The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 23, Ed. 1 Monday, July 5, 1954 Page: 4 of 12
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>A6I4- TW ItrTOWN SUN. MONDAY, JUIT I. UH
Auto Workers Step Up Nest
Guaranteed Wage
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DETROIT July 5-UP— GO PreBidwt
Walter Reuther got pushed into the direct
line of fire in the CIO s fight for a guaran-
teed annual wage this week when the CIO
Steelworkers signed their new coBtnct
with the steel industry.
The steelworkers, in going into negotia-
Demand Puts Reuther In Critical Line Of Fire
1
A
IBM
Pifc
Donald was the man directly, calling the
signals in the ateel negotiation*.
Reuther, as CTO United Auto Workers
president also, will be directly on the firing
line next spring when the 1.5 million-mem-
ber UA\. sits down to negotiate with the
.....jssss^s^zz °»*
.hi«.uwr^SfiS: ......S5rarta*ta“—- «• - =>
this goal ?
Union and industry sources who will do
the negotiating next year when the long-
term auto contracts expire won't talk about
it. The automobile indue* y, which has
many seasonal ups and downs, is dead set
aguntt any annual work guarantee.
The case for a guaranteed annual wage in
the auto industry appeans to have been
weakened by the failure of the steelwork-
ere to get one, or to hold out Sot it.
Steel output has been off this year. One
day. no mention was made of this.
Reuther, as CTO president, technically
has been leading the annual wage drive.
But steelworkers President David J. Mc-
production. ......, ~~ .. . a
But the failure of the steel worker to get
an annual wage guarantee also has cut
down some of the urgency for the United
Auto workers to achieve it
raSg^u%^uPghllSoUrnE ^
If UcDonald had been able to win the
guaranteed wage for his steel workers, the
pressure would have been strong on Reu-
ther to achieve the same.
The steel workers’ withdrawal from its
agSttgaftaaBN*
stick to win other benefits for his big un-
ion, then withdraw the annual wage de-
mand.
SUN SLANTS
By Fred Hartman
If that happens, one of the big issues
which has been threatening to possibly
end the long period of labor peace in the
automobile industry might disappear next
spring.
If Reuther decides to stick fast and show
the CIO’s other unions how to win the an-
nual guaranteed wage, the automobile in-
dustry could be in for some stiff labor dig-
putes next spring.
HW-
vegetables—Factographs. Sort of an Arctic
branch of the frozen food industry?
HELP WHERE IT HELPED
THERE 15 hard:? a handful of Tex** School teach-
ers who won't make more money (or their work
next terra than they made last term.
The one man who had more to do with that than
any other One person (a ;h? state i* Gov. Xilan‘’Shiv-
ers.
He is the only person in the state who has the
authority to call the State Legislature In specia. ses-
sion. Texas has *,000,000 folks more or less, bust the
governor is the only one who ha* that authority;
Gov. Shivers did call the legislature into special
session last March, and the legislature responded
to the governor's urging and did vote a *402 raise
for teachers makifig the minimum pay in she state
and what is more important the legislature, again
at the urging of this same governor, levied enough
^*xe* to provide the money to pay the hill.
It would seem to me that every school teacher in
Texas would be appreciative of the governor's ac-
tion and would reward him with their vote and sup-
port on July 24.
HN DEBACLE BEST FORGOTTEN
THE ALTERNATIVE is to vote and support a can-
didate who never ha* done anything for the teach-
ers of Texas. He hasn't, had a chance because he a
never been in position tamo so.
There may be some in the teaching profession who
are still rankled about that WOO raise voted at
an earlier regular .session but without the neces-
sary taxes to furnish the money. This action did not
have the support of Gov. Shivers. He lost many
friends at that time, particularly among the teach-
ing fraternity.
Those who say that the governor was pressured
Into the action he took last March don't know the
governor. He doesn't pressure very easy He pretty
much is motivated by what he things is right.
That's the way s governor ought to he.
SEN. A IK IN OUGHT TO KNOW
IF I NEEDED any more positive proof of the gov-
ernor's going to bat for the teachers it would hava
LOOKING AT LIFE
A 17-YEAR-OLD girl writes me a letter from her
home in the Pennsylvania mountains and asks mi
to explain the riddle of lift to her.
She doesn't say so in so many words, but she
•ertalnly give* me a large order.
"What ia better," she asks, "the life some of the
movie atara live, with swimming pools and big
foreign cars and servants and sable coats, or my
puny existenca here in a atuck-away place wjth
nothing to look forward to but some boring kind of
a husband, a Jot of children, and never ending
chores ?"
come from another Texan known all over the state
>« one of the best friends school teachers ever had.
I could be refrring to only one man-^Sen. A. M,
Aikin, co-sponsor of the now famous Gilmer-Aikln
laws which revolutionised public school finance (sad
teacher pay) in Texas, •
Sea, Aikin. who knows the problem Of the teach-
ers and who also knows at first hand the mere** or
failure of the Shivers administration, has come out
with a blunt statement that he is one of the govern-
or** strongest supporters. He urges teachers to vote
for Gov. Shiver*.
HEI-P WHERE IT MEANS MOST
ITS TOO HOT to argue, let alone with folks as
smart as school teachers, but fa my book Gov. Shi-
vers has proved his friendship to teachers in the
way I like to have friendship demonstrated 'near
the pocketbook), and backed by the blunt statement
of Sen. Aikin that my aizeup U correct 1 can’t
help but feel that a Texas
Gov, Shivers is not "
more for teachers than any other.
Sen. Aikin has pointed out thaf s teacher in 19*4
stands to make at least *1100 a year more salary
than IM9, the year Gov. Shiver* took tht oath of
office to replace the late Gov. Beauford Jester.
I’m not falling out with any teacher who isn’t vot-
ing for the governors re-election, but I am saying
that I fee! that they shoud feel obligated to give
him their nod at the ballot booth.
He's proved he's a friend of the teacher. Tht
other major candidates at best is an unknown quali-
ty.
ONE FINAL PLEA
WHAT ALL THIS adds up to it this I'd be willing
to give a Kiwani* apple to every Baytown area
teacher who saw fit to vote for Allan Shivers.
And as much as I hate to admit it, I’d be willing
to give every teacher who didn’t vote for the gov-
ernor the tame sis# apple. Tb* trouble with m« it I
like teachers.
But I still think they ought to!
i
mat
mr-.<
• *>
m f
£jar-lj.d
Mi
‘Vjhr. '
. 'tk
r Texas teacher voting against
levellng with a »a!h who did - l
J.
. "• ' ■ -
.BBj
Im
Mm
a
HOW ON EARTH can anyone answer s question like
that? How can ayone compare two kinds of Ufa
which are as different a* a doughnut is from an at-
omic bomb? -------
I think the good lord has uaed pretty good judg-
ment in placing human beings where they are.
He has put some of us on farms, others in the
city. He has given some of us typewriters to writ#
with, talent to act wlht, plowshares to plow with.
One supplements the other. ,
Although my correspondent does not tell me, I
take It from her letter that ahe works on a farm. I
think one of her chores is milking cowl, although
she doesn't make It quite clear.
The milkmaid's life 1* mad* more agreeable be-
cause out ip Hollywood there 1* an
earn and sable* and swimming pools
her.
By Erich BrancUis
She and her kind have become a necessity to the
girls on the farm. But that glamorous ectr*** opuld
never get slong without the farmer. Where would
her meat, her milk, her egg* come from?
It’s true that some time ago a chorus girl from
New York asked her oompanloa on the train whst
that animal out there was.
’That * s cow, you dope,” was the answer, "That's
where you get your milk."
"Oh, I thought milk come* out of eans," said
the chorus girl, who had never been out of the Mg
city before.
WHICH OF THE two kinds of life I would choose
If I had my way Is another question.
Some aay ' a short life but a merry one” is tb*
only Ilf* worth while.
Other* would much prefor the serenity, the secur-
ity. the regularity of life on a farm.
And that It another thing the good Lord has done,
‘ thla land of oura, which Ho must
-BUT
wm
iwto*1
Washington Merry.-Go-Round:
Churchill's Feeling For
Soviet Union Has Changed
By DREW PEARSON Churchill cooled his heel*. Finally
WASHINGTON - It was exactly appointment was arranged, and
a quarter century ago that the ,^5 PrilS* **lnw-
first prime minister of England J*'*®1 * f,ht' ' E*P?und*
came to visit the United States, £*, * **?*] after ,dinner,
sat on a log over the Rapidan rlv- t*!e. t*b!e *nd
er in Virginia and conferred with ©““‘“W ^p^t, by p^Bt what he
President Hoover ... Thing* have J afn,ed Btelin the next day.
changed quite a bit since then .., „ ,, e{' h*PlaiJned 10 *iVe Stalin
Hoover and Ramsay MacDonald, Hel‘ • • » Next day at noon,
England's first labor prime minis- L,h^,rcd.J Anally saw Stalin. But
ter, had nothing much to worry Stalin did all the talking, point
about except the site of naval „y P®‘"t be took up the issues
cruiser*. England dominated the Churchill had listed the night be-
world in those day*. We had little fore, answered them before
to say about it, and the British Churchill could raise them, Ob-
Prime Minister made quite a con- vlously he had , had Churchill's
cession in coming to America. His room wired for sound.
“LTuiSSKCt TAUN-*
least in the field of naval and fi- fi,r,t meetln* was "<* Peasant. So
naneial affair* ... It took him, In- afterwarti Churchill asked for a
cidentally, a week to get here by *econd meeting, but got the run-
boat. Lindberg had flown the At- around- Each time he asked for an
lantic only two years before the appointment word came back that
Rapidan Conference, so it wasn't S**lin was walking in the garden,
considered quite safe for prime anally it was Churchill's turn to
ministers to come by air . .. Since ®et 3ore- He announced that he
then, Prime Minister Churchill was returning to London ... Only
has crossed the Atlantic seven then did staliu invite him to his
times for conferences, moat of the apartment, where bis redheaded
time by overnight plane ... So daughter served dinner, and the
in 25 short years things have two men, thanks to plentiful
changed. vodka, made up and parted good
<anau .
CHANGE — Things have changed
a lot even in the. ten short years CONCELED SURRENDER OF-
since Churchill used to come here FER—Bitterness between Churoh-
m the war years ... In London ill and the Russians got wflrse as
recently, Churchill has been saying the war dragged on. It reached an
that Foreign Minister Molotov is (-xplosivie climax as the German
one of the great statesmen of Eu- armies retreating through Yugo-
rope. And Foreign Minister Eden slavia in late 1944, at which time
!£,IrWMn,rn ar "ice.thinf right German officer* asked for a
Houi ? >> tht* with Yugoslav leader
UJ MihhRibvicb . They pW
W. w. ^
search ocanographer and g,
fXtetfSJjR!
«nt, V. J. Henry of Port
on July 10 to study the i
of thl* section. _____ ______
Henry Is working on his thesis which is revising !
for a graduate degree, and It will In arithmetic, li
* at.udy of tee former slightly social sciences
ttnto eVi,lenCa, ^ „ . I
News of their visit was an- da?1 Monda*v°thr"J
nounced Saturday by W. L At- Lre
I Pnnlnent B&yt<>wn natura- ^TjC0ftUnmd"1
* fossilized beach which show* yislt^K 'PeciahJ
evidence that humans lived there *uIUntb to the wol
before the time of this fouillsa- Joyce Benbrook of
tion, The inhabitant* were extre- ot Houston, apecf
mely primitive and left no arti- U«1 Dr. Ben C.
facts that can definitely be identl-
! ?d, “ *uch. They did not use
flint, chert or other types of hard
atones.
Atwood has termed this a sand-
stone culture due to the presence
of numerous pieces of this mater-
ial which were undoubtedly used
as abralders in fashioning tools
and weapons from hardwood. The
stone is found in the locality and
appear* to have been at the bot-
tom of an ancient river.
Evidence that humans lived be-
fore this beach became fossilized
iz found in burned sea shells,
charcoal, aplit deer bones as well
as bones and shells of sea turtles,
and the bones of some birds. The
animal bones have all been broken
open in order to get the marrow
from the center.
The area also shows evidence
Methodist unlven
social studies;
Pratt, Southern
slty, specialist in
After four '
research, and stu<|
are now compiling
materials found
guides that will i
easier for the te
fun for the studei|
Next week, the:
workshop, will be I
ing, refining, an|
work into a final <
will ba published I
mer. for use by I
teachers during thl
Teachers, long
confusing complex
and subject mattl
growing need to
25,™ rjrurJKSS
ilk* eight feet higher than at pres- r^hc" ^
ent At another time it was quite L % I
a bit lower than at present and it' tbi,J
might he assumed that the Bay f0 "1 UP tbe ,mfl
was dry except for the streams fundamental* in t
flowing through it to the Gulf of tion&! program, ali|
Mexleo. to them, and, whe
Calvin Campaiqi
For Education Pi
HOKUM, OH SMOKUM, WHICH?
luf R*al Lif# Ctrtmony Sscref --
Wally Cox Wedding Resembled TV Rite
a change ____________
did not say nice things about Sec-
retary of State Dulles. He ignored
him . . . That’s a serious change
. . . How great a change it is can
be gathered by Churchill's views
on the same Molotov and the same
Russia only ten short years sgo.
He war then at sharp variance
with F. D, Roosevelt, who then
hoped we might get along with
Russia, might work out world
peace- together . j . Now it’s
Churchill who thinks we can get
surrender . . . The war was over
as far as the German leaders were
concerned, and they saw no rea-
son to continue the bloodshed. This
was in October, 1944, six months
before the war ended in May, 1945
. . . Mikhalovich replied that sur-
render was beyond his authority
and turned them over to his Amer-
ican liason officer, who forwarded
the prospal to Lord Alexander,
British theater commander in It-
HIV ftlll kin#» kanneMaJ
Declaring that schools are Texas’
biggest public business and that
Harris county is the biggest tax-
paying investor In that business,
Aubrey Calvin, Insurance and bus-
iness executive, this week opened
hi* campaign for representative
from Harris county on the state
board of education.
Calvin's platform proposes "an
experienced business man on the
state school board to deal with
the many and complex business
and finance problems of our state’s
biggest business—our schools.”
Calvin, who worked his way
through school and college and
particularly in th
have sicked as a
it I* the only land
HEW YORK D, Th !nd'bW WOrId' ^ wiU- Knowin* Asked wheth«- Marilyn bore any drastically Sf imSSf* ^ A.lexa"d*r
H1W YORK, July 6 -flfc- Th# he was going to the Rocky Moun- resemblance to Patricia Benoit *** ^ ^ pMi ^ iurren<kr °^tr
sort of paradise on earth, because ratl-lif* wedding of Welly Cox, the on his honeymon, Wally who as Nancy on the TV show was CHURCHILL'S WAR STRATEGY on Waahlngton . . . Several
ir J?, #n‘r £iW^,r! *UCh retiring but bright 29-year-old who bof*ht * nlovie eamcl» to use in wooed and won bv Mr Peepers, a ~A ,ot of hav* forgotten nlonith* *ater. ^^r the Russian
If you get tired of the one kind of ill*; if yau . . nature stud)- there. friend said: 'She’s nice like that <-3,urchlll» viewpoint in those war arml*» had battled the German
from wmreformer Utotovable but funny Mr Peepers Wally met Mar‘tvn. the daughter “and a real happy person." It years’ biggest haggling point armie* UP through the Balkans,
farmer all you havs^^di i.^, mv. on t*i»vl*ion waa perforriad*to^ a Edward Genniro, a garment m- was an art reference, for Pat am°nft th‘ Allies was the second Moscow learned from captured
...___ _ j1***..1? ** Me^ist^niit^ to rTerai^nv dustry P«“«rn-maker. four years Benoit from Fort Worth. Tex . a front the ®n*llah channel. prisoners and Mikhailo-
actreee with tears and nreeto (in five « 10 n^flfteei almoat identical with the one that **° when they Were b0^ in a re- 8*ri with a liquid voice who exudes ' • Tde ,an,e Molotov came to vlch of the earlier German offer to
to ^terum ^.^uH-rtv'dXte fumuS^ °r 1 ,BtJr and toffi ™ ^\ ££ mcT™ ^ °° ** i$ °n ‘h' Und°n in th* ,U"end"-
The opportunity certainly 1« there—If you are, Burw Nancy Remington on the air.
summer of 1942, where It was
agreed that the second front waa
■Die TV »r,mr«v tndA ? mc?th before brink graduated She’s as soft-spoken and guilless |‘*reea.“at »*cond front was STAUN EXPLODED — This
bv t^Tpee^r'<w(WBm from hlgb seh001' Wa,!y won' rave in person as on W^aughs easd) JJjf quJ™ e,t to *nd the war. was when Stalin sent the bitterest
B. ki I LI • from s notices for his satirical mono- read* a lot. says “uh-huh" instead churchUl and Molotov even signed notes of the entire war to Roose-
By MbI He mer ^ loRues- wh,cb he writes himself of 'yes.” and doesn't worrv too a n0”a«reM|on pact agreeing on velt. He suspected the Allies of de-
7 ° tbe.tmili.nty end, with the ritual, touch « "dnfo-.h., . -------1 ^S l?rtt
MY NEW YORK
NEW YORK - Had not Beverly Putnam gone to
the movies one night last year and seen "Mogambo,”
an improbable production about life among the lions,
she would not have been In my office today asking
me to help her dig up 15 women with 13,120 each.
Read on.
Miss Putnam is a tall, dark-haired doll who a
few months ago. after having seen that movie—
maybe It was just because she saw Gable- organ-
ized the much-publicized "ali-girl safari” to East
Africa. I looked her up because I was curious to
discover how 13 girls ever stuck together through
thick and thin in the jungle. When she turned up
today, however, in a snappy Claire McCardeil blouse
and skirt designed for safari travel, she virtually
had forgotten the safari. Now she’s organizing an
all-girl elephant hunt, already yet.
"8o if you know any females, preferably, say, be-
tween 25 and 45, who have 13,120 and want to go
hunt elephants in Africa this September, please let
me know," she said briskly. "We'll have tents com-
plete with Inner-spring beds, tent-boys to do the
laundry and Ironing, a chef of our own who special-
izes in antelope soups, refrigerators, gunbeirers and
everything else." I told her if I knew any female
lOvoall hgr own I'd cerUHijJy be foollah
th let n*r go on w ,»%—.1
BEVERLY IS AN upstate New York girl who now
'maintains a technical residence In the West 50s in
Manhattan "Oh, there are times when I like New
York Ctty. Now let me eee, when are thoss time*?”
’-but who was bitten by (he travel bug during right
years' publicity work with Scandinavian Airiine*.
Miss Putman look* on Africa as the crowning
glory for travelers. When she shepherded th* first
safari-load of dames to the Dark Continent, she
looked around on landing and thought, "Now let
Dm reel marriage, on June 7. two as •'duf»-"ha‘
though two of the women dropped out after th# first weekl after the TV marritge, was
k snd later there were report* of dissension in *m*11 ,nd almost secret Where**
1 — .....
•yes,”- and
crazy much about the
Buster-Brown hair-do.
weeL__________________...___________ ... . ______ _______
the troupe., "It was underatood that this was a O'* make-believe one was a church
pleasure trip, not a commercial Jaunt,” she told me,
"and when I saw thi* virtual sultosse-load of photo- For another thing, Cox made
graphic squlpment in this one woman’s baggagt, I both the engagement and wedding
knew there’d be trouble." What th* trouble was, rings for his real bride on his hob-
ahe won t say. It is interesting to note, she said, by workbench at home. A young
that the youngest woman on the trip—27—dropped man of many interests, he is gen-
out first, and the oldest, who was *0, atuck it out uinely shy, genuinely kind and
“the end. * considerate, and In some respects
They hooked up with 8. J. Perelman, the comic genuinely eccentric. He’s extreme-
traveler, at one point. Beverly said he was very po- ly funny off-stage. He never took
iite toone and ail "except when ws got to Muhchi- an 'acting lesson in his life. He
•on falls, near where Hemingway crashed. They're want* to be a writer,
the women turned
Grab Bag Of Easy Knowledge
*ia . . . Th* U.S. refused to sign Russian army. He suspected that
because we didn't want Poland Churchill wanted to deal with a
aplit up. though it ahould be an weak Rusala after the war ... It
ugi ________ ________
ax^rinr*"! *‘ata ' • • But after was one of these bitter notes from
bfekering hetan ?talin 11181 Roosevelt was answer-
A Central Press Feature „«nf J d!dn.t Ln* on APrii u when he died ..
GET STRAIT
ABOUT THE WEATHER
Th#y »«y that "a
chain <• only at
•troni w Ita
a 11 k • 11 llhk»'
# . . and your
window air-con*
dltlonlng unit ia
only at affiefont
aa ita dlrtioat
filter. For lost
than a bucK you
c«k fliv# your
unit naw Ufa
with a now filter.
And while you're
,at K, see the new
Frigldaire pack*
ae« unit te air-
condition your
entire
HOUSE, It’s a
real bargain In
year round com-
fort. On easy
terms, too.
STRAIT
REFRIGERATION CO.
“A Strait Guarantee on
Everything"
130* Minnesota Dial S27I
!
built up his ownl
business enterprisij
hi* incumbent
Binion) ia a lawye|
"Our state echo
members elected
state, include* ninJ
thus handsomely I
legal talent. In p<(
and of tax reven
has the biggest
the state school
a business man t|
interests there,
needs a business I
skill* and judgmen
its massive finan
happen to be la\J
also have the busij
and skills so vital|
"Also It would
mary need to
school board mel
that the candldatT
school patron andl
ponent i* a bachef
own business,
i* not the best trail
ing the schoolingT
ran. Nothing canl
for his post so wq
which I have gil
one’s own ohildren f
Color
MURORAN, Jaj|
school teacher \
yeara recording tl
color* to the persef
children *ay* your]
green and blue
personalities and
dulge” in a false
Among girls, she i
and green are
sick and loncsomel
The Answers, Quirk!
want the second front, kept post-
poning it. wanted
That was how Churchill felt about
STS ISlTwimofr 0t — - W1^Aea-t'tn^ H* tore* to rid# motorcycles apd Mme. Chlang Kai-shek "
SSdlwtfSJ?1'1 •*«*• »• KtLftSftteSS: ‘*“•
v in* member of the American Mu-
THE GIRLS brought down 19 animal*, Including !,*um of Na,ural History. Like Mr.
four buffalo, the most feared beast of th# Jungl# junior high school sci-
got involved In a couple of idyllic romances, avoided *nc? tMch,r Cox Is » scienUst of
ilines, (only Beverly came down with a jungl* f*v- *uch ,erv°r ^at he can go on a
•r) and found tira* frequently to gossip, just as If JJ^tore-study walk^ and *pend
18? Alba In Los Angeles. Yes Sir. the Quebec conference in the sum- •• • 11 will be up to historian, to
What is the first name of ,,at’,My Baby waa hfr fint m°- mer of 1943 the second front was dcfide which ia r‘Zht... The only
tion picture, and since then she oostooneJ once again, and know- b°lnt t*lla "Porter Is reporting is
word lugubrious?
5. What state passed the first
workmen's compensation law?
It's Meen Said
A man is never astonished or
ash med that he does not know
they wer# back In Qe«re Creek, Tex.'^iiome'"*! them ** ^vell.nf 10 feet. He's an d“”: b!" bp 15 sur;
ing that Stalin woftld be rip-roar- that 'rith Churchill now cialmng
ing mad, Churchill wa# told by we mu»t work with Russia for the
FDR that he would have to go to P**ce of the world — things have
Moscow hiinself to pacify him ... cfrt*!nly changed.
has played in Gal Who Took the
West, Baghdad, Story of Molly X,
Woman to Hiding, Sierra, Desert
Hawk and Peggy. You have surely
acen her in at least one of these. He went.
2-Th*s physician and sclent,,t "ore hfM ^id YoU KnOW7
American war supplies to Mur-
mansk was waylaid off the,Nor- Belgiym
wa, born in New York City, Oct.
2*, 1914. He studied at the Col
been
lete of the Qtv of New York * ** waylR‘d off the,Nor- Belgium ha* sometimes
"sesiii*-w . ■ K * “if?"» 4i.ti.5K.ta; SIT """ "
me see after thla trip is over, bow am 1 going to
Lrrange to come back here?”
She looks on that first safari a* a success, el-
the white hunters." f - His brkte U Marilyn Oeonaro, «0.
With the co-operation of TWA, the elephant- a chorus girl who was,born and
hunters will leave New York on Sept. 10 aad be in «rew up among the steel and ma- uuuniHATE _ (dii-iN-te--*ora ^<-7- * leuowimn m em- «r ah .w,
whlte^hunter'who I^the^-Mrfttfar^h^riS^ and Intran- dcmlology from th* National Re- Stalin so »ofe that for three'days
Jy ia a glutton for punishment, will ba on hand far high school ,nd piwmably*hasn't ^ he r^"? Ke thr Pr^"' Min1*"
the huntlnr exoedltions arain * had much contact with the bird- nto. ‘ra*,n*nts or powder, hence . nd “** University of
to destroy the wholenem, unity
or Identity, of. Origin; Latin--
Dis plus integratus, past parti-
ciple of Integrare, to renew,
from Integer, entire.
JTc
FLORSHEIM SHI
REDUCED
FOR A SHORT TIME ONLY
Nylon Mesh
ond
' ; ^dnddfd Sri
the hunting expeditions again,
"I know the last trip waa full of reaponaibillty
for me and when I got back last March I had to
rest up for # month," Beverly told me, “but I just
have to go back, that’s all. I sit around N** York
for a couple of waek* and I get fidgety. This i* a
nice town -but Africa, here I come.”
Try And Stop Me
•y Bennett Cerf
DATELINE: HOLLYWOOD ify Alin. Mo,by
JAPANESE MOVIES, most of them klssles*. will
Invade the art theaters of the U. S. to compete with
ether foreign films, a Japanese movie producer ha*
revealed.
Maceaichl Negate last year sent hi* film, "Raa-
homon” as a test around the world. Tb* movie, the
Drat Japan eat film exported to W'eatem audiences,
Won an academy award in Hollywood and captured
priaes at European film festival*.
"I decided that artistically and technically our
nicture* could be exported and that people la the
United States and Europe would like to eae our
films," explained the balding producers through an
Interpreter.
This trip he previewed to more Japanese film#
here, "Ms Oat*", and "Ugeteu", that will be re-
Isasil soon in this country.
'MM" " : '
Today’s Bible Verse
WHOSOEVER wu not found writtsn
..j th* book of Ilf* wu out Into thp lake of
fir*. Rovolttion 20.15
IN NSW YORK there 4* an old
German restaurant named Luch-
ow’s which grow* more popular. It
aa time goes on Broad-
yflehigan
for re*earch on Irifluenaa virus.
He Joined the University of Pitts-
burgh In iM7 and has been dltec- .....
tor of the virua reaearch labora- i VH 3 V4 j
tory of the achool of medicine.
. _ This spring, hit anti-polio vaccine
It Happened Today has been tested on nearly one
1*01 Adm. David Glasgow Ear- million children. He had previ-
ragut born. l*n~-Veneauela’« in- ouily tested the vaedne on over
dependence day. 1941-In World 100 children and adults, including
War U, the Germane reached the himaelf, his wife and their three
In an acre of rich pasture there
_ _ __________ »te 200 ’"lllion in»ect* and mites
for of England. Eor three day*, in th* soil.
On*'
promising stariet waa maxing her
first appearance In the Big Town
and her publicity-conscloue agent
_ ________7______ said. "The place In which you’ll at-
th# producer explained. "If a rtory calls for a lev* tract th# moat attention tonight la
■ *• *- I.iiohoVa" "That suit* me fine,"
enthused the starlet "I haven't
bean te an honeet-to-goodness Chi-
naae eatery hr heaven knows
whan!"
(Names at bottom of column)
‘•‘“T vh Vi _ —---------- waaw
Th# love scenes In these film* nr* without kisses way celebrities flock there In par- Hv#r after attacking Run- sons Who is he?
and cleavag*, unlike the more daring French and Ucul»1' 0n 8unday right,.
Italian movies. But Negate feel* sure Amerieea au- promising ateriet was makl
dience* will acoept them. ,
"In Japan w* are more conservative, and people
fo*l h i* not good taste to show affection in public,"
sla. 194* England's Socialist gov-
ernment adopted a national health
nervlee act, providing free medical
service.
aeanc* we put It In.
"There were some klase* In 'Raabomon', although
■on la 11*11'* OAt*.'" he added. "Wa do not make
these movies just for foreign audiences. They are
th* be* of our film* and are purely Japan*** "
“Hell’s Gate" is a medieval love trlaggie, but with
an unhappy ending, flom* Hollywood critic* wh*
viewed the picture, in fact, called It a Japan*** apep
opera, although highly artistic end with dll*
y that <
f&v
any photography that outdo** many a film fram
the Western world.
"I think American* now can accept th* trade
ending," smiled th* producer.
Negate bead* Dalai Films, which M the only on*
of Japxa'* 10 producing aompaale* to maks arevia*
that oaa b* shown in foreign countries.
ON GNU of those kiddles' TV
qulaaea, a precocious lad wu asked
to define "forefathers" HI* ah*
■war: Father* with four beads! On
another Program g t-year-old girl
(alty bred) boasted that on bar
vacation she had gotten round to
*411111 a cow. DM you enjoy th* __
experience?" naked the master at ,
sarMnonleC. “Oh, yea.” said th# Mm ef FW-Oore. Qu Ni
dtJt
L/f
|> ^
3 rAWM'
Tear Future
An active, buiy end lucceeaful
year is Indicated for you. Forgo
ahead and take advantage of th*
favorable omens. A business-tike.
Intellectual personality is likely
for to day's child for whom a bril-
liant career is suggested.
Ifmnrew RledkA..
Birthday greetings today ard
sent to Joan Cocteau, French poet
and playwright, and Wanda IA**'
dowska, harpsichordist. |«
■aw'd Taw Make Out*
L Queen Victori*-lM7-l9W.
2. Georgia.
j Mri-Uap
4. Mournful
1 Aaae Pearce. 1-Dr.
RES. $19.95
VALUES
’ll
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:*'3kL$Si
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ALSO .
FREEMAN
Summer Shoes for
NOW REDUCEI
Regular 9.95*
Regular 10.95 -
Regular 1195 -
11.95
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4 .:ifc ”** "
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 23, Ed. 1 Monday, July 5, 1954, newspaper, July 5, 1954; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1042051/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.