The Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 77, No. 148, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 21, 1970 Page: 2 of 8
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The Perry Daily Journal
A* Independent Community Newspaper
‘Forward March!"
*,
P. 2, Perry Daily Journal
Tuesday, July 21, 1970
OKLAHOMA PRESS ASSOCIATION
VA son • may I mean aovus anadr—un soeme ",
Successor to The Noble County Sentinel established Sept. 16, 892,
The Perry Republican, merged May I, 1924; and The Morrison Trans-
script, merged May 1, 1958.
Published Six Days Weekly at 710-712 Delaware St., Perry, Oklahoma,
by the Perry Journal Company.
Second Class Postage Paid at Perry, Okla. 73077
All unsolicited manuscripts, letters and pictures brought or sent
to The Journal are submitted at the risk of the lender The publishers
Expressly disclaim any responsibility for rheir safe return.
MILO W. WATSON
Editor & Publisher
Gene Taylor
Mrs. Clarence Duncan
Mabel Miller
H. A. DeLashmu#
Ernest Stoops
Managing Editor
News Ed tor
Advertising Manager
Cashier
Production Superintendent
■Uiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiin 11111:1111111:11111111111111111111111111111111
ETNAMIZATION
RAY CROMLEY
Youth Feels
Effect Of
AtomicBomb
By JOSEPH L. MYLER
WASHINGTON (UPI)
James P. Clark, 22, makes free
use of a couple of four-letter
words when he tries to explain
his generation to his elders.
One is "love." The other is
“fear.’’
When the first atomic bombs
were exploded 25 years ago this
month, Clark was not yet born.
But they have had a profound
effect upon him and others of
his generation
Clark, a native of Warren,
Pa , was graduated last month
from Georgetown University.
He had majored in English.
OTO
%
noil
Wednesday morning a great
bunch of local civic workers will
assemble at 7 a.m. to start a
drive for $3,000 to finance the
Cherokee Strip celebration and
other year-end activities.
The value of the annual ob-
servance is undisputed, since it
is now the only event in the
course of the year in which the
The
Almanac
Asian Red Splits
Open Opportunities
Next Year, thanks
scholarship, he will
studying law at New
University,
to a
start
York
By RAY CROMLEY
NEA Wash jton Corresporide iit
(4406?
*NA7
WASHINGTON (NEA)
While the Indochina war gets the headlines, messages
from this reporter contac Toky • Hor K
South Asia outline in some detail the very serious difficult
ies the Communists are having in the rest of free Asia
Though the December 69 elect
strength in the Japanese Diet from four to 14 seats, the
Japanese Communist party continues to fragmer
Early this year, several pro-Peking Com.....inter
groups started a rival Japane e t imun I part I ' i
en top of a pro-Soviet party and a handful of other splinter
groups off on one track or an I
In Ceylon there is a pro-Soviet Communist party, with
four seats in parliament a pro Chine e ( ommunist party
TITIT • D •
1V in Review
Lanka
ats and
with one parliamentary member a Trotsh
Samaja party (LSSP) with 10 parliamentary
finally an extremist group . calling itself t LSSP
(Revolutionary)
(This last group believe the othe I are not fficer tly
violent. It, in turn, is split into two factions, which are
not in violent disagreement
The Pakistani Communi ts have been sp t for se veral
years into a pro Peking part and .. Pi M ) oW • 1
Now the pro-Peking group has split into four parts in
East Pakistan and three i arts III We I Pakist in It
clear from the reports this reporter ha rece .' whether
this means a total of four or seven pro-Peking partic
taking West and East Pak in 1 S'
India now has four Comi nist ] 'It'' one in the
embryonic stage
This extreme splintering i quite typical of ( omm it
developments in the early stage. Some year or anoli
strong man totalitarian leader type 1 Mao Tse-tun
a No Chi Minh—may come along to unite some of th
lions and destroy the rest The n the r’e ( uld be the i
nings ol strong underground
But today’s Communist infighting in these important
Asian countries gives these land time to trengthe n tis 11
democratic institutions and their economic
It gives them time to pull unhappy-but-not-yet-dissident
groups into themair tream.
li the i nited State in the next few years will spend a
10th of the effort now being devoted to Vietnam to political
and institutional aid to the South and Southeast Asian
countries in this group and to their neighbors, (Malaysia,
Thailand the Philippir the cl
very.....d that there will be no additional Vietnams (or
Cambodias) in the reasonable future and the Nixon help
Asian-help-themselves policy will have a fighting chance
for success.
Economic aid will be necessary in some of these cour
tries i not Japan of cout • d me itary aid
well. But economic and military aid is secondary to th
overwhelming need for I e pro . that will I p the
lands build stronger more democratic |
along the line of their choice This what ed to our
remarkable postwar su es in Jap: I
(Newspaper Enterprise As n.)
Journal Crossword Puzzle
Olio
Answer to Previous Puxxle
# 3
HOLLYWOOD UPI
A dog
light 1 1. up between
CBS-TV and NB( TV for
rating premacy in the
pivotal Monday night program
) '■. tion dluving the season
that starts this fall.
The Monday night schedule
has long been the power center
of CBS-TV prominence in the
ratings. And despite all the
talk of
position networks
1 the 18-49 age
I brom
in its li
By RICK DU BROW
UPI Television - Radio Writer
power lineup for 1 BS T'V again TV because the network
this fall on Mondays will be believed he didn’t appeal to the
Gunsmoke the Lucille Ball 18-49
series Mayberry R F. D., ‘ the despite its emphasis on the
Joris Day Show and the Carol same audience, obviously felt
Burnett Vai.....y Hour Each E he was still such a potent
the ro 11 inks very li li entertainment institution that it
group.
but NBC-TV,
.....uidiences, any
nization would
have any ol CBS
prime time series
finish, the
in the national Nielsen Rating could get mileage out of him.
er will rea Even when he wa bounced by
be putting the test to CBS-TV CBS-TV, Skelton ranked very
on Monday come September near the top of the national
For the NBC TV lineup on that ratings, steadily
night, from start to finish. w il Laught-In." of course, is
be the Red Skelton Show another series that is enor
picked ip from CBS TV and I it mously popular. And the
to half ar hour Rowan and movies invariably draw a good
Martin‘s Laugh In." and the share of the home audience.
Monday Night Movies
Skelton was dropped by 1'1
although they are usually
stronger at the start of a
MIRRORS ESTERDAY
One Year Ago
Jane Morrow was named to
assist with the children’s story
hour at the Carnegie library
Ten Years Ago
Mrs Paul Pancoast. St.....jer.
Twenty Years Ago
1 ted
president of the newly formed
Perry Safety Council. Perry's
new $15,000 meal packi E plant
was ready to begin w holesale
was elected secretary
Gulf states area of
Conservation auxiliary
business according to
of the . ,
. , , Clark owner
the Sou
Miss
Pat Wise began duties as see
John
Thirty Years Igo
Miss Cora Mae Derr .n. n,<
eason when networks lead off
with big pictures than at the
end when they are down to the
level of "Frankenstein Turns on
the Well Man "
The smallest commercial
network. ABC-TV. which has
continually been demolished on
Monday nights doesn't figure
to do much better in the
coming season with entries like
"The Young Lawyers" and
"Silent Fill'll', a crime tale
However, ABC-TV's weekly pro
football games on Monday
Cosen as Speaker
Clark was chosen by his
classmates to be the student
speaker at the Georgetown
commencement exercises He
■ addressed himself to his
parents and to the other
parents present.
He said plainly that he was
opposed to "the system" under
which be had grown up. He
pledged himself to do what he
could to change it.
He said it without hate or
rancor He said it with "love "
The generation to whom he
spoke had made it possible for
the generation to which he
blonged to live and go to school
without worries about food or
clothing or the manifold other
necessities which some of those
present had found wanting
when they were young.
We are proud ol you." Clark
fold his elders, and love you
for your sacrifices ''
Nevertheless, he said, in
addition to the material plenty,
his generation had inherited a
legacy it could not stomach
Again he restored to a four
letter word fear "
More Than Spoiled
"We are more than spoiled
and overprivileged," he said
"We are afraid for ourselves,
for our peoples, for our world
"Most of the students who
graduate today have never been
1 cognizant of a time in their
lives when a man they had
never seen in a distant city
might not destroy them and
everything they had ever
By United Press International
Today is Tues. Jury 21, the
202nd day of 1970 with 163 to
follow
The moon is between its full
phase and last quarter.
The morning star is Saturn
The evening stars are Mercu-
ry, Venus, Mars and Jupiter
On this day in history
In 1861, the first major
engagement of the Civil War
took place at Bull Run Creek in
Virginia
In 1873, the world’s first train
robber took place at Adair,
Iowa, when Jesse James held
up the Rock Island Express and
made off with $3,000
In 1930, the U.S. Veterans
Administration was established
In 1954, armistice agreements
ended the 7C year Indo-China
war.
A thought tor the day Ernest
Hemingway said, "All our
words from loose using have
lost their edge."
QUICK QUIZ
Q—How did the walnut
tree acquire its scientific
name, "Juglans"?
A—In the early days of
Greek and Roman history,
walnuts were thrown at
brides and grooms for good
luck. The walnut was given
its present scientfic name,
by the Romans. It means
"the nuts of Jove.”
Q—How do United States
warships salute the Presi-
dent and important foreign
visitors?
A—By firing their big
guns. The guests standing
determines the number of
rounds fired. •
known, merely by pushing a
button
No other generation has.
faced the imminent possibility
of seeing in its lifetime a
murdered earth become the end
Q—How many arms has
an octopus?
A—Eight and only eight,
never more and never less.
(Nevipoper Enterprise Association)
• it th county agents of- ed her candidacy for county
school superintendent. .. Beryl
Spradlin, Perry FFA member,
I ACERS SIGN KELLER purchased a Southdow eye
lamb from the George Peabody
INDIANAPOLIS U Pl Bill college in Nashville Tenn
Keller a teammate ol Rick
Mount of Purdue, signed Friday
to play his sec nd season with
the champion Indiana Pacers of
the American Basketball Asso-
Forty Years \go
Miss Agnes Gengler was em-
ployed as an operator al the
Arcade beauty parlor.
Classified ads get results
TO YOUR GOOD HEALTH
nights may stir some .idled
interest
product of man’s very
tence."
Clark’s generation,
exis-
which
grew up in the 1950s and 1960s,
From an intramural industry had no clear understanding of
viewtoili' though there will be the travails of the Great
particular interest in whether Depression of the 1930s which
Skelton, the ( BS TV reject, can wounded many members of the
unseat another longtime staple preceding generation
on the network that let him go But it grew up in a period
last season. Gunsmoke For when the intercontinental ballis-
both shows will be head on tic missile, th U2 spy planes,
competitors and you can bet the Cuban missile crisis, were
Skelton would love to give ( BS the big news of the moment.
I\ something to remember "We saw developing," Clark
him by said. ' a national paranoia that
ACROSS
1 Father of
Lancelot
du Lac
4 Sa rs
8 Share
12 Goddess of
infatuation
13 Athena
14 Nimbus
36 HighwayS
(ab)
blackbirds
39 Fondles
40 P
ending
41 Female fowl
42 Coronet
45 Stiffly
formal
Conjunctivitis
George C. Thosteson, M.D.
15 Legalpoint
16 Consisting of 49 Entranem
pictures
18 Lover
beauty
20 Western cattle 53 1
garlands
5 Dismounted shelter
6 Move away 29 Fruit drinks
7 Was perched 31 Peruvian
8 Fling
show
21 Stripling
22 Sketch
24 Feminine
appellation
26 Flesh food
27 Depot (ab.)
30 Doc ile
32 Uttered
34 Celestial
beings
35 Weasellike
animal
ruminants
33 Incite to
action
38 Part within
40 Get up from
54 Courtesy title 10 Winglike
55 Solicitude parts
56 Lampreys 11 Horseback
19 Swiftness
DOWN 23 Rant
1 Reveal 21 Agalloch
2 Philippine 25 ell
repose
41 Suggestions
42 Soft mineral
43 Notion
41 Afghan prince
46 Labor
Dear Dr Thosteson: What in Asia Africa, and some parts
cuses conjunctivitis? Is there I Europe and the Mill'll I ist.
a cure?, is it catching? Does it is a particularly savage form of
cause blindness? ( R. conjunctivitis caused by erms
It is contagious, too, and can
There are all orts of causes cause severe searring of the eye-
er of cures. Some-lids as well as a frightful
time catehin Some amount of blindness in untreat-
turned into a non morality
which insisted that a protective
'first strike,' or shooting your
neighbor il be were to try to
get into y our fallout shelter, j
were somehow justified.
Wakes in the Night
As a grade-schooler, I
remember waking in the middle
! ol the night to hear distant
thunder and trembling to
addicted to it So can adults wonder if the Russians were
In fairly recent years the laws bombing our cities
governing sale of paregoric have Many of us came to identify
been tightened because of that nuclear war with the end of the
danger
world we heard so much about
1
2
3
12
15
18
21
24
25
30
34
36
42
43
44
49
52
56
sweetsop 21 Middle (law) 47 Assam
3 Young birds 27 Spner ge silkworm
4 Kind of TV hig wig 48 Short lance
program 28 Canvas 50 Observe
4
13
16
5
(>
17
19 I
tin
22
3
20
40
31
37
38
45.
50
64
46
41
(New paper Enterprise Assn.)
8 9
10
11
14
39
the
28
29
47
48
1) 1
54
57
times not al all And some
kinds can cause blindness It
isn’t one disease It is many
The conjunetiva is a very thin
membrane which covers the
eyeball and i therefore in con
01 with the in ide ol the eye
When ibis membrane becomes
irritated and inflamed, that’s
conjimetivitis But the type of
irritation is important.
The conjunctiva may be
ed cases.
Still another form of 1 -
junetivitis sometimes is seen in
elderly folks because the lower
lids may fold or sag outward,
expo ing the II inctiva t dust
dryne and milar incide tal
irritation, as well as infection.
Nutritional deficiencies, s-
I"'1 ally vital n \ can ead to
similar eye irritation in some
oldsters
You gave me tin clue what-
ir ever as to the type of con-
ited by dust, smoke, exposure junctivitis, so you’ll have to
vind 1 1 uch direct learn from your own doctor
whether your case is “catching"
and whether it is a type that
can be cleared up quickly or
is more likely to become chronic
sun, chemical mes
Allergy can cause conjunctive
wh fever sutler
l‘s eyes burn and get watery,
il’s a form of conjunctivitis
ing. however.
case I inctivitis stem
irritation
Deai Dr Thosteson: My
ections are friend lias been giving paregor-
ic to her baby for two months,
on childhood and he is only three months
be cleared up, -.....
it is highly lore every feeding which
i youngster every 3 to I hours
h uld b - il until it clears
old. He gels the paregoric be-
IS
babies and result in blindness
'll i t are used
at birth to prevent this.
more prevalent
I have heard that babies can
ause gonor become addicted. Is that true?
I in newborn My friend says the baby cries
il he doesn't get the paregoric.
- It J.
Paregoric is an opium deriva
live, so yes, babies can become
Paregoric is not a safe "cure" in Sunday school
for a crying baby Better to We did not outgrow this
find out why he’s crying and childhood fear During my lirst
correct it instead of doping him year in Georgetown, a small
which is what paregoric does group of students through a
Where, by the way, is your cruel trick convinced an entire
dormitory floor of sophomores
that a nuclear attack had been
friend getting such quantities ol
paregoric?
launched by the Soviet Union
Some had nervous break
downs, others simply wept
Perhaps they had come to
expect it '
Not unless an individual is So now youth, as Clark sees
highly sensitive to those partic it. must dedicate itself to the
ular things Some people are al proposition of no more war:
lergic to milk, so they have to war never again" With this
avoid it. Some are allergic to
Dear Dr. thosteson: I have
been told that milk and citrus
fruits or juices are bad for al
lergies. Is this true.’ I M A
citrus fruits Most are not
Never take a chance on dia
botes' For better understanding
of Ibis disease, write to Dr.
Thosteson in care of this news-
exception war against preju-
dice and poverty, war against
pollution and "dehumaniza-
tion," war against the "busi-
ness as usual" system.
ACQUIRES DINOSAUR
paper lor a copy of the booklet.
Diabetes The Sneaky Dis riest thing at the Brookfield
ease." Please enclose a long. Zoo may be a plastic dinosaur
sell addressed, stamped en rhe ' Atlantic Richfield Co.
velope and 35 cents in coin to gave its collection of Sinclair
cover cost ol printing and hand Oil dinosaurs away last week
ling. and the zoo got a 32-foot-long
Because ol the tremendous fiberglass modi'! of a duckbilled
volume of mail received daily, dinosaur
CHICAGO
i Ill’ll The sca-
Dr Thosteson regrets that he Zoo officials said they would
cannot answer individual let- place the dinosaur "where
ters, but whenever possible he hidden discovery by the visitors
uses readers questions in his will be sudden and unexpect-
i column. led."
people of Perry get together to
play host to visitors from this
area. The drive deserves to be
supported liberally by all busi-
ness firms and individuals. We
are all part of and bear a re-
sponsibility to the events in this
community.
These people who will con-
duct the drive will be taking
time from their own businesses
and personal activities to get
the job done.
The least we can do is to an-
ticipate the c: 11 from a solicitor
and be prepared to hand over
a check promptly.
Please don't ask these work-
ers to come back! They are as
busy as you are and are anxious
to do their civic duty and re-
turn to their own businesses. It
won't take long it we'll all work
together.
BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
We have a new film rating
for "adult'’ films—"Y." "Y"
is for "Why go?"
ss •
Croquet is poor man's
polo.
With inflation. "Pennies
From Heaven'’ should have
dollars in the title, but some-
how it strikes a sour note.
One problem yet un-
solved concerning the su-
personic passenger plane:
How to get the free meal
served before landing.
(Newspaper Enterprise Assn.)
PLANE CRASHES
CAIRO (UPI) A United
Arab Airways airliner crashed
Sunday on takeoff from Cairo
International Airport, killing all
three crew members
Airport officials said the
Soviet-built Antonov 24 was
making practice takeoffs and
landings when the accident
occurred
The officials said the crew-
men regularly had flown
British built Comet jets and
were training on the Soviet-
made plane
Out Our Way
SOMETHING
. HOLDING
UP THE %.
GAME : ).
NEA a -
. CERRAN
431,
YEAH THE I MPIRE! TH S AIN’T A STRIKE
- AUSE I DIDN’T M • . IT AA - AIN’T A
BALL CAUSE I STRUCK AT IT-ITS NO
FOUL TIP CAUSE IT ILL ON TH’ .
1 BAT, AN TS NO HIT ON ACCOUNT
+ OF * WHERE
V WE RA —
• THE WORRY WART
PAGING SOLOMON
Carnival
NASA
DIRECTOR
ORBRAL
OPERATING
7-21
19/0 by NTA, In TM Rrg us Pot of
‘'While you were out, your wife called about a space
problem ... seems she’s been parked in one about
30 minutes too long!" about
,44, Ze
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Watson, Milo W. The Perry Daily Journal (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 77, No. 148, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 21, 1970, newspaper, July 21, 1970; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc2247552/m1/2/: accessed July 1, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.