The Lawton Constitution & Morning Press (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 43, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 23, 1966 Page: 4 of 47
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■
BR
HU.—
IHE LAWTON CONSTITUTION-MORNING PRESS, Sunday, Oet: 23, 1966
4a
I
Day Of Her Homecoming
then traveled by motor-
start it on the move again.
$
had
variety of subjects at her
waiting for her when she
arose
at 7:45 a.m.
ities there, she went to Laverne
a
woman standing on
Seeing a
peared."
na-
Church.
Fred A. Harris
t
Arthur Higgins
Saturday
Dear Friends,
But until Hanoi gives up its
and Australian people are to-
peace.’
which is open to the public.
Poudly AA
wOUceR
THE OPENING OF ANOTHER
I
I
A
He was accom
<
T
o
the
E2,
likes
4
f iE
39
■
pH
468 06 2-0623
FC.
»
..
4 N
4
Boy Scouts Visit
Air Base At Altus
0
: '
be glad you did.
4s - ".0
PH<
. - 3
OUR QUALITY
NEW * USED TRUCK
SALESMAN FOB
SEPTEMBER
1
weekend when the Scouts were
given an orientation tour of the
Strategic Air Command facil-
i
I
Saturday, Miss Jayroe was to
lead a parade through Oklaho-
ma City and be honored at a
banquet Saturday night.
She will leave Sunday for Lan-
dead may
spokesman said,
thought 14 houses
The annual Christmas bazaar
• • Center
1
i
just more —
business. It takes 51 senators.
Government planes had E
tied some lawmakers back
. - c AFTER a reception in the high rrursdayArteraday of festiv-
Chapel, school auditorium at Laverne, T ■ - - -------
Arson Suspected
In House Blaze '
Firemen from Station No. 2,
1701 Lee Blvd., were checking
the possibility of arson in a
$1400 fire at a Lawton home
Saturday night
The fire apparently started
about 7:45 p.m. in a bedroom
and in a hall closet of a house
at 1001 S. 11th, firemen report-
ed. They said the fire engulfed
the bedroom and bathroom of1
the house. _______
DOWNTOWN OKLAHOMA CITY
208 W. MAIN ST.
gether — all the way — on the
battlefield and the search for
sing. Mich., for an appearance
Sunday night with the Lansing
Symphony Orchestra. She said
she is to lead the orchestra
when it plays the “Star Span-
gled Banner.”
Annual Bazaar
Slated Nov. 28
2705 S.W. 29TH
DLANE. anm MM 5.255
---Namanse
VIET ACTION
Continued From Page One
future. .. ...
No, he said. The idea of the
poverty program is not to re-
locate and disperse people in
the poverty bracket.
“The idea is to get the indi-
vidual capable, so he can do
what he. wants to do, either
where he fives or elsewhere.
a gust of wind.
_______ rapped on the
door and we went out and saw
half the school had disap-
P-’i ■ 1 C
a
Llg
NOW 3 OKLAHOMA OFFICES. .
"",nnr
trip by his
finger, 12. _
“What do you think of all
this politics?" someone asked
J
l
,558
eyes lit up. uHes
Eme=
Shriver,
said:
K- .12
- -72- s ■ ■
9
b 3,328662351
b 33 26F60
F
war* farther 1
the current
o/1
5 E a
. t
• Handicapped Children will
be held Nov. 28, the parents
ung knights
Shriver and
d Teddy and
Ie Jed — are
political
ure cam-
SHRIVER
Continued From Page One
Ei
FAH.srMMONS
If you don’t have a CONVENIENT CHARGE
ACCOUNT, you’re missing out on a mighty
good deal. No use missing out on these
many advantages any longer, just see Vicki
Gaskins or Ellen Scott tomorrow. You’ll
reporter through the conven-
tion - crowded hotel lobby,
bought a couple of cigars, un-
wrapped some gum, said “Do
you mind?” took a chew, of-
fered the reporter one, sat
down and warmed to his fav-
orite subject, the war on pov-
erty.
huge parade down Jane Jayroe
Blvd., was named an Oklahoma
Ambassador by Gov. Henry
Bellmon and attended the La-
verne-Keyes high school football
Boy Scouts from two Lawton
___were guests of Altus Air
Force Base during the past
He’s a husky boy with
smooth olive skin. He has a
lot of thick, dark hair, worn
long like most youngsters
wear it these days., , .
He listened to his dad speak,
and cheered as rabidly as any
of the other Democrats there,
ccompanied on the
friend, Neal Nord-
SB
ed
President and Mrs. Johnson are shown koala bears by Arthur Robertson, owner
tuary, following their arrival Saturday in Brisbane, Australia.
SHRIVER has a 1 $200,000
home at Hyannis Port.He
rents a 30-acre estate in Mar-
yland. He has an apartment
in the Drake Hotel in Chica-
go. He is former chairman of
the Chicago Board of Educa
tion, former associate with Jo-
seph P. Kennedy Enterprises,
former assistant general man-
ager of Merchandise Mart, Chi-
cago, former assistant editor
of Newsweek, former New
York lawyer. Heis an author.
He is the architect of the
Peace Corps, and once headed
We ought to do it, and we will:
We’ll print the news in big, big letters . . .
Our October
Charge Books
Are Closed!
MODERN OKLAHOMA OFFICE I
DOWNTOWN LAWTON
323 D AVENUE
tn
He,
As ever,
oasz,s qo.ey
aL.. 14
.L..
I
1 ' I
L I
9
mE
I
I
-
1
c"
2
posals.
Shriver. Friday night fol- ।
lowing the reception, may
have preferred not to be in-
terviewed. But he guided the
A Li DAY SATURDAY FOR
j Adult leaders from
, ---- troops accompanied by Scouts.
siEis bases-22 mmf*o
fended in the United States and however, that Premier Nguyen Eugene, of Oklahoma Sitser"r l
. .. 1— « NT-- e dei v-1a lnte Saionn Snn-idaughters. Mrs./Don dasser •l I
SSSs
political contributors.
Gore had proposed that the
Senate reject the intricate tax
package—which he said is stud-
ded with loopholes—and salvages
only the bill’s original provi-
sions. They were designed to
encourage foreign investment in
the United States.
Gore’s motion defeated, the
Senate waded once again into
the tax bill debate that has pro-
longed its session. The House
already has wrapped up its
business for the year.
- -
s'v
e ,
I
This means that you can chargenuRasstmdies
Mtndpcember 1th. That’s 48 days
or more than a month and a half away. Even
if you insist on paying your bills every
30 days on the button, you can take an 18
day holiday.
If something comes up that makes it a bit
inconvenient to pay your total balance on
December 10th, you may pay as little as
l/10th of it and we’ll still be friends.
Paying convenience is just part of the
advantage of having a CONVEIENT CHARGE
ACCOUNT. Sure it’s designed to fit your
varying monthly budget. Certainly each
month you have the option of paying your
entire account or as little as l/10th of
your balance. But that’s only part of the
story.
Because the names and addresses of our
charge customers are handy, we usually send
them an advance notice of any sale or
EeSgNNAAAAEE SACCOGNT just to get this
“opportunity for first selection”.
Some ladies like to take several selections
homiecsndbaxeconivrshendschiRmAE'ACCOUNT
makes it might easy to take merchandise
out on approval. -
schoolers.
He foresees public school-
ing at an earlier age than six
for all school children in the
yjoutonon-tokne iatmis allowed."
Miss she said, “but there is a prefer,;
returned to her al- ence —Oklahoma, of course."
- v - Miss Jayroe, wearing a green
of suit trimmed with a gray chin-
chilla collar and a matching fur
“ ‘ "*i newsmen at the
h plan is unwise and unconsttu.
Sonal. He said it would let tax-
payers, bychecking abox.on
—
5
■81
it.
There has been talk that he
will run for governor of Ill-
inois in 1998.
What about his personal fu-
tre smiles. ’Tye been too
busy to think about 1*
A' conventioner who'd had
a few drinks walked up and
introduced himself, ^Shnver
stood, shook hands. The man
showed him a big metal but-
ton with lettering on it which
he said represented a deroga-
tory anti-Notre Dame Irish
slogan. He tried to give the
button to Shriver.
Shriver smiling, declined.
“I might meet an Irishman
tomorrow,” he said. I remem-
bered the time Kennedy gra-
ciously, almost shyly, deciined
to put on the big cowboy hat
they gave him in Fort Worth
shortly before his death.
SHRIVER’S son Bobby had
gone to the room upstairs wd
undressed for bed before his
dad’s reception got under way:
But the boy agreed to dress
again and come down to
the reception room for a news
they did not recall a more re-
strained windup of a congres-An
sional session. Continued From Page One
End Restrained flight schedule as a
House members, when their stop on the 3,700-mile journey to
i it was Manila. It was one of the places --- . .
---- • «. *— —Li-h he served the viet ndmn critics “5
The House
ti4°praised itself. its accom-
plishments, its members indi-
vidually a.u ----W
spoke condescendingly of the ------------
Senate, which hadn’t finished its offer to North Viet Nam:
•10 e-e-
rb
EL 7-5333
ER
e g *
-
—n-
money is to be i
and that is a respoi
e22#5 5
pond notscure, the ills of mon-
ey in American politics
Long Praises Billj.
Sen. Russell B. Long.. P
its chief sponsor, insisted
fests and good natured horse- as a lieutenant commander
play but there was none of thatthe Navy in World War II.
Saturday. There were relatively Johnson said that after the
fewvnspestatorsuinttonstharifhad conference in Manila - involv-
-nq the adjournment effort ing the heads of the seven
was manpower. The Senate had tions fighting the Communists in
was man-than enough to do viet Nam - he planned to re-
view the progress of the Viet-
bus- namese war and “the prospects
— to for bringing it to an end and
Washington after the tax dead- what may be done to heal the
lock slowed the Senate Friday, wound of a long and tragic
Members wandered in war.
throughout the morning session.! He noted that the United
Sen? Thomas McIntyre, D-N.H.,
was the last to turn upahis
I DIDN’T expect it any other
way,” she said of the wind.
Miss Jayroe arrived in Tulsa
rocate.
IN MANILA, Secretary
“terror and violence” againstsmith gen.
the South, he said, “we shall given by Warren Smith, gen-
fight for freedom in Viet Nam.”
Johnson’s stop at Townsville
. a.
States had offered once before
------ . to halt bombings of North Viet
traveling bag Nam and to provide a timetable
• re-election- for a withdrawal of troops if the
ilked into the North Vietnamese would recip-
Neal.
NEAL grinned sheepishly.
“ don’t know. My folks are
-g Ez.T
c-5e- .
-Usga
-
..g,ga
coat on his arm, a 1
seeking senator walked into -
chamber while the crucial tax
roll call was in progress.
> House Satisfied
— with nothing else state
LE
Ct EC
, ■
-.fe -
---------------amAdMdmifMde
323 D AVENU
._“fdjihkdnimseme=sg
_______ _ Wazsynosizsimpnr dase whrand. D. James. Robertsuapresz;
sell B. Long. D-La., ^“Obviously that view is not Johnson was stationed briefly at dent of.the YMCAtbaretng
sponsor, insisted the LHuverone he said, re- a time the Japanese were be in charge ° ,t45. LniA8
fegilationmamounstsd to threatening the continent, which is openjojh^^pub^
000 population. .
The bodies were carried .on
stretchers to Bethania Cha*—. --—-A., +0 Oklahoma ues mere, sie we w—a-
There the children were laid out Miss Jayroe flew. 1oat she sid Friday, where she rode in
in nlain wooden coffins as be- City to wind up what sne saia .--------a- ds Tene Tav
faved parents filed in to iden- hasbernsee migh exciting three
husband of At Oklahoma City, she com-
H donned rub- peted for attention with the No-
trudged grim- tre-Dame-University, of Okaho game Friday night.
- 1 ma football game, being played 8aAfter anappearance at OCU
a few miles away at Norman. — - — —
Did her national title allow
a preference in the
• " d /'re
———
M . .
2 "X 5 iA ■ • - . -
VI -4-, — I GdJ VI " .
At first we first to her home state Since
........... ’ been she won the Miss America ti- will turn 20 on
swamped but now we know that tie. . with _ an early-morning on. onFerence-ranging from
17 went under the slag. _ breakfast in her• hometown Oklahoma’s gusty* winds, which
“There may be whole families | Laverne. Her father,E.G.Jay- whipped at her hair. to the rig-
in them.” . roe, Laverne high school basket- wniPP hedu le of a Miss Amer-
All day they brought out bali coach, had oatmeal, bacon o s
bodies from the rubble that was and eggs, toast and orange juice-d
j Panteglas — Green Hollow — *■ hon " “ Tst
I Junior School of this town of 4,-
of Lone Pine Koala Sane- reaved parents
(AP Wirephoto) tl^ttou. Philip,
Queen Elizabeth II
ber boots and t—
[faced through deep black mud
amid the rescue workers.
! inside the chapel, the .prince .
warned his nation to watch for saw the bodies of more than 100 her to have
what he termed attempts by the । victims -.mostly childrenHe
United States and its allies to turned aside and said: This is
smuggle “spy commandos” into dreadful, dreadful.
North Viet Nam. He also rep- Seeing a woman
89th CONGRESS Hanoi Given New
Continued From Page One
Bombing Halt Offer
... eated Communist charges that the doorstep of a house close to
ics of his Viet Nam policy in Manila conference was the school, Philip stopped and
the United States as well as in . escalating the war in asked her: “Did you see what
refueling Australia. Viet Nam. happened?” “I was indoors, __.
THE PRESIDENT said that There has been a great deal of said Rose AngelnntMy~amshte roops
ed me viei iar ««« ale not Viet Cong terrorist activity over said‘"hatissthat, mumi. Force
in necessarily mistaken but they the past week, including five thought W
are what he terms a “minority, grenade attacks aimed at Then Smeont
“But it does require us to see Americans and the exploding of
it in a larger‘context.» he said. a homemade claymore mine I
I ui a 5 Fridav in a crowded market
The larger view, according to ace’n the Mekong River delta
Johnson, is that the allies inPiiag of Tra on. The casualty
South Viet Nam are fighting fortiii i the latter incident rose
a free choice for the Vietnamese, Saturday to 11 dead and 54
people. wounded, all South Vietnamese
In Australia, Johnson drew soldiers or civilians,
record-breaking crowds and U.S. officials, meanwhile,
also vigorous opposition fromjwould neither confirm nor deny
ed the progress of youngsters E
in the job corps.
“ISN’T HE handsome!”
one said.
“God bless him!” the other
stage-whispered.
President Kennedy set in
motion the machinery for an ■
anti-poverty war six months
before his assassination. There
is something of the aura of
the late President about his
brother-in-law.
Perhaps it is the Ivy League
idealism. the trained courtesy
of the thoroughbred gentle-
man.
There is ambition, too. I
Shriver, emphasizing the im-
portance of Congress, said i
President Kennedy wanted
to gain the presidency because
it is “the seat of power,” and
he felt he could do most for
the country there. After hed
been in office a year. JFK 5
said the most important thing
he’d learned was the limita- |
tion upon the presidential PoW: 8
er. and the importance of
Congress which must approve
or reject administration pro- I
5 91 i%
0assp8nspint oPthe Comanche County
by Mission Village Baptist for Handicapped Childr .......
Funeral Rites ||S^hy“^P^^^
THE JOB corps, sometimes
branded the bad boy of the
program, is one of his favor-
ite projects. __
“It retains 70 per cent of all House members, Whe
those whoenter .This retention work is cleaned up as -------
ttei" most phenomenal . . . Saturday, often engage in song- in Australia in which
Rmember 50 per cent are —---- -3 natured horse- - “ lieutenant com
from broken families. Almost
all are school dropouts. The
idea is to motivate them — to
get them accustomed to regu-
lar homes, to the idea of go-
ing to work, to eating three
square meals a day ...”
He sees Project Head Start
as a “revolution” for pre-
sliding slimy stream of coal
dust rocks and mud that lay like
a black shroud around the
school.
teThasrescuprsnwor'antyiinztuin OKLAHOMA CITY (AP2,
avalanche that could be set off I Oklahoma City University's
tbv the rain. most famous dropout — J—--
' Earlier Saturday engineers America — returned to her.aJi
augmdeep channels'in th! mass ma mater Saturday, on.thefsina
of slag to divert surplus water day of the trtumphant tour c.__
building up inside the heap. herhm same Anne Jayroe hat, talked with
। They succeeded in halting the greeted by several hundred airport. tnt-, cst,
slow slide - but rains could “hsrngpersonsas she stepped cade . through. OklahomaIit
■ start it on the move again. frm a jet plane at Wiley Post stopping at the.
Police, who estimated Friday Airport here at 12:30 p.m. She hadienrolled a^named
the death toll would reach 200. MThis has been a great three junior beforeashearWind out
raised this figure after estab- days, the highlight of my reign Miss America droop mg
lishing that more cottages had so far," said the green-eyed when she "igttnext year, she
been buried. beauty. .10.0 4 regime her studies
’ “We now think the number of Miss Jayroe started the third hopes to
be 210 or 220,” a day of her Oklahoma. herh, 5-f00t-5-inch beauty, who
Oct. 30, touched
no indication----
what it would do if bombings
andcollectively and ended. * endawar-andwhentnexom-Asbutthequestionof
‘ * - Johnson said in renewing the munists decide to seek apeace their Pesinations remains unre-
ffer to North Viet Nam: fulsettlement"wezshal.bef solved, informants have said
“We are ready to stop the at the conference ta that at least two of the seven
bombing of North Viet Nam. We ‘ - i ’ -------- thsis S
are readv to produce the sched-
uleofsr thewhithder"the°other aPOSS, s cnangeanytsystem ofholfofronfurther puble action
pavers, Howtheir side tens US what it is prepared government, nor to deprive any! until after the Manila meeting,
their returns, de appropriated, to do to move toward peace in people of what is rightfully
onsibility that Viet Nam.” theirs,” he said.
The President said he had
found during his swing through
— a ------12-- -2i-m het “the
AVALANCHE Jane Radiant On Final
Continued From Page One
October 23rd
.(
fendrdiinth Viet Nam we de-E‘k§wold leave Saigon Sun-1 daughters, Mrs.,. Johnnvil
fend the right of the minority to day morning for Manila and Kermit,Tex,.and Mrs, . hnm
Eedheard peacenumly, at thenofurnArromgutsapcusttn bSter;"carl of Urania. Lt
D.^ Busk told reporter -And « iohedenddbenea.;lananak W I
S Tee o Per-seopover." " “ncchudren.
Me,saidittakestwozsidesrtooAzysevcnbietrhvssmaym2‘oMrs. Helen Rogers
end a war — and when the com 1M.i. he htheanestionof , .. 1
ianac- Funeral services will be held I
said at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Beck-
be conference tapie. I that'at least two of the seven er Funeral Home Chapel for I
“WF no NOT seek the uncon-th expressed their determina-Mrs. Helen C Rogers 76,.of
ditiVnEiDurFnder of those who i tion to carry through withtheir [1108 Chery, whqadied Saturda
oppose us in Viet Nam, nor tolresignations.butahadnakreednonnosncncengospi be Dr. T. B.
Leen of the First Christian
---- Church. Burial will be in High- i
MEETING PLANNED land Cemetery.
A progress report on YMCA I a member of the Presbyter-
facilities being built wUl betam cons,"LtsucolokkepcE
oral secretary of the organiza- znneuChRogw.sro2Sp2u,kzont
tion, at 7 p.m. Monday at thejand four grandchildren.
First Christian Church, Seventh;—asssmaamamummmmai
D. James Roberts, presi; ohig
ab.,
rino
WUI
‘...0
■ 1 1 ■■ ■
ij-tj..
Tea towels, aprons and other
both Christmas gift items will be
sold at the bazaar. Proceeds
a nd;will be used for the center.
V : "e
-■--------
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Shepler, Ned. The Lawton Constitution & Morning Press (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 17, No. 43, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 23, 1966, newspaper, October 23, 1966; Lawton, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2032260/m1/4/?q=Homecoming+queen+1966+North+Texas+State+University: accessed July 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.