The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 121, Ed. 1 Monday, July 10, 1967 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Chickasha Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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k THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS, Monday, July 10, 1967 *
THREE
Israel's Ben Gurion Blames Russia
SENSATIONAL
For Keeping Middle East In Turmoil
)
4
‘I
CONTINUES ALL THIS WEEK-THRU JULY 15
READ THIS
OSUSets
Course In
the chasing of their owners. The
vo-
Britain and the Soviet Union.
ag teachers and others, accord-
verbal fury.
appeared to be the payoff.
Second Like Item!
OCLA Swim
Reuther Has
i
PHS Plans
k
OTHER SPECIALS
Cigarettes
•2
Ah. Several Used TV Set
July 11th
C
410 Chickasha
L
t
______
1
1
_____________________________.
RIFFI
Red China Reports
Burmese Rebellion
Package For
Auto Makers
The Above Prices Are Good On All Clothing And
Shoes In Our Store-Hurry, First Come, First Served
X-ray Tests
in TV Tube
CANDY
BARS
Yes, We’ve Done It Again! We Purchased The Entire Stock Of A Large
Department Store At A Distressed Price And We Are Passing The
Savings On To You!
BARGAIN
PRICES
Reg. 10c
And 15c
For Rides To The Polla Call —
224-1849 — 224-7506 or 224-5530
■ HERE'S AN EXAMPLE
■ OF WHAT WE MEAN
THIS WEEK ONLY YOU CAN BUY ANY ITEM OF CLOTHING
OR SHOES IN OUR STORE THIS WAY...
soon to determine whether there
is a potential X-ray hazard to
viewers.
A spokesman for the National
Center for Radiological Health,
an arm of the PHS, said Friday
the tests were needed to pursue
further the discovery by the
jungle realm.
Moves Toward Neutralism
Supports Burmese Communists
It is “dommed to destruction.
. . the armed revolution, led by
the Burmese Communist party,
represents the developmental
orientation of the people of
Burma. . .
“Now, the Burmese people of
USED
FURNITURE AT
You Pay 25° For The 1 st 55 Shirt
And Only...
I25 For The 2nd $5 Shirt
S.B.C. BARGAIN CENTER
517 CHOCTAW
y
1
• Don't you wish you could vote on the
members of the Supreme Court of the
United States?
• Don't you wish you could vote on the
Judges of our Federal Courts?
• You still have a right to vote on the
Judges of our State Courts.
• Under State Question 447 and 448 you
would lose that right!
Keep Your Right To Vote!!
Keep The Two Party System
In Oklahoma!
c
1875. He expects it will take him
six to eight years to finish.
He keeps close tabs on Israeli
politics and world affairs. But
he said he would have stayed
outside politics altogether since
quitting the premiership “if it
were not for the problems of
the present leadership.” He has
often been at loggerheads with
his successor, Prime Minister
Levi Eshkol.
Other Observations
Ben Gurion made these other
observations:
—In 10 to 15 years Communist
China, armed with the H-bomb
1
Westinghouse
FLOOR
SWEEPERS
Reg. 59.50
While They Last
275°
Classes Full
The two youth swimming
classes at Oklahoma College of
Liberal Arts are filled to capa-
city, announces Miss Dorothy
Marotte, chairman of the health,
physical education and recrea-
tion department.
A Shirt That Sel is Reg. For 500
has moved toward its present
strict neutralism. Until recently
it was perhaps Peking’s most
respectful neutral in Southeast
Asia.
s
%
During the 1967 summer ses- i
sion, OCLA is offering the two
classes for Chickasha area
youth for three-week sessions.
The one opening this week is
the second session.
Teaching the classes are Miss
Pat Hildebrandt of Laverne,
Miss Meleese Seigler of Nor-
man, Miss Bobbie Greenway of
Ninnekah and Miss Liz Woods
of Tulsa.
HONG KONG (UPI)—Com-
munist China today declared a
Vietnam-type rebellion is under-
way in Burma. If confirmed, it
meant mainland Southeast Asia
is blanketed by guerrilla war-
fare.
The Peking Peoples Dialy,
official organ of the Chinese
Communist party, said Mao
Tse-tung’s regime is giving full
sympathy to a “revolutionary
peoples war” to overthrow the
Burmese government of strong-
man Gen. Ne Win.
The newspaper described the
Ne Win government as a fascist
regime of “greedy bloodsoak-
to Egypt.
—The west bank area of
2
malogy. It is to be held the last
two weekends in July. In gen-
eral, the purpose of the course
is to acquaint teachers and
other youth leaders in the meth-
ods of collecting and preserving
study specimens for collections.
Two sessions of three hours
will be held on Friday, July 21,
one in the afternoon and one
I in the evening. Instruction will
be given in general purpose of
the work. A field trip will be
held Saturday.
On Friday and Saturday, July
28-29, a total of three sessions
of three hours each will be
held. These will deal with pres-
ervation and identification of
specimens in the laboratory.
Additional information can be
secured at Lamar’s office in
the court house or from OSU.
ers” serving the United States, Rangoon government cracked Gradv County cattlemen
Britein end the Soviet down but Peking erupted in --
CARD OF THANKS
Words cannot express our
thanks and appreciation to our
neighbors and friends for their
visits, flowers, and food during
the recent illness and loss of
our loved one. We will never
forget those neighbors who as-
sisted us, even though there
was illness in their homes. We
especially appreciate Rev. Joe
Lacy, Dr. S. D. Revere, and
Andrew Talley and his staff at
Grady Memorial Hospital for
their watchful care and encour-
agement.
Lloyd, Elsie, and Lorene Null.
____12
FURNITURE ca
Many Western intelligence
officers long have reported
concern that the Communist
drive in Southeast Asia would
swing west, toward Burma and
later possibly Pakistan and
India and well as further to the
southeast, through South Viet-
nam to Malaysia. ,
Editors: The following exclu-
sive interview with former
Israeli Prime Minister David
Ben Gurion was obtained by
veteran UPI correspondents
Joseph W. Grigg and Eliav
Simon. Grigg, UPI’s chief
European correspondent, cov-
ered the Sinai campaign and
other battlefronts of the Arab-
Israeli war. Simon, UPI mana-
ger for Israel, headed war
coverage there.
Charcoal Briquets Reg. 59c
By JOSEPH W. GRIGG
And ELIAV SIMON
TEL AVIV (UPI)—Former
Israeli Prime Minister David
Ben Gurion blames Russia
for keeping the Middle East in
the shadow of war.
“Without Russian interference
there would be no Mideast
war," he said in an exclusive
interview with United Press
International.
Ben Gurion said he personally
believed United Arab Republic
President Gamal Abdel Nasser
was “the only important Arab
leader" and would make peace
with Israel if Soviet pressure
was removed.
“Russia is the key to the
whole problem,” he declared.
“Nasser is unlike other Arab
leaders. He is a patriot and a
statesman. But if he continues
getting arms from Russia he
will certainly prepare for
another round of fighting
against Israel.”
Grand Old Man
Wearing his customary open-
necked white shirt, the 80-
year-old “grand old man” of
Israel talked frankly with these
correspondents for more than
an hour in the book-lined study
of his modest two-story home in
Tel Aviv. A large globe stood in
one corner.
He looked in top physical
condition and spoke briskly and
freely.
Ben Gurion retired from the
premiership four years ago, but
has retained his parliament
seat. He said he was working on
a five-volume history of the
State of Israel, starting from
Jordan, now under Israeli
military occupation, should be
separated from the rest of,
Jordan and become internally
an autonomous state. It should
be closely linked economically i
with Israel and have its foreign :
policy and defense handled by ।
Israel. He did not object to
description of such a state as an ’
Israeli “protectorate".
—If a real peace settlement i
can be worked out with Syria,
Israel should have the city of
Jerusalem. “There can be no I
old city or new city but only one I
Jerusalem and that has been
ours for 3,000 years,” he said.
—Israel itself can solve the I
Palestine Arab refugee prob-1
len. He said mary could be j
resettled in northern Syria or
Iraq.
Ben Gurion emphatically de- j
cfared Israel should not surren-
der any recent territorial I
.. 10 lb. Bag 255
Burma since achieving post- conquests without peace treaties
war independence from Britain] with its Arab neighbors.
Miami Indians
Will Share In
Appropriation
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Only
about 3,100 Miami Indians have
made application to share in
the $46 million appropriated
by Congress for distribution
among them, Rep. J. Edward
Roush, D-Ind., said.
He urged Indians who believe
they are eligible to apply to the
Bureau of Indian Affairs at
Muskogee, Okla., before the
July 31 deadline.
The bureau notified Roush
that about 6,000 requests for
applications have been receiv-
ed since Feb. 1, and only 3,100
completed and returned.
Accumulating interest has in-
creased the fund appropriated
by Congress in 1963 to $4,735,-
749 after the payment of about
$350,000 in attorney fees, Roush
said. He predicted it will be
around $5 million before actual
distribution of payments begins
some time after Jan. 1.
ing to Bob Lamar, county ex-
Today’s Peoples Daily report, tension director.
The course. Natural Science
320, is a special study in mam-
Teachers may earn three-hours
The two classes, which meet | credit in the course.
at 1 and 2 p.m., are being
taught by four OCLA students.
and intercontinental rockets,
will be “the world’s most
powerful country." He said only
an alliance of the United States,
Russia and a united Western
Europe could meet this future
Chinese threat.
—There should be direct
peace negotiations between Is-
rael and its Arab neighbors
without big power interference.
—A peace settlement with
Egypt should include freedom of
navigation for Israel through
the Suez Canal and the Strait of
Tiran. If this can be agreed on,
he favors Israel returning Sinai
But sparked by fanatic rallies
by pro-Mao Chinese students, in1
the past two weeks widespread ________I _
anti-Chinese rioting killed more] MdmnmneioCV
than a score of Chinese] IM-VYY
residents and resulted in the! A short course, to be offered
smashing of Chinese shops and at Oklahoma State University
the chasing of their owners. The will be of special interest to
President Louis G. Seaton and
Earl R. Bramblett, the compa-
ny’s chief day-to-day negotiator.
The auto union leader was
scheduled to present the same
demands to Ford Tuesday,
Chrysler Corp. Wednesday and
American Motors Thursday.
Principal money demands
include a "substantial" pay
raise for all the industry’s
750,000 production workers and
an extra increase for the 150,000
skilled trades workers; a
guaranteed annual income with
a switch from hourly pay to
weekly salary status; wage
scales for Canadian workers
matching American standards,
and contract provisions rigidly
limiting the right of the
companies to subcontract in-
plant work or to buy parts from
auto suppliers if those firms
paid lower wages than the UAW
standard.
Other UAW proposals, with
secondary priority, include im-
proved Insurance and pensions
with a cost-of-living escalator
built into pensions; increased
holiday and vacation time; a
long list of changes in work
standards, including more rest
time for assembly line workers;
a boost in overtime payments
from time and one-half to
double or triple time, and the
right of workers to refuse
overtime.
The size and complexity of
Reuther’s proposals, the most
comprehensive in the union’s
history, have bewildered some
industry observers. One indus-
try source called Reuther’s
money demands this year
"fantastic” and forecast a long
trike unless the UAW scaled
down the demand*, ______*1
Pkg 255
demands to the auto industry.
Ahead are the most turbulent
negotiations in more than two
decades and the possibility of a
strike. The union is militant,
and is backed by a strike fund
that could reach $65 million
before the Sept. 6 expiration of I WASINGTON (UPI) - The
the contracts. Public Health Service is going
Reuther first calls at General to begin testing television tubes
Motors to present his “laundry
list” proposals to GM Vice
F 2,3 1__
3,52 "
: *, • • : ’
ELECTRIC
HEATING
PADS
Reg. 4.95
While They Last
199
Vote No! No!
L
You Pay 2 Reg. Price For The First
Item—Then Of Price For The
ELECTRIC
BLANKETS
by
Westinghouse
SALE PRICED
7 each
5 edch
General Electric Corp. that
certain tubes in some of its
models emitted excess X-rays,
i The spokesman empahiszed
there was no reason to believe
that other manufacturers have
experienced similar problems.
He said the tests would be
made only as a precaution.
GE discovered this year hat
90,000 large-screen table and
console models it sold to
viewers were a potential,
although slight, hazard, because
one type of tube emitted
radiation in excess of permissi-
ble levels. The company dis-
closed the deficiency voluntarily
and is taking steps to identify
the models and correct defects.
The Radiological Health Cen-
ter tested a random sampling of
television sets last fall for
excessive radiation and found
no hazards. But only picture
tubes were examined.
all circles who are anti-
imperialist, anti - feudalistic;
anti-dictatorship, anti-national
betrayal and who want to be
friendly with the Chinese people
are, under the leadership of the
Burmese Communist party,
further uniting together."
It is the same language
Peking uses in describing the
Communist rebel and invasion
forces in South Vietnam, Laos
and Thailand. It fits the
description of even Communist
armed bands in Cambodia,
where ruler Prince Norodom
Sihanouk is a neutralist to the
outside world but thick in battle
against Communists in his own
By DAVID W. CHUTE
DETROIT (UPI) - United
Auto Workers President Walter
P. Reuther today takes his $1
billion package of contract
"_ 2.»■
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Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 75, No. 121, Ed. 1 Monday, July 10, 1967, newspaper, July 10, 1967; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1864942/m1/3/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 24, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.