The Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 254, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 24, 1969 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE TWO — Sapulpo (Oklo ) Herald, Tuesday, June 24, 1969
Justice Department To
File ITT Antitrust Suit
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Justice Department plans to
tile its second antitrust suit in
as many months against
International Telephone and
Telegraph Corp. (ITT), this
time to block what may be the
biggest merger ever proposed—
a union between ITT and the
Hartford Fire Insurance Corp.
Both ITT, the nation’s 11th
largest industrial business in
terms of sales, and Hartford,
the sixth largest insurance
firm, said they planned to go
ahead with the merger. ITT is
parent company of such firms
as the Sheraton Hotel chain and
Avis Rent-A-Car.
The announced plan is part of
the Nixon administration's con-
tinuing crackdown on “con-
glomerates" — huge corporate
amalgams which rapidly have
been swallowing up smaller
firms, often in unrelated fields.
Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell
previously said the government
could challenge any merger
involving the nation’s top 200
firms or leaders in individual
industries.
ITT said it would ‘ move contended could shut out
forward” with its plans, de- competition,
pending on how Hartford The department moved
stockholders voted on the against two other giant firms
proposal. The insurance firm earlier this month and forced
said its directors would be both to back down. U.S. Steel
asked to approve such a Corp., the nation’s 10th largest
stockholders vote “as soon as industry, agreed to drop Its
practical."
In addition, ITT said the
grounds for the suit "appear to
be novel and untried, without
legislative mandate from Con-
gress and unsactioned by
previous court cases."
“The proposed litigation ap-
pears to be part of the
announced effort of the Justice
Department regardless of the
fact that there is no discernable
Commitment
Law Pondered
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen-
ate Republican Leader Everett
M. Dirksen is seeking to
narrow the scope of a
adverse impact on compel- resolutlon demanding thaf Con-
tion,” ITT said.
The department
gress approve, in advance, all
... . „ Vietnam-type U.S, commit-
specify on which grounds the men,s
did not
suit would be brought, but it
was believed it would involve
reciprocal agreements — ar-
rangements in which the
various firms buy each others
services and products, a
situation the government has
m
m
m
iii
The Worry
Clinic
By George W
CRANE
Ph D M D
I
.V.V
:W:
•V.V
!
i
$ss
CASE K-535: Bill D., aged
30, is an attractive lawyer.
“Dr. Crane," he began, “I
am in a dilemma.
Despite President Nixon’s
opposition to any resolution,
there is widespread support in
the Senate for such a proposal.
With Dirksen handling the
backstage arrangements, Re-
publicans on the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee plan to
introduce a substitute resolu-
tion. That one would limit prior
congressional approval to
"armed forces where hostilities
are involved" unless there is a
threat to the national security,
to repel an attack, or for the
protection of U.S. citizens or
property.
It was considered unlikely the
Senate would reach a final vote
on the commitment resolution.
But Senate Democratic Leader
Mike Mansfield said he hopes
the Senate would dispose of the
around her, even if he had to do
so by deliberate will power.
And at an opportune time, he
was to kiss her.
"But, Dr. Crane," he protested ______________,______
I have ,,ate<! many charming miserably, "1 don’t think I can resolution no later than Thurs-
girls ever since high school but do jj. j.d jee| as foolish and day.
have never proposed to any of self-conscious as if I were kiss- The resolution as approved by
ing my mother!" the Foreign Relations Commit-
My former girl friends have gU( j insisted that Cupid’s tee earlier this year would
married and many have families chemistry would soon change request that Congress take
by now.
“So I have been dating a girl
his outlook.
’’Bill," I advised, "be sure
next door whom I have known y^, proiong your kiss for at
since kindergarten.
"She is beautiful, athletic and
with high ideals.
least 10 seconds.
"For you will experience a
unique change in your attitude
But sbe seems like a sister af(er the first 3 seconds.
to me, though in all other “That ‘sister’ image witll _ ______ ___
respects shed make a perfect vanish by then and you’ll begin to Foreign Relations Committee,
affirmative action before any
commitment or promise of a
commitment could be made to
a foreign power. Dirksen
warned that such a resolution
"covers the whole field.”
Sen. John Sherman Cooper,
R-Ky., a member of the
wife.
My parents are crazy about
react to her as a sweetheart.’
And that is true, for our bodily
her, too. But 1 feel like a fool chemistry is constructed so that
when I consider trying to kiss
her, for she doesn’t give me
any romantic chills and thrills.
“Would It be wrong for me to
marry her, for I think she would
accept my proposal?"
CUPID’S CHEMISTRY
Because this girl was regarded
almost as a member of Bill’s
family, she subconsciously be-
came linked with the usual sister-
taboo.
For even in early childhood,
boys learn tht they must not
grow romantic about their
mothers and sisters.
But this incest taboo carries
over to other young women with
whom boys may grow up and
who are regarded as such close
female pals that they arouse
that sister-taboo.
Ideally, it would be far better
if more men picked women by
using cold logic instead of the
emotional infatution that hypno-
tizes them and produces butter-
flies in their tummy.
So I urged Bill to take this
girl to a drive-in movie.
Then he was to slip his arm
when we go through the proper
motions, we’ll soon begin to feel
the corresponding emotions.
Same goes for electricity. Re-
gardless ol whether you may feel
foolish in doing it. If you merely
twirl a wire in your hands, an
electrical current will immedia-
tely flow through that wire.
For when you cut these
invisible lines of magnetic force
that God has caused to flow
between the North and South
Poles, then an electrical current
is produced in the wire.
Physical contact between male
and female causes a similar
erotic current to start flowing.
So Bill promised faithfully he'd
give this cute neighbor girl a
10-second kiss, despite his
qualms.
has filed a substitute resolution
of his own that would also limit
the commitment of troops in
cases of hostility but does not
include the exemption in the
Dirksen proposal.
None of the resolutions, if
adopted would have any binding
effect on the President.
Asst. Democratic Leader
Edward M. Kennedy said "the
administration takes these for
what they want.”
Newsweek
Threatened
SAIGON (UPI)-The South
Vietnamese government has
warned the Saigon bureau
manager of Newsweek maga-
zine measures might be taken
ad I’ll explain tomorrow. ron,lnues ,0 ,sh
(Always write to Dr. Crane wh,*' ‘he government considers
in care of Sapulpa Herald, en- “^orable articles,
closing a long stamped, ad- The w!f Jfs“ed *"
dressed envelope and 20 cents PerS0" ,0„Ma>'n»r,d
to cover typing and printing costs T.r“ V“ Rector of the
cabinet of the Saigon govern-
when you send for one of his
booklets.)
Nervei Just Nerves . . .
"WHIPLASH NECK INJURY'"
Bv Dr W. B Gallagher, Sr
The neck is supporied by a column of seven bones
called vertebrae bound to each other by muscles and
igamenls The neck is highly flexible and therefore sub-
ject to injuries of (he type now known as whiplash While
silting in an automobile the portion of Ihe body below
the neck has some support from the seat back The
unsupported and highly flexible neck is often ' snapped"
when an automobile is hit in the rear by another car
The bones in Ihe neck may be jarred out on the
normal positior and cause pressure and irritation on the
nerves in that area Pain stiffness and limitation of
movement of ihe neck may result The chiropractic
physcial realigns the bones in the neck thereby removing
this irritation which is a basic cause of the discomfort
Many months of unnecessary suffering can be
avoided bv arranging for a chiropractic examination as
soon as possible
CALL TODAY FOR AN APPOINTMENT FOR A
CONSULTATION TO SEE IF YOURS IS A CHIRO-
PRACTIC CASE
Sapulpa — Tulsa Rd (Hiway 64) BA 4-6426
ment Information Ministry.
Informed sources said the
Information Ministry official
Indicated the measures might
Include banning Ihe magazine
for a period of time or refusing
to extend the visas of all or
some of the Newsweek staff
members in Saigon.
This latter measure would
amount to an expulsion of staff
members from South Vietnam.
The Newsweek bureau chief
was summoned to the Informa-
tion Ministry at about 5 p.m.
Monday. He said he had no
comment on the government
warning.
Informed sources disclosed
Parker was told that a number
of recent Newsweek articles
were viewed with concern by
the Saigon government.
The sources said Ptiuo urged
Parker to change his maga-
zine’s approach to reporting the
news in South Vietnam.
Three ships were Involved in
the Boston Tea Party, the Elea-
nor, the Beaver and the Dart-
mouth.
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reciprocal purchase arrange-
ments when a suit was filed,
and First National City Corp.,
parent firm of First National
City Bank of New York, called
off a proposed merger with
Chubb Corp., American agent
for a British Insurance group,
when it was similarly threa-
tened.
NASA Begins
Countdown
Rehearsal
CAPE KENNEDY (UH>-
Launch crews load the Saturn a
booster rocket with 209.000
gallons of ftiel today to prepare
for its last big test for the
Apollo 11 moon landing mission.
Fueling the first stage of the
Saturn with high grade kero-
sene propellant should take all
morning. The dress rehearsal
countdown is scheduled to begin
at midnight Thursday and will
put the booster and its Apollo
spacecraft payload through
every launch day operation
except engine ignition.
Astronauts Neil A. Arm-
strong, Michael Collins and
Edwin E. Aldrin are scheduled
to ride the Saturn into space
July 16 on a mission that
includes a lunar landing July
20.
The job is one of the most
hazardous in readying the
spacecraft tor flight. It involves
filling tanks with chemicals so
corrosive the men handling
them wear bulky protective
suits and masks.
The tedious spacecraft fueling
ran almost a day behind and
pushed back the start of the
full countdown rehearsal from
Wednesday to Thursday mid-
night.
The astronauts spent most of
Monday practicing in space-
craft simulators and planned to
keep this up for the rest of the
week. Today, they concentrated
on the re-entry phase at the end
jf their eight-day flight.
Farm Fund
Foes Lose
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A
House-proposed limit of $20,000
on federal payments to farmers
suffered a setback In a Senate
appropriations subcommittee
but it is considered certain to
surface again.
The House last month voted
224-162 to impose an annual
ceiling on federal payments to
any farm, ignoring warnings by
administration and farm bloc
leaders that this would prove to
be a penny-wise, pound-foolish
economy.
The limitation was attached
to the $6.6 billion appropriation
bill for the Agriculture Depart-
ment for the fiscal year
starting July 1.
Proponents anticipate a brisk
fight when the appropriation
bill reaches the senate floor.
Public criticism of the farm
program, under which some big
operators are paid $1 millionor
more a year, was increased.
Inquiry Set
Into Garland
Death Cause
LONDON (UPI) - Patholo-
gists investigating Judy Gar-
land’s death ran more laborato-
ry tests today in efforts to
determine whether in fact an
overdose of sleeping pills killed
her.
Scotland Yard sources said
an autopsy performed Monday
revealed evidence of an excess
of sleep-inducing drugs in the
star’s system. Some pills were
found in the two-room home
where she was found dead
Sunday.
“It is absolutely impossible to
say if such an overdose was
either accidental or otherwise,"
a Scotland Yard source said.
Further lab tests on her blood
and some organs were ordered.
Westminster Coroner Gavin
Thurston called an inquiry for
Wednesday to hear testimony,
the autopsy report and the
laboratory findings to legally
affix the cause of the 47-year-
old singer-actress’s death.
Mickey beans, her fifth
husband, was a certain witness,
whether in person or by sworn
statement, for it was he who
spent her final hours with the
singer and found her dead at 11
a.m. Sunday.
Friends described Miss Gar-
land on her last day as
despressed in the early morning
and then gay, laughing and
joking, in the evening over
dinner in the Deans home.
Scotland Yard refused to
comment on newspaper reports
that the pills found in her home
were 50 sleeping tablets out of
a bottle of 100 she had bought
Saturday. The Yard said the
tablets were not found next to
the body.
Plans got under way to ship
the body to New York, probably
early Thursday. There, it will
be put on public display at the
Frank Campbell Funeral Home,
with a private funeral and
burial on Friday.
A London doctor who treated
Miss Garland in her frequent
bouts with drugs and alcohol,
Philip Lebon, had said she
suffered from cirrhosis of the
liver— an incurable disease that
affects alcoholics.
"She was living on borrowed
time,” he said.
Laird Case Weaker
Opponents Claim
WASHINGTON (UPI)- Sen-
ate opponents of the Safeguard
ABM system say Defense
Secretary Melvin R. Laird has
weakened his case for the
multibillion dollar program by
revising his description of the
Soviet Union’s drive for a first-
strike nuclear capability.
After nearly five hours of
combat Monday with Laird and
CIA Director Richard C.
Helms, members of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee
also contended they had esta-
Wished disagreement in the
intelligence community over
Russia's offensive strategy.
They said Helms told them the
National Intelligence Board,
representing all U.S. intel-
ligence-gathering agencies, had
not made any judgment yet on
the extent of the Soviet threat.
But Laird insisted there was
"no question as tar as the facts
are concerned ... no question
about interpretation” between
him and Helms on Soviet
capacities.
Congressional action on the
controversial ABM system
shifted today to the friendlier
climes of the Senate Armed
Services Committee, which is
studying a $23 billion military
procurement bill Including $794
million for the Safeguard
program.
Laird testified three months
ago the Soviet Union was
"going for a first-strike capabi-
lity—there was no question
about that" It is to ward off
such a strike Nixon has
proposed the Safeguard system.
J. William Fulbright, chair-
man of the Senate Foreign
Relations Committee, said Mon-
day after he and other
committee members questioned
Laird behind closed doors that
the defense secretary’s view of
Soviet tactics had changed
considerably.
He said Laird's warning last
March was generally taken to
mean the Soviets were seeking
the means to launch a surprise
attack that would so cripple
U.S. defenses that meaningful
retaliation would be impossible.
On Monday, however, the
Arkansas Democrat said
Laird’s "Interpretation of just
what constitutes a first-strike
capability was much narrower
and more restricted than it was
originally.”
Retiring Chief Justice
Has Chance To Speak-Out
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Pres-
ident Nixon’s highly unusual
appearance before the Supreme
Court Monday gave Earl
Warren a chance to say some
things that probably had been
on his mind for sometime.
The retiring chief justice’s
response to Nixon’s eulogy
contained thoughts which he
perhaps would like to have
voiced during the 1968 presiden-
tial campaign.
In those weeks Nixon was
saying recent Supreme Court
decisions had given "a green
light” to people bent on a life of
crime. He was promising to fill
court vacancies with "strict
constructionists" of the Consti-
tution.
Praises Dignity
But Monday the President
praised Warren's "dignity, ex-
ample and fairness" and said
he has "helped keep America
on the path of continuity and
change which is so essential for
our progress."
In reply Warren reminded the
Nixon did not explain why he
chose to step over the barrier
Monday. Furthermore, political
enmity between him and
W arren had dated back to 1952,
when Nixon worked for Dwight
L. Eisenhower in California’s
Republican convention delega-
tion headed by Warren, the
state’s governor.
Offices Are Similar
As Warren relinquished his
seat to Burger, he told the
President:
"I cannot escape the feeling
that in one sense, at least, this
court is similar to your own
great office and that is that so
many times it speaks the last
word in great governmental
affairs. The responsibility of
speaking the last word in great
governmental affairs. The re-
sponsibility of speaking the last
word for not only 200 million
people but for those who follow
us is a very awesome
responsibility.
"... W> do not always agree.
1 hope the court will never
Soviet-Trained General
Heads Egypt's Air Force
By United Press Intern.itional
President Gamal Abdel Nas-
ser today fired Egypt’s air
force commander and replaced
him with a Soviet-trained
general, the fourth man as-
signed to lead the air force
since it was destroyed in the
1967 war.
The decree announcing the
change of command was made
public early today as an
intensive artillery duel was
reported in progress across the
Suez Canal.
Two ranking Egyptian aides
to Nasser also readied them-
selves for imminent trips to
Moscow and Paris, to bid for
further support in the confron-
tation wth Israel from the
Kremlin and the new govern-
ment of President Georges
iJompido4i.
The Cairo decree said Nasser
dismissed Maj. Gen. Mustafa
Shalabi el Henawi for unstated
reasons and appointed Maj.
Gen. Aly Mustafa Baghdadi, 47,
to replace him as commanding
general of the air force.
Reports on the latest round of
canal fighting came first from
Tel Aviv and said Israeli
artillery was continuing barra-
ges of Egyptian west bank
positions that had begun at 5:30
p.m. Monday. That report, just
after midnight, said one Israeli
soldier had been wounded and
did not pinpoint the locale of
the fighting by canal sector.
Former Egyptian Premier
Aly Sabry was to leave today
for Moscow where he will
deliver a message of undis-
closed content from Nasser to
the Soviet leadership. Another
member of Egypt’s supreme
executive committee, Hussein
el Shafei, was to leave within a
few days for Paris on a similar
mission.
agree on all things. If it ever
agreed on all things, 1 am sure
that its virility will have been
sapped because it is composed
of nine independent men who
have no one to be responsible to
except our own consciences."
President the court has no
constituency and serves no
majority or minority.
“We serve only the public
interest as we see it, guided
only by the Constitution and our
own consciences," Warren said
in a mild tone.
No one could think of a time
when a president has addressed
the Supreme Court. Normally
the contact between the judicial
and executive branches is
confined to the law suits that
come before the high tribunal
and an annual reception for
Supreme Court justices at the
White House. Nixon himself
told newsmen after appointing
Warren E. Burger as Warren’s
successor that he believed a
president and a justice should
keep their distance.
NOT SIM RE
GLASGOW, Scotland (UPI)—
British Postmaster General
John Stonebouse tried to deliver
the mall Monday— wllli mixed
results.
Accompanying Postman Wil-
lie McBride and rarryt-Tg » 25-
pound bag of mail. Stone house
managed to drop a pile of
letters In the street, deliver one
letter to the wrong address, and
In tossing a parcel to a sorting
bln, missed by yards.
’’Let me tell you, It Is not as
simple as It looks," he said.
Wednesday, June 25
B.P.O.E. Elks Stag Dinner
6:30 P. M.
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Barbecued Ribs
Good Food and Gomel
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Livermore, Edward K. The Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 54, No. 254, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 24, 1969, newspaper, June 24, 1969; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1490309/m1/2/: accessed April 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.