The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 19, Ed. 1 Monday, September 12, 1966 Page: 2 of 14
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Monaay, oepremOT i/, nroo
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Keep Baytown Clean!
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and willingness to settle for the
and wllngness to ettle fp then
possible are the roots of action
in American politics. Fbr in-
stance, there is not one domi-
nant figure in Congress who
could be called intellectual. .
And there has been no presi-
dent — Including Kennedy
since Wilson who could be
called intellectual, either.
dept must continually make if,
for instance in dealing with Con-
gress, he hopes for some prog-
ress by getting only part of
what he had asked or proposed.
And it is particularly comfor-
table for an intellectual miles
away from Washington to refuse
to accept — in his own mind —
any compromise or anything
less than the ideal he has set for
himself.
This might be considered in-
tellectual snobbery. But to this If Iff . * .
writer it is simply immaturity. filJCC £ PR||TfHF^
It is easy to sit backand^decide LAntJ ft UHJIMIU
Block's Pharmacies
&>re Roosevelt; one will have
sheep character sticking out of
his ears, like Harpy S. Truman;
one wi)l be a heroic symbol and
nonintellectual but magical pac-
ifier of emotions, like DWight
D. Eisenhower; and one will be
the essence of grace, like John
F.Kennedy.
Kennedy had more than
grace. He had style and taste.
In any of those fields Johnson is
no match for Kennedy , and
seems to^eveal it by his cease-
less efforts to be accepted, ap-
plauded and approved.
But Kennedy was an amateur
president compared with John-
son in the sense of accomplish-
ment, endless energy, and 24-
hour-a-day dedication to his Job.
Kennedy-tafted-bett^^
Johnson but performed much
less.——---— _
It is comfortable and com-
forting for an intellectual to live
remotely and safely in an aca-
demic world, far away from the
bootstraps of—panties, and
decide how the country should
bp run.
On the far-off college campus
he has none of the reponsibility
for running ’die country. He
doesn’t have to endure the or-
deals, disappointments and re-
buffs that go with the White
House job. _____
By JAMES MARLOW
AP New» Analyst
WASHINGTON (AP) - Dr.
Eric F. Goldman, historian and
Princeton professor, has quit as
a White House consultant, yvhich
in his case meant being a bridge
between President Johnson and
the nation’s intellectuals.
In a number of cases this has
been like trying to build a
bridge between reality and ide-
alism.
Goldman, in one of those
don’t-quote-me-directly news
conferences where he managed
to reveal Some thoughts after
two yarn in his job, believes
there is still a wide gape be-
tween Johnson and his intellec-
tual critics.
For one thing, Goldman
thinks there is mutual distrust
between the two sides. Johnson
is suspicious of the Intellectual’
motive and they won’t accept
him as an able leader because
his political^ maneuverings chill
NOW
TO3
rica
\. thous
THRU TUESDAY
' into
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THE ULTIMATE WOMAN
- They co
direction
■, ’ streamsl
white. I
, ”, .•'• Neap |
• merge. J
work ini
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For al
doors J
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Ass
CARTOON e NEWS
what Johnson should do. But
Johnson has to go through the
grit and grind of doing It.
Compromise, maneuvering.
IS
O.ck.r al Starling
sce-noi
721 E. Tt«aa
HH-178
A,
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NOW Thru TUESDAY
$1.00 CARLOAD TONITE
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NOW PLAYING!
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ULTRA-
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mystery
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r To this writer there is no
more blessed, Indispensable
U group than intellectuals for
their efforts to keep the Ameri-
~~ can mind working at Its highest
levels. '
But also to this writer, who
tor more, than a quarter of a
century has watched politicians
and government leaders in
Washington, a lot of American
intellectuals live In a dream
world which has no connection
with reality.
They set Up for themselves an
ideal of what a president should
be. although they would have
difficulty agreeing on it, and
close their minds to the reality
of what a president Is.
In the first place, he is an in-
dividual, which always makes
any president different from
any other. ^
sign "i
GREGORY SOPHIA
PECK 10REN
AjpifY [KilfW PMirntM can push ahead of him. The gun Ineffective at distances of 300 feet or more. He’s also equipped with a portable
ftnmirtiniir radio to be teuedlo every patrolman^ At_ top right, a small bottle emits a knockout spray, rendering an attacker
ARABESQUE unconscious for sb nlnutes^bMt aftereffects. Bottom right, an angle drill permits an-offteer to drill a hole
while remaining out of the line of Are. Tear gas can then .be sprayed through the opening.
[0>T
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The
wow- If*
prepar
ployer
• calls ti
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“ • He run
office I
nonwhil
washrol
——only." I
Color!
much I
nVelit, I
rgardol
and al
workerl
For Only 7 Nites
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BOX OFFICES: __
eotisaiM~rMfM
Juit Ditl CASADtS-fCA 7-23171
CAICV-C_ Downtown. Paiddona.
rULCT J .Sharpitown. ClMrqn It!
SAUh’C____ 9*tN OURINO
DUNU J— STORE HOURS
And he doesn’t have to make
the compromises which a presi-
2VD FF.AT1
:» F.M.- -
:30 CM.
MrsTI
dor—«
Frl. S Sotur
gesGamea
and S Matinees
Son.. Sop*. 41-2 14:00 P.M.
So*., Sop*. 17—2:00 P.M.
too.. Sop*. 10—2 * 4:00 P.M.
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BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (AP)
— A group of Aniericari and
British educators will meet at
Indiana University Monday to
plan a comparative study of 20,-
000 U.S. and British high school
pupils.
—Stejfudy wil) investigate pu-
pil ability in math, reading,
English usage and science.
gj
/■
Prkos: $2.50, $3. $3.50, $4
AngteDiCWNSON
SwtMeroWi
1 , t
AND ANOTHER FIRST!
icial Puces for Juniors, j
16 Years & Under'
MON,, TUTS WED , THURS, — 8 PM
SI 25 - $1 50 - SI 75 $2.00
SUN SEPT 11,6 PM, SAT SEPT 17,
2 PM & SUN SEPT 18 6 PM
$1 50 S2 00 S2 50 $3 00
s
apartheid fill on the Africans
living around the cities.
They travel to work on their
own trains and buses. They
have their own second-class tax-
is with African drivers. They
got -to* their own schools and
churches. They muit always
carry their passes or go to jail.
In restaurants frequented by
whites', Africans may serve,
cook or wash dishes but never
eat They are barred from white
hotels. ■ ■■ ■
More than' 600,000 Africans
live in a vast series of segre-
gated villages constructed by
the government outside Jo-
haimesburg. They stream Into
the city every day to work.
The pattern is. similar in Sal-
isbury and Bulawayo, the main
citierof Rhodesia^ But there are
differences.
Park benches in Johannes-
burg are for “whites only." Sal-
isbury's main park is the favor-
ite public resting place for Afri-
cans, on the benches and on the
grass. Whites also use the
South Africa, the government Is
providing Bantu universities for
the African tribes, barring them
from white 'Schools, Rhodesia
has LI Africans in Its Parlia-
ment of 65 members. South Af-
rica does not tolerate this. ... .
Angola and Moxambique also .
building slhools-for Afri- “ke WoodroW Wilson;
. 8 , one will be more bleak, like Cal-
cans, and a small number have ^ 0ne will exude
been snt to universities in Lis- warmth, like Franklin D. Roo-
sevelt, or ebullience, like TTieo-1
LONDON (AP)-Nearly one- Africa and Rhodesia frown on
sixth of the African continent ts the easier Interracial relation-
still troubled with racial prob- ships which flourish In Angola
lems 10 year* after the rush to- and Mozambique between low-
er-class Portuguese whites and
Africans. " • _• ;
than 2 million square miles, in-1 Portuguese officials in Angola
eludes South Africa, Rhodesia, and Mozambique openly differ
Angola and Mozambique at the with South Africa’s apartheid
southern end of the continent, policy of strict segregation.
Although African leaders of-
ten lump them together as
"colonialist Africa" or "white-
ruled .Africa," in racial- atti-
tudes they do not lump easily.
Apartheid in South Africa is
stronger medicine for the black
man than the segregation prac-
tieed in Rhodesia; Both-South
Sp(
COME DIRECT TO
COLISEUM, HOUSTON!
DON'T MISS IT!
This
under
MinistJ
and it
patten
his sul
segregl
m
j
ward indepenaMtoe started.
That hu^.' area, a little less
Sponsored by Houston Police
1$ Pension Fund
are
KAY 14« At I.A ^ORTf
wWOSCO ]
SunomJ
Chi
TONIGHT ONLY
$1X0 PER CARLOAD
THRU TUESDAY
stan mg
I
The Portuguese for centuries
have mixed with many races,
iiKlttding toe Africans, They
encourage mixed farming com-
munities and welcome interra-
cial marriages.——- -;
The Portuguese do not admit
to enforced segregation in Ango-
la and Mozambique although
they freely acknowledge there i»
"economic segregation." Any
African Is entitled to eat in the
fanciest restaurants tf he- has
the money, but not many have
bon.
Pi
t
wmmmmm.
FESS
■
^-Super-Market*
6400 DAY WAY DRIVE
Ohaml
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BaptiJ
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MkvY(HTbHC«l
■ — »ir£rj|>L,
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New Laundry
Detergent, —
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On one aspect of the racial
question, however, white South
Africam, Rhototans-ahd Portu-
guese are united. They do not
intend to have "one man, one
vote” or black rule as. long as benches,
they can fight It off. And they |In Johannesburg, Africans
have the guns. have their own entrances and
Segregation in South Africa is counters in the post offices and
about as total as it can be in, a public buildings. In Salisbury,
society where Africans do most Whites and blacks enter the post
of the heavy work._______1______ offices by the same door and
There are about 12 million line up amicably together.
Africans In South Africa. Slight- All Salisbury taxis are driven
ly more than a third- of them by Africans and they carry both
live in “homelands” or re- races. There are several gjood
serves. Another third work on multiracial hotels. African* and
the farms and the rest live out- whites eat together in some res-
slde the cities |nd townt where taurants.
they work. 'Rhodesia has a university
liie harshest penalties of which admits both races. In
7
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(With |2.5o or More Purchase Excluding Ogarettes)
Mr.
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visitin
Bill i
Tex.,
79'
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Mohawk Breakfast
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Delicious Extra
Fancy Red
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Mrs.
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PLANE TO HELICOPTER with the flick of a switch
could be achieved with this composite aircraft. Artist’s
sketch at top shows craft as conventional fixed-wing
plane for forward flight at speeds up to 450 m.p.h. At
bottom, the vehicle extends and spins rotor blades to
make a vertical landing in almost any small, unpaved
area. A preliminary design study, sponsored by the
Army Aviation Materiel Laboratories, has been com-
pleted by the Lockheed-Californla C*. The turbine-pow-
ered vehicle could be the forerunner of aircraft with
greater speed, range and operational flexibility than
helicopters and planes In current use by the Army.
WHIP
:
300 COUNT
-r
■
PREPARATION Is The key
to what Charles Robinson
hopes will be a heady rise
to film stardom. He's a
Princeton honor grad,
ipoalu four languages, is
an expert swimmer, plqys
three musical' instruments
and served his theater ap-
prenticeship on Broadway.
His next movie role is in
“The Sand Pebbles ”
Rog<
3 1
V FOR
amei
00
Jews Still Uneasy About
Returning To Germany
her
LAST TIMES TODAY
auDRei
H(kI*BU Kll
ftnn
perea *
CTffOOLe
LEAVE
-THEIR
FINGERPRINTS'
ALL
II CHUNK STYLE
IHflatcan....
A. S
r
Mt
Welsi
tors
Mrs.
, BERLIN (AP) - They came
from all over the world looking
for their dead, feeling a little
ujieasy to be in Germany.
• They are Jews and their desti-
nation at the end'of , a shaded
street in East Berlin is the
Weissensee Cemetery, where
114,000 Jews are interred.
The dead of Weissensee arej
not the victims of Nazi death
camps. Most of them were bur-
ted before World War II. But
with the war. and . the deporta-
tion of Jews came reports of the
deaths of some who managed tp
stay in Berlin. Just before war’s
end, about 5,100 Jews were reg-
istered in Berlin. Once there
were 170,000.
One visitor who came to Weis-
sensee was a journalist from
Jerusalem. He and his wife fled
Berlin and the Nazi* In 193.1,’
ThCy had misgivings about
coming back, even now, b(n the
husband wanted to find his fa-
ther’s grave.,
“He died in 1942’In Berlin,” he
said, “I know that from people
who were still here then. But I
do nqt know where he was bur-
ied. that is why I came to Weis-
sensee.” ’■
A woman attendant helped the
man look through card files and
registers but his father's name
was not listed. /
The visiting son said he would
check further with civil author-
ities In the West Berlin district
where his father lived.
Before thp couple returned to
West Berlin, they walked
through the 90-year-old ceme-
tery with Its beautiful old trees
and its many older graves lined
up in neat rows.
As they walksd along,, they
spotted names of Jews who had
been well known in Berlin and
Germany. .
The cemetery looked neat but
it wa* obvious that there was a
scarcity of workers to look after
things.
"We cannot look after each
grave properly with the money
M wmmunlty gefa;lJte«i-,
______Sometimes bodies are sent
from abroad to be interred in
family plots but this is becom-
ing rare. "We have plenty of
room,’’ the attendant said, “that
is no problem. But the costs are
great.
There also is a Jewish ceme-
tery (n West Berlin, founded in
1954 because of the city’s-politi-
cal division. That was before
the Communists built the wall
dividing the city in 1961 but
even then, a spokesman for the
West Berlin Jewish Community
Center says, "the people wanted
to have their dead near them,
where they knew they could
reach them”
Gerhardt Schaefer, an official
at the Jewish Center, said that
about 1,200 Jews are buried in
the new. cemetery.
Schaefer said there are about
6,000 Jews in West Berlin out of
a total of more than 26,000 In
West Germany and about 800 in
East Berlin of a total of only 1,-
.100 in all of East Germany.
/’As you aee," he said, "there
are not enough Jews In Germa-
ny for there to be a Jewish
question any longer.
Ic
Tli
meet
meet
59*
day
Any way you /fie
figure ft... M/m
THE FINEST,^
weel
DISHWASHING
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 19, Ed. 1 Monday, September 12, 1966, newspaper, September 12, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145589/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.