The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 77, Ed. 1 Friday, January 5, 1973 Page: 4 of 14
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Friday, January 5,1973
THE BAYTOWN SON
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X ** . *
\ ysvWvXv
^ Jack Anderson Says
South Vietnam
VK9
♦ KQJ10
+ 8 5 2
WASHINGTON
ish U. S. effort to
yi ujoycupic any, as mgniM numci
man, touch the hearts-b^oH-mair
the opium ‘smugglers in South-'
PicialsacEnowle
Not so very long ago, for example, the famous
number of other examples over the past four centuries
of history. -----
opium traffic.. Numbered
Consider this statement by the Mohawk sachem
Hendrick before the Battle of Lake 'George in 1755. in
input, classified
Thereport declares bluntly scientific attache Francis veterans Administration’s
that “the Vietnamese military, Latapie confided recently to prestigious Board of Veterans
especially the Air Force” American engineers that U. S. ApPeais, however, has broken
could not be trusted and should insistence on lower noise levels with the military to rule that
Ko eilhianfnrl tn tnuniiAk. ’ Mirim4/iniiM Inh j f A ' .a. • — '
for the Concorde could lead to
fhe cataracts which partially
shaman of the Oglala Sioux, which may remind some
controlled french and English
Thai dope runners are work-
10 to 15 years after his
■c-hargewerecaused by
report suggests, to smuggle start... a commercial war.”
opium into South Vietnam by In Washington, a French em-
out the t h i
1 Everyone fol
waves. Whiledurning down the
veteran. Arthur Kay, on dis-
menTs.iheVAJ3oardsai4inits
cause “there were just simply ; going on between Franco
tuq»«cectent«l ralinglthat “an-
titlement to service connection
for bilateral cataracts is, es-
‘Jablished.” * ' -— - -
English representative snadl
American environmental and'
aviation agencies. But fie said
Staple’s view was certainly!
for the Next Four Years!
wmm,
.../.
teritfof warrHHss/be said wftbaierseitess worthy of a
Caesar: ■ —' — . ,•
'If they are to fight, they are too few; if they are to
die, they are lbb”m¥hy.
WEST
'“The nlHon^sloop40ro£fe£ah5 scattered. There is
■ no center any longer, and the sacred tree is dead.”
The quotations are from “j Have Spoken,” subtitled
••American History Through' the Voices of the In-
-dians,” published recently in pdperbaett form by
Pocket .Books. . .
The collection is. a timly addition to the growing list
.of books'by and about American Indians. Edited by
Frederick VV. Turner III. and presentihg in' chrono-
logical order 2.51 examples of Indian oratory from 1609
to the present. ‘‘I Have Spoken” reflects in the red
too many military airfields
i about 300 i and too'few cus-
toms officials."
Yet the U. S. bas been turn-,
landed on his shores and which he could neither
comprehend nor combat. .......................: .
Old Tassel of the Cherokees, to U.S. commissioners
negotiating a treaty in 1777;
"Much has been said of the want of what you term
'civilization' among the Indians. Many proposals have-
been made to us to adopt your laws, your religion, your -
manners, and your customs. We do not see the. .
We should-be "Belfer
Nixon, U.S. Embarrassed • -
Kissinger Asumes Power
~~r’ ^ r ' ~ -l£—- ■ —: • ^ • ' - . i
Of Presidency, Fumbles
trines in your own practices than with hearing you talk
about them1'"’ ’ * ’”
Tffe Mohawk chief Joseph Brant, in 1804:
"Among us we have.no prisons, we have no pompous
-parade of courts; we have no written laws, and yet
judges are as highly fevered among us as they are
amoung you. and their decisions .are as highly
regarded We have among us no splendid villains
above the control of our laws. Daring wickedness is
never suffered to triumph over helpless innocence.”.
Tecumseh. Shawnee chief, in 1810 expressing the In-
dian^ attitude toward the environment while-vainly
attempting to umTe the tribes:
"No tribe has the right to sell (land), even to each
other, milch less to strangers.....Sell a country! Why
not sell the air, the great sea, as well as the earth? Did
not the Great Spirit make them all for the use of his.
children"”" • -
Letters To The Editor
aru- 'to suv that flic,
i\ town is represented
rt ufTRe world in the ’
m Ihi/f
brnluf the lW*.4tsits from all
. , r : Mr wnrld Fifteen thou-
sand v isiturs were expected for
Christmas ceremonies in
Bethlehem. ■■■>.._ • '
I will -send or bring ybur
paper a copy of The Jerusalem
. Post. Merry Christmas and
Happy New Year.
How ard O ’Sorrells
- S. S. Overseas Progress
■Haifa. Israel
..... Bv ERNEST ONFO *"
WASHINGTON ‘ (NAN A i -
, The U.S. has been indulging in
informal diplomacy at the
highest levels with unusual re-
sults for both itself and the na-
tions with whom it negotiates.
It started 50. years ago.
President Woodrow Wilson had
his Colonel House; FDR had
his Harry Hopkins .and Presi-
dent Nixon has his Henry Kiss-
inger. -
• • Colonel House.was. more or
dess an "eminence prise," a
confidant of enormous influ-
ence with President Wilson,
“the-man to know;"- in the
idiom of French diplomacy.
However, there was never any
doubt as to. the actual su-
premacy of President Wilson.
-The President was aloof and
formal even with his intimate
circle.
"fT^T^Tfi^1TOanir~
Hopkins. Hopkins was not only
FDR’s alter ego, but op several
occasions, to the Presidents
extreme annoyance, Hopkins ■
exercised the powers of the
presidency assuming that the ;
consent of the President would
be automatic.. ,^_/_______
PRESIDENT.. Eisenhower de-
■*' FerTed to John FosteF Dultes to
sucti ao extent thpt. the secre-
' tarywaS the dominating figure
• in Arnerican foreign policy
during-the two Eisenhower ad-
- ministrations., •’
President Nixon appears to
have adopted this mode of
operation with Dr. Henry Kiss-
inger. The essential difference
is that Secretary Dulles was
officially secretary of state:
Dr.- Kissinger is not/
This is not only a frightful
‘humiliation of Secretary of
Stale William Rogers, it is also
a junking of formal diplomatic
channels, which for, all of theif
heavy approach, have many
safeguards built ip .paradoxi-
callyas the result of their chief
fault, which is that they are
......cumbersome.
For example, 4he-lL£jna i n -
tains a State' Department and
embassies at etiormmis ex-
pense all over the globe
Nevertheless, in attempting "to
get Hanoi to negotiate, the U.
S. declared it had" instituted 200
"listening posts" all over the
earth, in case Hanoi wanted to
communicato with the U. S.
Government. - ____-... ? —
This is both ridiculous and
.Hanoi made., up. its ,mind. Jq .
communicate, it knew, very ■
well how to do so without the U.
prostrating itself in begging'
for some' word.
mese air force the very types
of planes,most useful for trans-
~ Twrttwillff si rfriiiri Tnr g in
elude fat C-130 transports. UH-
1 helicopters and prop-driven.
A-l fighters.
. In the gloomiest assessment
we have ever seen of the dope
, problem in Vietnam, t he secret
report contradicts official
, propaganda about South Viet-
• namese-Ameriean cooperation
on narcotics and cites esti-
' ' mates, that “only- ah ‘ ihsignifo
cant .amount .of heroin, had......
actually Been interdicted and
.Seized.”
dangerous. When, as and if
LAWmm.LAMB
The Doctor Knows Situation
j^| Water Pills and Menopause
Dear Dr. Lamb—Would it.
he possible for you to
tell me the effect water pills
will have on one's general
health !> retain water My-
left leg and both ankles
fsweli badly I have lost 23
, y-jvi'iinds-and my body also
\ retaking water i take
wJtfr-"'pills and alternate
them with a supplement of
potassium My. family says
it will make a mental case
out of me and kill me They
think the doctor should
know or find out why I re-
tain water My kidneys and
heart are fine Is there any
other test I should have-’ I
am 47 years old and going
through the change I also
take medication for this Her
haps I should not expect you
• Tt/comment or help, bui I
hdte the idea of changing
doctors and they are really
putting pressure on me to do
so
Dear Reader—f suspect
change Jo have this jpjob-
TJenfr and the hormones
sometimes given t<r help
wonlen through this period
of Jife cause the body to re-
tain salt <sodium' w:hieh in I
turn causes the body to re-
tain water
Jem with the change of life.
Your doctor also knows,
apparently from your state-
Here is an item that oughl
to be of interest to all of you
people who have arthritis in-
volving the hands A special-
ist in arthritis. Dr. George
E Ehrlich of Philadelphia,
and a collaborator. Dr. Al-
fred M DiPiero, were fo-
ment, that your kidney's and- trigued bv a patient's report
heart are fine, which would
be two of the. serious prob-
lems that might cause fluid
retention. He undoubtedly
also knows from his exam-
inations of-you that your
liver is functioning normally
which might also be a con-
sideration.
It sounds to me like your
doctor knows what he is
doing and merely changing
doctors wouldn't really help
Ask your doctor why you re-
tain fluid and see if he tells
you it is because of the
change of life and the treat"
ment If you are worried
about the rest of your health.
that if she wore stretch
gloves to bed at night it
prevented the morftTngs’txff-
ness ithat* **he had exper-
ienced. They devised a test
using two types of gloves/
nylon knit gloves or Spandex
and nylon gloves. Almost all
of the patients using these
a lot of benefit by wearing _
warm stockings to bed or
using heat with a warm
blanket or other devices
that depended on keeping*
their feet warm during the
night. In any case, this is
good news and it’s such a
simple” thing that it’s worth
trying.
I'd be interested in know-
ing how many readers with
morning stiffness of the
hands from arthritis get re-
lief from wearing stretch
gloves to Jbed at night, so I
would like to hear from all
of you who try this proced-
ure. If you write about it. let
me Jtaow whether you used
THE U. S. POLICY , is dan-
gerous because it invites and
countenances communications
of utmost importance outside
of official channels where their
importance is recognized.-
Thus, the Soviet Union eom-
• mumcated its desire to nego- „
, tiate the 1962 Cuban missile
crisis through an ABC-TV cor-’
respondent, who received the
: message from the Kremlin at a
: side table in the Occidental
. Restaurant on Pennsylvania
Avenue.
Thechancesof a nueiear-war
were reduced vastly by the
correct evaluation of this Rus-
sian message delivered in un-
arthodqVteW^-b>-<B«iwiar~~
thorized source fir relay to the
—1L ..S. Government. (That
source, incidentally, was Johp
Scab, who will succeed George
Bush as our U. N. ’ambassa-
dor i
But what happens if a vital
; . message is delivered via a bar-
tender who is regarded as hal-
lucinated and who garbles the
message’’ In short, fhe James
Bond stuff is ridiculous enough
-—-in. the intelh/t&ice services; it
could be cafa
lethal jn . foe diplomatic-ser-
vice.
This, of course, applies to the
general principles of informal
diplomacy.
But in the case of president
tial representatives, it is the
-highest- branch of informal
diplomacy, for which some ex-
ceptinnmust be made, because
it is the personal diplomacy of
the chief of state.
THE TOP U. S. drug suppres-
. siofl coordinator in Vietnam is
quoted in the-report as saying:
“Even if t Saigon and Washing-
ton) were totally successful
from now on 1n stopping all
heroiq from entering Vietnam,
there (is) enough herOin in-
country to keep eyery soldier
high until the last U. S. ser-
viceman has withdrawn from
South Vietnam/^
The reason smuggling can’t
be brought under control, of
course, is corruption through-
out the Saigon government.
The GAO report describes one
secret meeting, for example,
between U. S. 'Ambassador
Ellsworth- Bunker*and South
Vietnamese'President Nguyen
• Van Tfoeu. - ...........- ........—
“The U. S. Ambassador
again met with the Vietnamese -
Presjdent,” states the report,
“to discuss the progress of a
campaign ... against smug-
gling and narcotics."
After- an exchange of polite
words, "the Vietnamese Presi-
dent was told, however, that *
the results of the antidru’g
campaign thus far had hot
been sufficient tqjemove the
issue as a threat to continued
American support.
i POKES RfesPGNSE-Our
' report that Coca
ing a private war chest to pre*
' serve its franchise system
brought howls of outrage from
Coke's bigwigs. Some charged
wewere unfair for saying their
franchise arrangement cost
consumers up to a nickel a bot-
tle. But at least one gutsy Coke,
bottler,. Pope Foster, president
of Coca-Cola Bottling Co., Taft,
Calif., agreed with us. He said
our story was "factual'.' arid
added he is himself suing Coke
for just the Kind of activities
we described. Foster's suit
alleges that Coke won’t give
him enough concentrate to
BARBS
By PHIL PASTORET
., Considering their literary ■
eminence, some of the books
on the newsstands cap Vest
be described as “best-cel-
lars/
The .World Council of
Churches Is a fellowship of
■ 252 Protestant. Anglican,
Orthodox and Old Catholic
churches from ^countries
and territories throughout
the -world. It was founded
iif 1948 to promote Christian
'unify and to facilitate’co-
operation in mission work,
doctrinal study andrservice
projects such as aid to ref-
ugees, The World Almanac
?ays.
‘_________ ‘Copyright £; I**;?
EmpTprlie A*!«n
from dummy-
nothing bettt
cartfa-nearf:
a small trumr
Now he led
finessed, dunu
cashed the a
fourth diamo
best . East coi
discard a he,
made his eig
a small trumi
contract since
held all its trm
did even bette
He led his j
West had to r
* the jack-wo.uld
trick and'now
pteyed andhae
die last three/
- Ther e is
sidelight, The
table North pla
three no-trti
• work out his lii
(NcWSPAPIR EN1
VFCHRD
■-The bidding hi
\\ esl Mirth
Bible V&rse
An angry wife ts a
cross-word puzzle.
Anyone who thinks hip-
pies are out of style hasn't
Hmvbeit for this cause I ob-
■ tained mercy, that in me first
Jesus Christ might shew forth
al| long-suffering, for a pattern
fo them which should hereafter
believe on him to life ever-
lasting. I Timot.hv 1:16
' ■ You Soulh ho
.42 ¥AQ!WI75
W hat d<P von di
A—II o ij b I e.
Hr*rl» later on it
TODAYS ()
You do ttoobhr
ner bids (our he
. you do nou ?
Answer to
Send SI for MCO«l
fe. "Win at Sridjt,'
mmt), tP ,i«ii
Slat /in, Nfr'YiAj
been at the supermarket re-
cently
Q—\Vhat is the commer-
cml value of bauxite?
Have <
Penny-wise and'pound-
foolish is what happens to
you when you try to pick
up some ‘‘bargains'’ in a
market. % . ' ,
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN '
ACROSS
1 Nutriment
Q—Fm- what is astronaut
l a w a r df White especially
noted? „ . • „
' »A—He was the first Amer-
ican to walk m spacy." 20
minutes in 1965
SXouriaSSr
SHAdabite
XI Against
12 Fare o f
lunepier r- -
llBance step
. TiGiseou:
mostly of small peddlers and
street pushers, who were not
adequately punished when
"brought to trial. The Ambassa-
dor stated that it was essential
that big traffickers be invest!
- gated, prosecutedand severeh-
punished.” _
Bui, invariably, diplomatic
pressure w ould produce only a
'Small flurry of activity and
Cfje $aj>toton ^>un
had a significant decrease —tbejiylon knit gloves or the
in morning stiffness. The Spandex and nylon gloves.
If some of
doctors say they don't know ,f somc of .V°M try cotton m
why it works. It's apparently 8lov*s to see if just keeping > -*
more than just a question of the han<ft warm helps, I'd <-
heat since wearing cotton like to hear about that too.
gloves didn't do the same entiiprim auni
FYed Hartman ..... Editor and Ptfolisfaer
Jnhn Wadley ............................ General Manager
Paul Putman' ..... ...... .............Assistautto Publisher
Ann B. Pritchett..............................Office Manager
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Prestoa Pendergrass ......... Executive Editor
Jim Finley............... .................Managing Editor
Wanda Orton .....................A»»ociete Managing Editor
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
fwl Putman ...........................Directer
Dwight Moody .....- * j. ...... ..........Retail Manager
-y-......... ..........Classified Manager
Leon Brown
* M n* emni T.M. PM oma mi* mrn m
■ Ac» tt C«ofrm at RAprc* I. lilt NMi’ ‘ “
VQUf doctor already Knows• should asfc him He mav
irhy you retain fluid It s well think that you already
fainy common during the know this is a common prob-
This last item interested'
me because many of the
readers who have had leg
cramps reported to me a
that the
year, ago that thev- received
fv 0 torn at tha baak, "Ttma'i
Hal, to tokw; oar HHm,
Phn 25 far ,oWAf* •W kam-
itm, i* 'jwtriti, Uak? tO. 3m
W. IW* Citr Smm, Hm Tart.
NX 100 It
gam mmtmrnaarmam. tonimi — m lo Omni........ n,, no.
I OrM hk . AM Cimii Aiiinieni
■CRMCO Of TNI AMOCIATtO NIU
o CfRAAMWARr4tlWlr.UI elllROIMim^Irooo'locoH___
. MGastous«
r ftomern
X5 Craftsmen
17 Bellini opeij
UGaeln •.
20 Poet,
“/t oor i+ecm men endgiiered th* mkjmUT
25 Put (or)h,
as strength
2C151 (Romani
-■22 Sphtre_
30 Farm animals
31 Felladtrow
32 Electrical unit 2
33 Former name 3
of Tokyo
34 Charge*, feet f
35 Town Uf i
Galilee I
35 Permit
2 13 k
1
■r ' , ,
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 77, Ed. 1 Friday, January 5, 1973, newspaper, January 5, 1973; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1104808/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.