The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 201, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 1, 1980 Page: 4 of 69
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
-■i
Embargo Is Taking
fe&O In Ifan
7 ^
In promising continuing escalation of pressures
on Iran, President Carter may not fully realize ,
how' difficult that defiant country’s situation
already is. • -
That is suggested by a revealing item in a
Tehran newspaper, relayed to American media in
a recent wire report. •. .
There is a severe shortage of zippers/Foreign
supplies have dwindled to virtually nothing §pd
the price of even inferior local products has zoom-
ed almost beyond reach,-if any can be found by in-
creasingly gap-conscious consumers.
It is a small item in itself, of course, and of
small consequence to the larger spread between
U.Sl and Iranian positions. BUt it does suggest an
answer to a current burning question — whether
economic embargoes have any real impact upon a
population.
“ ce, it looks like an open and shut
%
in i on
ia
1
Amus
cast.
W/A’/fS/AV&t
I
Readers' Views *
| ; ’ \ J- i Av ./I--
Dear Editor: ' honest, dedicated and
I would like to u^ge the respofisible man who will-
people of Chambers County , do hjs job as it should be
to vote June 7jn the runoff. JdOfre. vpteforChuckMorns
for sheriff. -4for sheriff of Chambers
Tliis election is important County on June 7.
cm.li auu every pel still ■
living in our community. ;{.
I also want to urge the
people to vote for C.E
“Cfitick" Morris for sheriff.
I stand behind this man for
Kathy Badgett
\ Box 187
Mont Belvieu
Dear Editor: \ ,
I want to ask the peopleof
Chambers County to vote
for Chuck Morris for
iam . sherifC^People really need
Thi$ IS what Chambers to wake up and vote
otifity needs desperately Chuck Morris
a-man who de<
20$
Tp HA!LA
LETTER?
. ir’& AW
outrage!
MS
Nor REALLY.
BY fRE/TIME WE
GET AROUND To
PELlVERiNG IT it’ll
T ONLY be VoRTh
15$
WAbTE
Washington Report
Terrorists, Nuclear Power
Are Nightmares Of '80s
ft*..-
•B
By JACK ANDERSON
WASHINGTON - While
the possibility of a nuclear
holocaust is Of paramount
concern to worjdleaders, a
more likely threat is Worry-
ing intelligenee-'-analysts:
The increasing danger that
some irresponsible ten-
rorist group will acquire a
nuclear bomb or the
■—**>* _ • w,n SLwKSSZ
But it will take another in congress, who’ve had
ACROSS
DUt 1L — —in LUIlgXC&P, WUU VC
Manhattan Project, their doubts about Reaga
mobilizing all the resources al] ai0Iig; are now sayin
gan
„ ... „„ along, are now saying
of.the U.S. We must draft they’re, afraid • Jimmy
‘ ' - carter will chew him up in
the best scientists,
engineers and npanocers
from American industry,
nnt incf thncp the fornoraX
engineers and managers The ..... .
4f Maki
scon
I Vine-covered 48 Expl«
6 Vines " 49 City
II Synthetic " S3 Pieci
fabric'’ 55 Burn
remover 57 Over
14 Become 58 r0||<
ap|J
G0P doubters^ear CarteF-s-
-ssss&sft -Ys&.y.ur. m.i
Serious appTalial bv the ; The first task is to over- like a toss-up, with mg
.coldeyed men of the Cen- come the obstruction of the Jacks «»
tral Intelligence, Agency. oil companies, which are. Kispamcs rf°
* * 'flSUWga :{gf«raBU
20 Response —.....~
trnolr of tormr
most important is because
he is honest. He is a good
Sporadically - -
Al Descri bes Ravages;
years until they have squeezed
’SlfSiS. S S %£ £ Ser'aheid ’ in next
KrfrS: well True, they're studying weeks’s crucial primary
Ohio" but neither is Ken-
nedy. The latest polls show
23 Housewife’s ti- \
’•SSL. ig
.27 British sea 'a°
hero 7 S,ee
n«,h - par
Loc
*.3;
' - - > > achieve nuclear tuaily will,run dry- But the con^iderJ-V news
will-
Couhty needs desperately Chuck Morris is a
in » sheriff - a man who dedicated, honest and ——
will -uphold the law no mat-, reliable man This is what ,
ter^ho you are or wM your okr county needs in a ____ ..... ..
kinfolks are. sheriff. We need a change ByALMELINGER
Chuck Morfis-will right in our law enforcement. We The wells of nostalgia run
mafly wrongs if he is ^ that ..—
• elected sheriff. H? will real: -----r--r . .
.. ly have td ‘‘walk tall" to do and puttingthe1>eople first.
• . fttiS^jecause there is a lot of We don’t have that now.
Of Time At The '50th
“capability” - and their
guess is thatthis nightmare
will beedme a reality before •!
the end of thy decade.
The CIA recently
reported that while the
number of international
SfS'SSS . S2d'T.mSa,“‘d
ivaugvi • 1 ..ivmvmwv* ~ — - - - -
one," And he proceeded to year I edited the Ranger,
quote glibly a mediocre And he managed to mess up
limerick purportedly from the whole evening forme1
____ n..KI!»n>inn I rinn’t ‘
1979, the actual destructive ,
violence of their operations
time has come to slop stu- dean Walter Cronkite for a
dying and start developing , running mate. Reagan’s ad-
oil substitutes, ' visers also had Cronkite on
- . v - , -their vice presidential list
POLITICAL POTPQURR1: until the TV celebrity took
Both the Democratic and himself out of politics.
Republican national Watch on Waste: Since
chairmen have Held wor% 1971, the Pentagon has
ried consultations “with par, . spent some $534 million try-
_1Qfl, ___
~ 3VPitef on ®l°c
35 Pacific island ,9 SP®
36 Baffle mot
37 Beau ' 10.Tfai
40 Compass 12 Moi
point , 13Jnh<
4:1 Insec! at a Den
picnic '.•■.! 18 Not
44 There 21 Res
14-
16
F
ty leaders about the huge ing to correct problems that
______________________ „ _ . , number' of undecided turned up in thp engines of
jpg the people Sity of Texas Ex-Students limerick purportedly from the whole evening for me._ had increased. ____— voters. They're worried two aircraft - the; Navy F-
nrpeople first. Association wrote me that my publication. 1 don’t “i was thinking, ’.’he said, . \Vhat the public report that the November election -14 and the Air Force F-16.
;that now. my graduating class was remember it but it was a “ab0Ut the time ole Bull ieft out, however, were the could be thrown into the The problems have yet to
been said on having a Fiftieth Anniver- lesson - if any reader is go- ; and you got hold of a but- ominous conclusions of a House of Representatives. be solved, so the brass hats
knSyl^ge tovito the job as
sheriff %ol db it right "to „ forcement He
the letter of the law’’ / ’himself aware because he
iftyone who gives a haiig cares! He cares about peo-
abW this community has ; pie. Anyone who knows
noHeed many changes in Chuck Morris knows this
law enforcement in-the past Chuck can make the
tour years and now it is direction of law enforce-
time for another change, a . meiif oTiur commumly-gir
nnnll., cAll/l Ahnrtrta rttiA fnr t.Hp Hphf W3V for 3 Cha!H£&.-
expressed doubt that the
new engine will work,
either.
thiSfbecause there is a lot of We don t nave tnai now my graduating class was rememuei n uui u was «. -about the time ole Bull left out, however, were the couia oe mrowu into we .F.y».vU» w-
cleaning up to be done in A lot has been said on having a Fiftieth Anniver- lesson - if any reader is go- ; and you got bold of a but- ominous conclusions of a House of Representatives. be solved, so the brass hats
. thl?county and he is jusK" "both sides in these election Sary reunion, 1 was hooked. ing to keep in mind any Cher knife and had a contestsecret CIA'document: “If, .with irreparable damage to have decided what they
thffmantodo it. campaigns, and if you’ve Fiftieth! I had never been writing of mine for 50 years to see who could throw it the current trend of in- the two-party system need is a new backup
• dfluck is aware of many really listened then you involved in the ’ fiftieth I’d better try to write more between his tqes ” My wife, creasing terrorist violence Republican favorite Ronald engine - at a-Cost of $93
changes in law enforce- have but one choice,Aihuck------anything^ hatfe-entury-ts— Lmemorajile prose — who already suspects that continues, we would expect Reagan-has been criticized- . mllliflfl-J’-0—start w]th-
ment In Chambers County Morris. a Sizable swatch of a man’s It was a quietly pleasant my prohjbition era college a corresponding erosion of % for' his short, sharp. Government auditors have
and'the state . He has the -.. Chuck Morris is well visitation on this planet. experience greeting old ac- days were one long drunk;-""‘ The constraints against ter- simplistic answers to com-
.»« »Ah « aware of changes in law en- There were something over- quaintances. many of waS listening. rorist use of nuclear, ex- plex issues. Republicans
900 of usstriplings perspir-; whom I hadn’t seen since , . .. . ^nt . plosives" seem to love his style, but
ing in caps and gowns on graduation. But the high I have only a jjnj ^Sas stopped them so '
that ancient graduatron day point came at the climac- recollection of the bibulous ^ -Terrorists are and
of 1930. A lot of us no longer tic dinner where we receiv- evening bul l expect to hear - - continue ,0 be greatiy!
answer the roil call. U ed gold Half Century about it frequently in sensitive to the quantity
There- was curiosity Longhorn diplomas - one years to come. That night 1 nualitv of security
about who would be back. of my closest campus carefully counted my toes. syJems pffethirnudear
Whether l "^oura"Taiow rrieirdrslmwed up. He had --i ve-still got JO., --^eapo^TTnd the n.atertarlr-
from which nuclear ex-
plosives might be made,”
24
25
26
29
Vr
35
41
42
43
live here and want to* feel
safe and protected like we
should be.
From Sun Files - -
-QU-Well Drilled On
............ ...... ...... . "would -know
the right way for a change anybody. Whether anybody
So once agAirt I ask each wo"uid recognize me. And
of you ttf vote, and call so- what time had done to those
sale ano proxecieu me wr meone e^e . and remind upper teenagers who stood
ihould be. them to do so. .? in that long line with-me.
"T again '^nTT(rurgepeo- V(mi'tor-etTtrctc--Mtjrfnc NowlBey were'mostly sep-
ple to vote. Vote for Chuck the best man for the job as tuagenarians. •
Morris; Help him make our sheriff of Chambers Coun Mv thoughts ran back to
cummunity a safe and ty. • the campus, not the one 1 -
jS^rCeb^leC,m8 Jennifer Winmlll ffiTSS from The BaJtawn Sen ™, .......... ..
If you want a really • • Sl®nt Belvieu acres of grass and trees en- files, this is the way it was Newcomb College in New
Berry's World
■ BECAUSE WEAEaN.S..are.
City Property In '50
guarded more closely than
nuclear ingredients, ih*
report concludes,’ a ter-
h t
By Ned
-V
V-
circled by tarpaper bar-
racks from World War I.
then in use for classrooms
A -half-dozen permanent
buildings scattered about.
Beck’s Lake, a bucolic little
Lilly pond athwart the old
library, where you could sit
on tree-shaded rocks and
evaluate the co-eds un-
dulating . pleasantly down
mm******
- member^thechoirat ‘’None
Newcomb College m New q{ the steps jn;
ACato?al 125 sophomores ^nlbm M eTSV'a
speaker wlll.be Dr. E.H . ,
40 and 30 and 20 years ago
MAY 31,1940
Billy Seeger. son of Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Seeger, is
notified by Congressman „r________
Albert Thomas of a nomina- Westmoreland, pastor of
tion -to-the U.S. Naval South Maifi Baptist Church
Academy. He is a junior at in Houston,
the UniversitjLflf Texas. Humble Oil &- Refining
Second Lt. Henry Ditt- Co. notifies Commissioner'
man is assigned to duty n tV;V, Ramsey that right-oL
the main walk to. Hawaii in the. U.S. Army way’ for the new Decker
Guadalupe Street. Gone. , Air Corps. / * - Drive superhighway must*
...—flume nnanc a be purchased from the com-
pany at market value.
je J^aptotoft ftun
All gone.
< Now the grass is mostly
covered with massive
structures. Certainly there
; is no room for the scarlet
poppies which once enliven-
ed the green slope. The 40
acres have expanded to
- more than 130 acres, all
heavily populated with new
buildings devoted to arcane
disciplines. And the 1930 co-
eds no longer undulate but
are sitting in grey-haired
dignity in the reunion hall.
Today In
History
Tf
Leon Brown /
Editor odd Pud.
AsuHaOt-tdPiiiliite
Fred89SS tdi-O- ond ^sher 1950 1974
L tChalwan of Board Southern Newspapers Inc^) , -
EDITORIAL 0CPARTMIMT
Preston Pendergrass ■ Executive Editor
Jim Finlev Monafling Editor
Wanda Orton Associate Manog.ng Ed.to
ADVERTISING DtPASTMEHT
‘ MikeG0Kiolo. , , Dtsploy Advertising Manager
yt* Of MWCh 3. PuW.U^feWnoon., ^' I” 'f\
exoi, P O So* 90 Boyfow« 77520 <Sii>scnpt»or. Ro»es 8v co'
. y j MIJlIKt Of TIK *$SOCUUD tlftt
- ti*a—
And what, in that half ceiy
. tury, has happened to the
males among us?
. - There was in 1930 the lit-
tle skinny fellow with a
T great shock of«black hair.
NOw he is a big fat fellow
withoohahr stilL
A n d one of my
classmates was a mousey
bespectacled man in drab
suits who looked to be about -
10 years older than the rest
of us in journalism school.
Now he is a successful
Dallas business man, a
sharp dresser and more
* ebullient attitude than he
displayed as an’
undergraduate.
George Evans opens a
new drive-in. the Twin
Gables, on North Goose
Creek Street. In a full-page
ad, Evans says there will be
no tagging on the dance
,floor. It will fie a “dean
place where 'there ; is no
rough stuff!11
MAY 31,1950
The Texas Co. drills an oil
well on city-owned property
on the dumping grounds
south of West Main on the
east bank of-Goese Creek ——v ---------
Stream, The city bought the ^vas officially abolished in
land but the Texas Co. re- Mexico.-^ :.>v
tained the mineral rights, On this date;
explains City Attorney In 1533, Anne Boleyn was
George Chandler. crowned as queen of
BaCytolmeisS vLunto the ’ TM3, British actor
Texas Methodist Con- Leslie Howard was lulled
, - - —— —irplane
*
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Today is Sunday, June l,
the 153rd day of 1980. There
are 213 days left in the year.
Today's highlight in
history : In 1944, -the-siesta-
ference as a new minister.
Summer recreation
centers are set up at
schools by Frank James,.
playground director for the
city. ^ -i-
Tommy Smith, junior at
Robert E. Lee, is presented
the Houston Harvard Club
Merit Award.
MAY 31,1960
Mrs. K.K. Compton, a
former Baytown teacher,
Another white-haired
type WKosesameplate was retires InHardin.
unfamiliar rushed over James H. Boone Jr.
with outstretched hand. becomes business manager
“Hey, you still write those of The Baytown Sun.
limericks like you did is the Carol Sanders Is a
when a German warplane
shot down his civilian
Lisbon-to-London flight.
: In 1968, the American
writer Helen Keller, who
was both deaf and blind,
died. -:r_>
In 1973, Premier George
Papadopoulos of Greece
declared the Greek monar-
chy abolished.
Bib le Verse
FOR THE Lord is our
Judge, die Lord is our
lawgiver, the Lord is our
Ung; be will save us.
Isaiah 33:22
The CIA analysts, figure
that of known terrorist
groups, "the most compe-
tent” for a nuclear attempt
would be "one of the
Palestinian groups,”
possibly in collaboration-
rorists and-or the
“Japanese Red Army." ~
For what cold comfort it -
provides, the CIA analysis
* predicts that nuclear-
armed terrorists would be •
most likely to use their:
bomb as ‘‘a eredible threat
for blackmail and-ojr
publicity,” rather than for
a direct attack. “In ah ex- .,
treme situation, however,
some might attempt a
detonation,” the report
—warns,_:__
Memo to- the President;
There’s only one way to end--
this nation’s^, dangerous
dependence on foreign oil.
W.e must develop alter-
native fuels.
The Central Intelligence
Agency expects the Soviet
Union tu cross the great
divide into oil dependency
within a year. Soon the two
superpowers will be com-
peting for Persian Gulf oil^..
Your strategic advisers
have warned that the
resulting confrontation
could lead to World War III.
The crisis can be defused
simply by finding some’
other fuel to operate our
automobiles, trucks and
tractors. For years, I have
been calling for an
emergency alternative
fuels crash program. I
bhlie
elieve the nation that land-
DEAR DR. LAMB -
Recently I had a glucose tol-
erance list taken! My! father
, was a diabetic, When my eyes
were examined for glasses,
the doctor advised such a test.
I had had the first test about
four years agn and tfys nnp
showed that my sugar wasp
little higher. The doctor told
me that I was a potential dia-'
hetic and just advised me to^
watch my weight. I am a little
overweight and I do eat the
Wrong foods for a potential
diabetic but he only told me to
cut down on fats and carbohy-
drate!; Cotitd ybti {dease give
me a menu for possible dia-
betes instead of just recom-
mending so many grams of
this or so many grams of that
/ as most diabetic literature
does? - - V ■
DEAR READER -
Evidently, your doctor feels
on the basis of your test that
what you really need to do is
simply reduce your weight.
Many people who have mod-
erate elevations of their blood
sugar levels on such tests will
have perfectly nortpal tests
after they have •ellmisatal
excess pounds of fat.
The reason he didn’t give
you a more specific diet is
that the source of the extra
calories most of .us.get is fat
and sweets. There are a lot.pf.....-
good carbohydrates that
aren’t particularly fattening
and you do need a certain
amount of those in your diet.
That’s where the fresh fruits
well as cereals. But the con-
centrated carbohydrates $uch
-as the sugars and sweets are
the foods that are loaded with
calories.L
There isn’t really a specific
diabetic diet. Each diet has to
be tailor-made to that
patient’s needs. If the diabetes
is severe enough to require
insulin, then the diet has to be
fairly rigid ~ —u:- *-
- in relationship to
the insulin each day. For the
person who ha/ moderately
elevated blood sugar levels
and is otherwise all right, the
emphasis should be on elimi-
nating excess fat and proba-
bly on eliminating sweets.
The Way
It Was
JUNE Indecisive
battle between USS Trum-
bull and HMP Watt. ~
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View one place within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 201, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 1, 1980, newspaper, June 1, 1980; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1021046/m1/4/?q=%22~1~1~1~1~1~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.