The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 80, No. 226, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 22, 1972 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 21 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
V
5377
1
Advice From
nrs WORLD
I
WASHINGTON
New
1
1
P
PERSONAL FINANCE
$
Answer to Previous Puzrle
Movement
46 Dine
water
T
7
2
3
♦
5
16
8
9
12
13
4
15
16
17
8
20
21
1
35
33
36
■
39
40
44
7
48
52
54
55
56 57
59
61
22
(MEWSPAPEN ENTEEPRISE ASSN)
he Chitkaaha Baily Exj
MEMBER DONREY
MEDIA GROUP
i
tin
the axis
38 Took food
41 Outside
Charles Drew
George Miller
Earl Reeves .
Francis Best .
Richard Cline
(2wds.)
5 Priestly
title (ab.)
19
25
29
12"--
Call You
Sweetheart
16 Proceed
18 Coterie
19 Algonquian
Indian
30 Literary
collection
21 Military
title (ab )
23 Reinscribed
27----Paulo,
Brazil
30 River in
13) :11=la1 =1.1
Merv I •
38 Timetable
abbreviation
39 Papal crown
40 State
repetition
42 Behind time
46 River mouth
49 Winter
vehicle
51 Ohio town
53 Bitter vetch
55 Together
I comb form >
S6Gold(Sp.)
57 Legal point
Don't You Scare
At Manpower Glut
13 Roman moon
goddess
14 Wide street
15 Rip
17 Religious
groups
it Icelandic tale
22 Beetle
24 Dotted with
stars (her )
25 Again
26 Let ten
26 Soak flax
29 American
country
31 Existed
........General Manager
..........Executive Editor
.....Advertising Manager
Composing Room Foreman
......Circulation Manager
I
I
20 Years Ago
(From Express Files
Nev. 22,1952)
Football traffic to Norman and
slippery highways were blamed
in part for Grady County road
accidents injuring six people ...
Pete Ross, Chamber of Com-
merce secretary manager, said
Yule greenery was about to be
put up on downtown streets, and
lights would soon follow . . .
Three Chickasha stores were
burglarized overnight... Mayor
Max Hickey declared Thun-
derbird Thanksgiving week,
honoring the 45th division . . .
Water was declared Chickasha's
No. 1 problem at the Chamber of
Commerce forum discussion ...
The famous photograph of
Queen Elizabeth in a carriage on
her way to parliament was
published and Sir Winston
Churchill immediately ordered
two large copies
There Go De Judge
Even if the U.S Justice Department eventually goes to
trial with its antitrust suit against giant IBM Corporation
it may have trouble finding a judge to hear the case
The reason is that with a half a million Americans
holding IBM shares, some of them are bound to be judges
In a couple of recent legal proceedings involving IBM.
judges have disqualified themselves because of IBM
stock in their portfolios Three U.S. Supreme Court jus
tices have indicated they will not participate in a patent
involving IBM
But IBM is apparently only the tip of the iceberg
Lawyers are said to be worrying that too rigid observance
of conflict of interest policies not only make it difficult
to assign judges to cases involving corporations but also
restricts the judges' freedom to invest their money
c We should all have such a problem
"WOW! Could I get some Pilgrim shoes for
Thonktgning, too?"
i
10 Years Ago
(From Express Files
Nev. 22.1962)
A flag which recently flew
above the nation s capital is due
installation in Chickasha... The
mighty war machines of the
United States and Russia went
back to their normal cold war
duties today . . First Purchases
of right of way for the city's new
water pipeline were approved by
councilmen Wednesday. The
three claims approved are the
first of a series which will
complete Chickasha 's necessary
easements .. . India and Com-
munist China announced today
that fighting has stopped in all
sectors of their border war . . .
Oral vaccinations against polio
will be given Saturday Dec. 1, in
Grady County, Harly Day,
president of the Chickasha
Kiwanis Club, announced today.
Oklahoma’s Most Readable Daily Newspaper"
—Publisher—
Central Publishers Ltd.
omh.w.qpoy.
By CARLTON SMITH
Of all sad words of tongue
or pen, a couple of the sad-
der are manpower glut."
They mean that you’ve in-
vested a lot of time and
money in education and
training for a certain line of
work, and suddenly you find
nobody needs you, simply be-
cause there's a manpower
glut—too many people with
your qualifications, excellent
though yours may be
it doesn't have to happen
Before making any career
decisions, every student
(with the help of the family)
would do well to look at the
long-range forecasts on em
ployment opportunities and
manpower supply in the var-
ious job categories. Fore-
casting techniques have been
refined'to the point of con- •
siderable accuracy.
As an example look at the
case of the thousands of
young men and women pre-
paring themselves for teach-
ing positions eight or 10
years ago
Teachers, at that time,
were in such demand that
one with good credentials
could almost write his own
ticket. The “baby boom" of
earlier years was flooding
classrooms with ever-in-
creasing numbers of stu-
dents Federal grants to edu-
cation were plentiful Teach-
ers were, finally, being well
paid
units Scotland
8 Round dish 32 Headlong rush
10 Thu. (Scot ) 35 Become older
11 Danish 36 Heavy weight
islands (var.) 37 Termination
Washington, D.C.
As Day recalls it, he met
Marcello in a sumptuous office
at the Town and Country motel
in New Orleans. The Mafia don
poured out his tale of federal
harassment and his wish to
spend his last days in New
Orleans where he could be happy
ever after amid his alleged vice
and gambling operations
$25,900 Balm
Day's soft Texas heart quickly
melted, he recalls, and in his
head danced thoughts at a sugar-
plum fee of $25,000 if he could
push through a bill to keep
Marcello in the United States
"I never mention a figure,"
Dey told us, "until I am suc-
cessful. .There was no need to
mention it, but I planned to get a
fee just like I would on anyone
else. . 825,000 including ex-
Stressing the psychological
impact of the Dow's magic
1,000, breaking that old barrier
indicates “the public is now
willing to buy the good
investment blue chips which the
performance guys have veered
away from for so long," W. E.
Hutton & Co. suggests. The
other market indices have long
ago passed their "1,000 marks,"
and only public leadership, as
opposed to the institutions,
could push the Dow to its new
highs, the company says.
a stone
54 Ornamental
scheme
58 Blood channel
59 Worship
60 Diving bell
inventor
61 Biblical
patriarch
DOWN
1 Passing fancy
2 Hawaiian
garland
3 Room in a
33 Desire (coll.) seraglio
34 Move around 4 Departed
Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Wednesday, Nov. 22,
the 327th day of 1972 with 39 to
follow.
The moon is between its full
stage and last quarter
The morning stars are Venus,
Saturn and Mars
The evening stars are Mercu-
ry and Jupiter.
Those born on this day are
under the sign of Sagittarius
French President Charles de
Gaulle was born Nov. 22, 1890.
On this day in history:
In 1852, the second French
Empire gained recognition
when more than seven million
persons voted to back the
regime of Emperor Napoleon
III.
In 1950, a wreck on the Long
Island Railroad as it was
pulling out of the tunnel from
New York City, killed 79
persons
in 1960, the U.S. Navy
launched the "Ethan Allen," at
the time the most powerful
nuclear submarine in the world.
In 1963, President John
Kennedy was assassinated in
Dallas by Lee Harvey Oswald
Vice President Lyndon Johnson
was sworn in as chief executive
a short time later
)
gi a
—FOUR
You Want to Err,
Make Assumptions
Answer true or false to the following:
Frankl^ labor- liberal-minorities coalition put together by
rankiinD Roosevelt in 1932 was so overwhelming and
unshakahl t h the Republican party was relegated
henceforth to permanent also-ran status.
p. After losing the California gubernatorial race in 1962
Richard Nixon was washed up in politics
•The 1964 Goldwater debacle deflated conservatism
as a significant political force
basis 01 his strong showing in the 1968 presi-
dential and 1970congressiona campaigns, Edmund Mus-
kie.had the 972 Democratic presidential nomination
sewed up.
• Lyndon Johnson's 1968 decision to bow out only four
years after his landslide signaled the end of the two-term
presidency. The pressures and perils of the office had
become such that no incumbent would care to trv aeain
or make it if he did
It is an old American post-election habit to make sweep-
ing assumptions on the shape of the political future Like
ancient Romans studying entrails we scrutinize and ana
lyze the halloting rpglte gpokingAamie,,.,4, ", 41,
3_ plLH<---.121 —-H-b H--i idtiliS Uli Ulf
course of the body politic and individual political fates
History has a way of tripping us up. however And fre
quently in the very short term Occasionally a party does
go the way of the Whip. an Alf Landon is so thoroughly
buried as never to surface again on the national scene a
divisive issue such as Prohibition is decisively settled
But the general rule in American politics is persistence
and gradual pragmatie change—for parties ideas and
personalities
Elections are rarely as decisive as they are made to
appear in campaign oratory and in immediate post-elec-
tion analyses Assumptions as to courses and fates often
and rapidly turn out to be completely off-base or only
partially accurate
A very great deal can happen to change or discredit
the assumptions of four, or two. years ago, as this presi-
dential election has again demonstrated
The long view of the American political experience, thus
calls for caution in answering true or false to any or all
of the following
• The labor liberal-minorities coalition is irrevocabiy
dissolved.
a The South has solidly switched to a new allegiance
ro".Youth power has fizzled as a significant political
a Anyone is washed up politically
• Anyone has anything sewed up for 1976
penses."
Next time he was in
Washington, where he lobbied
for optical interests. Day
dropped in on his good friend,
Congressman Dowdy Day was a
contributor to Dowdy's cam-
paigns and Dowdy represented
Day's father-in-law as a private
lawyer.
Day unfolded the story of
Marcello's woes to the sym-
pathetic Dowdy, who as a senior
member of the House Judiciary
Committee had considerable
power over what private im-
migration bills get through
Congress
The Texas congressman
promised to consider the request
for friendship’s sake; both Day
and Dowdy insist no talk of
money sullied the conversation
between these two old cronies
A few days later, Dowdy
called Day to say he couldn t
help out the New Orleans
mobster. “I told him it was
something I couldn’t have
anything to do with,” recalled
Dowdy "When I checked into it,
I found out what he ( Marcello)
had done. I said I couldn't do it"
Day, his hopes of a fat fee
dead, relayed the sad word to
Marcello, The gangster gave up
his hope of a quick congressional
solution to his immigration
problem and is still battling the
case in the courts.
FOOTNOTE Marcello owes
his upper hand in the 19-year
fight to keep from being
deported to an indefatigable
immigration attorney named
Jack Wasserman On the Dowdy
gambit, Marcello — through
Wasserman — said his memory
was " vague."
Double Suicide
America’s pharmaceutical
firms pump out enough bar-
biturate pills “for everyone in
this country to commit suicide
twice," declares a secret House
crime committee staff report
The "barbs" or downers." as
the pills are called, flood into
high schools at 25 cents each.
They find their way from the
pharmaceutical companies into
the black market that caters to
youthful ' ‘pill-poppers."
The crime committee beaded
by doughty old chairman Claude
Pepper, D-Fla., puts the blame
for "barb" abuse on the
ethical” drug houses. After two
years of hearings, Pepper is
convinced the pharmaceutical
companies are well aware their
outrageous profits come from
saddling youngsters with the
drug habit.
"We need not look for a Mafia
or organized criminal elements
for the cause of barbiturate
abuse. The fault lies with our
pharmaceutical manufacturers,
drug wholesalers and retailers,"
says the massive report now
being prepared by the com-
mittee staff
"The barbiturates which are
taken by our young people are
produced exclusively by the
usual drug manufacturing
companies,'' the document adds
Among the horror stories
outlined in the report is that at a
California county where 75 per
cent of the drug cases involved
barbiturates. The barbs" are
sold in school corridors, on
playgrounds and even outside
elementary schools
At one congressional inquiry
in California, a participant “left.
unobtrusively and returned
within a few minutes with a
handful of multi-colored bar-
biturates which he had pur-
chased for 25 cents a capsule.
Each. . was produced by a
licensed drug manufacturer."
Urges the Pepper report:
Government control over the
production and distribution at
these dangerous and often
deadly drugs is, obviously long
overdue."
But anyone looking at the
forecast might have antici-
pated what was about to hap-
pen. Here were some of the
ingredients going into the na-
tional pot:
• The number of college
graduates more than doubled
in the 1960-70 decade Two-
thirds of the increase came
between 1965 and 1970
• Professional and techni-
cal employment (meaning
college grads i was increas
ing at twice the rate of the
nation's total employment
Teachers accounted for more
than a fourth of this in-
crease
• Professional technical
employment kept rising until
1970, when it hit a peak and
then leveled off Most of
those empty job slots had
now been fined '
• At about the same time,
the population curve for
those of school age hit its
peak, and leveled off
Predicting the outcome of
all this was almost as easy
as adding up a column of
figures. By 1971 the demand
for teachers hit a 20-year
low. There were 300,000
available, and only 19,000
new jobs to fill.
The Bureau of Labor Sta-
tistics had predicted the sit-
uation, with some accuracy,
as early as 1964
What's ahead for the '70s?
The forecast says that by
1960 our schools will have
churned out 9 8 million job
seekers with university de-
grees. from bachelor's to
Ph D. The economy will need
only 9 6 million of them, ac-
cording to BLS. economist
Michael F. Crowley. Evi-
dently there are going to be
some soft spots in employ-
ment for the grads
Want to study the detailed
forecasts. to see what the
outlook is in some particular
area of employment? Ask a
reference librarian to help
you locate the material. Next
best. visit any local Depart-
ment of Labor office and ask
for assistance Finally, write
the Superintendent of Docu-
ments, Washington, D.C., for
a list of Bureau of Labor Sta-
tistics publications, and take
it from there.
Wall Street
Chatter
NEW YORK(UPI) -Even as
stock market forecasters see
fair skies in the coming year,
Walston & Co. warns investors
to beware of approaching
inclement weather. “If the
market does ease off a bit
between now and the year’s
end, the low P-E issues will
fare much better than those
selling at high P-E levels," the
firm says.
Orleans Mafia king Carlos
Marcello once tried to get Rep
John Dowdy, D-Tex., to fix his
immigration case for him.
Dowdy refused to intervene for
love or money.
The anatomy of the fix that
failed, however, remains an
intriguing story of gangland's
ways in Washington. The
irrepressible Dowdy, who was
recently convicted for taking a
125,000 bribe in an unrelated
case, recalls the tale with wry
humor:
“If I'd been willing to help him
and if I'd been so inclined, I
guess I could have gotten most
anything I wanted,” he opined
from his home in Athens, Tex.
The scheme was hatched six
years ago Marcello was being
hounded by federal immigration
agents to leave the United
States, even though he was only
an eight-months-old alien when
he arrived here.
Once, federal agents had
whisked him off to Guatemala
without so much as a by-your-
leave. Ingeniously, he made his
way back
Only Congress, he decided,
could give him permanent
status. To handle his
congressional liaison, the racket
boss selected a fast-talking, far-
travelling Texan, lobbyist
Jimmy Day of Houston and
(Opinions of columnists are Niter owm
and irt not necessarily concurred
tn by The Chickasha Daily
Express.)
By Jack Anderson
(Copyright, 1972, by United
Featarea Syndicate Inc.)
(comb form) 6 Noun suffixes
43 Conflict in 7 Numerical
A Physician
By Lawrence Lamb. M.D.
Dear Dr. Lamb — After
reading several articles and
paperbacks on the subject of
lecithin. I purchased a large
bottle and after finishing it
purchased another one Later
I read that gallstones are
composed in part of lecithin.
I looked the word up in the
dictionary and found the de-
scription the yolk of an egg.
a nitrogenous fatty sub-
stance found in nerve tissue,
blood, milk, egg yolk, and
some vegetables "
My sister and I have been-
watching our cholesterol and
avoiding foods that would
raise the count. Ours are
both high I looked up the
definition of the word choles-
terol and it sounds much like
lecithin Our problem is
whether we should continue
taking these or not We have
a family history of hardening
of the arteries and were un
der the impression after
reading articles that lecithin
was valuable for this condi-
tion as well as many heart
problems We are 58 and 60
years old.
Dear Reader — Unfortu
nately, the experiments done
by reputable scientists trying
to use lecithin to lower
cholesterol or prevent
atheresclerosis have proved
that it has no value in this
regard. At the same time in
limited amounts it won't
cause any harm It is not the
same thing as cholesterol It
combines some of the fatty
particles in the blood to help
form a related fat particle
which some scientists
thought would prevent the
fatty particles from deposit
ing in the arteries. Unfortu
nately, this hasn't proved to
be the case I don't believe it
will contribute to gallstones
either
Dear Dr Lamb — I have
heard it mentioned that X
ray treatments might be
beneficial to prevent attacks
or decreasing the severity of
attacks of arthritis or osteo-
arthritis Please give your
valued opinion on this com-
ment
Dear Reader — There is
no evidence whatever that X
ray treatment will help arth
ritis or osteoarthritis There
is an inexhaustible list of
things that have been recom: ’
mended as cures for arth-
ritis It is safe to say that
most of those that are recom-
mended. particularly if they
are advertised, are worth-
less, and in some instances
downright frauds The quack
medicines foisted on the pub-
lic for treatment of arthritis
are astonishing. You will not
find these kinds of recom-
mendations being made by
reputable physicians
There are a number of
medicines which are helpful
in the treatment of arthritis
but they don’t offer cures.
The rheumatoid or inflam-
matory type of arthritis
sometimes subsides on its
own and some medicines ap-
pear to help to control or
slow the process
Osteoarthritis is the result
of wear and tear most often
associated with increasing
age and while pain relievers
are useful for it, they won’t
cure the process.
Everyone who has arth-
ritis deserves a careful med-
ical evaluation by his family
doctor and should try to fol-
low his advice There is no
sure cure for arthritis at this
writing, and none seem like-
ly in the near future
58
r
5 Moves quickly 47 Repair
* Genusol 48 Competitions
mosquitoes 50 Harvest
11 Of a weekday 52 Went, like
THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS, Wednesday. November 22, 1772
Washington
Merrygoround
ACROSS Greek drama
1 Proceed, like 44 Outer layer
The Lighter
Side—
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
current Harper’s magazine has
an article on “chain hospitals,"
which are described as "the
logical culmination of Ameri-
ca's franchising boom.”
According to Harper's, sever-
al nationwide motel chains are
now involved in hospital man-
agement and you can acquire
"your very own hospital
franchise equipped with every-
thing from sign to p:lls."
"No previous medical man-
agement experience is re-
quired." the magazine adds.
It quotes one hospital chain
tycoon as saying the growth
potential in this field is “even
better than Kentucky Fried
Chicken."
So now if you hear that
Colonel Sanders has enrolled in
medical school you’ll know the
reason why
“It's Paia Killin’ Good”
‘Hi, good neighbors. This is
d' Doc Sanders inviting you to
visit your nearby franchised
hospital and try one of my
Southern-style hernia opera-
tions My special anesthetic
recipe has a secret blend of 12
different chloroforms and
ethers. It's pain killin’ good,
folks."
But before franchised hospi-
tals can compete with McDon-
ald's hamburgers. Dairy Queen
frozen custard and Shakey’s
pizza, they will need more
patient appeal
The celebrity tie-in would
appear to be the most likely
gimmick.
Associating a franchise with
some famous person, say a
prominent sports figure, would
bring in scores of patients who
might otherwise stick to home
remedies.
Joe Namath, the football star
who has undergone several
knee operations, would make an
ideal “front" for an enterprise
of this sort.
I have in mind a nationwide
chain of “Broadway Joe
Orthopedic Clinic" franchises
The potential is even better
than Roy Rogers Roast Beef
A Solid Nucleus
Every high school and sandlot
quarterback in America strives
to emulate Joe Namath And
since the majority of them get
hurt at some point, they
provide a solid nucleus upon
which to build the business.
The non-athletic spinoff will
then be pure gravy For any
kid who sprains his knee on the
paper route or turns an ankle
watching television is going to
insist that his parents take him
to a Broadway Joe Orthopedic
Clinic for treatment
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 80, No. 226, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 22, 1972, newspaper, November 22, 1972; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1866614/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.