The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 27, 1968 Page: 8 of 20
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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jHn Thursday, June 27, 1968
Editorials And Features
;
, v“
French President Wins
Big Election-Victory
Taxpayers
Pay For
Trouble
f ■
Charles de Gaulle has won again.
* Given a choice between the stability
he has represented for the past decade
and at best an uncertain future without
him, at. Worst possibly the “totalitarian
take - over” he had darkly predicted,
the French have voted emphatically for
more of De Gaulle.
Gaullists and their allies have won
142 of the 154 National Assembly seats
decided in the first round of the election
and are leading in 150 of the remaining
316 contests to be decided in the runoff
June 30. Everywhere leading anti - Gaul-
lists — including Pierre Mendes - France
and Francois Mitterand, most prominent-
ly mentioned as likely successors'to De
Gaulle should Franco, turn to the left—
are in .trouble. Some may not surviye the
runoff. . , . '
Ttie nonradical majority in France „
is not alone in relief at the results. De
Gaulle is a difficult ally. But a stable
France is much too important to the
welfare of the entire Western communi-
Business Bad
•A
‘ Shaving was fast becoming*a lost
art among barbers, long before the
comeback of the beard. Now the same
' may be true for the Haircut. , ’
The long-hair trend has knocked the
barbershop business off by about 15 per
cent from 1966, complains a Barbers’
Union official in Los Angeles. The re-
sult has been a decline of more than
50 per cent in the number of appren-
tices working at the trade, he says.
Some barbers have begun counter-
attacking, however, reports the Los An- ,
geles Times. Hiere is more emphasis
in barber schools on hair styling and
analysis, tinting and dyeing, shampoo-
ing, rasor cutting—and beard trimming.
Even if you don’t have a beard/
some shops will accommodate you. It
seems there are a surprising number of
weekend hippies who have to be clean-
shaven on the job but who come in on
Fridays to have false beards fitted.
In New York, wig makers are also
enjoying a boom thanks to the part-time
hippie population—young men who are
respectable conformists from 9 to 5, then
transform themselves into instant swing- *
ers for an evening on the town.
So far, no one has reported seeing
a mildmannered clerk enter a telephone
booth, doff his civvies and emerge as—
Superhippie! •.. • - •
ty of nations for the United States and
other allies to take any, comfort in his
downfall and the likely consequences—a
return to the strife and near anarchy of
pre - Gaullist yeahs.
But while De Gaulle has won a strong-
er grip on parliament than he had be-
fore, this does not mean he yet has the
'nation under firm control. ,
Many voted not so much for De
Gaulle as against the alternative. The
French have given him time, not an in-
definite mandate to continue his heavy-
handed ways and the status quo.
He must now deal constructively with
deep - seated flaws in a superfically
prosperous French society that gave rise
to the May student and worker revolt— (
obsolete education and .industrial man-
agement systems, a lack of communica-
tiorrlfetween government and governed,
low wages, unmet needs in housing and
a wide range of economic and social
Jf a • ‘
areas. ■
De Gaulle appears ^understand this.
He is' reported to have ordered his minis-
ters to prepare a series of sweeping, New
Deal - style reform bills for submission
.-to the new parliament. Tbe future of
France rides on the success of his ef-
forts and their acceptance by millions of
dissatisfied Frenchmen.
France had lost a battle but not the
war, De Gaulle proclaimed in rallying
his countrymen in 1940.
In 1968, De Gaulle has won a battle,
but not yet the war.
~ By PAUL HARVEY
Baytown Sun Cohtnuiat
Sonne professional Rouble-
makers are collecting money
with hath hands.
They are paid by followers to
stage demonstrations and paid
of! ny politicians not to.
In Chicago some hfamous ■
youth gangsters, believed re
sponsible for 28 killings so far
this year. Have beer collecting
payoOSjUpio $6,100 each to pre-
vent trouble. This bribe comes
from $1 million in federal fund* ■*
distributed by the Office of Eco-
nomic Opportunity — your dol-
lars.
These gangsters, ostensibly
employed .as “instructors," ant
thus picking your pocket In ex-
change for keeping the city
“cool” through the Democratic
National Convention this aum-
Mixed-Up Genes
If you proudly trace your family name
back to some famous ancestor, a gene-
ticist has unsettling pews for you. Your
biological similarity to him is probably
zero.
“Although men do not change their
hames, their genes change in each gen-
eration, and do so at random,” says
Prof. C. C. Li of the University of Mich-
igan School of Public Health.
mer 1
At the saiine time there is
evidence thejl are collecting big
money from South Side mer-
chants as "protection” for their
property in case of further riot-
ing.
Similarly, in the racist organi-
zation called the Black Muslims,
big money is raked in by the
misleadership. Elijah Muham •
mad, head mail of this hate out-
tit, has boasted that he takes
In $120,000 a month.
A letter to the membership
mentions Muslim farms and a
supermarket and a restaurant,
all profitable to the Muslim
movement. The restaurant re-
portedly brings in $2,00C a day.’
The movement, /‘advertised i
and recommended'V by Cassius
Clay, has grown to a nation-
wide membership of 70,000 or
more.
The Muslims, while buying up
other properties, are demanding
that the U S. Government should
give them five states for a sep-
arate "black nation.” They pre-
fer Mississippi, Georgia, Ala-
bama, Louisiana and South Car-
olina They want all of the
drumsticks and none of the
necks!
Meanwhile, back in Washing-
ton—
TV, radio and press coverage
of recent public demonstrations
by the "poor people" constituted
a nationwide promotion for
"more money.”
Our church group kicked jn
$50,000 Organized labor -contri-
buted heavily. Sortef members
of Congress made specific con-
tributions. But incalculable cash
contributions flooding the Wash-
ington post office come from
Bridge
Tips
By Oswald and James Jacoby*
’ »■ •'
TOP
1
. „ V >
NORTH <B>V I
AAKJ9 \
r.V . Nj
*953
WIST . ; .EAST " ’
*962 * ' * 10853
V A 7 3 V 10 2
♦ 3962 ♦ 10543.,-
♦ K 10 4 * A 8 6
SOUTH
. *Q4 . •
♦ Q 9 5 4
. * . ♦ A Q 8
.......•• j * Q J 7 2
Neitherivulnerable
West North East South
. 1* Pass 1¥ v
Pass 2*¥ Pass 3 ♦
Pass 4 V Pass Pass
Pass -i . • *
— Opening lead—* 2
Sometimes we wonder if our
presence as kibitzers may not
affect the bidding and- the
play. .
South was a pretty good
player and we can only as-
sume that the way . South
played the dummy was the re-
sult of our being in back of
For How Long?
Washington Merry-Go-Round-
Poor People Spoiled
Goals By Overstaying
Mathematically, one parent contributes'
one-half the genes of a child. The con-
tribution of any one grandparent is theo-
that of any 6ne
retically one-quarter;
great-grandparent, one - eight,; and so
on. But even a father - son relationship
is linked by such complex lines that the
son is genetically independent, says Li.
The news is not expected to put any
genealogist out of work.
“i
ft* -. -
© l*M br NU, Ik. " f
- * I • —•
"What are we gonna do with all these Signs?"
This Day
In History,
By TOE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Today is Thursday, June 27,
the 179th day of 1968. There are
187. days left, In the year.
Today’s highlight In history:
On this date in 1844. Mormon
leaders Joseph and Hyrum
Smith were slain -by a mob in
sympathetic Negroes and white
all across America, most con-
scientiously seeking to perpetu-
ate what they consider a worthy
and constructive "campaign
against poverty.”
The instances herein cited are
admittedly unrelated except that
fci each case demonstrators an -
collecting money to stage demon-
strations or to prevent demon-
strations — or both at the same
time.
<And In each instance it’s,the
taxpayer who pays’. Unwillingly,
he subsidizes Chicago gangsters.
Or, when" compassionate peiv
sons willingly , contribute to d
gigantic, unaudited and terribly
tempting kitty, such contribu-
tions are “tax deductible’’ — our
Treasury is further depleted to
the extent of those deductions—
So the taxpayer pays all ways;
r m,
By DREW PEARSON
(EDITOR’S NOTE: Drew
Pearson’s cohuna today takes
the form of a letter to his sec-
ond grandson, George jL Ar-
nold Jr.)
Dear Georgie,
Last week your brother Drew
was walking down to the Lin-
coln Memorial past Resurrec-
tion City when he was accosted
and beaten. It was the day be-
fore the Solidarity March and
he was going dcwn there to vol-
unteer to help the march.
As he was passing Resurrec-
tion City a young Negro inside
fence shouted at him to
him did not represent the real
segment of the poor Reople.
They did represeftt a segment of
hatred against whites which re-
cently has become much, inten-
sified, and constitutes a real
danger in this country.
By this time the great ma-
jority of the poor people who
first came to Washington had
already gone home and only the
dregs remained. There have
been rapes and robberies inside
Resurrection City, with young
Negroes coming outside to tadrit
ihe police with, “We want a
whitey." - -
fact that there is a large seg-
ment of poor people in this coun-
try which is gradually drifting
further down the economic lad-
der.
Some of them, like the young
hoodlums who attacked your
brother, have come to accept
violence as a way of life. They
steal, beat up, rape, eyen mur-
der, almost as if they were eat-
g a meal.
mere are rx> easy remedies
for this, it will take years be-
fore we can get these hard-core
militants to become law - abid-
ing citizens Some of them will
never change/Some of them do
come over there. Drew kept on
walking. The Negro slipped out
through a hole in the fence,
came up from behind and crack-
ed Drew over the neck and
'shoulder with a club. Then an-
other Negro jumped out from
nowhere and hit him with an-
other club. A t.iird threw a big
rock which hit him in the back.
They spewed out some filthy
cuss words. “ ?
Your brother wore a solidarity
button featuring white and black
hands together. But that didn’t
make any difference to the
young hoodlums. ’ ‘ V »
Fortunately Drew wasn’t too
badly hurt. And the next-day he
got up at 6:30 a.m. and went
down to the Washington Monu-
* .nent to act as an usher for the
march. He realized that the
young Negroes who had jumped
: *' v , *•
not want to work anti never will.
James Clark, a Negro plumb-
er who was trying to help the
residents of Resurrection City
SO WHAT started as a well-in-
tentioned move to imprest Con-
gress with the plight of the poor
umninsfnGeo^ge'VhScthuyl^° caUs without charge, got an illustra
"Insurrection City . . . misled tion of this. He couldnt get a
hya passel of peripatetic, pul-
pitless parsons who are veterans
of planned pademonium."
And the danger is that the
Poor People hurt the ideals
7 him
He started by letting the
first spade run around to his
queen. So far, fust normal cor-
rect play.. Then he ran off
three diamond tricks in order
to discard a club from dum-
my. Still normal correct play.
At this stage of the proceed-
ings any normal player would
simply knock out the ace of
trumps and make the con1'
tract, barring some bad
trump break. But this South
wasn’t going to do anything
that simple.
He proceeded to run off
dummy’s spades and take two
club discards. West ruffed the
fourth spade and looked
around for new worlds to con-
quer. At this point West was
down to six cards—two
trumps—three clubs and the
jack of diamonds. He -could
lead any card but the jack ol
diamonds and beat the con-
tract but West had been
rather surprised by the whole
line of play and finally came
to the conclusion that South
still held the 10 of diamonds.
After ail, South had bid dia-
monds and his whole line of
play had indicated that he
had started with three clubs,
not four. '
Anyway. West led that jack
By ROBERT HEAD
AUSTIN (AP) - Fra
win, chairman of Univei
Texas regents, wants tl
ernor to control lucres
faculty salaries, especii
the law school, but he
not to say why.
And he does not think
'*£appen- i
’ Some of the professo
Frwin wants closer
over teachers he thinks
J' "radical.”
A 10-man House • Senai
mittee will decide if th
trot; now In the House
- cf the appropriations b
mains. ?'
Erwin said Filday it w
that he asked the chain
ihe House Appropriation!
mittee, Rep. W. S. Heat
duach, to insert this senti
•he bill:
"None of the funds
priated in this act may b
to increase the line itei
cut for the University of
s-t Austin School of Law i
prior approval of the govi
It waa the. first time
llsular school at the uni
has been singled out in thi
ion.
Erwin said he would no
* ment on the purpose of tl
en "I will say this: I
think it will be in the app
tions bill" after the join
mittee gets through with
" Asked if his rider coi
characterized as an att
getting device. Erwin sa
think that would be fail
ment."
/*■
2800 MARKET SI
single one of the poor people
......‘ a ditch tofrepair
of diamonds. South triumph-
antly discarded a club from
dummy, ruffed in his hand,
finally led a trump and made
his contract.
South looked :, around for
to help him dig t „ ,
their own sewage facilities.
What mokes, for continued and
they set out to help. This week,
for instance", the education bill
wEs due to come up for a vote
In the House of Representatives;
after that the housing bijl and
the antipoverty bill. All afftcV
the poor. And some conserva-
tive Congressmen ha* been us-
ing the Poor People’s March as ;
an excuse to boast that they
weren't going to be bulldozed
«... i___Inin onHnfl
Carthage, ill. Brigham Young
became head of the church.
On this date—
'In ,1759, the British, general,
James Wolfe, landed his forces
opposite French Quebec in prep-
aration for an attack,
t- In 1847, the cities of Boston
and New York were connected
by telegraph.
In 1880, the late Helen Keller,
a world-famous educator of the
blind, was born jin Tuscumbia,
Aia. „ .[. . '.
in 1936, President, Franklin
THE DOCTOR SAYS
Passage of Kidney Stone
Dependent on Its Size
By WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
(Last of Two Related Columns.)
When kidney stones cannot selves pain-in the region of the
be7 prevented one of three kidneys Is lijcely tp be due to
by Rev. Abernathy into voting
for these vital programs.
The Poor People have already
hurt those who have helped the
most. They/booed Vice Presi-
dent Humphrey, whp over the
picketed Secretary of Agricul -
lure Orville freeman, who has
done more to feed people than
any one else in government.
Unfortunately his hands are
romotimes tied by restrictions
passed by Congrefs. And if the
Poor People really wanted to
leepening poverty is the fact
Jiat the schools in the ghettos
are run down and getting worse,
And the labor unions are geared
so that the building trades and
craft unions get higher and high-
er wages — around $600 a week
for electhcal workers in New
York — meanwhile excluding
Negro apprentices. So while the
labor union member gets more
and the unskilled worker gets
door in full retreat.
‘Just for the record, we try
to avoid four card major
openings but would have
opened one heart with the
North hand, instead of one
club: ■ ,
(Newspaper enterprise Assn.)
■ ■ - 7/ ' ’ 7 27
AAONTGt
vm
proportionately less, the gap be-
tween the two gets wider and
V4CHRD Seniek*
picket effectively, they would
out Rep. W. R. Poage of
things may happen: (1) tiny
stones may be passed in. the
urine as urinary gravel-; (2)
stones that are about ““
trouble in the back muscles or
sacroiliac joint. The excruri-
ing pain associated with kid-
.........- — _____ the stones arises, Ifro© the,
n Roosevelt was nominated for same calibef as the ureter * fretefs. It is true that jt starts
SS a°Demomtic ' ’ pass dojn that tube with \tatte b. ck but U is. rareW
in phiin. great difficulty and cause the described as an ache and it
intense pain known
single out
Texas, chairman oi' the House
Agriculture Committee, and
seme of his Dixiecrat - Republi-
can cohorts. They are the ones
wider. This is true also between
the big farmer and the tenant
farmer.
These ore problems which
your grandfather’s generation
has failed to jelve. This is the
real reason your brother was
beaten While" passing Resurrec-
tion City. My generation should
not pass these problems on to
you. We should solve them our-
selves now If we don’t, if we
pass them on to you unsolved,
•hey will be much much worse.
Love from . v
Your Grandfather
Q—The bidding"has been:
West North East South
1 ♦ Pass ' -I ¥
Pass IN. T. Pass,
You. Sppfh, hold:.
*A4 ¥KQ1098 ♦KJ6 5 *K 8
•What do you do how?
A—Your partner has shown
a minimum hgnd. Just bid three
no-trump. ",
TODAY’S QUESTION
Instead of rebiddiiig one no-
trump, your partner rebids two
clubs over your one heart. What
do you do now? -
Answer Tomorrow
Fish Tole
Answer to Previous Funle
lip Saglmtm §un
:
fni Hartman .....
„ BUI Hartman........... ......
John Wadley-......
BraiabMae Jackson .........
Paul Putman................
inn B. Pritchett......
... . .. Editor and Publiaher
...........General Manager
—■sjssjsas
....... Assistant To The Publisher
...... ............Office Manager
National Convention in Phila-
delphia.
In 1942, the FBI disclosed the
capture of eight Nazi saboteurs
who had gone ashore from a
submarine on Long Island, N.Y.
In 1950, U:S. air and naval
forces were ordered to help re-
pel a North Korean invasion of
the Korean Republic.
Ten years ago — A U.S. Air
Force transport plane en route
from Turkey to Iran lost its
way in a storm and was shot,
down inside the Soviet Union.
Five years ago—Premier Levi
Eshkol was organizing s new
government in Israel. \
» year ago-Pope PaUI Vf
i ted th.
......... ,__________ as renal
for ureteral cqjic; or (3) one
or more stones become so
— 3 kidney peh
radiates down to the groin or
thighs.
elvis that
large in the k
they cannot pass.
Urinary gravel usually
causes no trouble. If renal
colic occurs, passage of the
(Ms flaxseed good for sore
kidneys?
A-No. ' ’j '
Q—What are the symptoms
iTremember that after Sen.
Joe Clark of Pennsylvania call-
ed attention to starvation in
Mississippi, one whole year be-
fore'the Poor People’s March,
Sen. John Stennis of Mississippi
paraed a $25 miUioti appropria-
tion bill to feed the hungry.
That! however, was as far as
DOWN
lPlane
ACROSS
1 Large
•pelagic fish surface
|9 Herringlike ■ 2 Meadows
4 Deed
5 Court (ab.)
stone can sometimes be eased of kidney trouble?,
by injecting oil into the ureter , A—There are so many kinds
from below through a ureteral 0f kidney trouble--that no
catheter. If a large stone is sifhple answer to this question
present fin the kidney pgivis. jS possible. In general, ab-
the decision whether to re- normal findings in the urine
move it surgically or leave it would appear long before^any
alone would depend on wheth- symptoms that the victim
er there is any evidence that himself could detect,
the stone i$ causing bleedinf.
interfering with kidney func- Q-My doctor says I have
it .get. The money wat/blocked
teritcjp ^
41 Piet
Poage and the Republi-t|
cans on his committee. They'
wouldn’t hold public hearings.
Poverty is a problem which
concerns everyone, tt does not
. Involve military secrets or the
defense of-fhe nation. Yet Chair-
man Poage insisted on holding
closed - door hearings so the
public would not know how .he
'killed the money to feed the
49 Ancient
>
14 Biblical
weed
’-ass*, «£s,k*
19Couch 10 Nimbus 27Lampreys
J1 Desert 28 Demolish »■
nomad 29 Let it stand
12 Low sand*- 31 Low haqnts
hill 34 Scourge ,
19 Obstruction 35 Compass
20 Implore point ■>'
aar-*«!*■■.
8mSk. !&■
’ » ■
Dwight Moody
OorriaL
'VJ J.J. * • • ,* Li. jk.9-.
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
20 Inquiry —
, aac-
1 23 Eater
26Pesterers
30 High cards
31 Walleyed
pike
32 Consume
•food
33 Sea (Fr.)
34 Mother of
44 Wheys Of
milk
45 Biblical
. name
46 Withered
47 Hurl
49 Pints (ab.)
50 Cuckoo"
blackbird
53 Cyprinoid
fish fvar.)
1
PAtltNOM TMt t
4-WAY OUAIItMTIi^
•• lr«
i Laughlin
.... Retail Manager
.. National Manager
Church, reviving a practice of
Christianity’s early days.
. ... ' : :--:=
, . Sfc . -- , -
< attend a* second class matter-at the Baytown, Texas, 77630 poet
, »hd Sundays by The Baytown Sifn.-Inc.
final days,, accomplished some-
thing. It helped to pry loote
■ -Mm itateijal Drive; to ....._ .
.......•
■■■?
^Wacu^yekgi^Htis. this? What do -you-a’d-
• " ■ vise? ® ■
Q—I have been taking psyl- A-Blood in the urine is al
^gdneys and form kidney .g^es /eha 1 tuberculosis. •
44 Depot («h)
V , - ' l - connection betereen the* kid- scurvy. The cause must be de- * «
"You shaU not hate yourf, neys and the digestive tract, termined before anv treat- - 1 -- If^wen
36 Desecrate
38 Property
item
39 Onager
40 Fruit drink
v '
p-' ■
hrO^^rhea^Wm, ^uW ttot I^e in
shall reason rntt; ynurnteigh-T^ -ymr tidneys: ■
bdr, lest you bear "sin because . > . ,
Bible Verse
j . * -: * • --m
How seldom we weigh our
'* merit column you
said' that kidney trouble does
hot cause backache. How can*
this be true?
"neighbor in the same balance .....,
*, * with ottrselves! — Thomas A. ’ A—Since there are nb pain
Jvempis,? German theologian. nerves in the kidneys
4
termined ! before any treat-
ment can be recommended.
(N&rtpaptr lattrprht AmJ “ - -
—■*-/ ■ MHBi
Mam pod par bwriiaiw W • FOR I, delivered onto you first
comments PWpp iG. IrandsteJt, at all that which I also re-
M O, m cannot thk ptpt. While ceteed, how (hat Christ died
Or. Brandstadt cannot antwer indi■ f for OUT sins accordine In Hi*
— . . ...........i ~.....7"" :
49F*vorite
50 Marian
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 3, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 27, 1968, newspaper, June 27, 1968; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1056982/m1/8/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.