The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 83, No. 210, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 12, 1975 Page: 3 of 26
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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THREE —
THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS. Wednesday, November 12, 1975
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Broadmore 12"
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STEREO RADIO/TAPE PLAYER
Regular 79.88
Electrgphonic
36" STEREO CONSOLE
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changer end diamond stylus •full range •
speaker Duocone audio system efqulpped
with spoaker motris switch to* channel
sound with addition of two speakers
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LATEX FLAT
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REGULARLY 4.99
Choose from 10 popu-
lar decorator colors.
Dries in just 30 min-
utes to a lovely flat
finish. Fast soap and
water clean-up for
you and your tools.
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8 TRACK PLAYER
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shoulder/carry (trap allow* you to tote it and
play it practically anywhere •Aecessory PA
mika maha* It possible tor you to sing-along.
• AM. FM, FM Multiple, radio •Solid-atote
circuitry •Pu«hbufton for power •four
position rotary twitch for AM, FM-MPX,
phono and tape •Slide controlt for volume,
balance and tone •Sferao headphone lock
•Automatic tape program indicator light
•Manual pushbutton for program changing
•Jackt for phono addition •Equlpped with
speaker matrix twitch for 4-channel sound
with addition of two speakers.
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Entertainment Center
CASSETTE RECORDER OUTFIT
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collont sound reproduetlon ’No tepe threed-
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for privete listening.
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delivers 2 wefts per chonnel RMS at 10*. TWO
•■quipped with blue illumineted cockpit
Stylo sweep tuning diol, slide sound controls
•Outputs for tepo spenkers, hoodphono, and
unswlched AC outlet Zulle-in full also
chenger with eueing puts avylus pressure
edjuvtment ocryile dual cover • Complete
with two mevehedlull-renge apoobora
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full size changer eAir
suspension speaker system
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switches for Power on/ON and
motris •5 rotery controls for
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Reg. 176.00 Lay-A-Way For Christmas Now
By Ray Cromley
WASHINGTON - (NEA) - Terrorist bombs killed 20 and
injured 122 in the United States in the year ending April 30
That compares with three dead and 51 wounded in the previous
12 months.
Some of the more prominent terrorist groups seem ex-
tremely well funded, supplied with able attorneys
Neither President Ford's men nor local police know what to
• do Most suggested solutions would expand police intelligence
and powers and compromise personal freedoms to a degree
most Americans would not be willing to accept And might. in
anv event. be counterproductive
As Brooks McClure. Pentagon-State Department expert on
terrorism. says "Sometimes countermeasures. even
i relatively mild ones, attract a lot of sympathy to the so-called
• underdog there's a tendancy for many people - people not
at all inclined toward violence themselves, or who even sup-
port violence — to come to the defense of an activist group
that they feel somehow is being abused
Most terrorist groups, in fact, aim at provoking police into
actions which will win them converts
The whole trick . " says McClure, "is getting the proper
balance between effective countermeasures without
• repression that affects the general population
in President Ford's attempts at finding an answer some
: knowledge of U.S terrorists has emerged
Contrary to prevalent opinion. Pentagon studies show the
I ideological terrorist to be an intelligent young man or woman
| very often attractive and conventional looking With few ex-
I ceptions. he or she is middle class with some university train-
ing. reasonably affluent and with no history of material or
• cultural deprivation The prominence of women in the
I movements and in leadership posts is striking
Most began their political activism between age 17 and 20
I The average today is in his or her mid-30s.
Typically, they have a deeply emotional sometimes
I suicidal. sense of commitment A great deal of their motiva
I tion seems to be psychological rather than political Met lure
I believes they are acting out their frustrations
| Though some seem to have rejected the values of their
I parents, and are in revolt, more frequently they "appear to
s t have simply extended into violent action the socially critical
I attitudes of their parents
B Worldwide. few terrorists have total disregard for their own
3 lives Many daring acts of hostage-taking appear to be based
B on a fair calculation of getting away
| Though there have been suicide attacks, such as that on
I Israel's Lod Airport in 1972, bombing buildings at night is
i relatively safe if the target is poorly guarded
I Terrorism tends to escalate under its own momentum The
I movements tend to disintegrate in the absense of action.
N maintenance of discipline becomes difficult
I ’ Because they find it difficult to compromise, and tend to
B fragment in disagreement when compromise is attempted
R terrorists typically and deliberately avoid saying too much
E about what they would propose to substitute for the existing
I system There is, in fact, usually a lack of plan - because a
2 plan entails compromises which could break up the move-
H ment it is easier to take the offensive
1 • These internal weaknesses may offer a promising line of at-
I, There's a possibility, for example, terrorist groups will aid
K their own destruction, as witness the Tupamaros. extremely
I effective in Uruguay a few years back The movement
g became too large, making discipline, control and security dil
R ficult. Fringe elements, lacking the dedication of the original
I ' group, joined the organization. facilitating government
E penetration _ __
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Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 83, No. 210, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 12, 1975, newspaper, November 12, 1975; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1867538/m1/3/: accessed June 4, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.