The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 266, Ed. 1 Monday, June 5, 1967 Page: 4 of 14
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.
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Hip Imtonm Swt Mondayi Jun* S, Wt>7
{-Features
Tourists
Are Good
A Paradox In Athletes
Middle East
(Editor’s Note! This •ditorfcd was written prior
* b«b» to b,
James Marlow
hostilities Between a-gyp* . .
As the smoldering Middle East crisis beg ns to be
SbSSSM. deitmcUon of ImJ (ttawh "KE
would certainly welcome that aa a dividend! but the.
invent something to take lU Ptoto: H toere isjn^ing
9^sisSfSs^ysS&
“^Enwintering serious ^"^^“^exSnlivdy
finding his military adventure ^ wpensiwiy
’ hoeeed down, seeing his influence among the Arabs
WS^SSSSSB
3?'Suss
iffaw ft£a*ot aSdf*ASbtoy JSgjjg **•
—,s r*K-ss vs skl
'•^SSStSSSSSSttSSS^Q
ttwSA’SSSSSStszes
hUmNaSr 1> undoubtedly, not through yet. He wUI
By HKNBY McLEMORE
NEW YORK - I don't par-
ticulariy like to admit it, bu
I have a. friend who'*8" offi-
cial of the Amateur Athletic Un-
ion (AAU) perhaps the most
juvenile organization in the U S-
the Cub ScOUtl mt
Whenever I tun into this
friend he always tells me about
his achievements in the hop,
step and Jump event some 30
years ago, and then bemoans
the fact that the 1068 U.S.
Olympic team is going to be
severely handicapped by the
mile - high altitude of Mexico
GThe last time he gave me this
high altitude pitch I asked him
why didn’t the selection com-
mittee throw out athletes who
were going to have trouble of
breathing in Mexico City, and
replace them with men and wo-
men who could breathe any-
where, anytime. -------- '.
There are no such men and
m
Nuclear Bomb
Deters Haste
■vil
Jv
women," my hop, step, and
jumper said. "To get along in
jumper »«»«• ---■» —
a place like Mexico City a man
must have time to become ac-
climated."
"You’re all wrong,” I s a 1 d.
and women In this country who,
each summer, travel the work!
over, and who are perfectly at
home at sea level, below sea
level, or on top of an Alp, an
Andes, or a Rocky.”
Jfle wanted to know who these
remarkable creature* were, atST
I told him — American tourists.
“Here Comes Another Statistic!"
Merry-Go-Round-
Judging by the tourists who,
at about this time every year,
start swarming over the globe
at a breakneck pace, America
has a mighty and untapped res-
ervolr of athletic talent#
The Arrferiqsm tourist shows
manufacture new crises, maite new ue..ia..u», .. termination, dedi-
threats, and Russia will ^^ «*Z>, a^d durability in his
boiling and run up the light bill at t^ Stete Depanme 4 euiture and fun than
non pomain iinnrovoked.
Oregon 'Prima Donna
Hacks Education Bill
can remain unprovoked.
Tire Pollution?
^fi^a5SS,ra,,ts^
,ir
ais®<fifcfcrsuss«
’‘^B^SoSSSSfiS Be Retreading Inst)-
tute are pumping hJrd for the nitrogen idea reporte the
National Observer. The retoeadeni see it *» » on
°n Original tire complies and tire
turers, foreseeing a dip in replacement sales, are less
than enthusiastic. '
Try Your Word Power
NEA Feature
lete. He goes all - out for days,
weeks, and months. He eats
anything set before him, climbs
anything that comes his way,
covers more miles on an aver-
age morning than a marathon
runner. Sprinters collapse when
breaking the tope after a few
hundred yards, but tourists nev-
er collapse.
I have seen middle - aged men
and women cover the Louvre in
an hour flat — a feat that would
break down., this country's finest
milers and half - milers. I
nice clocked, a 45-year-old man
from Chattanooga in the, Vatican
Museum. He saw it all, plus the
Sistine Chapel, in 41 minutes.
And he didn’t have the track all
to himsetf — he had to fight
for his lanes.
* American tourists never suf-
fer front ^heights. They go
straight from sea level homes
to the top of the Matterhorn.
Tens of thousands visit Mexico
City every summer, and move
at a gallop from the moment of
arrival until departure time.
Tourists are the toughest, best
conditioned people in our coun-
try. Choose an Olympic team
from tourists and we’d win in
1968 by a lopsided score.
Grand Opera
Answer to Previous Pussje
— ffi--
ACROSS
1“ Prince-
~ —r : •••
2 Spur
3 Soup vejfeUbl*
12 Donkey (sbnf) S Of indent
13 Greek letter Greeks
S©-— ffiSX
(Wegner) cherecter
17Mon«ter . 11 To vetn drinks
Negro Population
UpHalf Per Cent
By DREW PEARSON
AND JACK ANDERSON
WASHINGTON - After a torn
and tottered aid - to - educa-
tion biU Anally emerged from
9. 2 a.m. House debate, it was
remarked in the Democratic -
cloakroom that the administra-
tion could have won had it not
been for the change in life of
B$ith Green.
They were referring to the
fact that the Oregon Democrat
had deserted the Democratic
c$rty and teamed up with the
pixiecrats and Republicans in
gutting .her own committee’s
MU.
More and more over the
years, Mrs. Green has become
one of the unexplained mysteries
Of Washington politics. A highly
. intelligent, able woman in her
late fifties with long experience
in government, Mrs. Green now
takes a conspiratorial view of
the world. She thinks everyone
is gangingxup against her —ex-
cept in recent weeks the Re-
publicans and pixiecrats.
She engaged in a running duel
with the other lady from Ore-
gon, Sen. Maurtoe Neuberger,
until the latter retired. She has
been scarcely speaking to Sen.
Wayne Morse, another Oregon
. Democrat, who has campaigned
for her reelection in the past
There was a time when Mrs.
Green was a great admirer of
Rep. Adam Clayton Powell,
former chairman of her Educa-
sister from the committee pay-
roll'
ONE FACTOR which contributed
to the gutted condition of the
aid - ID . education bill was
committee aeniority. Thanks to
seniority, Rep. Roman Pucinski
of Chicago inherited the Sub -
committee on Public School Edu-
cation.
But because he had not served
on. the subcommittee before, the
main job of piloting the bill
through the House was given to
Rep. John BrSderaa* of South
Bend, Ind., who ranked second.
Brademas is one of the ablest
members of the committee. But
he .did not defer to Mrs. Green.
On a previous occasion Esther
Peterson, Assistant Secretary of
Labor, asked Rep. Frank
Thompson, D-N.J., to introduce
a bill for equal pay for women.
Thompson suggested that since
Mrs. Green had long pioneered
for women's economic rights,
she handle the bill. But Mrs.
Green, at that time, felt the bill
did not represent her views. She
declined,
Thompson then proceeded to
hold hearings, put the bill in
final shape and get full commit-
tee approval. Bi doing so he an-
nounced: “I suggest that this
bill is something the gentle tody
from Oregon might well handle
on the floor of the House.”
Mrs. Green accepted the invi-
tation, introduced the bill as her
own and piloted it through the
House of Representatives with
NEW ATTY. GEN. Ramsey
dark, who is following his dad-
dy’s vigorous trustbusting ca -
reer, doesn’t know that there is
an important antitrust case gath-
ering dust in his files.
It involves the biggest liquid
petroleum pipeline in the world
mnninff from
L_ Colonial — running f r o m
^-TStasthrough the South up
1 e Acts uuwgu -r
through Virginia to New Jersey, I
a total of 1,540 miles. Night and
day it pulsates millions of gal-
lons of oil through Its line —30.
to 36 inches in diameter.
Hie Colonial Pipeline Co., with
assets of $371 million, is owned
by Sinclair, Cities Service, Gulf,
Union of California, Continental,
Texaco, Socony Mobil, Ameri-
can and Phillips. So far it seems
able to thumb its nose at Wash-
ington. • •
•In April, 1963, the Justice De-
partment’s antitrust division sent
Colonial a demand for docu-
ments and records dealing with
the charge that other oil com-
panies, not as mighty as the
above giants, were not able to
run their oil through this pipe-
line For an oil pipeline is a*
private transport system which
any company is entitled to use,
just as any company-ia entitled.
to ship a railroad.
Despite this, antitrust experts
have attained evidence that
Colonial is in a private con-
spiracy to keep its line tor the
use only of its nine owners-
barring particularly the small
independents.
After a delay of three years,
there still remains no action
WASHINGTON (AP) — The
nuclear bomb didn't end war
* but it does make the big powers
a little more thoughtful and a
little less overbearing, which is
a giood excuse tor the smaller
ones to take advantage of them.
And, In taking advantage of r
them, the small ones can dare
the big ones and even tangle
with them, feeling rather safe
when they do since, in a sense,
the nuclear bomb has immobil-
ized Its owners.
A couple of good examples
are Vietnam and the Middle
East.
If Ho Chi Minh and his North
Vietnamese feared they would
be wiped off the map with a nu-
clecr blast if they took on the
United States, no doubt there
» would be no war in Vietnam
today.
The North Vietnamese have
proved themselves tremendous-
ly brave but they are neither
lunatics nor suicide-bent m *.
they would have been both if
they had felt, when they got into
this war, the. United States
would use the bomb.
But they had several reasons
to know the United States would
be reluctant to go that far; the
inhumanity of it, the scorching-
ly bad world reaction, and the
possibility the Soviets might get
- in with their nuclear bombs.
On the other hand, the Soviets
themselves have avoided get-
ting d irecfly"Hivolvedr Vietnam-
is a long way from Soviet terri-
tory and It is within the sphere
of Chinese influence, not Soviet.
So the Soviets have been re-
luctant to butt in, knowing that
in a world where one thing leads
to another they might, before
they knew it, be in a nuclear ^
weir with the United States, a
war in which Vietnam would be
only a minor episode.
The Soviets haven’t even ex-
erted themselves overmuch in
giving other kinds of help to Ho
Chi Minh. But, if the United
States used nuclear weapons,
the Soviets, much as they
dreaded it, might feel compelled
but of self-consciousness before ■
the Communist world to use nu-
clear bombs on the United
States. . , -
Perhaps Moscow wouldn t
have done anything of the kind.
But there was always the
chance It might. So the United
States has limited Itself to 1110
so-called traditional bombs in
North Vietnam.
And the North- Vietnamese,
knowing the odds against total
destruction tor them, took their
chance, and while they are not
winning they are not losing.
More
Egyptian President Gama!
Abdel Nasser has played the
.same kind of game, and. no
doubt for the same kind, of Tea-
sons, in bringing the Mideast to
the edge of War, closing the Gulf
of Aqaba to Israeli shipping,
while increasing his prestige in
the -Arab world to a new high.
The one missing link in this
one. which may make it differ*
ent from Vietnam, is the Soviet
Union because no one at this
point seems to know whether
.the Soviets, to smash Western
influence-in the flTfft i5l-
creasing their own, ^ connived
with Nasser to do what he diu.
The Soviets know the United
States know that if it takes mili-
tary actions break Nassers
back so close - to toe Soviet
homeland, the Soviets may
coma, to his aid and, with one
shot leading to another, wi nd up
in an American-Soviet nuclear
No wonder the Johnson ad-
WE
EMC
SOf
AL
WE
T
in silence and behind the
scenes, without threats. Threats
might bring responding threats
from Moscow find that In itself
might force a showdown.
Like the Soviets with Viet-
nam, President Johnson with
the Middle East has to ask him-
self: Is the Mideast important
enough to the-United Staes and
its Western allies to risk a nu-
clear war to save Israel?
The nuclear bomb has even
given the big powers a new per-
spective, for what may seem
dreadfully important today may
seem inconsequential tomorrow
if, after butting heads, all that
is left are a few remnants of
life.
By Oswald & James Jacoby
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
*i8£sfc) ggpr Ssggr
23 Wine (fT.) *5*"“*“*
Mrs.—
27 Alluring
53 Persian fairy
54 Lubricant
35 Thing (Latin)
St Flams
37 Hoax
IS Extinct
« Enential being
41 Masculine
ipoeUatkm
42 mb bait gently
in water
44 "Barber of
2S Tendency
41«_ Godunov"
(Mussorgsky)
52 Athena
Swag*
57 Fencing sword
..MSB#wh.
50 Heavenly body
ROWM
1 Body of Kaffir
45 Lamb's pen
name
50 Willow fenus
51 Proohet
MM&tol^
r
sraracBSHg
h«t n ««l«ll P« at iZ. U»lo.bldly 4d.m knm « W> ^ fc
how to handle the “gentle lady
from Oregon” better , than the
present chairman, courtly Ken-
tuckian Carl Ferkins, He knew
how to crack down on Edith.
Once when she broke her word
to him he promptly fired her
more than in I960 as The Ne-
gro segment of the population
continues to grow more rapidly
than the white element.
But both the Negro and white
birth rates declined during the
seven-year period. The bureau
■aid Friday. The Negro birth
rate dropped from 32.9 live
births annually per 1,000 women
to 26.5 to 1966. The white birth
rate fell of! from 23.7 to 17.5.
Had Messrs. Perkins, Pucinski
and Brademas given Mrs. Green
the job of floor . managing the
education bill last wek, toe out-
come probably would have been
different.
NORTH
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WEST EAST
* Q 8 7 6 4 *9
¥ K8 .¥652
♦ 82 ♦ Q 10 9 3
*A943 * J 8 7 6 5
SOUTH (D)
A AK J3
Bible Verse
AND THIS gospel of the king-
dom shall be preached 1 n all the
world tor a witness unto all na-
dons; and then shall the end
come. Matthew 24:14
THE WELL CHILD®
Salt Intake Reduction
Blood Pressure Treatment
By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
Newspaper. Enterprise Assn.
B A R B S
EfKVflS!
By WALTER C. PARKES
1
'i
J ■
. ‘aasAssi'r,.;.....'
Head man in the Internal
Revenue Service says the
American tax system works
because the American tax-
payer is fundamentally hon-
est. A, nice tribute, sir—but
that snoopy master computer
you’ve installed hasn’t hurt
the systenf any, either, ^.
Fantastic toay
weight: Eat less.
Although high blood pres-
sure is usually considered a
, disease of persons who are
past 40, it may occur in
children. When it does it is
- - important to determine the
cause. The most common type
is that associated with acute
nephritis. Other causes iih
elude congenital narrowing of
the aorta, overactivity of the
thyroid and tumorj pf the
adrenals.
• When no cause can be
found the condition is called
essential hypertension. The
important part of the treat-
ment of these children.
Q—-My son, 12, had a bad
case of poison oak on his face
last October. Our doctor said
the spots would fade out in
time but they haven’t done
so and my Son is very sensi-
tive about his appearance.
V/hat can we do?
A—The poison oak has left
your son with a chronic con-
tact dermatitis. A Pragmatar
ointment, obtainable only on
a doctor’s prescription, is
often successful in clearing
up the inflamed areas. If this
doesn’t work, a skin specialist
--euu -J but com-
placent antitruster, has been sit-
ting on the case despite needl-
ing from down below.
Meanwhile iederai prosecutors
away frqm Washington have
been more active. This past
Feb. 23, a federal grand jury
in Newark, N.J., indicted three
top executives of Colonial Pipe-
line on charges of bribing, the
mayor and council president of
Woodbridge, N.J., to get per-
mission to build a pipeline
through « nearby area.
The Colonial Pipeline officials
who were indicted included Karl
Feldman, executive vice presi-
dent, *aod Glenn H. Giles, vice
president for operations. When
residents of Woodbridge objected
to having a pipeline and storage
tank* built close to them, Colo-
nial executive* simply bribed
city officials, according to the
grand jury Indictment
New Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark
might wll ask his subordinates
to dust off his Colonial Pipeline
files
Note: Justice Tom Clark Ram-
ley’s father, recently handed
down one of the toughest pipe-
line opinion* in Supreme Court
history regarding El Paso Na-
tural Gas. Both Tom and Ram-
sey are from Texas ■
QUICK QUIZ
• -.--a
West
Both vulnerable
North East South
2 ¥
Pass 2N.T. Pass 4 ¥
Pass Pass Pass
Opening lead—A 6
Oswald: “South’s play was
really bad. He could only gain
a trick by the finesse if East
had started with exactly the
king and one trump because
he could not get back to
dummy to repeat; He would
4ose- » trick_ if.. .W.e&t .hgld_a
singleton king and also he
should have’ recognized the
danger signal when East
played the nine of spades at
trick one. Of course, if South
had gone, up with his ace of’
hearts and led a second heart
the defense could still have
gotten one ruff but it took
returned a club to put West
in. This lead did not repre-
sent blind luck.. East and West
were using obvious suit pref-
erence signals and when West
led the four of spades he
1 knew that his partner was go-
-——-—- irig to ruff it. He led his low-
Oswald: “The finesse is un- est spade to tell his partner
mbtedly the best, known to return the lower Side suit.
... in h-Mbo a fp.w ntaVers if \U6ct hoH wanted a diamond
doubtedly the best . Known to return the lower sme sun.
jjlay in bridge. Mew^piayow If West ^ad waited ajiiamond
OM of that type there must 'eight of spades; or everi the
be hundreds who finesse when queen had he wanted to be
they really shouldn’t.” sensational.”
fflUlH'ftM
of spades at trick one and was rt_The bidding has been:
delighted when it held the Wegt North East South
trick. This put him in dummy l + pass ■>
and gaye him a chance to try You South, hold:
the trump‘ finesse. It lost *aqi054 ¥K62 ♦ 2 *aq87
to the king and then the hand what do you bid? -»
collapsed on poor South. a—Two spades. You want to
West led the four of spades, Mrve Immediate notice that
East ruffed and returned a you are interested in a slam,
club. West took his ace and XOday’s question -
Wt^ „Hal*n hithrufafedhby You bid two spades and your
spade lead to be rutted ny artnCr bi(js two no-trump.
his partner." ’ -
IM-p, two ...
What do you do now?
Answer Tomorrow
Poolside philosophy:^Never
ias so muen been stuffed in-
blood pressure in a Child with aoesn i worn, a so...
this symptom , is usuallv sub- shbuld be consulted
iect to wide fluct£hrtton»—
high when the child is excited Q—Is there any cure for
or apprehensive and normal spina bifida occulta? Would
when he is calm. If the sight surgery help?
of a doctor or a blood pres- A—This is a birth defect
sure apparatus makes him *p- that results when the right
prehensive, it may be diffi- and left halves of a part of
cult to get a. normal reading the spinal column fail to come
______l ... u M M ha ic aelaon •*« ■----*
to ».little in front of
many.
except when he is asleep.
Such a child is likely to have
* • Lt__A MwAaoiiPA oil nic
* •
a high blood pressure all his
life unless it u treated.
The first line of treatment
is to remove the cause if
IpgMia fcvimmi »v »«•••«
together. The seriousness of
the condition depends on
many factors. Some cases re-
quire no treatment. Others
can be helped by surgery
which should be defer
Q—How many countries
have paid off their World War
1 debts to me Ifnited States?
A-r-Three—Cuba, Liberia
and Nicaragua. Of the remain-
ing 17 countries who still owe
war debts to % the United
States, only Finland is current
in her payments.
sea cucumber
Stye lagtmmt §mt
...................."-••■••"BSMSSSS
BIU Hartma
John Wadlej
General Mansger
Q—Is
edible? ,
A—Yes, this animal is the
source of the well-known Ori-
ent*! delicacy, "beche-de-
erred un-
"That troubhlfthe MMk fast had hotter be over by
the lima we're scheduled to he there?
$ w.
sSt£?,f fiSsss
entai delicacy, “beche-de-
mer.’1 ;
ADVERTISINa DEPARTMENT
Published afternoons, Monday through Friday,
and Sundays by The Baytown Sun., Inc,
at 1301 Memorial Drive in Baytown, THOR.
p. O. Box 90; Baytown 77620
V
By Canier^(L75 ^onth, $2LW Par Year *
lire t* re u«. m*
possible to do it if the fuay
tives could see through the
fog
limits
down the
at all
’times. Cutting
It intake is an’
doctor must decide after
careful study of the child.
Q—On what type of trees it
dwarf mistletoe found?
A—Only on conifers and it
is most Common in the far
west.
(H«hn»w lutwwlw AnecletM
iMCa fdilW waviiwi •
Single Copy Price 10c
Mail rata* on requaat
salm mm twnto •** »ire waarva*.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 266, Ed. 1 Monday, June 5, 1967, newspaper, June 5, 1967; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1044384/m1/4/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.