The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 246, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 5, 1966 Page: 4 of 14
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5, ISM
■4
I —
__
If*
—
Sputnik
Put Us
In Gear
I
WIN._!
Confident South
Outthinks Self
1
Features •
r
fi
■
t Deferments
Cause Much Confusion
By JACOBY & SON
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Too many cooks spoil the
broth and too many precau-
tions cost many a contract
North didn't have much of a
spade raise but with the fa-
vorable diamond opening and
the five of hearts return
South should have had no i_
trouble making his contract
with an overtrick.
He started out beautifully
by dropping his ten of dia-
monds on East’s ace and win-
< ning the heart.
After this fine start all he
had to do would be to draw
trumps with two leads, lay-,
down his king of diamonds,
continue with the eight, dis-
card his losing heart on the
long diamond and concede a
. club trick
This simple line of play was
not only the winner but it was
most logical because it was
sure to succeed if West held
the jack of diamonds irrespec-
' live of how trumps broke and
would also win if trumps
broke 2-2 and East held the
diamond jack.
But South out-thought him-
self. Somehow or other it
=: did not occur to him that East
could have ‘been dealt only
, one diamond. He could count
10 tricks if he could ruff a
V
mm.
if
By AL MEUNGER
For some time now I have
been in deep meditation an the
subject of higher education and
my conclusions, reached after
profound thought, are disturb-
\ 1
i
i
■f
i-
ins
and psychological war requires civilian
language specialists, economists,
chologists, organizers, managers,
teachers, agricultural experts and in-
dustrial technicians.
In Viet Nam, for example, we were
caught with a scarcity of men who
knew Vietnamese. In World War II and0
after we had a severe shortage of men
who knew Japanese and Korean. The
next go-round we may be short of men
who know Thai, Burmese, ah African
language or Portuguese.
The nation must carry on at home
during and after war. Children must be -
educated, nonwar business, farms, lo-
cal, state and national governments
must operate. Space and other civilian
research programs are essential to the
nation. Colleges must provide the skill-
ed men and leaders to keep the United
States growing In education, research, •
industry, space and In a host of other
fields.
It’s impossible to predict all the skills
will be needed in the bnoa'd na-
tional interest. Manpower overplan-
ning bogged down Russias expansion.
So the draft is organized to let as
many as possible go to college.
If a shortage of available young men
develop*, some fulltime college stu-
dents doing satisfactory work will have
■ to be drafted.
Qualification tests and class stand-
ing ratings are rule-of-thumb attempts
to identify students with the greater
potential for serving the national in-
terest
But every student deferment is de-
cided as an individual case. Each local
draft board has the power to decide
there are other factors more important
than test scores or class standings.
There’s confusion about student de-
ferments.
Bluntly, deferments are not aimed
at helping the students. They’re in-
tended to promote the UJ5. national in-
terest
The military is short of doctors. The
at that doctors with
drafted. It wouldn't
Sputnik put us in high gear.
Cbllrge students, functioning un-
der relentless .pressure, are be-
ing driven to the psychiatrist’s
couch, to the use of various evil
drugs and, to extreme instances,
to study.
. Even eoQtge faculties, re-
sponding to the inexorable *
thrust toward toteUectualism
ire belching torrents of a cane
psy-
A
*
shortage is so gre
children are being
make sense to draft medical students.
There’d be fewer doctors to draft a few
years hence.
* The Army and Air Force are hungry
captains. The Army
f able young college
>•
texts
Some of these books are even
read by an occasional graduate
student whpsy television set is
broken.
My personal sense of insecuri-
ty began stirring last year When,
on a parents' night visitation,
my young son's mathematics
teacher baffled me completely
with an explanation of fourth
grade procedures. .....
Then I fell completely apart
when Dr. Arrwsmith of the
University of - Texas wrote
searchtogly about what is wrong
with the teaching of humanities.
I wasn’t sure what he was driv-
atr Then an avalanche of
responses came from assorted
professors to a subsequent issue
of the same magazine, I could
not tell what they were driving
at either. ~
Now a survey of outstanding
graduate schools has been pub-
lished and there is hot a stogie
Southern university on the list
This cut me deeply as I am
an intellectual product of ad-
vanced learning at the Univer-
sity of Texas. The sole, crumb •
of comfort resided in the fact
that the UT German depart-
ment was mentioned as one out- -
standing area in Southern ed-
ucation. Unfortunately, I did not
study German.
I must conclude that our
youngsters are being taught too »
much too soon,
...... They are learning'facts that
they don't understand. Even
worse,. I don't understand them'
? ' cither. " '
L
for lieutenants and
is jumping for every
graduate officer candidate it can get
Pulling good men out of school would
cut down the pool from which the
Army can get the young officers It
needs.
There's a shortage of enlisted men in
a wide variety of skills. The lists run
all the way from electronics specialists
, tO 'intetfigence. The more schooling
these young men get before they're
draftedr the better it may be for the
r
fj
mcoti
r
■
i
that
Ariny which has but two years to train,
deploy *nd use e«di draftee.
Defense industry is short of special-
ists. The help-wanted sections of news-
papers are filled with calls for systems
analysts, programmers, trainers, ac-
countants. personnel ,men, design en-
gineers, economists, labor relations,
specialists, electronics nj$n, teachers,
mathematicians, physicists.
The need is for men with college de-
grees. If these men are taken from col-
lege. their skills won’t be available to
help develop and produce the tactical
and strategic weapons at the speed
they’re needed. ^
Viet Nam and future Viet Nams re-
quire more than officers, enlisted men
and weapons. The political, economic
NORTH
*986
NJ9732
♦ Q 9 7 4
4
Helping Hand
*Q
T*
Washington Merry-Go-Round-
WEST
*53
FK10
♦J6532
* A 1086
EAST
*104 '
VQ865
McCormack Is Anxious
To Cover Up Scandals
♦ A
Ilf;
* K 9 7 4 32
SOUTH (D)
* AKQ J72
VA4
* K 108
* J 5
Both vulnerable
Went North East South
1
1*
Pass 2 * Pass 4 *
pass Pass. Pass
Opening lead—♦ 3.
savings and loan outfits to which law firm *10,500 for "general
he has an interest legal advice." A member of the
Ethics Committee, reluctant at Multer tried to persuade the group told this column that
first to investigate a colleague, board, for example, to charter Multer was expected to use hil -
ls now digging With quiet de- the Park Central Savings and influence, as a member of the club therefore he lerf » „r,.h
I am. alas, the product of pre- SSffUf te^M^ST* ‘rick three. W^ won with
mature education. I am also the th*?? ^rter‘ the ace afld gave East a dia-
product tit-pmrniftire mfaircr- firm1 lias «l!so repre- mond ruff East led bark an"
Tbeculturing process started *Spe'*®r John McCormack.-is cation, he paid repeated calls sented other banking cllents. In-.—other heart. "West took his
at 'an eariv see when I was more anxl°us to cover than on thljn-Oiairman Joseph Me- deed, Multqy’s law partner, Mil- ting and mup Fact -
forced to tenter childhood to. . ■■■*£* ^ scan®^ £^y and finally hauled him ^ton A. Seymour, i. vice president fuff forda two-tS
^ for
in other miserable children House Ethics Committee to po- McMurray explained that the one of the charter stockholders jn« West’s three-SDot lead
plunked forlornly at the keys of conduct of Congress- board couldn’t approve the char- to the District of Columbia Na- was nr0kabiv fourth best and
a grand piano men. Behind the scenes, McCor- ter because less than 5 per cent tkmai Bank. it could iust as well haveheen '
I have never voluntarily at- has also been one of of the stockholders were local The Congressman himself fourth of five as lowest nf
-tended.a..plapo.cmmrt.khce.. Dodd's msLstaunch jfcfendera. residents. The proposed savings helped to organize a Swiss-styie • four Furthermore the odds
* Whenever I am threatened by «* not only towered the boom and loan company, he testified, bate to the Bahamas, ttoTgrt. were tremendS’to flvM S
on freshman Congressman Joe was controlled by "a tew men ting around the banking laws he Wert holding the iartrnf di.
Wk,D-N.Y.,for mentioning fa New York." help, to write frelT<Wro£ Ss S ^ld SS
Dodd t name,on toe Hou« floor, -lt shouldn’t matter, to you try. The Guarantee Trite Cbm* ca?d he SaSfwS have
h? Pfr!^1!L.<>r^red ^ d£’ where that money came from,” pany, as the bank was impres- played iUt trick one *
missal of Dodd's former admin- snapped Multer, "whether it . lively called, was supposed to P y 8 nC*0ne'
istoative assistant, Jim Boyd, came from Alaska or Call- become a haven for depositors
who had found a job with the fornia or anywhere eke." who wanted to establish secret
House Public Works Committee. . *•» a smaH group controls the accounts. For banks to the Ba-
capttal of an association,” re* hamas are permitted to oper-
around to establishing an ethics plied McMurray, “there can be at« toe same secrecy as
committee, this column will be manioulation For the tone- ttiose in Switzerland,
happy to supply the names of ^ SroefiTof 'the commS
Congressmen who should be to- jt might not be good to have a
few, especially outsiders, oper-
ating it.
Multer didn’t mention that he
was one of the New Yorkers
who had invested to the com-
pany. Another: Harlem's Rep.
Adam Clayton Powell, D-N.Y.
By JACK ANDEBSON
WASHINGTON — The Senate
The Sun's Weekend Television Log
■*.
Candid, Camera
What’s My Line
News ;
Cinema H f
ifews .
SATURDAY NIGHT
1:30 O Flipper .
9.45
Houston Home Show
St. liike's. Methodist
Camera Thfee
Gulf Coast Jamboree
Frontiera of Faith
Face the Nation
The Western
10700
S:30
io tin
10:25
CD Jackie Gleason
, . an Ozzle and Harriet
IDrearoof Jiaiitie ' »»
o v Of H 32nd Com*
mencement Exercise*
10;!»
11:00ffl
News
Late S>ow
10:45
■<#
>
•* A- -M'.y*?.'- ' i
Reed
Comic Strip Capers
■ Jimmy Powers
II :15 Q Art OFLiving
11 ISO O Early Show
CD Astros W. Philadeljrfiia
81'NDAT AFTERNOON
!2 00 O Meet file Press
12 :30 m Movie
Secret Agent
Lawrence Welk
Movie*
fht Fite Is Famiiar . *
MONDAY MORNING
C^ll $tot OR'-
6 28 0 Sign On
« Sunrise Semetter
i«to»Ql*etDDe
6:55 0 Sign On
7d» ■ Today
1
f:»
8:30
9 00
an invitation to attend a recital,
my nostrils quiver with the
memory of how the furniture
polish smelled on the gleaming
mahogany monster which stood
in our parlor with fts shaggy
fringed scarf. My ears vibrate
with the recalled sounds of three
doleful plunking nights wasted
back to West Texas.
Tm afraid that's the way
some of today’s college grad-
uates are going to react to about
ten years to a suggestion that
they read a book.
9 30 © Grand Ole Opry
:
10.00
Weather, Surfing,
Fishing
0 Morning Edition News
7:05 © News
735 0 Weather
7:30 0 Today
1 00 0 ? ports
1:30 0 CBS Sports
»:10
2:30 0 Victory at Sea
!*)0 Sports In Action
Memphis Open
Red China 4;
Viet Nam Special
Sam Snead
Sportsman Series
4730 0 GE College Bowl ,
“ Amateur Hour
America -
Frank McGee
20th Century
Voyage
0 Actuality Special
Adventure
Late Show-
Big Movie
30:15
Morning Show
Cadet Don
Q—The bidding has been
West North
If the House should ever get
10:20
Sooth
4:00
I
10:35
Weird
- 8:25 0 Newt
8:30 0 Today
iw
i*
12:30
Pass 3*
You, South, hold:
*AQ953 *3 4432 *KJ75
What do you do?
A—Bid four spades. Yea
don’t have much of an overeall
bat your singleton heart should
Pass
One at the depositors was the
late Gate San Soucto, a high
teamster official who deposited
6611.000 bonds to Mutter’s bank.
The bonds later turned out to
be counterfeit.
Mutton also arranged for the
bank to handle a tottery, catted
tire Medical Award, patterned
after the Irish Sweepstakes.
The tottery ticket* were printed
fa Ohio and shipped across
state lines, which is a viola-
tion of federal law.
The versatile Brooklyn Con-
gressman also made a quick
885.000 profit on a Florida land
deal, backed by Teamster Un-
ion funds. He was supposed to
be paid a 850,000 annual sal-
ary for 10 yean, plus a percent-
Bible Verse
which planned to develop prop-
Captain Kangeroc
Kitty's Corner
Eye Goes*
I Love Lucy
12:30 0
i 40 0
Morris Frank
» SUNDAY MORNING
ten!
M .00 M _ - a- _
V ID WM Minsiopner*
6:30 0 This I. The Life
r |
vestigated. The majority, as in
the Senate, are scrupulously
honest. But some Congressmen
| ■ p |l£_ bear investigation.
|An MiaialiffV The House Ethics Committee,
JVI# InUUami ' if McCormack would permit it
■ ■I aw ■ < to be formed, could begin with
1|h*||| PailAli Rep. Abraham Multer, D-N.Y.,
fftlf rafCU a bespectacled, benign^ppear-
re tag Brooklyn attorney whose
plump figure, rosy face, and an-
gelic glow give him more the
took of a clergyman than a po-
litical manipulator.
But, as the No. 2 Democrat
on the House Banking and Cur-
rency Committee, he has used
"We didn’t watt for them to he influence to promote his own
apply, we sought them out,”
says Janies Hodgson, director
ot todustrial relation*.
Result: Lockheed now^reports
that 6,500 of its 84,000; jmployee ______ _________________
^ are members of minority groups HE HAS ALSO broueht pressure WASHINGTON 1AP) —
— and among the 6,500 there on the Federal Home Loan Heavy re even moderate Demo-
are 2W times as many to man- Bank Board, which comes under cratic tosses to the 1966 congres-
ageria] re professional jobs than the jurisdiction of his commit- sional elections could produre a
in wMcffled or service work. tee, to give favorable rulings on post-election session of Congress
this year, say some congres-
y|nf^| sources.
If the pattern of past off-year
1 elections is followed this year,
Democrats now to control will
lose some House seats. If they
lose as many as 15 or 20 they
still would have numerical con-
trol but not voting control of
“Great Society” legislation,
9:00
Jack La Lanne
1
5:00
'9:250 News
9:30 0 Concentration
8 McCoys
Girl Talk
TODAY’S QUESTION
Instead of passing, West bids
two hearts over your one-spade
overcall. Your partner jumps to
three spades and East bids four
hearts. What do you do now?
; -Aaswer Monday
5:30
mmm
Sign On
Children’s Gospel Hour
7 00
10:00 0 Morning Star
THIS COLUMN also learned flat
a Florida group, seeking a bank
charter in I960, paid Mutter’s
:
too
0 Andy of Mayberry
The Pulpit
News
Super Market Sweep
LOS ANGELES (AP) - In
May of 1061 Lockheed Aircraft
Corp. was first to sign for the
federal government's equal op-
portunity employment program,
aimed at foxitog job* for minori-
Gospel Time
7 30
i
10:30
Paradise Bay
Dick Van Dyke
Dating Game
0 Early Bird Theater
SUNDAY NIGHT
Watt Disney
I JO
Solons Hay
Get Session
After Voting
My Favorite Martian
■A
8 :00 0 Gospel Singing JuDilee
i I
11:30 0 Post Office
0 Search For Itouionvw
0 Father Knows Beat
0 c
Oh
Love of :
World of Giants
11 .-00
This Week to Galveston
The Living Word
TaRftaek'
Life
7.-00
0:15
8:30
Donna Reed
ties.
ill
*1:25
7:30
SttebY Time te Dixie
Lamp Gnto My Feet
’EM_a *w-Wi'iWrjSP*
rirst netnoasst
9.00
banking interests. Both he and
8:00
■. ;
his wife have invested in banks
while he has been passing on
banking le^iitebb.
Perry Mason
Citrujay Viffht
Wackiest Ship
Mori*
te \ x .
■
11:45
8 M
9 30 0 Look Up and Live
erty on Honeymoon Isle near
— Tama.
AND.....WITHOUT cbntnimay
great is the mystery of godli-
ness: God was manifest to foe
flesh, justified in the Spirit
seen of angels, preached unto
the Gentiles, believed on to the
world, received up into gtory. I
Timothy 3:16
11:55
ricwl
f
....unto.: the
floundering.
c t started
putted out
Try Your Word Power
-NEA FEATURE--
12:00 0 Midday with (Hopv
©Ben Casey
Let's Play Pret Office
As The World Tuns
ftis
885,000 profit.
for a
I
Multer has also battled in
News at Noon
Congress to tin the proposed
Washington subway system over
to O. Roy Chalk, the transit ty-
coon, and to block pricing
12:30
| World Tnwrtir
f
N
12:55
BERRY’S WORLD
1:00 ( I The Days of Our Lives
ington liquor dealers.
9
S
His activity to behalf of the
liquor interests led fanner Con-
1M
• ■nacii, 2
mm J
iissr
Party
4 N J., to comment during the last
-
1.55
House leaders stfll are point-
2:00
J
U
tog for adjournment not later
than October, white almost cer-
tainly would leave some of the
Praddenf s legislation stranded.
why foe distinguished gentie-
frotn New York, with all
_ ibffittes, spends to much
font wockfag on tide liquor bm."
F ■
To Tsfl The Truth
>4
f;
i chinrtn
i TL.
2:25
*
!
*4
2:30
You Don’t Say
j ;
k
Mlp Sagtonm ftnn
■M
n
3:00
Matte Game
af ate
3:00
Golf
rh'rv
47
% ’ zii&M
ray
i
in
Rmtlto Y<
—
■
H. Hale
3:25
m
■%: i1* -t: <!C
UmmIm MSw
Atestiuit To The AibUtere
Ariene DaM s Beauty
Marjorie’s MagiCastte
-nl
Mae Ja
3:301
Hie decathlon is an
athletic com pet i t io n in
track which lasts two days.
It has been an Olympic
event since 1912. Contest-
ants are required to run
the 100-yard dash and com-
pete in high jump,
and 400-meter run on
* first day. On the second day
they enter the 110 meter
hurdles, the discus throw,
the pole vault, the javelin
throw and the 1,500-meter
W
Early
Office
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
Aaa & Pritchett
. rr-
3.30
Early
When The Action Is
-
John Wadtoy
4*0
Merv Griffin
Pul Putman ..
Oofrie Icaghlla
5.00
ans
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:
y
re
Offirew^
the Act af
■pfe
Yogi
aftentoou, Monday through Priday,
BdiJV hgf fht Bi^KtflRVl. 'Vt&v.
Memorial Delve ta Baytewn, Texaa.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 246, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 5, 1966, newspaper, June 5, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145460/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.