The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 117, Ed. 1 Friday, February 18, 1972 Page: 6 of 16
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THE BAYTOWN SUN
Friday, February 18,1972
^ Editorials • Viewpoint • Features-^
[ *'
1 •: *:-
. 3tl-^ ■ StO=0^^e0pi;T^'j^^^iB!
Case Now Phhht!
France had Captain Alfred Dreyfus. Germany under
the Nazis had Pastor Martin Niemueller, and untold
•* others. America in the 1920s had Sacco and Vanzetti.
To'day, alas, those who are convinced that America
is the abode of fascism have only H. Bruce Franklin.
Franklin was a brilliant and popular associate pro-
fessor of' English at Stanford University, which ap-
pears to be about the last campus on which the revolu-
tionary movement of the 1960s is still alive, if just bare-
ly.
Franklin himself had the. distinction of having been
granted tenure by Stanford at the academically tender,
age 'pf'31. But while respected in hiS field, Franklin at
37 seemed to have lost touch .with certain realities
along the way. ; . , •,.
He called himself a Maoist Communist and told his
. students that the Red Chinese.Revolution was the
greatest event in history. He recommended a similar
event in this couffiry. • “““
____ These opinions, while not looked upon favorably by
the university administration, were clearly protected
under the First Amendment, It became a different
. matter, however, when Franklin allegedly stepped
across the bounds of free speech into the area of action.
After six weeks of hearings last faH, at which 100 wit-
nesses appeared, a seven-man faculty advisory board
.v found Franklin guilty of having incited students to vio-
lence on the campus and in January recommended,
five to two, that he be dismissed. (The minority con-
curred in the verdict but recommended suspension
rather than dismissal.) .
At a pre& conference following the verdict, Franklir
called for “revolutionary counterviolence.” His wife'
stood beside him holding a symbolic carbine (un-
loaded).
Sordid Exercise - - I
New Left Smears | Br,d9e
The White House
By Oswald & James Jacoby
By ERNEST CUNEO*
„ WASHINGTON—The articu-
late New Left is engaged in
late winter maneuvers, Joint
and sordid exercises designed
to smear, the White House for
counter smearing the New
Leaf.
It appears that the White
House and its spokesmen have
accused some of the Presi-
^ dent’s critics of “consciously
aiding and abetting the
enemy.”
It is both pointless and fruit-
less to exchange verbal brick-
bats when the average citizen
can judge for himself. A mere
recitation of part of the public
- record should answer the
question for many.
ITEM ONE: It is an open and
notorious fact that various
senators have conferred with
L Hanoi representatives, and in
secret. This contravenes not
only the norms of senatorial
courtesy but the constitutional
forms for carrying on the
foreign affairs of the United
... States, apd indeed, come close
to a violation of the Logan Act.
ITEM TWO: Mayor John V.
Lindsay provided police
protection for a parade in
which the Vietoong flaf was
-carried by scores of people,
and as a-preliminary to which
draft cards were burned, the
climax of which ceremony was
the burning of the American
flag. •' • *■
A Delicate Balance
Chiefs of Staff that withdrawal
of bombing interdiction of
enemy lines of supply would
multiply the totals of American
dead and wounded, though duly
notified of such, the Senate
opposition to the war insisted
on the stopping of such tactical
operation.
ITEM FIVE: On at least one
occasion, terms offered by the
United States to Hanoi were
brutally assailed and rejected
on Capitol Hill though Hanoi
subsequently expressed in-
terest in them as a basis of
further discussion.
• ITEM SIX: On at least one
occasion, Senate Foreign Rela-
tions Committee chairman, J.
William Fulbright, assailed the
men of the American armed
forces as despoilers of
South Vietnam family life, and
largely responsible for the
moral breakdown of both
public and private morals. In
his book, “The Arrogance of
Power,” Chairman Fulbright
bitterly assailed the United
States for exactly what the title _
of his charming book sets forth.
Further, with his character-
istic intellectual frankness,
Senator Fulbright subse-
quently declared that the
militant criticism of the Viet-
nam War in the U.S., of course,
gave comfort and encourage-
ment to the enemy; but, he
declared with equal candor,
that is the price we must pay
for an open society; -
ITEM SEVEN: Members of
NORTH 15
*1075
V105
♦ AQ72
*K1083
WEST EAST
* K92 * J 8643
VKQJ94 V 76
♦ 1063 ♦ J95
*74 * A 5 2
SOUTH (D)
♦ AQ
VA832 ■
♦ K84 —“~
*Q J96 '
East-West vulnerable
West North East South
1N.T:
Pass 3 N.T. Pass Pass
Pass
Opening lead— VK
Remember the story about. •
the man who quit his job of
sorting oranges because of
too many decisions?
A bridge player has to /
make decisions also but a
wise declarer, can frequently#-
eliminate therm .
Take today’s hand as dfr
example. South holds back
his ace of hearts until Ulfi .
third lead of the suit'. He dis-
cards a club from dummy,
Then if he is mentally r
'he leads a club and is
down one trick automatic-
ally.
South isn’t so happy when
loaaea;. • _ _ _ _ ■ -• .
Predictably, l’affafre Franklin has arroused some " j'__*r_ 2 *“ '
liberal members olthe Stanford faculty, who fear that JOCK AnaersOn OOyS
it portends a wave of repression on the nation’s cam- . . A • - ■ I • I <
Author Of Autobiography
€i)t JBaptoton £>un Accuses His Sub ject, Nader
-Rogers for -criticizing Sen
MuskleJ- lhere is scarcely a
President who has not been
defended by his cabinet
Perhaps the most fiery and
effective defense was that of
Republican Secretary of War
Henry Stimson of his Presi-
dent, Democrat Franklin D.
- Roosevelt,
Fred Hartman ..........................Editor and Publisher
John Wadiey.............................Business Manager
AnnB,Pritchett ........ .................. .OfficeManager
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Preston Pendergrass........... ..........Executive Editor
Jim Finley................................Managing Editor
Wanda Orton........«........ Associate Managing Editor
ADV ERTISING DEPARTMENT
Paul Putman.......................... .Advertising Director
Dwight Moody. ?.......... ........... Retail Manager
~LeonBrowh........... .... TT..TT7....ClassifiedManager
Entered as second class matter at the Baytown, Texas,
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Published afternoons, Monday through Friday,
and Sundays by The Baytown Sun, Ini*.
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T^e ent-netf e*etu5*veiy- to ttie use for repubi'Caf'On to arrp
...-Attfl-lffl,»» -atBtf-W.St O-Mitta ,'.B 0*r .jpid lociy,
—gt t -or-q-n-p uD -ner^n- - RigCitS-Of rgpuDiicat
MLAWkiNCEELAm
Skin Commonly
Sags with Age
Dear Dr. Lamb — Why do
some women have sagging
muscles and'wrinkles aFOund
their neck and upper under-
arms? I've noticed a big age.
difference in many younger
140- to 50-year-old > women
having'Wrinkles compared to
- I'm worried about my
_ _ ___future. What can one do ter
rrr' avoid or lessSriThe_wfinkies?-
Do'es doingjtrenuous house-
ercise?
m&m
overstretched skin is beyond
any reasonable expectation
from an: exercise program.
There are some muscles un-
der the skin in the neck that
-.help if their tone is main-
taine.d but usually exercise^
does little for these either.
• ,,Y.«pr larnHy- might-
ate all thafstfenuous' house-^
work, but it won't help or
_____harm your skin. ‘ * %
Because there is no
WASHINGTON—The author
of an unflattering biography of
Ralph Nader says the con-
sumer crusader tried to intimi-
date him and his publisher into
changing the book.
Charles McCarry author of
“Citizen Nader,” believes the
alleged pressure was an at-
tempt to “undermine the
publisher’s confidence in the
book.” It will be published next
month by the Saturday Review
: Press.
' “In 20 years of reporting,”
McCarry told my. associate
Brit Hume bitterly, “I have
never encountered anything
that compared to the kind of
harassment and and intimida-
tion I’ve gotten on this book.”
Nader, however, scoffed at
the idea that McCarry was
under pressure. “I accepted
». his-invitatibn to correct factual
eiTora^Sadersald. “He wrote/
..... tome,onDctpber 27 and asked
me to read the galley proofs of
- the. bode and inform-him aT.
errors. • . •
“I* found about 12(T errors;
"andYhisls what they're calling'
intimidation. I didn’t object to
a single one of his conclusions.
I’ve made no attempt to say,
^You’re wrong in your value
judgments.’ ” :
Nader suggested also that
McCarry’s angry comments
were an attempt to stir up con-
•troversy that would help pro-
mote the book. “He knows a
good thing when he sees it,”
Nader said.
McCarry said Nader’s list of
objections; involved mostly ^
''maters'of opinion and “ranged' '
from the trivial to serious at-
tempts to suppress the truth.”
truth.
hours and, therefore, was not
responsible’ for the tragic
campaign.
Nader didn’t deny that he'
disputed McCarry’s version of
both the law school grades and
the Yablonski affair. But he
insisted that he is right aboat
both. He suggested that Mc-
Carry’s law school transcript
could have been “forgedby
General Motors.,
McCarry wrot£ a searching
book and aired ail sides'of the
' issues. Although he professed
“unprecedented sympathy”
for Nader, his book shows more
sympathy for Nader’s longtime
adversary, former General
Motors chief James Rocke,
who is described by McCarry
as “gray-haired, a grand-
father, and honest man baffled
by his times.”
JAPANESE FOREIGN
Minister Take6 Fukuda has
suggested deficdfely fliftt t~“
“top-level” member of the
’ presIdenlM'^
Tokyo on the way home from
Peking-to. .brief.,. Japanese 4
leaders on President Nixon’s
talks with Chou En-lai.
Other U.S. allies in Asia have
agreed “to consult frequently
on China” but to make no
unilateral moves toward closer
relations.
Reporting on a recent con-
versation with Fukuda, Ameri-
can Ambassador Annin Meyer
cabled: “Fukuda believes that
after Peking visit, a Tokyo
stopover* by Secretary Rogers
or other top-level member of
(ASEAN) had sgreed “that
there , would be consultation
among the ASEAN member
states prior to any'move by any
state toward closer relations
with China
Bible Verse
BEHOLD, I stand at the door^
-ahdknockif any man hear my
voice, and open the door, I will
come in to him, and will sup
with him, and he with me.
Revelation 3:20
Did You Know?
■ There were more than 44 mil-
lion boatmen in 1971.
HMHii
Sen. George McGovern
publicly declared the Cam- --- - --------------- ,
bodian action of American the Nixon Cabinet are assailed
troops'“Hitlerian.” for defending their President
Sen. Vance Hartke appeared (more particularly, Secretary
' on a platform bedecked by
' Vietcong flags.
Sen. Edward M. Kennedy de-
clared the President was
engaged in massive bombing
costing the lives of thousands
of innocent people because
such bombing was part of the
President’s obsessive drive for
-reelecfion.------------ ----------
ITEM THREE: Through
public statements, while the,;
military action was in
progress, and often before it -
was launched, various senators
have notified the world of the
number of American troops
involved, the nature and
caliber of their weapons, their
objectives and for how long
they would remain. The over-
whelming “weight of expert
military authority is that such
vital combat information,
together with the total destruc-
tion of the element of surprise •
greatly increased American
casualties. • - -
ITEM FOUR: In spite of the
unanimous opinion of the Joint
________ .. successful spacr
finesse or a 3-3 diamond
break will give hira.'l§8'
ninflj. Which should he tw?
If South is a mathemati-
cian he knows that the finesse
is 50-50 and a suit breaks 3-3
only 36 per cent of the tiiriie.
He tries the spade fine|se
and is down two. If hd 'is *
afraid of going down two he
refuses the spade finesse
and this time the sun shines
for him and he makes his
contract. :
An alert declarer nev;er
has to make this decision.
He sees that it will stare
in the face if he plays first -
but notes that he can well
afford to test the diamonds".......-
Nothi^fo^morfr^-; ^wgmjggm
tion, nor m the First Amende of dubs So he runs the_ dia.
How's Your Vocabulary?
f'
;Jfiblica| 6eog«»pbf-
Answer to Previous Puiile
... ACROSS
“TBibifcar ~
kingdom
6 Galilee's
1 neighbor •
13 Biblical
mountain
14 Basic part
15 Stand fast
16 Roman
playwright
38'German
interjection
FAoSsrr*
40 Capital1 of’
ancient -
41 Asian country
43 Newt
45 Was observed
47 Over (poet.)
48 Biblical
high priest
SI
m
ment, limits the freedom of
speech of an American by
reason of his acceptance of
appointment to the Cabinet.
Accordingly, it comes with
particularly ill grace from left-
oriented editorial pages to
castigate a public official for
full use of his rights under the
very same Amendment which
guarantees -them as a free
press.
The New Left, out of a
concept of higher duty, has
exhibited great vigor against
the war in Vietnam. Doubtless
in the belief that they were
rescuing their country from an
immoral and costly war, they
have nearly achieved their o|fc
jective; but it would be fatuous
sf them to deny that they have
also brought victory to the ene-
my.
FUNNY BUSINESS
-----------------the, dia-
monds successfully and- has
his nine tricks without any
worry about the king of
spades. ,
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN.)
V+CHRDJivWoM
The bidding has been:
_West North East South
Pass
! '♦ IV Pass 3 V
‘4 V ' Pass. Pass " • ?
You, South, hold:
*98654 VAQ6 VA32*J4
What do you do now?
. A—If your parti(er makes
weak overcalls, pass. If he over-
calls soundly, you should dou-
ble. A four-heart or no-trump
bid should not be made.
TODAY’S QUESTION
Instead of overcalling, your
partner has doubled one dia-
mond. What do you do now?
Answer Tomorrow
By Roger Men
iTfemale deer JJ Of a moral
18 Timber tree. standing
20 Partiality 54 Church
21 Ostrichlike
bird 56 Windflower
22 Farm animal 5^ount where jj,dian
ship’s side
6 Adam’s son
7 Pub brew
8Sea(Fr.)
SProtozoan
.. (var.) .
10 Opposition
11 Quechuan
24 Mountain
inMoab
27 Nasty'child
29 Shade tree
32 Greek
war god
"34 New -
31 Additional
amount
36 To and'—
37 Legal agent
(ab.)
42 Oleoresin
44 Recently
made
45 Sea mammal
46 Sicilian
CIOO HAO one
BSClCflF-AFor
belw oh uA !
!l
5 Sicili
volcano
- 47 Spanish
cheers
48 Feminine
thflaw801 12 Philippine
58 Bewails sweetsop
59 Gives ear to
DOWN • dawn
1 Deep-bodied 22 Sea of—'
-------
(comb, form) of the road 24 California city 50 Garden flower
35 Plum kernel 3 'GreatLake .25-the Red 52 Commit to
. name
U4££hakeepufe»,
ean king
y-.r.'iV-
sagging skin around the neck
^sorae-WMBeflLgnd some men _
have cosmetic surgery done
to remove the excess folds
A common method is to pull
up the, s'kjn around the neck
Dear Reader — The niost
important factor is the "skin
itself. The skin loses its
normal*elasticity arid, in a<
...sense, is-oxets-tretcherL Utl-v
fortunately ihe loss of elas-
ticity is. often^ a familial u» vi una^a. n wuu
char«Mfetic;-i?jp6» -mirth-* . scar may remain after the
er tended to have .this prob-. procedure. •.
lem you’are .definitely more_ f V.
* likely to have it, too. Dear Dr.. Lamb — I have
an excess amount of skin
' under fny chin. Is there any
exercise or something else
that can cure This unwanted
problem? I have tried sev-
jeral exercises, but I do not
seem to get any results.
Dear Reader — Exercise
won’t help much. The only
thing that will really help is
cosmetic surgery. You could
have an incision just under
McCARRY SAID, for example,
he had a copy of Nader’s
Harvard law School record,
which showed'Nader scored a
low 494 oh his admission test
and finished near the bottom of
over could 1>e disclose
publicly prior to President’s
going to Peking... Fukuda
said pre-Peking disclosure
would not be expected.”
ut» A"?*aik*11 ai vuiiu 1uk jicwr . and fimstied near tne bottom ot Meyer indicated in his secret
tfte back of the neck. A small
Mistreating the skin is also ’
a big factor. Too much sun
and wind actually damages
the skin and speeds up its
loss of elasticity. That sum- .
. mer tan can also, age the _
skin. Obesity stretches the
skin and if .weight is sub-‘
sequently lost, the previous
normal* contraction of the
skinmdy not return,
Exercising isn’t really
much good for this problem.
It helps a- little but the
amount of increase in muscle
test grade was 594 and his class
rank was in the middle, said
McCarry.
He. also contended that
Nader had persuaded in-
surgent Jock Yablonski ty run
for theUfuted-Mine-Worker’s-
presidency in 1988, a campaign
that ended , in tiff murder.
McCarry claimed logs kept by
one who attended the Nader-
Yablonski meetings before the
campaign showed there were
at least nine meetings lasting
some 75 hours. - ^ -- »
But according to McCarry,
Nader claimed he had only two
or three meetings with Yatdon-
concerned about “how far
ahead of Japan U.S. has
already moved in preliminary
contacts with Peking. ______
*■ “I tried to put visit in pre-
spective,” reported the Am-
bassador, “as reflected in
recent top-level U.S. state-
ments, e.g., limited expecta-
tions, bilateral issues, etc. Also
reminded Fukuda. how well
Japan is doing in trade and
other intercourse with PRC
_ (People’s Republic of China).”
Another secret cable from
the U.S. embassy in Djakarta
1
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3
4
5
13
15
mam iiaia aiaa
*’ • -
32
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35~
sr
— u.w—~ —...~— scar ;ust under the jaw is , *7.7"" "T'
si» you would need to fill an hardly noticeable. 1 -, lasting no more than a few
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 117, Ed. 1 Friday, February 18, 1972, newspaper, February 18, 1972; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1104985/m1/6/: accessed July 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.