The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 82, No. 94, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 27, 1974 Page: 10 of 16
sixteen 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:
1
9
BERRY’S WORLD
♦ 4
I
► •
1
• 4
*
Answer to Previous Puzz’e
Travel Talk
F
SIB
E
er Side
I
NWS N’kI MNIIII’IIISF w
11
8
7
1
4
5
6
2
3
1
13
14
12
16
15
17
20
19
18
22
31
29
30
28
25
24
34
35
32
37
36
40
41
38
45
44
42
43
52
49
51
48
50
47
46
56
54
53
158
57
56
60
ST
59
27
Uhe Chitkasha Baily Expna
a
d
media GROUP
MEMBER DONREY
3/2
cai
tc-j
&
C
si
L
a
At
H
Sa
Sa
The
Governor
Reports
SI
p
M
R
a
N
Charles Drew
George Miller
Earl Reeves
Francis Best
Richard Cline
I
I
(Opinionsol columnists are their own
and are not necessarily concurred in
by The Chickasha Daily Express.)
C
a
F
c
w
N
ol the
Misunirt
5 Mimi
6 Mirk
7 Ireland
Footnote: The airlines
point out that they, too. play-
ed a prominent role in cutting
down on hijacks As to the S30
million. air industry spokes-
men say the original
surcharge of 59 cents was.
after all. okayed by the CAB
It proved high because of
unexpected increases in the
number of tickets sold, the
spokesmen say.
6
A thought for the day: In the
story of her life, blind author
Helen Keller wrote, ' Literature
is my Utopia. Here I am not
disenfranchised. No barrier of
the senses shuts me out from
the sweet, gracious discourse of
my book friends.”
(
Me
P-r
S
Ne
p.n
t
. Atl
p.n
S
6)
3),
THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS, Thursday, June 27, 1974
Washington
IT(
. IU
IA
if
am
tuns
MIN
, odor
NOU
By Jack Anderson
(Copyright, 1973,
by UNITED
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
1
1
1
1
(
5
General Manager
Executive Editor
Advertising Manager
Production Manager
Circulation Manager
Merrygoround ,
expression of such a
possibility is a regressive
f N)
_g
Thought For Today ...
But they shall sit every man under his vine and under his fig
tree, and none shall make them afraid; for the mouth of the Lord
of hosts has spoken. — Micah 4:4
10 Years Ago
(From Express Files
June 27,1964)
Former Ambassador Henry
Cabot Lodge gave President
Johnson a final report today on
the war in South Vietnam. He
said the situation there is en-
couraging. .. Attorney Norman
Reynolds today asked a three
judge federal court to order new
elections this year for part of the
state senate and house to place
Oklahoma's 1956 legislature on
population basis . . The Senate,
after a weekend rest, bore down
again today on the mountain of
major legislation piled up during
the marathoncivi rights debate.
poison
26 Fscort
28 Vacillale
30 Year
(Latin
ACROSS
1 Hawalian
city
5 Arabian
gulf
9 Creek letter
12 Summers
(Fri
13 Father IFr 1
14 Scion
IS Circus
leaiure
17 Before
18 Reproduction
19 Erlects
21 Oklahoma
city
23 Compass
Mini
24 By way of
27 Sketched
29 Cities in
Ohio and
Oklahoma
32 Dinner
course
34 Made of
Silver
36 Comeback
again
37 Austrian
city
© 1874 by MM Inc Qm6ev
"Actually, she 's like those jewels you wore - she was
not a personal gift, she was a gift to the country!"
31 itemann
hwehund
1 Nin- ,
ahrvnaid .
15 Ila/ardl
888518888
MeL
golfe’T
%6 Taj Mahl
MlC
47 contemn
48 Bristle
30 cirl • muainie
51 202
iltoman
52 Hards
heronne
55 Taxatrin.
aroup’ab '
By David Hall
There are many issues we must debate and decide during
the years that remain in this decade. The point we must
never lose sight of in that debate and decision process,
however, is that each and every step we lake must benefit
the people of this slate.
(Opinions of columnists are their own and oro not necessarily
concurred in by Th. Chickasha Daily Express.)
v
E -
"Oklahoma's Most Readable Daily Newspaper"
—Publisher—
Central Publishers Ltd.
-TEN
Are leaks worse
than deception?
This matter of "leaks" needs more thoughtful discussion
than it has been getting.
' Assume the worst that anybody in government who neaks
information to the press must have an ax to grind or enemy
to get; that reporters are more eager for a scoop or editors
more interested in getting a jump on the competition 'ban
they are in exercising responsible judgment, that disclosure
of government secrets harms the United States.
Even assuming the worst — and it is assuming much more
than is warranted by any existing body of evidence _ the
sad fact remains that neither the news media nor the Ameri-
can public could get along without leaks, the way the game
of government has been played in this democracy the Past
few administrations.
The current controversy centers on what presidential
speechwriter Patrick J Buchanan has called systematic
leaks from "weasels in the hen house" of the House Judiciary
Committee, constituting "nameless, faceless character
assassination" of the President, the secretary of state and
other officials
The recent leaks naming the President have been varia-
tions on the old Watergate theme of "What did he know and
when did he know it9’ Those concerning Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger allege that in 1969 when he was President
Nixon's chief national security advisor, he either initiated, or
at least permitted if not approved, wire taps on 13 members
of his staff and four reporters in an attempt to trace the
source of certain “national security" leaks
Kissinger. as everyone knows, stunned the nation by
threatening to resign if his name was not cleared His
vociferous defense of himself, against the background of his
brilliant services to the nation, did more than anything in a
long time to give leaks a bad name
Senators quickly lined up in support of the secretary, The
man in the street asked Who is out to get Kissinger Or is
this a flank attack through him against Nixon9
Hardly anybody stopped to think about the original leak
which had occasioned the wire tap surveillance - the secret
bombing of Cambodia.
For a full year, without the knowledge or consent of the
American people or Congress, the President sent American
B-52s on thousands of bombing raids against Viet Cong or
North Vietnamese targets in Cambodia, all the while claim-
ing to be respecting that country's neutrality.
If this information had not been leaked by a person or per-
sons still unknown who had access to top-level government
strategy, would the American people nave ever learned
about it9 Would the administration ever have admitted the
truth, as it finally did four years later9
Whether he initiated or whether he reluctantly went along
with the wire taps. Henry Kissinger was a party to this
deception of the public Americans have a right to know this
about the man who is now their secretary of state - and 'hey
would not know it had someone not leaked it to them
Of course, it may be that most people don't really want to
know as much about their government as the press thinks
they ought to know The utter absence of repercussions over
the Camobodian bombing strongly suggests that this is so.
In that case, if the saying is true that people get the kind of
government they deserve, then Americans have got theirs.
Gone forever are the days of sprcial interest groups shap-
ing the future to fit the needs or desires of a particular
professional organization or set of busi-
ness interests. We must concern ourselves
now with such things as education for
our young people, the delivery of health
care for our sick and aged as well as for
20 Years Ago
(From Express Files
June 27.1954)
President Eisenhower and
Prime Minister Churchill
declared they would press
forward with plans for collective
defense of southeast Asia. . .
Sequoyah County's ballot selling
scandal spread with charges
being filed against fivepersons. .
Leveling down on the Braves
for 4 strike-outs, Jackie Voyles
gave up only one earned run as
the Thunderbirds plastered
Anadarko, 10-4. . . Miss Doris
Comby and Mrs. C. P. Campbell
of Washington, D. C., were
visiting Mrs. H. B. Comby and
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Comby Jr..
. Police Chief Ernest Kell
warned the younger of citizens of
the community of the dangers of
fireworks and reminded them of
laws governing their use.
the far turn. But as
38 Abound
39 Nights
before
41 Plaything
42 Negalive
word
44 Clumsy
boats
46 Accust
49 Make into
law
53 Tibetan
gazelle
54 Place of
abode
56 Boy s
nickname
57 Asterisk
56 Cucko
blackbirds
59 Danish
county
60 Auricles
61 Raised
platform
DOWN
I Halfiprefix)
2 Newspaper
paragraph
3 .Wie! river
4 Tributary
araaoiau 585
b.latnb-
aw
rural Oklahomans.
We must, and we will, continue train-
ing doctors and para-medical personnel
at the University of Oklahoma'- Health
Sciences Center. It is difficult right now
as we wrestle with extremely complex
financial problems. But we will prevail!
As the national economy continues on
its uncertain rampage, unchecked by
forceful action at the national level.
Oklahoma's senior citizens continue to
hear an unfair share of the burden
living on fixed incomes.
We must try for the fifth time next
January, when the legislature returns, to
remove the sales tax from prescription
drugs. If it is rejected again our ap-
proach may well have to be a statewide
vote of the people on the question.
8 ilqpuiremenis 40 ( iiett in
9 Anlerit ivushkrPNI
10 t'aintut 43 sucetne’
11 Itoman dale 45 Noed
16 Mx
20 Ilabitual
u
22 P’vuce
gokldem
24 Grentkr 1
25 Arrow
Advice From
A Physician
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB-1 wonder
if you could give me some in-
formation on diabetes. I am a
diabetic and am trying to
find foods that contain in-
sulin, such as artichokes and
sweet-breads. Could you help
me or tell me where to write
for the information?
DEAR READER-I don't
know where you got the idea,
but you might as well forget
about it. Insulin is a complex
Protein That means it is
formed by hooking together
over 50 amino acids. All pro-
teins are formed by hooking
together various combina-
tions of amino acids, just as
words are formed by hooking
together letters in the
alphabet.
The rub is that your diges-
tive system is designed to
break down proteins into the
original building blocks of
ammo acids. Just as the pro-
tein in milk, beef, fish, eggs
and other foods is broken
down, so are any protein
medicines you swallow.
The acid pepsin juice in the
stomach starts the process
The rest is accomplished in
the small intestine as a result
of enzymes from the pancreas
and intestinal wall. What gets
through the intestinal wall
into the body then is just the
building blocks and these are
all the same whether they
come from meat, milk, wheat
or other sources. This is just
like breaking down a lot of
words. The letter "a" is the
same "a” whether it comes
from one word or another
word.
So. insulin has to be given
by injection This way the
protein avoids being broken
down by digestion into its
common building blocks. The
insulin can then be active in
the body Digested insulin is
just a collection of discon-
nected amino acids and has
no effect on diabetes or the
blood sugar
DEAR DR LAMB-1 sent
for a book advertised in the
Farmer's Almanac titled
"Stale Food Vs. Fresh Food"
and was really shocked at
some of the things they said
were bad for your arteries,
like flour and cereals and
ham and bacon and you
should drink raw milk. is
there any truth in a diet like
that, and wouldn't you get
some other disease drinking
raw milk9 Would like your
opinion on this diet as I do
have trouble with arthritis
and my husband has trouble
with his arteries I just won-
dered by eating all fresh food
and raw milk whether it
really would improve your
arteries.
DEAR READER-In a
word "GHASTLY." Raw milk
went out with the dark ages.
Happily we do have
pasteurized milk and in most
places it is required As a
result our children are not
exposed to many diseases
that are milk borne.
Widespread areas of the
Midwest once had cattle with
brucellosis, a disease they
then transmitted to humans
who drank the raw, infected
milk. That is only one disease
that milk can carry Milk is
good food, even for growing
germs. You don't need to tell
me anything else about that
diet. If it is as far off the truth
as the bit about raw milk in-
dicates, it is probably a
public health menace. Throw
it away and save yourself the
doctor bills it could cause
you.
Send your questions to Dr
Lamb, in care of this newspaper
PO Box 1551. Radio City Station.
New York, NY 10019 For a copy
of Dr lamb s booklet on balanced
diet send 50 cents to the same
address and ask for 'Balanced
Diet' booklet
Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Thursday, June 27,
the 176th day of 1973 with 187 to
follow.
The moon is between its first
quarter and full phase.
The morning stars are Venus
and Jupiter.
The evening stars are Mer-
cury, Mars and Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Cancer.
Blind author Helen Keller
was born June 27,1880
On this day in history:
In 1847, telegraph wire links
were established between New
York City and Boston.
In 1893, a major economic
depression began as prices
collapsed on the New York
Stock Exchange
In 1950, President Truman
ordered U.S. naval and air
forces to help repel the North
Korean invasion of South
Korea.
In 1960, a typhoon struck
lazon island in the Philippines,
killing more than 100.
We’re going to have additional legislation, such as we
recommended this year, strengthening a code id ethics for
state workers and elected officials. We have an intense study
underway right now on proposals which would require lull
disclosure of income and sources of income by public
officials.
Work on our roads and highways must continue so that
we have a modern system of roads and highways with every
possible safety factor built into them.
All this, and much more, must be done to assure that
Oklahoma will progress in a manner which Iwnefits all our
people and at the same time maintains the quality of life
we have long enjoyed.
The Light
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPII - The
term “Machiavellian" has
come to stand for all that is
dark, deep and devious in
politics and statecraft
Usually, the reference is to
Niccolo Machiaveli, an Italian
statesman, political theorist
and intriguer who operated in
Florence around the turn of the
16th Century.
But some folks who use the
term may be referring to Roy
Machiavelli, a storm door
dealer who ran for the school
board in Bagatelle, W.Va., in
1956
As to how either Machiavelli
got mixed up in the Watergate
affair, I am not prepared to
say. But ever since the case
broke, this city has been awash
with Machiavellian theories of
what really was behind the
various developments.
Who, for instance, has not
heard the theory that the
Democrats were really behind
the Watergate break-in?
. . Been Advanced
According to this theory, the
Democrats arranged the bur-
glary to make it appear the
Republicans were trying to bug
their headquarters, thus embar-
rassing President Nixon at a
crucial point in his re-election
campaign.
And that was fairly straight
forward compared to some of
the theories that have been
advanced.
The latest theorist of the
Machiavellian persuasion to
venture a conjecture is Rep.
Diomas M. Rees, D-Calif., who
speculates that the White House
is really behind all those leaks
from the House Judiciary
Committee's impeachment in-
quiry.
The course of Rees’ reasoning
is a bit sinuous in places, and
I'm not sure I didn't get lost on
reassemble it, the theory goes
like this:
Part of the White House
strategy in fighting impeach-
ment is to discredit the
Judiciary Committee and make
the move appear as a partisan
effort
So it arranges for Republican
members to leak confidential
material damaging to the
President
The White House then de-
nounces the leaks, building up
public resentment against the
Democratic majority and creat-
ing sympathy for the President
Threat to Resign
Got it? Very well. If you
followed that, you are ready for
a theory I heard the other day
regarding Secretary of State
Henry Kissinger’s threat to
resign.
Ready or not, there is a
labyrinthine logic behind it:
Kissinger is the “Mr. Cean"
of the Nixon administration and
one of the most admired
government figures in the
world.
For him to be linked with
White House wiretapping would
be disastrous So material is
leaked linking him to White
House wiretapping
Kissinger then vows to quit
unless his name is cleared and
it all works out to Nixon’s
advantage.
Machiavelli rides again.
How Can /
Q What can I do about a
scorched white shirt?
A. A scorch is not really a
stain, but a burn. However, if the
shirt has not been deeply bur-
ned, it can sometimes be
remedied by sponging with a
cloth dipped in peroxide, then
ironed again over the blemished
area with a clean, dry cloth over
it.
step."
Not only do NATO leaders
look with apprehension on the
edge which President Nixon
has already given the Soviet
Union in missile numbers and
payload, but the NATO
partners are also concerned
about the balance of troops
and equipment in Europe
The Soviet satellites. ac-
cording to one report, could
unleash a force of 925.000
men, 15,500 tanks and 2,800
aircraft "with very little
warning." As a defense, the
NATO nations have only 770,-
000 men, 6,000 tanks and 2,700
aircraft.
So despite appearances,
our European allies aren’t
united behind the President
as he sits down to bargain
with Soviet leader Leonid
Brezhnev.
Misused Millions: The ma-
jor airlines have stuffed $30
million, collected from pas-
sengers to combat hijacking,
into their corporate coffers.
The rip-off has been known
to federal regulators for a
year But only after goading
by Rep John Murphy, D-
N Y., and a few others has
the government stopped the
airlines from misusing the
antihijacking funds
The Civil Aeronautics
Boards, however, has done
nothing to recover the $30
million from the airlines
Here’s how the air passen-
gers have been taken, with
the connivance of the CAB
which is supposed to protect
them:
At the height of the hijack-
ings in 1972, the government
ordered airports and airlines
to take special security pre-
cautions. The costs were sup-
posed to be met by socking
the passengers 59 cents per
ticket
A 1973 audit, however,
showed that the average
airline spent only 35 cents
per ticket on the new security
set-up The remaining 24
cents were merely added to
the profits At nearly a
quarter a ticket, the extra
revenue quickly mounted up
to $30 million.
The chief beneficiaries
were American, Delta.
Eastern, TWA and United
Only a few small lines. such
as Alaska with its far-flung
stops, spent more than the
allotted 59 cents per ticket
The CAB's negligence,
however, has been matched
by the Federal Aviation Ad-
ministration's diligence
Although FAA head Alex-
ander Butterfield has admit-
ted in a frank letter to Mur-
phy that “the state of the art
has not provided us with
metal detectors that are 100
per cent efficient," not a
single passenger screened
with the metal detectors has
committed a hijacking since
January 1973
The FAA also revealed a
number of unpublicized inci-
dents where air security held
firm:
- On Aug 18, 1973, for ex-
ample. a 16-year-old with 241
rounds of ammunition and an
M-1 carbine came to Dulles
airport outside Washington
with plans to hijack a plane
and to demand $300,000 in
ransom Authorities caught
him before he could go
through with it.
— On June 4, 1973. a man
with a rifle walked into the
Portland, Ore. airport and
said he was broke, wanted to
charge his ticket and would
shoot anyone who stopped
him. A courageous policeman
grabbed the rifle which went
off but didn't kill anyone
As quickly as air security
men come up with antihijack
and antibomb solutions, the
terrorists develop new tech-
niques. as evidenced by
classified Justice Depart-
ment papers
They tell of interception of
passengers with ingenious
shotgun-shell devices for .
detonating bombs, and a
homemade bomb made to
look like artists' canvasses in
which the only solid element
that might show up on a
metal detector or X-ray are a
small battery, a bit of wire
and a tiny blasting cap
WASHINGTON - On his
way to Moscow, President
Nixon stopped off in Brussels
to sign a NATO charter and
to smile for the cameras But
behind the show of cordiality,
our NATO friends are
secretly worried that the
President will give more
than he will gain at the
Moscow summit meeting
This nagging concern ap-
pears in confidential draft
reports prepared for the
North Atlantic Assembly,
which gathered in Washing-
ton earlier this month.
The reports reveal that
some NATO leaders believe
the President has already
signed away the Western
military advantage The
result "could give the Soviet
Union tremendous
superiority in numbers of
warheads and total 'throw-
weight.'" warns one report.
NATO leaders are frankly
suspicious of detente. "De-
tente in Soviet eyes." states
another report, "is clearly to
achieve recognition by the
West of the political situation
in Eastern Europe and to
secure for the East as much
economic and technological
benefit as can be gained."
Unfortunately, adds the re-
port. the political softening
has been accompanied by a
military tightening
throughout the Soviet bloc
"Hence the price of detente
in the political sphere,” the
report warns, “is increased
readiness and vigilance in
the military sphere."
A report on "Atlantic Polit-
ical Problems" takes blunt
notice of the "domestic prob-
lems" besetting President
Nixon These, according to
the report, "threaten to
severely handicap
his., authority."
Declares the confidential
document "Most people
would now acknowledge that
above all, the President needs
a major foreign policy initia-
tive to counter the domestic
issues that threaten to engulf
him
“This in turn increases the
suspicion of his critics that he
will seek a major agreement
with the Soviet Union that
will have more to do with
domestic prestige than the
longterm foreign policy in-
terests of the country."
In one report, the latest U.S.
doctrine that "nuclear attack
would be met by whatever
scale of launch the circums-
tances demanded" is de-
scribed as a "dangerous
development."
This permits "a theorecti-
cal approach to nuclear
weapons which is out of touch
with political reality." the
document charges "It im-
plies the possibility of waging
limited nuclear war and the
Xi
33
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. 82, No. 94, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 27, 1974, newspaper, June 27, 1974; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1867109/m1/10/: accessed July 12, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.