Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 59, No. 238, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 19, 1973 Page: 2 of 8
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PAGE TWO—Sapulpa itikla. i Herald. Tuesday. June II. 1S7J
Watergate Hearing Delayed
110
Cause Unknown
In OC Violence
As Effect On Summit Feared
WASHINGTON (UPIl - The Senate
Watergate Committee, fearing its televised
probe of the scandal may endanger the U.S.-
Soviet summit, has postponed its public
hearings until next week
In another development. U S. District Court
Judge John J. Sirica granted an urgent"
request from special Watergate Prosecutor
Archibald Cox for a hearing this morning on a
motion related to the case Cox met privately
with Sirica for 20 minutes Monday, but would
not publicly discuss his motion. Two sources
< lose to the case said the hear mg would not
deal with indictments
Cox also told reporters he was studying
whether it would be legally possible to sub-
poena the President to appear before the
Watergate grand jury There was a
“possibility" Nixon would be subpoenaed.
Cox said
“Whether it would be the best way to pursue
the investigation and whether we would have
any legal grounds are both open questions,"
he said
Cox Study mg Hold ot Questions
Cox said he also was studying, together
with “a whole host of legal questions."
whether it would be passible to indict a
President in advance of impeachment
proceedings, which are initiated by the
House
Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield
took the miUative Monday in persuading the
Senate panel to put off until next Tuesday the
hearings it had planned to call back into
session today
Mansfield argued a delay would help bring
about the "most favorable condition pos-
sible" for negotiations under way between
I'resident Nixon and Soviet leader l«omd I.
Brezhnev.
The committee voted 6-1 for the post-
ponement after receiving a letter asking for
the delay signed by both Mansfield and
Republican Senate leader Hugh Scott.
Committee's Plans
The committee had planned to call as a
witness today John W Dean III, the White
House counsel Nixon fired in April. Dean is
expected to implicate high former ad-
ministration aides in the bugging of
Democratic national headquarters and the
subsequent coverup He also reportedly is
prepared to testify he assumed that Nixon
knew of the cover-up within weeks of the June
17, 1972, break-in
(The New York Times and syndicated
columnist Jack Anderson reported today that
Dean borrowed $4,000 from 1972 Republican
campaign funds to finance his wedding and
honeymoon last October. The Times said he
paid back the money The Times also said
Dean put $14,000 from campaign funds into a
special trust account not in fus own name.
That money reportedly was left over from a
$22,000 fund for buying newspaper ad-
vertising expressing support for President
Nixon’s Indochina War policies, i
In the House, a small group of members
have been trying to discuss on the floor the
possibility of impeaching Nixon. They
followed the Senate committee's lead and
postponed such a scheduled discussion Rep
Paul N. McCloskey, RCalif., one of the
discussion group, said it would be "inap-
propriate with Mr Brezhnev here to
proceed."
In other Watergate developments:
—The White House denied a Washington
Post report that quoted White House and
other government sources that Nixon was
prepared to place the blame for Watergate on
fus former chief advisers. H R Haldeman
and John D. Ehrlichman Deputy Press
Secretary Gerald L Warren said “the
anonymous White House sources quoted in
(thel Washington Post do not have access to
the facts and do not speak authoritatively
either for the President or members of the
White House staff working on Watergate
matters."
-Cox appointed Henry S. Ruth Jr., 42,
director of the Mayor's Criminal Justice
C oordinating Council of New York City, his
deputy special prosecutor
—Ervin said that White House counsel
l^onard Garment had assured his committee
that the doctrines of executive privilege and
the lawyer-client relationship would not be
involved in Dean's testimony. Sam Dash, the
committee's chief counsel, said this meant
that Dean “can testify about any con-
versation he had with the President or
anybody else.”
or-
was
;; *
OKMHOMA CITY (UPIl- W Norton. 24, was shot to death
Police said today they had found when he answered his door and
no reason for a rash of violence his father, Edward I.. Norton, SO,
that left one person dead and was seriously wounded The
four hospitalized Sunday night elder Norton was listed In
and early Monday serious condition today at
The Federal Bureau of Inves- University Hospital
tigation also assigned agents to Also listed as serious at Uni-
versity Hospital was Ryan Cald-
well. 22. who was shot when a
man asked to use his telephone
Patricia June Hall. 15, was cri-
tically wounded by gunfire while
riding in a car on a city street
about 1 a m Monday
The other victim, Kenneth
Hudson. 24. was in satisfactory
condition after surgery He was
slashed with a machete when he
stopped to help several blacks
who appeared to be having car
trouble
Police said all the victims
were white and all the assailants
were black
Firebombs damaged a small
grocery store, inflicted an esti-
mated $1,100 damage to North-
east High School, slightly dam-
aged the National Cowboy Hall
of Fame and destroyed a C. R.
Anthony store
determined whether some
ganized extremist group"
attempting to disrupt the com-
munity.
No other incidents of violence
were reported Monday night
Authorities would make no
immediate link between the
violent incidents and a con-
frontation Sunday between
police and members of the Black
Muslims over the arrest of two
Muslim members
“Any connection would be
•uire speculation," Sgt. Russ
Rigsby said
The two were arrested on sus-
picion of assault and battery of a
police officer after a disturbance
at a musical program at a high
school.
later Sunday one person was
killed, four others injured, and
four buildings set on fire Robert
Reds Haven't Changed,Thieu Warns
C Al/VkM I TTDTt nnet II KAoer at ivnc nnl Ko/'OIICU gU'Pnf (Ivor fho (*i fv Tho flvnvor Q/XIltK V'lotnom TomnoPotllPAc . .m A ...
Fink Week Flock Ready
SAIGON (UPI) - President
Nguyen Van Thieu today w arned
the world not to be lulled by
Communist appeals for peace
and charged the Communist
scheme is still to take over South
Vietnam by force.”
Speaking at annual Armed
Forces Day festivities, Thieu
told an estimated 50,000 onlook
ers in downtown Saigon: “In the
past 18 years it was not because
of their peace and good will and
national love that the Com-
munists spoke of stopping the
fighting. And they will never
give up their scheme to reinvade
our South."
At the end of his nine-minute
speech, dozens of South Viet-
namese helicopters, cargo
planes and fighter-bombers
swept over the city The flyover
was followed by a parade
featuring about 20.000 members
of the armed forces who mar-
ched past Thieu, cabinet of-
ficials and foreign diplomats on
the reviewing stand.
It was a perfect day for the
parade, which featured a good
deal of the $5 billion in U.S.
military equipment owned by
South Vietnam. Temperatures
were mild and, although it is the
monsoon season in South
Vietnam, the skies were cloud-
less.
Because of the holiday there
was no morning military news
"The Communist scheme is
still to take over South Vietnam
by force," he said “Last June 13
the cease-fire was once again
pledged by the Communists but
in past days they have still
continued to seriously violate it.
briefing on Communist ceasefire
violations but Thieu indicated This is enough to confirm that
there had been no real let-up in ft** Communists' intention is not
the fighting. 10 restore peace by a temperate
Illicit Methadone Use On Rise
WASHINGTON i UPI) - Illicit
use of methadone, an addictive
drug used as a treatment sub-
stitute for heroin, has more than
doubled since last September,
the government's chief narcotics
enforcement officer told
Congress Monday
John E. Ingersoll, director of
the Bureau of Narcotics and
Dangerous Drugs i BNDD), said
methadone use is quickiy ap-
proaching marijuana and heroin
as a major part of the illegal
drug traffic in the United States.
He told a House Commerce
subcommittee he favored
proposals to give the govern-
ment more authority in dealing
with the methadone traffic
"Of approximately 325 sub-
stances on which data are
collected." Ingersoll testified,
"methadone consistently ranks
in the top 10 in frequency of
reported incidents."
He said marijuana and heroin
continued to lead the list.
"Data for an eight-month
period ending in April. 1973, the
more current reporting month,
show that the incidents involving
methadone constitute a major
portion of all narcotic reports,"
he said
Ingersoll said BNDD’s Drug
Abuse Warning Network
(DAWN i collected 822 incidents
of heroin usage from 13 sample
pouits in Apr*!, compared to 643
in September.
It cited 200 illicit methadone
incidents in Aoril, compared
with only 93 last September
Part of the problem. Ingersoll
said, was that during the past 30
months the number of addicts ingersoll said methadone is
enrolled in methadone main- Averted to illicit use by un-
programs has grown scrupulous practitioners, neg-
.. . mm t^w““nd 10 “ ligence or ignorance by legiti-
high as 70.000 and the number of mate practitioners, and by in-
practitioners, or dispensers, dividual patients in the
rum several dozen to several programs selling their dosage to
others.
tenance
from several
hundred
White House Role Questioned
In Probe Of My Lai Massacre
THESE PEOPLE
GOT WELL
’Low Back Pains”
A thirty
one year
old man
made an
appointment
at tin
Ga'lioher
Chirif-ractic
Clinic in
order to
find tne
cause of
severe low
back pains
it seemed
he had been suffering off and on
with back trouble for several
years A spinal analysis and
spinal »-rays revealed nerve
interference along his spine
This poor fellow had to be helped
into the clinic but was able to
walk oul by himself alter the
first adfustment And after iust
a few more treatrr. f hl4 6iCk
has never given him any further
problems Your pams may be
due to pinched nerves along
your spine Remember,
chiropractic physicians
specialize m the correction of
nerve interference along the
spine Investigate you'll be
glad you did and so win your
back
WASHINGTON (UPIl - At-
torneys attempting to overturn
the conviction of Lt. William L.
( alley Jr. have asked a military
court to probe the role the White
House played in investigating
the My tai massacre.
The attorneys filed a motion
Monday with the U.S. Court of
Military Appeals asking it to
order the production of inter-
views, wiretaps, logs and other
records collected by two former
White House aides who have
been mentioned in the Water-
gate case.
The lawyers cited published
reports that former New York
policeman John J. Caulfield and
an associate, Anthony F.
Ulasewicz, interviewed My Lai
participants on behalf of the
White House
Caulfield and Ulasewicz
worked on undercover projects
for the White House for three
Or w B
Gallagher, Sr
THE SAPULPA HERALD
An independent Newspaper
established Sept 1, l*u and
published at 16 South Park,
Sapulpa. Oklahoma (4066 every
afternoon except Saturday and
Sunday morning Second Class
Postage Paid at Sapulpa,
Oklahoma Postmaster send 3576
to Box 1370. Sapulpa. Oklahoma
74066
Subscription Rates
By Carrier week S 50, mo S 1 »5
By Mail Creek Co Sla 35
Elsewhere in Okla $21 ®
Out of State $24 60
MEETS PICKET LINE
LONG BEACH, Calif (UPI i —
When Secretary of labor Peter
Brennan showed up Monday to
give a speech to the National
Retail Merchants Council
aboard the permanently docked
Queen Mary, he met a picket
line.
The Marine Cooks and
Stewards Union is on strike
against the shipboard re-
staurants
“I didn't want to aggravate
the situation, even though it's
not in my jurisdiction,’' said
Brennan, a labor leader before
he joined the government, so he
backed off and delivered the
speech at a nearby restaurant
years beginning the spring of
1969, principally under the
supervision of John D. Ehrlich-
man, one of President Nixon's
chief aides.
The two investigators told the
Senate Watergate Committee
they sought to ensure the silence
of James W McCord, one of the
seven men convicted of
burglarizing Democratic
national headquarters.
Capt. J. Houston Gordon,
(.'alley's principal military la-
wyer, said the attorneys had
asked the court to obtain the
records to learn "everything the
White House staff did that in-
volved My Lai.”
"We don't know what we’ll
find in the records because we
didn't know about their involve-
ment before," Gordon said
Gordon said such material
might raise doubts about the
truthfulness of witnesses if they
said one thing to the White House
investigators and another at the
court martial of Calley. It said
the records also could supply
evidence of a White House effort
to convict Calley.
Caliey’s defenders already
have charged that numerous
high officials, including Presi-
dent Nixon and then Army Chief
of Staff William G. West-
moreland, pursued a policy of
punishing Calley “in order to
cleanse the Army of any guilt.”
They have asserted that such
“command influence" is
grounds for overturning Caliey's
conviction.
Calley was convicted of
murdering at least 22 civilians in
the massacre at My I,ai March
16. 1968
GALLAGHER
Chiropractic Clinic
New Sapulpa Tulsa Highway
Phone 224-6426
CARL’S PIG STAND
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT: Larry Caines
4 Bar-B-Que-Pig. Beef, A Ham
4 Old Fashion French Fries
4 Home Made Onion Rings
• Serving Complete Menu • Curb Service Nightly
WEDNESDAY NIGHT SPECIAL
PIG IN A BASKET $150
With Fountain Drink. .. X
CARL'S PIG STAND
219 N. Mission
224-9826
WONG KONG
Custom Tailors in TULSA 3 DAYS ONLY—
JUNE If, 20, 4 21
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4724 S. Yale, Tulsa
solution "
He praised the military for
recapturing most of the territory
taken by the Communists in the
spring offensive in 1972.
“Exactly one year ago, also on
Armed Forces Day, I ordered
you to reoccupy the lost
territory,” Thieu recalled
"Exactly three months later you
defeated the Communist in-
vading troops on all the main
fronts and the important
territories were retaken "
The Communists, however,
still control much of northern-
most Quang Tri Province just
below the former Demilitarized
Zone and a vast area around Loc
Ninh, 75 miles north of Saigon
near the Cambodian border
THE DOWNGRADE
must’ve been loo much for
this truck at Kansas City,
Kan Well, it isn’t the first
time somebody got in trou-
ble just because of soft
shoulders
An official survey shows the
average per capita daily water
use in Alabama increased from
987 gallons per person in !9S5 to
1.944 gallons per person in 1970
FINK. Tex lUPI)- It s Fink
Week all week this week in Fink
But, no one may notice until
Thursday
Mayor Pat Albright will host
the eighth annual National Fink
Day celebration Thursday The
community’s other five resi-
dents are expected to attend,
along with perhaps 2,000 other
persons
Mayor Albright has ordered
enough barbec ue beef for 1,500
There was barbecue for 1.000
last year and she ran out.
“This year Red Wilson is bar-
becuing enough beef for 1,500"
she said VG 11 serve free bar-
becue from about 11 a m on
Thursday until we run out."
The headquarters of the Fink
Day will be Mrs Albright's red
store which offers food and fish-
ing NtippWes for residents and
tourists in the I-ake Texoma
area, about an hour 's drive north
of Dallas
She said parking far Thurs-
day's crowds wouldn't be much
of a problem, since her store sits
on an 11-acre plot.
"It’s never rained on a Fink
Day yet,' she said
A "Welcome to Fink, Texas"
sign will greet visitors Thurs-
day The Fink Museum will have
a guest register for the dozens,
or maybe hundreds, of Fmks
expected to show up Mrs
Albright says she has never
really bothered to count the
number of Finks who have
shown up for their special day in
the past
The Fink population is only
six this year, a loss of two from a
year ago. but Mrs Albright says
things will get better
"1 wouldn't be surprised to see
the population triple by next
year." she said
If you left your heart
In San Francisco,
make a return trip
this weekend.
15 minutes
for 03.05
Whether you’re in love with
the city or someone who
lives there, Long Distance
is a nice way to go back.
Especially when you call the
One-Plus way, Saturdays
between 8 a m. and 11 p.m,
or Sundays between 8 a m.
and 5 p.m. Low weekend
rates mean you can take all
the time you need to
recapture that old feeling—
and maybe even find your
heart.
(2) Southwestern Bell
Travel by Long Distance...and stay awhile.
\
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Livermore, Edward K. Sapulpa Daily Herald (Sapulpa, Okla.), Vol. 59, No. 238, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 19, 1973, newspaper, June 19, 1973; Sapulpa, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1496062/m1/2/: accessed April 23, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.