The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 185, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 13, 1980 Page: 4 of 20
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4
Iran Heritage:
Suez Remembered
From Sun Files - -
I
Editorials And Opinion
R.E. Paul Jr. Earned
Medical Degree, 1950
B
i
IE
Face it, the situation is not one to inspire con-
fidence in the future of the collective security of _
the democracies.
The chaotic Mideast is seemingly hellbent on
being the cockpit of a third world war.
The region’s key nation, stridently revolu-
tionary, is not only challenging the West’s in-
terests but deriding its ability to defend them
forcefully.
And in this situation of escalating crisis, call for
allied solidarity are producing anything but. In-
stead of rallying to the cause we find ourselves S
wrangling with each other.
Iran 1980? Yes, but the scenario also fits Sue*
Tuesday, May 13, 1980
THE BAYTOWN SUN
4-A .
Am
graduates of the University
of Texas. *
From The. Baytown Sun
files, this isthe way it was
* 40 ahd 30 and 20 years ago: MAY 13,1950
MAY 13,1940 Robert E. Paul Jr. will
Louis Bains, cornet graduate from the Baylor
player in the Robert E. L,ee
Band, wins first place in a
- national contest in Waco. A
third place award in mar-
ching and second place in
sight-reading are earned by«
the band, directed by A.A.
Davis.
Services are held today rotg
for O.Z. Hafer, 53,
Highlands merchant.
Gilbert Stoufflet’s Cedar
Bayou home is damaged by
fire.
Yvonne Curtin, president
of the Tri-Cities Choral
Ciub, tells plans for a
membership drive.
B.C Littlefield is moved
across the street form its
location on South Pruett
while a new building is be-
ing constructed.
Zulma Knowles of Goose
Creek and Norma Archer
and Anna Opryshek, both of
Baytown, are new
JaJtan aci
of war for jfoui
lo attack our
Lessee if
IV yh this
R16HT-
i
z
\
\
slrai^l..
i
University College of
Medicine in Houston next
month. 4
James Clifton “Boss”
Williams, 64, of Cove died
last night in a hospital here
after he was injured in an
oil field accident at Lost
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ft
0
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Wesiem World
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o
11
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r”S
_ 1956. . * • v/
That, for memories in need of refreshing, .was
one of the great crises of the early postwar era.
And as blunder followed blunder,4t led to one of
the great spectacles in the Ijrfef history of the ...
United Nations — the IMted States, in semi-
concert with the Soviet Uhion, orchestrating con-
demnation of its owfi chief allies, Britain and
France. / X
To recap briefly, Egypt was sMll in the throes of
a revolution that began in 1952 with the ouster of
King Farouk. Gamal Abdel Nasser, the driving
force in the original revolt of junior military of-
ficers, earlier in the year had assumed supreme
^power as president*. More than the leader of
Egypt, he was the charismatic figure to whom
dissidents throughout the Mideast looked to bring - ___ _
^eanu^Ue,’negotiations with the U.5. on finan- HjF CIA KeepS Old SpiV
clng of the projected Aswan High Dam, the great . By The Associated Press In 1968, peace negotia-
hope of Egypt’s economic future, werefoundering Tors " - Today is Tuesday, May ? tions officially opened in
as Nasser became increasing receptive to Soviet MloiUfy I UU JcUcl 13, the 134th day of. 1980. paris between the united
offers of Tn rptaliatinn TI Q sip/»rAtiir\7 •-• . There are 232 days left in States and North Vietnam.
2 clil Inhn Fn^pr n, iH By JACK ANDERSON U S. espionage activities in secret is anyone’s guess. It the year. Ten years ago, -Israel' Frymrre.
oi state J°nn rosier Dunes wttnarew tne U.b. aid WASHINGTON - It’s no 1980, the record of seems unlikely that the 204- Today’s highlight in staged raids into Lebanon
Offer. And in counter-retaliation, Nasser seized secret that the Central In America’s first venture into year-old mail drop on St. history: to try and wipe out Arab
the Suez Canal, which was not American but con- telligence Agency routinely economic espionage is still Eustatia is in danger of5be- On May 13, 1607, English guerrilla bases,
trolled by British and French interests ' engages in economic es- classified as confidential. ing compromised ... or colonists landed near the Five-.years ago,
It all ram’e to a vmlpnt hParl that OrtnhPr with a pionage around the world. The secret publication that the quality of Ukrai- James River in Virginia, American Marines, war-
sudden Israeli nre emntive xtrikn Fovn The CIA’s economic spies tells of the mission assigned nian tobacco is a secret that and set to building what ships and planes were plac-
suuuen Israeli preemptive StrlKe against mgyp- are highly regarded, and to one William Carmichael, must still be protected. became Jamestown - the ed on alert in the western
tian forces in the Sinai, quickly followed by sometimes gives a presi- Who was sent to Holland Moscow On Muskie: first permanent English Pacific following the
British-French landings at the Mediterranean dent his first inkling about late in 1776 in the guise of a Cyrus Vance’s departure settlement in America. seizure of the merchant
mouth Of the Suez Canal, ostensibly to nputral.l7P..-^^8Us_Ji.ffiPMna-..iP- the..... jnerejiant to gain.Mqrma^____ from[ Foggy Boitoiti hasp’t ,_.On this date: _ ship “Mayaguez." by Cam--
the vital Waterwav from the EfiVDtian-Israeli con- nevir-neVer land snJollSfs, iion “for thF Coriim ittee -Dr~"Tra'ti' sed ^ r e nPi i n In 184 67 Congress bodlfh gunboats,
u e viidi wdwrw^f irom uie t-gypuan israeu COll yens and marks. It was Secret Correspondence, the Washington-watchers to declared war on Mexico. -’MM!». ■
11 mV’ I, „ ... . . from the CIA, for example, CIA’s predecessor in the lose any sleep, according to In 1915, the United States year. Secretary of
The U.S. responded instantly, not With support that President Carter first Continental Congress. ’ U S. intelligence experts. protested to Germany the state Cyrus Vance said any
Of its allies but with intense pressure to compel learned in 1978. that the Carmichael’s “control” While American pundits sinking of the British liner attempt by the Senate to
their withdrawal. Suez, Washington maintained, ^United States had slipped was Silas Deane, a lawyer have speculated that Ed- “Lusitania” and the loss of
—-waraflagrant use Of force in Violation Of the U.N. from first to sixth place and busmessrnan from mu* VA?P^vf“n- would proLm^ni it ■'
Pharter anH threat in wm-lrl wicp among the world’s m- Wethersfield, Conn., who more clout at the White In 1 9 4 0., Q ue err-----------prooaoiy kui 11.
utiarieidiiu d inredi 10 wona Dtjace. dustrial nations. was sent to France by Con- „ House than national securi- ^ Wilhelmina and Crown
~: _That_.it certainly was, antFlt happened to coin- This unique brand of es- gress to obtain military ty adviser Zbigniew Princess Juliana of the
cide with an equally serious threat,to peace in pionage may be less roman- supplies for the newly in- Brzezinski, the Russians Netherlands fled to London
Europe — the Soviets by then had moved in to tic than the James Bond- dependent British colonies. are under no such illusions. ahead of Nazi invaders,
crush the Hungarian Revolution Washington’s sty,e of sPy|n§’ But lr ls no Deane interpreted his man- They_stfll ser the Polish-
0 6 less important. It has date broadly enough to born Brzezinski as the man
become a major part of the recruit Carmichael to do a who has the decisive in-
CIA’s operations since the little economic spying. f.luence over-Jimmy
derring-do days of World Deane “tasked Car- Carter’s foreign policy.
michael with a number of Soviet intelligence
economic intelligence re- analysts consider Muskie’s-
quirements,” the CIA’s appointment as strictly a
secret history discloses. It political move intended to
then quotes agent Car- help the president’s re-
michael’s report to the election campaign. Unless «■
Committee of Secret Cor- he stays on past the ‘
November election, the
Politburo pols will continue
to assume that Brzezinski is tions sta§ed a boycott in
protest against a Supreme Council for Sport
totalitarian state.
The guilty party stood
condemned by the world
Glenn Lowry and Herbert
Kitzman, juniors at Cedar
Bayou High School, will
represent their school at
Boys State. Delegates from
Robert E. Lee will be Roger
Gary, Paul Parkinson-,
Sherwood Hensley and t3 Social club
. labbr)
14 Auto efub
15 Kick a football
16 Use brains
better (comp
wd.)
.18 Period
19 Cow's chewed
^.bulManaA -foil iOTIT.
cfwrlotrj.
lo ftsaie those
1 WdtAmP
Ontj if I have
the pair and ,
%n $1 play
poker, does a
pair heal a
full honse?.<
ACROSS -
\
this gun..,
1 Cremation fire
5 Fire (prefix)
9 300, roman
12 Suffix
.)■
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Robert Larkins. . 7
Jay Shepherd replaces
Harold Keown as manager
of Radio Station KRCT
1
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here
MAY 1371960
The 1960 Lee Traveler
yearbook at REL is
dedicated to the memory of
the late Principal R.B.
Sparks. •
Jane Isenhower, who is
leaving with her parents to
live in Australia, is.honored
at four farewell parties.
N.O. Felps is the new
president of the Lynchburg
Parent-Teacher Associa-
1/'
food
/
I
20 Feed the kitty
21 Singer Mama
- 23 Who (It.)
25 Insect stage
27 Pessimistic
31 Tropical plant
32 Become
insipid
33 Whatfft)
■ ,34 Navy ship
prefix |abbr]
35 Impudent
36 Mexican
laborer
37 Collection of
papers. •
39 Elba and
Wight
40 -New England
Washington Report
Today In History
tion. He will succeed J.W
The Way
It Was
*
cape
3
2'
1
4
MAY 13, 1780:
Cumberland Compact,
providing for a govern-
ment, signed in Tenn. t
12
15
7
I
18'
Bible Verse
21
2
BUT THOU, when thou
prayest. enter into thy
closet, and when thou hast
shut thy door, pray to thy 1_._.
____ Father which is in secret; ■
Thought for today: Tlie ."findthy“ Fafter~~^E9^T i'”
height of folly is to live poor seetb in secret shall' , ‘
so you can die rich. reward thee openly. Mat-
Anonymous thew6:6 !
25
26
1
31
I
I
--
37
31
4(
Julian Bond - -
response to Suez raised some questions at the
time: Could it be because Britain and France, still
recovering from the exhaustion of World War II,
were more susceptible to U.Srpressure than was war H and the cold war
Indeed, economic es
42
43
44
*
Why No Boycott Of
Olympics In Past?
53
I
.-the:So^t.:sup^ ......
Questions never answered and now history, as ^SS^LVoTmore
is the Suez crisis. Britain and France did than 200 years Yet such is
withdraw, peace did return to the Mideast for a the absurdity of the cia’s
time and the Atlantic alliance went on, but severe- obsession with secrecy that
ly shaken. Memories, however, Still linger, at the very first economic es- respondence from Amster-
least inTaris pionage mission on record dam on Nov. 2,1776. It was
,, ,. . , .. , „ ....... in 1776 — Ts apparently sent through a secret mail
If there IS a lesson in all of this, it IS that an classified as”secret by,the drop on St. Eustatia Island,
alliance is only as dependable as the real com- spy agency and told the Revolutionary Seeing Crimson:,. Rep.
munity of interests of its members make it. In The documents that ciA: Lester Wolff, d-n.y., is
theirs - enough so that It chose to break ranks SJ^*g5!5S?*{, ’Tl’have^nSSafo'S SrtW^th. "ttoS » «wl sanctions againsl the The International Olympic
and oppose them directly. Tn 1980, the European telligence ‘ Collection at
allies see their interests affected differently or Langley, va., in suburban
more severely than those of the U.S. — enough so Washington. ; Despite the
fact that the information
could hardly compromise
1
56
disputes growing out of a fields were threatened,
sports event in Jakarta the
previous year.
Eight years later, the Supreme Council of Sport in
Africa unanimously asked
that Britain be barred from.
the Moscow games for
hosting a South African
rugby team in—Dctober. _
That plea was ignored by
the U.S., which still insisted
offender, but few nations Committee capitulated and • that politics and shot puts
complied.
Neighboring states felt
threatened and complained
that the transgressor ex-
THE CHARGES came in a ported subversion and
*, , fund-raising letter Nixon’s revolution. A few brave demanded that New U.S. Department of State,
former Cabinet secretary citizens of this outlaw Zealand be excluded “these people (Africans)
wrote for a 26 year-old con- republic spoke out, but they because a New Zealand will be glad to aid you.”
servative protege, John were imprisoned after show rugby team ^had toured All’s brief tour as Presi- ’ •
LeBoutillier who has trials or banished to remote South Africa. When the IOC dent Carter s envoy to
By Lawrence E. Lamb, M.D. challenged Wolff’s re- sections of the land. Other refused, the African black Africa taught the
election bid LeBoutillier dissidents were denied per- boycott began. champ a lesson in the
If both parents are hetero- won conservatives’hearts mission to emigrate. ” The position of the U.S. realities of African politics,
zygous (Dd), the laws of d min(js with a booi, he Most of the population in was quite different in 1976 It’s a shame the Carter ad-
fohurCoef ThyeirhoHs0DnnE°sUtwUl wrote while he was a stu- thlKs dictatorship existed on • and 1972. In those years, ministration hasn’t learned
have a paiTof Mg ^(DD) one dent at Harvard. Its title, submarginal wages under a human rights were less of a hat boycotts m interna-
wl^have paired little ds (dd) “Harvard Hates America,” rigid police state m which a .. concern. The humane were t.onal sports are good for
and two will be heterozygous said it all-for many conser- small elite controlled the only Africans, and no oil every occasion, o.r for none.
(Dd). * vatives economy and the govern-
With Simon's en- ment- Most of the popula-—
_Son were non-citizens in
By JULIAN BOND
At the 1976 Olympic
Games in Montreal, 26 na-
Indeed, as recently as
Last December, the ~ ;
% OSCt
3 0001
NICE
C3
vou
the one to watch.
!
in Africa threatened to
boycott the 1972 games in
Munich because the white-
minority government in
Rhodesia had been invited.
QJ
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CO
K
Q
m
MAC
oF
Q.
Mo0
0
O
gressman as a “wartime
visitor'to Hanoi” and tagg-
ed him with involvement in
the ‘ ‘Koreagate scandal. ”
tobacco here, and the best
of it is worse than the worst
. k,m]
>
voted by a small margin to did not mix.
dis-invite Rhodesia.
»
LU
of our ground leaf.”
“IF YOU make a move
against South Africa,”
Muhammad Ali told the
<
that they are reluctant to go all the way with
retaliatory measures being pressed by
Washington.
i
FOUR YEARS later, in
Montreal, African nations
WHY THIS material is still
£
HEALTH
By Ned
s
■ £
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C/5
v
kl
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>{
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.-VS
DEAR DR. LAMB - I wish
you would clarify the differ-
ence between Rh positive and
V Rh negative parents. Isn’t it
true that two Rh positive par-
ents can have an Rh negative
child? Both my husband and I
are Rh positive and we have
an Rh negative daughter. I
wouldn't want either my
daughter or my husband to
think I had been unfaithful.
DEAR READER - You’re
absolutely right and you can
rest easy. However, if an Rh
positive mother under these
circumstances should have an
Rh negative baby it will not . . .
cause the typical Rh problems Blood types and subgroups
that are usually discussed. sueh as, Bh have been used to
That occurs only when the determine paternity,
mother is Rh negative and the DEAR DR. LAMB - What
baby is Rh positive. It is true causes itching before, during
that if both parents are Rh and after urination? Is there a
negative then they will have cure and what is the treat-
only Rh negative children. ment?
It’s rather complicated but DEAR READER — It’s a
here’s the explanation. We symptom. You might as well
have two genes that deter- ask what causes part of the
mine whether we’re Rh posi- skin to itch. There can be a
tive or Rh negative. The Rh local inflammation that’s irri-
positive gene is big D. The Rh tated by the urine. That may
negative gene is little d. If be from mechanical factors or
both genes are big D (DD) from an infection. Some worn-
such a person is homozygous en are prone to have yeast
Rh positive type. If both genes infections, particularly
are little d (dd) that person is they’re diabetic, and this
Si «* Uttl, d -bo Leon Cole to Justify the two
still should have an examination to wooden in-boxes 01
see if there is any local prob- door with a messaj,
lem that deserves treatment. “Do not remove. Necessary
WSN | for efficient operation.”
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If both genes in both par-
ents are positive (DD). all of......tbt|slastic support-
their offspring will be Rh * LeBoutillier has been able
positive. But if both parents
are Rh negative (dd), both
genes in all of the Children
will be little d genes and all
the children will be Rh nega-
OlVy r
TH£f
<u
their own land.
This nation had highly
placed allies, however.
Britain, France, West
Germany, Japah, the
United States and others
condemned with a loud
voice and conducted com-
merce with an open palm.
Capitol Chic: To keep the They retained diplomatic
spiffy, new $160 million ties with this outlaw nation.
James Madison Building’s Trade missions and tourists
interior decor compatible continued to shuttle back
with the overall design, and forth. -
employees of the Congres- And a11 but 26 nations
sional Research Service made sport with South
have been ordered to get rid Atrica in Montreal in 1976.
of such old-fashioned There have been other
bureaucratic ac- Olympic boycotts,
eoutrements as wooden in- c I" 1f56’ Holland and ,
boxes, desk blotters, coat Switzerlandrefusedtocom-
racks and desk lamps. This P®1® agamst the Soviet
edict moved CRS Union after Russian tanks
crushed the Hungarian
revolution.
In 1964, Indonesian and
. North Korean athletes left
THE
>
. 5-13
(TS
to raise thousands of ,
dollars from wealthy con-
servatives across the coun-
Ef
□
•” I'VE HAD fl LOTOF REAL (jOOO I OEAfON HOW TO (YlAl<£
iYlOWEY-GUr TWey ALL turned our TO se impractical- ,
LIKE -HAVIN' TO WORK*
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o
LeBoutillier denied that
he was part of any organiz-
ed effort to target liberals
for defeat.
ffie iaptotofi ^>un
tive.
Q-
S
Leon Brown.
Fred Homberger
Fred Hartmon
........ . Editor and Publisher
.... .. Assistant to Publisher
-..S Editoro’nd Publisher, 1950-1974
MChairmon of Board Southern Newspopers. Inc.)
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
X
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z
*
Preston Pendergrass
Jim Finley
Wando Orton
Executive Editor
- r±i
......Managing Editor
Associate Managing Editor
m
ml
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
Mike Groxiola
Display Advertising Monoger
S&L
the Bay town. Texas Post OHtce 77520 o
ss of March 3 1879 Published aftevnoons Monday thtough F.-iday a<
Memonoi Drive tn Baytown Texas P O Box 90. Baytown 77520 Subscript!
$3 50 per month S<2 00 pe» year single copy prtce 20 cents Doily 25 cents Sunday Mom rotes
on request Represented nationally by Caostol Publications
Entered os second i
sder the Act ol C<
Rotes By
130!
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The Associated Press u entitled exclusively to the use tor republic at ton to any news dispat
____ches credrted to »t or not gtherw.se credited m tM paper and locol news o* spontaneous ongm
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iH^inc^vvoi
" Sun rtlQtm nc«nully
big Dgene
gene (Dd)?
I,-
■i> m n, NEA in.
That
X .
.
urrarvucr
or publtcotion Nomes will be withheld upon request lor
letters short The Sun reserves the nght to excerpt let
types nut as Rh positive
(called heterozygous Rh
positive).
the 1
con-
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Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 185, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 13, 1980, newspaper, May 13, 1980; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145126/m1/4/: accessed July 2, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.