The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 182, Ed. 1 Monday, September 21, 1970 Page: 4 of 8
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Washington
Merrygoround
House Appraiser
Worth His 'Salt'
The Lighter
Side-
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editorially reprinted to illustrate what
used to be like.
21
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MEDIA GROUP
General Manager
Executive Editor
16
18
he is better at it than
or your Uncle Charlie.
Real estate appraisers
MEMBER DONREY
Charles C. Drew
George Milier . ..
Earl Reeves.....
Francis Best.....
James Nash.....
34 Fencing
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An Advertising Ringer
A 70-year-old advertisement for rubber horshoes
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an early Goodyear ad
52 Taro (var.)
53 Weight of wool
- ---------------- 54 Epoch
23 Judicial term 40 Enclosure for 55 Accomplished
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30 Puddings, for 46 Japanese coin
example
33 Javelin
By all rights, that something
else ought to be the estimate
of a professional appraiser. He
makes his living by determining
property values, and it's a cinch
. Advertising Manager
Composing Room Foreman
.... Circulation Manager
48 Journey
49 Not closed
60 Small horse
61 Father
DOWN
IFish
2 Be indebted
3 Abstract being
4 Small wagons
5 Singing voice
6 Observe
7 Auricles
8 Indian
footwear
%
2
Churkaaha Baily Exrens
Oklahoma s Most Readable Daily Newspaper'*
— Publisher —
Central Publishers Ltd
"I/
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a less-precise
ACROSS
1----College
in Iowa
4 Ohio's---
Institute of
Technology
8 Bryn----
12 Possess
13 Athena
14 Monster
15 Absconder
17 Piece of
money
18 Ear
(comb, form)
19---Heart
• College
21 Spanish
’ laborers
24 Sea bottom
sands•
25 Climbing
plant
28 Jests
'28 Want
31 Lifetime
32 Roman date
36 Weight
deduction
37 Spanish noble
38 Back of neck
39 Expended
41 Arikaran
Indian
1 42 Pursue
45 Organic salt
47 College
official
49 Number
50 Jug
SI Amended
one's life
56 Toothlike
notch
S7 Same (Latin)
S< Boundary
(comb, form)
*9 Table scraps
4
13
9 Greek market 27 Greek chariot 43 Wood cutter
place race 44 Deputy
10 More twisted 28 Confined 45 Foe
11 Splits m- - 05
16 Time division
20 Primate
21 Liquid
measure
AR
EAlM
Thought For Today . . .
Let no one deceive himself. If any one among
you thinks that he is wise in this age, let him be-
come a fool that he may become wise.__ I Cor.
3:18.
A thought for the day: H.G.
Wells said, “Human history
becomes more and more a race
between education and catas
- trophe."
54 85
20 Years Ago
(From the Express Files,
Sept. 21, 1950)
Roy Schenk exhibited the
champion mare and stallion in
quarterhorse judging at the
Grady County Fairgrounds . . .
Dewey Meade president of the
Lions club, was reminding
Chickasha residents of the club’s
forthcoming paper drive
Mayor C. A. Chincholl issued a
proclamation setting aside a
date for Kids’ day, in coopera-
tion with the Kiwanis club . . .
Paul C. Davenport, a former
resident of Chickasha, was ex-
habiting a model of Jerusalem
at the state fair . . . Glen
Schneider, Alex Ayrshire breed-
er, won a number of honors at
the Tulsa State Fair . . . Mrs.
Bobby Goard was a guest at
a meeting of the Fortnighters
club.
a product that has
a century.
anniversary issue of
-
® w • NIA, he
Of cqurse,women.deseme equal ri9hts - ofter an,
""5 re no drfftrtnt from mtn, art thtf?”
UE
#
d
AG
set off a small stampede for
not been manufactured for half
The mixup occurred in the
off-the-highway ads." McEwen
spoke of driving late at night
on the way to his district and
finding himself out of both gas
and money. The New Yorker
said he was grateful for a
sign telling of a gas station
open until 11 p.m. that would
take his credit cards.
The Volpe plan, he complain-
ed, would knock out all but
small "Gas,” “Lodging” and
“Food” signs.
The ailing Volpe left shortly
after bis presentation. His aides
stayed on for two hours to
argue for his plan with statis-
tics on every state in the un-
ion. The cost estimates ranged
up to $300 million to take down
the billboards.
At several points, minority
counsel Clifton Enfield snapped
back at the Volpe s taff, push-
ing a plan of his own. En-
field’s scheme would exempt all
but a fraction of the 35,000
miles of highway under the
1965 Act.
This plan is strangely like
an idea backed by the National
Advertising Company, a giant
billboard firm owned by Min-
nesota Mining and Manufactur-
ing. National has been buy-
irg up small sign companies
all over the country. Three-M
also reaps huge profits from
its Scotchlite, a luminous fab-
ric used on most of the na-
tion’s billboards. Thus 3M stands
to profit from delay and from
a limited billboard removal plan.
The meeting broke up wih-
out agreement.
By RICHARD PRATT
(NEA)
"What something is worth, is
what someone will pay for it.”
This bit of conventional wis-
dom is accurate enough, but
not too helpful when you're
faced with setting a price on
something you want to sell.
When this something is as val-
uable as a home, clearly some-
thing else is needed as a guide.
g a
immi 14
measurement, too, since not
many single - family homes
are available for rent in most
residential areas.
Once a fair rental is deter-
mined, it is multiplied by a
factor known as a gross month-
ly multiplier. This multiplier is
calculated from general factors
adjusted for the area's parti-
cular situation.
The final answer gives an
approximate value of the house.
A typical appraisal report
will devote a page to each of
these approaches and then will
show a single appraiser value
derived from the three.
Unless otherwise specified,
this figure is called “fair mar-
ket value." This is defined as
"the highest price that a wil-
ling and well - informed buyer
would pay and a willing and
well - informed seller would
accept if the property were
immediately exposed to the
market for a reasonable period
of time."
Despite the progress made in the art over the
intervening decades by Madison Avenue experts, hun-
dreds of readers failed to note the difference.
Ihe magazine has been busy ever since returning
money and writing personal letters of apology and
explanation.
Advertising may not be what it used to be, but
about that old gray mare . .
The
Almonac
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Sept. 21,
the 264th day of 1970 with 101 to
follow.
The moon is approaching its
last quarter.
The morning stars are
Mercury, Mars and Saturn.
The evening stars are Venus
and Jupiter.
On this day in history:
In 1792 France became a
republic.
In 1893 the first successful
gasoline-operated motor car
made in America appeared on
the streets of Springfield, Mass.
It was designed and built by
Charles and Frank Duryea.
In 1938 at least 450 persons
were killed in a hurricane that
battered the coasts of New
England and New York.
In 1955 Rocky Marciano
knocked out Archie Moore in
the ninth round at Yankee
Stadium in New York, success-
fully defending his heavyweight
title for the sixth time.
A Physician
By Wayne G. Brandstadt, M. D.
NEA
Coronary heart disease, pri-
marily a disease of persons
who are over 40, is being seen
with increasing frequency in the
5-to-17 -year-age group. The
predisposing factors in these
children are (1) high blood
pressure lover 142 systolic, when
the heart contracts, or over 82
diastolic, when the heart re-
laxes), (2) a blood cholesterol
level over 220 and (3) body
weight 30 per cent above the
average for the child’s height.
The most effective way to
reverse this trend is to lower
the fat content of the family’s
diet and increase the amount
of exercise the child takes
daily.
QI im a boy, 14. I have
large breasts and this is very
embarrassing. Will they shrink
or could I have them operated
on?
A—In most boys, this en-
largement, often accompanied
by some soreness, disappears in
one to four years. If it doesn't,
it will be necessary for your
doctor to determine whether you
have a glandular imbalance or
whether the enlargement is just
fat. Surgery may be advisable
in the first case but not in the
second.
Q-Each time our children get
one of their frequent strep
throats, our pediatrician takes
throat cultures and gives them
all a shot of penicillin, even
if they have no fever. Doesn’t
too much penicillin make the
germs resistant to the drug?
A-If your doctor is sure
the infection is due to a strep-
tococcus each time, he is wise
to treat all members of the
family with the antibiotic. The
drug should be taken for at
least 10 days to insure the
eradication of the germs. The
building up of a resistance by
the germ is the result of inade-
quafe treatment.
Q—About three months before
our last child, now 11, was
born, her older brother and
sister had chickenpox. When she
was about two weeks old, she
had a breaking out that looked
like chickenpox but our pedia-
trician couldn't say for sure
that it was. She has been ex-
posed to the disease since then
but has never gotten it. Could
she be immune?
A—Chickenpox is very conta-
gious and very few persons
reach age 15 without having
an attack. If your daughter has
been exposed and has not tak-
en the disease, that is pretty
good evidence of immunity but,
like your pediatrician, I can’t
ba positive about it.
‘ M*,"* “ M
26 Semiprecious animals ’
stone 42 Belief
10 Years Ago
(From the Express Files,
Sept. 21, 19601
Mrs. Frank Parker discussed
the care of roses during the
fall and winter for members of
the Rose Unit of Federated
Garden Clubs . . Mr. and
Mrs. C. S. Baxter, were hosts
to Chickasha members of the
National Association of Letter
Carriers and Auxiliary at a
wiener roast . . . The home
room mothers of the Northwest
school met in the home of Mrs.
Pat Hodges to make final plans
for the Fun Night program
held at the school . . . Miss
Julia Lee Hawkins, dean of stu-
dents at Oklahoma College for
Women, spoke at the traditional
“welcoming" assembly in the
Administration Building audi-
torium . . . Jack W. Hess,
head basketball coach and as-
sistant football coach at Chick-
asha High School picked 16
correct answers out of 20 to
win the Daily Express football
contest of the I960 season.
i[ ________
si2•8“Ii-
listed in the classified section
of your phone book, but you
may have trouble making a
selection. In that case, almost
any bank, attorney or real es-
tate agent can refer you to
one or more reliable people.
Another test of reliability is
membership in the Society of
Real Estate Appraisers. If your
candidate has earned the So-
ciety’s Senior Residential Ap-
praiser rating, so much the
better.
You may be surprised to find
that what you’re buying with
the appraiser’s fee is really
three appraisals, instead of one.
Most professionals use a sys-
tem in which a separate ap-
praisal is made on each of
three different bases. Each re-
sult is used as a cross-check
against the others. Here's how
it works:
Cost Approach - This meth-
od of pinpointing the value of
your home is based on what
it would cost to build the iden-
tical house at today’s prices.
The appraiser multiplies the
number of square feet of floor
space by a cost • per-foot. The
cost figure is worked out, us-
ing a formula that considers
size, design and materials.
This final figure is then re-
duced by subtracting the
amount your home has depre-
ciated in its lifetime. The val-
ue of the site, and any other
improvements, is added to the
depreciated cost figure to find
current value.
Direct Sales Comparison —
In this method, the appraiser
ferrets out recently sold prop-
erties similar to yours and then
computes the value of your
property as reflected by the
sales prices of these homes.
This is obviously a less pre-
cise way of determining value,
but it works well in many
areas. Many of today’s homes
bear a remarkable similarity to
each other, particularly in the
suburbs. Comparison homes will
be close to yours in size, faci-
lities and location.
Income Approach—How much
would your house yield if it
were rented unfurnished? This
recently.
Despite repeated demonstra-
tions that the whole idea of
manned flight is absured, the
society has never completely
succeeded in routing the cult of
aviation. As a result, its
members have become dispirit-
ed and have taken to quarreling
among themselves. Some have
also taken to drink.
I had feared the society
might be following the Em-
balming Chemical Manufactu-
rers Association into defunct-
ness. But that alarm was
groundless.
It was, however, distressing
to find that the encyclopedia
had downgraded the society by
identifying it as a "hobby and
a vocational” organization rath-
er than putting it in the
“scientific, engineering and
technical” category where it
rightfully belongs.
Since the never-fly society
obviously needs new blood and
a fresh outlook in order to
regain prestige and carry on its
work, it might do well to
consider a merger with the
Fairy Investigation Society.
The latter group, according to
the encyclopedia, is composed
of "persons who sincerely hold
the fairy faith." Among other
exciting and worthwhile activi-
ties. the organization “publishes
occasional newsletter describ-
ing recent fairy sightings."
By combining their resources,
these two groups might be able
to shed new light on what
really happened that day in Kill
Devil Hills when the Wright
brothers allegedly made their
first flight.
Investigation might disclose
that what bystanders assumed
was an airplane flitting over
the sand dune actually was a
fairy testing its wings. If so, it
will be another splendid
triumph for the organization
man.
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI) —Eyes
firmly fixed on the bylaws,
hand steady on the gravel and
wallet awash with membership
cards, the organization man in
America has arrived at his
finest hour.
A new edition of the
Encyclopedia of Associations,
just published by Gale Re-
search Co. of Detroit, shows
there are now 15,000 national
organizations in this country,
give or take the American
Guppy Association.
This means that 1,100 new
groups have been formed since
the last edition was published
two years ago. Which clearly
ranks as a quantum jump in
coalescence despite the loss of
the Embalming Chemical Man-
ufacturers Association, now
listed as “defunct."
I was especially pleased to
note that the Man Will Never
Fly Memorial Society Interna-
tionale is still on the active
roster. The “never flies,”
whose 324 members have
dedicated their lives to debunk-
ing the Wright brothers myth,
have fallen on hard times
out gunplay.
The emphasis is on how to
restrain a hijacker, yet avoid
violence, in the event of air
piracy. First, the security
guards will use new means to
screen passengers and detect
concealed weapons before the
planes take off.
If a hijacker should succeed
in smuggling a weapon on
board, the security guards will
attempt to stun him with a
dart gun or chemical spray.
They will use other devices
and unorthodox methods that
must be kept secret if they
are to succeed.
But the last thing they will
do is open fire upon the hijack-
er as Denisco did aboard the
TWA airliner.
—Volpe’s Secret Appeal-
Secretary of Transportation
John Volpe drove secretly to
Capitol Hill last week to im-
plore rebellious Republicans for
help in clearing down 800,000
highway billboards
The peppery Cabinet officer
spoke eloquently to GOP mem-
bers of the House Public Works
Committee in a closed ante-
room off the vast hearing cham-
ber.
The mission was an ironic
one. Even as Volpe journeyed
to Capitol Hill to win over the
stubborn Republicans. Presi-
dent Nixon was blaming Demo-
crats for blocking his legisla-
tive package.
In the anteroom. Ohio's Rep.
Bill Harsha, usually a staunch
administration wheelhorse, in-
troduced Volpe and his team
without enthusiasm. Harsha said
lamely that he was wrestling
“with this thing" about bill-
boards.
Volpe took over the meeting
and spoke passionately for an
hour, even though it was clear
to the congressmen that he
was ailing. Fatigue has plagued
the bantam Cabinet member
for weeks.
Volpe told them th./ Ameri-
ca was getting fed up with
too much government attention
to concrete and not enouzh to
natural beauty. Federal law has
called for removal of billboards
since 1965, yet only a few
have come down
He explained in detail his
plan to dip into the Federal
Highway Trust Fund to give
billboard owners “fair compen-
sation” for taking down their
signs.
"This will work,” he urged
the doubting GOP congressmen.
Then, wearily, he looked at
Harsha and said: “You've got
my program, now what are the
problems?"
Harsha seemed to be moved
by the presentation. But with-
out backing Volpe, he turned
the discussion over to Volpe's
critics.
—Republican Rebellion-
New York's Robert McEwen,
whose upstate district is a land
of sparkling lakes and superb
woodlands, told of a road be-
side a beautiful overlook on
the St. Lawrence.
“That is the kind of road
people wanted protected," he
agreed.
But he insisted: “We do need
One More Freedom - To Be Free
* — Freedom of speech and expression, including a
choice of one's own dress and grooming, the wear-
ing of buttons or emblems or the carrying of picket
signs on school property,
— Freedom of the press, including the right to
publish or distribute literature on school grounds.
Freedom of assembly and association, including
the right to join and to urge others to join any
organization.
— Freedom of petition, including the right to peti-
tion against public agencies, governing boards and
school administrations.
Freedom of peaceful dissent without repression
by administrators or teachers.
— Freedom of .. .
| But stop already.
If the foregoing reads like the demands of some
militant college campus organization. read on.
They are the main points of a resolution adopted
at the national convention of the American Federa-
tion of Teachers in Pittsburgh the other day. The
above-listed freedoms, the resolution urges, should
be accorded every high school student, and presum-
ably grade school and kindergarten students, too.
In other business, the delegates representing the
200,000 - teacher-strong AFT recommended that all
locals seek through collective bargaining to establish
a teaching load of no more than 20 children to
a classroom and restrict classroom hours to no more
than 20 per week.
If the student “Bill of Rights” goes into effect,
the AFT could get more than it plans to bargain
for.
With the kids busy publishing and distributing lit-
erature, parading wth picket signs, promoting var-
ious organizations and petitioning sundry agencies,
classroom students and classroom hours might well
eventually approach zero.
It’s a pity that while it was about it, the AFT
did not see fit to append one more freedom to the
list—the freedom of every student to pursue his
education without being organized, politicized and ra-
dicalized by his classmates.
tOpietens colematete un mm
•WB BB< are net mocemmrii, cemeee
red la kr Tk» CAteheuhe Baliy
Eaprems.)
By Jack Anderson
(Copyright, 10, by Bele-
McClure Syndicate)
WASHINGTON - Some hot-
heads in the White House have
urged President Nixon to send
troops into Jordan to rescue
American hostages and to save
King Hussein.
The President has firmly re-
jected their advice, however
pointing out that the hostages
would be dead before the troops
could reach them.
At the same time, the U. S.
Sixth Fleet has quietly maneu-
vered into striking position in
the Mediterranean, and the Air
Force has rushed planes to
U. S. bases in Turkey. These
are strictly precautionary moves
in case American power may
be needed to stabilize the troub-
led Middle East.
The White House, meanwhile,
has obtained the solid assurance
of the Swiss, British and Ger-
mans that they won't make a
deal with the Palestinian radi-
cals for hostages unless the
Americans and Israelis are also
included.
If the hostages are harmed,
of course, the President may
change his mind about U S.
intervention.
FOOTNOTE: The two Alger-
ian security officers, whom Is-
rael has offered to release as
part of the exchange for the
hijack hostages, may not want
to return. They have given their
Israeli captors information about
Algeria’s secret support of the
Palestinian guerrillas.
Algeria not only has trained
guerrilla officers at its Cher-
chel Military Acaademy but has
also sent Algerian instructors
to guerrilla camps in Jordon and
Svria. Algerian officers have
also indoctrinated Palestinian
leaders in the revolutionary tac-
tics that drove the French out
of Algeria.
—Publicity Stunt-
President Nixon was quick to
congratulate Robert Denisco, the
Brniks guard who shot a hi-
jacker and saved a TWA air-
liner from being diverted to
North Korea. The President
even invited Denisco to lecture
his new airline security guards
on how to prevent hijacking.
The President's phone call,
apparently, was a publicity
stunt. For the security guards
are receiving careful training
on how to stop hijacking with-
15
— 39
1*2 |43 144
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Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 78, No. 182, Ed. 1 Monday, September 21, 1970, newspaper, September 21, 1970; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1865937/m1/4/: accessed July 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.