The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 232, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 3, 1954 Page: 3 of 10
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L *“ J. P. West Dies ^ 1
Graveside services for J. P.
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West, who died is Kilgore Mon-
day, will be held ^ * — “—
day at the U
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Ip Mite Too
Imkko
. YARD
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-ENDS TONIGHT—
"THE GREAT DIAMOND
ROBBERY"
"SO BIG"
3 BIG DAYS-STARTING
THURSDAY-MARCH 4TH
★ FIRST RUN FEATURE *
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CMKNSSU
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ESCAPE
non J
FORT I
BRAVO.
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WKttpBb KMrtL * Queers Think G«7«0
Egypt"7 W’SPSmglfat *£5 40 *?taess % «I*o extended to powerful ele- t AUS™LMarch * -UP-^ repeated iW opposition to an fe- enacted by the Legislature i
* .strong, man President open** of the Sudan', first inde- — * of *e Wu mgr- “* ^ * t>r«lurti‘® ***<>“ 09 W“ «*SS
*5receiver*- iY As5oelltlo° “• and «« month by the United State
t ite open revolt...... The new use of the heat lamp Pressed belief Wednesday a const!- M D, Rrvan* nt e„„ _n jt waj ,
estate commerce* CHEYENNE, ’
sviAsrt slxst.
'
.....
THJE BAYTOWN SUN, WEDNESDAY,
w$
--- «.«, ofS’ V™m ** ^^tfs^g^usMeTi, Te^fSpgS *° *" ** *“C*1 * ■* 1° MSI raise, estimated to cost about «M
grfSiM bJ°ft|,Sv,r h8V# -‘ver*CUre W ^ oner, As.ci.Uon ex- ZV "*** ** * - Zh^thTS^ ^
gj> ^sss-01 *• ito“a" Ps.^rsyssiAartg j£2SITSS’iiS ™oK,4s,,U“.« eatftsssis'*
Jtisissars BSSSSES* sg^-ma: %«®S ® gss»Ae as*srSis tSSSIsS
S5W*a« WKr.-na SSfSS jgaaa5»aa§gSss s.5SHS3St
Pe^le Wit of
cracy.
, Nonetheless, he proved himself
considerably stronger than was ex-
* ^Se’BAiSSSSftfaiSK: SS5
demo- ^ act,°n mi^t cost Egypt per- litical parties which the revolution- out£i ita
manent los. of the Sudan whirh i.t. =riu °. of. lta
pected by fellow members of
Egypt’* revolutionary council who
_ _ cost Egypt per- litical parties which the revolution- if. - -
manent loss of the Sudan which ists outlawed will hope for a plague tionVto um the
could elect to go its independent on both their houses. T
Tw?iS „„ JSyS^KsrsXSs ™■s^s^^sss.’s;
'HU
* Shepard Barclay On Bridge
SON
I NOW SHOWN* -
SSd^.OTIisMtessss'
. mpe ______________
__.............vwul-u return was proof that his popular- externally may be irreparable.
sought to throw him out and who
finally had to take him back, al-
though in a lesser role. ;
The result would seem to be -
political vacuum which cannot en- FEAR BAD DISTRIRTiTTnv .
SS-- —• HS
Ekftsm* MSm^°sas^gas
nj»i,44ie .mwhanically precise they would have been more wary
riffling, then bear in mind the and would have endeavored to
faCl t|'®t.there, *reuP,"ob4bly **• get their opponents out on a limb
tremely freakish lengths all instead of being caught there
around the table. In ether words, themselves. “ ®
what happened to your cards was Looking at Just the North and
hkeiy to have happened to the South hands, you would think
others as well, so the remainders that the top spot would be 7-
nt Y°ur *««* «n‘«ht be stacked Spades redoubled. But it was
HnnctS
ALWAYS FIRS! 0 U A l IT Y !
was only last Thursday that Min-
ister erf Information Salah Salem
was denouncing Naguib as a man
who had to be fired because he
demanded "absolute autocratic au-
thority."
This week Naguib and Salem dis-
missed the whole thing as a fam-
ily affair and proceeded arm-in-
arm to Khartoum in the Sudan.
Gkeat things are
happening to windows!
MODERN MA
\UBHTro
TANGIER
Joan FONTAINE
Jock PALANCE
* MU/MI/Nt MCTW
pANE HUNTERS” ★ LATE NEWS
against you. ;
x ♦AKQ987«5
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♦ kqj< •
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♦ J1043
♦Its/
♦ None’
4U96U
A None
RAK2
A 109 8 7
6532
*KQ
YOU SEE IT
fi&t four International
Harvester Air Conditioner
now!
Gwk deans, and drlea tbeair
«low operating cost. And you
cm decorate Jt to natch any
room. Low down payment-
“Vterma.
A None
VQJ10 9654
♦ A
*108752
(Dealer: North. BoU sides vul-
nerable.)
North East r South West
*• 6 A Pass Pass Dbl
7.2A S*A 3 A Pass
3 A Pass * A Pass
7 A Pass Pass Dbt
Rdbl
bottom score when West set it
two tricks. Middle scores came
where the contracts were only 6-
Spades, either not doubled, dou-
bled or redoubled.
The only serious teseon hi such
a freak iste be auspicious when
you have such a hand, and'bid as
gradually as seems wise, in order
to confirm or deny your fears.
Tomorrows Problem
A 354 2
f A98
A A J94
*105
I Antique Weave
DRAW DRAPESi
WAVY
■
TEXTURED
COTTON
A None
VQ745
2
A85I
* A K J 8
2
AKQJlA
VKS
AK2
♦ Q 9 7 54
8-2A • *♦ DM.
- FfiT* - 'A. F7S3»-^ *
; ■N4*-«!S3J2t^BS2^«abSSisSfc
deal in a tournament made his
contract. Even the doubled 3-
♦ ART#
A 5 10#
__
(Dealer: East Neither side vul-
------— . nerabla)
Diamonds by East was beaten with/uu ^ _
r-st jasisrr r
“»• - <*« —•< -“/■ s^v^'“£"sr, “■
DRAPERY
___:_J__
* -2
II >/
*4R m SO LID
BARK CLOTH
• :
yard
Teacher Politics Are
Hot Issue In Japan
WITHOUT GLASSES! j*
emaScoPc
i A
BEnY LAUREN
)E • GRABLE • BACALL
louToMdiry
LMillionair‘P
1st Payment Due June!-
BUTLER
REFRIGERATION
Inteiaational Harvester
AppHaoee Sales to Service
1 N. Oommeree — Dial 7902
D0»TT LET YOUR SEPTIC TANK
Mttm
TOKYO, March, 3 — (IP) — Japan’s The argument rteemblee some-
st'isrs.t'rxs: *“ -
over political activities of teachers. over whether teachers should be
The government wants a strict required to take anti-Communist
law banning the teachers from oaths, but one Important differ-
classroom support of any political encf m&ke| ^ tion morc vitaJ
party or belief. But the teachers ^ thg free worW ^ Jap(ul ^
union charges that the govern- the Un|te{, statM
went actually is proposing thought ^ Unltpd state] ha, t wealth
control and a return to World War 0f experience in protecting lndi-
U Fascism. vidual liberties, but Japan Is only
— three years old as an independent
democracy and ig taking Its baby I
steps -in th# very shadow of Com-
munism's second strongest world
power, Red Chin*. One faltering
step and the island empire could
stumble and fall to Communism.
In their youthful enthusiasm to ‘
make freedom work, some Japa-
. nese government leaders frankly
suspect the teachers’ union, rep-
resenting all public school Instruc-
tors, of spreading left-wing sym-
pathies contrary to democratic
education.
Until leas than a generation ago,
Japanese educators accepted their
government without question and
taught students the policies laid
down by military dictators.
Now teachers, like all other Jap-
anese, are free to think and vote
: he way theiy desire, but' the gov-
ernment fears the union has gone
too far.
The parliament's vice minister
or education, Isamu Fuki, charg-
'd the union Is "an organisation
of teachers with distorted political
views”’ which "is guiding and
wielding sway over the education
circle of th* country.” He warned
that teachers’ political activities
have made controiing legislation
"imperative." -■
Not so, said the chairman of the
union’s central executive commit-
tee Tskeshi Kobaysshi. He warn-
ed that the government MU, soon
to be introduced into the Diet, Is
a front for "the ominous bugaboo
of Fascism "
"Should the bill be given legis-
lative approval, teachers would be
considered as maintaining neu-
trality In the realm of education
only when they are giving lectures
exactly in accordance with the pol-
icy of the government then in pow-
er." he added.
Between theae two extremes, the
president of respected, miseionary-
supported Rikkyo University Mid
teachers’ "restrictive tows" are
“inevitable" la Japan because at
what be called a “cancer that Is
frustrating the effort to build up a
democratic society "
Th* university bead. Junao Sa-
saki said many Japanese show a
'lack of good sense" in adopting
democratic ways _
"The fundamental reason for
tbs absence at this__„
educator said, “is to be fousd to
the fact that the Japanese had
neither training sow knowledge at
the individual dignity, truth aad
trfkrn that .re the fundament-
ai concept at democracy"
At the mat time, he-->>-nr4
the government against---„tl
U»t would ~ptaea all educational
d*l*rt»«ti under its control.'
W
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 232, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 3, 1954, newspaper, March 3, 1954; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1042585/m1/3/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.