The Lawton Constitution (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 71, No. 94, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 7, 1972 Page: 10 of 36
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12 B THE LAWTON CONSTITUTION, Thursday, December 7, 1972
The Lawton Constitution
Washington
’The Honor Part Is Getting A Bit Sticky’
Report
Reverts To Old Self
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Effects Of Education
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Distrbutud by LA. Times Syndicete
MIRROR OF THE MIND
Solution To Waste?
Dennis The Menace
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1973 Economic Recovery
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Matter Of Fact
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Cold War
Politics Out
Andrew Tully
Vigilante Comeback Possible
Ernegt Cuneo
Midtown Manhattan
T'" si > "epgnneyan »"omwgpun*
Thoughts For Today
p.i
288
47
Bin F. Bentley
May B. Shepler
Shirley Shepler Bentley
Donald S. Bentley
Ted Ralston
Wm. H. Sullivan
Alfred Wallace
W. D. Hargraves
'i
*
1
-
Horseshoes have been
"lucky” ever since the English
imposed a tax on all metal, and
the American colonist consid-
ered himself fortunate to find a
still-usable shoe thrown by a
horse.
Friendship is the nearest thing we know to
religion. God is love, and to make religion
akin to friendship is simply to give it the
highest expression conceivable by man.—John
Ruskin, English author.
JOEYGIVE ITTOME! HE’s GETTIN’ awful Tam
ABOUT HIS SISTER saw' ^FAn*
another committed the crime for
which he was electrocuted. And
history tells us that vigilante
groups sometimes have substi-
tuted their own terror for that of
the criminal.
fd
vl
And Herod and Pilate became friends
with each other that very day, for before
this they had been at enmity with each
other.—Luke 23:12.
i ternational ideological competi-
» tions.
Can coaxing brighten
a moody child?
NO, not if the parents make a
big issue of the child’s emotion-
al state while trying to talk him
into a brighter mood. Extra ten-
derness and attention, however,
could do the trick. But the par-
ents must try to put themselves
in the child’s place. making an
effort "to get inside his mind.”
if they understand why the
youngster is moody, they may
be able to help him achieve an
attitude that reflects a-happier
mood.
Editor and publisher
Vice President
Secretary
Treasurer
Managing Editor
Advertising Director
Circulation Manager
Mecnanical Superintendent
Does anyone enjoy
being conned?
NO ONE really does, although
many a duped person will say,
"Well, you’ve got to hand it to
that son-of-a-gun, he was really
Hlibilaensunamarmmasadsummanlnamnmaleasznmommmmusazeqaussmsbsmommmmmmanaunzgazuinlan
Your Horoscope
By FRANCES DRAKE
Yesteryears
(From the Constitution Flles)
10 Years Ago
5 J
Pvbiished Evenings Monauy mrovgh Friday ot Each Week
at Third and A Avenue. Lawton. Okiahoma
Ned Shepler, Publisher
1911 - 1967
Member of the Okiohoma press Assoclation.
southern Newspaper Publishers Assoclatlon.
Americon Newapaper Publishers Association
DIAL (all departments) 353 0620
Member of Audit Bureau of Circulations
MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Assoclated Press Is entitieo excrustvely to the use tor re
publication of oil the local news printed In mis newspaper as wet
as all AP news dispatche.
No advertising will be acceptea from promotlon men or
fransients through local firm* or independentiy unlex: It
Is poid for In odvance or it eccompanled by written cuthort-
zg"lon of local business man quaranteeina pavment.
Any erroneous reflectlon on the cnaracter or any person, firm J*
corporation and ony misstatement of tact which may opDear in "his
newspooer will be gladly corracted upon 111 being brought to the
oftention of the management. _______________
*4UKe---
2-7
3
S
488
8
BI T I welcome both develop-
ments because they show an
awareness that the people are
sick unto death of the shilly-
shallying that has marked the
Republic's approach toward phy-
sical crime. We are up to our
ears in scholarly studies of the
problem. Please, not one more
ruddy study. Certainly even the
meanest intelligence among our
side-saddle politicians should be
capable of acknowledging that
tougher mandatory sentences,
with the strictest possible con-
trol over the parole system, are
needed to wipe the creeps off
our streets.
In his piece in the Nov 20 is-
sue of New York magazine,
black author Orde Coombs of-
fered a starting point for the
O
1 1
Look in Hie section in which your
birthday come* and find what your out-
look 11. according to the stars.
FOR FRIDAY, DECEMBER 1, 1972
ARIES — (Mor. 2) to Apr. 20> Some
unexpected situations possible so be
alert. Take time to think over all the
angles; then, In your usual competent
manner, sel out to correct what's undesir-
able.
TAURUS — (Apr, 21 to Moy 21) Get
facts and figures stroight before attempt-
ing new undertakings. Don’t stretch your
budget too tar. but do not heitat to
spend a bit in a truly sound venture.
GEMINI — (May 22 to June 21) An
Immediate follow-up on certain plans and
prelects recently begun will be important
now, since you have the "go" sign in oil
worthwhile endeavors
CANCER — (June 22 to July 23) You.
loo, now have more than a loir share
of opportunities through which you con
climb high on the ladder or worthwhile
attainment. Try out some new ideas,
LEO - (July 24 to Aug. 23> In all
endeavors, consider the long range view.
Don't put a lot at time and etfort Info
undertaking* which seem to spell im-
mediate success but have no lasting value.
Prudencel
VIRGO - (Aug. 24 to Sept 23) Flane-
tary influences now stimulate your im-
agination, ingenuity and incentive. This is
the time to reach tor top gaols.
LIBRA - (Sept. 24 to Oct. 23) If you
let things slide—a tendency now—results
will not be satisfactory. Read the signols
and rules early and keep your activity
at an even paca. Curb emotionalism.
smart.” Inside, however, the
victim resents being conned. He
can’t admit it to anyone else,
but most of all he tries to pass
it off as a joke to save his self-
esteem. But it is not the loss of
face that bothers the fall guy;
he just doesn’t relish the idea of
anyone being shrewder than he.
WASHINGTON - In a coun-
try under siege by murderers
and muggers who ply their
trades unmolested, two recent
developments suggest that the
plain citizen may be sufficiently
aroused to force meaningful
action by his reigning leaders.
A Gallup Poll shows that a
majority of 57 per cent of adults
18 and older favor the death
penalty for persons convicted of
murder. This is a spectacular
increase since last March, when
only 50 per cent voted for capi-
tal punishment. And a black
author proposed that black vigi-
lante groups be organized in
New York’s Harlem to protect
blacks against blacks.
Neither the death penalty nor
the vigilante may be the solu-
tion to the scandal of the 20th
century. Killing a convicted
murderer not only smacks of
playing God, it has a trouble-
some finality. We cannot bring
back to life the electric chair’s
victim if new evidence shows
Si
99
i
If there is one thing that all Americans of what-
ever political or ideological bent have shared in com-
mon, It is the belief that the road to personal success
and social equality is through education.
Up to now it has seemed to work. The good life be-
ing lived by the children and grandchildren of poor,
unskilled immigrants can surely be cited as proof of
the value of education. It is obvious that an employ-
er, given a choice between a high school dropout and
a person with a diploma, will hire the latter.
Where it hasn’t worked, the answer has been more
and “better” education. Educators continually come
up with innovations—from the New Math to "class-
rooms without walls” to programmed instruction to
educational vouchers—in pursuit of the goal of equali-
ty and competence for all.
We will this year spend a record $90.5 billion on
classrooms and instruction for 60.4 million students.
Public schools will employ 20,000 more teachers than
they did last yean
But belief in the ideal has received some bruising
blows of late. One of the most devastating is a report
called “Inequality: A Reassessment of the Effects of
Family and Schooling in America,” usually referred
to as the Jencks report.
The report is the result of a four-year review and
analysis of data from various students on the effects
of schooling by a team headed by Harvard professor
Christopher Jencks. Among its most surprising con-
clusions:
Eliminating the differences between elementary
schools would reduce the range of test scores among
sixth-graders by less than three per cent.
Economic success seems to be as dependent upon
such slippery factors as luck, timing and personality
as on I.Q., heredity, family background and the cog-
nitive skills measured by standardized tests.
In sum. the way to attack poverty and inequality,
say the authors, is not through educational institu-
tions but through economic institutions—by means of
what can only be called socialism. The primary bas-
is for judging an educational system should not be
how many employable adults it turns out, but wheth-
er students and teachers find it a satisfying place to
be and whether their lives are enriched, they say.
While the word “socialism” is guaranteed to turn
off noneducators as much as its other findings have
offended professionals, the Jencks report does provide
strong evidence that we may have expected too much
from education in one sense and too little in another.
“I suggest that the purpose of education is not to
improve competence but to improve desirable human
characteristics usually associated with the word "civ-
ilization’,” says Cleveland newspaper publisher Thom-
as Vail.
“Ethics, integrity, kindness, tolerance, human dig-
nity. respect for others. These are the things, it seems
to me, that education is driving it... Education is a
step toward tolerance and understanding, and that is
what civilization is all about.”
But to drive at these goals, education has to start
somewhere. Thus an even more primary purpose of
education would seem to be to inquire into how civili-
zation got where it is, to acquaint each new genera-
tion with the accumulated wisdom as well as the ac-
cumulated follies of mankind and to impart at least
a basic understanding of the structure of the physical
universe in which the human species has its existence.
For most of us, the grade school and high school
years are the only exposure to “what civilization is
all about.”
He
ty i 8
W7
WASHINGTON - Causing no
astonishment whatsoever to stu-
dents of Lincoln Steffens but
bringing pained surprise to a
considerable number of emin-
ently respectable citizens, a cor-
poration owned 56 per cent by
Rockefeller ('enter and 45 per
cent by Time, Ind., was reveal-
ed as the principal landlord of
premises wherein live sex shows
and coincident services were
available.
As is customary in Ameri-
can business and the Christian
conscience several sublessees at
arm's length from the landlord
effectively separated the owners
from any liability, legally as a
matter of right, and morally be-
cause the landlord ddn’t know
what was going on.
Some other leading and res-
pectable real estate owners in
New York City were on the list
As is usual in these matters,
the owners point to the difficulty
of cancelling legal leases, but
also as is usual in these mat-
ters, the owners’ suspicions
were not aroused by the terri-
fic rentals paid and the fright-
ful police reports on the use of
the buildings in the area.
This is about par for the
course*. In the early part of the
century, a few crusading clergy-
men put on a tremendous drive
against New York’s Tenderloin
district. As the veil at corrup-
tion was tom, it was revealed
that among the landowners were
prominent churches whose hor-
rified pastors had no idea their
trustees were collecting rents at
triple rate from the vice areas.
FOR MANY years, anti-Com-
munism was good politics. West
Germany’s fiercely anti-Soviet
Christian Democrats ruled from
1949 to 1966, and then in coali-
tion until 1969. Australia’s Liber-
al-Country Party coalition has
governed since 1949.
But this year, the roof fell in.
Out of power for three years,
West Germany’s CDU preci-
pitated the November, 1972 elec-
tions on the issue of opposition
to Chancellor Barndt’s Ostpoli-
tik (detente with Russia), and
they lost — their first sweep-
ing electoral defeat.
President Nixon’s Moscow-
Peking summitry is partly res-
ponsible for upsetting Australian
and German conservative ap-
plecarts. However, during the
two decades that Australian and
German conservatism has held
power on a substantially anti-
communist platform, socio-econ-
omic yeast has been at work in
both countries. Cold War politics
has bottled up the increasing
demands for change caused by
rising prosperity and destrati-
fying society. Domestic shifts
had to break through, and now
they have. The Cold War era is
over. Local politics must seek
a new base.
AT THE risk of too-sweep-
ing a generalization, the U.S.,
Britain, France, Japan, and
Canada went through a similar
ideological shift in the Sixties.
With anti-Communist militance
SCORPIO - (Oct. 24 to Nov 72) Stress
your personality now ond you am ride
aheqd with distinction. Toke setbacks in
stride, seeking still better ways to pro-
gress,
SAGITTARIUS - (Nov. 23 to Dec. 21)
You can make a bright new place for
yourself with a little more diligence. Use
a practical arena (or trying out decs
before putting them into effect
CAPRICORN - (Dec. 22 to Jon. 20)
influences fovoroble in part, but day will
require more effort, steady application
of your skills ond knowledge. Cooperation
with other* vital.
AQUARIUS - (Jan. 21 to Feb. 10) Fine
planetary influences encourage artistic
pursuit*, romance, domestic interests Day
spells action, determination, oggressive
neu. Plan wisely.
PISCES - (Feb. 20 to Mor 20) If you
happen to get a late start, pick up your
pace os you go along. Your line mind
and quick comprehension of oil situation*
should be stimulated now.
YOU BORN TODAY, endowed with a
fine intellect, excellent foresight and extra-
ordinarily good judgment, have a good
head for fingnces and could make a great
success in the business world, as on in-
vestment broker or as top executive In
any large corporation. You have a gift
for words and, because you can lislen,
too, would make on excellent diplomal,
statesman or journalist. Other fields which
would make excellent outlets tor your
talents. Writing, music, journallsm. Birth-
date of: Horace, Roman poet; Christina,
17th century Queen of Sweden; Jon Sibe-
lius, renowned Finnish composer; Hervey
Allen, author.
gg1fiil4
r /6: 63
“idiMk MOM
o
1m §
T Peace
.W/TH E
HowoR 8
PIMS (
/ V»' I
quest for true ethics. President
Elliot of Harvard once asked
him if he would consider teach-
ing a course there. Steffens
said he would. "And what would
be the benefit of such a course?"
asked President Elliot. "Why,”
said Steffens, "if close atten-
tion was paid, it would never
be possible for a Harvard man
to be a crook — without know-
ing it!” That ended that.
Jake Dantes, Steffens found
that the ultimate in compassion
came not with love but by un-
derstanding. "The progress of
man,” he told the bishop of San
Francisco, "can be traced in
the evolution of his scapegoats.
First, he blamed poor Eve. Then
they advanced to the present
point, where they both blame
the poor serpent. My contribu-
tion is that it wasn’t the fault
of the serpent — it was the
fault of the apple!”
Incidentally, Steffens believed
he found the final rule of eth-
ics: "Never use the truth
against the man who told it to
you; never use as an enemy
what you team as a friend."
In the meantime, for all of
the respectable kindlords of the
midtown hell-pit, as Damon Run-
yon would say, "What do you
want us to believe, whet you're
telling us or what we are look-
ing at?”
WE
Mo
Niju
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21)
Ee-UN
5003
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8
By JOHN CONWELL
Is marriage a shelter
for the shy?
NO; marriage is the means
for a man and a woman to ex-
press their love for each other.
If both happen to be extremely
shy, that doesn’t mean they
married to escape being tor-
tured because of their shyness.
It means that in spite of being
shy they are able to communi-
cate with each other and declare
their love. Many married cou-
ples regard marriage as the
ideal medium of expression be-
tween a man and a woman
whether they are shy or not.
I i •
a
108
X e a
{g 5
fl 3
__ / 410
---tHi 21X
TW
gd
& e3
Mrs. Clara Mahaffay, repre-
MOST MENTIONED in the renting women civilian employ-
publicizing of the financial es at Fort Sill, delivers 25
structure of the area are the handmade dresses to the Salva-
fabulously wealthy Riese broth- tion Army for Christmas giving
war that must be waged. He ers. The Rockefeller Center- - Larry Brantley, Sterling,
wrote: Time. Inc., landlord corporation ‘he members’ response at
.N on , Crim, can leased the property until 1983 the 4H Club Acheivement ban-
„tNo duestion ofcrime’canhe to a corporation controlled by quet • • * Kenneth Bridges “
raisedswithoutexpiorngsdope Irving and Murray Riese, who, speaker for the Breakfast Opt.
addictionumust quite simp in turn, rent to the operating mist Club.
be recognized that in the black ’ ., 9
M4[ Ppg . pome,, igp, corporation, presumably on a
8hettos0 our countryheroin much shorter lease considering 20 Years Ago
that has consumed the best and the.’hazards 0 such operations. Donald R. Hill completes Air
now threatens the rest. The ad- 1116 Rese brothers are finan- Force basic training at Lack-
dirts must be swept off the ciers 0 rising[Silhouette They land Air Force Base, Tex. . .
streets and placed in addiction are. lsted as the, owners of the Harold Carey announces that
villages in the deserts of the Childs Restaurant group and the the Elks Club will sponsor a
West. And the pushers of heroin undisclosed partners of Mayor charity ball to provide Christ-
must know that once they are Hndsays, recent high, com- mas baskets for community
caught they will spend the re- mand, Sid Davidoff and Richard needy ... Mr. and Mrs. Jack
mainder of their lives in the Aurelio,,in a restaurant hard McCarty are new managers of
dungeons we call prisons. by 21, called "Jimmy s the Airport Cafe ... Bea Lynn
Hypocrisy, said Voltaire, is Watters is honored with a
"IF THE liberals cry about the tribute vice pays to virtue, birthday party.
constitutional rights, chase them but tins wasn’t enough to get
back to Scardsale, for they do the Bourbons through the 19th 36 Years Ago
not quake every time they century and.it certainly won’t A 6%-inch snow, the most
saunter out of doors ... 1 2e-enough t0 get any Sstem snowfall in 12 year* and second
know that if this is done to ad- through the more educated 21st heaviest on record blankets Co-
dirts, it can be done to alcoho- century, manche County with continued
lies, to homosexuals and to all The fact of the matter is that flurries forecast . . . Head-
blacks. But we can only fight midtown Manhattan has des- lincs: "Work, Fight, Sacrifice.”
one battle at a time, and we eended to the moral level of the Is America's Theme On First
are fighting, now, for our lives." Old Tenderloin. It has a much Anniversary of "Day Of In-
Urging black vigilante groups higher number of crimes; and famy" . . . Marvin Crabtree.
in Harlem. Coombs noted that it 18 undeniable that some of sailor, visits in Cache with his
participants in discussions to the best names in town own the parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. L.
this end "feel that drugs have worst places. Steffens, who re- Crabtree.
created monsters out of their garded life as a wonderful com-
brothers. These brothers (are) edy, toughed as he noted that T A 1 ■ ■
hiding behind their weaknesses receipt of three tunes a normal In ( lahoma
and using the sorry history of rental never seemed to arouse
white brutality and sentimenta- the suspicions of trustees of If you’re looking for a real
lity as a shield . . ” -ong “80° oldtimer, try to find someone
Coombs has the courage to NEIepII, pee „ . who has never heard a kind
face a fact of life, to wit, the gMEv,K.HELENS, IT is a word spoken about the state
wholesale perpetration of crimes tact that most. Americans penitentiary.
avainst hlacks hv blacks Ped- haven t the slightest idea of
ants scribbling their studies, for their own part in.the structure. Governor Hall is supporting
pay, either ignore this fact or rhe average Stizen, raged the move for new national Dem-
excuse it on the grounds of pov- Mayo, -a Guardia,..asking to ocratic leadership. He doesn’t
erty or discrimination. Coombs get a traffic ticket fixed hasn't have much confidence in the
acknowledges root causes, but the.sightest conception of the party’s present MeGoverning
he places first things first, fact that he is trying to corrupt body
Blacks are being slaughtered hy the Bexch. Nor does he think
blacks; ergo, stop the slaughter. Wo ask that if a magistrate will It may be comforting to
fix a ticket for him what he „ .. . “ .
SIRFLY THF statistics must wil do for the tinhorn politi- Oklahoma not
SURELY, THE statistics must cian who got him tris job " have a bit of trouble with peo-
be frightening enough to move * — 12.0 ",
even the most detached academ- Steffens penetrated deep into Ple violating laws allowing liq-
ic expert on crime. Among America's consciousness in his uor by the drink,
blacks between 15 and 25 years
of age, murder is the second
ranking cause of death, and its
ranking is now being threaten-
ed by death from drug over-
dose. No amount of wailing
about poverty and white bigo-
try will save those human be-
ings from an early grave.
Thus, the problem has noth-
ing to do with the white-black
issue. Muggers, rapists, dope
pushers and murderers are
neither black nor white; they
are muggers, rapists, dope
pushers and murderers. If our
politicians cannot or will not
find some means to quarantine
them, preferably for the rest of
their lives, the people will. Orde
Coombs’ talk of vigilantes is not
only a warning to the criminals
who lay siege to our cities. It
says that those under siege are
prepared to go outside the law
to survive.
• • •
There’s seldom a silver lining without a dark cloud a thing of the past, conservative
behind it. parties in these countries have
Not the least of the problems associated with adopted center-right positions
atomic energy, which we once thought would solve based more on domestic social
mankind's energy needs for all time, is bow to dis- issues, plus a responsible worid
pose of highly dangerous atomic waste. role (as. opposed, to Cold War
The method currently used today is the deep under- sahrezrattling).Meanhile,.the
ground burial of radioactive by-products ranging -eftlbera side in the U.S
from depleted uranium cores to contaminated goves. Eritain, Canada,
Buttheradioactivityomay take hundreds or thousands pastin " mbcovemn
ofyearst decompose ulevels, and critics Democrats, Britain's Labour
worry about would happen if a burial site were Party, the New Democratic Par-
fractured by an earthquake ty of Canada (dragging Tru-
A German engineer has come up with a bold idea— deau’s Liberals with it), the
firing the wastes into that great big nuclear furnace anti-Gaullists, and Japanese So-
we call the sun. cialists—have swung too far to
It would be costly, he admits, but so is burial. The the Left, dallying with radical-
beauty part is that the radioactivity of the wastes ism at home and isolationism
could be utilized, under the right circumstances, to abroad.
power the rockets that carry them. Collapsing Cold War politics
in Australasia and Mitteleuropa
suggest more than a shift in
internal political dynamics. To
The nation’s 1,000 largest manufacturers plan big- be sure, the friendlier-to-China
ger capital investment outlays, which points to a Labour Party victories in Aus-
strong economic recovery in 1973. The firms set aside tralia and New Zealand, plus
$7.1 billion in the third quarter for new plant and the friendher-to-Russia triumph
equipment, 20 6 per cent above the same period last of Brandt's Ostpolitik in Ger-
year. many, are both entirely com-
patible with President Nixon’s
foreign policy. But even so,
there is no denying that the
United Stales has lost miles of
international ground since the
days when Der Alte Konrad
Adenauer teamed up with Sec-
retary of State John Foster Dul-
les, and conservative Prime
Ministers sent Australian troops
to fight with the U.S. from
i Chosen to Khe Sanh. The arti-
Communist era was America's
world heyday, and it's over. A
new order is emerging in in-
By KEVIN P. PHILLIPS
WASHINGTON - Anti-Com-
munism may still be true-blue
as a philosophy, but it is virt-
ually defunct as the keystone of
domestic conservative politics in
any major country in the
world. Such a conclusion is un-
avoidable in light of West Ger-
man Chancellor Willy Brandt’s
November 23 landslide, the No-
vember 25 Labor Party upset
in New Zealand, and the in-
glorious December 2 showing of
Australia’s liberal and Country
Party (conservative) coalition,
in office since 1949.
Simply put, conservative part-
ies can no longer premise their
voter appeal on Cold War era
anti-Communism. West Ger-
many’s CDU (Christian Demo-
cratic Union) and Australia’s
Liberal-Country Party coalition
were just about the only impor-
tant remaining examples of this
reliance, and their defeats must
be counted as a kind of "last
hurrah.”
In the wake of World War
Two, our ANZUS Pact allies,
Australia and New Zealand, and
later post-1949 Germany, be-
came linchpins of America’s
anti-Communist, Cold-War alli-
ance. Their concerns were na-
tural enough: Germany was
Russia's traditional foe, and
local politics in several German
lands (states) was greatly sway-
ed by bitterly anti-Communist
refugees from the East; Austra-
lia was democracy's World War
Two bastion in the Far East, a
white stronghold in the shadow
of China’s teeming Communist
masses, the only major white
nation to send troops to fight
alongside the U.S. in both Korea
and Vietnam; New Zealand is
Australia’s nearby ally, a little
bit of Britain in the South Paci-
fic, theonly other white coun-
try to send soldiers to Vietnam.
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Bentley, Bill F. The Lawton Constitution (Lawton, Okla.), Vol. 71, No. 94, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 7, 1972, newspaper, December 7, 1972; Lawton, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2037738/m1/10/?q=food+rule+for+unt+students: accessed June 30, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.