The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 83, No. 94, Ed. 1 Monday, June 30, 1975 Page: 1 of 11
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M21
11-3-75
‘5
Uhe Uhitkasha Baily ExpreE
I All AMERICA CII /1
I CHICKASHA OKI A |
'ini'
PRICE 15 CENTS
United Press International
CHICKASHA, OKLAHOMA, MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1975
TEN PAGES
VOL. S3 —NO. 94
Federal Energy Officials
N
242.
unprecedented prominence
billion budget for fiscal year 1995, a decade beyond the goal al processing
President Ford, officials has- solar energy, coal, improved oil it Project Independence
1985 and 2900 of synthetic gas
'■ u
By Deranged Texan
CBO said.
trial gold users.
CIA Director Colby Against Disclosures
kkkkk
Upswing
in Prices
Predicted
Miss ) our Paper?
Chickasha subscribers who
miss service mas get their
Express by calling the Cir-
culation Department, 224-
3600. between 5:00 and 7:00
p.m Monday through Friday,
8:00 a m and 12 noon on
Saturday, or 7:00 and 8:30
a.m. on Sunday.
District W eather
Fair to partly cloudy and
warm through Tuesday. Local
temperatures 1 p.m. today 85,
Sunday high 96, Sunday night
low 71.
"ROSEBLD"
This coupon good for two
tickets to see the above
picture.
Hugo police station to use the today were from 64 at Guymon
to 72 at Tulsa
The Chickasha Express
Invites
EDWARD J.SULLIVAN
to the W ashita Theater to see
"Oklahoma's Most Intorosting—And Most Readable— Daily Newspaper"
Dateline 1775
By United Press International
PHILADELPHIA. June 30
Congress adopted Articles of
War to regulate the Continental
.Army. The colony's assembly
appointed a committee of
safety to plan defense of the
province with Benjamin Fran-
klin as head of the 25-member
group
- doned the nuclear breeder breeder uses and produces.
CH I CKASHA, OKLA.
7 JO I 8
is the only place I know of The show will be nationally War of 1812; and then settle
where you can tell what a guy televised and shown on Ok- down in the elegantly restored
* does just by looking at his lahoma stations Thursday 19th Century Supreme Court
boots Where I come from the night. (Continued On Page 2)
Delivering a 25-year research 1976, with the additional money set by Ford. But officials said —Accelerated work leading to
blueprint to Congress and going to expanded research in that did not necessarily discred- commercial production between
Rep. Tom Steed Speaker Th par
For Bi-Centennial Tour Of Reserve
By Joe Car ter of his beloved son during World history with contemporary WASHINGTON (UPI) — The management reorganization
(Editor’sNote: Theauthoris a War II. He is not bitter; simply events. 500,000 ounces of gold the U.S. and a new assessment of
former Oklahoma newsman, patriotic. Americans will see Steed rub government had on sale today environmental impact,
now administrative assistant to Seated in the historic old U.S. the toe of Will Rogers'statue for is only a tiny fraction of the
Congressman Ted Supreme Court Chambers, the good luck. Hartz, a native nation's 276 million ounce
Resenhoover.i Oklahoma congressman tells Oklahoman like Steed and reserve —about equal to the
WASHINGTON, D.C. — When Hartz and America about the Rogers, then will polish the well- weekly output of South Africa s
America’s bi-centennial year famous decisions Chief Justice wornbronzetoefor his own luck, goldmines
dawns next Friday, millions will John Marshall hammered out Both are symbols of American But the Treasury Department
watch two Oklahomans explain (1801-35) shaping our Con- "luck" because both have risen could realize earnings of about
and muse about our nation's stitution into a mighty hammer through hard work to the peaks million from today s auc-
capital. of freedom. of their aspirations. tion, the second since gold was
Jim Hartz, host of NBC's While the film crews adjusted "We have Will Rogers faced so legalized for private use in the
Today Show, will stroll through their lighting during filming of he can keep his eye on United States,
the Capitol with veteran the segments, Steed whispered: Congress," Steed qiips. "That
Congressman Tom Steed— "Marshall liked a glass of wine shouldbepunishmentenoughfor
chatting a bout the first 199 years but would allow it only on rainy all the mean things he wrote
of the republic. For Hartz, it days. Duringa long dry spell, he about us"
Even the most optimistic of —An unmediate focus on
mtchaspakyu sr"opine -----
S the agency's secret Meet the Press), was asked He added: "Some of the facts -Asked if the Rockefeller declined to say whether the
” ... 8 - why it Was necessary to are not well known or not well Commission substantiated a National Security Agency regu-
. a "S it is inevitable that if maintain absolute secrecy over recorded, and some of the charge the CIA conducted a larly monitors telephone cals
' you expose a single figure, you funds spent by the CIA. degree to which various people massive, illegal domestic oper- between American citizens and
-m immedintny get a delate CIA spending in recent years within and outside of the ation during the Nixon adminis- citizens in foreign countries,
wiltimmnedittingdts awhbttt has been hidden in Defense agency were a part of any such (ration: "I don't think so." The —I categorically deny” any
does’nottochide why did it go Department appropriations activities is not very clear." commission “found three CIA involvement in attempts to
ST whi d2 1 go down he me Rockefeller CoLission Colby also said: agents whose work was illegal remove Indian Prime Minister
Sid "Lid shortly get toto a recommended Congress consid- -He failed through a "misun- I don't think that’s massively Indira Gandhi.
Abandon Stand On Atom
WASHINGTON (UPI) — Ina In part, he said, more coal and oil shale by 1985 and now inhibit greater use of
sharp retreat from past empha- information is needed about to increase emphasis on sun- presently available energy
sis on the atom, federal energy potental medical effect of light as a source of electricity sources, primarily coal and
officials today formally aban- plutonium—the deadly fuel the by 2000. water-cooled nuclear reactors
HUGO, kla. (UPI) - A shooting and Magar died an personnel and the members of
Texas man described by his hour later while undergoing the highway patrol risk their
wife as despondent because he emergency surgery. Authorities lives to serve us as citizens,
lost his job a month ago shot said the bullet that struck “All of us deeply apprecate
and killed a state trooper Magar lodged in his liver the efforts which they make,"
Sunday. Authorities had no motive for Boren said.
Trooper J.C. Magar, 29, found die shooting, but said McAl- Magar, who celebrated his
WASHINGTON I UPI) - The Charles McAlpine, 22, of pine's wife told them her 29th birthday Saturday, was a
The void was offered in 250- Congressional Budget Office Houston and his wife stranded husband had lost his job a native of Garvin and a
ounce bars and the minimum predicted today that recent south of Hugo on VS 771 by month ago and had been graduate of Idabel High School
bid was one bar At the current declines in the rate of inflation car trouble. Patrol Lt. Don despondent since. He joined the highway patrol in
market price, one bar is worth will soon end, with prices langley said Magar took the He was arrested by Tulsa 1970
. - , 2.e . . ui 50 resuming their upward swing. McAlpines to the Hugo police police Friday evening on a He is survived by his widow,
launches a year-long senes of looked out ata cloudless sky and Steed, formerly a gutsy " 12“ in a projection of the station so they could telephone charge of public intoxication by Brenda; son, James, 5; daught-
visits to the 50 states which ends said; "It must be raining’ newspaper man like Will Vssmsosnuctontan economy’s course over the next Houston and try to arrange for use of drugs and officers said er, Dana, 8; and parents, Mr
onour national 200th birthdayin somewhere within our Rogets, actually{admires the thurimstomon Jan6 18 months, the CBO said it was transportation, he was very belligerent during and Mrs. Vester Magar of
Philadelphia, the city where the jurisdiction, so let shave a glass late humorist who whittled on the first one on aDerices "moderately less optimistic After making a call to the time he was in jail. He was Garvin
country was born. Washington is of wme congressmen. Steed knew on said F rid a v more than the White House, which Houston McAlpine sat down, bonded out by his wife AU highway patrol troopers in
where we matured. Steeds mind steeped in Rogers personally. That was nunisfration sad fnday ir»re has been haili end Of the then jumped from his chair and Saturday evening, the state have covered their
Steed talks about the good history from nearly 30 years as a years ago-but are among the tomnmer. lis intom ss"wreon recession and a 50 per cent cut grabbed Ma gar's service revol The death of Trooper Magar badges with a black ribbon and
“•Hie symbol of our liberty," powerful congressman and instant Steed memories. Even Eondisyp denseows But to the inflation rate ver. Langley said The man saddens all Oklahomans ’’Gov. the badges will remain shroud-
Steed calls the Capitol with respected chairman after after years as a responsible win mnagonugswaiting It also predicted an unem- threatened to kill both Magar David Boren said. "This ed until after Magar's funeral
serious patriotism that was previous service as an ad- chairman of an appropriations "ntt ™ny gon ougs on f rate of 7.8 to 8.2 and the police dispatcher unless incident demonstrates again Funeral arrangements were
nurtured in a covered wagon ministrative assistant to three subcommittee-guiding the “pe ™ last sidt the accompanied him on a how often our law enforcement pending Sunday evening
molded in the red clay of congressmen before running expenditure of countless bilions nreasuryepeassamatetas down from the present rate but plane out of Hugo
Oklahoma and glazed by the loss himself, twines early American of dollars. Steed can recall numhe.o above the White House predic- Magar and McAlpine went ry A 1
small detai S ° eca lespast. * After lifting the 40_year ban tions. outside and the trooper was trooper Completes
A 1 Aiy TT P H on orivate ownership of gold by CBO is a new agency, created shot in the side as he was I I
Crowd Cheers Hope tessieweartarttage35,oneot UP ctizens, the TFeasury t advise Congress on how getting into his car, pobce said — ’I
I the top men in television Years offered 2 milion ounces of much spending to permit to McAlpine was then hit by a HouGe H or Hamlv
m • AI OP . 5 , j j bunin Jan 6 The resnon3 was keep the economy on an even volley of bullets fired by police -VMS- * “ J
During Observance ngoshnreadandnportimradn Sluggish,bids werePlow and keel. Its report was the first it officers and Choctaw County HUGO, Okla. (UPI _ telephone and McAlpine al
• when I was a UPI correspon- only’754,000 ounces were sold at has issued deputies. Highway patrol trooper J.C. legedly ordered him outside
’ OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) — only gusher we have is Howard dent Today he is the same an average price of $165.67. The rate of inflation had McAlpine died in a Hugo Magar had just completed a and shot him with the trooper’s
About 12,000 enthusiastic Ok- Cosell." sincere and warm human-but An alarming slide in the free fallen to an annual level of 5 hospital one hour after the house for his family and revolver Police and county
lahomans cheered Bob Hope, During one break for a still a no-nonsense probing market gold price, from about per cent in May -down from celebrated his 29th birthday He officers then shot and killed
John Davidson and dancer commercial during the taping newsman. $199 an ounce when the first an average of 12 per cent in was shot to death Sunday. McAlpine.
Juliet Prowse at the bicentenni- of the show, he told the Tom Steed: atage71oneof the sale was announced to $170 an 1974 Wa dU Magar, a five-year patrol He'd pick them up and take
al version of the annual Stars audience he read about a dozen most powerful men in ounce at auction time, was a But developments on the VV • •• C VV veteran, was shot and killed by them wherever they needed to
and Stripes Show Sunday night Revolutionary War invasion of Congress with 20 years as an big factor in the lackluster energy front threaten t0 refuel Mrs. Walt Flood, in a a motorist he aided. He and his go. He must have done that a
Davidson, the master of Oklahoma in which the soldiers Oklahoma newsman before turnout. inflation, the CBO report said telephoneconversation ...Mrs. wife, son and daughter were to million times here,” Dukes
' ceremonies, won immediate came up the Poteau River and jumpinginto politics. I knew him Since then, the price of the I Ciedit oL EXE6taes George Evans, taking care of move into the new house this said
approval by entering singing raised the Jolly Roger. “Not when I was a newsman and later often volatile metal has found a impose y rest en o e some business downtown this week.
"Oklahoma!” He starred in the John Rogers, he left town," he when I took to politics. He is the plateau. It was roughly $167 an widely anticipated price in- morning.. Blair Nelson, with a "It’s a pretty big loss to all of I ,,
New York City Center revival said. same genuine and generous ounce on May 30, when the creases th fall by sorsugn1.01 friendly greeting .. Clarence us down here. Everybody knew Forecast Tor
of the musical "Oklahoma!" Lee Trevino, who was struck human-still acts and thinks like second sale was announced and nations and the possibility(at Fly, stopping off at a drugstore him," his partner, Bob Salmon, p • We,t Lep
Hope joked about Oklahoma by lightning on a golf course a tough, inquiring reporter, was about $166 an ounce at the -ongres will accept lords for coffee while downtown today said. I a Wtmilll
driving, industries and politics, last week, but not seriously Onour national 199th birthday, close of business Friday. proposal that domestic on ...Wayne Brooks .spraying his Salmon said he could not By United Press International
"They all drive here like injured, also was one of Hope’s standing on the West Side of the «y don’t think they'll be prpes be Trend Irom con ° „ shrubs . Rev. Max Berry, believe it when a lake More warm and mostly fair
they’re trying to get St. targets. Capitol with 20-some million beating down the doors but nadiata ann indutinrat, of stoppingin at the Daily Express patrolman told him Magar had weather is in store for
Christopher reinstated," he “When God wants to play Americans watching TODAY, there Should be a litte more Peq d 4 f office . Mrs. Jerry Fairchild, been shot. Oklahoma the rest of the week.
’ said. through, you better move they will stooD and chat into the action than last time," said Lher t.n Manrorat ’or the talking over old acquaintances He said Magar a native of forecasters said today.
"Fifty-five miles per hour in over," he said. grand rotunda of the Capitol; Thomas W. Wolfe, director of ."3405 with a friend Greg Ratcliff. Garvin in southeastern Ok- The outlook includes the
California is the speed you go Oklahoma native Anita discuss a plaque which marked the Treasury’s Office of Domes- 8 ; 1 ua , *e busy installing a new television lahoma, "just wanted to get possibility of widely scattered
to change a flat," Hope said. Bryant, Charley Pride and the our 100th birthday; climb a tic Gold and Silver Operations. nidEi» e era trom -set over the weekend, back down in this part of the afternoon thundershowers,
Noting the major industries Cisco Wrangler Belles of Cisco, spiral staircase where British , H , Mr Ejwene Raker talkin country” mostly in the southeast half of
•of oil and cattle, he said, "This Tex., also were featured, bullets ricocheted during the The reason for the sate. Unemploymen wil a so e • - - c oming vacation Magar graduated from the the state through Tuesday and
according to Treasury officials, worse than the White House poutmtpepvmkinonve patrol cadet academy in 1970 in the north and east the latter
was to satisfy demand from predicts though better than MrandspMaonEtig. Mr and worked in Okemah until half of the week But the
American jewelers and Indus- Mays 9.2 per cent rate, the andMrscinBusbtand Mr late 1973. weather service said the
and Mrs. Dale Schneider and Darvin Dukes, an Okfuskee probability of ram at any
son Chad enjoying an outing County deputy sheriff who specific location was slight
and picnic at Lake Chickasha worked with Magar in Okemah. Temperatures were expected
County Commissioners, looking said 916 trooper had a to reach highs today and
over a new ambulance which reputation of picking up strand- Tuesday from 87 to 93 and lows
may be purchased for county use ed motorists. tonight from the mid 605 to
. . Mrs. Debbie Duncan and .Magar picked up Charks near 70.
McAlpine and his wife south of Highs Sunday ranged from 91
Hugo when their car broke at Hobart to 87 at Ponca City
down. He took them to the and McAlester. Lows early’
• tened to note that the basic production, conservation and At least one of those three and oil from shale and coal.
■ energy costs in the United advanced energy system, bong-range processes appears —Inclusion for the first time
g States are likely to double by The new blueprint said the necessary to guarantee the of solar electric power
5 the year 2000 no matter what breeder, once targeted for nation enough energy in the produced by windmills, solar
E; technology is developed for the commercial use no later than future, the report said, but it is cells and differences in ocean
H future. 1987, now probably will not impossible to predict now which water temperatures as a high
Hl And Ford also cautioned that become a major commercial can be developed for economic priority possibility for the year
53 energy sufficiency is still a long energy producer until the early commercial application, 2000 and beyond.
E way off. 21st century —if ever. It called for five major —Increased attention to pre-
-- --------- , The research plan prepared It stressed instead the need changes in U.S. energy re sently underused technologies
' A CONTRAST IN TIME AND DIRECTION - A windmill and a radar initallation are years apart, but somehow they appear to be in by the Energy Research and for an expanded range of search policy: that can be developed rapidly,
harmony with each other. Development Administration research, including more vigor- —New emphasis on technical such as solar heating and
asked for a 571.4 million ous efforts to produce synthetic solutions to reliability and cooling of buildings and the use
reduction in funding next year natural gas and crude oil from environmental problems that of geothermal power.
for the controversial breeder
Dr. Robert C. Seamans Jr., _
headof ERDA, said the funding £7^ j A B 6 I a
reduction was requested be- •t 6a ■ I D4dThdF e M2 4al
cause the breeder program is • U Cl U A LU • JU * N I ■ U U
being slowed down to allow a
reactor as a major power Seamans noted ERDA also six scenarios presented in the conservation efforts, with initial
source for this century and was asking for a $63 million plan showed the United States emphasis on the automobile,
raised solar power research to increase in its original $1.7 continuing to import oil until building insulation and industri-
nivrrsity i rxience ana axis
if Oklahoma - LiBRAHY
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Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 83, No. 94, Ed. 1 Monday, June 30, 1975, newspaper, June 30, 1975; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1867423/m1/1/?q=aRCHIVES: accessed May 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.