The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 188, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 29, 1964 Page: 4 of 14
fourteen pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
4_•» Sunday, March 29, 1964
Editorials
fitted who otherwise would te
charily patients.
Thla month llw eongreaakmaj
benefactor of the blind »u near
blindness hlmaeU Rudolph, now
• mm tor ftom iW TIM
tea boon in tho hooplUl under-
,jmg mmm lor • douohod
H,
II uood to bo that.tho chancoo
oT bllndnoot from thla aBmoot
wort .i in nit 10 per cut Today,
thanka to madkot acloaoo. tho
ohuoaa are much laaa. Sonator
Kurxtolph hui U-«*n »ui i rufully
oi*r*u*l on by*Dr. Jim* tae*
or Oiyin, • surgeon With a
heart aa wall aa skilled hand*,
and will aaon bo back In tho aao-
Frank Boykin a major laauo la
tho iuatloo Department. Kan-
nody had ovan gone to Baltimore
to taatlfy against him.
Presumably tho Prraldont alao
waa no! UMwart of tho aour
(iaaoaa cut In hla direction by
the Attorney General In It*
drive by tho Kennedy clan to
make lobby President At any
rata, the President told the
ly a aba r that if ho. McCormack,
would cltar the matter with Bob-
by. ho, Lcmdoa,. would front the
pardon.
Ipttfctr McCormick wu most
im[f
Chanea he had with hli fellow
Boa Ionian «f fitting a pardon
approved for "ad la mada tor
By DREW PEA MON
Washington - a mU by
Speaker John McCormack at thi
while House waa not officially
luted aa the Piaaldent • echo-
dule. However, It wu rather Im-
portant *
The gaunt, gray. Madly Speak-
er aaked Prealdont Johnaon to
give a pardon to (toOteMI-
man Prank Roykla of Alabama,
tho man (amour for hie motto,
"AM la mada lor leva." hla
and boar meal, and for hi* btv
b mg tor (Honda. Including uv-
One of the mo«t powerful DemocrtU In Congress
has suggested, in effect, that President Johnson stop
flaying to the gallery in his handling of foreign at-
Sen. J. W! Fulbright of Arkansas, chairman of
the Senate Foreign Relations-Commlttee, in an 8,000-
word speech Wednesday criticized the Johnson ad-
ministrtalon for yielding to the "malady of chronic
NEW YORK
SnJdkuta fm
the Soviet Ui
e-.J^a-------
NvirT bupress
sharply raduo
rtcrrhrs open
■II faith*.
Radio Ubert
h alf ae a "V!
•i itloa, aaya
behind tho &
ratoa Soviet
ahehov may
thus hla prw
campalgB to a
and excessive caution.
He said "an effective foreign policy is one which
concerns itself more with innovation abroad than
with conciliation at home. It is sometimes necessary
for leaders to do unpjeasant and unpopular things."
Fulbright ranged the world-Communlsm. Russia,
Red China, Viet Nam, Cuba, Latin America. Panama
—calling for fhis country and Its leaders to abandon
ancient myths, do tome re-thinking and face real-
ities.-
But on some of the problems he mentioned Ful-
bright didn't seem to have any new Ideas himself.
Nevertheless, all this got a quick and cynical re-
sponse from Rep. Melvin R. Laird of Wisconsin, chair-
man of the platform committee at this summer's Re-
publican convention.
In a House speech answering Fulbright he call-
ed the senator’s talk a trial balloon launched with the
blessing, support and probably at the instigation of
the Johnson admlnistrtaion.
He called it the "first gun in an administration
drive to extricate Itself as painlessly as possible from
the morass of foreign policy blunders" of the past
three years.
This writer asked Laird Wednesday night if he
was implying that Johnson and Fulbright cooked up
the speech between them. Laird said: “That's the
implication.'
The Fulbright speech created such heat in the
Senate that >ractlca!ly all work on the civil rights
bill stopped. ’
Here are some of Fulbright's views:
Cuba—He said invasion is unthinkable, a block-
ade is out of the question since it might lead to war,
and that even the present American trade boycott
aimed at trying to topple Fidel Castro is a failure.
He suggested acceptance of the continued exist-
ence of Castro as a “distasteful nuisance," hut he
neglected to say how this country should, or could,
do business with him, if that's what he had in mind.
South Viet Nam—He was for continuing aid. But
he was a little out of date here. The Johnson admin-
istration said last week it would do that.
Red China—Fulbright said we are committed to
"inflexible, policies from which we hesitate to de-
part” on Rdd China and other areas of Asia. What
would he do about Red China ?
He wouldn’t recognize it, or agree to let it in the
United Nations, or enter normal relations with it un-
til it gives up its designs on Formosa.
But Fulbright belted the Johnson administra-
tion’s handling of the Panama crisis and its hair-
splitting: Its willingness to "discuss" a revision of
the 1903 Panama Canal treaty but not to "negotiate"
about it.
The senator suggested Panama got a pretty raw
deal when the treaty was signed 61 years ago and
Johnson should be willing to "negotiate."
height of tte Cypru*
Haikant would hovo boootM to-
volved.
L8J. t touch (MMatoor an
to* telephone. ga*» N* "xwt
vigorous Miss talk to (to Itete
tot Premier; wu by
■Hotter phone call by Fite*
Minister Sir DousluJtoro* to
Mtoto. , ^
From The News
The Business Forecast
M«bM - aren't WO all?
I. latoad nation where Greeks
•ad Turk* tpat with bullru
». World heavyweight bnxin*
champion rejected by Army
10. Thai "3 rtriku yor out!"
waaon I* upon ua.
U. Th* V S ofterto at G*o*v a
to bum toO of item.
I. Fear of tone cancer hu
caused many to atop doing It
13. Rusk aaya h* won t da K.
but Salinger did.
14. Ghana’i Pm. did H ay a In
— te ousted another judge
15. Huntington Hartford re-
cently opened on* In New York
atr
U. Israeli Premier who will
visit U.S. to June.
IT. Ruby did It to Belli.
IS March X uttered It to.
' IS The pateover tare that had
trouble getting baked a Mos-
cow.
30. Ms Taylor's new name.
21. Senate Inquiry Into Ms do-
Inga unaallatactor/ to many.
& Tte Drafon Lady who just
can’t atop knocking toe U.S. (1
wards).
23. Area of world being vtoted
by Richard Nison 12 word*).
:i. Eddie Flcter think* te
may do H agate.
25. On* that Jadd* Kennedy
wrote brought S3.00 at auction.
MMI BATING
Mbinet|»lia • Honeywell, RCA.
Sperry - Rand, and Control Date
Corp. Do not write me taking
which of toe five It tte teat teL
Nobody knowi. You might put
an equal amount of money Into
each of tte** five.
I am told that on* of tte new-
er model* now being offered
work* 30 per rent faa ter than
tte one presently in uee Tte
computer manufacturer* claim
that te one woond their new
machine* can do 537.000 addi-
tion* and (ubtractiona. 111.300
multiplication*, or 109.000 dlw
•ion*.
ONE OF MY MIT triend*. Pro-
feuor Chari** Town**, I* a pio-
neer te thla field Later tech-
nology endeavor* to ham***
light and eound wave* and con-
centrate to*** Into "coherent"
beam*. Tte greatest Immediate
probable application lie* te com-
munication* A later beam can
be tte carrier of million* of
telephone meaeage* all at once.
Or, It can transmit slmultan-
eoualy many different TV pro-
gram*. Instead of requiring a
single carrier tor each program.
I utter technology may become
very valuable for »pac* com-
munication* and dtilance me*-
auring Thau powerful beam*
can alio be u«*d for cutting,
such as In surgery. Industrial
cutting, welding, etc. Laser tech-
nology !■ definitely forging
Bible Verse
computers. When I am asked
what will be tte nest big Indus-
try. Lfuggest that tte computer
industry should lead tte list.
Among com panic* now In tte
forefntot of thi* field art Inter-
national Business Machine*.
Who's Who
In American
History
(See Oae question at and af
teat I •' .
L Who wa* to* Engliih mu-
sician and Florida orange plant-
er who composed "Appalacia"
and Brfgg Fair”?
2. Who wu partner of Na-
thaniel Carrier ta producing
print* of 19th Century American
u/e?
3. Who wu tte Virginia gene-
ologist and editor who wrote tte
novel*. "Jurgen" and "Tte
Cream of to* Jest"?
4. Who wu the Polish patriot
who built fortification* and
served u brigadier general te
George Washington'* Continental
Army? » •
5. Who was tte woman who**
snubbing by Washington. D C ,
society contributed to ter hus-
band’* resignation from Presi-
dent Jsckson's Cabinet?
6. Who wu tte temperance
advocate a Kentucky-born
women — who smashed uloons
with a hatdjet?
7. Who wu tte Massachusetts
suffragette who headed to* flr*t
woman's right* convention and
co-edlted the Woman’s Journal?
CLUE QUESTION: Spelled
downward, the first letters In
tte seven surname* above are
the last name of toe Engltsji
noveliit who wrote "American
Note*" shortly after his "Tte
Old Curioustty Shop”?
.tNHWKKS
1. Delius. Frederick. 2. Ive»,
Jame* Merritt. 3. Cabel, James
Branch. 4. Koaciuiako, Tadeu*z
(Thaddeual. 5. Eaton, Mrs.
John Henry (Peggy O'Neill). 6.
Nation. Carry. 7. Stone, Lucy.
Clue Question: Dickens, Charles.
Daily Crossword Puzzle
-KINS FEATURE -
LET ME CLOSE by summsrt*-
Ing a recent talk at Tampa,
Florida, te Dr Gaorg* L. Hal-
ler. Vice Prettdent of General
Electric. The primary human
need for the next 20 yean will
be for machine* to help us or-
ganize and handle great quanti-
ties of Information without be-
ing swamped by & We will need
machine* and system* to help
us think, to solve problem*, to
(tore-Information In small space
on the drawing hoard* and In
tte laboratories. Thi* leads me
to believe that women who are
buying telephone atock may be
showing more sense than tte
investment advisers who claim
they have too much. As long as
the federal government doe* not
take over such companies, their
efficiency and earnings should
continue to improve.
The telephone Industry will
gradually profit from the use of
Dr. Haller also added that tte
machines will he|p retrieve any
particular tafoteration. "Home
computers" would keep track of
everything - grocery lists, ap-
pointments. anniversaries, etc.
They would take car* of your
finances, bank balance*, even
pay household bDlsl
Know Your Bridge
— 1/ I. JAY IECKER-—
MuTvulamMN ■Ua’A^HI
TODAY'S GRAB BAG
If ruth iamsiy
Control Frost Writer
4,000-mile-long system of canals -
drawa water to irrigate tte fer-
tile, but one# usalesa land.
Raaarvotrs and lakes created
by th* dam art leading rtcrea-
tlon area* In th* Par Wast, and
Its supplies electric power for
everything from besting curling
-to"1' unrimnlng mklua* for
developing atomic power.
What and where I* thla spot
of famo? ,*
(Name at bottom of columa)
World's Fastest River
Hydrofoil daft Built
MOSCOW (API—The world's
fastest river hydrofoil craft has
been built in the Soviet Union,
Tass claimed Thursday. The So-
THE ANSWER. QUICKI
1. What is the meaning of
the Spanish word tnonana?
2. Who painted "Th* Laugh-
ing Cavalier"?
3. What Is the "Blue Grans
State"?
‘ 4. Who wa* the U.S. ambaa-
sador to France at ttequtbreak-
of Wmld Wtrl?
S. What. la th* capital of
India?
. teria supplies by bid.
3. Instituted districpydde ap-
. praisal program by lnflependent
appraisers.
4. Began collecting $40,000 per
——vear intere«t__an district s cash
■accounts in bonks. _______ ...___________I
Persons on the Board and in per hour and can carry 150 pas-
the administration who opposed sengeri. It is driven by gas tun-
these and numerous ‘ similar bines with water jets rather
items may actually have had than screws.
viet news agency said the ves-
V TOUR FUTURE
Business and romantic fa-
wards are Indicated. Today**
child will be artistic.
For March ft: Your Ilf. be-
comes Increasingly happy and
successful. Today's child will
hav* a happy-go-lucky disposi-
tion. - I
IT'S SEEN SAID
No man is justified in doing
evil on the ground of expedi-
ency—Theodore Roosevelt.
ft HAFFINID TODAY
On thla data In 1197, Na-
thaniel Briggs of New Hamp-
shire received a patent for a
washing machine. \
on March 29, 1949, Niagara ]
Fall* atopped flowing tor th*
first time In recorded history. |
Ice jammed the rj,vat's entrance ,
today's spot of famo, tte princi-
Slaterman Christian Ureter,
pal unit of tte U.S, Bureau of
Reclamation'* Columbia Basin
Project, are enough to ataggpr
actress Dame Flora Robson,
pianist Rudolf tsrkin, bandlead-
er Foul Whiteman, actors Fred-
dis Bartholomew and Dirk Bo-
garde. ■
Undsay, composer William Wal-
ton, singer Pearl Bailey, actress
Bilesn Herkart and actor Den-
nit VBjsafs, **> . \~
WATCH YOUR lANOUAOE
PREDILECTION - (pr.-de-
UOUbim) — nouitta prapo*-
sesslon of the mind In favor of
something; partiality,
MOW’D you make outt
1. Tomorrow.
1 Rev la#
2. Enter
3. Inland
4. Abdicate
th* Imagiaatton. T....
This da« la actually repeat-
ing th* performante of a glacier
that blocked the river during
the last ice, age. Then, Its chan-
nel cut off at a point slightly
west of the dam site, th# river
backed up, epllled over Ka bank
and poured south across tte
Big Bend country, j
By to* time the glacier melt-
ed and the river returned to Its
old ted, it had deposited* more
than a million acres of rich, 1
Arabia *otl (which fit lnsuffl- 1
Fred Hartman............................. Editor and Publisher
James H. Hale......................... General Manager
Prcaton Pendergrass ........................... Managing Editor
Beulah Mae Jackion...................... Office Manager
Robert K. Gilmore ..................Circulation Director
o ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT .
John Wad ley ..................................:........ Manager
v Paul Ptltman ................................Retail Manager
- Corrle Laugblin ...................... National Manager
Entered aa second claaa matter at the Baytown, Texas Post
Office under the Act of Congress of March 3, 1*79.
Published afternoon*, Monday through Friday,
*, and Sundays by The Baytown Sun, Inc„
at Pearct and Ashbel In Baytown, Texas.
............' Subscription Rates: - " .'
$1.45 per Month, $17.40 per year. (
, Rapreaanted Nationally By
Taxsa Newapapera Reprearatatives, Ino.^
Poverty
Cyproa
CassilM
Baseball
whot fle
;
. , ,'4 ■
um for r«puWlPRtIon ©f
ntdIUd In th|« p*p«r and
SALINGER I
IN THE NEWS
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 188, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 29, 1964, newspaper, March 29, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057540/m1/4/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.