The Norman Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 72, No. 227, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 4, 1961 Page: 4 of 10
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Norman Daily Transcript and was provided to The Gateway to Oklahoma History by the Oklahoma Historical Society.
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Our Point of View
Cancer Research
Will Save Lives
A recent announcement by the
American Cancer Society estimating
the number of persons who vill suc-
cumb to cancer in 1961 C26:000) set
us to thinking about how this might
apply bnlividlally to you or me
Statisticians tell us that out of
every six deaths this year one will
be due to cancer Yet that wouldn't
necessarHy apply to you or me be-
ause only about one out of cVerk
Anloricins Will dit in I96I 1:ut
there is another Cancer Society sta-
tistic which says -one out of four
persons some day will have cancer"
An it can still say the odds
are on his side literally three to one
that he won't get canCer A pessi-
mist might turn the odds arohnd and
say that it's "one to I hree” he kvill
get it
What alloiit a realist ? lie can
say that neither is the case If can-
cer is to develop in one out of four of
us is there more than just chance
involved? Or are there bioogical
facts hich have something to do
with it? To answer these questions
we must know something abutit Call-
cur We must know that it develops
because something- goes kyrong with
the mechanism of the cell and that
wild uncontrolled growth l'estlits atid
never ceases unless the celk are de-
stroyed or death illterVenes
What makes a cell betintle Can-
cerous? The scientist only knows
that dozens of compounds will cause
cancer if introduced into the cell that
continued exposure to radioactive
rays will result in cancer that ciga-
rettes are the major cause of long
cancer and that overdoses of hor-
mones will cause cancer Ile knows
too that the genes of our forebears
may have something to do with it
and that ant ibodies or a lack of t hem
may be a vital factor in getting the
disease or ill combatting it
So in the end it's not just chance
is it ? There are reasol)8 even if we
don't know all of them What we
have to find out are more facts about
these unknowns so that cancer no
longer can poke a grim finger at one
of uA—scemliwly by chance
Finally a bit of advice Have an
annual health checkup and learn the
seven cancer tlanger signals This
will' help change the statistics And
support with a contribution the an-
nual crusade of the American Cancer
Society so that science can prove
that death from cancer need not be
our fate
Migration to Sun Country
The lure of the sun country of
areas promising wa r me r freer
brighter living is working a gradual
but steady transformation in the
population centers of the United
Slat es
Leaving (flit I he 01(1 SOLO h and
looking just at California Florida and
the "new" states of the Southwest—
Arizona New Mexico Texas and Ok-
lahoma—we get a portrait of striking
change
Sixty years ago the 6200000
People living in those six states rep-
resented barely 8 per cent of the total
United States population
Today the six hold 35 million
which means that roughly one in
every five Americans now lives in
I hese areas All the signs suggest it
will soon be one in four
As in much of the nation a factor
of mounting importance is the in-
crease of births over deaths But a
big element has been the tide of
Americans flowing toward warmer
climes Especially in California and
Florida of course the influx has been
immense
As the flat ion has been made more
comPaet by television speed of trans-
port and the like more and more
people have felt the magnetic pull of
these places And the rise in econom-
ic levels allows more to pick up and
o
TheY're drawn by im)re than the
sun Beckoning also is the prospect
of a general betterment of their lot
Some basic things are cheaper
Though the story varies in some
places job opportunities are bet ter—
or at least pleasantly different
Population experts and social sci-
entists generally expect the flow 'to
the country's warmer zones to wo
and on
Except for huge Alaska there
isn't any real geographic frontier for
restless Americans to reach out for
today
So Americans ‘veary of the rigors
of old-fashioned winters and eager to
escape the rigidities of the older eit its
are finding their "frontier" in the
sunny regions And they're much
bet ter-equinped places for goal
than t he frontier we used to read
about
4 Tuesday April 4 1961
The Doctor Says The Key Is in Your Hand
Tips Offered
On Avoiding
Iron Poison
fly II T M
Nenspaper Enterprise Assn
'What in the world is herno-
omaiwas7" a-k the ditressed
Ile of a pfitient fold is it here-
ditary' Will my child' en be af-
fected like their lather?"
Although !wino( hi otnatosis is a
JlI disease the explanation of
its probable cause may ha e tar-
reaching implications to ‘v hid)
I invite the aticohon of thuig
pal ents in pail 'villa R is Dot
hereditary
lemoduomatosis is a (kin an( e of metalfolisrm In it
vast deposits it iron discolor the
skin giving it a bronzed appear-
ance and settle in vital organs
interfering hA ith their itinct ion
like sludge in a machine
Among the in gans particularly
affected are the liver the I'tifl
organs and the pancreas
And because of pancreat IC ill-
vovemcnt inot int s A ill'
hemohromatosis have sugar in
the urine Bence the disease is
called "bronze ihabutes'
Until recently vke A ere at Ft
loss to explain hemochromatosis
or to do anything to prevent or
cure it Then a chance observa
tion made Ill Africa provided a
clue and a possible means for
prevention
Briefly stated a somewhat simi
lar disturbance icylosiderosis
as observed in natives Nilo
dtank beer breled in iron vats
A study of y tosiderosk suggested
that the disease WaS Illd to
the beer as originally suspected
but in the vast amount of iron
that was drunk ‘ ith the beer In
other vtords it as a sort of
chronic iron -a 'oiling
o s
When certain pat lents
liemochromatosis talind ill
the light of the African exper-
ience it was discovered that niany
had been given or had taken
large doses of iron in "tonics"
"blood builders" or tablets or so-
anions used to correct an anemia
Others had had repeated trans-
fusions Now the importance Of this ex-
planation of a rare disease to
young parents rests in the present
tendency to overdose youngsters
I and certain oldstersi with iron-
containing tonics Here are some
guiding facts to consider before
resorting to iron nia4ation of
any sort at any a t
The normal blood count is vari-
able For example the normal
Value of the red pigment I hemo
globini may be as low as
grants in a baby Nee months
old and alIVM hVI:e Veil 12 and
M grams tor adult women and
num
Partiularly if blotter tests are
made technical errors may re-
stilt in a low reading in terms
of per cent tor a normal person
For example the three-month-old
baby ith a normal content of It
gt ams may be read at 65 per
cent
I( t required supplementation
of the infant's diet Only minute
doses of iron are needed One of
the most popularly used iron tab-
lets cootains enough iron in its
daily dose to do a child for a
ew mont
ot other substances
such as manganese folic acid
hydrochloric acid and vitamins
and BI2 It) the simple iron salt
accomplishes nothing usetal to
t he patient
The daily requirement ot icon
during the period that the intant
is primarily on a milk diet min
be met by early additions of
it oncnih food such as pureed
beans apricots peas pork in
beet
Now all this is a tar cry from
the letter of inquiry aboat ionic
chromatosis but there may be
lessons to be Itnarned that ill
at least sine ting parents some
itintiety and considerable expense
Out Our Way
-
(ER(ONTRO
oo At4 t
By RAI' CRDMLEY
WASHINGTON — (NEM—The
U S position is worsening in La-
tin America Castro-communism
is gaining
Cuban leaders make no secret
that they aim at Et moue Cuba-
type revolutions in Latin Ameri-
ca The Castro men have It
cells in a dozen 1atin countries
In Panama they're know n as
the Committee tor Defense of the
Cuban Revolution in Costa Rica
as the Committee of Friends Of the
Cuban Revolution In some coun-
tries these units are litedged to
become shock brigades that will
rush to Cuha Cuba is attack-
ed by the U S Other units are
pledged to sabotage U S prop-
erty While they wait for the ''CS
attack" they agitate against the
U S push for adoption of closer
ties with Cuba spread admir-
ation for what Cuba has done
bring pressure On their govern-
ments to follow the Castro line
These cells have strong effects
in shaky Latin countries
Somewhat over 100 Latin-Anwrican
students teichers labor
nom and intellectuals have been
brought to Cuba trained sent
back with a strong working know-
ledge of Castro-type politics
Cast r0 aims and indoctrination
on how Castro and his men N‘ on
their revolution
Reds
By LEON DENNEN
NEw yoRK NE IA
ing threatened war Russia and
licit china w iU ItOW tCCk to pick
Ill) the fruits of ar at the nego
liating table
l'he patio n is plain I katched
it develop at Ceneva in 19'4 NVIlell
Viet Nam as partitioned Chou
F Chinese foreign minister
skillfully imposed Peiping's Viet
Nam solution upon the West The
Reds ere flushed ith vietory
atter their defeat of the French
at Pienhienphu
Now there mill be another con-
feence of 14 nations -- including
Red China and Communist Viet
Nam -- as a resuB of the Russian
eol'eplittiCe of British compro-
mise proposals
What does it bode tor Laos?
J R Williams
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Reds Gaining in Latin America
Seek iNeutraiii Victory
WAI0
‘
Some of the ablest of these
I rainees have been siphoned off
sent to the Soviet Union and
other Continuing Noe lands tor
advanced training
The Castro Communist team
aims pri Mal at control of lab-
or organi7ations student associa-
tions professional groups press
associations and others influen-
tial in molding public opinion
and deciding elections
Copies of Ernesto Cuevara's
book on guerrilla warfare are be-
ing eirculided to key men through
Central and South America
Thirty thousands tons of Com-
munist arms have been shipped
to Cuha Reports have come from
somewhat over NO sources that
tiwse arms are being sneaked
underground to profted pro-Cuba
groups in a dovn Latin lands
Castro agents move through
Lit in America telling how Castro
'wiped out illiteracy in Cuba in
three years" how Castro "took
the land from the rich and gave it
to the poor" how Castro "stood
up to the mighty CS" how Cas-
tro is "hringing better living COO-
ditions to the workers"
1Vs unchallenged propaganda
is heady stuff for poverty-stricken
Latins It makes Castro a hero to
many South and Central Ameri-
cans who know only what they
hear
The Commiinist bloc — not in
Both sides have been talking
about a neutral Laos As recently
as Alarch I the clandestine radio
ot Communist Pathet Lao broad-
cast: 'Set t lenient ot the Laot iar
issue needs necessary and appro-
priate illetsures to be proposed
by tin international conterence
$ imilar to the OA GelICV a Con-
ference to restore peace in La-
os and provide a guarantee of its
nein ratify"
President Kennedy has repeated
ly said the United States seeks
only a neutral Laos
This does not mean that all
parties come to the negotiations
with identical aims Far from it
Moscow and Pelinng ii will
soon develop want a Laos which
will be "neutral on their side"
They have already indicated their
choice of premier Ile is the so-
called "neutralist prince sou-
S anna Phouma Once acclaimed
the only real statesman in La-
os it i now eN ident he has long
been a puppet of Red China
Souvanna Phouma despite his
plausible and coneihatory ap-
proaches to Western leaders may
have been the real villain of the
Laotian drama by providing the
Communists with a legal basis
for the civil war It was he who
furnished the "authorized and re-
quested intervention" of Soviet
military aid to the Pathet Lao
forces
Since Britain and India have
been duped by the prince's pose
of neutrality it is hard to see how
the Moscow-Peiping axis has any-
thing to lose in the 14power in-
ternational conference
We would seem to have escaped
the risks of an armed intervention
on an impossible battlefield only
to enter a game of negotiation in
which the enemy holds all the
trump cards Ile will take the
ti
V
Our Ancestors
---r
chiding Cuba — beams 176 hours
ot Red propaganda Weekly into
the in countries
There are 2-)0000 Communists
in Latin America These are be-
ing built into compact dedicated
and well-trained cadres They are
backed kith $100 million a 'elir
in Soviet bloc subsidies Another
Vuo in a year goes into Cuba
to keep Castro's regime going
Evidence suggests a small mi-
nority of Communists in strategi-
cally placed official positions con-
trol Latin labor organizations with
one million members mostly non-
Communists Infiltration into uni-
vesity student organizations is
The Cubans and the Red Chi-
nese are now aiming their sights
on the farniers A plantation
orkers conference just held al-
most unnoticed in Cuba was set
up to sell the organization of
farmer cells In northeast Brazil
already strong rural Communist-
dominated farmer units are being
organized Theyre modeled after
the farmer Organizations in fled
China A Latin Cuba-Red-dominated
women's conference is in
the oiling A Latin youth confer-
ence is planned
Castro men moved in fast in
many Latin countries They've
had the Communist apparatus —
kilt up over two decades —
given to their use lock stock and
barrel
tricks at the bargaining table
which he sought in the first place
by promoting the civil war
This is not a game ot uhich
we ecel although the rules have
been fairly evident for a long
time
Russia gave Id China a free
hand in Southeast Asia at the
December meeting of top Reds in
Do Although it as Russia's
planes Ivhicti flew in arms to the
Laotian Communists it will be
'Ala() Tse-tung who winds up
mater ot the puppet neutral state
of Prince Souvanna Phouma
Nik'ta ithrushchev is all set to
play the peace broker at another
international contorence to lilt
the thceat of a war he fomented
as the price of handing over vic-
tory to his Red partner China
Your Pocketbook Japanese Edge
Anticipate
Health Need
Of Oldsters
By 'AYE HENLE
Newspaper Enterprise Assn
One out of every 11 Americans
today is 65 or over You've read
about the health problem of senior
citizens What should you be do-
ing if you have or will have an
aged dependent?
If it is still preretirement for
this upcoming dependent waste
no time finding out whether he or
she has health coverage on the job
and more important whether it's
convertible upon retirement
More workers are covered by
health plans each year and more
of these plans are being written
so that they can carry through
retirement years Often the -employer
continues to contribute
If your dependent has retired
within the past year or two and
has no health insurance find out
hether he or she was entitled
to such coverage and whether it
might be reinstated
If your dependent has no cov-
erage survey available plans
Make certain you know what hos-
pitalization Pnd other costs might
be in your area There is a wide
variation in such charges through-
out the nation
Bear in mind that people over
65 remain in the hospital twice as
long as those under 65 need twice
as much health care as those tin-
de 25
The health Insurance Institute
outlines four areas of coverage
upon Which you must concentrate
These are:
Hospital ev:ense including such
extras as operating room cost
X-ray and laboratory fees
Surgical expense which general-
ly is offered with a hospital ex-
pense policy and allows a stated
amount per type of operation to-
ward payment of a surgeon's bill
Regular medical expense w hich
pays all or part of a physician's
usual bills other than surgery
This may or may not cover hos-
pital home and office calls
Iklajor medical expense which
provides financial protection
against very serious and prolong-
ed disability that can wipe out a
lifetime's savings Such policies of-
fer protection also during convalescence
III
For families with annual in-
comes under $7000 the newer
senior citizen group approach
plans such as the one offered by
the American Association of Re-
tired Persons merit consideration
Here by having the retiree join
the association for a $2 member-
ship fee he benefits from a group
plao needs no medical examina-
tion no health requirement
This policy provides a hospi-
tal allowance up to $10 a day 50
per cent of charges to a maximum
of $125 for 31 days of confinement
There is a six-month waiting per-
iod for renewal for same or re-
fated illness
This policy also provides up to
$200 for surgery allowance and
up to $125 outpatient charges for
accident or emergency The total
cost: $72 per year
A further benefit for members
is reduced prices on drug pur-
chases Several insurance com-
panies oiler similar plans during
specified periods of enrolment
If a family can afford the ex-
pense several companies now
virile policies for the aged which
cover up to $5000 of hospital bene-
fits with a $25-a-day room and
hard limit This type of policy
has a $300 deductible clause
intaning that you pay the first
S500 of expense The cost per per-
son of these policies-is $84 a year
Name Explained
Tarrytimn N Y is located
near Sunnyside the home of
Washington Irving The town was
given its name by housewives of
the countryside because of "the
inveterate propensity of their
husbands to linger about the vil-
vage tavern on market days"
according to Irving
By Quincy
4wotkoalkawaalabodAllinuontaiikb
s'Says he gets seasick Cap'n Chris! Won't sign on
unless he's issued pleaty of dramaminor
Sewing Machine
Exports Booming
By PETER EDSON
NAGOYA Japan—(NEAl—Los Angeles
born Ben Izumeda who is now general sales
and promotion manager for the Brother
Sewing Machine Co here says the average
citizen of an underdeveloped country marks
his rising standard of living by three steps:
First he gets a bicycle for himself Next
he gets a radio for his family Then he gets
a sewing machine for his wife When he has
all three he has it made So let's talk
about sewing machines as a symbol for un-
derdeveloped status seekers
There were four million sewing machines
manufactured throughout the world last year
in round numbers The Japanese made two
and a half million of them They sold 600-
000 of them at home They sold a million
in the United States Canada and Puerto
Rico (which is known as Area One) They
sold 900000 in the rest of the world which
Is Area Two
There are several reasons why the Ja-
panese have been able to capture 60 per
cent of the world market
They are low - cost producers for one
thing with a 560 to $70-a-month average
wage for an sight - hour day and a six-
day week Alsa they are automating their
factories
They are aggrameive salesmen in a tough-
ly competitive world market The Brother
Company has an assembly plant at Dublin
Ireland They get British Commonwealth
most-favored-nation preferences on Dublin
production So they sell to Scandinavia and
even Germany as well as to the Common-
wealth countries Italy and France which
have their own sewing machine makers keep
out foreign competition
There is a 10 per cent tariff on imports
into the United States but Japanese makers
consider that no obstacle
Where the Japanese have their greatest
advantage is that through their Sewing Mach-
ine Industry Assn and allied Exporters Assn
they control their own production and mar-
keting by voluntary agreements which under
US antitrust laws would put them all in
jail for civil if not criminal conspiracy
There are about 75 sewing machine manu-
facturers in Japan today Last year there
were 135 Some of the smaller anes made
only 50 or 60 machines a month in back
alleys Exporters bought up production cut
'prices ruined the market
So the 75 bigger companies in the associa-
tion decided to put the smaller producers
out of business They imposed a tax on
themselves of 50 yen — 14 cents — on every
machine sold for export
With this kitty the bigs went to the smalls
and said in effect 'how about getting into
some other business? We'll finance you to
get started Here's $3000 capital It's yours
if you agree to quit making sewing mach-
inea" The 40 smalls agreed so the 75 bigs now
have the industry "stabilized" The Japan-
ese Sewing Machine Manufacturers Assn
spokesmen insist they don't have a monopoly
or a closed shop Anybody can join who
makes sewing machines But the new com-
panies can't get an export quota which is
based on past business performance
The Japanese government's ministry of
international trade and industry has a strong
voice in setting quotas
The basic quota for export of Japanese
sewing machines to the US and Area One
in 1961 is one million units — same as last
year Quotas include machines made for sale
by American companies under their own
trade names
Quotas are reviewed every three months
by the manufacturers' Association annual-
ly by the exporters But manufacturers don't
allow the exporters to go over their quota
If the manufacturers decide the market is
being flooded the quotas for the next guar-
ter are cut All quotas are based on
future business trends
The associations get frequent reports on
US business conditions If sewing machine
prices start going down through over-supply
the quotas are cut
All this has vaster international compli-
cations than may at first be realized The
industrialized country that sells the most
radios bicycles and sewing machines to
underdeveloped countries may get its foot in
the door for future trade relations
The Japanese have been working hard on
the Southeast Asia markets and are now be-
ginning to sell Africa
Editorial Barbs
Nine out of 10 mailmen in an Oklahoma
town have been nipped by dogs The dogs
must know about bills too
Thoughts for Today
Through thy precepts I get understand
Inc therefore I bate every false way
Psalms 119:104
Precepts or maxims are of great weight
and a few useful ones at hand do more
toward a happy life than whole volumes that
we know not where to find—Seneca
The Norman Transcript
ESTABLIMED JULY 139 1889
VS Last Comanche Street Norman Okiamome
Telephone JE 4-1800
Fred E TarmanEditor and Publisher
Harold R BelknapAssociate Publisher
Dale F IleckendornManaging Editor
Don M Frensley Business Manager
Robert N Herr-Advertising Director
W G BlackCirculation Manager
Member of the Okahotna Press Associa-
tion The Southern Newspaper Publishers
Association and The Audit Bureau
of Circulations
Member of tete Associated Press Int Associated
P vss Is exciusivsly entitled to the use tor repubitca
Von ot alt news dispatches credited to it not otnerwise
credited to Inns paper and aiso the 'local news duo
Iáhed teerem
Accuracy and Pew Piav krrors volt be promptly
Corrected and complaints ot unfair treatment n Me
coiumna Of this newspeper will be diusted aalied
tit t1s attention Cot ?nit allefo
-sili 71
Lsj Programs I
TUESDAY April 4
145 0 HUnti Brinkley Report
Four scar Report
COO 0 News teacher
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610 0 Laranlie
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1:3I 0 Alfred Nitchock
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1:00 0 Thriller
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S10 () Red Skelton
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11 li3O 0 Critic's Choice
10:00 0 News Weather Sports
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10:IS 0 Early Late Show
1030 0 Jack Pear
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1100 0 Truth or Consequences
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COO 0 The People's Choice
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Tarman, Fred E. The Norman Transcript (Norman, Okla.), Vol. 72, No. 227, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 4, 1961, newspaper, April 4, 1961; Norman, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2129212/m1/4/?q=virtual+music+rare+book: accessed June 11, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.