The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 36, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 2, 1966 Page: 4 of 18
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- T
1.0 Editor
... _ .... ,
October 2. 1966
• -/r-
.V
^ ~7. -■ I Two More Naj
itorialS. And Feature$ jW >Var Criminals
Gain Freedom
- H
m
United Fund Time
Again In Baytown
ye^raTToU by in a lurry, dbn’t end tlie committee cut h
‘1 The ye
they?.
-• Here we are in Baytown .
United Fund, campaign time.
For over 30 years Baytown and East
Harris County have beerf involved in
annual campaigns to raise funds for
charitable and social agencies. The '
responsibility has grown from year to
year as, has the community, , *
* Now Baytown has a fine organiza-
tion that stages an annual drive for
funds out- which spends every day of
® the year in supervising the administer-
ing of these funds after they have been
raised and allocated.
Baytown enjoys, a most enviable
role in that thii community can proud-
ly say thaHt has never failed'to reach
its quota. One year some factors were
not given genous enough consideration,
^ and we were late getting there, but we
{ The quota was set-aftir your friends
in this commuhity, sitting as a budget
committee, studied long and hard at
, requests that came beforeJx.' In the
nd the committee cut here and sliced
there and came up with a figure of >
$205,029,00. . And that represents the
amount bf dollars we must have.
We have a fine organization staging
the drive this y
won’t be any ”
than it has u'
r. Going over the. top
lore difficult this year
mr in years gone by --{t
you dp your part. You personally are
the key to the success of the United
Fund drive, -- .....sprawling-1
-JTKat goes' for men, women and chil- ’ of televifio;
dren, . professional people, technicians, - -
scientists, annuitant^4ahoreifs, crafts-
men, salesmen, et al andet al. The suc-
cess of Baytown and East,Harris Coun-
ty’s fund drive this'Year is up to you, ;.
The Baytowp $un assqr&s leaders of
the drive that this community will hit
the lick log again. It has never failed.
It won't in 1966. ~ -/. \
Tftatdaesn’t mean everybody can re-
lax arid that, we will get to the quota
with no big effort. No sir. But it does
BERLIN (AP) - Two more of
the Nuernberg trial war crlmi-
, nals go free at midnight tonight,
_ leaving Rudolf Hess the only
. Nazi prisoner in West ‘Berlin's
Spandiu Prison.
• • Baldur Von Schirach,’ the first
leader, of the Hitler youth move-
ment and later the Nazi gauleit- •
v“ ---- -ompletes i 1
>r complicity
50,000 Austr;
Jews and providing slave labor
for the German war effort.
Albert Speer, a brilliant archi-
tect who ran the Third Reich’s
armament industry, has served
the same term for using slave
labor an<f prisoners of war in
the Nazi production machine^.
As theyi walk out of the'-”'
isen -into- the glare -
and camera lights,
Hess, Hitler’s onetime deputy
fuehrer./will become the only
inmate of the fortress-like pris-»
on built by the Prussians to hold
more than 600. i
iss, 72, is serving a life term
inciting and carrying out
ssive war and plotting
peace. The British
mean that if we push ourselves and
others and do what we should do, there
won’t be anything but success at the, ’
end. ,,, • .
Letters To The Editor
(EDITOR'S note : Many -donesia, before It became Com-
times cause and effect are muhist controlled,
realized in a flash of jiostal- I,am just returning from Viet
gla. Patriotism, character and Nam after nine days of dis-
are revealed in the charging cargo,, which is - ac-
llowing letter from George complished by army personnel,
Gordy, chief engineer on the who work 12 hours a day for 10
SS Battle Creek Victory, for-_____days with one day off.
.......mrr Baytoniaa. The morale is high consider-
3fessr a
Elementary School and much
I Walked back to the stern of
the Battle Creek Victory and
looked at white flickering stars
on a. blue background. For the
first time in many years my
eyes became misty as a proud
feeling came over me. It was
then-my thoughts Went; back to
5*. j ***'- «*.uo*i,
arid ’ Americans have
asked the Soviets to agree to his
transfer to a smaller jail, but
the Soviets haye shown no sign
of agreeing. In one of the last
remnants of four-bower oecupa-
i tioii cooperation, the four World
War II allies run Spandau at a
' cost of HOODOO annually to the
West German government. -
Von Schirach, j59, lost the
sight of one eye in prison and
was divorced by his wife in 1950.
He is expected
Munich and write
vrr
^ "• • ........
•
HBESE
TOE
xaTT
——-
Always Easy
To Bid Badly
By Oswald & lame* Jacoby
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Some bridge players pride
themselves on the soundness,
of their opening bids. We
have no quarrel with*stbi«<jpol-
icy as long as they (don’t feel,
once they pass with one of
those hands that most either'
players open, that they have Z.
been given a special license
to make horrible overcalls.
Most players would open
the South hand withione dia-
mond. The hand Includes 12
high card points, a very good
five-card suit and a couple of
tens. This South elected to
^ass and if he could just have
stayed out of the bidding
from then ohr East aqd West
were well bn their way to -
trouble. Even lf they had
stopped at one no-trump they
were due for a 200-point pen-
alty and they might have
worked their way a lot .
.higher.
South must have thought1
“Why-should they be penal-
ized when we can get set our-
selves?” He, .bid two dia-
monds. • ! ■ \
West wasn’t sure what to
do but he decided to double.
No one had anywhere to/go'
although when the hand was ;*
.to live near
his memoirs./
of his time was spent playing
football and baseball, accord-
ing to the season, during his
years at Robert E. Lee High
School, according to his broth-
er, 3. L. Gordy of 119 Bowie.
His annual vacation is spent
in Baytown visiting friends
and reminiscing with his
mother, Mrs. Blanche Boehme,
1300 Pine.)
Editor, The Sun
Dear Sir:
I’m writing to you front the
SS Battle Creek Victory at sea,
coming directly fromViet Nani.
We will arrive in Hawaii to
take on water, thence through
the Panama Canal to one of the
Gulf ports. Houston I hope.
In the following paragraphs !
mentioned a few things which
might t)b of interest to Baytown
people.'
I have graduated from sev-
eral marine engineering train-
ing and upgrading schools
throughout the country, includ-
ing St. Potcreburos , Fla; -Port
Arthur, Tex.; Sheepshead Bay,
Long Island, etc.
During my 17 years of credit-
A-time with, the NationaL Ma-
rine Engineers Beheficial Asso-
ciation, I have sensed on vari-
ous ships during World W/mJT
in all theaters: North and South
Pacific, North and South Atlan-
tic, Mediterranean, Red Sea,
Ihdian Ocean, Bay* Of Biscay,’..
Milliney Bay and others. tssA*
I was in Cuba befbre Castro
took over; in Korea; ifl Can-
dler, India, when Pakistan and
India began fighting, and I
was on one of the last Ameri-
can shipjs to leaye Djakarta, In-
constant turbulence in the air
coming from many different
kinds of aircraft (all ours, thank
goodness), the enemy is being
bombed constantly, iut_ mostly '
at night.
The men I talked with were
mostly young and it is their
first time away from home.
They are quickly adapting to
this environment.
ing barefoot on, cool grass in
front of the Baytown Elemen-
tary School with the other chil-
dren. . - ' ' . ,
1 could almost hear young
voices making a pledge of al-
legiance to the old flag with
not so many flickering stars on.
the blue background. I now
know why it was compulsory
and should continue to be so,
Speer, 61, has been described
as a model prisoner.
He will live wifi his wife in
Heidelberg and plans to resume
■ his career in I architecture,
specializing ip.hoiise design, his
lawyer said. /
.The-two men sp^nt 7,305 days
in prison following the collapse-
of Hitler’s.Sefch- ,....... " Bv DREW PEARSON-
Twen^-two top K5TIe«fia
were tned _.n 1916,. by the Inter- ^ ^ ^ offjce he gave
the gate to personable Najeeb
Halaby as Federal Aviation Ad*,
ministrator, Todaythe-* P$si-.
Washington Merry-Go-Round--
Pan Am Proves To
Best Lobbyist Of All
Desegregation ‘Ordeal’
Traced By Southerner
editors, clergy, businessmen, or-
ganized whites and. Negro pro-
tests. ’ ■- . r !
A 1th o u g h advocating no
causes, the book analytically re-
ports the foies played by each
of the segments in the social
revolution in America.
The5 emergence is a |tory of
leadership and the absence of
it. It also records the kindness,
cruelty, heroism, cowardice and
"THE ORDEAL of Desegrega-
tion” by Reed Sarratt. 374
PP-, New York, Harper *
Row, Publishers, $7.50.
By MARY H. BROWN
“Separate educational facili -
ties are inherently unequal” de-
clared the Supreme Court which
led to the changing of the law
of the land. But this declaration
did not change the thinking and
feelings of vast numbers of ——~v.
Southerners. Reed Sarratt- in ■*-’ emotion -rubbed raw by events
"The Ordeal of Desegregation" the near past,
• traces -the reactions to that de- More than anything else, this
! cision of people of every station account makes clear why school
and walk of life ' desegregation has progressed so
■ The boi^T^t journalisfio acr - slowly *,despite the Supreme
(count of desegregation in public C'ourt ruling. Attention is also
education during the decade be- given to the likelihood of a con-
tween the Supreme Court deci- tinuing slow speed in the future,
sion and the passage of the Sarratt is a Southern pews-
Civil Rights Act of 1964, Focus-----paperman and therefore speaks
is on the actions and words of from close contact with that
~ the people directly and sig'nifi- about whieh he writesr- Amply
cantly involved. \ documented and lucidly written,
Sarratt divides Southern life **’...... " ‘ '
national War Crimes Tribunal
at .Nuernberg. Twelve were sen-
tenced to death/but onLv 10 died
On the gallows. Hfemann Goer-
ig committed; suicide and
Martin. Bormann has never been
found. Seven were sent to Span-
dau and three were acquitted.
'Passers-By' On Hand
At Burglaiy Scene
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M: CAP)
-- Police answering a burglary
call to a business establishment
found two men who said they :
were passers-by Who called offi-
cers after hearing the burglary. _
alarm.
dent has on his desk an order
which will help Halaby earn his
$90,000 salary from Pan Ameri-
can Airways, for which he went
to work after leavi ng the gov-
ernment.
The incident illustrates the
manner in which Pan Am has'
earned the- title not merely of
the "world’s most experienced
aiifltae,” but also "the world’s
mist experienced lobbyist.”
Some of the top officials fo
government, upon leaving gov-
ernment office, end up working
iqlr Pan Am. This includes' bem-
crats as well as Republicans.;
Secretary of' Commerce, and
“ MAtob .Eisenhower Jr., nephew
of the Tormer~Pf.andyiili
however, had not held public of-
fice,
One of the latest to leave of-
fice is Mike Feldman, able
White House - counsel for JFK
and LBJ. While in the White
House, Mike had reversed a
CAB ruling against permitting
Pan Am to pick up passengers
at Chicago and intermediate
points in crossing the U.S.Ao
then continue overseas.
The CAB had ruled against
this because* it-would, increase
the dollar outflow and the bal-
ance of payments. But Feldman,
While.in the White House, re-
versed the CAB.
■dent. He went on to the White
House.
- •-JDR iJr. .went on to make
plans to^m?'tora=fem»i8fefif,
New York," thinking that he
would have the gratitude of the
Kennedy clan and its support
fop the Democratic nomination.
But six years later, when FDR
Jr. turned to Bobby Kennedy,
then senator from New York, to
cash Jn on his political chips,
Bobby reneged^———
Bobby and FDR Jr.,
^ - sc-y
NORTH ‘ 1
AK98 3 -
If Q 10 8 3
- ■ A7 ■ •- - -
, AQ8 5 4
WEST ' -EAST... .
A A A J 7 6 5 .2 ,,
VAKJ5 V 7 2
♦ 986 5 ♦ J4,2
* A 97 6 A K 10 2
SOUTH <D).: _
A Q 10 4- 7
♦ A K Q 10 3
“• a j 3 - *. . -
Both vulnerable 3
West North East South
Pass
I* Pass 1 A 2A
Dble Pass Pass Pass
“ "TpBBtr
<1
over'l East anf /West- having .1-;
marked 800 points onto their ’
side of the ledger, North did’
express some ideas on where
South might go.
The defense was not bril-
Mant but it was adequate
West opened the king of
had an
unpleasant session over this. b
Roosevelt reminded the inheritor hearts. East started an echo
to JFK’s mantle that he owed a_ his seven soTkestcashed
political debt. Bobby replied the aces of hearts ana spades.
sicl
I
kil
F
>ii
th|
dt
•/ "1
mT
m
<ii|
tiif
til
fd
w|
af
. tri
d
t|
that the Kennedys had paid the
debt by appointing FDR, Jr. to
the Commerce Department.
•' ocrats as well as Republicans.
Officers arrested Donald - Pan Am lias been completely bi-
Deats.^ 31, and Carlos G. Perez, partisan. Among .its ex-officials
have been thg late Louis John-
son, former Secretary of De-
fense;' Robert Lewis, former
Under Secretary of the Air
;£££££* as
rarily by Pan American Air- of the United States was equiva-
26, both of Albuquerque,
Wednesday night and charged
them with aggravated burglary.
Police said the establish-
-ment’s alarm can be heard only
at the alarm company’s central
office.
[force; Tom Dewey, former
SOP candidate for President;-.
ftobert Murray, l former Under
into 13 categories and spends a
chapter developing the past 10
years of each: governors, legis-
lators, presidents; schoolmen,
colleges, police, lawyers, judges,
YOUR DENTAL HEALTH
If Tongue Burns, Poor r, ,
Bite May Be Responsible
By WILLIAM LAWRENCE; D.D.S.
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
DEAR DR. L A W R E N C E: Treatment consists of re-
For over six months Ijhaye plactRg Mssjng teeth and re-
'/: .3 "■ '3 ~
tongue.
away, but when I’m nervous
it gets worse. I smoke a pack
of Cigarettes a day, but I
stopped smoking for seven
- whole days and didn’t get any
relief.
A burning sensation on side
of tongue is considered by
many doctors to be a hfturo
complicated and lengthy, suf-
ferers are usually first treat-
ed for relief of pain. For
instance, it helps to limit diet
to soft foods for a few days;-!
apply hot, )vet compresses to
side of face over-joint afid
his book should provide a basis
for self - examination of our
times and of the enlightenment
of future ones.
Assistant Sales Boss
Js Named By Ui. Steel
HOUSTON (Sp) - Albert'E.
Jones has been appointed U S.
Steel's assistant manager of
sales in the Houston district, it
was announced Saturday by M.
W. Phair, district sales man-
ager!
Jones comes to Houston from
Pittsburgh, where he has been
assistant manager — lipe pipe
products for United States Steel
since 1962. He entered the em-
ploy of the corporation in 1950
as a salesman iq Chicago. A
native of Old Forge, Pa., Jones
attended Cornell University, re-
ceiving the jBachelor of Science
and Master of Business Admin-
istrate
Si?? Sagtotmt &utt
...............-••L-jj— Editor and Publisher
M-WkrfejMe'uv...-rmtrteifmrvtsr; General Manager
John Wadley .........>..................... Business Manager
Preston Pendergrass ............................ Managing Editor
\ ah Mae Jackson -..........J..,. Assistant To The Publisher
Paul Pitman ........................ Assistant To The Publisher
Ann B. Pritchett —........................ Office Manager
ADVERTISED DEPARTMENT
-_John Wadley ...........y................... Manager
PauTPutman .........;...;//rr.r...r:rr..;■;:.. Retail Manager'
Come Laughlin .............,..L............. National Manager
Entei-ed as second class matter at the Baytown, Texas, <77521 Post
Office under the Act of Cougress of March 3, 1879.
Published afternoons, Monday through Friday,
and Sundays by The Baytown Sun., Inc.,
at 1301 Memorial Drive in Baytown, Texas.
—P. O; Box 90, Baytown 77520 • —- -
Subscription Rates
Cr's?-"By Carrier $1.75 Month, $21.00 Per Year
-3-" V .... ’ Single Copy Price 10c
Mall ratea on request -
Represented Nationally By
Texas Newspaper Representatives, Ine. .
MEMBER Or THE ASSOCIATED PRESS .
T»it A»oelat<4 Ptm» Is wituied sxeluslvsly to th« iWfortr-publlcitlon of
any news dlspatcKss <r«itlted tff It of not othenrtw orwBtM In this mp-r and
local n«w* of apontancoua orlfln publlahed bait. Rights of rcpubllcation of
all othor nuttar twrf art also rcatrvtd.
______..............
Try Your Word Power
-NEA FEATURE
Time for Music
Anawtr to Previdtli punla
ACROSS 5 Dismounted
1 Kind of concert 6 Venerate
4 "Ne’er more to 7 Gadget for
lAlTfHlEl
ms
golfers
9 Look sullen
9 Its capital la
take aspirin
aches. „ 1
relief of
r'
135i.ind one or ^c
‘ ** * caused of burning tongue. A
fype of anemia is thought to
be involved sometimes, and
vitamin deficiency has also
been put forward as a cause.
Some doctors think it’s pure
“nerves". One recently told
m n n nmil/in't A«/l aHoiltiaiM
R B S
a group of symptoms known
as Costen’s Syndrome, or
hinge joint dysfunction.
The hinge joint of the jaw
seems to be tne focal point of
patients' complaints which in-
clude pain and tenderness
over the joint, pain in and'
around, the ear and side of
head, catarrhal deafness,
dizziness, snapping noise dur-
ing jaw movement, deviation
By WALTER C. PARKES
At least tight money will
keep ipjne, folks - from loose
4 "Ne’er more to
8 "Swing —>
sweet chtriot" 9IU capil
11 Exist Muscat
12 Nautical term io Routes
^ Persian poet 14 Royal Society
!S£M*n
.... ^Commend
me he couldn’t find anything
wrong with a patiept who-had
these complaints. As an ex-
periment, his told the patient
that in his judgment the
cause was due to vitamin de-j .-j
ficiency. After taking vitamins -
spending. r /
—A---g-----e^gt >, <•.•! Q' M ■ ------^----■ tgag
Thi most frightened man , l#
in the world isn’t in Viet
Nam combat, /He’s the guy Jx
, 3«*wrgars5 "ss
uSHH' 1 gSt
43 Within, (comb.
44 Japanese
outciatr
Nam combat, ,m » .
who has just lost a teal
full of credit1 cards,
- 0 /■«/• • .
SB
itissSPSSSSi ss^aisafe - mtU^
K ■ . A
.asBfcr*"; 3r^,%s4, <
, Its believed that these ionger period Of continued „ , i
of the hinse joint because of permit mstallf
"enure
"Sweetheart of
Sigma —•"
30 Play, aa a flute
32 "Now-, now
Prancer.
34 Eptertaini*
35 Dinner couhe
30 Bandleader I
Brown
37 Heavenly bods
39 Assists
day!..38 High hofnea • 40 Otherwise
•20Trials l 40 Turn inside out 47 Comfort;
Y7 Wintry holiday 41 Encounters 48 Genuine
, 28 Mind , 42 Narrow inlet SO To and -
..of the hinge joint because of
early and continued loss of
molar teeth, or poor ‘‘bite’7
of either the natural or false
teeth. These conditions put
eccentric pressures on the
joint which eventually break*
down.
‘ ~*;
are soaring so
mgn supermarkets may soon
permit installment buying
fitow ml your qutiliom about • > .* !•
dental baalth to Dr. Lawrence to car* *' Gals’ bathing tuitt have
af tMi par*t. WUh fe etimi answer been getting skimpier
each tetter paruaall,, tetters of gw- " War. It isn’t even
*
»,. kf; A- ;v'
|A
l
■-JV-
&
■j-
y\
summer
40 Essential bein
41 Amiai (prefls)
42 Female ru9
45 penetrato anew
(49 Cross-file
51 Miss West
HHebeow moofli Iw
53 Pause In mwC
fa***
55 Hops'kiln
50 Glucides
57 Selection (ab.)
DOWN.
1 Top of the bud 5J"
2 Moulhward ^
3 Miserly
4"—Lore
Kmr"
;”f;r
T~
J
r
j
8
it
12
13
14
16
lY
■j
M
.............. T
0
IT
4
II
M
II
IT
■> 7.6:
"Jeeb” Halaby was one Of the
most efficient aeronautics ad-
mnistrators in many years.
When Pan Am hired him at
1 $90,000 annually he continued to
be efficient for them.
He has just persuaded the.
CAB to recommend that Pan
Am, not / TWA, ]geF ihe new.
route to Dublin, Ireland, and
-this recommendation is now on
LBJ’s de,sk. The recommenda-
tion, Jt adopted, will mean ML.
TWA pulls out of Shannon and
out of Ireland altegther, which
will give 65 per cent of this bus-
iness to Irish Airlines; T®s al35
will hurt toe balance of pay-
ments.
THERE IS one famous faml.,
in America which will not be ■
backing another famous political
family anymore. The Roosevelt
family will not be supporting
the Kennedys, at least if Frank-
lin D. RooSeVelt Jr., the No. 1
political leader of the Roosevelt
clan has anything to. say about
it.
During the ( I960 Democratic
Prrmarylri West Virginia, FDR,
" Jr. stuck his neck out for the
late John F Kennedy ahff his
brother Bobby, then campaign
manager. The West Virginia pri-
mary was crucial. It would tell
whether a Catholic could win
4n“a Protestant state, once the
stronghold of the Ku Igux Klan,
No Catholi? had ever run well
in West Virginia. So John F.
Kennedy was out to demon-
strate that a Catholic could car-
ry the state eyen against a dy-
namic and attractive Protestant
opponent Hubert Humphrey.
The key man who turned the
tide against HHH was FDR Jr.,
who stumped the state and got
off the famous charge against
Hubert’s military record. The
charge was too strong and
Franklin later apologized. But
by that time Kennedy had won
the state and clinched the Dem-
ocratic nomination for Presi-
Female Beagfe Adopts
Family Of Ducklings
TORT SCOTT, Kan. (AP) -
Qeq, a female beagle, has
adopted a family of twoducks.
Bought for the children of iht
R- L. Morton family when they
were ducklings, Oeo took them
over and maided i them as she
'would her own puppies, ■
Thursday a youth described
by Mrs, Morton as about 15 en-
tered the family's backyard arid
grabbed one of the ducks Clco
dashed out from under ths back
porch, locked onto th« youth’s
hand and wouldn’t let go.
J Mrs. Norton says when the
dog barks with a certain tone
~ ♦haducks, now lull grown, oopw
running. If there'is any appar-
ent danger, Oeo herds them
under the porch and stands
guard, she Laid,
lent to an appointment to an un-
__der secretaryship' in the- Com-,
merce’ Department; The two.
men reached the parting of the
ways and there has been no po-
litical love tost between the
Kennedys and the Roosevelts
since.
Counting Teddy Roosevelt, a
Republican, the Roosevelts have
put iwo Presidents In Ifie WWt*
House. The Kennedys hope to
put two of their .family in the
same place. They will not have
'"Roosevelt support in achieving
this ambition. '
THE ROCK-ribbed Republican
state of Kansas, which has
elected only two Democratic
governors in about 100 years,,
ing'another.
Though I-BJ's rating JsJow in
Kansas, so also is that of Re-
publican Gov. Bill Avery. At-
jresent Bob Docking, son of the
Democratic Gov, George
Png and an Arkansas city
bankCTr*^ jrunning ahead of
Avery abouPBisger cent in the
polls. Avery nnadeTBR^ame mis-
take which Nelson RooRsfeller,
another Republican gover
made in New York. He in
creased taxes. When he had giVf.
en promises (hat he wouldn’t.
Bible Verse
Do you see a man skillful in
his work? He will stand before
kings; he will not stand before A—A tong Japanese
obscure men. —Proverb* 22:29, harp of 13 silk strings.
"ji *' (NivipefH, Entirpriu AiMci«ti«l)
-Then he .gave East a heart
ruff. .
East returned a spade for
Wesf’to ruff. Then West led
ace and a small club. East
was in with the king and led
another spade.
West ruffed. That ,was all
. for the defense but they had
plucked the goose clean
South was down to his five
good trumps and could not
lose any more. "•
tM-CHHDJc/uc*4
Q'~The bidding has been:
West North Eaat South
•a*.
..Pass 2* Pass ?
Yoy, South, hold:
A J 8 7 6 5 VAKQ64 AK 2 A 3
What do you do now?
A—Pass. You are happy
about this contract but don’t
' have the cards to want to to
hither.
TODAY’S QUESTION
You pass and West bids
' three clubs. Yoof partner dou-,.,
bk-s What do you do now?, - 1
Answer Monday
QUICK QUIZ
Q—Is the Cathedral of Saint
Sophia still used as a church?
A—No. The Turkish gov-
ernment decreed Santa, So-
phia Church in Istanbul to
cease-to be u£ed as*a religious
^Jace of worship and to be-,
-Ime a museum. So, today, it
pwpetuates the memory both,
of Its Christian and i t s Islamic
backgrounds.
-What t y p e of musicah
ument is the k
koto?
zither
BERRY'S WORLD
. O ISM tr m. U I
\ ': ‘ I’* !•Je'-whafya wantr
-A*:.. .
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1"
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 36, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 2, 1966, newspaper, October 2, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1062070/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.