The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 185, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 2, 1971 Page: 14 of 18
eighteen pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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TAXI
STAND
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TAXI
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ALLEY OOP
WEIL, OOP WHAT'P TUNK
WANT USTO SCTmWER?^^
by V. T. Hamlin
ATS RIGHT.’ ME
SAID HE LIKES
BEING KING OF MOO.
• AN' HE AIN’T
Magician Mike Christian and
the Crystal Palace Players.
Also featured are a dancing
elephant, banjo player, Up
lew for this season at
the Seal Pond,
La-
goon Pavilion Revue and the
River of No Return Excursion.
complete with Astro uni- Astroworld are the Seal
baseball bats, strike-Happening, Astrowheel
Attend Church
Sunday
CHARLES SANDERS, left, administrator of San Jacinto Methodist
defense film on emergency services to the City of Baytown as a gift from the hospital. The film
is accepted by City Manager D. R. Voelkel, right. The color film is entitled “Before the
Emergency.”
_(Sun Photo by Linda Cassity)
Need For U.S. Grain In
Europe Said On Increase
A
CAPTAIN EASY
M TH6 COMT SHARP ClITTgft PLOW* BACK
TO MIAMI. WITH THKEB PRI90NBR9 ABOARD,*
WELL, ypy’LL HAVE TO ADMIT
IT tVA* BXCITIWS FUN WHILE
VOU SAID IT!
THAT TROPIC
MOONLIGHT*
A MITS
PANSER0U5I
BUT.,
by Crooks & Lawrence
fell
FORT WORTH (AP) — A| ing grain sorghum’s use In the
[grain marketing specialist of four countries visited. These are
[Texas A&M University says thethreshold-targetpricingsys-
!“marketpotentialforU.S.grain tem imposed on outside grains
[sorghum in the northern Euro- by the European Community,
pean area could easily double and the 10 per cent duty in fa-
| in the next few years." Ivor of Commonwealth grain
The view came from John J. sorghum producing countries,"
[Seibert, addressing a group Seibert said.
[of grain and feed men. He explained that the overall
However, Seibert said, “This threshold-target pricing sys-
| potential, subject to political re-1 tem is a political establish,
straints.willberealizedthrough ment and is very difficult to
[aggressive market develop-[economically penetrate. “Un-
mentand expansion. We’ll gain
less such artificial restrictions
are relaxed or circumvented,
the outlook for expanded U.S.
grain sorghum shipments
these countries is rather dim,"
he said.
He said, “The United King
dom is currently seeking to re-
move the 10 per cent duty levi-
ed on all imported non-Com-
monwealth grain sorghum. Re-
cent negotiations indicate re-
moval of this duty is contem-
plated.”
advertised in
$169.95
buys the lightweight chain saw
for heavyweight cutting jobs.
Poulan’s Model 361
• cut firewood * limbs and logs
• fanes posts • clear heavy brush
• fall and buck trass up to 34 thick at
cutting speeds of nearly an inch a second.
SnMnViIM'IXIM*.
Other Pouian Chain tyw prices start at a low S12S.9S
UNITED RENT ALL
MO N. feme* it Pml
ttMHS M
LANCELOT
our NewTRge is A
5k* mwonp/S/litV.
IWB HAVE TO FBSP IT, I
GIVEIZWATSR AND’
ttOeoFtr
TAKS
Lite A LITTLE
BABVf
our giant share of this market
for grain sorghum through
the Yankee initiative which is
iproven throughout the world
and which the Texas grain and
[feed industry is most capable
of delivering.”
He explained that results of a
recent market promotion study
in the Netherlands, Belgium,
bv Coker & Penn I Germany and United Kingdom
indicate a strong desire for more
/T..HOW Pt? <toT\ information on U.S. grain sor-|
A WUNS ? .lgUm’ and th8t P* “P*1® con‘
THE BORN LOSER
llSJPHi
OUR SCWe\
(mc&
by Art Sansom
X KNOW! j
-•!» V-
■ •#•••
..SMEKEPSDHARPH6
BROKE HIS BASK, SIWfc
Rxiv-WQLLV-amE all’
m DA-AAYl*
9
-t:
jy j sumption of beef and veal, pork |
and poultry is expanding in all
these countries except a slight
decline in beef and veal in the |
Unieed Kingdom.
This, plus population growth,!
which is expanding from .6 per
cent per year in the United Ktag-
>m and Belgim to 1.6 per cent [
per cent a year in IheNether-
lands, is setting a strong growth j
demand for feed grains, he ad-
ded. Seibert headedathree-man [
study team in the area recently.
“Yet there are two overriding
considerations which are limit- [
- «-i
1975 Lions
Convention
|Goes To Dallas
DALLAS (AP)-lions Inter-
S^SSSsas*—
i
.....
MARKETING ALASKA S OIL
North Slope
Oil F ields
Prudhoe Boy ^ V l , J,
m
GREENLAND
Projected y
Trent-Alaska^ / tTC
Pipeline/ / |[*F
Labrador Sea
Suggested I
Canadian V
Pipeline |
I
Seattle
UNITED STATES
Chicago
With development of Alaska's North Slope oil fields rapidly advancing, the best means of moving the oil to market
is still under debate. The Northwest Passage sea route pioneered by the icebreaker-tanker Manhattan's voyage across
the top of the North American continent has run into opposition as p result of possible detrimental effects on the
environment and sparring between the Canadian and American governfai
nents over waterway jurisdiction. With environ-
mentalists also opposing'the proposed Alaskan pipeline, a second route down Canada's McKenxie river valley to the
US. Upper Midwest is now being pushed.
national, which held its 1968 con-
vention in Dallas, is coming
back in 1975, assuring the city of
some 40,000 visitors who will be
here for five days June 22-27.
Jack V. Vaughn of the Cham-
ber of Commerce Convention
Committee,announcedthatDal-
las won out in competition with
New York and Chicago for the
1975 meeting.
‘ ‘Since Dallas has been host to
Lions more recently than either
New Yorkor Chicago, the Dallas
victory was all the more signifi-
cant," Vaughn said. “The Inter-
national Board of Directors,
meeting in Chicago, chose Dal
las by a decisive margin.
The 40,000 visitors are ex-
pected to use all of the expanded
facilities at Memorial Auditor-
ium Convention Center and to
give Dallas hotels, motels, eat-
ing places and stores one of
their peak crowds.
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-**-**•
SI
..flisas^SSHaifa’s
Joe Allens’
Son Is 111
Jay Allen, 19-month-old son
of State Rep. and Mrs. Joe
Allen of 5315 Bayway Drive, is
listed in satisfactory condition
in the intensive care unit at San
Jacinto Methodist Hospital.
His condition Friday was
stable, a hospital spokesman
said.
Mrs. J.V. Allen of 226 Arbor,
his grandmother, said the child
was admitted to the hospital at
9 pjm. Wednesday. “He is a
mighty, sick little boy,” she
said.
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VOTE MAE 4
FOR DON HULLUM
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 185, Ed. 1 Sunday, May 2, 1971, newspaper, May 2, 1971; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1066706/m1/14/: accessed July 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.