The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 83, No. 226, Ed. 1 Monday, December 1, 1975 Page: 4 of 10
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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Berry’s World
Advice From
45
d
Answer to Previous Puzzie
Solo
i
M 27 Big--
Washington Window
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42
INNIAL
40
46
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51
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47
53
52
55
54
Va
1
1
268
Ir "Oklahoma's Most Roadable Dolly Newspaper"
Ho
d
MEDIA GROUP
MEMBER DONREY
i
I
y
42 Withered
43 Music as
written
4
11 Transgress
12 Was sealed
18 Cylindrical
22 Trial prints
23 Upward
(comb form)
24 Person
addressed
25 Bitter vetch
27 Vocal music
28 Gram
steeped
in water
29 Girl s name
30 Aduit male
Charles Drew
George Miller
iarl Reeves • ■
rancis Best ..
Eichard Cline
ACROSS
i Solo
14 Biblical region
IS Accumulate
16 Fricative
17 Nervous
ieughter
19 Greek letter
20 Noun sutfixes
21 Roman
goddess
23 Word of assent
26 Downcast
Blue and gold are the state
colors of California.
(
he
me
»f
pe
'ht
ind
on
I
4
—Publisher-
Central Publishers Ltd.
47 Ultimate (2
wds )
51 Weaned
52 Has a noble
desire
53 Greek
goddess
54 Most precious
55 Swift horse
DOWN
1 Defense
lor med by
felled trees
2 Thin plate
3 Spoke
pompously
4 Snug places
5 Gaelic
6 World War II
group (ab )
7 Backs of necks
8 Exude
9 City near
40 Likely Osaka
V 41 Library sound 10 Epoch
The Lighter Side
... General Manager
.....Executive Editor
Advertising Manager
. Production Manager
. Circulation Manager
Merrygorounc
Indeed, the FBI had learned
from Julius Rosenberg’s cell-
6
t
o
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n
b
.Opinions of columnists are their own
and are not necessarily concurred in
by The Chickasha Daily Express.)
Thought For Today
, And his name, by faith in his name, has made this man strong
! whom you see and know; and the faith which is through Jesus
i has given the man this perfect health in the presence of you all.
- Arts 3:16.
• ‘6 175 M, Inc
"Lt mt put it this way. You'ro not ttblo. I'm
not atoblt. Why thould wa txptct our
GOVERNMENT to be ttblo?"
t
i
v
a
fl
6 Singleness
13 More exposed 45 Sole
By Jack Anderson
(Copyright, 1973,
by UNITED
Feature Syndicate, Inc.)
WASHINGTON - Newly
released documents have
revived interest in the case of
Julius and Ethel Rosenberg,
who were executed for es-
pionage 22 years ago. But still
buried is the stark story of how
the FBI plotted to wring a con-
fession from Julius by executing
his wife first
it was the FBI's grisly hope
that Julius, horrified by the
trauma of his wife's death and
his own impending electrocu-
tion, would blurt out a last-
minute confession
The late FBI chief J Edgar
Hoover was worried about
public doubts that the Rosen-
bergs were guilty, doubts that
still stubbornly persist Hoover
wanted a dramatic, 11th-hour
confession to clear up the
doubts
The FBI was convinced, ac-
cording to our sources, that the
Rsoenbergs not only were guilty
but that the strong-willed Ethel
was preventing her weaker hus-
band from confessing.
W
Pr
.1
1
r
i
■ |
#
TShe Ghurkusha Ms
Almanac
By United Press International
Today is Monday, Dec. 1, the
335th day of 1975 with 30 to
follow.
The moon is approaching its
new phase.
The morning stars are Venus,
Mais and Saturn.
The evening stars are Mer-
cury and Jupiter.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Satittarius.
American actress Mary Mar-
tin was born Dec. 1,1914.
On this day in history :
In 1913, the world’s first
drive-in gasoline station opened
for business in Pittsburgh.
In 1917, Father Edward
Flanagan founded Boys Town,
the “City of Little Men," 11
miles west of Omaha, Neb.
In 1943, ending a "Big Three”
meeting in Tehran, Iran,
American President Franklin
D. Roosevelt, British Prime
Minister Winston Churchill and
Russian Premier Josef Stalin
pledged a concerted effort to
defeat Nazi Germany.
In 1974, a TWA 727 jetliner
crashed into a wooded slope in
the rain near Upperville, Va.,
killing all 92 persons aboard.
2589088
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uranic 0-03 H0G
ali nnsn (NA0
mnLiHcnaw uaLiPici
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-GGI HUM I LIMHK
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-FOUR
IRS abuse: your
tax dollar at work
WASHINGTON - (NBA) - Your income tax forms are not
held in confidence
Thousands are regularly looked at by the Justice Depart-
ment, the Securities and Exchange Commission. Congres-
sional committees and other assorted agencies and branches
of the federal and state governments Sometimes for very
good reason, sometimes in fishing expeditions for suspected
law violations of one type or another and sometimes merely to
secure background information as to what kind of a person you
“n the first half of 1974 alone, the Internal Revenue Service
supplied the Department of Justice with 6,114 returns, U S at-
torneys with 9,570, the Securities and Exchange Commission
with 238 and on and on and on
The Civil Aeronautics Board used tax returns to look into
profits on charter flights They were used to investigate alleg-
ed kickbacks by a borrower from the Rural Electrification Ad-
ministration They have been used by combined strike forces
attacking organized crime. Committees have used them to
learn who has information on something being investigated
For a time, the data in income tax forms was used to screen
prospective jurors in federal cases
In many instances the user has provided the IRS with no ser-
ious or specific justification for seeking the material in
others the IRS has taken the initiative and suggested that
another agency ask it for information on an individual
Some of these forms are widely circulated without adequate
controls to various and sundry departments.
There has been a growing demand for tax returns by U S at-
torneys for investigative purposes, with no assurance that
these politically appointed, usually politically ambitious men
will not use them illegally to discredit political opponents
Congressional committees have used tax information for
developing investigative leads, providing excellent op-
portunities for political abuse
As the official Administrative Conference of the United
States - which made the study on which much of this column
is based - notes in a detailed report provided Congress, some
interesting information has been developed on past White
House requests for tax returns
“Early in the Kennedy administration, Carmine s bellino,
a special consultant to the President, entered into arrange-
ments with the Internal Revenue Service to inspect tax
returns and associated documents
"Similarly, in the Nixon administration, Clark R
Mollenhoff, Deputy Counsel to the President, reached an un-
derstanding with the Commissioner of Internal Revenue con-
cerning the inspection of tax returns
"So far as is known, neither individual had an actual
Presidential order to inspect tax returns They merely exer-
cised the influence of the White House to obtain access to tax
information .
"In the Watergate investigation, further evidence was
developed that tax return information was improperly
transmitted to the White House
"A few weeks after President Ford took office, he issued an
executive order designed to control White House access to tax
information . " But, the Administrative Conference notes,
executive orders can be changed at will by any president or his
successors
There is evidence the present head of the IRS, over strong
opposition is attempting to eradicate some of the abuses out-
lined above How effective he will prove remains to be seen
for he is s' ady in hot water for his efforts
an hour later he was ready for
another one
Question: Well, what qualifi-
cation has Bush got for this
job?
Answer Man: He was chair-
man of the Republican Nationa
Committee. That proves he can
run an underground organiza-
tion.
Question: And Donald Rums-
feld as Defense Seretary? What
does he know about that kind of
work?
Answer Man: Remember, he
was Nixon's director of the
Office of Economic Oppor-
tunity. Ford figures anyone who
can wipe out the war on
poverty can keep the peace at
the Pentagon.
Question: Why is the Presi-
dent bringing Eliot Richardson
back from London to be
Secretary of Commerce?
Answer Man: Actually, Rich-
ardson liked being Ambassador
to England. But Prime Minister
Wilson complained he couldn’t
understand Richardson's Boston
accent And nobody listens to
the Secretary of Commerce
anyway.
Question: The President
seems to think letting New
York go bankrupt will teach the
city a lesson. What does he
think it will learn?
Answer Man: How to be nicer
to Republicans.
Question: The President says
his campaign is going well and
it is ridiculous to think all of
his trips to California mean he
is worried about losing the
state. What about that?
Answer Man: That’s a lot of
orange juice.
34 Devour
37 Extent
38 Feminine
appellation
39 Necessary
41 Sheets of glass
42 Force air
through nose
43 Bustle
44 Lacerated
46 Egyptian
wading bird
47 Youngster
48 Peer Gynt s
mother
31 Biting insects 49 Watering place
32 Palm leaf (var 1 50 Superlative
33 Bite suttx
10 Years Ago
(From Express Files
Dec. 1,1965)
Robert Buser and Larry
Taylor, members of Friend 4-H
Club, received first place and
grandchampion ribbonson their
project entered in the National
4-H Chibcongress now in session
in Chicago . . . President
Johnson awaited a first-hand
report from Defense Secretary
Robert S. McNamara today
before deciding how to counter
the faster rising infiltration of
Communist troops into Vietnam
.. . Weathermen gave Gemini 7
Astronauts Frank Borman and
James Lovell a tentative go
ahead today for blastoff
Saturday on man’s longest
venture into space... Ten young
women from Grady County are
members of the 39-voice
women’s glee chib at Oklahoma
College of Liberal Arts, which
will present its 42nd annual
Christinas Candlelight Service
for the public at 3 and 7:30 p.m.
Sunday, Dec. 12.
Patrick Henry was a lawyer
and member of the Virginia
House of Burgesses where he
spoke out against
Parliament’s Stamp Act in
1765 Among the seven resolu-
tions he proposed in his
speech, the last one claimed
that Virginia enjoyed com-
plete legislative autonomy
He closed. The World
Almanac recalls, by stating
Caesar had his Brutus -
Charles the first, his Crom-
well - and George the third -
may he profit by their exam-
ple If this is treason,
make the most of it "
20 Years Ago
(From Express Files
Dec. 1.1955)
U.S. officials said today that
“Blockade" conditions could
arise at any minute as a result of
the Russian's change in the
rules undivided Berlin. A senior
American officer said the Soviet
authorities have made it clear
that: The East German Com-
munist Republic (DPRI which
surrounds Berlin, is completely
sovereign. The Eastern Soviet
sector of Berlin, is part of the
DDR. All laws of the so-called
DDR now apply to the quarter of
Berlin whichonce was called the
Soviet Sector. .. Virtually all of
Grady County's record shat-
tering 1955 cotton crop has been
kept off the open market with
the farmers preferring to take
Commodity Credit Corp. loans. .
. Mr. and Mrs. O. C. Bush have
returned to their home in Cof-
feyville Kan. after visiting here
during the Thanksgiving holiday
with Mr. Bush's sister, Miss
Lillian Bush, 1313 South
Seventh.
THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS, Monday, December * 1775
Washington
A Physician
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR LAMB - My
two and a half year old son has
hypoglycemia. Last New
Years day he was acting very
strange all morning By
strange I mean very tipsy,
throwing up and terribly crab-
by I laid him down for a nap.
and an hour later I heard a
loud scream I ran to the
bedroom His bed was
covered with vomit, and he
was in a coma We rushed him
to the hospital and over an
hour later it was established
that he had a low blood sugar
As soon as they injected sugar
he came out of the coma
within minutes
He remained in the hospital
for a week, but they never
came to a conclusion as to
what caused the episode.
About two weeks ago he was
showing the same symptoms,
and I gave him a glass of juice
with a lot of sugar in it. and in
about 10 minutes he was fine
again
Our son is super-active and
seems to always need
something to eat or drink 1
try not to give him sweets to
snack on is this the right
thing to do’ Can you help me
as to what is causing this’
Will he have it the rest of his
life’ I have read about
hypoglycemia in your
columns, but it doesn't seem
to fit my boy
DEAR READER - Your
description sounds like he has
primary hypoglycemia The
usual type of disorder seen in
most adults is secondary and
is often related to a previous
stomach operation or certain
poor dietary habits These
people usually get
hypoglycemia after eating,
whereas the primary attacks
can occur before eating
I can't tell you exactly what
your son has, but I do know
that he will need some very
specialized tests and for that
reason you should arrange to
have him seen by the
endocrine-metabolic section
of the nearest university
medical center Don't delay
as repeated attacks in
children sometime lead to
brain damage He can
probably be treated
The most likely problem is
some defect in complex en-
zymes in his metabolic
system Of course, he could
also have some extra insulin-
producing tissue If it is the
latter that could be removed
if it is an enzyme disorder his
proper treatment will depend
on what the defect actually is
Remember hypoglycemia is
just a symptom, not a
diagnosis You'll need to know
the cause of the symptom to
provide proper treatment
In the secondary more com-
mon type of hypoglycemia,
the patient has anxiousness
sweating, tremor and a host of
symptoms related to the
release of adrenaline
In primary hypoglycemia
the effects of a low blood
glucose level in the brain
dominate the symptoms The
patient will show signs of
altered behavior, as your son
did. of mental confusion,
coma and even convulsions
In primary hypoglycemia
physical activity may use up
all the available glucose and
induce an attack Your active
son could very well do this
When he is active be sure he
has enough to eat. including
available sugar
Fur those who want more
information on hypoglycemia,
send 50 cents for The Health
Letter, number 3 9. Low Blood
Sugar Hypoglycemia, with a
long, stamped, self-addressed
envelope Send your letter to
Dr Lamb in care of this
newspaper. PO Box 1551,
Radio City Station. New York,
NY 10019
By DICK WEST
WASHINGTON (UPI) - One
of the world’s friction points
that is becoming ever more
fractious is the nationalizaton
offish.
Fish are notoriously cos-
mopolitan in appearance and
habit. Hook a haddock two
miles off the coast of California
and you couldn’t tel just by
looking whether it was a
Japanese haddock, a Russian
haddock or what.
The only way you would know
it was an American haddock is
by the fact that you caught Rin
U.S. territorial, or piscatorial
waters.
The lack of ethnic character-
istics in seafood makes it
necessary for a country to
nationalize the fish off its
shores. Otherwise, some would
be caught by fishermen from
other countries who were
unable to distinguish one
country’s fish from another’s.
For years, the standard
piscatorial limit was three
miles. In other words, any
haddock that swam within
three miles of, say, Peru
automatically became a Peruvi-
an haddock.
But if the same haddock
subsequently ventured farther
southward, then it magically
changed into a Chilean had-
dock. Thus some migratory
species might switch nationali-
ties several times during a
single season.
This situation did not set well
with some countries. Mexico,
for example, might feel that a
haddock four miles off its coast
was just as Mexican as a
. Calfornia
01 29 Landed estate
al 30 Married 10 one
H person only
32 Supremely
ur exclusive (3
wds )
35 Chinese
weight
36 Animal tissue
37 River in
Virginie
mate, a secret FBI informer,
that he had admitted guilt The
informer’s reputation for cre-
dibility, however, was uncertain,
so the second-hand confession
couldn't be used.
The FBI needed an admission
from Julius' own lips. An attempt
was made, therefore, to make
sure Ethel went to the electric
chair first. An agent was stand-
ing by, with an open line to
Washington, ready to relay the
first words of the stunned hus-
band's confession.
But the FBI was unable to
change the execution schedule
Julius was executed first, then
his wife 10 minutes later. Neither
gave a dying confession.
Double Agent?: Daniel
Rathbun may be the most valua-
ble double-agent in the history of
corporate intrigue. Or he may be
an innocent, unwise in the ways
of public perceptions.
In any event, his story is a
fascinating one.
Rathbun headed up perhaps
the most crucial government
study in a decade: how much oil
and gas is really available in the
United States. The study will be a
basis for many far-reaching
domestic and foreign policy deci-
sions.
The need for such a study was
obvious. In the past, the govern-
ment had only the word of the oil
and gas industry And their word
on oil and gas reserves, it was
suspected, was heavily in-
fluenced by the profit motive. No
one was really sure whether
there was an energy crisis, or
whether the industry was simply
holding out for higher prices.
So Congress authorized the
study in 1973, and Daniel
Rathbun was placed in direct
command. Early last month, the
study was completed. It gave the
industry a clean bill of health,
assuring that the figures com-
piled by the American
Petroleum Institute were essen-
tially accurate.
Now here’s the rub. Daniel
Rathbun has turned up on the
American Petroleum Institute
payroll. This is a little like a
judge going to work for a man
' he just declared not guilty, it
raises doubts about the integrity
of the verdict. was
Rathbun and his former
employers at the Federal
Energy Administration hotly
deny any impropriety. Eric
Zausner, Rathbun’s former boss
at FEA. claims that Rathbun
could not have influenced the
study on behalf of industry
because it was “locked in ce-
ment" over a year ago.
One FEA official confided,
nevertheless, that Energy Czar
Frank Zarb “hit the roof’ when
he heard of Rathbun’s defection
to industry
Congressional and public in-
terest energy experts, mean-
while, dispute Zausner's view
that Rathbun could not have in-
fluenced the study for industry.
They point out that the ques
tionaires sent out by Rathbun to
oil and gas producers were
heavily influenced by the Amer-
ican Petroleum Institute. Con-
sumer groups were allowed to
make suggestions only after they
kicked up their heels. But in the
end, many of their suggestions
were included in the crucial
quest ionai ire
To make matters even
stickier, Rathbun himself has
been neither a saint nor a sinner
in anyone's eyes while a public
servant Some of his decisions as
a deputy assistant administrator
have angered consumer groups,
and some have angered the in-
dustry Everyone agrees he is a
top-flight statistician.
Rathbun himself told our asso-
ciate Jack Cloherty that he sees
no conflict since he will not be in-
volved in data collection at the
API
But Rathbun's move to indus-
try casts a shadow over the
government's “independent" oil
and gas reserve findings.
Slogans Deadline: The
search for the official bicenten-
nial slogan will end tonight,
December 1, at midnight Over a
million slogans have already
been submitted.
They are now bing screened
by the American Legion, Na-
tional Jaycees and General
Federation of Women’s Clubs
The state and territorial bicen-
tennial chairmen will narrow
down the selection to six final
slogans, which will be an-
nounced at the Superbowl game
on January 18
Then a public ballot will be
taken to determine the official
slogan. Today is the last day to
send in your slogan Mail it to
Slogans, USA. P.O. Box 1976,
Washington, DC, 20013.
Cuvynegt 197 Urued Feohure 9ndicae Inc
By ARNOLD SAWISLAK
WASHINGTON (UPI) - The
Campaign Answer Man has
been trying to keep an eye on
the entire political picture, bu
came down with compound
strabismus watching the Demo-
crats. So today he is turning his
bloodshot gaze on the White
House.
Question: Why did Vice
President Rockefeler chose
this particular time to an-
nounce he would not seek the
Republican nomination next
year?
Answer Man: Actually, the
vice president made up his
mind in August and wrote a
letter to the President inform-
ing him of the decision. When
he learned that the letter hadn’t
been delivered by Nov. 1, he
took it to the White House in
person.
Question: Well, what is the
reason Rockefeller is dropping
out?
Answer Man: He doesn’t
want a job that requires him to
deliver his own mail.
Question: Why did President
Ford fire Defense Secretary
Schlesinger?
Answer Man: As an old
center, he was having enough
trouble understanding the quar-
terback options Henry Kissing-
er was calling without having
Schlesinger trying to substitute
Army and Navy end runs And
on top of that, Ronald Reagan
is on the bench agitating for the
Statue of Liberty play.
Question: And now he has
George Bush coning back from
China to drect the CIA. What
is the reason for that?
Answer Man: Bush thought
the job was all he wanted when
he first got to Peking, but hal
haddock you might catch
surfcasting at Acapulco.
So the piscatorial limit
generally was extended to 12
miles. And now some countries
are nationalizing seafood as far
out as 200 miles.
At recent Senate hearings,
however, the State Department
argued against adopting the
200-mile limit for American
fish. Witnesses warned that
continued expansion of pis-
catorial waters could lead to
“confrontations” among coastal
nations.
That point is well taken. I
daresay that if the trend
continued, confrontations like
the following eventually might
arise:
BRISBANE, AUSTRALIA -
A Japanese trawler fishing off
Australia's Great Barrier Reef
was seized today by a Canadian
patrol boat on grounds it was
catching Canadian haddock.
Canadian officials explained
that Canada’s new 5,000-mile
piscatorial limit definitely in-
cludes the fish in the Coral Sea.
But Japanese authorities de-
nied the allegation and demand-
ed that the vessel be returned.
They pointed out that Japanese
piscatorial waters extend from
Tokyo Bay to the Auckland
Islands. Therefore, the haddock
caught by the trawler clearly
were Japanese, they said.
Alarmed by the confrontation
between two U.S. allies, Secre-
tary of State Henry Kissinger
moved to cool off the dispute.
He proposed that the fish be
kept on ice at the United
Nations until their nationality
could be established.
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Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 83, No. 226, Ed. 1 Monday, December 1, 1975, newspaper, December 1, 1975; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1867554/m1/4/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 28, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.