The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 37, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 7, 1965 Page: 4 of 12
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»n»—b»> y. t m
Washington Merry-Go-Round-
DOWN TO THE HOT END
Lot Of Wire Tapping
War-11
No Surprise
To Anyone
$
I
:
«
V
BMjyV'
>IV
- rSM?
•elf. hovertnu O'
•Ifht In old i|«,
It*« • dream of Franca u one of the irratH
powon aftln. , But it’« a rickety kind of dream. In-i
extricably mixed up with De Gaulle’* vl*lon of him
«*lf. •• ho revealed Thursday
He I* almdst 75 and Thuraday, to no one * aur-
prlaa, ha said hf want* to be choaen pmMent again
In tht Dec. 5 elect iom for a aeven-year term, which
would keep him In office until he la 82.
Thla wax no surprise. Everyone expected It.
De Gaulle hat made hi* life and hi* presidency a
leaaon In dramatics. So he had to dramatic the
WM Ill a
t
.w.*y
By hucw ra
ASHINCTON -
J*mn IMtw.
rndld by a guardian angel, him-
It until *t last he totters out of
w
•«y ai Philadelphia,
ary general, heard
Mr,
«mm wt ■ mu§> t? m
WWW.
van
« Secretary of the Navy * lor, Revlon, had wiivtappod
Kmm. Neither Knox nor ' conveneUmm rriardin* the TV
the war by Army to
surprise thoe*
will not
•
I knew about the Nsvy’i spy-
ahow, on guertioa,” which
ties of the Amy, Navy and
•v.in
prompted Revlon to match the
ahow away from Hard Bishop,
In the senate investigation
over Internal Revynue wtrelap-
pinf. Cbmmisaloner Sheldon
fs
the ra
— samst fl
m why Mn
«vJ
'■mm'
Jm
man of the Senate committee
Tyry
Investigating eavesdropping. la
Tl
worried about current internal
Cohen deaervea credit hr laau-
Revenue wiretapping, he ahould
Ins a atrons circular Instruction
Hut
Eft
r
review what happened during
to all i»T«vifi*|' June U that
of the Imagination could they
the war
there waa to to no ‘ll-gal wire-
•Xpsctsd sniAHa try to make It ■ mystery
AAir t|Mjfii^tekvlsk>n^MwjjHH
right-minute broadcast, Uto <*■
Will MbM.1* be mm bo sdvsncs ward leaked *
H^Poment It went out over the airwaves.
“I believe I must hold myaelf ready to carry on
my task,” he Mid, adding that the “future of the new
republic will bf illrtjjlfr MBUPlf If tht WMCh
i*r«pla keep hint in office.
Then caMtll* revelation. IT he didn't remain
praaldent. he akld, “then no one can doubt that this
trollap«e and that France
it thia time without any
- a confusion within the atate even
than that which ahe has known he-
$
The OSS, predeccMor of CU.
tapped wire* at the drop of a
Iraaalina tapad hi*
CWnmunlit*. But In the opinion
of thoae operalins the taulli
%
pert*. They. Inn, have their con-
atllutlonal right*
Though Oommlat loner Cnhm
admitted to Sen l/mg that hla
telephone Army and Navy In-
*
A
* 1
teBIgence couldn't aleep at night
unlea, they had hag a hundred
poet anyway.
During World War II. Naval
Intelligence one* stationed two
ear( of agent* outilde my houae
1 have lorgotten why. When
out. until the
room* wired tor iound Donald
agent* had engag.d In aom* U-
„v
Netaon, head of the War Poe
duetkm Hoard, once got a re-
cording of a military teuton
It ahould alio to noted that
aome of the He gadget* ran to
uaed quite legally.
For Inatanee. when tax agent*
raid a gambling raaino to col-
W‘
at which the brau hat* planned
Faith Made
America A
Great Power
to tak* over U S Industrial pro-
l Hi
due lion Don uaed the recording
v.
new rrou
would ha
poaalbli* r
M
to ahow President Rooaevelt
leal Unetc Sam i share of the
t ;
",
what Gen. B a Somervell and
take, miniature tranamltten are
the military were up to and
FDR put them In their place
Even good old Harold trkov
planted In front and in the rear
at the oulnn in order to alert
M
1
poller If the operator! try to
era ah out Thla I* not illegal
Tux u’ent* aim explain that
It waa not Illegal to uao two-
way mirror* In nlxm' XI revenue
office*. Furthermore, there wu
good reaaon tor it — namely, to
protect wttneaae* aaked to IdenU-
f> dangeroua erimloala.
• Attorney Gen Katirnbach ns
rently le»lUird that the Juatlee
Department had "loat" 25 In-
formant* on underworld leader*,
later found drowned wearing
cement tnoti So the twcvway
mirror* were uaed to apot on-
au*|ie<ting gangaten-
Out of MO Internal Revenue
office*, IS were bugged, tax
agent, explain, and them, were
Intel!wenre area* where |»xe
pie were suspected of fraud.
Buc;in>! room* and mini; two-
way stytTor, is not illegal Nev.
ertlieleu. following Sen Umg'i
investigation, all hove toen re-
moved.
words, hardly surpassed for sheer ego-
Htfl In history. De Gaulle pronounced
Mb|e man. But it was hardly a
>d country.
he was aaying the French na-
tried to compel the re*t of the
|n the cquijl of the atrongeit, ig so —
basically chaoiW that it could not survive without • •
the guidance nibone man. him.
Yet, f hene 6 feallam in what he said, •Ithough'it
contradicts tils ppeteruion* about France. With its
multitude of political parties and its inability to es-
tablish anything Ifke a solid government. France was
dlainiegtniing until De Gaulto took over In 1958.
He has pulled the nation together, renewed its
given tt fifsh confidence. But now, as he re-
. it a||iqHhres around him.
This doesn't m>eak well for his ability to think
of France Id term!other than himself for. from what
he said ThuradijK It can be roncluded he has not
steered the IVetflk Into any more political maturity
than when.ht cMHt along.
Ip his obttesilkin with the glory of France, which
he now realty, rtplcs to his own glory, he haslH*en a
pain to Prcsidgnr Johnson and other Western allies
just as he was t<i I’resident John F’ Kennedy.
Oddly. If! lit t* elected Dec. 5, which seems cer-
tain, his new termjof seven years will keep him
Ing, and no Qoiit't annoying, Johnson as long as
Johnson could hope to stay in the presidency.
Johnson b finishing the first year of his eleeled
term now. J|t. tik>, then would have another seven
years in offlff1 If Selected in 1%8
Among othf^ennoyances De Gaulle has con-
demned the flmAWAn intervention in the Dominican
Republic and Mjlffect, without going into details
hera, has thf falMAd to disrupt the North Atlantic
Treaty Orgamzatlkn unless France can be a free-
wheeler in a, Way>1o suit herself
What he see
of NATO a* ii I
type of loose nil
most got it <ki*tr
And De (|iu
in Viet Nam, fal
of SoutheasttAi
Viet Nam in 4oli
eight-year wxf b
|V
» la IMM
tlsm by any
himaelf the I
tribute to hli
anre bugged the room at hla aa-
By M. L. HtrNT
Alexia to TocquevUlc. utter a
visit to the United Stale*, wai
ukked whul In hi* oplnket made
America grral He replied that
he had aecn much of America,
had aeen the great railroad*,
the buty factories, the ferilk1
farm* Ha wat‘de<-ply imicvaaed
by their Importance Hut, to be-
lieved. the grratnena of America
’ Uy In the faith uf her |>eop!e
aortal* on the Public Work*
Board, Chip Robert, when Chip
and Marvin McIntyre were en-
tertaining ladle* In an Atlanta
.*1
In ih
Hotel
tlon. which
J. Edgar Hoover'a FBI did
very little wiretapping In those
days - only when authortxcd by
Fulton Lewis Speaks-
G<
a federal court or the attorney
general But every other Intel.
Itgenre agency had a field day
13 Americans Defect To Reds
The churche* of America, to
said, are everywhere, and Amer-
ica w-a* great because America
waa good
This happened In liic nine •
tcenth century. Tin' years since
have brought many changes.
Itul they have nut changed the
truth that America'* greatnes*
must grow out of her goodness
— out of the faith of tier people.
A basic factor in the faith of our
jieoplc Is a deep and abiding
love for liberty. That is our tra-
dition.
Today Ids'll)- Is threatened
It is a time above all times when
our love for freedom must to
accompanied by a determina -
lion to save freedom. Vitally
needed now is a dedicated eag-
erness nn the part of Patriots
to give of their time, their ener-
gy and their intelligence to
working for the cause of liberty.
The conspirators who have
dedicated themselves to destroy-
ing freedom in the world never
let up in their efforts. Patriots
must be no less wholehearted In
faith, no lets energetic In action.
-TODAY, wiretapping ha* be-
come much easier, due to elec-
tronic refinements. It s now pne-
slbl* to listen In on trispnnne
conversation, without (tutting an
actual tap on the wire, Amt
If* reported that a TV camera
will anon to available by which
detective* or law; enforcement
officers, or suapielou* husbands,
can peer into private rooms,
In recent years, also, there's
toen quite a rash of electronic
By FULTON LEWIS JR.
■Thirteen
for almost M years; James
Veneris, r "student'’ who says
that "American imperialism is
like Hitler * fascism — but on
a much larger scale"; Gerald
Tanncnbaum, an aetor in Grade
II propaganda Him* who left the
United States two decades ago,
and Sidney Shapiro, an Army
veteran wisi is a translator at
IVking’s foreign languages
press
Tin- voice of Rotort Franklin
Williams, a fugitive from Amer-
ican justice, is frequent-
ly beamed to U S. servicemen.
Williams, a Negro who fled the
United Stale* while sought on
kidnaping charge* in 1961. now
makes his home in Havana. He
has made at least two trims to
Red China, however, and often
broadcasts for Radio Peking.
The following is typical of the
Williams' line:
"I am ashamed to discover
that brutal agression is being
carried out by the government
of the United States, executed
and waged by the troops of the
United State*. It grieves me
even more to realize that there
are black troops, black Ameri-
cans who arc wiving ns a vici-
ous police dog of U.S. imperial-
ism,. 10,UOU kilometers from
home " ■
Radio Hanoi, voice of the
North Vietnamese Reds, also
uses U.S turncoat* in propa-
ganda appeal* to American
G.I.’i. WUIIam* appeared recent-
ly on Radio Hanoi to urge Amer-
ican soldiers to lay down their
arm*. An excerpt from that
broadcast:
"You, who are tto sons of
George Washington and Abra-
ham Lincoln, k»k squarely at
Die truth. Where is the Weal of
(ivedoiti which your anceator*
defended In the 1776 revolution
end in tto war to liberate otto
slave*? He courageous In re-
fusing (o (lariicipate In firing at
and killing the South Vietnamese
people, toe a use that Is a com-
plete contradiction of the Weal
of freedom cherished by your
l-eople."
In recent weeks, the Commu-
nist radios have Informed G.I.'s
of tto anti war demonstrations
staged back home. Soldiers are
told that millions of "peace-lov-
ing Americans are marching
against U.S. policy and have
struck fear Into the heart* of
those in power.’’
pride.
WASHINGTON
Americana, ranging in age from
'JS to HO. have renounced their
homeland to wage ideological
war for the Red Chinese.
veiled
Rei
Ttotr strident voice* are
lie,mud to U.S. Servicemen by
tto inwcrful transmitter* of Ra-
dio Peking, The message of
Clarence Cecil Adams, a Mem-
|ihii Negro and Korean War de-
fector, is typical:
"The war in Viet Nam is
a dirty war American men.
you are fighting pcuide in Viet
Nam like the one I fought in
Korea — people who are de-
fending their homes with home-
made weapon*
are you on the right side of
this? Tto Vietnamese are not
Inmhing your churche* and kill-
ing your children
in the wrong battle tore You
are fighting tiic wrong war.
Brothers, go home. The Negro
(teople need you bark there.”
Tto Chinese broadcasts are
produced by Sidney Rittentorg,
nn Army veteran stationed in
China during the Second World
War. Rittentorg later wrote for
tto Dally Worker, official organ
of tto Communist Party, U.S.A.
Rittentorg works ck«ely with
Frank Coe, a former New Deal
bureaucrat who
of the International Monetary
Fund Coe and hi* wife. Ruth,
appear frequently nt Chinese
rallies 1° denounce American
"Imperialism"
The dean of Peking * Ameri-
can colony is Anna lnulsc
Strong, an octogenarian Marx-
ht who has served Mao Tie-
tung for more than a dozen
year*. Mist Strong, who pub-
llstos a monthly propaganda
sheet, haa taken to the airwave*
to urge Cl’» to defect.
Other U S. turncoats now In
Mao’* employ Include Dr.
George Nathem, a former mis-
sionary who haa served the Red*
port
Tear
SUC i
elet
Know Your Bridqe
-- By B. JAY DECKER---
fae-
trwi
talent
C D
South dealer.
North-South vulnerable.
•ere
from
Greg
But when he now continued
with a spade and East followed
with the eight, South made the
mistake of covering with the
ten. which lost to the ace West
returned a diamond, taken with
the ace, and declarer then en-
tered his hand with a club to
play a spade in the hope of find-
ing a 3-3 division.
West showed out and South
eventually went down two as a
result of running into the 4-2
spade division.
Had he made the proper play
of ducking the eight of spades,
South would haye made the
contract. He would have made
three spade tricks by leading
the jack later, and would alao
have scored two tricks In each
of the side suit*.
Actually, South had nothing
to gain by covering the eight.
If It turned out that the spades
were divided J-3, his play of
ducking or covering would make
no difference In the result.
If it turned out that the
spades were divided 4 - 2 and
West had the four of them,
ducking or covering again could
make no difference.
But if, as in the actual case,
it turned out that East had the
four apadea, ducking the eight
waa absolutely essential to the
Xuccess of the contract. Thia
distinct possibility should have
be?n exploited by South, alnce
h* could not gain by covering
tto eight and had a chance to
£ain by ducking it.
(O U». King nature* Syndicate lac.)
Fellows
NORTH
4 K 7
B JBt
♦ A K742
*J63
ton
You arc
EAST
4Q082
V W10 7 6
ape
spoke
♦ A4
*83
to have in mind lx abandonment
existed and a return to the old
res in Western Europe which al-
'd in two world wars,
had the Rail to condemn the war
; for neutrality and independence
r nations although Franco kept
r! bondage until driven out in an
je Vietnamese.
4 Q J 1086
410852
grade;
4Q974
SOUTH
.4 J 10653
« AK52
Sporadically -
Editor Figured It Right;
Story Did Stir Interest
ond
third
Brawn
♦ 53
Dagle
4 A K
llama,
honon
Th* bidding:
.South West North East
1 ♦ Pass 2 ♦ Pass
2* Pass 3* Pass
3 NT
Opening lead-queen of dia-
mond*.
was secretary
'Six Missions Of Texas'
Combines Art And History
era, both signinK feminine
names, wrote scorching com-
munications to the editor, each
sarcastically attacking his judg-
ment in using this simple little
feature about tto former front-
page personality.
There was a strong implica-
tion by one writer that the edi-
tor, still seeking to publicize the
former convict, would not have
printed the picture If the egg-
plant had sprouted In aome lew
noted personality’s back yard.
An editorial note, ignoring the
implication, indicated that the-
story was deemed usable while
some others are not.
By Al, MKUNGKR
As a reformed news editor,
we are always intrigued with
(he manner In which other edi-
tors handle the atfairs of day-
today human travail.
It is apparent that the morn-
ing newspaper which Is moat
heavily patronized tore recent,
ly exhibited a photograph of 34
eggplants luxuriating on a tin-
gle shrub in Harris County. Pre-
sumably this Is, In itself, un-
usual. But the arresting facet
of the feature waa the owner of
the plant, a young woman
whose name was notoriously In-
volved In a grisly local murder
aome year* ago. The murder
story was front page material
for months and two heavily-pub-
licized trials ot the young wom-
an resulted In a period of in-
carceration which is now term-
Anyone can take trick* with
aces and kings; the idea ii to
make the low card* count. Play-
ing your low carda to the best
advantage frequently pays good
dividends, but It la not always
eaay to find the moat economi-
cal way of playing your carda
*0 aa to conserve high-card
strength.
Take thla hand where South
went wrong. West led a dia-
mond, taken In dummy with the
king, and South played a low
heart to the ace followed by a
low spad* to the king, which*
Building Code Altered
•••IX WIHHM)N8 «4 Texas" hy
Laa Hakle. Jar Hrknilta, Dor
maa H Wla/rr), Jo* H.
In an introduction hy Govern-
or John fliiuinlly a resume of
how the txok was conceived nnd
I sit together is given Connally
!*>■* tribute to Mr and Mrs
John B Godfrey who had vision
enough in 1956 while touring a
„ mission in California to realize
B) MAKt H. HROHN frxat missions a*
A valuable new contribution to lairl of our toritage In 1962 the
tto annals of Texas history is Gutfrrys negotiated with Gran-
"Six Mission* of Texas.” de - ville Bruce of Irving. Tex., to
signed to capture the true his- paint six selected Texaa mia-
of the mission* of Texas sions The G<xifreys presented
bring their exciting story the paintings to Texas and they
to the general reader A com- are today on display at the Tex-
binntion of art and factual his- a« State Library in Austin
tory, tto book promise* lasting it i. from tto paintings that
—* Importance. the lx** ’Six Missions of Tex-
__________ janUAflU- lcirhMW>A-*toP>-a«
The Alamo, Concepcion, Espn-
da, La Bahia. San Jose and San
Juan de Capistrano, all imixiri-
ant to early Texas growth and
history. Illustrations of these
missions are Included to provide
visual appreciation of the sites.
In addition to these paintings,
there are historical sketches of
th* mission* written by care-
fully choaen authors whose know-
ledge of Texaa history and abili-
ty to bring then* historic shrine*
to Ilf* are recognized. The au-
thors are experts in their field
of history. ~
TRENTON, N J (API The
State Board of Education has
revised the school construction
code to permit the installation
of plastic windows in new school
buildings to cut down on smash-
ing or breaking. Tto cost of re-
placing broken glass wndows
runs Into several hundred thou-
sands of dollars annually, a
spokesman said
fronts. June* M. Ilw« aad
Ren Procter, tat pp , Want.
Textaa Prroa, It*.
1
There was widespread feeling
in the area that the term served
by the young woman wa* In-
adequate punishment for her
involvement in the grotesque
R’ght On The Job
3
held.
Bible Verse
I '
„ MOOSE LAKE, Minn. (API -
Michael Erwin, 21, elected as-
sistant village constable this
welt tii-.t -I .-in 11 I........ *0 in-
mediately. TBs white convertible
was stolen the night after his
election
LET NO corrupt ctoiimunication
proceed out of your mouth, but
that whic
edifying,”
grace unto the hearers. Ephesi-
ans 4:29
f
crime In which *, middle aged--rf
rmt
Houstonian wa* fatally shot and
his body partially burned. This
feeling may have stimulated the
protests. There Is always a
wave of public resentment over
the glamourizing of females
whose names are connected with
crimes of grrat public Interest.
It Is suspected tore that some
of this emotion also was in-
volved in the letter writing.
The point is that names which
have been familiarized in the
public mind, regardless of how
Sordid the connotation, always
retain a special news value. Ex-
perienced editors know this and
they also realize that the pos-
sessor of a lurid criminal identi-
ty can never shed the inglorious
image. And they know that r
there will always be people who
resent efforts of a former con-
vict to become a normal mem-
ber of society.
The editor's job is to select
from the great anecdotal out-
pouring of day-today human ex-
perience those events which will
be interesting to most readers.
The Houston editor thought that
the eggplant raiser would at-
tract some reader Interest. The
letter writers proved he wu
h la good to the use of
that It may minister
Daily Crossword Puzzle
-KING FEATURE-
We didn’t see the eggplant pic.
tore but some of the reaction
wa* noted recently. Two read-
T,r
mer Governor of Texaa and a
member of tto Texas Library
and Historical G>mmis*k>n,. In
tto hook'* Preface point* with
great prkV to tto Godfrey* and
their contribution* to tto per-
petuation of Texa* history: "Our
stato I* fortunate to have citi-
zen* like Mr and Mrs Godfrey
and th* publishers and authors
of this hook, who have tto love
and appreciation of tto Texas
heritage and the desire to mske
a part of their state's history
available In this manner."
na W.
BIH
DOWN
1. Guarded
by the
I
ll.CUpId
16. Assam
TODAY'S GRAB BAG
r!
1. Upright
support
5. Faucets
9. Rascal
10. Of the
central
By IUTH RAMSIY
Central Prats Writer
SPOT OP FAMI-OUUS THINAMI vlllagt not far from 8t Peters-
burg. but th* probMm of trans-
porting th* 1,600-ton block pre-
sented Itself. A reward of 7,000
ruble* wu offered anyone pro-
, >. during a solution.
1 A since-forgotten blacksmith
■H suggested using
l#£isM specially laid rails. Th# Idas
K K
sllk-
; ;
A 1
uHifj* n 3
t ,
law
worm ■
19. Blulah- ■
white
metal
20. Moun-
tain of
Thessaly
22. Waist-
coat
23. Tidings
26. Eternal
27. Practicable 33. Assessed
29. Upward
slope
30. Girl’s
nickname
31. Muddles
A
2. Eye
!. French
author
4. Present,
THI AN JWilt, QUICK]
1. What multi- millionaire
mads a hobby of distributing
M
, -
5 aicTaIp a]
line
! I
Botany
12. Girl’*
name
13. Purport
14. Contend
15. Place*
17. Therefor*
18. From:
prefix
19. Word In a
count-
down
90. Exclama-
aRoJa]
InTaJi 11
I L'-IcI J
put,
new dimes?
A]
A
future, etc
5. Design
on skin
6. Hewing
2. Where are th* Carpathian ;
Mountalna?
3. Against whom w*r* a
gnat number of Cicero's best
orations deli vend?
4. Who Is sometimes called
th* "patron saint of socialism" ?
Is credited with the
Invention of th* steam engine?
tji ■]
YaaUrdsr'e Aa■ war
32. Musical
work
tool*
1 „
worked; the blacksmith got Ills
7. Fastener
8. Spluh
through
water
9. "Midnight
rider"
reward, Pster and his hors*
Saytmmt $tttt
37. Mix
38. Armadillo
40. Man’s name
42. Biblical
v
got their pedestal, and th* win-
■ •
5.
f to Ctarina Catherine H got a
credit line on th* atatu* for hav.
during bar ralgn.
pot of flune.
HiM hmmnui
Editor and Publisher
......... General Manager
.......... Managing Editor
.....a..... Office Manager
........ Buslnsu Manager
..... Promotion Manager
it erected
Ii
lion
James H. HaJ*
&
IO«N TODAY
Preaton
Pend erg ran
Mae Jackson .
Robert K. Gilmore ...
Bill Hartman ......w
| _
I rittoTn"’"
m
■<
lion*
5
4
5
Z
b
7
6
■
Btmdtmo* John Philip Bourn,
21. Improve-
menta
24. Paradise
25. Biblical
£
MfJtor Jamas Jome, soup tor
Btymour Upton.
Bora Nov. 1: Chemist Mori*
Curie, phyatrial Dr. U*TMeit-
ner, sculptor Isamu Noguchi,
soprano Joan Sutherland, evtm-
»g*Ust BiBy Graham, conductor
Bfrtm Kurt*.
7/
10
II
TOW PVTUKB
'/.
r.
Much u the Eiffel Tower la
uaed to denote Paris, France, to-
day's spot of fame la the trade-
mark of Leningrad, Russia. It
wu unveiled in 1712 to com-
memorat* the centenary of the
coronation of Peter the Great
The statue, showing Peter—
In a Roman toga—on a rearing
charger, wu scuLpttM. by
Etienne Maurice Palconnet, a
member ot the Pirie Academy.
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ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
.
.................Manager
......... Retell Manager
........National Manager
Entered u second efua matter nt the Baytown, Texaa, 77621 Poet
Office under the Act of Cbagreu of March 8,1*71.
Published afternoons, Monday through Friday,
and Sundays by Th* Baytown Bun, Inc,
it 1101 Memorial Drive In Baytown, Texu.
P. O. Bott M. Baytown 77,521
Bubocriptkm Rates
By Carrier $1 40 Month, $11.20 per Year
name
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BOSTON (AP) - The Boeton
Naval Shipyard will add 300
workers to it* force of 6,500 over '
the next tew months became of
a heavy schedule of ship repair
and conversion work, says Rear
I Adm. Frank C. Jones, shipyard
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 37, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 7, 1965, newspaper, November 7, 1965; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145428/m1/4/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.