The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 204, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 27, 1970 Page: 4 of 6
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Page 4 THE CUKRO RECORD Thurs Aug 23 1970
Editorial—
Electronic Surveillance
' - : ■■
The story of a food store chain's fight against ai-!
ieged Mafia gangsters, seeking to move In on its profits. I
and how law enforcement officials were almost powerless
to defend the giant chain. In July’s Reader’s Digest,
should he must, reading for all citizens
Probably better than any other case, except possibly
the roundup of narcotic agents in the Washington, DC
irea, this story demonstrates the need for limited elec-
tronic surveillance (wiretaps) in US society today
Just as law officials were about to move, on the
basis of evidence gathered by wiretaps (in the intelli-
gence .push against gangsters instigated by Robert
Kennedy), President Johnson banned all such surveil-
lance except in national security cases.
With wiretapping banned and evidence obtained
therefrom useless in court, a series of fires in ware-
houses of the food chain have continued. Law officials
finally went to the press and television In June of 196!)
with an indictment, saving openly that the individual
was only a pawn in the Mafia assault on the grocery
chain. But the court case gops slowly. Worse, the House
Judiciary Committee in Washington continues to drag
its feet on a crimp control bill passed by the Senate last
year, urgently desired by President Nixon as a law which
would greatly help law enforcement officials in such
cases
ATOMIC ROULETTE
m
i<ri lit
Wally $ Office
An Increasing number of newsmen In Washington
suspect Interior Secretary “Wally” Hickle’s days are
numbered They reached that conclusion, tentatively,
when the Secretary made a pitch for popularity at the
expense of the President during a recent student tur-
moil, criticizing Mr Nixon in the process.
This landed among exasperated White House person-
nel as a particularly ironical bomb since getting Hickle
confirmed was the hardest fight the President faced a-
mong all his Cabinet nominees. There have since been
subtle hints from the White*House that his resignation
would be accepted.
Now comes the news, and scandal, that, Wally spent,
about $40,600 refurnishing his office. He spent over $7,000
for design services. Furnishings cost $27,000. The Gov-
ernment Accounting Office charges that the method
used in making the purchases were “oeyond the autho-
ity of the Department of the Interior.”
?ster Insurance
Your opinion of yourself is always different from the
opinions of your friends i
¥ * *
Almost anyone can tell you why you should do some-;
thing tor nothing for him.
EstabUatMd in 1894
PubUibed Each Afternoon _
Sunday Morning
B» THE CUERO PUBLISHING CO., too.
U» E. Main, Coero, Texas *• O. I
Second class postage paid at Qiaro, Ta
South Texas Press Association
Southern Newspapatr Publishers Association
JACK HOWERTON
J C “PETE” HOWERTON
MRS JACK HOWERTON
President and .Publisher
Vice President
Secretary-Treasurer
Texas Daily Press League Ywe., 960 Hartford Bldg., Dallas
Home delivered by earlier: One Year 116.00, 3
mall in re Witt, Victoria, Goliad.
Ai
egS STrS
SI #■
snsztt'ttisasttJtsx.
nwuu.Pof.l UsMBha* Gtvaf Cuero and County at DeWttt
UNDENTS ITSELF — A new
unwrinkle in the automo-
tive industry is this wheel,
made nf polyurethane pki -
tic laminated to a basic
steel backbone wheel and
painted with Ilurothw
100 elastomeric enamel
from PPG Industries of
Pittsburgh. The w heel
"heals” 'tseif of any dents
by slowly swelling back to
its original contour without
peeling or cracking.
MARCH Of EVLN1S-
v X
PORNOGRAPHY REPORT
CREATES LARGE DEBATE
CONGRE5SMTN HWD
DISTORTED EVIDENCE
>
'CV-
........
■ -. •• v,
By HENRY CATHtART
Central Press Washington Correspondent
tt VS MING TON-—The majority rrport of the. President f 1 *
W minion on Pornography h is cparked * Hv rlk- drn.*' h-• o
with Ripnifirance that rxtrnds far beyond the question of d
books and movies.
The commission, appointed three years, a to bv rrr.iJdent .1’ ; u*
son found "no evidence linking- por.nogr.tph7
to sox crimes or to a "detriment.^ nripac'.
upon moral character. w»xua! orient at lor or
attitudes of you up people Therefore, the
com mission called for the repeal, ,i |a\> con-
trolling exposure of pornography to-adult
But while the commission was probing.por-
nography. a congressional .subenmrr.ittoe -
probing the commission and itu tnveaiija&t.a1m
To put it mildly, the congressmen; .did rot
lik«‘ what they found.
In the w ords of one con^resarr. \r> ’ -This
was a tragic waste of $2 million of taxpayers*
money"
Dr Victor Cline, professor of v , :)<<-rzy
n\ th»» I’niversity of Utah, charged in
monv before the House Pastal Operations
Subcommittee that the com mis-i on - r» } ” 1
, in an almost Alice in Wonderland t;. pc U
at tu.11 evidence ’
cornmiMsiqn had deliber.Hety omitted e- d< r o
Washington
D* hot*
t v In f i>/
V37 ’’rigged . .
distortion of the
He (N.ii<l the
favoring- traditionalist views on pornography and that thbuc-
of time given to actual experiments-'was f »r toy on».‘ to r-
valid conclusions.
.<%: .Vrf
and tornlu .'ii': A
The Manion
lorn ni
Uv MAUII.W M\MO>
WHI N TilK ltl.l>'
TAKK OVER
i ii spur the tuniwi'i iii the
Mitiillf Cast Hint tin- v.il- in
Indochina, it ,ym:iin.< fashion-
able to -insert 11iti 1 thi tVcnmu-
nists n it hi-nf on worl l
domination. Thu ’hifu-k-and-
white" definitions «l yore tire
passe We rv• -longer -if
Her) i -(inquests, m-dead: the pop-
ul,ir theme is splt-dctr i-min,i-
tion.’o whii li in Communist jar-
: gon would Ik- ■'liberation.”
What is it like to In- liberated
arid self-determined by the ben-
eficent Communists? One way
to find out, is to ask someone
■wlv, has Ined through the ex-
perwnce. That is why Dean
Clarence Manion united Tse-
wang Jignie Tsarong to speak
on the Manion Forum radio
program. Tsarong, a student at
Indiana's Valparaiso Univer-
sal, is a refugee from Tibet.
In 1949, you will recall, Tibet
was invaded by The Chinese.
H , is how Jignre Tsarong
I el i s I he story ..
We hnrt.no toreuarmng and
mill if wo had we wouldn't
have been able to stand up a-
gamst the invading force* of
China They just walked in. We
■pleaded to India tor help, but
the, Indians just ignored ii We with the Chinese and
to the United ! lv’ the uprising started.
even appealed
Nations and even there
didn't pare -"about Tibet.
'Sure wp knew that we
would be overrun my family
had no rho.ee but to flee to In-
dia.”
Mr. Tsaryng believes that
the Chinese mean U> use Tibet
as a stepping-stone for future
agression. Here is what he
says. “Tibet is a very strate-
gic place. It you look at a map,
you will see that Tibet is a
plateau anti it's a gateway to
: India, even to Burma and to
I ii'de countries like Bhutan. N'e-
! pal and aLso out to the west
where there is Pakistan, Kash-
mir and Ladakh.'
In 1954, the family returned
lo Tibet ") stayed thpre tor
pro years.'' recalled Jigme,
gradti'il-
The , tu-
they I nese couldn't
Various proposals have been put forward for the
fabJishment of a broker insurance corporation, backed
"‘nanciaily by the federal government, (at nominal cost),
‘o protect investors in the stock market.
The need for such insurance is obvious In the last,
six months some of the country’s oldest and largest
stock brokerage houses have failed, and in some cases
the investor who places his confidence in these houses,
to hold his securities, has been shocked to learn funds in
his account have been used by the brokerage house in
an effort to avoid liquidation.
Obviously stocks and funds paid to brokerage com-
panies should, by law, be held in strict trust and a law;
Is needed providing criminal penalties for all who touch
such funds for other purposes. Meanwhile, the proposal!
for the establishment of an insurance corporation to pro-
tect the investor is urgently needed.
The idea has received a boost from Presiden Nixon,
who recently sent word to a House Commerce subcommit-
tee holding hearings on the question; since the backup
Insurance would cost the government little and protect
Millions of Americans participating in the. free enter-
prise system Congress should speedily enact such legls-:
laftton
DAILY CROSSWORD
i
ACROSS
Bored
12 wds , i>1 ,
s Submarine
11, Molding
12 Divine
food
13 Stair part -
15 Stem
16 Parro!
17. Gratuity
ID Empto
20 Sweet..
i inf i
23. At tho t
tim*1
25 In any ease
28. American
moth
29. Preposition
31 Palm
(Br«7.. i
32 Book-
keeping
abbreviation
33. City in
Minnesota.
36 Guided
missile
38. Leaps
40. Man din;,
42 witness
43. Chemist
workshop
46 Sword
handle
48 G< venting
body
50 Mail
covering
52, Depressions
A3. Irritable
54. Pops
DOWN
1. Farm
implement
2. Girl’s
nickname
. 3 Prescription
detail
4 Rubber .
11 re
!’ Alegre
*■ Humming
sound
7 Capture
8 Headlong
flow
0 Cuckoos
TO Tone down
11 Cordage
tree
18. Liquid
mea-
sure
21 Aval,
a bit
.2
wds i
22 Ogling :
23 Poetic,
con-
trac-
tion
24 Con.
trover-
■ rial
i inf i
26 Tree
27. Sorrow
30. Posses-
sive
pro-
noun
.34. Songs of
praise
35. Fibs
37. Guam,
for, one
39. Require-
ments
■in Small talk
“and went to a-Chinese school
j We weren't taught anything s-
! bait our own history or cul-
ture mostly it was about Chi-
na We were told that countries
like the United State.-, and
lain werr all Imperialist*
that we should have nothing to
I do with them.
"In 19.5<i the people in Chairi-
, do, Tibet, had brief .skirmishes
stop, all the up
i risings. They boinlx-d Milages
“and women and children wore
! killed..’ Gradually the inoincn-
i '
i tun started m Lhasa the , api
ta! ot Tibet, in. 1959 the people
! really ,revolted against the Cin-
! nese That w as the time that"
I the Dalai Lama .escaped! lo. in
1 dia and 'sought poiihral asy-
lum
! “.Since then, everything that.
! w as Tibetn lias been destroyed
[All the monasteries. and all toe
j Monks were even furred to
ma’Ty Chinese uonier. People.
| were really used as Slaves The
j International'Jurists firmly be
j lleyed that there w as an art of
j ger >cide in Tibet, The people
■were used as a means of mak
ing airdromes, railways. >ti "
Jigme's family esraped foi
the second time iri 195b How
dries he sum up the . situation
now? "As things stand now,
there is no hope But there
might be a war in China or t —
Bri-i Russia, China „-i«y get mvolv-1 the
and | ed in a big flare-up', and if that
happen*, then we might
to return.
“I don't think there
hope for the people m
• s|\m:\ LKKOKS—He offered 16 spe, if
;or errors in the conunissiorTs investigation -:
disi iissjon of our alleged fault, is typical
In the commission -report It quotes a researcher for the Kir..»ey
Se\ Research institute as s. ving his study found sex rnmm.U.t
were sexually unresponsive lo tore s of rape, violence and tor-
ture But Pr Cline points out that the. commission ignored or
refused to Mate that the Kinsey researcher was referring ur y
to one tvj>e sex offender out of 21 tapes studied by th, insti-
tute And this research Dr. Cling revealed, was based on a
“verbal self report” by the sex offenders, uncorroborated
When the professor examined the original Kinsey lr.stit ho
data, he found that certain type* of sex offenders score "extn •»>•
lv high on being sexually aroused bv pornography” But this
data will not. be found in the commission's report.
Dr Cline contended that the commission used “mother tvpe’
middle-aged housewives who had no experience in asking quru-
tions on sex as interviewers in certain studies.
Finally. Dr Clin asserted that the commission members sh , . t
b 1ST made their data available to a competent panel of s.xul
scientists which could evaluate, the findings without lias
• FILM ONCR.lt KIR—Unfortunately, that Is the basic pron w
with the commission on pornography and, indeed, with mo t
presidential study commissions. A majority of the erimmissi.m
members appointed by former President Johnson and nearly l
the staff aides hied by the commission had preconceived n -
tions that printed and pictorial erotic materjpis
are |>cr se protected by the First Amendment to
the Constitution.
It could be argued that, the same would 'be
f — )c of a commission apjrointed by President Nix-
on only such a commission would he loaded with
members who have preconceived notions against porting-apr.-
This is typical of most so-called study commissions Their in" -
hors haw basic point* of view on. the is .lie*' they study and th' .r
LmtUngh and recominendaUoaa axe ail too oiLco ptedictabie.
Fir*< iog»
Uauoll /
Pr»dlCtobls
oul of j yrasmbiP heehuse riiost >1 As
ie.n.os f is. 'very underdeveloped'. If ' -
lie able 'the Chinese or the Russians arc j United Sf.dos ■.'.prills '-vA.it, I inih
going lo take advantage of the the whole of A >u. i- , -,inv it
is any i situ d.ion an i try thfi'r ’oe.sr to junto Communism " A-: ,',■ r.
s ' can 'Why Featur'd
Unit'd Sta’r- pulls
Vietnam If Amcrii a .
if I.spread Couiniumsm, and
Vfilwdij’i An*w«v
4 1 Rent
14 Indian flour
43. Good Queen
47 Child
49 Comb form
recent
ol Railroad
tabbr.)
7 h£ PtOTge Of- fiWATARA
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DAD, I HAVE A
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The Cuero Record (Cuero, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 204, Ed. 1 Thursday, August 27, 1970, newspaper, August 27, 1970; Cuero, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth702922/m1/4/?rotate=90: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Cuero Public Library.