The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 9, Ed. 1 Monday, October 5, 1964 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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Editorials-
Whew, Storm
Comes Close
iiliS:
:T!ieTta*gxout.
There wasalso asincere feeling dfsym
■>VW
On We Right1-* %
FBI Must Stay'
Above Polifices
W.
"T-:
i I
i -, ‘
• .* PUT ^ighbOfs ih Louisian* who were in
path of the blow.
“I hate for the Louisiana people to
this storm.-^but I must admit too I'm '
come our w^.” . . ■
Tbep words seemed to-about-stfm up the ex*
pressions and feelings of folks hereabouts.
Although the storm went elsewhere, there were
many and varied preparations here in Baytown by
individuals, families and emergohcy groups.
The Baytown Police Department, always a b
uark in times of need, was poised and ready. Mem-
bers of the department argold heads at handling
emergencies in Baytown, they, like others* were
hopmg^ crisis uoulrf/cortie, but if it had, they
' Probably the mosthervous member of the police
Mann. This storm was
under fire. He said Saturday
p came from veteran members of
ngly told him to relax.
Fritz Lanham's experience with
. s «s also rather scant since the
rdry land man from the West Texas
► has been With tornadoes t
By WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY JR.
WASHINGTON - The Presi-
dent requested the Federal Bu-
reau of Investigation to ascer-
tain the extent to which recent
riots have -beet "systematic “
i.e., to ascertain the extent to
which they- were planned by
regimented agent* of disorder.
IrtlhtigpHpa. -
s Mr. J. Edgar ■
tangential observations
Ing: the riots" causes:
"The social and economic con-
ditions in which much of the Ne-
gro population lives are demor-
alizing. While iteadly improve-
Mr. j. Edgar Hoover’s re
to the President, published
such a Not
summer were not in fact “race
Iriots.” and n6T consciously motf-
these substandard- con-
; a long
In litthcentury America the
average person did not dream
of such material advantages a* *
‘ by the typical rioter
yet it was rare
store windows
ot aupi material i
LS
term goal, the
program as well a*
> and public actvivi-
result in steady im-
vated or directed by
,munists or by the
rights groups.
Corn-
civil
’ That is What 1s known in the
academic world as a "value
true. His merely one that hap-
pens to appeal to the person
who puts in forward. The so-
called enQ • poverty program
means. * ......
and lugged away other wop!©*
properties, overturned vehicles
and threw bricks on the defend-
ers of foe public, ordeh. '
“Tfis commonly,asserted that
toe so-called revolution of rising
expectations makes relative pov-
erty a problem that absolute
poverty never was. There may
■be somi
zm b
some truth here. But If so
super-sleuths of the FBI.
The FBI has defended itself
reported
amstSnid -
properties.
Chief.Mann’s
thaLt his biggest
the force who
City
tropical hi
manager is
plains. His,
Mr. Hoover's
that the riots,
lives,MkiillilP
were prima/fly the result of ma-
terial causes. To be sure, Mr.
Hoover pointed out, there were
| here add there individual agita-
. tors/whose ties to the Commu-
' ' Party or to the black ran
in thd publre ear, the
* *ed in re cent
isident Lyndons.
program .instigated in re cent
over the years by reminding HI
critics that K is exahisively a
Jonal^g matter of pub-
mdnths
Johnson.
It is riot a program that was
conceived by John F. Kennedy,
or Dwight Eisenhower, or Har-
ry Truman. Not, one hastens to
suppose, because these gentle-,
men were- any less aware of
poverty', or any less sympathetic
fact-finding agency, not an ag-,
-V that draw* social or po-
cyclones,
gthty wwiny hwra orgaBjang fhe
? eveJVHilda^alfed0o^Saytown^"8
■ m Baytown Civil Defense unit had put together
[all og" its forces and was ready for the onslaught.
■ too were proud they had only to make a dry
The director of the Baytown group was out (if
I ■: &«*■» the dvil defense workers went
bwit their job indicated it is no one-man show but a
real organization of dedicated people* .
r, , r?*8? thVl1? <*» * ^ven to the Harris
CouJUy Chapter of the America^ Red Cross as. well
emergencyjmijg
ECLIPSE?
Letters To The Editor
Mr, Fred Hartman
C3r» The Baytown Sun
Baytow'ii, Texas
Dew Mr. Hartman,
Through various media of pub-
lic communication “Extremism
After the Jews had been de-
livered from fog Egyptian bond-
age arid made their jourhey in-
■get *liu iliouc UlCil JVUXlir^ Mir
v -to-the land of Canaan the prin-
-dpi* of extremism was not laid
make hifflf free from'sin — to
retain Ms spiritual liberty and
enjoy^4^mat Mss. in heaven
over. ,
don't, think, that the prin-
aside. The stray ofthe Jews is .d§ Extremismfo The Defense
who urged the riot-
ers on.
. - But there is no evidence, said
opportunized on them — saw
them, moved in, and dfid their
b«*t to make them as extensive
and as bloody as possible. The
headlines, accordingly, pro-
< claimed the Communists and the
Negro idealogues as blameless.
There can- be * no question
about Mr Hoover’s probity in
the, handling of facts. But Mr,
-Hoover cannot be expected to
pass official .'judgment on the
. effects upon foe public morale
’ of the, strident exhortation of re*
cent years to anarchic resent-
tedu SwRUmBSp ;
ty is best dealt with by gran-
diose federal programs;
To {iut forward a casual rela-
■-emgR^L,______
litieaicoricjusions from the work
it engages in. It is under the
circumstances disturbing to
read In the current report what
amounts to the FBI’s endorse-
ment of a controversial arifo
poverty program. - -
Disturbing because it suggests
a move towards foe politicaliza-
tion of the FBI by the Execu- -
live Brandt. \
j. Klgar Baover is a hereto
most Americans, including my.
- ->
,V-
------jiui tuinuiu a vactual, icia- liltov niirouvaiffl, ntviuwii§ /
tion between poverty and the ex- -self, bri*ause he has over the
plosions that took place in the years, resisted any effort to core
United Sta‘ - “ ---- — - ---------- * *’----
H ■
WW: * :.%*■
a bad bearing during UtiIi^PS' whljCh always take
£S55sSS£Ss5^
wh®J0,t 10 Jmuch In the 1961 storm
were frightened asi they read and heard weather re-
s,ri
Vice." has been viewed with,
contempt b it not true foot Ib'H
ass-- **a r--
Texas Btidhg Down 17 Per Cent
AUSTIN (API - Texas con-
■ wm JBS.T million lart nwnth!
■ com from July.
»d to
pw cent tty first eight, months
trir.-
such philosophy originate with
any of his contemporaries, when .
President Kennedy authorised.
the Cuban blockade, extremism
fo detente at liberty wai tn
practice but was not originated.
An American atateamaa for the.
name of Patrick Henry prac-
ticed such philosophy as irgU-
eated to fo* waif known pfarase
"Give me liberty or grim me
deafo.” Even though Henry,
Kennedy and others of Amer-
ica have both: advocated and
ipraeticed this principle, such did
lUverance. Fbvtus Joaephus, in /It halbeen practlMhfer^hMm-
his work on the history of the and* of years both with divine
sanction ana by-Gad himself.
abuses can no doubt spring
forth, 1 can’t conscientiously
ments. Mre Horiver 4M «H at-
tempr an inquiry into Whether
foe OommuiiHi end fot rivfl
lates during this sum-
mer,4s -tos-dally with premises
that are alien to the general line
of thought of the Director of
Federal Bureau of Investiga-,
tion., “ ;
There are nations in the world
Infinitely poorer than the seam-
iest sections of Rpchester and
Harlem and Philadelphia, where
pebple have hot recently riot-,
ed : for instance, Bombay . There
are areas in the world resplend-
ent in wealth where ihe masses
have recently rioted: for fo-'.
quieting. One recalls that
by Kennedy, as Atto
efttl — and as such
official in charge ofot
dispatched FBI ai
and three o’clock it
ing, to knock on /fhe doors of
officials of the steel companies
in 1562 when JFK declared war
oft- steel —
stance. Tokyo.
Riots are, as a general rule,
an expression of foe chronic di*-
tel — m
in intimidation,
musrhop
declared war
obvious venture
We musy hope foat future .at*
tempts to conscript the FBI a*
... i' ..
few ex-
tion ra a few
i Jewisbltistory will
to surialn this t ‘
a this point
could be
A cemsideratkm of
amples from
be sufficient to s
even though many
*lven- ' /■"
What coulq be more extrema
than a shepherd boywlthslingj
stocks RoinK
conclude that Extremism In De-
fense of Liberty is a vice.
Sincerely,
H. L. Brace
209 South Street
• ■ Baytown ,
community to believe in the es-
sential rightness of taking the
law info their own hands and
simply smashing up the Joint, as
a way of manifesting their gen-
eral dissatisfaction with life.
» is fo the context of this
. failure of Mr, Hoover foat ont
read? with surprise bis alto-
Wl Vt tlW VIH AIIV W
content of die somI, *‘man»fe»i^ and one base?* irme’s hc^es that
tion of everymaiTs Talent row- ' iffoy will be on a Mgh regard fof
dylsm. Riots, are uncorrelated the integrity of John Edgar
fo material poverty.
integrity of
, Hoover.
•was *128.7 million
I (fown 17 per rem
JUJ.T million, down 19 per cent
!M«iedfo5.7 ^llSdi^SJre
deonw7pre
cent; and mm residential con-1
; Krortlon ro down 32 per cenl
-• There are ffodfogi cd fog Uab
(While nrawrsidentUl budding
over lest yea#r.
The August residential con-
•traction index level was- the
lowest this year except for May.
and foe-Revtew concluded that
“AuguSt provided more evi-
dence foat foe pace of residen-
tial building, particularly In the
multiple-family category, hat
■Mat tMk yew In Texas; as
and stoifos going against a ma-
ture giant who had been a man|
of war from hit youth. The story
of .David and Goliath has lieen
told to bur children and all know I
it. The youthful David was one
extreme of the scene. The ma-
Sporadically--
Newspaper Critics
Dally Crossword Puzzle!
---KINS FEATURE-
1 Wound
mark
iffiSL
ms*
tice in ancient Egypt.
As a result of 75 migrate*1
coming into Egypt from the,
northeast, a vast mtdMals of
their progeny had formed in
the liberty at Israel. The story
of David and Goliath is the
Story of extremism in defense
•of liberty.■
Don't Understand
/ 34. Top**
DOWN
1. Drudge
2, Artificial
waterway
I. Portion of
a curved
-Jimi.
4. Acheer,
5. Stupid
•.Permit*
7. Pa.it
Egypt. Out of fear of, the multi-
hide and in order to_exp«dite
^>%Men^puUUwd4to^h* ** hM ,tao *lowe<?, over ,h#
their economy, the Egyptian*
made slaves of these foreigners
who had grown up in their
midst, arid caused (hem fo serVe
For fot yaw, conftructfon fo
J dentil! constivction it down 4
* - ■ -
central cities of the «
metropolitan areas authorised
Si wfonalad SO mUHoo J**»
than in July.
with rifeor and o|>prcssion. The
task was hurdensome and hard
but slavery persisted with rake
executed without-rnercy. Jf ever
xwp existed who wefoB
/
Try and Stop Me
----By BENNETT CERF
£
A LMOST EVERY Important offltial in television circles haa
a very definite opWoB on fhs ligww value—or worth*
leones s—of ratings. The troubla is foat practical^ none of
foe
Allen once
ally he
The late Fred,
rawed caustically
knew of one show foat
actually registered, a
. , MnfUS rating. “Not only
does fiobody watch tt,”
rasped Mr. Alien; “but
there’s one fellow in Tuc-.
eon who keeps knockir.g
' -.....—
cease to New Tort for care-
prttattaTaf'ui
rare of * Mangy Lotst." k*
a group existed who were in
need of physical liberation these
' slaves were that group. Their
male children were befog put
to death. Men aatUwomen were 1 nc s
being oppressed with unbearable conveye
demands bring made at them. is in api
While liberty was persued In the defense
emancipation of these Hebrew
slaves, extremism was not
avoided.
As a liberator and deliverer
of the, Hebrews in ■
lwndage, Moses was
Through
and mult
Hebrews
Egyptian
raised up.
practical, but hurtful reaaR. In
ipite of the *xtremisnv'’empk»y.
If Shadrach, Meshach and
Abednego, the three Hebrew
children, had not practiced ex«
tremism in defenae of liberty
fosy would Mt.htfe'been cast
into foe furnace of fire. How-
ever. they being extremist, and
appreciative of the one God and
the liberty to serve him exclu-
sively, would receive the ex-
treme persecution of the fiery
furnace rather than surrender
the liberty to serve .one God e*»
clusively. ■
I The story of., Jesus Christ a*
I conveyed in the New Testament
Is in application of extremism fo
■ of Liberty. To what
did God go to bring
about and sustain salvation for
ittjuk? * ynj jj| spiritual
bondage and-in need of a Hb-
erutor. Man .could not save
himself. No man could produce
spiritual salvation lor him. The-
story of the dapfos to which
God went in order to save man
are expressed fo these worts: |
• God so 1
' By AL MEUNGEK
In? the unlikely event that
tom* college department of
tjburfiaiism calls on me some
. #
day to help arrange a curricuL.
um of study, I
am prepared to
add a brand new course.
It will not be limited to stu-
dents of journalism but will be
.offered to all departments as a
basic required course lijte phy-
sical training and freshman
English.
It will be on how to under-
stand r newspaper.
All my life I hove been as-
saulted by otherwise amiable
ladies and gentlemen who will
often introduce their remarks
with foe casual,. "Of eotine, you /
can’t expect any thing you read
,in the newspaper to., be the
*Hiaaa alwooea *
believe
ao kwed foe usortL
and, the apparent
ch It wrought, resu
hcorufog, when God.
^■cruelty
results were
home destroying foe first born.
that ha gave his only begotten
■font mbhbhMhhM
“ “ !.On“?
whosoever believe th
every
home destroying the first
As « result: foe Jews
Cpaal
Son, tl
fo him
hays everlasting life
If) Th* extreme love that God
had for man caused him to go
foe depths of giving his son in
■ order to deli
order to deliver man and thus „Jinal
Tnese sincere citizens
■ this earttesfo. They,
couldn’t be more wrong.
In a good many years of writ-
ing for newspaper I have never
knowingly written a word that
I did not think was foe trulh
and. so far as I know, none of
foe numerous colleagues with
whoqt I have stared a common
avetslen to foe tow pey of
Mwsptpering. have either. A
tarithy respect tor the truth Is
th*,ciirdmal principal fograinsd
in every newspn j -er tyro, it em
' ■) from frrshmanhood to the
__:___
nours oi inr n<janeM eat-
torisl writer. It Is lundamenul
to the bedrock basic reason for
reporting news. /
The trouble with the readers
who don’t«believe it is that
they do not know how to read
analytically. /
When a public figure issues a
faise statement and is quoted
accurately, foe story is true,
Candidate X did say that black
is white. The newspaper didn't
say so.
A couple of excellent cases to
point are current. As' this is
being written, popular interest
u largely centered on two of
America's most fascinating top-
cior —politics and bxitball.
Political polls are consistently
/ being quoted to the effect that
Democratic Candidate. Lyndon
Johnson will win foe Nov. 5
election by top heavy major-
ities. All such polls, being of
intense interest to foe public,
are quoted.. .
■ But riotg foat nowhere to fo*
bird
U-Boat of
burden
IS. Continent;
abbr.
IT. Becomes
softer, aa
with age -
M. Little gtri
II. Night bird ’
■.Fencing
sword-
23. Heathen
IS. An alloy
r. In bed
2S. Distress
caU
to. Wharf
Inhabitant
SO A social aet
K Equal
Dear Helene
I’ve known sc
"Dorm Dames"
ty tame sororit;
you gre at collet
ely'on how yoi
up at home. 17
- -wild” are
so tightly held,
they have to ’
anyway, break
they’ve had too
and carry it aira
the. ifoiversity.
Hie majority by
spite; of what boi
*ay. But they «
foe headlines tl
Ills a good fo
. dents don’t have
outside reading
start believing
panda about how
lyt are. Why dot
er,give a TRUE
kg* life? 0014
MMI
district
24. DU-
concert*
25. ObUin
9. Stuff 24. Botany:
11. Rents under abbr.
contract 28. Female pig
15, Shoe- 20. Struggles
, maker’s with ,
tool . 31. German
18. Burden river
19. Possese 32. Particle*
-Dear. Junior;
.ai URBIr i-
.Perhaps b<
. , USI imp, u,
not be spicy enm
writing world is
the expose, the ;
sationai and .stc
gpod die young
pet past a junto)
I think th* pern
due for a revei
cause there's no
ther out for it
to. In What
IT. Cud-
newspaper doe* the newspnj^r
itself says '
says that one or other of
will win other
these attributed
aotattos. Jt Is
than to one of
polls or opinion
-true tharifus h
is being sud
en- If
quoted That’* afl foe
paper ta
comes up
that Ba^y Goldwater is going
M quoted
to wtn, that, top. will.be .
Tv* got a reservation at
to Bernard Gets, hls ;
th* Plaza fo the sarr.« r;:J.e
time 2 era* tbera, I caught* rat to my room. I think tt waa th*
isaaagir. lot IU tat you know when I tee you.' •
’ ■ When ha antred to New Tort, Groucho mat to the races at
• * Aqueduct ca a vary rainy afternoon. He promptly tat oa t 71
to l foot, ryplitotog. 1 hear Ota mare to a goad maddw wta
• am tm foddar> (PA. Tha mare fltortad Mat). .
(Tljf tiaiitmira "i?nit
! Robert K. <
*••••*•••••••••#•#•»••**• *•• x>
I ••••eteeMfet »**•«■
l*tHe*t*tt***«(|*i«****
IMBMI «t*«S4|**M*eM*****(H
........ QrtuMkm Director
a: -.trt:s;n., r r pap.t>!1 n :
..........."VKVr""..;-..
>*••••• • • era • • • • ***** •*«••••• •
III • ••••**•«•••••• * *. /■ *
rat the l
■v.~^
-s
- K
TODAY'S GRAB BAG
ly IU7H RAMSfY
Canfro/ Pntt Writer
TM AMSWH, QUI CXI
L During what war waa th*
KrapJotgeneon rig# used If 1
American troop*?
% What is um Mini Mtaa-
Irig of "ptaca-naTT
i What la a taaavarstof
4. What waa tha relattonahlp
krawvew Omrfw’y ad FafiaA -
Kaiser Wilhelm XI of Oermaay
and Char Nlchota* 21 of Rue
ata?
I. In what hook do ’The Lori
Dauphin'* and "Tha Duka of
WOT or fami-oumi thi mams r uteiad tagA tha gray bufld-
taga took more tmpoemg than
they actually are. Only six or
seven stories Ugh. they appear
twice that, for each floor has
a double row of windows and
t*e fr.Ms.ve «•»:•* r «e abruptly
from * flat wadi, tad, to (top*
alighUy tart dm
ttons.
n HAMfNtO TOO AY
O* tots day ha 1918, th* AJ-
Today-s spot off
What and where to this ^at
effame?
«tty,
foldings wen built and
id over the aapturies
■a against Urn attacks
irabarg Line
World War 11
BORN TODAY
dire At- i
Despite the facts that there
are no ml tfreeU to the city,
“ its
IT’S BHN SAID
MetMng m lift u M »rifle-
rating s« ft to atot at wtfloaf
giren it sq almost ompowvring Ward week and
odor, it haa for sen tunes been ttoe af a vaiqrd
toT* of i
MOW^ YOU MAXI otm
^LTta S p a a i 11-American
:
climate, wilt, prob-
foan its stare of
ably gat
front page attention
But the itowspaperls-Nof sap
tag who trill m
tad on this week's, football
HEAR J
WHITE, OC
St. Hart’s I
DO YOU
VITAMIN
STILL FEEL
mwmwu
Know Your Bridge
ty I. JAY DECKER
■ yea AH
feel tired, your t
due to kuB-pocr l
alont caa’t build
Mood. But Gcanc
just two Geanot
i thlc«poonS Of li
cuotai»7 vitamin!
iron in Mb. of a
In only out da;
n in your blood*
to cany ttrtngth
every prat of yot
»ith your doctor
bred I
take i
jiroager/art I
moacy hack from
•Due to
The polls are aaytog ao. And
toOfcw you.
;But it Lvrxtou or fo* Long-
hpesie rel dall|gndr I’ty anre
finger of acorn* at me. "
. ‘That show*, you.’’ he will
tear. ”taw much pm caa be-
lieve the oenspapeis. - -
Wait debtor.
North-South vtdnerabl*.
•7rr~s%||jfji —
r, !E
4A«>
“““ EAST
General Gruenther is not aa
WeU known to th* pubUc ia a
moro than hold hto-awn to at*
SCARBORi
DRt G f»
be once piaysd.
Th* General was 8
found himaeif to ata
AQJIOI ,. A17112
9 A J10 4 f 9171
IAJ104
411
4UL-
perfbefor, he prstudsd to t
w contract.
H* won the sped* With tha
Max
♦ a
gAQJ107C4
49”
two. If West had gone up wit*
th* ace, South would tare had
twolre easy trick*, but Wert
r^y*d low, aad th* quaes was
the trick.
TB*
Thieves Uft Boxcar
To Get Axle Bearings
«»*- aK.2z-.r3
Opening toad — queen af
■ftoaarilH
j After entering dummy with a
trump, he ruffed dummy * ;«t
faced with two club
alt with romf
Mrsa;
......misi:ss»se
/mer
S Hi
,. •• - - .1
(
:
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 9, Ed. 1 Monday, October 5, 1964, newspaper, October 5, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057649/m1/4/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.