The Lawton Constitution & Morning Press (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 22, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 6, 1971 Page: 3 of 52
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Oklahoma Digital Newspaper Program and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
4
A • - -
-7 f
$
Britons Sot —lldren °^ered Polioz Rubeola Vaccinations
Two Hurt
On Common ^mmun':at'on ^nic ^oted Monday At Health Department
in Crash
1
Bunche Condition Termed 'Serious'
an ear-
health officials aim for an im-
MeKinzey said the clinic is
SearS| Save S20 to $30
3 Slavs Ouly
• e
»
m,•
tet•
--
*
t
______mi—f—
lor l
T
in
Bedroom
DeL
2
4.
v8
umxzmam
• Rust-resistant construction
Iree
P--
..
C
SAVE ’20
0
5
Q
3,000-
Alodel
•••EE
K 4
HRoomS
N
.....
am
S,
-22 -
scee . 2--a-a
Cools Up To
41
HRodpm<
------
:20-
v I
(0
-A-
exe
Y
r 1
SAVE ’20
13.000-
1
lo
i
“I
",
=-=
28,000 B.T.U. Models
$369.95
meadah
I-
Sears
SEARS, ROEBUCK & CO.
SAVE ’30
14,000 BTU Model
• Two fan speeds—choose quick
cooling or extra-quiet cooling
• Slide-out chassis; weather seal
• Rust-resistant construction
spokesman announced Friday.
Bunche was taken back to
Model
3 Hooms
her stay in the hospital.
Bunche is the highest ranking
American in the U.N. secretari-
Joseph C. Richard
Senior Sales Consultant
Iles. 353-3703— Bus. 335-4286
of the city. When he had not
returned by 4:30 a.m. Saturday,
the pilot's wife reported him
missing to airport officials.
One man at the scene of the
crash said he thought the pilot
afternoon.
Pilot Mark Landoll, 4) and air-
craft mechanic Randy Smith
took off from Will Roger’s in-
•t
>N
R\
|I
N
•a
■ o
' II
( «e Sears Easy Payment Plan
We Service What We Sell, Wherever You
Live or May Move in the U.S.A.
.....-s
—1
11 th and Gore
Lawton, Oklahoma
Dial 353-4351
3
Ne
• Two fan speeds—choose quick
cooling or extra-quiet cooling
• Slide-out chassis; weather seal
• Rust-resistant construction
_ _______ ______ „ at. He has charge of special po-
munization level of SU per cent New York Hospital after falling litical affairs.
Regular $169.95
$149
YOUR MAN FROM
EQUITABLE
y»
: ■ 9 .
• Compact and lightweight
• Kenisan filter keeps out dust,
dirt, pollen—air stays cleaner
• Uses regular house current
• Rust-resistant construction
sensitive eyes and a red rash
Despite the fad the effec-
tive vaccine has been avail-
able for some time now, health
officials said the level of pro-
tection in children one to four
years old has dropped in the
dren who will enter school for Midwest City hospital Saturday
the first time this fall.
t ~
STORE HOURS
Monday. Thursday and Friday,
9:30 til 9
Tues . Wed., Sat., 9:30 til 6
• Cools off fast for all-night
sleeping comfort
ANNOUNCES
A new up to date way to
meet your insurance needs.
THE EQUITABLE
The Equitabte LIfe Ansuranae
Society of the United States
New York, N.Y.
' 3
—.—
/ 4
•I
Regular $119.95
$99
Regular $229.95
$199
is
mmmummm-mi mmm"
emmmsummmmmmmum.
smmmmmmwwmmmu=•
$
—=B)
A04
R
Children receiving the vac-
cine must lie accompanied by
a parent, legal guardian or
responsible adult. A donation
of 50 cents per person is re-
quested. However, no one will
3a
34
4
A I
S4
. ■ 04 1
infection and can even be fa-
tal. Even with an ordinary
case, a child may suffer a
high fever, harsh cough. light-
Regular $279.95
$259
04
4 ;
»IH nW -5"
5=:
"mme
„uu”
RR ____ _________
mmesmu=mez====:: 3
====--=-===
,76,
s.y
THE LAWTON CONSTITUTION-MORNING PRESS, Sunday, June 6, 1971 3 A
European community would
mean an increase of only about
1 per cent per year in costs and
prices over a five-year period.
- . - The extent of the men's in-
i he spokesman said he also the multitude as the "great un-injuries was not immediately!
was suffering from the chest washed.” known.
* .
3
amemuuuumme
===-=-=
:===--===
* •
r -RN
%,----~
,pp, ternational Airport at 7:30 p.m.
.. — — UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. congestion and weakness that for a 30-minute sight-seeing tour
nation from 79 per cent in 1966 (AP) — Undersecretary Gener- had troubled him during
to 66 per cent this year. al Ralph J. Bunche is in seri-
mmumwi
being held in view of the in-
creasing number of cases of
hard measles and outbreaks
of polio in neighboring Texas.
If any child has had either
disease, or three doses of oral
polio and vaccination for hard
measles, he does not need to
attend this clinic. The polio
vaccine being offered Monday
is an oral dose.
However, McKinzey empha-
sized. the red, hard measles
(rubeolai and the three-day
German measles (rubella) are
not the same disease. Rubel-
la vaccine does not provide
protection against the hard
measles.
The hard measles can cause
serious side-effects such as
encephalitis, phetimonia, ear
Up To 2
h
3 -
i m, * ‘
-DUQi
S
p
To control the spread of any
preventable disease, public
I
1
1
I
•EEE
R ••••
' ji—r-
;< 1
‘ -I I
CoolIRoom. 2 Hooms. 3 Rooms
..... ------------------------ -----
_ ___
.... - - JJ—L
\ i ■
was attempting to make an
emergency landing at a nearby
dragstrip.
b mmmm-=
in any community McKinzey and breaking his upper right--
said Lawton’s current immu. arm at his home 111 Kew Gar- Edmund Burke, famous Eng-
nization level is under so per ens last Friday night. lish statesman, first spoke of
cent.
’ | —
Polls Against
Public opinion polls show sen-
timent against joining even
though leading politicians of all
major parties favor joining.
The politicians went into their
districts this weekend—some to
sound out opinion themselves,
some to try to convince the
housewives and workers they
stand to gain in the long run.
Douglas-Home struck out
sharply at arguments that join-
ing the Common Market would
jeopardize Britain’s sovereignty
and send prices—especially food
prices— skyrocketing.
“What is sovereignty?” he
asked, and then gave his an-
swer: “It is the right and ability
of a nation to decide on its inter-
ests and to pursue them. It is to
enhance that ability to com-
mand our own future and for-
tune that we see entry into Eu-
rope.”
The veteran British diplomat
said there was a time when
Britain dominated the world
economy and held the keys of
her own prosperity and that of
others.
Situation Reversed
"Today, that situation is re-
OKLAHOMA CITY ( \H) -
be turned away McKinzey Two men hurt in the crash-land-
said. ing of a light, home-built plane
He emphasized that both in north Oklahoma City Friday
vaccines are required for chit- night were being treated at a
___
. '' I
I
‛_25- dla
n5~l2,
2> "
7
' - -?
4
SHOP SEARS AND SAVE
Satisfaction Guaranteed or Your Money Back
A"T)
-*, lve0h aet - . • A
____1
- ---
E-
— mu------
s-==ss===
8
4
ous condition but he spent a
comfortable night, a U.N.
a Me
ammmmmmm=i
- -----
- =======
3:2-
* -----
• ?
- ■ ---:---)
— "" ---—- N
---------uxee®
■ .... e "
versed,” he warned those fight- 3
ing against joining the Common IX
Market. “Our economy is more I
sensitive than any other to the 31
climate outside Britain. |\,
"We live by trade, and when ~e
our trade goes badly overseas
we feel the effect in every Brit-
ish household.
"It is not just a question of
our balance of payments, or the
constraint which Lhe ebb and
flow of currency imposes. It is a
question of whether British in-
dustry is working at full capaci-
ty.”
Sir Alec said fears about costs
and prices were exaggerated.
He predicted membership in the I 33
' 17
. d g j {
I
----===:
====================
E- - hhe ■ < M
Only three years ago, the av- NA sgkgamums
erage weekly wage in Britain I M3 ! EEMMsmn
was $4.80 more than it was in i—
Europe, he said, while today it 1 2
is $12 below the average for "
Continental workers.
Dynamic Growth
"It is this difference in the dy-
namic growth of incomes which
measure the economic oppor-
tunity before us," he went on.
"Members of the community of-
fer us growth and full employ-
ment : outside we could go on as
we are, but it would be a future
of relatively falling living stand-
ards: this, then, is an opportuni-
ty Britain must not miss."
A growing split in the opposi-
tion Labor party about whether
to join the market was acknowl-
edged by Robert Mellish, the
party's chief whip in the House
of Commons. The party leader,
former Prime Minister Harold
Wilson, favors joining, but with
conditions.
Speaking in Durham, in the
heart of Britain's coal mining
area, Mellish said: "The Labor
party is divided on this issue—
probably the majority is against
entry. This reflects the present
mood of the country."
Mellish said he would go
along with the policy to be
adopted at the Labor party con-
vention in September and said
he did not believe the govern-
ment would be "foolish enough”
to try to push the issue in Par-
liament before the summer re-
cess.
Heath has promised time for
full discussion but has kept se-
cret the timing.
His chief Market negotiator,
Geoffrey Rippon. is flying to
Luxembourg Monday for more
talks, confident that a final
package deal on the terms for
British entry can be completed
by June 22 or 23.
Rippon bases this confidence
on reaching an agreement with
the common sugar producers
and emerging prospects of solu-
tions on other major problems.
These are the role of sterling,
Britian's contribution to the
common budget, New Zealand
butter, and safeguards for Brit-
am t fisheries.
SAVE ’20
5,000-ITU Model
( ools One ________ Ideal
EE”
AN immunization clinic will
AA.E.I | | be held Monday at the
IMAGEKAT 1/10/1 City - County Health Depart-
IMVU ment. 1010 S. Sheridan Road,
for children 1 through 15 years
IoNnON , r. old who have not received a
i.M (A P) ~ Prime Min- polio or hard-measles (ro-
ister Edward Health’s Conser- beola) vaccination
vative government launched a m, ■
campaign Saturday aimed at 0. clinic will be open from
winning British ’ housewives’ 9 30 am until 3:30 p.m.
backing for joining the Euro- A child may receive only
pean Common Market. The gov- one immunization dose An-
emment warned staying out other clinic will be held in
would mean a decline in living about a month to dispense the
standards. ° vaccine missed in this clin-
Foreign secretop, s. ic. Both vaccines are live
Douglas-Home set off ‘the Ane viruses, and cannot be given
naim in ,10 ■ . cam at the same time, according
Paiznsinithemarket town of t„ wes McKinzey, adminis.
tnaf north Fn t in the ' US trative assistant at the health
north England county of department
Lancashire. —
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View six places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Bentley, Bill F. The Lawton Constitution & Morning Press (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 22, No. 22, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 6, 1971, newspaper, June 6, 1971; Lawton, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2032482/m1/3/?q=112+cavalry: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.