The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 5, 1964 Page: 4 of 22
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: ■ y ■ -
" ■ 'r-.-T. .
LiiMLL-W 1
t-
Congratulations
. , . ’ ■ '' - V * r.
Mr. President*
---
President Lyndon R. Johnson hM proBably feeen* -
si: rung well these last few nights, and no person in
Act^ka is due more congratulations than the tall
aau talented Texan who now has won his own way
in.a the White House to serve a four-year tern as
chief executive.
Hebaswon the presidency by a larger popular
vote than has ever been accorded a candidate for
high office. Not a single one of his illustrous
ever received a nutfority that came ...
several million votes of being as large as the
■voters gave President Johnson over Sen.
Goldwater.
President Johnson is due the congratulations of
the entire, country far the splendid victory he won
at the polls.
! Now be has a chance to apply all of his many
talents toward making this.country a great presi-
dent One Ustwitt once wrote that it isn’t great to
badaM president It is gnat only to become a great
president
No man era reached this high office with as
many things going against him To his everlasting
credit is can be objectively reported that President
Johnson conducted a vigorous Iwt dignified cam-
paign. Never once did he lose his poise. Never once
did he descend to the level of some of his opposition.
It took a man to absorb the abuse that Lyndon John-
son took in atnide. He had a goal set, and he reached
1 it in a big way.
. Much has beea written about President Johnson,
Much more will be written.*
Ur?'
Washington Merry-Go-Round-
. •- ■
Mississippi Hearing
Voice Of Moderation
By DREW PEARSON wet in-favor at arresting Free.
dom Workers for'cooking in
their own headquarters without
> health permit.
McCOMB, Miss. -*■ There it
a Jot of sentiment in Mississippi
for hira wfcHttndtog .wito
the Negro population, but tt i*
scatter^ and^etow^ a
hard time making i
It includes such voices ns those
of Mayor John O. Holland of
Vicksburg, Mayor John J. Nos-
serof Natchez, and Mayer Allen
. Thompson of Jackson who.
Swp origtoaBy mohilUii% a
small mechanized army to cope
[ army to cope
with noe problems, has now
steadfastly maintained that the
law * the la wand, the Civil
Rights Law must be bbserved.
There are also such moderate
HOWEVER, the moderate forces
Jo Mississippi are jip against
two problems:
L The extreme racists, includ-
ing the White Citizens Councils,
and the Ku^Klux Klan, which
has greatly increased in srength
(farirglbe past two years.. .
2.-The unwillingness of even
moderate white leaders to sit
I voices asking Tor better under-
standing as those <
down and talk better understand- ;»«pare tor this,
tag with the leaders of OOTOHffikMMMB
(the Council ol Federated Or-
fr } -
to
REPAIR JOB
■ pse«d<»ym “landslide Lyndon:”
The LB J Story
Now after 16 years Lyndon Johnson wins the
to i le fteMdent a» "Landslide Lyndon,” they on
jopai by l^mdon Johnson supporters to
ma?*' their point very clear:
Which landslide? P 4
—feslq\
r_ _
Cashman Jr. of the Vicksburfc
Post. who recently putdahed
Rabbi Blinder’s review- of the
very critical ook, “Mississippi,
the dosed Society,” by Prof.
James W. Silver of ttaUniver-
- lity of Mhatewii-
Even in the heart of tuihulent
southern-Mississippi where most
of the bombing has occurred,
Paul Pittman of the Tylertown-
lima bat vigorously editorial*
ixed against violence, while QHv-
er Emmerich” editor of the M.c-
. Comb Enterprise - Journal, ha*
fought a valiant, uphill toth
against bombing and for better
race relations.
"It is no longer a matter of
sfgrcgatkm, but a matter of the
survival' of our community, 4.-
says editor Emmerich.
In general, also, Mississippi
newspapers have published criti-
tfeDeeatifc.by thit cobimn,
---
em newspapers TSin say S
in" the exposure Of certain local
fMbattons) or SNCC (the Stu-
. dent Nonviolent , Coordinating
Committee). These are the
groups which mobilized students
from, all over the United State*
to carry on the “Summer Proj-
ect” and are now endeavoring
s wd
problem, are being met success-
fully. Tupelo’s responsible lead-
ership js working to the end of
full employment for all their toe-
al people, oothwhitemidNegroJ
Negro mngeiine EUay. ptgebt T
irrelevant to the trial, to b*
passed around the jury. Its
members, like most Mjariwtopf
juries, acquitted the defendant.
Editor Emmerich, however, is
that on July 1 the fair employ-
ment section of the Civil Rights
Act will go into effect, at which
time Negroes in. Mississippi will ;
have an equal ’-.chance- akwg *•
with whites for jobs in-the lin-
gerie mills around MeComb, and
that MeComb is doing little to
to register Negro voters
conduct freedom schools.
JNUfcnto white leaders an
Willing to talk to Negm clergy-
man and Negro businessmen in
their communities, but flatly re-
fuse to have any discussions
wita the leaders of GOTO and
a SNCC, though it is these twoj
“Tupelo's-firet step has been
through an
ROUTE Mi
as they move-al
by rice ehootc a
f^oupa which are actuary cany-
tag the torch in Mississippi.
the triih and trihubliow of ed-
itor Emmerich in MeComb;
DURING THE “Ole Miss”
Ltufbances in 1961, a battery of I
{tarthem newspapermen invaded
Mcffirnb and dropped around to
extended them the usual'
.V*.
T
' son On Business'
Ready For Big Assignmenr^»l^«
grade of political office holder
in Texas wears the beige West-
an extensive manpower
ana vocational program to fnii
workers for skilled job*.,, Tha
courses are odro td. white, and
colored alike. Tbs program is
being operated smoothly, effec-
tively, and withopt tension or
conflict ... At Tupelo people
are too busy solving their prob-
lems to discOss the matter of
race,
“It is tithe for -responsible
leaders in the MeComb area to
provide our people with tha
needed community initiative.. .
Gainful employment for all ttur
people, whites and Negroes.”
So goes the plea for law and
order of one newspaper editor
in one of the most strife-tom
— •- SfeffiMpjiL TUm
but they seem rather rel
ak out.
Prospei
MEXICO CITY (A
member the gen
image of the Mexkt
Bent over in slumbe
giant sombrero?
* Well, he’s gone. Got
ticket. i .
The once slumberli
“manana" has coi
Latin America's secc
country is buying wit
dented prosperity,
peace seems well ent
It’s still a long way
Ml* hm . bean. wi|ttm
•boat Lyndon B. Johaoon, Uw
id (boat Lyndon .B.
ttoiaRMi
Fref Enterprise
Vs. Socialism
*.
poUUrian. In thH>
’*a*9 «% • Mat, ImWkMBl
of the aeHs* candeaaad from
his best seller book. Lyndon
». leknem; A ■hfHfly.*
nathor Ail felow - Texas
Harry Provence raptures the
■ toBaOWPARK.il—,-The
words “eitheri and ••or'? have
eoeentlnl lagredteaWi of tho
JwiiailrirhNtoR ijp
nrTrrffaa
• word "or” may rx-
Wm tadeffattiiim M to Ae
MOMce. "Thero were 10 or l2
Pro?le present” Or itmaytadi-
eato deftolten*
by the community. Bommr. b-
dwtluah are frre 'to angaga in
'WWUi activltias withcot gov
■trnmtBtal tntorttrmae.
Many of the “BW-liiKatlc** to
tmta* ft the federal govern-
By HARRY PROVENCE
When Lyndon Johnson took the
oath of office as President of
Mtoi
ment stemmed originallyfrom
tale, local eonvntmides, or
the United States in the ur-
I'lanc .it Dallas <>n Nov. 196.T
it seemed th dawn on nejriv
all who knew anything about our
government that here was the
SsHILSI
rnmmWi■aMdiito *•
The word “or” is often used J-ffifSR S ~
merce Commission. It was the
depression of 1929 that brought
stive is usually fas from ore- ln,n l,omK the numerous govern-
• - ‘ ment agencies that shored
em.hat... some have thought
in order to be distinguished
from the voters. For. years,
t|MM Jchraon followed t h e
custom, and still keeps several
broad - brimmed hats in his
closet. But since the'late 1930 s
he hi usually seen wearing an
ctofeaty hnstaeai hat, 0 even,
hawheaded. ••
Johnson seldom wean AtoP*
cost On the ran<»t, depending
on the season, he likes a khakt
jacket or a short leather jacket..
With the rising fortunes of the
Johnson business interests .be-
ginning in the mid-1950's, John- '
son has found it increasingly _
possible to indulge one
best ->ed tabbies -jtaopping
loosely with reference to human
beings. F« example, saying a
perspn is a Bberal at a oonserv-
Essentially, he is action jter-
sonified. Yet he acts only after
the fullest preparation.
■ .Masculine it* the iullest 1
most people sup-
‘both points of
It is probable that there
•re Vaty few who are wholly lib-
• whoBy consemtivt.
eralor
In tha heart of political debate
the backan of one philosophy
talk as though the other philoso-
phy were wholly evil, and vice
Free enterprise is, of
, --------------up
the economy aq it could function
— at all in some oases. The fed-
eral guarantee of bank deposits
at the bequest of banks has elim-
inated the likelihood of a run on
banks like that of 1933. Price
support* in agriculture were in-
stituted to ensure us food to
eat Rural electrification'mide
it possible for those living on
it is the law
of the jungle. Each animal is
iff* to prey *n thaw It can Is-
strop until a attwpr one comes
akmg to destroy it This led to
the old concept that wealth is.
the reward for virtue, and pov-
farms to enjoy some of the con-
s of those who live in
the cities.
If we were to Imitate Sweden
we could go a long way in both
directions, because there they
standard of living
than we
sense,
he* can be tender and allection-
ate.
Perfectionist id all things he
can appear gay and carefee.
By turns imperious, cajcling,
cool and dignified, as exuberant
as a cheer loader, brusque and
demanding. .Lyndon Johnson
exudes vitality in every mood,
every gesture.
The man's sensitivity to others
runs much deeper than what
has been described ir. him as
vanity. He wants everybody to
like him. to admire him, but he
also tries to return the feeling
have a higher i
KHHgfiE
ITtta
in Northern mills
ro slaves in South-
ern plantations. It has also led
to Ibe rise of dictators — Stalin,
Hitler and Mao.
(to tto other hand, pure so-
cUIRm leads ultimately M
aaployntoBt, and taw interfer-
ence with business from 1 ■
They have more social-
ism in the form of job retraining
for the unemployed, state care
for the sick, reedy, and older
people.
If we 1
full measure.
So much has been written In
recent years ajwut Johnson’s
tailoring and fondness for put-
ting the LBJ initials on every-
thing that he is likely now to
say, “This suit-only cost $90,
but they keep writing about my
S200 suits.” His personal ap-
pearance is always correctly
consonative unless he thinks
the occasion calls for Western
and to follow his open-han
sense of generosity of giving
4away- clothing, watches, cigar*
. ette lighters, paintings', and oth-
er goods he may buy in the
course of a shopping visit.
In possession of the LBJ
Ranch only a dozen years, the
Johnsons have so implanted-
their personalities on it. that It
is difficult to imagine them
without the ranch, or the ranch
without the Johnsons..
The road crossing the river to
reach the house runs on a con-
crete shelf ip front of the dam.
The normal flow of water over
the dam keeps a few inches of
water spilling across the road-
way. This adds an extra, fillip
to the task of driving across the
stream.
First new addition to the
LBJ's comforts after Johnson's
recovery was the swimming pool
complele with heating' equip- *
menusp {hat it.can be used.,
year round; and a -hath house.
A thick carpet - ----*---
t Later
runway of 6,300 feet stretching
up the slope behind the build-
ings.;
When' Johnson is in residence
or even on a flying visit, at the
LBJ he goes out in the morn-
ing and again in'the evening'to
look at the Hereford cattle grax-
ing on‘the several pastures.
On the LBJ, which now has
gwwn-to more than 400 acres**
and on nearby leased pasturage,
Lyndon Johnson provides plenty
of grass, some grata and water
to attract deer arid keep them
healthy. He htihts Mlriyeveiy
day: of- the season when ha j*
on ibe ranch, but he shows as
much excitement over the sight •
of a running bunch of deer as in
shooting at them.
Lyndon and Lady Bud John-
son sharathemsalmaiidttelr
ranch for wider purpose*.
One notable occasion In 1963„
saw 31 United Nations delegates
flown to the LBJ for a full day
of feasting and .Western - style
entertainment interspersed with
personal visiting by about 200
Texans from nearby cities and
ranches.
uphill battles for law and order.
Chief
Guy, for instance, was
Report From
Washington
street corner, one extremist
came up to Emmerich and, with-
out any advance warning,
punched him in the nose.
The assailant was arrested
and tried. During the trial, the
judge permitted a copy at the
Bible Verse
JESUS ANSWERED and said
unto him, Verily, verily, I gay
unto thee. Except a man be horn
again, he cannot see the king-
dom of God* John 3:3
By FULTON LEWIS. JR- *.
WASHINGTON - The cam-
paign over, Administration lead-
ers will build new “bridges of
understand! ng” to the Soviet .
satellites of Eastern Europe.
Construetkxi ’at the 'multi-"
billion dollar projects was stow-
Know Your Bridge
--By 8. JAY DECKER--
country’s prosperity
population growth.
Still, the Mexico t
Gustavo C
lakes over in Decern
well ahead of the res
America in the sti
economic and politics
In a time of nearly
poltycal unrest, the
scene seems almost ii
South dealer.
North-South vulnerable.
ed by the campaign. Adminis-
tration leaders frahkly conceded
they feared that attacks on
these would damage the Prcsi-
->r electoral
dent’s bid for i .
Whtta "tha Iwrwwl; how-
ever, the program of "constroc-
tive friendship" (as one State
Department aides calls it) has
i were
The whole atmosphere that
.barbecued steak
came next.
demands for
extra room brought the building
of a modem office attached to
the house, the construction of a
six - bedroom frame guest house
and an enlarged dining room.
The LBJ has gradually be -
come an aviation center. First
came a grassy strip for light
| day, over .barbecued steaks and
much conversation, reflated the
p e r s o n - to - person acquain-
tance that is a Johnson special-
ty. '
J. Frank Doble, watching the
proceedings that day, recalled
the camel driver's -visit to the
LBJ ranch because it snowed,
he said, how' Lyndon ‘Johnson,
is able to be at complete ease
with every? kind of person. “He
has respect for human beings
and sympathy for them. He has
no awe of people in high placea
nor contempt tor those fa lower
itatianu ‘
“I was there that day at tha
ranch. I doubt if- Lyndon John-
son ever had a, better tinje In
his life, r tom I never did. The
came! driver was as much at
ease as if he were talking With
‘ ' ‘ter in Pfilris.
-SSkSMSSSi®
n m uir unu
hr Oto early Christi-
1 tea of much later
to be unhappy,
times be
another group
it may aome-
■for to* Co*
it a tnus of modi wer times be necessary for the gov-
toan free enterprise. It eminent selected by the people?
i^rSsj! irs&sawS
.grangnt 'Wtoe propta, by tb*
teach meh^ -pfSpIf" awf for the- people
y was work- should be able to solve mos
mr sociere waa made up of
(Commimism of the Russian
eat good for the greatest
her. The final result will 1
of toe two.
. ______mm ■■ *
'—but a mixture,—
ft our government Benin the
United States we have Hither
Did You Know?
The 196? PGA goU chamoton-
kron, Ohio.
ship will be held at Akron,
Tse dates are July 2M3.
ms*
feet, and now a thicker asphalt
another camel driver
tan. And It was all Lyndon’s <kh
tag. Not everybody can do
that”
(Ne*t: “Lyndon B. Johnaon:
Dedicated Pwrecttonfet'T - -
TODAY'S GRAB BAG
ly IUTH RAMSEY
Central Press Writer-
THI ANSWER, QUICK!
L What lt a phUetvist?' |
1 Where is Samsrksnd?
3. What have ketch,, felucca
and dhow In common?
4. Whst le a Jspklsry?
5. What have Green,“ Frols-
Bart and Durant In common?
„ SPOT OF FAMI-QUISS THI NAME stronf garrison.
lTta. tha Id-foot-high, IP
VOW FUTURE
Subjert important derishMM ta
■ embraced a community of 4.000
souls and tt became the capital
of the colony of Isle Royale. It
was a great military and naval
base, a mrjorfshirg center and
carried on extensive trading
with France, the West Indies
and continental North America.
In 1745. a British expedition
of s«me 4.000 New Englanders
under the command of an
May's child will he tapuMv*.
American Colonial general rag-
Uhf laytmtm &itu
trs IBN IAW
Fred Hartman
• ••••••eaeeaawaweaw**•••••• •
General Manager
....Office
Ctacutotion Director
John W adley
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
eimmafi •4'faaa* •• *f « •
••••a Mseeeateasvea
Entered aa second dam matter i
Office aader tte Act 01
aytown. Texas. Poet
t March 1 H78.
It it not ft* ttrrngth, feet
the duration ..af great eeatt-
wsrafs that melees greet 1
Kktoche.
lured the fortress. Of the :
tiamen lefuto garrisan the fort-
res* that winter nearly 900 of
them died of scurvy, fever and
dysentery,.to be buried on near-
by Rochefort Point. Less than
.three yarn later, the fortress
was returned to France under
the terms 0 the Treat/of AU-
WATCH YOUR IANOUAOI
RIGMAROLE
roll) - noun; n
(RIG-
or to-
The British attacked ag-
in 1758 and the. defenders h
out durihg 49 days of seige
fore surrendering. Two ye
later, the British planted !
been reo|>ened. Final plans wi
aprxo\«t (or ar exchange, of
ITS. and Yugoslav “scholars.”
with Unele Sam picking up most
of the tab.
Deals closed last week by the
Food for Peace A gene v guaran-
tee Yugoslavir another $51.9 mil-
lion worth of American food-
, stuffs. The agreements, signed
Ort. 28 and 29. provide the
Reds, with more than 18 million
bushels of wheat land 26.5 mil- -
Hbn ;wunds of tallow. The goods
are part of a $2.5 billion pro-
gram that began after the war
, when Comarade Tito announced
his preference for a “national
’Communism” free of Soviet
dominance. The rid. military ***
and economic, has continued de-
spite evidence that Tito’s feud
with Kremlin leaders is long
piML.
A lifelong revolutionary', Tito
was schooled ta the techniques.
Of insurrection at Moscow's Le-
nin School almost four decades
ago. With the full support of
Stalin and the mighty Red
Army, Tito took over Yugo-
slavia in -1944, -iquldattag ell
political and religious opposi-
But Tito welcomed American
aid, ? a y I n g: “The- capitalist
forces constitute our natural
enemy- despite the fact that they
helped us to defeat their most .
dangerous representatives (Hit-
ler's Germany). It may happen .
that we again decide to make
WBI
♦ «
$F A109 8.S
♦ Q1093
4AQ10
NORTH
A K J98
«T4
v:r
= ssr -
*J852
. au
4 j 9 5 4 2
SOUTH
A A Q I054 2
■ k a
4AJ8
4K7
Tha bidding:
South West North
3 « Dble. 2 4
East
Pass
*9
Opening lead—six of spades
Wien the outcome of a con-
tract is in doubt, depending
upon how the defenders' cards
are divided. It Is very comfort-
ing to declarer to discover a
method of play that Assures the
contract regardless of a, bad
division of the adverse cards.
Her* is an example of such
a cast. South was in four
spades and West led a trump.
attempted, and that unless tha
dtaaanfeikfB turned, out to ha
divided M, South would alas
Have to lose two duba as well
as th«r ace of heazta. .'
Faced with this situation, de-
clarer came up with a line of
play that was certain to suc-
ceed. HO drew two rounds of
trumps and played a heart to
the king. West won with tha
ace and returned a heart to tho
queen.
. South now entered dummy
with % trump and returned a
low diamond. When East fol-
lowed low, South played tho
eight.
West took it with tho nine,
but there was nothing he could
do to prevent the contract from
being made. A heart return
would permit declarer to die-
card a club from hl3 hand as he
ruffed in dummy, while a dia-
mond return would give South
an extra diamond trick and par-
mit him to discard atcfub even-
tually on the king of diamond*
’?he only other posaibte return,
a club, would make South’e king
a trick.
•stantial jeopardy, particularly
since West wts marked by the
bidding with practically ah of
the missing high cards.'
V The indications wen that a
Try Sw
Ckwifie
Wholesale Pr
ON SNTIRI STO
LtimtitaD Pali
SHELtt
*m "uuSata comma
. Note that declarer’s method
of play
. _ would have aucceadod
. *lao if East had had either tte
that the contract was in sub- torn 0 ten of llvj
played it on the -low diamond ‘
lead from dummy. In that case,
South would have playftl tha
Jack and West would then hare
become subject to the identical
would to**. If tjipe of endplajr described above*
■a
Daily Crossword Puzzle
—-KING FEATURE-
. . MM of their aid, but always with
'the sole aim ol accelerating
their final ruin.”
Aid to Yugoslavia is justified
by Administration spokesmen on
the grounds of Tito's "todepend-
But the independence
e myth than Iact. The Yugo-
slav delegation to the UN fal-
low* the Soviet line; THe hinv
self defended Soviet suppression
of the Hungarian revolution: the
Yugoslav regime has, tf any-
thing. become even more re*
pretsive in recent yeatsi "
Amgnc m tod enables the Yu-
donesia. the United Arab Re-
public,
As
Ghana, India. Ge}k*D,
Sen. -James Eastland
- . ACROSS • 1A meal
1. Insect that 4. Silkworm
fifes* ' *«£■«•
4. Agrswnents cation
lL 'AMa,"’ A Father:
for one ootioq.
12. Beetle T.Cendto-
13. Past of not
swift t+rvr trs*
15. Source of - IBrittoh^
1* Oto^snoti wealth
17. Symbol at , ration
Indebted- 9. Journey
ram UiAnettai
19. Ak an- 14. W»dtng
threpotd bird
S3SSL “K .r
harp *Md
25. ROb away 21. Cloth for
25. Exclaaa- -wfitag
WES
CLOCK
jjqt 2CKJU :a
IRttona
A tended
tap Mini
SO. Dry
KSetf-
41. Wide-
RMmr
peotto -
47 MeUlUa
40. Broth
to.'Qan: sL
01. PaMnottas
.Chairman of the Senate Internal
Security SubcommiMte. has
"Much of tho
Tito
0O*N TOO AY
ftm beneath the walls and de-
nioft4ied the
V. Drbe. set-
____ fortr_
t0* j fcTiat and where u thU spot
) YOU MAKE OUTI
3. They are types of sailing
an.! mairriak we give
vrinds up in so-called 'neutral'
nations . ... If the pest is any
Inriication w* have no atsuranew
rthit tlx- sabre jet air planes'
■okt.by the US. to Yugoslavia
will not be passed on to nme
am - afomed notion to 4e ad-
vantage of Bitemattonal Com-
55 Rule .
15 Idem: cal
W
■iiiHti^aiiiiifeui
mummmmammu
fMmmm-dmmmm
aummmammm
wrndmmmau'm
E-totand tesed bis choree xn
n detailed stud) for
dumamum
mwmmd*
.
mMMW-
BBHHi
■■■
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 5, 1964, newspaper, November 5, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057393/m1/4/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.