The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 88, No. 25, Ed. 1 Monday, April 28, 1980 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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THE CHICKASHA DAILY EXPRESS, Monday, April 28, 1980 ,
a
-FOUR
Berry's World
Advice From
i.
C
E
3233332
E
© 1980 by NEA, inc
4D
I
Business Today
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BARBS
Uhe Chickasha Satl^ Expreas
c
MEDIA GROUP
MEMBER DONREY
□BQQ
IDO
EC
E"E8I
EE
iiik
UE
Washington
Merrygoround
(Opinion! of columnists are their own and are not necessarily
concurred in by the Chickosha Daily Express.)
Charles Drew . .
George Miller ..
Earl Reeves
Francis Best
Pamela Stitt.....
What this country needs is a
kid-proof pill bottle simple
enough for an adult to open.
Ask anyone who has tried it
- the stock market is a safe
investment compared to put-
ting your money in blondes.
30 Vend
31 This (Sp)
33 Make lace
34 Gadolinium
svymbol
35 Lead symbol
42 Village square
in ancient
Greece
43 Stones
44 Brainstorms
45 Delicate plant
46 Inner (pret |
47 Dregs
50 Not pretty
51 Lacquered
metalware
52 Cries
54 Boom
55 Compass
point
IPS POSSIBLE!
Robert Schuller
1 Acquired
4 Speedy
9 Gazelle
12 For rowing
13 Senseless
14 Gram
15 That girl
16 Tincal
17 Baseball
player Mel
Reverend Schuller, pastor of
the Garden Grove, Calif , Com-
munity Church, can be seen
weekly on his nationally syndi-
cated TV program. Hour of
Power "
Thoughts For Today
Happy the people to whom such blessings fall! Happy the
people whose God is the Lord! — Psalm 144.15.
18 Tints
20 Scoop of ice
cream
21 Deathly pale
22 Delaware
town
25 Viet Cong
(abbr |
27 Cry of
surprise
28 Awaken
32 Ingesting
35 Trims
36 Rimy
37 Igneous rock
38 Singers
39 Note of the
scale
40 Note of
Guido s scale
41 Roman
45 Display cards
for a score
48 Deity
49 Intestines
53 Person
54 Drills
56 Sticky stuff
57 Female saint
(abbr |
58 Spaces
59 Law degree
(abbr)
60 Urgent
wireless
signal
61 Billiard shot
62 Indeed
1 Expletive
2 Hawaiian
island
3 Poplar
4 Chest bone
5 Positive
electrode
6 Gay city
7 Not suitable
8 Amphetamine
(sl)
9 Sticky
substances
10 Word of
honor
11 Barrister
(abbr)
19 Psychotic
21 Awakening
23 Sincere
24 Mistakes
25 Blue-white
star in Lyra
26 Telephone
29 Faerie Queene
A
A
A
M
t
General Manager
Executive Editor
Advertising Manager
Production Manager
.... Circulation Manager
E
S
A
T
Oklahoma's Most Readable Daily Newspaper
—Publisher—
Central Publishers Ltd.
900%
‘8
BE
BE
cL
People who adopt a devil-
may-care attitude quite often
find out that he most certainly
does.
A
R
!I
Our more ‘humane’ meddling
WASHINGTON (NEA) - It was exactly 15 years ago this
month that 405 U.S Mannes landed in Santo Domingo, osten-
sibly to rescue American citizens caught in the crossfire of a
civil war that suddenly had erupted in the Dominican Repub-
lic
And it was exactly one year ago this month that more than
1,000 residents of Kerala, a small town in Afghanistan not far
from the Khyber Pass, were massacred by Afghan troops act-
ing under orders from Soviet military 'advisers "
The two anniversaries are worth noting because they pro-
vide evidence of both the similarities and the disparities in the
military adventures of the United States and the Soviet Union
Within a few days after the Dominican rebels launched
their offensive against the military-backed civilian junta then
ruling the Caribbean nation, the rebellion erupted into open
warfare in the streets of Santo Domingo
The lives of Americans and other foreign nationals living in
that capital were indeed endangered, thus justifying President
Lyndon B Johnson's decision to dispatch the Mannes on April
28, 1965, to protect and evacuate U.S citizens
But long after that task had been completed, American
troops continued to pour into the country Within a month,
there were almost 24,000 uninvited Marines and members of
the Army's 82nd Airborne Division
Those forces were not fully withdrawn until 18 months later
after the rebels presidential candidate and their bid for
restoration of constitutional government had been rejected in
ostensibly free elections
Vietnam offers another Afghanistan analogy Beginning
with 900 military "advisers" in 1960, the United States
engaged in a massive buildup that peaked in 1969 with 541.500
troops committed to a vast land, sea and air operation that
carried hostilities into neighboring Laos and Cambodia
Overshadowing the 50,000 American fatalities were the 15
million Asian lives lost, many the victims of B-52 "carpet
bombing, " napalm attacks and other brutal forms of modern
warfare
But the United States never resorted to the inhumane use of
chemical or biological warfare That contrasts with reliable
claims from intelligence sources that the Soviets have
unleashed in Afghanistan a nerve gas that produces nausea,
convulsions and then death within 15 minutes
Moreover, in a little-publicized memo recently sent to Sen
Lloyd M Bentsen. D-Tex . Director of Central Intelligence
Stansfield Turner outlined a series of alleged atrocities com-
mitted last year by Afghan military forces, at a time when
that country's government was under Soviet control
In Kerala, a column of 30 Afghan tanks and armored per-
sonnel carriers ringed the community on April 20, 1979, then
pointed their guns toward the center of town
When local residents defiantly shouted Moslem religious
sayings instead of the demanded pro-communist slogans,
approximately 1,170 men and boys were forced to crouch
together, then were slaughtered by Afghan troops under Sovi-
et direction
In another village where residents refused to cooperate
with the pro-Soviet regime, Afghan troops mutilated children
in front of their parents, then killed the adults and destroyed
the town
in a third incident, 300 residents of a village were slain by
Afghan troops in other cases, aggravated rape by Afghan sol-
diers has led to the victims deaths
A modest observation The United States is somewhat more
humanitarian than the Soviet Union in its military adventures
(although humane warfare" probably is a contradiction in
terms) but has not been markedly less disposed to military
meddling on foreign soil
if President Carter's Olympic boycott and export embar-
goes are part of a propaganda campaign to embarrass the
Soviets, that's a legitimate undertaking
But if^he presideot aetually believes his sanctimonious
rhetoric, he lacks even the most elementary understanding of
recent history and contemporary geopolitics
1
oP
faff INACCURATE
WH REAGAN
N STATEMENT
IFA COMING UP HHIEi
Indian Spring is the season
when you finally can go out of
your tepee without your
toupee — and not catch cold.
Driving oneself to distrac-
tion is what happens to most
of us every rush hour.
Love is the happiest feel-
ing in the world' That’s why.
when you go through sad-
ness and the tears flow, you
can find gladness in your
sadness I discovered the
truth of this principle this
past summer when my 14-
year-old daughter was in a
tragic motorcycle accident
and lost part of her leg.
God taught me so many
lessons during those days.
But one that really stands
out in my mind is the love
people showed us. God's love
became very real to us
through cards, letters, gifts,
flowers and other beautiful
expressions of concern.
For nine weeks, Mrs.
Schuller and I would take
shifts, sitting at Carol's bed-
side. It was during those
long hours of the night or
day that we would read the
mail. I can't express how
much it meant to all of us.
You can be happy if you're
loved!
But you cannot receive
unless you give. And the
more you give, the more you
will receive! A farmer will
not harvest a crop until he
first throws the seed away.
In the same way, it is impos-
sible to receive love until
you give yourself generously
to others. And the harvest is
happiness, for you will be
surrounded by love!
instead
An inexperienced official
at the 500-student Lake
Region College told her that
her acceptance by the first
school would allow Yuko to
complete her studies at
w
Lake Region on a student's
status. She was advised to
come to the United States on
a 90-day tourist visa, enroll :
at Lake Region and then
straighten things out.
But though she was doing 1
well at the North Dakota j
school, and was popular in
the small community, her }
U.S. college career has been
blown away by immigration 4
bureaucrats who ordered
her to leave the country I
when her tourist visa I
expired Friends put her in |
touch with an attorney I
versed in immigration law. I
but he holds out scant hope I
of winning an appeal from §
the immigration ruling. {
Footnote: Lake Region )
College refunded Yukos f
$600 tuition and the money I
she had spent for room and 3
board 2
WATCH ON WASTE: One 3
of the things that infuriates I
someone who challenges a I
member of Congress is the
cut-rate TV and radio studio
available to an incumbent -
with a taxpayer subsidy A
20-minute videotape sets the
congressman back $35.
while a five-minute radio
spot is $1.50. Congress
appropriated about $550,000
for the studio's services this
year. :
Copyright 1980
I Inited Feature Syndicate. Inc
A thought for the day:
President James Monroe,
author of “The Monroe Doc-
trine,” said, “National honor
is national property of the
highest value.”
D ElC 01
E wEs
AS_A rHt
fl.
I E I SENT
Almanac
United Press International
Today is Monday, April 28,
the 119th day of 1980 with 247
to follow.
The moon is approaching
its full phase.
The morning star is Mer-
cury.
The evening stars are
Mars, Venus, Jupiter and
Saturn.
Those born on this date are
under the sign of Taurus.
James Monroe, fifth
president of the United
States, was born April 28,
1758.
On this date in history:
In 1788, Maryland was
admitted to the Union as the
seventh state.
In 1945, Fascist leader
Benito Mussolini was
executed by Italian patriots.
In 1952, the war with Japan
was officially ended with
signing of a treaty by the
United States and 47 other
nations.
10 Years Ago
(From Express Fles,
April 28,1980)
Miss Evelyn Hassebroek of
Chickasha was appointed
state public relations
chairman of the Oklahoma
Federation of Business and
Professional Women’s Gubs.
. Two Verden FFA members
were among the 320
Oklahoma Agriculture
studtats to be awarded the
Junior Master Farmer
degree’s by Lt. Gov. George
Nigh at the state FFA
convention in Stillwater . .
Awards were presented to
Cub Scouts of Pack No. 11 at
St. Joseph’s Academy in
Knights of Columbus Hall . .
Sgt. Robert Odom, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Odom and
Ariman 3-C Paul Lumpkin,
Chickasha men, helped in-
vent a piece of machinery to
save theAir Force money and
manpower . . Miss Sarah
Elizabeth White of Denver,
Colo., accepted a position as
director of student counseling
services and association
professor of education and
English at Oklahoma College
for Women.
that regularly interrupt his
working day under con-
ventional office environment
conditions — running to the
bank hunting for a barber
shop or a cab to take him to
one. driving to the airport to
pick up visiting customers,
going out for lunch and even
of having his automobile
gassed and serviced, or
getting in his daily exercise
and swim.
Spiniello brought in Roy
because Roy had been
manager of the Boston
Redevelopment Authority’s
$1 billion Charlestown
project, which turned a
depressed area into a
thiriving new community.
Airport Park isn’t fully
completed yet but it has at-
tracted a number of blue chip
tenants such as the aviation
department of American
Telephone & Telegraph
CorR., Cessna Aircraft’s
finance division and branches
of Motorola, Inc., and Bechtel
Co.
In addition to things like a
sauna bath, barber and hair
styling shops, limousine ser-
vice, an auto repair shop and
other amenities, the com-
pleted park will have an art
gallery and studio facilities
for budding artists in the
community.
The buildings have acousti-
cal-thermal glazing
throughout and full-spectrum
lighting, which transmits the
ultraviolet rays you don't get
in ordinary artificial lighting.
These rays kill a lot of bac-
teria in the ambient air and
cut down on the spread of
colds and other infections.
Roy said physicians and
psychologists also told him
full-spectrum lighting helps
workers to concentrate better
on the job.
Roy is confident the
Spiniello office concept will
spread although he doesn’t
expect it to be limited to sites
on the fringes of airports.
Planners and developers
have come to Morristown
from Baltimore, Boston and a
number of other cities to look
over Airport Park.
Roy said the park also
benefits from its proximity to
suitable housing for workers
and to some of the more af-
fluent residential areas of
New Jersey, communities
with excellent schools that
appeal to executives.
There is no public tran-
sportation but Roy is hoping
for a busline soon. He said a
project like Airport Park
ought to have public transit
as well as adequate parking.
1 N [ExJA[C|r•DE8UI
s|r[E•LoN•zA[NE
DA|vEEBoER•R 1 D
U| jo[ TIT , 01 I R A,
P fa[oaR DLNII
L A'mW I 0, I 8
By LeROY POPE
UPI Business Writer
NEW YORK (UPI) - The
average American executive
spends his working day in an
unnecessarily inefficient en-
vironment, say Jim Spiniello
and Charles Roy of
Morristown, N.J., who are
doing something to change
that.
Spiniello, who runs a con-
struction firm, is the owner
and Roy the manager of
Airport Park, a unique office
complex located on the edge
of Morristown Airport.
It’s a campus-like scene
with a health club, having a
swimming pool, overnight ac-
commodations for visitors,
conference suites and dining
rooms and a coffee shop, plus
large parking space, a pond
and other aesthetic ‘and-
scaping features.
Roy says there’s more to it
than that. “There are lots of
office buildings located on the
edges of airports and there
are other campus-like
complexes, but," he said,
“they are made up of what I
call ‘stock buildings,' not too
comfortable and not very
functionally efficient.
"On the other hand," he
said, "some companies in the
Fortune 500 list have
buildings that are really
sophisticated and func-
tionally superb. What Jim
Spiniello decided to do when
he embarked on Airport Park
four years ago was to give
executives of comparatively
small companies most of the
advantages the fellows in the
big companies get in their
country-club style offices.”
Spiniello’s prime concern
was to relieve the business
man of much travel and of
attending to a lot of the chores
E"
mlhe
mem
'■ • ■ ■ -130* 1 •
fjvs •Ke 3*355 nt
20 Years Ago
(From Express Files,
April 28,1970)
David Nix, a seventh
grader at Chickasha Junior
High School, was first in the
discus with a heave of 98 feet
in the Del City Invitational
Track meet . , Nancy
Newsom, Chickasha, was
awarded the first OSU Daisy
D. Purdy award as a major
infood, nutrition and in-
stitution administration . .
Mike Leaverton was Rat-
tlesnake patron leader for
Boy Scout Troop No. 301 . .
Mr. and Mrs. George Davis
were president of the
Chickasha Band Parents
Association, with Mr. and
Mrs. Ray Van Dell as vice-
president. . U.S. Air Force
Major Dan L. Zachaary of
Cement and the husband of
the former Miss Gwen Gates
of Route 1, Chickasha, was
decorated with the
Distinguished Flying Cross
for Air action in Vietnam... A
baby boy was born to Mr. and
Mrs. Jerry Hill, 1228 South
17th . . Don Boevers, Sam
Wheeler and J. Harper
Thomas were elected to the
board of directors of Grady
County Cattleman's
Association.
By JACK ANDERSON
WASHINGTON - The
popular wisdom in Washing-
ton is that the United States
must depend on its allies in
Western Europe to help
achieve American goals -
whether it involves a boy-
cott of the Moscow Olym-
pics or sanctions against
Iran
For this reason, the Pen-
tagon has kept tight security
wraps on a potentially
explosive strategy report
that advocates an almost
total US withdrawal from
Europe as a move that
offers “the best prospects
for the future.”
What lends the report
weight is its authorship by
two of the Defense Depart-
ment's best and brightest -
Adm. Henry Train, head of
the U.S Atlantic Command,
and former Deputy Defense
Secretary Robert Ellsworth.
Train's duties include com-
mand of NATO’s Southern
European naval strike and
support forces.
The secret, 35-page report
spells out the authors' rec-
ommendation that the Unit-
ed States drastically
decrease its NATO commit-
ments in the interests of
national security In a
nutshell, Train and Ells-
worth suggest that our Euro-
pean allies simply cannot be
depended upon
The report is not regarded
as a crackpot commentary
by any means. Pentagon
sources told my associate
Dale Van Atta that the
report offers “very viable"
alternatives to present U.S.
policy. How many top
Defense Department stra-
tegists share the authors'
views is not known.
Train and Ellsworth
acknowledge that Western
Europe has top priority in
U.S. defense thinking, over
Asia and the Middle East
But they note the difficulties
involved in this long-accept-
ed priority
A Physician
By Lawrence Lamb, M.D.
DEAR DR. LAMB - I have
just returned from a week's
stay in the hospital. After sev-
eral tests and scans, the doc-
tor said that I have possible
pancreatitis. I had an elevated
amylase and the pancreas was
enlarged No stones I had my
gallbladder removed five
years ago because of stones.
The doctor said he isn't sure
what to do for me. I'm on a
low-fat, salt-free and sugar-
free diet. I have weak, faintish
spells and lose all sense of
balance and the room spins
around Do you have any
information you could give
me on the pancreas condition
and is there a treatment or
cure9 I’m 67 years old and
have never used any alcohol
or smoked.
DEAR READER - The
pancreas is the source of
many of your digestive
enzymes. The pancreatic juice
empties into the small intes-
tine and provides enzymes
essentially to complete the
carbohydrate, protein and fat
digestion. You can have acute
pancreatitis which may cause
severe abdominal pain that
cause doctors to suspect a sur-
gical condition. Literally, the
pancreas becomes inflamed
and the digestive juices leak
into the pancreas tissue itself
and start digesting the
pancreas.
In addition to such acute
attacks, some people may
have chronic forms of inflam-
mation of the pancreas. These
tend to interfere with the for-
mation of the digestive
enzymes and impair digestion.
Often these individuals have
trouble absorbing fat. Man-
agement is difficult and some-
times enzyme replacement is
helpful.
I’m sending you The Health
Letter number 11-4, The
Pancreas: Your Enzyme
Organ. Other readers who
want this issue can send 75
cents with a long, stamped,
self-addressed envelope for it.
Send your request to me, in
care of this newspaper, P.O
Box 1551, Radio City Station,
New York, NY 10019
Your symptoms of dizziness
or problems with balance
may have nothing at all to do
with pancreatitis. It could be
simply because you've been ill
or may be a different disor-
der. I'm also sending you The
Health Letter number 9-10.
Dizziness and Vertigo.
It’S trte that betheicases of
pancreatitis arencaused by
drinkinglalcoholTiut many
cases are not. Some are
caused as a complication of
gallstones and in a large num-
ber of cases the cause is never
really known Regardless of
the basic cause, anyone who
has pancreatitis should not
use alcohol in any form, which
shouldn't bother you
DEAR DR. LAMB - If a
person was having a massive
heart attack and kept taking
doses of Riopan thinking they
had gas, would this do any
harm9 I know it wouldn't do
any good
DEAR READER - In the
usual amounts that would be
taken for indigestion or an
acid stomach, it's not likely to
cause a problem. Riopan. by
the way, is not particularly
useful to relieve gas symp-
toms nor are any of the anta-
cids.
Many times a heart attack
begins with symptoms of
indigestion or pain in the pit
of the stomach or a sensation
of gas. There may not be any
associated chest pain My best
advice to people who develop
severe indigestion is to seek a
medical opinion. That's par-
ticularly true in men past 40
years of age when heart
attacks are common
- There has been, they
report, a steady decomposi-
tion. erosion and destabiliza-
tion of political will in
Europe and of the Europeap
defense posture "
- There will be "continu-
ing congressional and public
desire to cut U.S military
presence abroad ”
- There exists an
unhealthy (if unavoidable)
dependency by Europe on
the U.S for Europe s mili-
tary security ... (which)
tends to further erode Euro-
pean will."
The authors of the secret
report are convinced that
the last-named difficulty is
the most serious They note
growing European frustra-
tion with having to pay, eco-
nomically and politically for
a security guarantee from
the United States.”
Train and Ellsworth then
argue that "a reallocation of
resources and restructured
defense of NATO Europe
offers the best prospects for
the future."
America's long-term
strategy, they suggest,
should aim for "an autono-
mous European defense and
deterrent capability.”
In other words, our best
bet would be to force West-
ern Europe to fend for itself,
instead of depending on
Uncle Sams protective
umbrella
In terms that might irri-
tate our European allies, the
Pentagon report observes
that the recommended U.S.
pullout "recognizes that the
Europeans today arc basi-
cally irresponsible and
impotent in foreign policy
and security terms, (and)
that their impotence is due
in no small measure to their
dependency on the U.S. for
their military security."
The authors recommend
that the United States with-
draw all but a "small U.S
force" from Europe, making
up for this pullout by a
promise of quick military
backup in the event of a
SovieL .attack. This would
frede limited American
milita’? strength for use
elsewiMre in she world,
encourage a credible Euro-
pean nuclear deterrent -
and, of course, be popular
with budget-cutters at home.
The possibility that the
Russians would "react
aggressively” if the United
States pulled out, or that the
Western European nations
might "run to Moscow,
were discounted by Train
and Ellsworth as unlikely
RED TAPE RIGIDITY
While thousands of militant '
Iranians are allowed to stay
in the United States because
of their status as students, a
24-year-old Japanese wom-
an is being denied her dream
of attending college here
because of inflexible govern-
ment red tape
Yuko Hori saved up mon-
ey from her secretarial job
in Tokyo to enroll in an
American university
Accepted by Ellsworth Com-
munity College in Iowa, she
changed her mind about
going to that school and
chose Lake Region College
at Devil’s Lake, ND.
IN WASHINGTON
K h Robert Walters
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Drew, Charles C. The Chickasha Daily Express (Chickasha, Okla.), Vol. 88, No. 25, Ed. 1 Monday, April 28, 1980, newspaper, April 28, 1980; Chickasha, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc1869125/m1/4/?q=War+of+the+Rebellion.: accessed June 26, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.