The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 188, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 5, 1971 Page: 4 of 38
thirty eight pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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11
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Newspaper Brings News, Hope To Refugees
DARJEELING, India (AP)—
I The only Tibetan language
newspaperpublishedoutside the
Chinese Communist-ruled Him
alayan nation brings both news
and hope to the 50,00ff Tibetan
I refugees living In India.
One of the best-read features
I is the personal advertisements
placed by refugees seeking
I news of missing relatives.
Manyfamilieswerebrokenup
I when the Chinese conquered Ti-
bet in the 1950s forcing the refu-
COULD THIS be a “bridge UNDER troubled waters?” The In the good oT days - before the land had subsided so much in geesto flee °ver perilous moun-
"troubled waters” in this situation result every time the tide that area - the roadways at the battlegrounds were always Itoin trails to India,
comes in around the picnic grounds east of the San Jacinto dry. Now it Is difficult to obey such signs as “No Fishing from
Monument. Tidal action causes water to cover this bridge and Bridge.” What bridge?
other small bridges and roadways on the battlegrounds. Back (Sun Photo By Wanda Orton)
“Has my brother been seen
I by anyone in India or heard of
in Tibet,” asks a typical ad. “Is
he alive or dead?”
Former Prime Minister’s Wife
Publishes First Poetry Book
Only 1,200
pageta
Freedom,"
week in this picturesque north-
ern Indian city nestled In the HI
malayan foothills.
But they are passed from
hand to hand wherever the refu-
against our people, our r
our culture," thepaper’i
gees work and live, to Insure ev- TsewangGyurmeyh
Maja has personal reasons for
his anti-Communist stance. He
fought in the unsuccessful 1959
guerrilla action against the _
habitation centers across In- Chinese in Lhasa, the Tibetan further if the arrival is particu- the Tibetan cause alive,
dia, and illiterate exiles hear
eryone gets a chance to read
them.
Important articles are posted
on bulletin boards of Tibetan re-
the revolt failed, larly Informative. The stories
forced to
leave hia-wife
Maja’s paper gets Its news
primarily from the tiny trickle
of refugees who manage to get
through the tight Chinese secu-
rity net on the frontier. In 1970
only about 40 escaped.
Escapees are debriefed by’
gee centers, and news is sent to
the paper. Sometimes a report-
er Is dispatched to interview
arecheckedagainstinformation
given by other refugees to in-
sure reliability.
“If a man were a Communist
stooge,"Maja said, "other refu-
gees from his village would
know something about the facts
in his story and say the infor-
mation was untrue."
Escapees are debriefed by
welfare officers at border refu-
Maja said, its efforts help keep
the paper read aloud at public
meetings.
Reflecting the views of the
refugees, the paper’s editorial
policy is firmly anti-Commun-
ist. Articles often focus on food
LONDON (AP) — Screwing
up her face and lisping slightly,
the gentle brunette delivered a
stinging parody of the ad-man’s
housebound housewife, elbow-
deep in soapsuds and simpers.
Mary Wilson — 55-year-old
wife of Britain’s former labor
prime minister, poetess and
staunch supporter of the sec-
ond sex — believes women can
do anything men can. And bet-
ter too.
“We are more peace-minded
than men,” she says firmly. “I
am a terrific feminist.”
While reluctant to endorse the
tactics of Britain’s Women’s
Libera tionMISement, Mrs. Wil-
son is full of praise for the wom-
en '9 enthusiasm and verve.
“They certainly have got
something,” she says. “A fresh
approach. For example, the
standard of TV advertising Is
sickening.”
Her hackles-and her voice-
also rise at the suggestion wom-
en might not be fittetf to hold
key positions in government.
"Of course they can,” she
says.
But she adds, “it wouldn’t do
Best Sellers
THE MASTERS AFFAIR. By
Burt Hlrschfeld. Arbor House
$6.50.
The teasing question in many
a suspense novel is—who did it?
who was the sniper who assassi
nated W. W. Masters? He was
the head of a super-outfit known
as the Internal Investigative
was confusion over who was the
target—perhaps the sniper had
meant to kill the liberal senator,
rather than Masters?
The final answer to the puzzle
In this case it is a question of *sa switch that the reader may
not anticipate, which of course
this type of yam is supposed to
have.
Hirschfeld is a pretty good
Agency, a sort of cross between storyteller.ffisbookdoesntrise
the Central Intelligence Agency
and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation^ Masters was a
very powerful man,
Seeking answers to the ques-
tion are two men—Malone, a
protege of Masters in the ILA,
and Heilman, a muckraking
journalist who got into the case
in order to make some money
from a magazine article, and
then got caught up in the frenzy
of trying to solve the riddle.
The reader gradually learns
that Masters could have had
several enemies. There was a
secret flaw in his private life.
He also had been swinging his
agency toward the ideologies of
the far right, and had become
involved with a super-patriot
senator andaparapiilitary righ-
tist organization.
There are cross-currents in
theplot. At the moment Masters
was shot, he was standing be-
side a liberal senator with presi-
dential aspirations, and there
above the level of entertain-
ment, but that’s all it’s intended
to be.
Miles A. Smith
for me. I would get into a flap.” ^ie publication last year of
For this reason, she explains, her first book of poems brought
life at No. 10 Downing Street- her headlines, and with sales
theprimeminister’sofficialres- currently hitting the 65,000
idence and her home until la- mark, the slim volume has be-
bor’s election defeat last June come Britain’s best-selling
—was not all roses. post-war anthology. Its simple
“I’m no good at small talk,” title: “Mary Wilson, Selected
she sighs, “and with the best Poems.”
will in the world I don’t find it Mrs. Wilson does not hide ha-
easy to talk to strangers..." pleasure at her astonishing suc-
The daughter of a Congrega- cess
tional minister bom and bred in “To hold a book like this in
the country, she never devel- your hand and know they
oped a taste for government is- thought it good enough to pub-
sue furniture and front door po- lish in its own right,” she says,
lice------------------“is a great thrill.”
“You couldn’t think of it as She warns against misin-
home,” she says. “You were al- terpretation of ha poetry One I bradley rocha, whose pet rabbit “SnowbaD” was killed
ways conscious of the history of mucbquoted passage speaks of Iast week b , k dogs on Cedar Bayoo-Lyncfaburg Road,
the place. Portraits of Glad- “vap.d voices shrillmg high in accepts a new rabbit trm Dwayne Oliver, right of 107 Park-
stone, Disraeli, Peel every-one continuous parrot cry.” N d “Bugsy,” the rabbit was sired by a grand chain-
where. You sometimes felt tfcy This she stresses, is.not a r* £ of % BaytoL Youth Mr. Bradley’s mother, Mr,. Pat
were ^ breathing down your minder of ha Downing Street Rocha) says the famJ|y the concern shown by a
. . . . „. ,y.s . ... . number of people who came by their home after the story ap-
Although she has fewer off.- Mrs. WUson does not take her d in The Sun about fte d ^led their rabbit and more
cia! commitments now, Mrs. poetry lightly. ‘Whi e l’mwalk- ^ m chlckens. offered gfve tbem rabWtl
Wilson finds ha life changed lit- mg I’m always thinking poe-1 sh. ,ald , c™ pboto Bv uv. ru-a ,
tie. In or out of No. 10, when not try,” she says. And, pulling out ' ----“— -
toil Car Semce / Piggyback Seivice / All-Piggyback
Trains / LCl-LTL Seivice / Trucking / Motor Carrier
erchange / Containerpak Sting and Stripping
Maine# Seivice / Interchange Agreements on
Containers / Chassis Leasing for Containers / Split
r-Mm | 2
I % M
Senrice/Trap Car Service/Short-Term Warehousing
“pottering” around the hone, her check book, she indicates a j
she is happiest cooking, reading few wads scribbled in pencil,
a simply walking by the riva. “The best lines come to you I
The wife of the leada of Ha out of the blue and you have to
Majesty’s loyal opposition, has stop and write them down. Aft-
always refused to join the party erwards,” she says, “you can’t
fight with ha husband, prefa- understand them. It’s madden-
Assodated Press “>8 Poe^ to Pities-
,ing.”
Keep Up With
SPORTS
In T%e Sun
These ere 16 services we provide. We summed
them up in three words-MoPac Hauls AM-on lapel
buttons for our people to wear. Wa spent a few
hundred on the buttons. And many millions on the
services. Our people wear those buttons proudly,
and we perform these services the same way.
1
Mtoeerf Ub/lwl Wh / Atop a (Mot Mwb / MM MHUm/1mI Mi Nn*
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SCHOOL
LUNCHES
THURSDAY
Baytown:
Breakfast - Prunes, egg,
'buttered toast and milk.
Lunch - Smoked sausage or
turkey and dressing, candied
yams, English peas, califlo-
wer, (choose two), fruit salad,
buttered com bread, milk and
butterscotch pudding,
Barbers Hill:
Lunch - Lasagne, buttered
cabbage, com fritters with
honey, pineapple strawbory
cut, hot rolls with butter and
milk.
Channel view:
Elementary School Lunch
Hamburger, pinto beans, po-
tato chips, hamburger salad, i
cheese-apple crisp, milk and
bread.
High School Lunch — Ham-
burger or tuna salad, pinto
beans, potato chips, hambur-
ger salad, banana pudding,
milk and bread.
Antilitter
Signs Litter
ROCHESTER, N.Y. (AP)
—Police arrested a Rochester
man Sunday tor posting two an-
tilitter signs along an ex-
pressway.
The charge: littering.
H. Evaett Clements, 62, said
he ptrt up the signs
“litta , garden ahead," at
places -whae roadside trash
was prevalent.
Officers said the signs vio-
lated a state antilitter law that
prohibits dumping or placing
materials on highways or adja-
cent land.
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Los Angeles Spokane Wichita
Waco Inglewood Nebraska
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BUltDEBS Of THE WOULD 5 FINE:
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869-2024
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 188, Ed. 1 Wednesday, May 5, 1971, newspaper, May 5, 1971; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1066253/m1/4/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.