The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 271, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 5, 1964 Page: 4 of 24
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•'*y r *• • ««■»,»
BSM
« « ";■-i
[|f
ffljr llafiluuin fcitn vrenhfrsaay, Muqust a, i roy
oniied Asians Want 'Theirs
Decision Pending
en Hunger Pantfs Are Reel, .’nBhltosto
Who Considers The Politics?
' O R’S NOT!
. * *
►TE—When
Western civilization roue, Asia
was aw
iSi
already was ancient. Today the
burden of imroniproiiiialng cen-
turies has brought mllllona to
the hopless conclusion., that
there Is no tomorrow. Not with
any, hope or promise. In their
ngnitv there la an anger, Conrad
j-Tnk, Associated Press bureau
chief In.New Delhi who has
teaseled widely In Asia in the
Inst three years, summarizes
the MibslajSftCpjr, that agony and
anger. '’ v <'
By <O.NKAI) I INK
l_A»»iiclated Press Writer
Pat Cfiong-rok, a 24-yea Mid
South. Korean farmer, summed
. up Asia’s agony one- cold No
veber day in the squalid \il-
,» nmi ....... •in,.,,.
the appeal tfm^ Communists
have and tyhy they'have it.
xjoutli Viet Nam’s President
Diem didn't • understand ffh-at
Jeast. eouldn’t convince his oWr);
soldiers tfihf he did, so last year !
he died In a revofuti
Questioning
NEW, ■OftLKAj'IS (AB)--Civil
.•Instrumental Disf. Judge' Paul Garofnln de-
li preventing fragmentation of |cides today whether tc order dig
the pafion, * •w *..... ' ’
Thls is not to say America^
f*ort,in Asia has secured its so- posed to Rita Mossier.
called
Till
lo tigi
'image.
district attorney to reveal ques-
tions Miami, Fla., police wanted
v». .-..-hs. Miss, Mossier, 20-yeur-oid
lie Willingness of Americans blonde beauty, is the stepdaugh-
ighi and d o in Asia has i.:- t?r.cf slaitwlltiuslon millionaire
pressed many, people but;Jacques Mossier. 69, utoose
scared, sick by (lie colossus of slabbed' body Was cfotind r'ayajbd.
Rut those who understand are
tlying desperately to-beat the
''Communists lo "hhe punch,
”Idon’<t know what we'll do,'
lie said, and tie.wept in his des'
pair.
Pai, like millions of Asians,
walks with the burdenjy^cenlu-
'.Tiw-cn his siitrttMeB'i firth -he
and his land are worn p$l. His
children are sick. Moneylenders
have mortgaged his soul,
they did lii* father s.
Pai wept because he could not
look forward to anything'better,
or tv more of the‘same.
le
pr. blems.
India’s leaders, among others,
,ve---1teartf“ TffFTEtlt'tur jobs-.
b'eeau(s$^nmwv— , ■ ‘the Orleu
On-the sWage. Asia's agony, issue a subpoena for. Missler
the huge pmveUrpushing-and when she uame here under an
urgingt across^ Asia; This has assumed name to confer with a
navi
rice and security. Supported'hy
Jy n
‘•Nonsense'-rit was a gay
- Yeung Atnqrican tourist, safe in
me comfortably plush,lobby of
_r_':.^:yfehyp's • Imperial . Hotel. "Non-
Sense, they (have never known
anything else exists. ’They are
rC'iTIy'q'uite happy.”
Put “They'' do know. 'And
' they" fife not happy. *
Ail across Asia- in the barren
liberty and economic
w r I1-Ueing,. They want itnow-.- j
now, not later.
lulls of Korea, the jungles of
’ s of India—
Viet Nani, the plains
this is what its an about. This"
to answer. , v ...
. Do they have. time? -No one
knows.
Even Nehru, tjdored by the
masses, could not produce re-
sults fast enough. He lived to
«pe 10,000 demonstrators march
t.n Parliament and shout "Neh-
ru get out.” ........ .
South Korea’s President Boston harbor in 1716.
Chung Hee Park, who seized
power three years ago, has been
in trouble from ti»e beginning,
always a half step behind the
ISfcjgp, they are leary of joining Miami apartnienk in'June.
up.few are really sure the A hearingWas ret today on a
A|iierie;ihii..,w'ill stick it out to petition b,v Miss Mossier’*'law,
tb» hittw'vS*Ki to places like vers seeking an injunction for-
The Great War-
Destruction Of Louvoin Triggered .World Anger
Anton
To S c
GEMMENICH, Belgium (AP)
-It was a fresh sunny morning
on Aug. 4t 1914 when a company
of German cavalry trotted
tit rough 'this border village in
the'green foothills ot the Ar-
dennes Mountains.
The first campaign of World
War I had opened.
The Uhlans, despite their
spiked German helmets, were
flying Belgium’s black, yellow
and gold lrom their steel-head-
the bitter
Southeast Asia;
yens seeking an injunction
bidding the Orlc a n s. Parish
Grand Jury or (lie district attor-
neyTb question , her.
had
day Di-u. Aity. Jim Garrison ha
the Orleans ThiriSh Grand Jur
Bu! now, there is a difference Garrison said jMjamt police
—PajChong-rok and the otfifedgave him a list of questions *-
fagged, hulfgt'y millions. Mossier, who way
"They” ate determined to get der hmcharge
theirs. < *.....- 11
The first lighthouse on tin
mtic Coast was built of t
people’s desires for increased
political
lantic ...........
on Little Brewster
io At-
stpne
Island off
to
un-
iwever, she left ..... ,„„v
subpoena could-v,sged iiiej
I.-....... i,»»
gold lrom in
moot lartces.
1 Stil* war t
Gorman General Staft:
. war manual of- the
The wearing of enemy uni-
forms and the use of. enemy or
neutral flags or insignia with
the aim. of deception are .de-
clared permissible.”
Antoine Reynders Is 75 now
and slill lives in Gemnicnich.
He remembers wltut the Uhlans
looked like,
of new
ordered the bridges over the
Meuse River to be blown up.
The following evening, Hrjtaln
sent Germany an ultimatum of
its own: Get out of Belgium or
we fight. Theobald v>Bn Betb-
mann-Hoilweg, the German
chancellor, was angry with the
British ambassador who deliv-
ered it. He accused Britain of
going to war “all tor just a word
-’neutrality'—just for a scrap
of .paper.”
The scrap of paper—a des-
cription that ^echoed around the
world — was Belgium's peace
treaiy with Holland, signed 75
years before and guaranteed by
all the great European itowers,
Prussia as well* as Britain.
“Belgium is an independent
state, perpetually neutral," ,ho
treaty said.
Britain was bound to defend
and. straps and saddles. ,
“We—were -not-- .expecting,
them," he recalls,- "but we
didn't belieye them either when
they handed out tracts saying
King Albert of Belgium had
Bad German behavior In Bel-
gium, diligently publicized and
often exaggerated by propagan-
dists, added every day to the
strong feeling arouse^ by the inj
vasion.
Germans felt
The German troops had a movad hr reply. The emperor
neurotic fear of snipers. They explained that what his army
also resented Belgian military had done in Belgium was the
resistance as a kind of affront, .......
feeling that the Belgians should
not have interfered with pas- ..
sage through their country to T0X3DS MflKe NaiTGW
including the library of whlchlbarous action of the Belgians.”
nothing Was left but ashes. They jA.group of world-renowned Ger-
killed 218 people. Including 20linan«’issued a dental that Ger-
and 11 children. • man troops had brutally des-
wld reaction was one of troyed Louvain. They were .no#
egjigjssg «. «* ^ a«. "K»
drove —-------- ......
cessiul campaign by the Ger-
mans would have put them in
possession , of the Belgian and
i’renoh ports on the English
Deigium iKiu .hannel, an hours steaming
help to fight the from the British coast. i ■
Germany had been building
up Its navy to challenge-..£r!-
tain's. German command of the
channel ixtrts would have laid
Frehch.”
Nor Mad the king who Just 25
hours earlfenjhad turned down a
German 'ultimatum, taken com-
mand of the Belgian army and Britain wide open to invasion.
attack France.
ifSJFBB SSfflfc* Flood Escape
their insigni^. was a- skull and
crossbones -who came to Gem-,
„*h »» d.y, ...» ™
The Germans razed
The world read ion Wii
horror, and the Germt
'result of the criminal and bar-
TONOPAH, Nev. (AP) - A
them'K I'SS (roAm te™ oSMd fc
tancomt Uege,’ he remembers. charley Pope o£ Lubbock, Tex.,
“Gentleness and charm were and Dr and Mrs L Wayne
Culp of Dallas.
I_______ J|... BP ...Their car «
was at least 5,200 Belgian civili- yards off U. S 95 before they
ans were executed and more scrambled cut. The vehicle
than 25,000 buildings destroyed, floated a mile away"®! was'al-
”iostly by fire. - most destroyed.
What brought world Indlgna- The two out ______
tlon to a climax was the dfes- jured. They walked eack to the
traction of Louvain, a university highway and were brought to
town; where German anger town:
turned against bricks, books
troyed
believed. -
Less than a week after the
destruction of Louvain, the Brit-
ish, French and Russian gov-
ernments signed a pact barring
a separate peace. Belgium had
clarified the issues.
King Albert carefully con-
served his limited Resources of
men. He refused to have thorn
join the Allied offensives and
sent them forward only in the
final, victorious drive of
„ „......1918.
Belgium lost about 40,000 men
in the war. but its percentage of
loss was low compared to the
major belligerents.
When It ended, Belgium , was
awarded 382 square miles Df~
territory that Jiad been held by
Gemiany-the cantons of Eu-
pen, Malmedy and Moresnet,
not far from Gemmenich.
‘r
you
fun
and art treasures. ~ Georgia has 6,017 miles of
Louvain, railroads.
If It’S...
WHEEL CHAIRS
Black's Pharmacies
585-1755 585-8107
711 I. Tmm Dwktr *t OtflrMno
w, not tater. >
The signs that time Is* short
worry Asia's non-Cont immist
(ea'deS:'TlWy Teel TtmpeltetHn j
n:
X
is what is behind the bloodshed,
turmoil and agony of Asia,
Pai Chong-rok and million*
like him knpw that other people
.in other lands get a day’s: pay
for a day's work, don’t have to
sell themselves to moneylend-
ers. and can loqk toward to
being surrounded by healthy
children in old age.
~ And "they" all the Pai
Chong-rbks—are out to get
theirs.
i Democracy? .........
East-West jxtwer balance?
-iouTramp.roany dpsiy .miles
through India's villages or wade
a lot of ride paddies in Viet
Nam before finding anyone who
really understands what those
words mean.
••But you don't travel far be-
fore finding someone who can
describe with shattering simpli-
city what hunger pains feel like.
Or what it is to see a child die of
smallpox or cholera or malaria
—diseases all but wiped out in
more prosperous areas of the
world. ■;--------
And, If you linger a while, you
fmd just below the surface a
boiling anger.
If the Chinese Communists
and their -comrades in Viet
Nam, Korea and Laos misealeu-.
. . ■ ----.u,---1— un.
tie,'and produce quickly,
o.their rush, some make
jhistakwX, ’ 1
American economic experts in
a measure‘ the eftei t bt
India" measure the
massive U.S. aid in almost inti-;
nitcsimal terms terms thatll
would make hard-headed bank: |
ers blanch. So much must bell
. ...r-V-Tr^n-,.. ......j|
Whitt's the percentage in all |j
this?” an American is likely toj;
ask. : • v
In some areas, It is difficult to
see where there has been signi-1
fiuant return on America’s mon- j
ey—or blood.
South Korea has as many un-
ComnjdhlsrB? employed as ever,' Peopl? die of I
mulnourishment in India. Viet [
Cttitg., gtlerrillas, Still, swamp vil-d
laces.
But it Is acknowledged all j
through Asia that had America L
not sent its inen and dollars, ||
there would be'no South J>ot ea, j"
and probably. no • South' Viet
Nam., Despite their despair,j
American economist* in India)
ROSEDALE FROZEN
SQUASH ’ CORN
• GREENS
€
• CUT OKRA
tO-Or-Plfgsrj
late on anything else, they
vclerstand completely this anger.
'They are busy building empires
- I llr.._- . . _
ha tiered,'r ghell-tom village
South Viet Nam as qn army ma-
j'l'r translated instructions from
Ho Chi Minh’s Red regime in
the north1 to Communist Viet
Cong guerrillas fighting jn the
south, X
The Instructions were take)
from a guerrilla’s body.
Speaking softly to the people,
the instructions said, promise
'ffiem rice, land ffiKt.....freedowU^p
from ‘‘co]onialists”-~the people jen, ",
-are-'aw.. «ei>,1h-which you,:it».
Texas' Attempts
In Racial Strife
. ' •
AUSTIN- (APi- Gov. John Con-ij
nally told U.S. Commerce De-|j
partment officials Tuesday he j
expects Texas to continue im-
« re BMgttSRaH
shell-tom village in Connally met for less than an]
hour Tuesday with U.S. Com-
nierre-Secretary Luiher Hodg-fi
es; former Florida Gov. to toy [I
Collins, director of the Commu-
nity Relations Service; and for-j
mer Tennessee Gov. Buford El-
" lington to discuss the communi-
ty, relations service provision in[|
the’Civil Rights Act.
"clia*in by
—all In the h
• k-pot. Now
one and nary
<1.
By MIK
I-AS VEGAS
•utomation has
it women g;
■ one-armed 1
Now there’s
It looks pret
regular slot m
u drop in the
tires of cherri'
“t>un electronic
This has cer
'or the gambit
tional jqckpot t
ated two-hande
coin with the le
with the right.
The new mot
’dght for coin d
the -left fwe fot
clutching purs<
more change, <
ing one’s back,
easier for smo
whp prefer op
three machines
For* the casin
"’fxtels are a b
They don’t
rnnm” t0 the St
'lie rear for em
i s. This permit;
he
90
his permits
new ones in the
. And at a S'
gulping rate;,
theoretical 3,5C
-04—1' ’
ever 24 hour
steadily.
FRYERS
GOVT. INSPECTED
GRADE A WHOLE Lb.
GOVT. INSPECTED GRADE A CUT UP
49c FRYERS ......
BONELESS.
SMOKIES fRath'i Blackhawk)
FAMILY SIZE . J-Q^ ^ m
rp? «c57C PORK SAUSAGE
I2p£ 49c
NEW DAWN
HAIR COLOR
Reg. $2.00.
HONEY GLAZED
HAM
CLUB STEAK
GROUND CHUCK
CLUB STEAK bonejn......x— u
SHORT RIBS
is. 98c
-
lean....ib:S9c
69c
i; 25c
ICE CREAM Borden'*.
(LA
tN 0!L
'/j -Gal.
...Rnd. Ctn.
HORMEL DAIRY BRAND SLICED
MAZOLA
,;48-Oz. BtL
guerrillas, will swim,
Theref had been no m
that village when govert
—fh
in
mment.
troops stormed in with their
American advisers.
“They’ve all joined the Viet
Chng,” the major said apologet-
Ali is not that dark, of course.
America, with its power, hope
and way of life, has won brave
men to its cause. - ,
, One day in the sweltering jun-
gle of Viet Nam’s Thanh Phu,
peninsula, I watched little Viet-
namese troopers^ hardly taller
thqp the U.S.-made -All rifles
. they carried, jump from behind
protective dikes and charge
herd-on into deadly guerrilla
fire. , -
No one gave the command be-
, cause cautious men were' seek-
ing cover that dap. But the Httle
troopers—those who still lived,-
charged on.
A nation
tong-strike Tuesday hi proh
A nation could not hope for
braver alli^.
And no nation could send bet-
ter men to this far-off part of
he'Civil Rights Act.
.CQntiSijy. issued.....a...s!aiement
MAYONNAISE-'..................<?*. ^
FRUIT COCKTAIL
303
...Can
1.59
69c
79c
19c hams
Rath's Blaekhawk..
...........
Lb. $A05
Can 4
BACON
RATH'S BLACK HAWK
LOIN STEAK „
CHUCK ROASTCENI£R
59C ROUND STEAK
T-BONE STEAK
CUT....... LB.
♦X-
4£s427 ROAST
ENGLISH-CUT.,
e 79c
55c
LB- Ore
...u.98c
u. 59c
..v.
KRAFT
and he "expects I he.,state to con-
tinue its progress without the
need for- outside help.” -■-
59c FRANKS
RATH'S..
vCKHAWK
12-0*.
Connally said the ihreeXjsi-
4ors ."commended t e state m
this progress and joined in Gov.
Connally’s hope that local com-
munities would continue to meet !
their own problems.” 1
The service helps communi-
ties resolve disputes dealing!
with discrimination.- - ]
The department officials and
Ellington were requested by
President Johnson to informally
discuss the service._with goyer-
nors. -
.. 12-Oz, Pkg.
Mexico City Drivers
Sfage Hour Protest
MEXICO CITY (AP)—About
2W taxi drivers' staged an hour-
aetjon
thugs.
tsaayir
ned lac
to protect
what they termed lack of polire
them from
KRAFT AMERICAN & PIMENTO
SLICED
WRITE . ...
WAXvPAPER..............ns aRoir 25c
49r
-RATH'S-
BLACKHAWK
N?
I ARMOUR STAR
' IIIIIIMIIIIB
12-Or.
....Can
CORNER
MEXICAN
SEVEN STEAK
X
\
*
.....'•?-•
55
II >
DINNERS
PATIO
Each
cimtue,{
getic Lt. Col. Frank B. (toy, so & irReformaTVhort-||
The famous^ Gen. Lucius D |)y after and refused to ||
, CiAy,..Who WtiiTetadvising 'South' provide service. Police'(food by
- • Viet Nam s 7th Division argued but-made no attempt to force
for social and economic reforms
to consolidate the army's gains
agaipst the guerrillas.
The military is only a smalt
part of it;” he said over and
»over. “If you,can't win the sup,
port of the people you can't win
the wai'.”
•There "Was young Capt. Je
down off a hill in Korea at
dawn; flushed »Wth excitement
because he had seen combat for
he first time—against a North
Korean raidingparty. .X -
"It was a helluva fight," Scott
• said-:....." .
< Thr Clay*. Scotts and Viet-
namese troopers," brave as they
Board Urged To I
Negro Harvard Boss
WASHINGTON (AP) — Dr.
^ntague Cobb, a Negro physi-
,, cian, suggested today that Har-
University name a Negro
as its next president.
Cobb, new president of the Na
them to move.
The drivers complained that |j
assaults have increased ’ lately
and that they cannot count on
l»lice protection.
- Almost at the same time the I
strike.was being staged, 50 driv- j,
ers of a company which oper-
ates radio-controlled' cars-btoclt-|
detergent
Xl
CALIF. NO. 1
40N6WHIIL
neighborhood and captti
three men they accused of hav-
ing assaulted ,a driver.
10 - 49c
DON'T FORGET-DOUBLE
BIG BONUS STAMPS EVERY TUESDAY
Public Apology Eases
Deg’s Wounded Pride
Peacock had complained to
police that Tina, hairdresser
Ruth Harvey’s 2-yearmld Alsat-
an, bit. his son. The police
found another deg was die cul-
prit __
The Sobam Advertiser carried
this advertisement' today:
"Mr, B„ Peacock wishes to
LARGE CRISP
LEnUCE h™, ’
| SWANSON’S BONED
CHICKEN or TURKEY
APPLE- GRAPE ‘ ^
NUBIAN A
PLUMS
1.00
CRISP A PITTS
BAR-B-9 SAUCE
KRArr_prTi;APPLfc ,
^ ,r. 3 (S. 1.00 PRESERVES
YELLOW’
ONIONS
. . lJ-Oz. Boa
I MORTON tioUSE - *
BAKED BEANS
- -4* . _ . .
GREEN GIANT .. . '
ASPARAGUS.....
■. 18-0?, Glass
39c
15-0*.
Cans
lOH-Ot ,
sorted that William Hastie of against Mrs. -ft. Harvev's (tog."
Philadelphia. Judge of the .lid--■-
r* "****.,*
t-vrs
TOMATOES
COMSTOCK CHERRY
PKFKUNG
UPTON
flA
■ m ■ Mte.eee»ee«sM«M
LIGHT CRUST ’
CORN MEAL
..No. tOan
, ' .
,.M Lb. Box
......
5£i39e
•::&S
-
, ..... ■■ : ■ '
■■ ’ ... ■ ■ \-
X,
Mi
■ y ■ y-.
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X,
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 271, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 5, 1964, newspaper, August 5, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057299/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.