The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 10, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 5, 1965 Page: 4 of 14
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A
1
*
Tuesday, October I, 1965
—
, World Impressed By Pope's Message
prayer, lifting them I vie, dele,..*. Iran* tone.rd ml 'I/ you wteh to b. brother,.
UNITED INATIONJ, N Y
United Nation* its prrtfitr SMtatlve expressed regret *»»•«
Of (tod* I |l|1vi|p(ld
Ai hr •l-Jir Ihr |
•a- ly but
TV
Union briud the pant lit make
(APt -Th* corridor* <4
■jcjsr* sjrv*. **»
ut In • 1dgh-back#d, bolt* col
hod been «*•«
urod chair, ktmpW but aom*-
whci (hrunobkr, and thoughtful-
CBM, M» It KdMSi
today
k ^ri fit*
MM fttfinM BUT
catch rach word, though they Mi amte In MppMcatto* Irt
A* ho cam* to the auhjoct of'Uaienrd with earphone* to tho'thc arm* MU from your hand* ."
mm tnohtng man In
*
m
ly retarded hi* audience
taiiona of the pentIM a word* on
ftasntag mmtmm, m M* own
c
1.1
Th# Pope had come, Thant
th* uni venality <4 the United
rehevtng
credible (
th* teorid af the In
alhelarn «
H:x.
Soviet rbreignl
ey la
★ * * • ‘ * * * *
* * *
direct and •*> ■i«ilic in hit re-
n«ii<«u whan ha urni' It to
®r an appeal to th* moral earv
gor (or the peaee of the world,"
natta, warty and aMpMV
LBJ Says Papal Visit May
Be'Just What World Needs
And pence wu th* main burden
you any who have
•cpnntad
tafilMa
calling tar duarmameni etlorU,
<4 the puntin'a meaaoge.
The UN. the Pope told the
themartvea.*1 loma
•ell to the 10th ami vena ry
a battle agalaat hunger In
world, tor univenalilyH
dm a
•mile at
aoo> pean voter <4 Red China, stayed
daw- pway - listened with bushed
sounded like an appeal tor Red
oMht
Nathan ItaeIt, and rven
I on the deltoaU subject
I.
Chinas entry, other* that It
to
I
X
Hi member* to march resolute-
------—W..0
_
The Impact was
Ih control
out clearly against any
*m)d* tSataa
l» along road* to a wariaat
delegate* lUd
NEW YORK (AP) - Praai-
aUne - Mr Secretary <4 State
Daau *M> aa^h^Maariaaaa
and virtual!)
UN
try, the rwu world leaden tavtt-
•ay* I‘me Paul
he said, la disarmament.
A* he spoke, hnmgstured light-
favor "artlfktal" birth control
To a Chilean delegate, the
ad five new* men to th# living Pakistan. Vki Nam, th* Pom in
lean Republic and others.
VT* visit to New York •'may be
just what the world needa to get
the pontiff* appeal waa to all
Mttona, to men (4 all religion*
THE LAST
i
the Waldnrf-Aitorla Hotel to
view a lurmal picture-taking
station.
The two men tpnke without
note* The Pot* had an Intor-
timer, *
Johnson said hr and Pope
Paul dltruaaed pnailble route*
to pear* and talked "to tome
* —
The President said "we dia-
Damp Weather
Clings To Most
Areas Of Texas
a nd men with none HI* trr-
peace and getting ua to make
gnat progress
made by th* United Nation* In
trying to provide help In these
trouble spots "
The two nvn. who conferred
pontiff, concluding hit mendous effect In strengthening
■M—iltatata Ms MMg b» «■
_________
frwtuff toomta*
quent gestures of tupplleallon.
when he raised his thin, pale
hands to hit audience, teemed
Intended for all: Christiana.
Jew*. Modems, Hindu*. Bud
dhiala. the men of* many faith*
•nd even the athrUts In hit au-
dience
Cardinal* of the Pope * en-
tourage. In their scarlet skull
c*|w and black caaiock with
tcarlrl sashes, it on either tide
i4 the asirmbly hall tanking
(hr laidlum
The asaembty roar, applaud
tog, as th*.puntiff, dad to white
cape, cassock and skullcap and
red slippers, amt wearing a gold
chain fro m which was tua
IM-nded hit golden croaa, tottered
the hall wilh assembly Presi-
dent Amin tors Fanfanl <4 the
Pope's Italian homeland and
UN Secretary . General
U Thant
Thant, a Buddhist from Bur
ms, recalled thal he was moved
•nd Inspired by the Pope's sp-
peal last year to India for diver-
sion of arms money Into the
progress in that area."
the U N and the cause of world
Th# Pope said he was very
happy that hi* SO-mtoute private
conference with Johnson Man-
day "revolved about a mutual
desire to work for peace."
After the first meeting of a
peace “ To a Central African
Republic representative, the
P
To th* edm erf
1
ovation, he »U>*I>
Ripe's mlaatan of peace waa a
boon to th# world organisation!
OF THE \
prior to the Pope'* address to
M
the podium No
-f .
the United Nations, also dis-
cussed efforts to fight Illiteracy ,
and disease throughout (lie
world, the Presided said.
Johnson, speaking with obvi-
he disappeared than
rs butted escHedly
•l of the add nr ••
tk*
"will prove very beneficial.”
By THE AMKK1ATED PRESS
Damp weather lingered In a
broad belt of Te*a* today and it
waa at least partly cloudy ev-
erywhere to the state.
AU the rain was light and cal-
culated to be of maximum bene-
fit to tanners sad stockmen At
the same Urn* It slowed tale
harvests, plowing and planting
to many sections
Temperatures stayed on the
cool side but relatively mild.
Patches of drizzle or very
light showers during the night
•nd early morning moistened
area* from around Lubbock and
Oilldresi In the Panhandle-
Plains to (he east and south
Also In the rainy belt were
Wichita Falls, Mineral Write,
Denton. Denison, Sherman, Sul-
phur Springs, McKinney, Waco
and Intermediate points.
Dense fog cloaked a Panhan-
dle area about 100 miles acmosktkm variances among districts
including Dalhart and Amarillo and the way districts are
before daylight, reducing vlslbll- aligned
Ity to zero to places
Dslhart was one 14 the cooler
points, registering a low <4 11
degrees Reading* farther south
ranged through the upper 40*
and'50s
Top murks Monday a* slow
rains pelted nearly every sec-
tion except Southaest Texas
varied from 82 at Presidio to 56
at Amarillo and Childress.
A*
■n*
and the appeal for peace will be
helpful to a frightened world
impressed A Romanian repre-
Barnes Says Redistrfcting
Was 'Good Faith Effort'
GREAT
spi-i.
thal[ the
aua pride, said: "His Holiness
expressed his pleasure at our
not only talking about education
and health but our acting on it
to this country."
Pope Paul's Interpreter re-
layed this statement to news-
In
Civil Rights
Push Coming
wl
1. I
AUSTIN (API - The Texas Representative, joining to the
Legislature mad* an "honest brief include Nelson Qrwtra of
good faith effort" to comply HaltevUle, Dewitt Hale of Corpus
with court-set House redlstrict- Christ I. Mack Edwards of Pat-
tog requirements. 32 House
members, Including S|*aker Hen
Barnes, have told a federal
court.
The lawmakers submitted a
"frifhd of thq court" brief Mon-
day asking the court to Houston
to uphold the House redlstrirtlng
bill -passed by the 59th Legisla-
ture In Its closing days
Several other legislators,
mostly from urban districts,
have asked the court to strike
down the plan because of papula-
«
I
65
rota:
WASHINGTON
' 1
tonvllle. George Richards of
Huntsville. Paul Floyd of Hous-
ton, Jack Hawkins of Grors-
beck, LrRoy Wlettag of Port-
land. Tony Bonilla of Corpus
Chrisli, Menton Murray of Ifluv
linger, Maurice Pipkin of
Brownsville, BIU Rapp of Ray
mondvdle. Milton Schiller of
Cameron, Charlie Jungmlchr) of
La Grange. J. T. Newman of
Cuero, John Field of Dallas,
J E. Ward of Glen Rose, Henry
Fletcher of LuUng. Wayne Oon-
nally <4 Ftoresville, Joe Shan-
non Jr. of Fort Worth, Skeet
Richardson of Fart Worth, Jack
Crain of Nocona, Honor* Li-
gurde (4 i-aredo. Roger Thur-
mond Jr of Del Rio. John
Blaine of El Paso, Forrest hard-
tog of San Angelo. Temple Dick-
son of Sweetwater. Vernon
Stewart of Wichita Falls. W. S
Heatly of Paducah, Grant Jones
(4 Abilene, Bill Parsley of Lub
bock and A. C. Hallmark of
Dalhart.
"IUs Holiness says he has
come here to pay his rv*i*ct* to
the President of the United
States....and also to thank the ,
President for having made this
trip from Washington to New
York to meet His Holiness He ,
is very happy that this discus-
I
^^^^|<AP) - The | Voting Rights Art. Rauh said,
civil rights leadership) »n,j |J«n» no tegUlatlve'drlvc un-
■■{li new oongmsksial
goal for 1966 Passage <4 a i>rr-
snnal-security set to take civil
right, criminal raw* out nt
f it
of
tll nest year.
"There's no bill ready yet." he
said "We know that this Con-
gress is ready to go home and it
won't be very well received I
think a bill trill be ready when
Congress comes back to Janu-
ary."
1 1
CHEVROLETS
"i
>
n
tlvj
the Public Aceom-
Act In tM4. the vot-
slon hat revolved shout • mu-
f
tual desire to work for price "
The Pope end Johnson sat on
chair, for photographers, and
Johnson Invited the five report-
ers to approach the chairs.
Mrs Johnson, dressed In
black, joined the President ant
the Pope Just before the Pot*'
left the hotel to resume his fas<-
paced Itinerary. __
<4
bill In 1963 and we
ARE
exi
to the personal
act In 1966," Joseph L
Raufi, -«ounael for the Natinnal
lead*
nth
Demos Join Filibuster On
Union Shop Ban Repeal
tlo
Ship Oinference on Civil
.paid to an Interview to-
w ill
Ilia
tar I
!l"ll|
GOING
FAST!!
Three Harris County men
alto allege the plan discrimi-
nates against minority groups
The brief filed by Barnes and
the 31 other House members
contends "population wa* the
controlling criterion in distribu-
tion of House seats and popula-
tion disparities are less than in
other states whose plan* liavc
recelvec court approval."
. conference, an amalga-
mated of more than 100 church.
unkto rand civil right, groups. WASHINGTON (APi South-
met privately last week em Democrats take over from
Ita’fneetiitg esme shortly Republican* today a filibuster
after n> lt*ynevtlle. Ala . jury aimed at killing n1K-ul of a ban
acquittal Thomas L. Coleman, on union shops .
1 deputy sheriff of a veteran of several civil
County, of man- rights BUbtHters, Sen Slim J
In connection with the Ervin Jr . D-NC , will captain
slsytof 3f Jonathan M Daniels, the Dixie force, for the day as
27. etslf .rights worker for the they try to block with words
EpisOOMi Sodety for Cultural Senate Democratic leader Mike
and Rectal Unity, The church Mansfield's motion to bring the
group said-Daniel*-waa the MMifrsprartmi ;a WH?)5r
civil right* wsakrr In the South
to die violently since 1961
The leadership conference
asked itself. Rauh said. "Is this
thing going to continue* Have
we seen the last of the judicial
farce w-r saw in Ha>nevilie’"
The conferees agreed, he said,
that "every assault with a ra-
cial purpose or effect should be
made a federal crime."
And congressional passage of
such an act, he added, "should
be the major legislative goal of
the leadership drive In 1966.”
Rauh said the -legislation he'
has in mind would, In effect,
take civil righu-connected crim-
inal case* out of the state's
hands and into a federal court-
wni
got-
ta New York for the visit of
1‘ope Haul VI
The bill to repeal Section 14B
14 the Taft-Hdrilcy law was
pds*eil by the House July 2* and
is on President Johnson's list of
"must" legislation
Unions are anxious to have the
Tatt-Hartley law provision re-
tiealed, for under it 19 states
have made the union shop Ille-
gal. A union shop agreement i*
If If* . . .
FIRST AID!
Block's Phormoci**
|iarl
won
< rml
(oUi
*
Dwell or »\
7f1 *- TwM
SO-II&A
font
ftlai
i
T
th Anniversary
As Baytown's
in
The filibuster le-gan Mondat
under tin- leadership <4 tte|iiil>
lk-an I-eider Everett M I Irk
sen, and Wednesday GOP seme
tors will hold the fort again. For
this newly forged coalition of '25
Southern and Republican sena-
tors has decided to alternate
dally efforts to frustrate the
White House-backed drive for
passage
Administration forces have de-
elded to leave most of the talk-
ing to opponent* for the time be-
ing Mansfield, their leader,
skipped Monday's session to he
by the union contract are re-
quired to join a union
To crack a filibuster requires
two-third* of the senator* pres-
■nt and voting, and supporters
of the hill confess they haven't
got the votes to accomplish this
Dirksen said time is on his
side, “Members of Congress are
fatigued and battle-weary," he
said "They want to go home "
He said his staff has compiled
3,000 editorials on the subject
and commented: "I may be
compelled to read all 3,000 and
more "
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"In a federal court we just
don't get judicial farces like we
•aw in Haynevill*," ha said. "Not
all federal courts are perfect, but
they certainly don't act like this.'
The leadership conference un-
successfully attempted to write
similar provikions into the 1965
l'in
too I
isn t I
lalkinl
the ail
is pq
season
txmnnl
lielievJ
finallyl
Hint III
while. I
Tlv M
» ay.
SAIGON. South Viet Nam cry American, a U.S. military
(AP) - A Viet Cong force am- spokesman announced,
hushed a small U S. Army unit Another U.S. Army patrol
15 miles northeast of Saigon to- heard the shooting and rushed
day and killed or wounded ev- to the scene hut the Viet Cong
had fled Two guerrillas were
reported killed.
The patrol unit that was am-
bushed from the 1st Infantry
Division, wa, made up of less
than 12 men, the spokesman
said, hut the exact number was
not given. •'
A
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Three other Americans were
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Mill
Check These Features
Elsewhere, two Viet Cong as-
saults of battalion size were re-
ported.
Heavy losses were inflicted on
government troops Monday
when the Viet Cong hit a river
convoy of five boats in the Mek-
ong Delta 55 miles southwest of
Saigon. The convoy drew in-
tense small-arms and automat-
ic-weapons fire from the shore
and two of thejxials were sunk.
The convoy was on •' supply
mission to a nearby post.
Another guerrilla battalion
attacked and overran a hamlet
defended by government troops
110 miles northwest of Saigon,
near the Cambodian border.
The fate of the hamlet was not
known.
The Communists h«d been
operating in small units in re-
cent weeks. A Viet Cong battal-
ion normally, numbers about 500
to 600 men .
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CURMNT
DfVKMMD
i XAIV . . .
PM ANNUM
COMFOUNOO
PUARTDU.Y
J
Y
Negroes Kill Man
After Train Crash
,V
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./ > .
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\ DURBAN, South Africa (AP)
Enraged Negroes beat a
white , railwayman to death
Monday night after South Afri-
ca's worst train disaster.
The general manager of the
South African Railways said at
least 78 Negroes died in the de-
railment of t commuter train
but the death toU might reach
150’.
M mty MpmS Indicated
nearly 200 persons were injure^,
Negro survivors turned on W
Hartslief. 20, • signalman, and
another white railwayman when
they rushed to th* scene Harts-
lief was . battered to death with
stones and pH
an) the other
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 10, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 5, 1965, newspaper, October 5, 1965; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145529/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.