The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 127, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 6, 1980 Page: 4 of 20
twenty pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
' * ■
V-i .
■
7 ■ r
■ ■ >
Is Up
r ■
a
#
inion
■«.
1 France may prove of notable assistance in'J
another area — energy.
While the U.S. takes time out following the
Three Mile Island scare to reassess nuclear-
power policy^ France ^accelerating its own
nuclear development. s?
With an annual investment of some $4 billion, it
now has ^reactors in operation supplying 15 per-,
cent of French electricity needs. By 1985, the
figures ar^scheduled to rise to 47 reactors and 50
percent. And by the end of the century, the French
are expecting a full 80 percent of their electric
power and 33 percent of their overall energy re-
quirements to come from nuclear sources.
............ It is by far thermost ambrtious programTf am
nation and, with the rapidly escalating costs of oii-
* generated;electricity, already is paying financial
. ..' dividends. ........^7 * *
( . The French are not oblivious to the hazards in-
volved. They do have their protesters raising
questions about plant safety and waste disposal.
Three Mile Island has been very much in the
news. . * • ■ :- •
•But public support is high and government com-
mitment to nuclear expansion is firm. - ■■ -■ ; •
' The French experience is well worth watching. a
It may provide some of the answers to questions *
Americans are asking about their'own nuclear
-future
tr
4-A,
THE BAYTOWN Sl’lN
Thursday, March 6. 1980
—;
Washington Report ■ - ^
Interior Boss Irked By
' A •> • . .... ' •
Stories About His Past
XF 1 .
• gr
-—-“v
x?
- By JACK ANDERSON information came from the _ now lives in fear of his ljfe^A^:
1NGTON"'" in- niesW~aTTe^IirreeoThciai Thformed lnternal Revenue '
terior,. Secretary Cecil Ah- investigations, Agents how he'^served as
dims, wearing a petulant air Here gre just a few of the ... “bagman’’ for Bender. A.
' of affronted dignity and an- questions thatj are, stilly, -sec-ret memorandum
noyance.,has taken excep; reverberating: Why did An - relates that the informant
tion to mv reports on his drus as governor engage in told of being asked by a
political past. political manipulations to group of northern Idaho
Secret investigative files promote an Emprise race bartenders to deliver an
and knowledgeable sources . track in Idaho? What hap- envelope of cash to the
disclose that Andrus g.s pened to the investigative sheriff's car. The informant
governor of Idaho seemed file that was entrusted to claimed that on another oc-
to do everything possible to . Andrus’ care? Why did he casion he _ handed over
clear the way for Erhprise " ' appbirif a backwater $5,000 in payoff money to a
Cor,p., a Mafia-linked sheriff, with a refutation Bender deputy.
sports outfit, to move into for corruption, as Idaho’s '
the state. His appointment ‘top laW MoVcement of- FEARFUL accuser
•of a smaii-totvn sheriff; Jeer? Who removed the ' n switched t
chief lawman also appalled
essr " “,he aSssar*-
- Atanationallawerifor.ee-' The burly John Bender p ;
"-N-ar
I
•\\\
Man\^r i
of the I
Year J
U-
"V:
d-
o
0
■o
•,
6:!
s
t
n
Xi
2 -
A’
. More Such Signs
o
0
ment,conference,, one ex- served under Andrus as the Enemies List — Presi-
pert described the Bender top’Idaho cop from 1971 to dent Carter had a “City of^
appointment as "a classic ■ 1977. Yet here’s what my Champions” day at the
case*'of corruption and in- reporter found from . White House on February
• ffltraftion by organized sources and documents: 22 to honor Pittsburgh’s
Meanwhile. „the * Four . separate- in- finest - the fobthnll
Erifj)ii^m£fl4^4fl- .formats teld"four state in- players of the Super Bowl-
tehigepce Unit, a federally. x vestigators that Bender winning Steelers and the
subsidized crime-fighting 7 took payoffs from them, baseball stars of the. World
group, refused to send any while he was sheriff in a S,erie5:winning Pirates. The
' sensitive data to Idaho northern Idaho gambling president also sent invita- ,
when it found out Bender bailiwick. y.
had unauthorized access, to * A state agent, quoting
And if ttie higher price tag for fbe 1981 volume
x presents a personal budget problem for would-be
buyers, the government is prepared to be of fur-
ther assistance. r-*-' -
For the first time thisjv£ar.jt wiiLhonor pfasitr jf
in lieu of the real thing it prints. Thepurchase can - ' I
be charged t&eredtfrcardsr“"~4-7”
.•V
a In Washington
- -.....' •
♦
,. crime.”
’ Law
IA Moves To Stifle Its •
\
Today In History
I Future Unlawful Conduct
tions to all Pennsylvania
Congressmen ■ —. except
an underworld Informant, one Rep. Eugene Atkinson,
•h-frs attracted the reported Bender had,-'kept
scrutiny of crime investfga-. the, heat off” his illegal
tion units- at. bolli- the State . . drug pushing, which was
and federal level. No less “allowed to'continue
than Nick Scoppetta, the through the protection af-
N’ew York prosecutor offorced by Mr. John
Serpico j&merfrcame to - Bender.”
Idaho to investigate. , 1 -r—-
There was enough ( __________
INDEED; THE -CIA' can ' evidence, he concluded, to Rprrv/c Wnrlrl
. cite no specific examples of r justify- caHing a special’ ‘ y v V1 lv
‘ such FOIA abuse. Instead. ‘ 8rand jury But Ms was
it relies upon the vague- precluded by Idaho stale *
claim that cooperative in- law. Instead, thefagts were
telligence agencies in set forth inln’investigative
various nations aWptfier file which' mysteriously^-
sources of information are disappeared after it . was
uneasy about possible" - turned over to Andrus —- --
future disclosures of sen-
sitive ihformation
By ROBERT WALTERS formation from the agency . , has casually released, any it
ference, denied he had ever ■ WASHINGTON (NEAj— /* But the law already Con- -information, even when
approved hush money dr.. After su ffermg-thwugtv-y larris a provision, repeated- Complying with FOIA re-
1980 There are inn rfav, lef. hT"!." AfQr the Waterga,e decade oT embarrassing, ly, relied upon by the CIA in quests, thexe^is jCL-pet
■nTheVea? y defendants^_______________^.sclOsumatUts illegal and— past -years; AiaT exempts--Tuas^'e evidence that Me
Tnriav'a ■„ - Ten years ago, Alexander • unethical activities, the from FOIA disclosure re- law ever has been sirc-
historv' > "8" 10 htt^JfkAthe ousted. Central Intelligence, Agen- quirements anv material
on^Mar ,, Czechoslovakian Com- cy is moving to stifle future"
., 6’ > ’ 016 munist party leader, was revelations of its unlawful
Alamo fell to Mexican at- suspended from the parlv
’.. tackers after a 13-day seige . ■
imSan-Antonio, Texas-The—^Five-years ago, Iraq and .
186 defended, including ran announced a joint
■ * U.S. scout Davy Crockett. agreement to end a long-
fought to the last man. ;. • stapdtng bBrder dispute
7— * Op this date. Last year, the Justice ",
In 1475, the Renaissance Department -said, tt was
J artist Michelangelo was r possible a . special pro-
• secutor.would be named to
look into the operations of
the Carter peanut .
warehouse. Meanwhile. Bil-
ly Carter, the p'Fesident',s
brother, was admitted to a
By Tbe Associated Press
Toda’y is Thursday,
Democrat of Pittsburgh,
-was-pointodly omitted from—
the guest list. It seems he
hasn’t been welcome at the
White House since he threw „
I
-a
n
a
a
. • p
cessfully used to the detri-
that must "be kept secret in . ment of this country’s
the interest* of ’ national national-security interests,
defense or foreign policy ,”
(Tf h e r ■ e x*e hi p t i o n s
preelude the disclbsTTreTof^
information*relating to in-
ternal agency practices,
personnel matters.-internal
agency 'memos and in-
vestigative files. - .
Asrecently as last year.
CIA Deputy Director Frank
C Carlucci ’told a House
committee: “It is
h
his support b*ehind
presidential contender Sen.
Edward Kennedy.
2!
’An-tdaliu convict, who-
D
conduct.
m
JbeXlA4sflA necessarily
going tQ.clean.up its act. In-
stead, . it 1 has convinced
.sympathetic members of
Congress to introduce
legislation that- would
shield the agency from-hav-
ing to publicly, release in-
formation about its tran-
sgressions.
Tbe legislation takes the
form of amendments to the undeniable that, under the
Freedom of Information
cl
. 9
J
Br
7:30i
• bom in Caprese, Italy.
• In- 1857, Ule Supreme
- I Court ruled that Dred Scott.
4’a slave, could not sue for his
• freedom in a federal court.
In 1965, the Defense
Department announced 7 California hospital ip be
that 3,500 Marines would be treated for alcoholism.
sent to South Vietnam, the ' Today’s birthday: TV
» first American gfoutfCRc
bat troops-committed To 57. ~ _
fight Communist guer- Thought for tefday: Man
r.-r vritta*.. —-.......
Tn l974, President Nixori,
: in a televised news con-
G<
arr
V>
Upon President Carter’s
appointment of Andrus to
the Cabinet in 1976. a team
of FBl-Agents. pulled^ the ;~
. facts together for a routine
been reconciled to the background report. Yet
democratic concept of pro- astonishingly, this
Two yea'rs earlier. moting • government ac- derogatory material/was \
anotbefCIA official.told a countability and encourag- - not jncIuded in the FBI
Senate sub-committee that ’n8 an enlightened elec- report that was submitted-- -
is the onlv ,SV^' ^0U!d,...7°inTL»^cewith the jaw -»-c -P«Wi
Mushes - or neSs to Itmited, “ To^ltmlly wasafraumat^ex- disclosure and discussion of My sources said the em-
ffi^alnflSSlO) their ^personal files, re- perience for. the agency, federal aetiv^ ’ 7
quired under provisions of then added: “We hatebeejv - Now that tbE 1970s "expunged from the report
both the FOIA arid the— able to make the necessary criticism of the CIA is before any Sftiators could -
Privacy Act, but the agency adjustments, -! am pleased -fading, the agency is Snx- . see it - a charge that a
would be protected from to report that, ip fact, 1 ious to insure that It never- White House spokesman
ever again hav ing to reveal think the agencv^!sj)etter again will\have to admit to emphatically denied. Yet
humiliating information off for it.’’. its misjudgments, its'ex- the information never
Qbout conduct such as: Because the CIA never cesses.and its failures. reached^-ihe-Senate-eem-
“ Project CHAOS, a * ^_______— ————j*. "' . a . - -7" .mittee-that reviewed the /
- domectic spying . ... ■ - - f 1 ' --- Andrus appointment; ’ ob-
°Perallon;.dur'^ the late _ _ hrom Sun Flipc------ -•-----------------v.nmirri^r^
" ^70S thaf — — 7 - , ' had been quicker than the
involved infiltration, e&- m J . . . • . * • ’
pionage and surveillance of OWeGfieV. DQIfl NOmeCl
crIUcs of the Vietnam War. • / .
7 civil-rights activists and *• y • ~
■ I960 Track Captains ■
wiretapping, unlawful -
break-ins, interception of
be
<gsr.
an
;
a';:
current FOIA. national In fact, the security"
* Ad that would restrict the - sCetmty^ exemptions “exist . c°nsc«)us. CIA never has
right to request data under
the FOIA to U.S. citizens.
seeking only information
about themselves maintain-
ed in CIA files.
8:000
e
to protect our most vital in-
formation.”
-LA
i
The
bei
personality Ed McMahon is
halli
tied
M
for
itionl
—i-th
tune
>7
- ®
By Ned
Bar
nar
was
new
Dietr
V
b u
.est
held I
-
—m
as
w at
~T~~
ft 60
■%
r
..
-
plAL
Gues
-tr-
U-A
"OH WOW! I thought the new baggy slacks
thingwas ngjy 1pr WOMFN ” — --r--—
y/x'pii
( 'll,
■——r
eye.
v—,Waw
8:300 Si
"
1 ASKED MY' associate,
i Dale Van Atta, to im;
vestigatfe the cover-up. He •
spent weeks' in Idaho where
~he spoke to dozens--of
From The Baytown Sun—W.D. Reeves; A,J. Hombs, sources and gathered hun-
p e r s o na 1 m a i 1 and files, this is the way it was W.C. Jackson, Mrs. Cuba dreds. of,.pages of
maintenance of dossiers on 40and 30and 20 years ago: Greer and ‘ L.E. ..Gray. documents. Then we qu*&
individuals whose only MARCH6,1940 District 1 candidates are tioned Andrus about the —
suspected “crime” was ex- '■ Two Mont Belvieu men Harbers, Carl R allegations.
“ pression-of their disagree- ; are injured "when a "tire" Mann and E.W. “Bill”' The Interior Secretary is
ment with varidys govern- blowout sends ..their car’ . BuelowA- . an amiable, earnest sort
ment policies.
T'
The
fi
m
"■ CV/ —
butlerl
-> and b|
-matthl
w 17
/4;
-4J
iL
Vl
ft
t
9:000
,A b
• (Kathr
X__once <
the m
HEALTH
7f
m
r
t ■ '
-......r.
(R)
kWfl By Lawrence E. Lamb^M.D* 7
0 pl
Regula
!
, due to
"Same
(1978)
• tymTwi
unusual
by me<
resort ft
year ovt
decades
cr
3D0’ut him of DEAR DR. LAMB - Do vou * be similar but the cause Ms
Jones will co-captain the legitimate purpose anl„_.J|ayejJflealtjLleU£jb-Qr,paa<^~»^^
- Horace Mann Junior . High-. 'TJEartnTngTTririkness. His - phlet on Alzheimer's dtsease’ ' .. tunately. there is no available
Marvin THton, 18, is being football team" next serison. 'iriethod is to admit candidly . A neurologist diagnosed-my. ,
. — ----------,........- ----- . . treated at Lillie-Duke They are introduced at the what was already known AiWi^’^di^aJaftpr «hf"• '*he cha"ges. lhV v ,
W^N HER kiNFOLKj LEflve RfTEft A V'SiT, TRAPS . congressional-mandate that HospitaFfor a broken nose annual athletic banquet by and beyond hiding, but to had SmT^ numerous '
TH’PflRTf LIKE BEST forbade the CIA from exer- and other injuries. Del last season's grid captains, deny Us logical implica- Jel 2rtSS hart7S! tr2 ta SfSS
•cising any police, sub- Stubbs, 22, suffered lacera- James Hollister and Gerald tions. , , loss of memory, confusion and as one out of five people who
7. poena or law enforcement 5 tions on his face. Orton. Letterin' footbMi, - ' Meanwhile, he adopted inability to concentrate I have mental. changes. It’s
powers or internal security J.H. Harry will, be elec- basketball and tennis^are the tactics of the cuttlefish., understand many oldsters are_____.,.,ifqpftrtanl ,far all of these pro-'.....
■functions,” tion judge for the Barbers presented hu...ae^re*~£-^brrtrareim»rafrTfrfn'ai:ino' - -'*4w^'wimir'AFeThere any . pie to have a rather Comoro--'
. , iiidnne vitamins or health foods that hensive medical evaluation
____________________ Perkins. James “Slick” biologists for their protec- ’ will help hert The .neurologist a uon'
Assistant to Publisher .* legal projects — operated April 6. Trustees whose Ellis and Leo LaBorde, tive habit of squirting ink to says no
Editof and Publisher, 1950-1974 under code names such as Term will expire are J.fL respective coaches in the- evade pursuers. He began DEAR READER I wish
MKULTRA, MKDELTA, Barber, J.C. Battle and three sports. squirting ink long before I * cou*d be the bearer of
MKNAOMI, ARTICHOKE T.C. Fitzgerald. MARCH6 1960 could get to my typewriter good tidings. Unfortunately, 1
Manoaina Ed tor and BLUEBIRD-in which* W.J. Durham becomes John Sweeney and Without knowing what I ' :'-
Assoc io-e Monogmg Ed„gr American citizens were us- manager of Kamin’s Fur- Richard Bain will co,. intended to write, he called SjfSSttS}^ 'l
((NT 3 ed- often without their mture Store in Goose captain the 1960 track team a press conference,Jabeled - wav that aging sometimes
knowledge, Jar drug ex-- --Creeks- ” at Robert E. Lee. Both are the unwritten story as “gar- affects the brain. Its exact MARCH e. , , -,
perimentation or research MARCH 6,1950 ; members of the mile relay bage” and huffed off. He caQse is not known except it Wash?n;;" J5 ’ ‘J77:-
in “brainwashing” and Freamon Pruett chalks team! has continued to spread the • can oceur in f^op16, ^a rela- . “f ®n opposed non- -
other forms of behavior up a perfect score in a skeet Tommy Skipper and Jab protective ink. ----- ' SS™8dai!i“rlier fearJh«t°KA ' ’
...... modillcatlon, sh»I altta Humble Gun Taylor repreSbt Zee Col- -Mr. Auderaon baa just ^SSSSSSP^- ~ **
omuBocuraatoi - Club range at Camp Reber. lege in. the‘‘Mr. and Miss resurrected and rehashed The symptoms are the same
THE Cia claims the pro-' Jack Cu^ is the last Future Teacher of Texas" old barroom gossip which ’ as you might see w>th agmg of "
<*m .w 'W or, Biw Th, posed restrictive legislation candidate to file m the city contest. has absolutely no basis in' the brain which includes the,
biH^d.woy.- <»w«d is necessary to prevent " council election. He will John Booker Shows slides fact,” he snorted. A- * prpbiems with memory, men-
foreign nations, especially seek'the District 4 position, on Iran to the Baytown rehash? The story had tal confusion and inability to
the Soviet Union and its running against E-W.* Kiwanis Club. A chemical, never been published, but JJ3"as’ othen'T
allies, from using the FOIA Burke and Milton L. Camp- engineer, he spent two had been actively suppress- caused by poor circulation tb
fo extract sensitive in- bell. Districts hopefuls are years ih Iran. ed. Barroom gossip? The the brain. The symptoms may • Paul.*’ — Actffoi
approaches to a
. - operations in which the bridge over Cedar -Bayou,
targets were U S citizens
in direct violation of a
ini
* 3-6
WHY Mf WIFE CRIES
HLk fctoton i»un
ferent r<
that Kar
X
r ‘" * ■ y
L.
20/
LeonBfpw0 __....
Fred HoMbcrptr . .
Fred Hortmon
m MEF
9:400 SAT<
Louis A
this prog
life from
New Or
..appearan
jazz Festi
1000 0 ® (D
(Chairman of Board Southern Newspapers, (nc )
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
<»
The Way
Preston Pendergrass .....
* JimFintey
» Wondo Orton
, Executive Editor
It Was '
ADVERTISING
ARTMENT
. Display Adv
LAST
Mike Gfoxioto.......
"Night St
m ErwedosjecondckwfTW^efOtrheBovtc^niTeNmPOTtOWt^/Z^u^jj^ActpfCqri^
, gnnt q* Morth 3 1879 Published aHernoof*sn Monday jbaijgh Fftdoy and .Sundays at. ? 301
f Mtmanal 0nrt m Soytown; Texas. P (J Bo* 00. 77520 Subscriptior Rotes Bv carrier
■4 25 cents iunday Main rotes
- frwulm-. notiondHy.^yipw*^ ~ '
0 LIFE
EDDIE RC
Chrissie a
child mod
Billy stay
ter case; I
have a sur
1
army
Bible Verse
© THE
syrtekwes
n fh
SHOW
KMO0 TONIG
Guest hos
Guests: S
Hudson
... and a° certan orator
- Darned Tertullus,
informed the
:77"7 7! inmuuo
CWy M0nedWHur* u«Hbrcormdeftd fix piAbcoiior
t wtfhhek»*4?on request tor
who
governor agaist
»*•/
K
f
'V'
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 127, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 6, 1980, newspaper, March 6, 1980; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145323/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.