The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 16, 1971 Page: 35 of 36
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by Bowtn A Schwon
by Bowun A Schwan
WHEN I GO THIS
WAY, I CAN BETTER
WATCH THE TRAFFIC. ■
*«W-
THE BAYTOWN SUN
Thursday, December H, 1»71
Bangla Desh' Is a Fa
B\ TOM T1F.DE ‘justice of the Pakistani Su-tChowdhury says that
y' preme Court, a college presi-khough East Pakistan has GO
UNITED N AflUNS-dent-andhe had no time fpeiper cent of the Pakistan pop-
iNEAl - Ten floors over politic*. [ulation (estimated m I960
safi'vw; s
sweaty walls and peeling n<
paint, there is a grubbv £eaJ^ - ^ ^ „ ,---WUfk
10 x 15-foot office which as- °f w*st Pakistan addition, he adds. Western-
sertively. it not yet leimwC f-ame mto an<! ers make up S3 per cent of
represents the despair'of 75l“f8an ’° k‘" hundreds of the military forces. 80 per
million people. / (thousands of my people I rent of the government em-
It s the Btfhgla Desh fight '"g** M JgM
GO tort
millioni. the West has the
Bo aH,t*‘&*fian*ed ,w nation's capital, the Parlia-
me. On Mafch 25 of this ment the Supreme Court and
larrtfes ofWest
■ United States,
created three*, *r
1 better. ugh federal offices. Finally,
methinc better" is, says ChowdhuryJVest Pakis-
Ronnlo Tkach A tonic aant £1 nhA>ant mnro
Other people in the building
might have wondered what
Bangla Desh was. hut no-
body asked
by Art Sonsom
(f uHc^r^ea'dquarS^Rits exis,enM « W'p« ■«* « fedwal
W Chowdhury, “A
„»» TOl „*i*ht £ evidence on his people’s anger grows slowly,
idv asked Plde '"hat we have sui Today you submit, tomorrow
oic. the cite wk. euffi SL'SStSL'T?
S* ^F"llf Ke?tSat '^ra»’< S December <*m. Ben-
aneia Desh was a new g° 6ack ,0 that now galis stopped submitting
nation, formerly called East .In fact' Chowdhury says. Running on a campaign for
Pakistan and that it was trv-lhere ne'er were two co- a new constitution, reformist
p“»-
ognition in the United States
'sanecw I ww '
r»./ e.r DAtlT AAS/ dtDpI -
and the rest of the world He f.8* formed 'hy NAakaway seats in the Bengali half <£’
S his people were natkfc. It was^nougb
Q
sTiZ
jy fi-K--
“ ‘s'
from two decades of
EM&WmSMKW" " m mmmma
nusck
But he only had 10 floors toP* 9 ine w**: arw «Hatrtooo“T more money..
sass asusw8gss»,sw ‘
^ _b>'-^.lif,_hJln_dJ fceinmlnrto es7S SS Stef
independence also a demand for wholesale
preferred centraimore everything for the
fag the woman's eves started Pover"ment t0 sta,« a“ton°-Eastcrn «•?: •«> « *» K
to glaze my. Eastern
Today, the situation at the *as "jjjj-.
MLSSLS&li 2?'S,H>| Bm ihe
sssr r. y .as BSS&j suffix
some notoriety and some P”*""' grumbled ^ndlwrth demonstrations «f MH
clamoring to the
door. But even now. as a few rw, March ^
tgtewBeewe*
soldiers
roung girts were
Whole villages were
yed by artillery.'’ Al-
together. says Sayed Chowd-
hury. >Y a h a Kahn has
killed one million of my peo-
ple and forced another 10
million to flee to India fbi
refuge You see now why
Pakistan can never be re-
«N.sis'
Technically, of course.
Pakistan is $tiU united The
Bangla Desh leaders pro-
claimed independence last
April and appealed to all
respond by recognizing the
new nation
Yet. "Bwgja Desh is
fact,’’ says Chowdhury. "We
are 75 million free people,
theloae of the largest nations in
the world. We have fought
for and won our independ-
ence We will never go back
to Pakistan. 1 swear, we will
never go back to that.”
iM(WVAKI (NTttMIM ASSN I
'
' * *;
■k
JAMES GLEN (Bw) Ma
tan, mi «d Mr. and Mn.
James J. (Saab*) Jshana,
5» S. Baraet, has gradated
from Texas AhM Uatventty
with a BS degree la
Eagiaeert*._
Gty Group To
Hear Talk By
FFA Official
Ernest H. Dodds, accident
prevention specialist with the
Federal Aivaton Administra-
tion in Houston, will be the
guest speaker far the Experi-
mental Aircraft Association,
Baytown Chaplar 335, meeting
to be held at 7:M p.m. Friday
in the Pecan Room at the Bay-
town CWfc Cantor,
Dodds, a flight instructor
since mi. will speak on safety
and explain some of the pro-
posed revised traffic patterns
He has flown for Paa
.American World Airways, the
U. & Army Air Corps and is
chief pilot far Val Airlines.
■4*
, y
\s€x
In The Sun
WHAT AM I OFFERED for the Qacca s chemise? The rayal tvvery w«a oacc part
in London. Embroidered with lace, plus the rayil maaagram. the silk meathmaMe
dates from abaut ISM. •/' ^
s
Pakistanjwon 167 of 169 parli
idea was to form two inde- assume control (167 seats to
m| * ‘ 9 m> *>* ‘ ----
ie. assembly.
^«“»»15 Hbts?
ssent began. dragged Sleeping children
ritv Of the entire world Yet Easterners protested theMere bayoneted. Young men
SflT Zam Si^^on of comfortsKad their blood drained oft
» “» replenish snnrtedl
just a funny name which no-
body understands.
Ironically, one of the
Bangla Desh officers, whose
job is to make the world un-
derstand. can sympathize
with world apathy Abu
Sayed Chowdhury. a spe
cial representative of the
Bangla Desh nation.” says
that for much of his life be
too. was apathetic about his
country. He was a lawyer, a
County To j
Get $9.1
Million
80UST0N <Sp)-A 25 per
. ......tent-increase im the ffarm
County tax ratio coupled with
the county’s natural growth will
^^SnJuSs^over lit MILLIONS ON THE MOVE. B*
m of East Pakistan helped pressure transformation of
^year’s receipts of »67,«1,»8, Bangla Desh {rom an^dJ£ —- —•--^---
according to Carl Smith, movcment and a civil
county tax assessor-collector, conflict.
County property value rose
by $1.4 billion to $16.6 billion
’ !
L
tools of a
shoplifter
’ i
wr
y?
■ ■ ■ /
__
t£L.
—-J
5^1
s|b(
a serious resistance
into an international
tetwem i970 and|97i, but at School Valuation At
sby $51.4 Million
UCLWCCIJ linv cuJU ivi aj
the county tax ratio of 25 per
cent, taxes will be paid on $4.2
billion. L*' /
Taxes were paid on^.4 -
billion at a tax ratio of 22 per CROSBY (Sp) - Crosby past in valuations, Swanson
cent in 1970. The ratio was school district’s total tax pointed out, has been the turn-
changed last January by Com- valuation is $51,400,947, ac- over of tax assessor-collectors,
missioners Court. cording to the annual report "H we can get longetivity with
The total increase in county presented to the Crosby School a tax assessor-collector we can
tax rolls from 1970 came to Board by Ed Swanson, chair-come up with a better program
to
1
.1
man of the board of equalixa-. . .”
Swanson said that Muth had
tion.
$819.5 million, Smith said. Most
totje to^Cdwnge°UtdUe fa his presentation at the done a “good job” fa coming in
Only about 60 per cent of the school board meeting Monday at the middle of the year. The
increase will be available for night Swanson commended the board of equalization accepted
use fa flie 1972 county budget, work of toe tax assessor-col- all the values except far a few
because tax payments are not lector John J. Muth and said minor changes, he said, and
all paid during toe year, he that Muth “is going to need there were “very few" pro-
jaii some help at the rate the school tests.
Smith said toe increase In- district is growing.” The board of equ----
eluded a total of $205 million in “In the next 10 years the va- asking toe tax asseesor-collect-
land and buildings for 1971, lues will jump tremendously,” or to make a special study of
rawSbssaw
A*ss»srs sr—■
industry. Fifteen large Indus- our program 'current assess- was o« new pipeline
trial companies contributed mentt) ^ esn hw several in me (lisinci iu» yew biki Im
m< miUir to the total fa- toouspnds of dollars.” new pipeline this year, he said.
Sas? of »19 5 miUion. Swanson indicated it will be Muth said be will see if all toe
SfaS values increased by Cheaper to give Muth the help pipelines in the district are low
$20.6* utilities facreJ he needs Instead of going out ta nta. comp««d with other
^ $36.1 million and banks and hiring an appraisertola Mneto.
swefled in Value by $25.8 few^ years to appraise afl toe Swanson
mil ~ ‘
a •tost-** ■ n
IRED BYXJ
THESE CONCERNED
businesses mmd
UNITED DISTRIBUTORS
JEWELERS & IMPORTERS 1
900IUEMS MX
''.j - .
BEALL BR01
DEPT.:
221W. TEXAS AVE.
*
4
427-1972
7123 BAYWAYD*.
411N. COMMERCE
“ 1001S. MAIN
Hands dre precious Skillful They C8H b€ used for lots of
something 'artistic * waving helio" or making a peace
s*gn or simple tn*ngs like tying a rhoe lace, changing a
diaper cooking dinner writing a letter, chang ng a spark
:
through or they can bt- used for something disastrous
SHOPLIFTING
IS STEALING
Using your hands for shoplifting is letting yourself
become an outlaw on the reta * scene A snop!ifter (s a
•-
of dollars annually A
1006 MARKET
2300 N. ALEXANDER
427-4119
422-4318
a treacherous use of pood hands .. hands
Use your hands
BAYFAIR DERI STORE
for those better things' Shoplifting is a crime $hof
IS playing R^vd - rouleHe with your future
2300 ALEXANDER
■$>
427-5668
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 16, 1971, newspaper, December 16, 1971; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1065853/m1/35/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.