The Lawton Constitution (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 70, No. 217, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 30, 1972 Page: 4 of 24
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THE LAWTON CONSTITUTION, Tuesday, May 30,1972
Russian Papers Publish
Kiev’s Pioneer Palace
Statement Of Principles
Toured By First Lady
KIEV, U.S.S.R. (AP) — Pa: was placing a wreath on the
the Communist party's Pioneer seeing tour before it took the
youth organization
in
He said there had been too be mailed beginning June 1. Se-
concrete
more to engage
here from
with cherries
. ported by the entire Soviet
leaders were the future of the
thank you to oar native Com- tillery pieces damaged
see
stick to gauge the sincerity of the Karachardogsky Median •-
inter-
big
weeks in southernmost Cam- out
we
done," she said. but I enjoyed church and gave her a Richard
er
meeting the people."
gon command claimed that 75
killed.
enemy
— Rejected an appeal by Cali-
men
- OU Historian's
central highlands.
Vietnamese forces in the south-
ern and northern sectors of
it in- murder of a Choctaw man
Funeral Home for Dr Edward
said Schumann indicated the
—Approved a public hearing
AL TERRILL
tion.
draft on former city treasurer
KICK OFF
—Approved a use permitted
DINNER
source said the two conferences
nor diverging.
funded by Model Cities
two crewmen were missing
within NATO that a carefully ----
Name
Address
F—
City, State
Zip
9,
*
1iA
A
P
4
Price
$9995 dial
$59%5
ZALES
Gmi
Execution Stay
Granted By Hall
OKLAHOMA (TTY (AP)
centrating on cooperation and a
smaller one dealing with troop
many of them by air strikes,
while the only South Vietnam-
Another warning was sounded
by NATO Secretary General Jo-
ese losses
wounded.
school and receive induction or-
ders may have their induction
re- ne property at 1602 Monroe
from R-1 to C-1.
said.
As she left the Pioneer Pal-
ace, Mrs Nixon said her Soviet
re-
res-
norman, Okla (AP) _ Fu-
neral services were scheduled
at 1 30 p m today at Primrose
main rad to the airport Thou-
sands of people pressed up to
aiong the
Boulevari
Loc itself has eased, but North
Vetnamese forces believed to
be from the 5th Division have
mtensified shelling along High-
way 13 south of the devastated
town and are keeping a relief
column from getting through.
Field reports said the enemy
She visited a class in short
wave radio and found 15 cards
sent by American amateur ra-
While Mrs Nixon was observ- startled guide gave him a book
mg the Pioneers, the President of pictures of the cathedral and
_ its history and said. "It’s in
ing leg kicks with ease
"He is good— you will
fired into the city just after
midnight. The Saigon command
with the youngsters
Mrs. Nixon also watched a
group of youngsters perform
Ukrainian folk dances, applaud-
mg vigorously as an 11 -year-old
boy handled the difficult squatt-
25 TABLE LAMPS and
HANGING LAMPS
"Here is my
Nixon said
would accept the U.S. position
favoring parallel European con-
mid~June.
The July induction orders will
The Shah would like to see
the United States and Soviet
Dial
353-8140
the Cambodians than to refit,
but were not sure," said one
Comanche County Fairgrounds
Tuesday, May 30,7 pm
Everyone Welcome
F
i
t
i
were reported badly battered
by B52 bomb strikes.
Troops of one of the divisions,
the 9th. are believed rebuikding
tags.
• We
'mauan e-
nAtionai ban
The World in 1971
Lawton Pubshing Co.
Third and A Ave
Lawton, Okla. 73501
1820
Gore
1
I
7
English ■■
"That's good news,” said the
President
historian.
Dr Dale, the George Lynn
Cross professor emeritus, died
Sunday at age 93.
Soviet public
"This is all their doing We
lunch." Mrs. didn't want it this way," one of-
serve compensating duty in a
been fantastic, civilian rule.
Squads of municipal workers for another overnight stop and . .. ____________ „___
were busy throughout the night a meeting with Edward Gierek, oath for public school teachers homa City man scheduled to
sticking blue patches on the 5 • the chief o the Polish Commu- against claims of a discharged die in the electric chair for the
Wednesday the death penalty. Gov. Hall granted a 60-day stay — _
-Upheld New York's loyalty of execution today for anokla- Funeral Slated
He said that preparatory letter in the orchestrated 34 miles south of An Loe last Gulf area, which holds 60 per
talks for the East-West confer- chorus, this one signed by M Fnday destroyed 3 South Viet- cent of the world’s known ou
ences would " constitute a yard- Shevtsov, party secretary at namese armored personnel car- reserves
in an effort to show that the
summit agreements "are sup-
set it Luns, who told the minis- to the editorial offices in ardent
ten they must keep in mind
people." said an American Em- ran, the Iranian capital, then preme court decision outlawing
bassy statement. flies to Warsaw on
drastically and illegally
duced the role of slum
staking blue patches on the 5 - the chief of the Polish Commu- aganst claims of a discharged die in the electric chair for the
____________ „ 000 American flags decorating nist party. During the visit Sec- Syracuse teacher that _
Kontum. Associated Press cor- the streets of the capital. The retary of State William P. Ro- iringes. on the religious beliefs
respondent Michael Putzel re- flags, which were made locallv gers and Foreign Minister Ste- of Quakers
had ordered a halt to construe-
tion of an antiballistic missile
base in Montana.
No Soviet newspaper has pub-
lished the text of the joint cum-
Men who are in this group
Exampie of Political Realism," other division, the Tth, • may be
"Good Prospects for Consoli- pulling back
datioa of Peace." "In the Inter-
Downtown 319 D Ave.
Open 9:30 to 5:3
GORE EAST
BARBER SHOP
• Haircuts • Rarer Cats
• Styles (Notary Public)
Gore East Shopping Mall
2300 Gore
1
I
4
some 35 nations. One American proving and authorizing execu-
tion of a proposed amendatory - . —
grant agreement for the Squaw ter “as shot down six miles MeV, tne capital of tie Soviet
Creek Project. The project is northwest of Kontum and the Uaraine
Open 11 SCDaE,oadMSmuarun 1M
59
825
91 ;
Baylor skindiver at an
unbeatable price s35
Calendar, 17 jewes, 4
water-tesistane*
I’
Elsewhere fighting broke out Union agree to let Iran act as
tenticns and consequently de- Irvestia also carried the text - _____
tertaine whether a conference of the agreement co the limita- for the first time m several the policeman of the area with-
Continued From Page Ore
and the Shah reviewed the blue-
uniformed Imperial Guard
Then they drove in the Presi-
dent's open-topped automobile
to Shahyad Square, site of a
reductions and other mlitary is-
sues. Rogers reported or. the
Mi scow talks to Washington’s
three principal European allies
Raul st on Furnit ure
Enclosed is 3 Please send copies
of The World in 1971 at $4 95 each to
"I just do not want to speculate ceiling will be announced in
W ashington. Irainan officials es-
timated the turnout at 250,000.
Massive security precautions
-gSS-SE
on's extensive talks in Moscow tive Service said. How high classes under sponsorship of ly through the city on a sight,
about Vietnam Kissinger said: this will push the lottery callup t " -
DRAFTED
Continued From Page One
0oka rezoning request by Juan-
ita McCarty. The request was to
SUPREME
Continued From Page One
/3
F rance. But informed sources
""etzr-esistant . te, M M cro- and cyt ur
Fozcomveient credit plemsavailabie •ZieReritgQap-z-mc--C-g-MueCag-gaaxmenema
power interference
summit talks.
These agreements are in the
interests of universal peace and
security. the interests of al
and reorganizing a: rear bases
Typical headlines were "An in Cambodia, sources said. The
TROTLINE
Continued From Page One
on renew request by J. Roy
Stephens to allow operation of a
parking lot at 207 H.
—Set a public hearing on four
other planning commission ac-
tions.
—Approved a resolution ap-
7 here is general agreement
tary Meivin R Laird, in com-
— — Nixon told Lyashko ‘s wife and
I Mrs Vladimir Scherbitasky
wife of the Ukrainian Commu-
agreements and their expected
results but it continued its
heavy coverage of the Nixon
visit.
Watts "has not exercised his
available constitutional rights
to an appeal."
Arthur Godfrey is 69 years
old
ported the North Vietnamese
appeared to have backed off on
the northwestern side of the
provincial capital.
More than 100 shelis were
its such a lovely day, rd
like to stay another we-k.»
riers, killed 42 troops and
wounded 159
in the
pliance with
summing up the results of the
Monday nig nt at the four-power summit talks The Soviets nor-
dinner traditionally held on the mall! wait until a state visitor -
eve of the N \TO metin• i ' eft the country before pub- South Vetnamese troops fought
discuss German pronlemts : shing the communique on his for.asxth day against North
"1 would
were three
—-----— — -upue. az -------— . - -----5 Hall ordered the reprieve for
flags, which were made locally sers and roreign Minister Ste- 0 “uaxers Michael Wayne Watts 23 who__ ..
pleadediguntyainthe 1965 hoot- D Dale, Oklahoma Umiversity
take der negotiation for 10 years.
Nixon is the third US. presi. The President flies home to
dem to visit Iran Washington on Thursday.
about what the results may
be."
mor or whose inatial postponements of "Yes the child replied with White House officials did not
induction expire during the a smle hide their disappointment at
----" " ... J The chidren served the First the efforts by the Soviet author-
Lady tea and cake and a favor- ities to prevent contact between
Me Ukrainian dish, dumplings the visiting President and the
problems of our time, pe
sistently and determinedly
Nivada chronograph, Baylorskindiver
17 jeces.3windows, 17 jeweis. automatic,
SCP buton, tachometer calendar, lumincus
E
88
329
2
0B
Zales has the action match
that suits your lifestyle___
Franklin D. Roosevelt attend-
-----. « puuu azeazung .. .. ed the World War II allies” Teh-
for June 20 on an ordinance to S“ casuates were tight ran Conference in 1943, and
make theaters located on major .A communique reported that Dwight D Eisenhower came
streets a use permitted on re- 115 North Vietnamese troops during a good-will tour in 1959.
view in a C2 toeing classifica- were killed and 47 weapons
troops were
golden key to Tehran Mrs
the building s modern barricades placed
into a false sense of security,"
Brandt cautioned. "Thus we
must do both: We must keep
our defense preparedness intact
and at the same time seek po-
litical solutions for the great
would be neither converging
planned European security core I
ference is desirable, but there
ar differences over what such I
a conference should discuss I
Some of Washington’s allies. ।
notably the West Germans,
have favored including troop '
reduction on the agenda of the 1
al!-European conference 1
Rogers told newsmen the |
United States is prepared to be-
erected last year to mark
Iran * 2,500th anniversary At
the monument Nixon received a
should drink tonight to
kitchen Mrs Nixon chat led broad Shevchenko
the other Atlantic allies
' It's just
said his wife
.. .. -----------------since men with a sky. blushing S-year-old and stood silently behind sol.
xixsx’ do armin arm
In addition to those bom m The gir respondong ti the There were no shouts and no
1952, a small number of older First Lady’s questions, said her demonstrations o{ emotion that
men will be issued orders for favonite food was borsch anycne in the motorcade could
July indductions. These are men "How about cookies?" Mrs. see
Questioned closely about Nix- as he 9,000 June callup. Selec- attend cuitural and hobby ousines and sedans drove slow.
1 in __ -— - mg death of Willard "Bill" Sig-
Clin 1 view a ruling that 64. The new execution date
the Nixon administration has was set for Aug 1
Hall ordered the stay because
that "Soviet offers of detente
notwithstanding, the steady
buildup of Soviet military pow-
er is being relentlessly pur-
sued.”
Mrs. Nixon wrote "Patricia
Nixon" in a smooth feminine
hand
The President stood up. ex-
limousine flown
L_Lk
the prives these families of 34 to "Naturally the major accom- tended his hand to the woman
heroes who fought in war and $60 a month worth of medical plishment is what Dick has who acted as his guide in the
tended only by nations most
directly affected—those mem- zemi r, ,
bers of NATO and the warsaw kermit Denham’s bond.
major newspapers published vestia, normally an afternoon
the text today of the statement newspaper, skipped Monday's
of principles to guide .Amen- edition in order to come out
can-Soviet relations signed this morning with coverage of
.Monday by President Nixon the signing and of Nixon’s de-
visit had been "most
esting."
MINISTERS
Continued From Page One
ects the concepts of security
and detente are linked togeth-
er ’
It was not clear from this
whether Brandt frit both coop-
eration and troop reductions
sbouid be handled at a singe
conference or separate meet.
A few hours after the arrival
in Kiev, presidential adviser
Henry A. Kissinger told news-
men that Nixon and the Soviet
leaders reached no secret
agreements on V ietnam or
other controversial questions.
"This is not the way these
things happen," the President s
assistant for national security
affairs said.
postponed until the end of the Nixon staged a version of the tomb of the Ukraine* Unknown
summer session if the session "kitchen debate" today, but it Soldier. Then they joaned forces
runs beyond their induction bore no resemblance to her for a brief visit to the 11th ten-
date husband's ideological discussion tury Church of St Sophia—now
The August draft call is ex- with Nikita Khrushchev in 1959. a museum—on the way to the
cne con-
Pact whose forces are con-
fronting each other in that
area.
The Americans feel the Eu-
ropean conference on coopera-
tion should be attended by all
the European nations, plus the
United States and Canada or
E8B - EP I I
Tt
All Styles
Wednesday Only
French government has not re-
laxed its opposition to any talks
on troop reductions.
The Nixon administration
feels that talks to achieve a
balanced, mutual reduction of
Communist and Western forces
in Centra! Europe should be at.
gleaming white monument
WEATHER
Continued From Page One
will become northeasterly
from six to 12 mph tonight.
Lake Ellsworth received
1.60 inches Monday. Lake Pa-
trolman Gerald Little said
streams feeding into the lake
are running "slowly." He
added that there might be
enough runoff to cancel the
five inches of water pumped
into Lake Lawtonka last week.
Lake Lawtonka received 1.20
inches. Meers. in Lawtonka's
watershed area, received 1.55
inches. The Wichita Wildlife
Refuge reported 1.70 inches
for the heaviest amount re-
ceived in the area
in Lawton. Fire Station No.
5 at 53rd and Gore Boule-
vard, recorded $7 inch and
downtown at Third and A, .75
was received
Area towns reporting rain-
fall were Faxon, 1 inch.
Chattanooga .40, Grandfield
30, Frederick .41. Marlow 1.21,
Altus. 1 inch. Anadarko 95
and Carnegie .82.
must not indulge in World " The controlled press
the Eastern countries’ tn- cal Plant in Moscow
simply say
Bagior chromosr aph,
17 jeweis, 2 windows,
calendar, stop
butto $59%5
ests of the Peoples of the
U.S. officials said the secre-
tary received a warm response
from Foreign Ministers Waiter
Scheel of West Germany Sir
Alec Douglas-Home of Britain
wishful thinking, nor be ulled gave no lengthy analysis of the
capturedin fiehting Monday n been’tosranhinhettmaman he
-Formaly accepted a $s,000
edas troops killed and $5 w.n „„ ‘ .
wounded. Wearing a gray suit, white
v. . shirt and blue and gray tie, the
-Eor to second day ina row. President looked tired but
aoout.5, U S E32 bombers smiled as he said goodbye at
dropped 1250 tons of explosives the Kiev airport to President
on the outskirts of Kontum in Alexander Lyashko erf the Uk-
an attempt to keep North Viet- and other omclals
namese reinforcements from m
driving into the town .The weather was clear and
m.mge , , balmy as the President and
The I S. Command said an Mrs Nixon boarded Air Force
Army OH6 observation helicop- One after an overnight stop in
M Nixon fountain pen. The
pet Pravda and other gunners on Monday slammed
news pers published -letters 2,400 rocket and mortar shells
that Soviet people are sending
munist party.” said a typical An ambush on the highway Indian Ocean and the Penman
MOSCOW (AP) — Moscow's The government daily, h-
o security and cooperaticn in tion of strategic arms, pub- . - _______
Europe can offer reasonable fished by most other papers bodia, just across the border Failing that, the Shah was ex-
prospects of success " over the weekend. And it car- from the western Mekong Delta pected to seek assurance of un-
it remained to te seen wheth- tied a brief report from New 13 South Vietnam. South Viet- diminished IS. support. The - ----- — — --------
York that U.S Defense Secre- namese rangers spearheaded Soviet government’s recent the heres who have rebuilt aid
by an armored column dashed friendship treaties with India Ihis ety in peace and, we trust,
with North Vietnamese forces and the hostile regime in neigh- to the ew ' adership to which In other actions today, the
while on a drive to block infil- boring Iraq have increased our two countries . may con- court:
tration into the delta. The Sai- Iran's sense of isolation, and it tnbute b) which the world may _ Agreed to rule on the power
is suspicious of Moscow's in- have a peniod in which the of grand juries to force wit-
tentions in the Gulf. tragedy of war will never again nesses to give samples of their
The visit "is designed to re- be visited upon this city or any voices and handwriting,
state Washington'* friendship other city lke it in the world."
for Iran, its Shah and its Nixon spends tonight in Teh- forma to review the state
dents in guiding Model Cities
programs.
— Dismissed challenges to
taxes imposed by Pennsylvania
and Philadelphia on the wages
of New Jersey residents.
gm preparations this fail for a
Europe-wide conference in 1973
U.S. officials said the Ameri-
can view is that preparations
for negotiations on troop cuts
should begin about the same
time. But the officials said Nix-
on made dear throughout his
meetirgs with the Kremlin
leaders that the United States
would have to consult with its
allies before going ahead with
the talks.
The Soviets, these officials
said, challenged the American
contention that Washington
could not speak for the entire
alliance on such matters They
said Nixon did not retreat from
this position.
Informants who attended Ro-
gers’ dinner meeting Monday
night said that despite the re-
cent agreements between East
and West Germany, it appeared
that long negotiations woukd be
needed before the two Ger-
manies could agree on a treaty
recognizing East Germany as a
sovereign state and laying the
basis for their two applications
for membership in the Untied
Nations.
and Maurice Schumann
ferences—a big
200 July total—about the same Palace where 12,000 chikdren The k g caravan of lim-
the agreement.
who are going to summer
pected to be higher than the 7.- Mrs Nixon toured a Pioneer airport
t—m-
v 3
nist party chief, as they pre-
pared to leave for the airport.
Why not' Mrs. Ly ashko re-
plied
We'll get fired.” said Mrs
Nixon with a smile
The President commented
। "I think Id get in a little
•-rouble at home if I didn't go."
munique- released Sanday—
CRASH KILLS
Continued From Pare One
check flight when it crashed
shortly after 7 am.
The DC-9 is a standard pas-
senger jet that can carry up to
70 passengers or. short hauls
Greater Southwest Inter-
national Airport has been used
by a number of airlines and
military units in recent years
as a training facility
Another crash occurred at
the field in 1963 when an Air
National Guard plane was prac-
bang landings.
final said
Nixon and the First Lady
wer asked to sign the guest
book at St Sophia on their way
out. Nixon sat down, took a
fountain pen from his inside
coat pocket and wrote in a
large hand • Richard M. Nix-
on."
He looked up and said quiet-
ly ' May 30 " He wrote the
date and then added: "A great
monument to the Ukraine’s
proud heritage "
Nixon, Shah Meeting
STRIKES
Continued From Pare One
that American pilots flew more
than 250 strikes across North
Vietnam during the H-hour pe-
riod ending at 5 P M Monday-
Most of them were around
Thanh Hoa and two other ma-
jor coastal cities farther south.
Vinh and Dong Hoi.
In the ground war. there
were reports of the first with-
and Communist party chief parture from Moscow drawal of North Vietnamese
Leonid I. Brezhnev • Reports of the Soviet-Amer- troops., from south Vietnam
. Mostpapersiiront-paged pho- van summit agreements are the fenski;thezsmarteds the b8 Nixon and the empress followed
tographs of the signing in the major items of the press, radio , se wqsmopmnsago,, gin another car
Kremlin. . Accepting the W. the Prest
ond pthe,‛Communistparty ese divisions had pulled back dent said he hoped the talks he
dalyaPrapda,.Saidabove a into Cambodia from An LOC, had with Soviet leaders wouid
mounupe Wor Pss com- the besieged provinciai capital contribute 'o the peaceful fu-
ment on the just-cocluded 60 miles north Saigon Both ture of the thousands of Iranian
school chaldren he saw lining
his route. —
Nixon and the Shah stood in man predictrons about the war lective Service sakd,
the back of the car to acknowl-
edge cheers from the crowd ments
0 one bigquestion, sadkssin
thecurseimso hedy ■ Nenomsbommdananw.xew
lined Eisenhower amsncansdmdaia surtet meendy ket deferments or Nixon asked,
source and other main thoroughfares adviser said they got mom A whose inatial postponements of "Yes.” the child replied with
The enemy pressure on An to wave as the President and less what ihe’ext
the Shah drove by in Nixons hoped for "give or take ) A month under recently revised
cent." draft regulations.
Kissinger added that the All those in the prime group
summit had teen so carefully with number up to 50 no de-
prepared that each side knew ferred or exempted will be
"e taken aganst attacks by pretty much what to expect. He called under the new system of
urpan guerlas and other dis- said the two govemnments a uniform national call. Under
sieptiranans who were tokd agreed in advance: "Don’t lets this all eligible registrants with
' ■' a8hdad broadcasts to dis- surprise each other at the sum- the same tottery numbers are
pPE. thezyisit. Police lined the mit." issued orders to report in the
into three South Vietnamese po- _ ‘ s route into the city The Nixons’ flight from Mos- same time perod regardless ot dio operators who had talked
approvai of the Soviet-Amer sitions along the. highway two athere were heavy guards at cow to the Ukrainian capatal locations in the country.
mP2 “5 -oet-amen to 14 miles south of An Loc. ail Points on his itinerary was delayed nearty an hour The July probabiv
can Twenty South Vietnamese sol- Among the topics expected to when te s v " Itm. N si C. .0. . n PO
' In the name of an the work- diers were reported killed. 109 be discussed during the five the them etiner. wilibe the finst able to tahe ad-
ers of our plant I want to say wounded and as many as 10 ar- hours of talks between the two "ine Son. th ’ e ed f antage of a proposed rule per
• ■ K toue on the ground, mitting men to enlist in the Na-
nheyes"ite ed to another Hyu- tional Guard or Reserves after
snin 6-.. , j . receiving their induction notice.
-The’ iay, foreed Nixon to The current rule limits this to
PostPo ‘ unti today anappear- men entsang in the active duty him in lights some day," she
anceatkiev’stombotanun-cmics
known "A crid War I] soldier
In a toast at a dinner given
for him by Ukrainian officials,
Nixon said:
N
' I
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Bentley, Bill F. The Lawton Constitution (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 70, No. 217, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 30, 1972, newspaper, May 30, 1972; Lawton, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2037470/m1/4/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed July 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.