The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 86, No. 158, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 10, 1978 Page: 4 of 26
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THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS, Sunday, September 10, 1978
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SUBSCRIPTION RATES
EFFECTIVE APRIL1, 1978
BY CARRIER IN CHICKASHA
Continual Soviet Military Expansion Aims At Superpower Status
*% - ------" between the Libya, Iraq, Syria and South Admiral Isaac C;KiddiJr, suhmarnseh Fleet, based in notably Secretary of State
Japan ' has declined in Cyrus Vance, believe the
strength to only 90 ships, they Soviet military buildup des
said although the American not directly threaten
fleet includes a higher American interests and
proportion of large ships such should not interfere with
psoPirrant carriers, efforts to negotiate new arms
“The West depends on the control agreements.
sea and the Russians are now UPI Moscow correpondent
making it more and more Charles Madigan writes from
difficult for the West to be Mogcow, “There is sentiment
able to guarantee that it can among Western observers
keep the sea lanes open," a here to support the argument
diplomat in Singapore said, that the Soviet Union has not
----- changed course or stepped up
There are no signs of Soviet at all, that it is just plodding
or Cuban military expansion along on its own traditional
in the Western Hemisphere course. These non-Americans
state’s office showed it Derryberry said the
states: "Provided, that the Eufaula lodges are 512
commission may not repay a million in debt. Clark said the
greater annual amount than state doesn’t owe a dime. He
A 51.5 million " said whatever is owed is by
H The bill also states that the lake redevelopment trust
• funding shall be pursuant to on a mortgage held by the
- Title 74, Section 356.1 through federal government.
Yu
ONLY
$1077
By WILLIAM J. HOLSTEIN nuclear duel that obliterates expenditures actualy superpowers if Washington Yemen in what Western commander of NATOs
United Press International each side will be ought for declinedleachzearesinsenm ontus to whip up"nti- analysts fear is part of an Atlantic operations, at a June
The Soviet Union has control of the sea lanes and - the hpightqfithecietnmm Soviet hysteria ” encirclement of Saudi Arabia 20 news conference in
achieved numerical that this accounts in part for • Preside Carter,.s Although the Soviets insist and Iran Annapolis, Md.
superiority of conventional the current Soviet and Cuban recordinnndefennebudg to tAwotsbrepnsiil for the Iranian officials in Tehran “The free world could face
arms in Europe, encircled activity in Africa. $115 W-ss4obiiiion-a-year said they feared a recent coup economic strangulation
Middle East oil suppliers and ..The rivalry between the first increase in American arms racOloscow apiars in Afghanistan by a pro- without a shot being fired,
conducted a major naval United States and the Soviet spendingn.in A ecade, bent on building up a military Moscow faction has left Kidd said. “They (the
buildup in the Pacific in a Union took the form of a Defense Departm gures mnEine canbie r subduing Iran's northeastern border Soviets) have the capability
global campaign to reassert nuclear arms race during the shouL Europe andcutting the West extremely fluid and virtually to sink lots of ships. Indeed
itself bs a superpower. 1960s and it was believed off from its supplies of oil and uncontrollable. they have the power to in
Western defense experts nuclear weaponry had ren- tional.arms.race that rw mntril With a 1,100-mile Soviet terdict.”
say Soviet forward bases in dered conventional ar- prompte . er.t0 warn The Soviets have achieved border to the north, hostile
Africa and naval strength in maments obsolete. Mose0Ws in taru me a Mo-1 advantage in tanks Soviet-armed Iraq to the west Soviet maneuvering in the
the Indian Ocean mean the But the superpowers have competitionLSI JJL and armor in Europe and the and Afghanistan to the east, Middle East and Africa has
Soviets are determined to now reached a rough nuclear straint andwithout .8hared Warsaw Pact rorcs have 1.3 Iranian officials say they not been without its failures,
straddle the vital sea lanes parity - a ’’balance o ruleswill gscalateintograye million more men in uniform have been encircled by a Somalia, angered by the
used to deliver oil and other terror’ - and the realm of tensions between the super ccording to superpower envious of their supply of Soviet weapons to - -- j f -- . . wLat h.
mcimei saa • EBSS Sm's s
."s,a^x.”y
unless it is a devastating 15 years while U.S. military of “the danger of a con- thenddition-thU.s.figures was part of this attempt to the area . growing Cuban politisalin to assert itself as a world
. go show the Soviets have 11,000 squeeze the West’s oil
rI A.I24 •:Me combat aircraft compared plies, some Western analysts that Moscow s alliance w th islands. earnest after the 1962 Cuban
Park AUCIT CUreS with 3,000 NATO warplanes, a say. The Soviets also Iraq may be under strain. Carter’s administrationi missile crisis, __ when
rarK riyu SXKK
Contradict Derryberry
OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI) A check of the statutes and 356.24. That reference is to a Gvt"haaifdwilam Nort^waiS: "With thS capiesrdy"fPottne did little to clarify At the time, the United
- Attorney General Larry park department provided 1947 law which states: “The Elanns - inFo prward operating bases in in the Pacific, Japan, South Washingtonis position. States was the only nation
Derrybarry’s demand to see not only a different story but board may not create any Washinaton D C East and West Africa, they Korea and other U.S. allies Some of Carter s advisers, that qualified as a super-
an audit of state park lodges language that the law specifi- indebtedness payable out of . hingtan, con- (the Soviets) straddle the are concerned over the led by National Security power while the Soviet Union,
has produced a reply such cally prohibits pledging of tax taxes or assessments, may DuquPe wn vital sea lanes of com- growing strength of the Soviet Adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski, still recovering from the
records .re already money to pay off prk bonds, not in any manner pledge the traryttossmetalarmtistuswhp believe the Soviet Unions devastationofWorid War
available The constitution also credit of the state of say it.i8 thesr ,. wp h mre than half of at Vladivostok and largely selfsufficient for oil lagged far behind.
prohibits this without a vote Oklahoma, and nothing in this sincestheNa ^lii^.ntr and Western Europe’s food, Petropavlosk. and minerals - wants the M gtung by the
Derryberry asked for the of the people. act shall be construed to II, has been deliberateaand Westrrnnatermaterians Japanese officials estimate capability to cut the United Moscow w„ tung by the
audit Friday in charging that Derryberry made the at- permit any of the above.” measured," Elann erssaid. ene rsyoand must come, and, the Soviet Pacific fleet at 755 States, Europe and Japan off incident Minister Vasily
Lt. Gov George Nigh George tack at a Capitol news con- This apparently was in "And NA . texact indeed tn which North ships, including large from their sources of raw Foreign, nis I 3
Nigh had backed a new law to ference in which he direct conflict with been sittingonitts hands the Sea too is now depen numbers of missile-equipped materials in the Middle East Kuznetsoatom w we
obligate 51 5 million a year in questioned the credentials of Derryberry’s statement that n h sunnlied vast dent" cruisers and destroyers, and Africa. P „
tax revenue for a park bond Nigh who opposes him in the the bill obligates tax money. Sovietshavesupplied 1vast dent ear was echoed by landing craft and about 80 But other members of the caught_like_tto8_agMn^
issue. Democratic gubernatorial Derryberry said the new quantities of weapons to
primary. law gave the commission
Chickasha Daily Express Derryberry closed by de- authority to finance lodge
jo2 No. ire simt manding that Nigh step for- construction under the same
P.O. DRAWER E ward and provide current terms as the old planning and
Chickasha Estahlished audited figures on the resources board.
oxla:73018 - operation of the lodges. A check of the final bill
A tourism and parks showed this had actually been
spokesman said lodge done six years ago and the
operations are audited an- new law merely repeats the
nually by a certified public language.
accountant, that all audits for Derryberry said the new
the past several years are on law gives financing authority
file and “are open to the to the commission subject to
public." “approval of the governor”
Carl Clark with the and it would take effect at the
Tourism and Parks Depart- start of the next governor’s
ment said the new law in fact term.
places a new and lower Clark said that particular
ceiling on the annual amount language actually imposes
the state can pay in bond new restrictions.
payments. Clark said the old "The commission formerly
$21 00 law limited such payments to could act on its own,” Clark
$42 oo one-fourth of revolving fund said "Now it must also have
1 3 50 revenue, which he said would approval of the governor.”
have permitted the state to Derryberry said Nigh had
pay more than $2 million in lost the state 522 million
bond payments this year, under an agreement he
“So the new amount im- sponsored as acting governor
poses a lower ceiling and is in 1963 on the Eufaula lodges,
more restrictive," Clark said. Derryberry later conceded
“For the first time in under questioning that the
history," Derryberry said, state had lost nothing under
“it provides that the state that agreement, because it
513.50 may be liable for up to $1.5 was invalidated.
t 7.00 million per year to pay off Nigh has said that
lodge debts out of the tax- agreement kept the state’s
payers' money." options open until a new one
A check with the final bill was signed by his successor,
recorded in the secretary of Gov. Henry Bellmon.
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Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 86, No. 158, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 10, 1978, newspaper, September 10, 1978; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1868620/m1/4/: accessed June 19, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.