The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 218, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 25, 1975 Page: 12 of 42
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V
Hunger‘Problem’ Known;
Solution A Big ‘Mystery’
By JOE HUGHES
Copley News Service
Half the world is starving to death
and experts agree the other half better
do something about it
yunk
Two billion people are without proper
food; 460,000 are half-famished, hall-
dead right now; 10,000 die each day.
To make matters worse, the world is
running out of natural resources. The
Umted States is a big offender, with 6
per cent of the world population, it uses
40 per cept of it; resources.
The problems are obvious; the solu-
tions are not.
The experts know the urgency, the
scope and the futility of the crisis. They
wish they knew more,
Says Dr. Glenn Seaborg, Nobel Prize
winner and chairman of a recent “Fac-
ing a World Scarce of Resources" con-
ference:
“How do you feed a swelling popula-
Uon on a small planet with finite, di-
minishing resources?"
/ Forums are fine for expressing ideas, - *
focusing attention on a serious prob-
lem. But they usually are not a source
of solutions, says Seaborg, who would
rather be doing than talking about it.
Seaborg is a doer: former chairman
of the U.S. Atomic Energy Commission,
codiscoverer of plutonium; the man has
a list of credits Hollywood would love to
oifjUk^iiiiirfliriii - -•
He will settle for some thought- for
“wr--*“
“Our crystal ball went foggy," Uni-
versity of California's outgoing presi-
dent, Charles Hitch, simply states.
“And there to no guarantee we will be
able tn predict things any bettor than
we can today We are unable to predict
the political, technical or climatic con-
ditions which will play havoc with our
preelections.
"You can't predict earthquakes, de-
pressions, another Mideast war, unfa-
vorable weather trends; all could
happen.'"
Despite such gloomy news, Hitch will
retire from his UC stewardship this
summer and join Resources fSr the Fu-
ture, a Washington, D C., group which
deaJs full-time with the situation.
'Die main problem as he sees it:
“Water: the rainmaker may again
come into style
The mam constraint bn efforts to ex-
pand world food supply during the final
years of this century will be water, not
land, says Hitch.
“in many regions of the world, fertile
agricultural land is still available
provided water can fie found to make it
productive."
Orville Freeman, former secretary of
agriculture, says
"Increasing the food supply takes
world discipline, government interven-
tion and, most importantly,'a global
food reserve,"
Freeman was in Washington when
PORK MAY VISIT U.S.
PHILADELPHIA <AP) -
Pope Paul VI attends the 41st
International Eucharistic Con
gross here in 1976, it will be his
ffrst official visit as Pope
this country He visited New
York in 1966 but it was an offi
rial visit to the United Nations
which is international territory
In endorsing the congress and
its Rejection of the City of
Brotherly" Love as its site Aug
18. 1976, Pope Paul indicated
that HP Hoped fo be in Ptiiia
delphia for the event,
HI'is expected the Pope will
favorably respond by coming,"
the Rev Walter J Con-
way. executive secretary of the
ingress.
‘Motherhood’ Is Stairway To Broadway
NEW YORK (APi - For vet
eran Teresa Wright and new
comer Janet League, mother
hood means Broadway oppor
tunity
Miss Wright has come back
after an eight-season hegira, to
portray wife and mother in the
dramatic favorite, "Death of a
Salesman."
Miss Leagufe. after 12 years
of waiting, is having her first
Main Stem break with a far dif-
ferent maternal enactment in
The First Breeze of Summer
Arrival of the two plays with-j
i a few recent June days was!
sheer booking coincidence, Ian Oscar for “Mrs Miniver,
hardly heralding a new trend in Gradually the roles tapered off
Times Square fare but never total idleness
The widely different careers
of Miss League and Mis;
Wright attest to the varying
paths leading to parallel theat
ncal fulfillment
Miss Wright's performing ca-
reer began with a glow in 1938
when lurk wttrr ACT pare ih'
such stage stalwarts as “Our
Town" and "Life .With,Father."
Soon.she was in Sam Gold-
wyn films Fortune continued to
smite in a sequence of glamor
parts, culminating eventually in
In recent years, with two
marriages along the way. Mis:
Wright's main efforts have
been concentrated On stage
work
Among recent solid stints
were "Long Day's Journey lot'
Night" and " The Effect of
Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-
Moon Marigolds," Both, not in-
cidentklly, motherly portrayals.
Her initial workout with
Death of a Salesman'
last year when George (
persuaded her to do Unda Lo- keen self-criticism
man opposite Martin Balsam's
"I'm very harsh on myself,'
Willy under Scott s direction in she says, "and I don't pay at-
tention to what critics say, If I,
allow myself to be suggested
toi then I don't have control,"
The league entry into show
business wasn't easy. She grew
up in Chicago A brilliant scho-
male lead and lastie record aimed her toward
site diinjifrai: fa legal varwiT flic eiasmir
Philadelphia
I wasn't happy with nlvself
then - there were a number of
i," she asserts When the
present Circle in the Square
production was bruited, with
Scott in the
jiff dtrectih’i
‘Now,” says Miss Wright
think I have worked out
pact differently."
Janet league's road to
camelBroadway, the handsome young
Scott /actress avers, also has involved
, 'll dramatics stirred other yearn
fHfjtnes,
' j Los Angeles was incorporated
as a city in 1850 and is now es-
timatedSo have a population of
more than 2,809.596
enough to deal with a world going hun-
.. '
‘ "The energy crisis and the food crisis
are just forerunners of bigger trouble
unless we learn to predict some of these
things before they happen," says Sea-
borg.
The experts admit they were caught
flat-footed in last year’s energy woes.
Now they are storting to look around
and they see more shortages cropping
up all over the place.
Examples:
fne United States, a great contribu-
tor and exporter of food, no longer has a
tag surplus. The big American food
bank is bankrupt.
. The world's best land already is un-
der plow; someone suggested you could
always "grow bananas on Pike's
Peak."
Oceans are overfished; affluent na-
tions'such as the Soviet Union are eat-
ing more meat.
_not lo grow _
in 1961 and no place to put it," Freeman
remembers "We had to tell farmers
not to produce it.” ,
Times have changed.
"Suddenly, we have a critical short-
age of food,” says Freeman. "If we
have one bad crop year, we are going to
be watching millions and millions
starve to death on television".
Most experts agree the United States
no longer is in a position to help the
helpless alone.
“Increased food yields and supply
must tome from the developing coun-
tries - the hungry countries - them-
selves,’1 says Dr. Werner Hirsch, eco-
nomics professor at UCLA.
But that isn’t nearly enough.
"The United States must frastically
alter its life-style of affluence into one
of a recycled society,” says Seaborg.
He and other experts picture Ameri-
ca -- Wthlh the next decade — as a
country where wastes and scrap .must
be the major resources; natural re-
sources the backup supply. ■
"liegisiation must be enacted now to
require consumer education," says
To know the probiemtata know what —Seaborg^'Ure-styles must be changed
went wrong. to meet economic needs."
land, water and fertilizer are in shark.,
supply, everywhere.
Little-Known Bandelier
Park Offers ‘Surprises’
m
tuengarten’s
wiiryKMi.il ippgff
/ GOLDEN
BANANAS
THE FOURTH IS COMING!
PRE-FOURTH
Stock-Up For The Big
◄
4
A
A
By GARY EVERHARDT
Director,
National Park Service
Distributed by
Copley News Service
scenic grandeur. Sprinkle in
some Yellowstone wildlife.
Add Indian ruins as fascinat-
ing as those you find at Mesa
Verde. ’
Spice with the highlights of
a dozen other national parks
and you have the charms of
manyof America’s treasured
lands stuffed into 46 square
miles of north-central New
Mexico - Bandelier National
Monument. Bandelier Is ap,
excellent example of a lesser-
known site in the National
Park System, but one that of-
fers many outstanding at-
tractions. * .
Waterfalls, large Pueblo
ruins, hundreds of hand-dug
cliff dwellings, backcountry,
a campground, deep canyons
deer, forests of ponderosa,
juniper and pinon, nature
trails, campfire talks, living
history, guided tours.....
It's all within the
boundaries of Bandelier, a
monument that borders such
contrasting settlements as
Ijos Alamos, birthplace of the
atomic bomb, and the pueblos
of Cochiti and San Ildefonso,
inhabited by Indians who
claim Bandelier as their an-
ces
Nearly all of Bandelier) is
virtually undisturbed wild
land, dotted only by 60 miles
of maintained trails leading
to archaeological and scenic
features such as Alamo Can-
yon, the Stone lions Shrine,
Painted Cave, the pueblo
mins of San Miguel and
Take a part of-Yosemite’s- Yapaahi- and White Rock probably set in before Corn-
Canyon of'the Rio Grande
But most,visitors seldom
venture into the rugged back-
country, preferring instead to
remain in spectacular
Frijoles Canyon, a deep
gorge through which
meanders a bubbly stream
that breaks into an occasional
waterfall,
4 The road into Frijoles Can-
yon and another to a nearby
campground are the only fin-
gers of asphalt that poke into
the monument, named in
honor of Adolph F.A. Bande-
lier, the distinguished SWiss-
Amerifcan 'scholar .who
carried on an extensive sur-
vey of prehistoric ruins in the
region between 1880 and 1886.
The 400-room Tyuonyi
Ruin, constructed between'
1383 and 1466, is within easy
tor center, museum and con
cessionaire services. Here
the visitor will find two miles
of cliff ruins, cajj* rooms
gouged out of the Seep can-
yon wall of compressed vol-
canic ash.
The monument was estab-
lished primarily to preserve
the ruins, most dating to the
The large pueblos of Tqan-
kawi, which is a detached
section of the monument 11
miles from Frijoles Canyon,
and Tyuonyi evidently were
occupied until about 1550, al-
though their decline had
nado visited the region in
1540.
FAWME R BROWN
Hot Pepper Cheese
FOOD CLUB SlICEO
American Cheese
PIAVrt) IMPORTED
Can Ham
>-000 CLUB
Canned Ham *
SPITE AWT . .
Cheese Spread_______________
Danish Imported Salami
BEST KOSHER BOLOGNA CHUBS OR
Salami Chubs -
HORMEL REGULAR OR
Beef Weiners
ROSOFF NATURAL
Sweet Kraut
ROSOFF OLD TIME
Burrell Pick els
ROSOFF WHOLE
Kosher Pickets
CLUB* —
/ MaiUER 4
WHOLE KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE GOLDEN
CORN, CUT GREEN BEANS. OR SWEET PEAS
CANNED t
^VEGETABLES’*
~ WHfll P KPRNFI OR TRPAM CTVI c cm nc»l ^
w
- ►
:: A
A
.1
r.ion ‘ -
Mushrooms '^ 69*
UtofiE. _____«. -
limes 6 for 29*
FRESHSNE.ET, - '
■ . .FRESH CELW HESO ' ..... $°n90$ . \ ^9
Lettuce -3 m *1 Nectarines *59*
LB 79*
59*
Cucumbers 29*
5T, JAR 89*
48 OZ. JAR 1
rvr
FOOD CLUB
Jt 02.
CTN:
CHAMPION t
WHITE
Cream Cheese 45‘
ASST ,.t VARIETIES - .
Armour Star Cold Cuts
ARMOUR STAR _
Luncheon Loaf
ARMOUR STAR
- Chopped Ham or Hammette 1or pkg I19
New Zealand Kiwi Fruit
California Cauliflower
fXESH ^ IMS LB. AVG. '
Red Ripe Watermelon
FRESH
California Carrots ’
Valencia Oranges
' LB.
•BAG
.39*
99*
|U
69*
99*
» OZ. PKG. 69’
6 OZ. PKG, 79*
%
J ■
Sisters Fight
To Save Life
Of Brother
ORLANDO, Fla 1AP1 - Two
British, sisters have traveled 3
400 miles lo try to save, the life
"I -i brother, they haven't seen
in 12 years. One will give him a
kidney and the other will be a
standby
I sure km : lucky," said
Charles Gaster, 50', as he
beamed and hugged his sisters
upon their arrival Friday night;
For nearly two years, Gaster
kept his kidnev disease a secret
4-
4
4
A
A
\
31
►
>
• A
A
A •
ARMQURSTAR
Meat or
FREY SLICEO
Salami or
'FREY
Beef Hot Dogs
Luiich Loaf ,K
u or PKG. 109
PKG 189
«Frey Bunch nf I69 Salam i
oatw ti ir.pn
'GOLD MEPAlV I
FLOUR ► !
• WITH ^
COUPON
. , . RATH SLICEO
-^Dologna W- 69* Cold Cuts
FREY SLICED RATH SLICED
•v Cold Cuts .79* Cold Cuts
tt.tt.EM. ,J49
,p“:69*"
J‘ OZ.- PKG. _ dSCARjlAYER ,
Ham Steak 339 Wieners HKm
113
« M9
COiONUTl
CREAM PIE
8' SIZE
.►AAA44
r V
4
j GOLD MEDAL jummn
FLOUR ^ 69(
walking distance'of the vtoi-
dating back as early as the
12th Century,
Kent, England.
But they became suspicious
of band-aids they noticed in pic-
tures he sent home, learned the
marks were due to treatment
on a kidney machine and soon
decided on a trans-Atlantic kid-
ney transport.
Before the sisters were ap
do.noj
sisters said they did not learn
whose kidney had byyn chosen
until they arrived in Orlando
So (ar, doctors have decided
Mrs. Jenner's kidney is the bet-
ter match for Gaster. The oper-
ation is set July 3 at Florida
Hospital.
Incase something should
happen and Vera's kidney can't
be used, then they’d both be
• here:" said Gaster. who suffers
from nephritis, a toxic infection
that results in kidney failure.
We've always been close
and kept in contact., Their deci-
sion came as a surprise, al-
though i know if they had
known about it sooner, they’d
have done it sooner. 1 .
Angel Food Cake
BAVARIAN SLICED OR UNSLICED
; Pumpernickel Bread
1 SLICED OR UNSUCgD
Onion Rye Bread
DANISH
Choc. Nut Coffee Cake
HEARTH FRESH HOTDQG BUNS OR
a 79*
LO.AF 59‘
Hamburger Buns
COCONUT
Choc. Chip Cookies
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Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 218, Ed. 1 Wednesday, June 25, 1975, newspaper, June 25, 1975; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1105195/m1/12/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.