The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 30, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 25, 1966 Page: 4 of 17
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■
Sunday, SaptambRr 25, 1966
4
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| # Editorials And Features # |
■ . m M .........u----—.—-----1.
Hubert
f-W'VgSMy
jy.
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si
Safety Play
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tie
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■■
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IF—:
IPS 3
By Oswald* James Jacoby
Newspaper Enterprise Aim.
South rises with dummy’s
but East covers with the king
and South wins with the ace;--------------
lple play at this
. If the king'drops
South "can claim all the
tricks. If it doesn’t, South will
— discard his Wring spade on
The trouble with this line
of play is that South will lose
\
E
gj
#
-t
■' ■ Sj
. r
fror
It
-I-
mw
HENRY McLEMORE
f YORK. - Not long ago -
igUshman won nearly a
m
day
sa4
_
Lor
.
W:
^ _ _Thfc
The
pennies - a
__ have been imp
U.S. until recently.
int is to
-i-
ot
Ififs
m
decade‘of civil rij
,1J
war
ts prog-
rnt
At
fact
:
d
thp
»•*%
of
ule<
that an American could get for
his money were 126,000 to 1 of-
fered by Las Vegas bookmakers -
that the sun wouldn’t set in the
east; 93,000 to 1 that a llama
jwouldn't win the Kentucky Der-
]by within three years, and 85,«—e
iOOO to 1 that no soap company
(would give a detergent a three-
ftolable name.
,v
*
bill that the House passed the 1966 bill
»majority In the Senate
its final ballot, the up-
Senate to pass the
with its contrtm
provision.
Yet at the same
that this will bri
turmoil than the
a
JL
Fat
Fat
■
per chamber was o
m
md the
out on that first trump lead.
ned
Mai
nation hu al
T
of p
olie
will guard against that bad
trump break. He starts by
cashing two high “clubs in
cry of
resist-
l0But it can be confidently predicted
that castigation of the government and
the natlon afF a-whote beca^ ^ the
action of a minority, and wild warn-
ings about more violence to come, will
ke the passage of civil rights
Ion in the next Congress any
the mood of Uda«t1
swel
I.
thei
community or to
dntment of Negro
Me:
,,...........to Hubert Hum-
phrey, it isposslblefor a man
to get odd* of 34,000,000 to I on
| bet from the Las Vegas odds-
makera. .
—
Thaf Vice President Humph-
rey will, just once, disagree with
President Johnson.
lade
take positive
: p.m
----------- afte
card. Then he leads a trump
from dummy. If East follows
with the deuce, South simply
out,
national
10:
I dal equality, tti-outcorneshowsJ'i
trend of the Congress as well as the
administration to sell black Americans
down the river of political expediency.
sep:
or
i
sch
jack, South will pick up the
last trump later on. If West
shows out, South will cash
his ace of tramps and cOR-
cede one trick. ——_____ !
If East fails to follow to
that tramp lead. South__.
his ace and leads a second
__
lunc
not ma
O
u
hookmaken, a man might even
get a higher prices
When I told a friend of mine, J
Terry Haute Harry, that to tose-----
such a bet would put him and
a lot of qther bookies under, he
jKiilwwbuIdn'tbe the only
easier.
uncalled for In
Such
If
•err
t
1
trump toward dummy. :■ ~t—^—-
This constitutes a perfect
safety play in the trump-suit
because it guards against tie
Love, to
iMs*$
&
a
Have You Join!"'
A lot <
r....., >
rainstorms to reach patients in remote Harry wid. "Let Humphrey say
areas. Most happen during pleasures .'no'toatead of ’yes’ to Johnson .
flights and are due to nothing but care-
In fact, the accident rate among doc- lessness and overconfidence: — ^
tors possessing pilots’ licenses is so , Doctofc, it seems .don’tjlke tojtake
medical privatepilots*That Federal ermen and airport personnel, and seem
to feel that skill with a scalpel is a
guarantee of skill in a cockpit. ,
Maybe the air surgeon’s admonition
will bring the flying physicians down
to earth. We need every one of them
that we have.
8 fly. Un-
7*
ft*
and everything would go under. . -___. .
Washington Merry-Go-Round
backwards.-rooctebwould ... ....... ' * ^ J
at noon, the wheat fields would
wither,,and the Oval Room in
House would become '*
NORTH (D) 24
TQ865
‘♦KHC
*AKQ5
EAST
T
J
xe
the
WEST
(Not Shown) (Not Shown)
------SOL'TH_____
♦ A 6 "
■ T A 10 9 7 4 3
♦ A Q 7 4
-^
f”
all of them, requesting that they "fly
with the same judgment and care that
you exercise in practicing medicine.
Few of the accidents are the result
of trying to fly through blizzards or
octagonal.”
Terre Haute Harry was asked
how the Las Vegas boys were
so sure of Humphrey as to lay
such fantastically high Odds,
“Past performances,” he said.
"There’s the President’s picking
‘up those beagles by the ears,
for example. H a vice president
ever was going to Say 'Don’t do
that. str/ that was the time. If
Humphrey wouldn't criticize dog
lifting, why expect him to speak
his mind on national and Inter-
national affairs?”
While Humphrey’s services as
jolly echo to Johnson are said
to have hurt him politically,
especially with the liberals, .it
hasn’t damaged his chances for
a good job when he is no longer
“vice president. Any number of
high executives have expressed
wishes to have him by their
sides when he steps down from
office.
“I have been on the lookout
for a man who couldn’t, or
wouldn’t, say ‘no’ to me for a
long time," Orville J. Pettibone,
president of the vast Hill and
Dale Enterprises, told a friend
in Washington. “Every vice pres-
ident I have ever had has al-
ways come up with a stubborn,
streak under pressure that
made him say ‘No.’ Humphrey
appears- to-be-free^ thto grave -
fault. There’ll always be room
for him here at Hill and Dale
Enterprises.”
■
Ashamed Of Powe
V
f
4
f
Cars Not To Blame
East-West vulnerable
| West North East South
1* Pass IV
2 V Pass 4 N.T.
Pass 5 N.T.
Pass Pass
equipment to Betchtesgaden,
Hitler’s former playground, for
the Congressman’* use while he
was supposed to be inspecting
European education.
Fishing and women then be-
came ^'Adam's^ number one con-
cern. They still are. At least
they rate ahead of his duties in
Congress. On Sepf. 4, 1962, this
column published the now fam-
ous State Department cable on
behalf of Powell ordering Amer-
ican embassies in London, Paris
and Rome to get theater tick-
ets, night club reservations,
counterpart funds and a special
I PAID TRIBUTE to him last a.^
. i-L two female memDers or nis
™ ^ ^ staff, Miss Tamara Wall and
pass Aid to Education, the Man- ... n U(l»
power Training Amendment, the Miss Oirrine Huff.
Coal Mine Safety Act, the anti- Junkets abroad continued
poverty bill, revision, of the Lam Tight up until this summer when
drum-Griffin Act, the Higher *e reported (July 26) how Pow-
Education Act and some of the «»,.^d been traveling abroad
most important laws ever while other members of his
passed through one committee committee readied the anti-pov-
of Congress erty bill, and how PoweU, re-
“*
To Negroes, the two most Im-
portant bills in Congress are
civil rights and anti . poverty.
Yet Powell had been absent for
both. Rep. Sam Gibbons, D-
Fla., the man Adams now ac-
cuses of being a racist, has vot-
ed for civil rights and worked
hard to bring anti-poverty to a
One defense that Negroes
make regarding Powell is that
he isn’t really Negro, that he
masquerades as such in order
to get Harlem votes. It is quite
true that no one would ever rec-
ognize Powell as a Negro. In
any Washington ballroom he
could pass off as a Spanish
grandee, or an American In-
dian brave. He has charm, a
brilliant mind bears himself
with distinction and when he
wants to work at the job, can
be an extremely efficient com-
mittee chairman.
By DREW PEARSON
BEVERLY HILLS - Travel-
ing around the country, I find
that Negroes generally are
ashamed of Adam Clayton Pow-
ell. He is the third Negro to
serve in Congress since Recon-
struction days, yet they are can-
did that his activities are not
unlike those of Tom Dodd.
They do not consider a critic
of Powell to be anti-Negro or a
racist, as Powell now alleges.
I would be the first to know, be-
cause I was the first to expose
Powell’s operations.
The record is a long *and
sordid one, showing clearly that
the House of Representatives
does not police the conduct of
its own members. Some have
claimed that no action has been
taken against Powell because he
is a Negro; yet the House also
flagrantly ignored the conflict of
interest case of Rep. William
Miller of Lbckport, N.Y., when
he was 1964 GOP candidate for
I:
Pass
Pass 5 ♦
Pass . 6 V
Pass
Opening lead—A J
“ The real problem with traffic acci-
dents, it has been said, is not with cars
but with the people who drive them.
The same could be said about the prob-
iems of the cities - smog, noise, litter,
crime and all the other evils that arise
from human congestion.
Look what happens when people flee
the cities for the nation’s parks, as
they are doing in increasing numbers
every year. According to a story in the
Wall Street Journal, Yosomite Valley
during the height of the tourist season
has about the same crime rate as a city
of 50,000 population. -
- In 1965, there were 253 felony thefts,
320 auto accidents and 1,689 juvenile
offenses. Aggravated assaults have led
to about one murder a year. Last year
j»u*kv rangers apprehended Stpeople
for putting their initials on rocks or
trees with spray p^int.
loss of two trump tricks ir-
respective of how the trumps
divide.
It does lose the contract
for South if West holds the
singleton king- or jack of
trumps and East is void of
diamonds or against 8-0 or
7-1 club breaks, hut the
chance of one of these bad
breaks is much less than the
chance of finding East with
all three trumps so the tramp
safety play is preferable.
i
it
KATZENBACH 'ELEVATION'
WAS NOT A COINCIDENCE
l
’
President’s Cabinet, and take a
$5,000 annual salary cut.
The switch made Katzenbach
Jfo.-3~maa4n-ti>«. State,Depart,
one seemed to know when or
Br JAMES MARLOW
AP News Analyst
WASHINGTON (AP) - It
hsTdty
that, two days after the 1966
civil rights bill was killed, Pres-
ident Johnson announced the
appointment of Nicholas Kat-
zenbach m undersecretary of
For months it was common
knowledge in Washington that
undersec retaryXeorge W. Ball,
56, wanted to resign his State
Department poet although no
why
You, South, are dealer and
As, attorney general, Katzen-
bach»44,waa not onlyjohnm's.
hold
46 J 8 7 6 5 TAKQ64 4* 2 463
What is your bid? 1
A—Bid one sp«4e. Tfar It
high card points plus three
distributional points make your
hand an opening bid. You
should open with the higher
ranking five-card suit for con-
venience In later bidding.
8- colncid-enw
chief architect in putting togeth-
er the 1966 civil rights bill but
administration's
spokesman and engineer in
trying to get it through Con-
ment under Secretary of State
Dean Rusk, whose resignation
chief j,ag also been rumored but with
less certainty than Ball's.
Ball and Katzenbach have this
in common — both are special-
ists in international law. Be-
fore he became the State De-
partment’s No. 2 man, Ball was
_ widely experienced in foreign
affairs. But this is a .brand new
* field for Katzenbach.
Immediately after Johnson
appointed Katzenbach — since
Katzenbach was taking a reduc-
tion to rank and pay to move
over.tq the State Department —
there was speculation he would
succeed Rusk sooner or later.
Later, if at all. seems the like-,
ly time for that switch, which
means Rusk isn’t likely to re-
sign for many months. It will
probably. take Katzenbach that
long to learn about wheeling
and dealing in foreign affairs,
although one Washington wit
said: "Anyone who can deal
with Dirksen won't have trouble
with (Andrei) Gromyko (the
Russian foreign minister).”
Four men who served as at-
- tomey general became secre-
tary of state: Edhvund Ran-
dolph (1794), Jeremiah S. Black
(i860), Richard Olney (1895)
and Philander C. Knox (1909).
The way Johnson chose to an-
nounce the resignation and ap-
' poi n tm e nt Wednesday was an-
other good example of his un-
predictability. Late Tuesday
night a Johnson press aide in-
formed Hiwimtn the President
himself would conduct Wednes-
day morning’s news briefing.
This was extraordinary in itself.
There are usually two brief-
ing! n day at the Whit* House
when Johnson's press aides call
to newsmen to tell them what
the President wants known or to
answer questions. These seldom
provide major announcements.
The President usually reserves
them for himself.
But, instead of a news brief-
ing Wednesday's session be- ,
came a news conference. The
President answered questions
and A nally was asked about fill.
Ing vacancleg at the State Der
partment. *
Then blandly, almost casual-
ly, the President told about Ball
and Katzenbach. There can be
little doubt he was waiting for
this question or that he would
have volunteered the Informa-
tion if he wasn’t asked.
Rep. Don Edwards, D - Calif.,
when he proposed a resolution *
of censure.
ute to the patriotic job he did
for his country by going to the
Bandung conference of Asiatlc-
Afrlcan nations and defending
the United States.
Generally speaking, Powell
had a good record during his
first eight years to Congress.
Then, in 1956, as. Eisenhower
came up for re-election, this
column reported that Powell
faced income tax prosecution;
and had gone to Vice President
Nixon with an offer to switch
to the Republican Party if Ike
to turn would soft-pedal his tax
case; release his secretary,
Mrs. Hattie Dobson, from jail;
give his assistant, Fred Weaver,
a federal k>b; and raise money
for various political expenses.
The deal was sealed and both
sides faithfully, carried it-out,
Powell went down to the White
House, and under the smiling
aegis of Sherman Adams and
Jim Haggerty announced that
he was campaigning for Eisen-
hower.
the
®1IBagtmmt §mt
grass
state
He was also the principal au-
thority bn it as, it crept on its
tortured way through the House
and finally Over to the Senate.
This took months to which
Fred Hartman .......
Bill Hartman .........
John Wadley .........
Preston Pendergrass . •
Beulah Mae Jackson ..
Paul Putman____......
Ann B. Pritchett .....
......... Editor and Publisher
■............ General Manager
............. Business Manager
......... —. Managing Editor
.... Assistant To The Publisher
.... Assistant To The Publisher
...........A.. Office Manager
TODAY’S QUESTION
You bid one spade. Your
partner bids one no-trump.
What do you do now?
- Answer Monday
%
vote
Washington waited for official
word‘of Ball’s departure.
Katzenbach and Sen. Everett
M. Dirksen, the Senate Republi-
can leader, had worked together
to getting civil rights bills
through Congress to 1964 and
1965. But this year Dirksen
balked.
He was the bill's chief execu-
tioner a* the Senate killed It last
Monday. There was nothing
pure Katzenbach could do
about that toll. :
And then Wednesday Johnson
, . atmouncad: He was naming
Q—What was the first Katzenbach undersecretaiy of
. American comedy presented state to succeed Ball who re-
by professional players?, signed Saturday. To do this
A—“The Contras t,” by meant Katzenbach had to resign
reduced in si attorney general .leave the
l-
1)
There were many other col-
umn* about Powell and His
sometimes brilliant, sometimes
deplorable career.
Some dealt with the manner
to which the Justice Depart-
ment, after five years of foot-
dragging, finally yielded to a
runaway grand jury and brought
Powell to trial for income tax
evasion. The result was a hung
Jury. In 1960 Powell, came out
for John F. Kennedy) making
a spectacular statement that
“the bigots of the South have
turned to their white robes for
ministerial garb.” Powell’s ef-
fective campaigning as a Bap-
tist minister for Kennedy helped
dispel prejudice against a Cath-
olic onfldatt.
When Bobby-Kennedy became
attorney general, one of his
dMt acts was to drop the in-
come tax prosecution of Adam
Clayton Powell,
QUICK QUIZ
ADVERTISED DEPARTMENT
John Wadley ................................. Manager
Paul Putman .................................. Retail Manager
Corrie Laugljlln ..............................National Manager
Entered as second class matter at the BaytoWn, Texas, 77521 Post
Office under the Act of Oougress of March 3,1879.
Published afternoons, Monday through Friday,
and Sunday* by The Baytown Sun., Inc.,
at 1301 Memorial Drive In Baytown, Texas
P. O. Box 90, Baytown 77520
Subscription Rates
By Carrier $L75 Month, I2J.OO-Per Year ---------—
Single Copy Price lOe
Mail rates on request
Represented Nationally By
Texas Newspaper Representatives, Inc.
MEMBER OF TOT ASSOCIATED PRESS
Tl» Auocltttd Proa ■■ tntlttod luhnlvtly le the um (or npuMIcotlon o»
any newi dUpitchei credited to It or not othorwlee credited In thie roper and
local newe of epontaneoue origin publlehcd heta. Right* of repuhllcatloa of
all othor matter here are alio reeervod
Q—How many planets are
closer to the sun than the
earth? ’
A—Two, Mercury and
Venus. - ,
S
BARBS
I
f.
By WALTER C. PARKES
Time passes so quickly
sometimes we doubt there are
24 hours in a day.
0 * •
Pity the folk who work
for a boss who feeds on
flattery. >
li
Qr-lnt0 how many districts
is the Federal Reserve System
divided? __
A—12, each witfi a Federal
Reserve bank. ~ ; -
f
- »
jtf/e*
m
i
i
AT ABOUT this time, Adams’
attitude toward his Job to Con-
gress changed. Jack Anderson
Royall Tyler, p
New York, 1787
Q—For whom was the
month of May named7
' A—A pre-Christian Roman
gpddess, Mato, mother of
Hermes and Zeus.
(Nmpoper titer*h* Aneciatlee)
Bible Verse
Try Your Word Power
-NEA FEATURE-
reported, Sept. 1, 1956, how
A gal can make a better
pitch at matrimony if she h»3
an assortment of good curves.
PoweU had written Army Uai-
son officer Capt. Florence Nich-
olson to send him fuU fishing
BE NOT deceived; God is tn
mocked: for whatsoever a man
aomtfi, that shall ha also nap.
Galatians 6:7
Answer to Prseioua Punlo
Animals
By Gill Fox
SIDE GLANCES
Nuns As Teachers
| Sparks Argument
i
:
3 Encountered
4 Foundation!
3 Young bovine
S Hybrid animal antaid
12 Willow genue SSpanlah
. 13 Exiet ; 7 Have on
14 Mountain
/ ACROSS
1 Young sheep
5 Bovine critter
Y-
I
m
"gold
S Cattle ditches
(comb, form) t Footed vase
15 Touches lightly 10 Permit
IS African worm 11 Dawn goddess
17 Social inserts 19 Meadow
18 Sprite 21 Rowing
20 Decompose implement
22 Get up . 22 Streams
24Ret)uaeta M Fancy
27 Cover 25 Retainer «
28 Change 2« Stellar
S2 Greek letter 27 Genipap wood
34 Hall! 29 Permipiion
SS Equine's tidbit _ to usa™
M Auricle SO Small pastry
37 EducaUonal SITollatiycasa
BOERNE, Tex. (AP) - An
Oct. 7 hearing has been set on
two Catholic nuns and their
flowing dress which
including a Baptist
aay violates constitutional
church - state separation.
Dist. Judge Marvin Blackburn
ordered the hearing Wednesday.
Besides the minister, two re-
tired Army colonels have asked
the court for permission to take
depositions from the nuns per-
taining to their religious beliefs.
The nun* are Sisters Msiy
Thelka Goertz and Henrietta*
Marie KaUui'of the Benedictine
order. They teach in kmlor and
senior high schools here.
At issue are the flowing habits
and headpieces they wear to
classes.
School Supt. Roy Liesman said
the sisters were hired because
no other teachers were avail-
able. f
Pat Maloney, their lawyer, •
said to an answering petition
that questioning the nuns about
their religkn would violate state
I
three men,
preacher,
i
t
T
/i i I _
52 Scottish
alder tree
53 Body of water
55 Night before
57 Scnora fab.)
58 Race rouree
circuit
59 Note in
Guido* icale
ii pa irr
:
SS Scope
41 Summer (Fr.)
42 Hurtle
45 Require* j
47 Strong
49pKtngMrd
sofock'e-
St Narrow Inlet
I
I
I
tr
*a**
i
II
4
TT
tab.)
SafB
» r rnr
group
near New
;i
4;
(T
t
lN
39 Priority (prefix)
40Cfaft
41 Eseential being*
- 43 Age
i spa
48 Flat-bottomed
IT
V
,vS
M
I
tched
|t
Wf
44 D
F
3
\
»
boat
I
yd
ji
48 Lamprey
50 Commit to
t
61 Demolieh
54 Above (poet)
56'Small island
■SO Angered
81 tit (comb
ftirml
*
elMBBJ JgB
A
4Mf
u
82 Verbal ♦
83 Genua of
fresh-water
ducka
84 Novel ’
65 California city gt
DOWN "
1 Mouth part „ w
2 Indoneeian of
Mindaaa* L-
Timely Quotes
I
i
*
1 ]
a rniwwa, r*». % i* *» aa
n
wv
e um 6r hu, —
"Look, honey, I don't WANT to go ott on another non-
political trip, but IFt part of politics.
law
WP
Throw away all ambition be-
yond that at doing the day’s
work wall —Sir William Osier,
Canadian author.
The three men who filed for
to
’No, it doesn't keep her from washing my tars, but it
do«o discourage horl,r
4
such
George McWURama, M.
kina and John Hopkins.
gNTERPRUk ASSN.
NEWSPAPER
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 30, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 25, 1966, newspaper, September 25, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145189/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.