The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 10, 1959 Page: 3 of 16
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Thursday, September 10, 1959 Oh* SautMon ftu
3
Spectacular Road Show Head Books . Tour
By MII.I.IAM L RYAN i achieved the peak of hi« ambi-
AiuMH'liOxl PiMi New* Analyst tion as h showman: * booking for
The man who head* die world1* a United State* tour,
moat Kpirlnrular mad »how hail Now that la* ha* achieved It,
to hint, wheedle and threaten for the tour *tarting next week like-
more than two year* before helly will prove the *upreme lest of
career a* a traveling salesman re*t
for the Soviet brand of commu-l Khrushchev hlmaelf had »nme
m*m. • troubles In that respect. The Red
Until alxait four ycarx ago the n,m,.v. Wcrc unlikely to la*
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„ j. nuttlne all these naituinc fears at i remove some of the public oatra- neva, but the "spirit of Geneva". Jolt. He had expressed willingness j show on the rend again. I be
NMto ^ry^L^ «I^Tan1c)*m of SYFVirt communism In theisoon faded Wore the chill wind in mid-1958 for a summit confer-! But there have been signs that [to
West and make the Kremlin more j of a new ly toughened Soviet pol enct*
respectable. ! icy. Kast
The Soviet boss I* a practiced: tn the winter of 1955, Khru-!,ri»m Peiping, looking gray and has some kind
‘ ' he reversed himself and aliment and ha
June 1957 that
visit the United State*. The hint*
reeelved scant attention. He tried
again. On New Year's Day, 1968,
he toasted President Eisenhower,
saying: "If the Soviet Union and
the United States eould get to-
gether and reach agreement, most
of the world'* problems would be
solved."
Next day the whole Soviet pro**
took up the cry for a meeting
between the Soviet Premier and
the American President. Hints
multiplied thereafter. Khrushchev
indicated he was willing and ea-
ger to visit the United States for
a summit meeting. Again the
hints got nowhere.
I Vice President Richard M. Nix-
on's tour of the Soviet Union this
summer contributed to a notice-
able thaw In Soviet-American re-
lations. Khrushchev finally got the
invitation he had wanted so bad-
lly. And the question arose: Why
'was Khrushchev so eager?
Even before preparations were
complete for his trip, there were
signs that the impending visit
was causing aggravations among
members of the North Atlantic Al-
liance. Many were not too sure
the Big Two might not, as Khru-
schev phrased it, get together
and solve the world’s problems
without reference to smaller na-
tions. Even President Elsenhow-
er's trip to Europe fell short of
mans miht also e nervous
Khruschev had to reassure both,
Just as President Elsenhower was
intern on reassuring the Western
Allies.
But In any event the bouncy
Khrushchev seemed to look for-
ward with relish to his prospec-
tive new adventure as Commu-
nism's No, 1 tourist.
| been wearing down. He Just wants
go. go.
the dangerous Middle!even the fabulous energy of the| Tnmnr™/. p
| East crisis. After la* returned Soviet leader has its limit*. Ilfi^
Khru-rn>m Peiping, looking gray and has some kind of kidney or liver___
»clful-1 shaken, lie reversed himself and .ailment and has eased off notice-
“■ »» h‘‘ would "* 10 —■ "•“» h, UtM dumpwl'in tow!ISZ^s^ EmlL wl^
R was an astonishing mission, h(, S()t [)Ul „ rao| p^pdom
undertaken said Khrushchev,:(() yrllaln> tt||Pr,. suave British
'with pure heart and open soul ; outfinessed and en-
to beg park si from Yugoslavia . ,u
maverick Red, Tito, for the abuse r‘‘kM mm
Stalin had heaped on him for de-
fying Moscow The love feast was
PHOTOS
COPYING
Thermo-Km Photostat
News Commercial
Aerial Industrial
BAYTOWN PHOTOS
Sun Building
Phone JV MSM
spectacular Rlt it did not sur-
vive the 1956 Hungarian uprising.
Khrushcliev would be able to Moscow placed much of the blame
check personally on reports he'for that on Tito's example,
had received about the United, Khrushchevs first trip outside
States from official tourists who I the Red orbit came in the sum-
had preceded him. In addition, he'mer of 1965. The era of smiles
might count on his trip to help bought a summit meeting in Ge-
It was nothing any more for
Khrushchev to make suilden, un-
announced trips to Communist
capitals for iiis own political pur-
poses: to Prague, Warsaw, Sofia,
Budapest, Tirana and to Red Chi-
na's Peiping. It was far more
than junketing.
On his last trip to Peiping,
Khrushchev apparently received a
KRHUSHCHEV'S ITINERARY
IS STILL NOT TOO CLEAR
WASHINGTON (API-Just what lay lies In red tape In Moscow, 15 • 27 visit. Those are
Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev
will see on his visit to the United
States is still an official mystery’,
even though his arrival is only
six days away.
So far only a bare-bones outline
of the Soviet premier's itinerary
has been issued here, although the
announcement of his coming was
made by President Eisenhower
more than five weeks ago,
Khru-
thlckerthan the Washington vart- shchev's initial days in Washing-
ety, which makes still more dif- marked by ceremonial func-
ficult the arduous task of prepar- '
ing for an historic visit of top uons-
importance. But as for specific questions on
White House press secretary j what the Soviet leader will do on
James C. Hagertv has named the | his cross-country travels from
half-dozen U. S. cities Khrushchev i New York to Los Angcles-and
will visit and the dates. ! the questions pour in by die hun
The White House also has an-
nounced the detailed schedule for
An apparent reason for the de- the first two days of the Sept.
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dreds-the official re|>ly here
that it is still uncertain when an
announcement can be made.
That is die stock answer given
| even after poisons and organiza-
tions along die Khrushchov route
have passed out word locally of
arrangements for the visitor.
U. S.-Soviet negotiations over
what farm and factory to see.
what transportation to use, and
i other nuts-and-bolts details of the
! visit have been conducted here
through Undersecretary of State
Robert Murphy and Ambassador
Mikhail Menshikov. ,
The catch is that what the two
diplomats agree on in Murphy s
office is not necessarily final.
Menshikov isn't taking chances
on okaying something Khrushchev
might not like. He messages back:
to Moscow and may wait days for
a reply. Then he sees Murphy
again on more details.
On top of this, Khrushchev is
noted for acting on impulse. The
possibility is left upen here that
even after the announcement of
a Specific-schedule, the Kremlin
I chief will take a notion to do
something else.
i The headaches to planners
'from an unsettled schedule are
| compounded on a mammoth scale.
About 100 Soviets are expected
' to accompany the Premier to die
I United States. They w ill have to
be received, fed, and housed.
| About 350 newsmen and photog-
raphers have applied to cover the i
tour. More than a thousand want
; accreditation at local stops.
! Federal and local- security -offi-
I rials will have to mesh gears to
I provide protection and handle the
crowds.
; The traveling horde will need
special transportation and accom-
modations not easy to come by.
| In the matter of hotel reserva-
|tions, for instance, advance
ichecks show that during the Sept.
20-21 period allotted for Khru-
shchev's stop at San Francisco,
1 seven conventions will be in town.
Baptist Housing Head
Has Very Big Problem
SAN FRANCISCO (API - The
housing chairman for the Nation-
al Baptist Convention here this
j week has a big problem: Where
to house delegates and their fam-
ilies, totaling some 20.000 Ne-
groes.
Tlie chairman, the Rev. John
Henry Pierce and aides, by per-
, sistent telephoning, have found
1-2,000 hotel and motel rooms.
1EAVE ME AlONEI' - Crying,
"I want my daddy. Leave me
alone," Karen Roath, 9, clings
to her father, George Roath,
31, as her mother, Mrs. Verna
Jo Tatum, looks on: Karen's
mother was awarded custody
of the little girl after a Los
Angeles judge ruled Roath h^d
violated a Riverside, Calif.,
court order by keeping Karen
with him more than 45 daye.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 39, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 10, 1959, newspaper, September 10, 1959; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1104405/m1/3/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.