The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 305, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 9, 1969 Page: 4 of 38
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•' ............—-
•M Bagtumn »mi Tuesday, September 9, 1969
•Editorial Comment
Sun Features#
Sun
Strokes
Authority warns About
Africa Racial Problem
By JOHNELLA BOYNTON
T. F. Seale, coordinator of
vocal and public school mlisic
for Baytown schools, has some
very personal memories of
three concerts the Houston
■niere is a racial time bomb ticking in
Africa, warns an American educator and
authority on that continent.
The best way to defuse it is by restor-
ing diplomatic relations between white
South Africa and the countries of black
Africa, contends Dr. Carl L. Schwein-
furth, associate professor of history
and poirtical science aT'Bethanj College"
Africans and others could at least bring
about a more just and equitable modi-
fication in its racial policies.
It’s a tall order, like asking the Arabs
to extend the hand of friendship to the
Israelis.. But, in both cases, the only
other alternative,ife^a mutual bloodbath.
—really leaves no choice.
I
in West Virginia.
Isolation through moral and economic
sanctions has forced South Africans into
a defensive and inflexible position, he
says, and continued isolation, sanctions
and threats of war can only result in
their taking even more oppressive meas-
ures against blacks and Asians within
their borders. - * ,
—A*TFhe United States and other powers,”
say$ Schweinfurth, "should give all pos-
sible (nohmiiitary) support to the small
black independent states which point
like swords into the heart of South
•Africa: Swaziland, Lesotho and Botsa-
wana . . . they should become show-
places of what die black man can do witlp
proper assistance.” /
At the same time,-we should ify to
develop as many contacts avpossible
with South Africa and her people, be-
cause understanding occurs only through
communication. f
“Increased relations will show us
what their system has accomplished,
and it will allow for the South Africans
to see what*black people in the United
StatesJfase accomplished,” he says.
predicts (no sudden or dramatic
times Change
here in ld40, 1941 and 1942.
■ Seale was a trombonist in the
orchestra, which was then
under the baton of the late
Ernst Hoffman, who is
credited with building the
Houston Symphony into a
major metropolitan musical
unit. -
The orchestra returns to
Baytown on Sept. 18 to give its
first concert in many a moon-
possible the first since those
budding World War 1 days.
v Along with Seale in the 1939-
4AM1-42 orchestra wen* two-
High school students’ manner of dress
ing may not be regulated by administra-
tive order where fashion or taste are the
sole criteria, the New YorkSthte Educa-
tion Commissioner rule,d this year.
"The standards of taste of a previous
generation of students are an insufficient
basis for the imposition of restrictions on
students today,” the commissioner
stated;
That was purely administrative deci-
sion, but now the same right of individ-
ualism in appearances has been accord-
ed teachers by a federal court.
The U.S. District Court for Massa-
1 other Baytown teachers. They
were the late Anthony
Banuelos, who conducted a
band and orchestra of some
.. renown at DeZavala
Elementary School, and A. A.
- Davis, who organized the in-
strumental music program in
the schools here. Davis js now
retired and lives at I^ake
Whitney, Tex. Seale, at the
time, was an instrumental
m(isic teacher in the public
schools here and in I.ee
College. He switched to vbcal -
Instruction after the war.
Seale played six years with
Bridge
By Oswald & James Jacoby
NORTH
4 J 1086 5
V 984'
4 J 1072
*A
WEST
• A 93
EAST
♦ K4
♦ K8643
• 10987
♦ Q95
*K642
West
Pass
Pass
SOUTH (D)
A Q 72 *
• AKQJ7
♦ A
AQJ53
Both vulnerable
North >: East South
IV
2 V Pass 4 V
Pass Pass
Opening lead—A 10
Here is a, hand that looks
like a lead-pipe cinch. You
are humid .fn get tn»,game .in
either hearts or spades and
there is no defense to beat
you. It looks that way off-
hand but- it was worth 10
match points out of 12 to
bridge teacher Sally Johnson
of Westport, Conn., when she
made four hearts in a recent
Long Island tournament.
The play is simple enough
but .quite instructive. She
counted up to try and find 10
winners. A cross ruff would
’■.....-i.
I
'How Am I, Doc?"7*
pHange in South African attitudes and
practices, but a more positive and prag-
matic approach to the country by black
chusetts recently ordered the reinstate-
ment, with back pay and compensatory
damages, of a 24-year-old eighth-grade
teacher who had been fired because he
wore a beard. ——-
Fashions change but leghl principles
don’t. Law school students ar§ urged to
file these precedents in their memories
for reference on that day — oh, maybe
20 years from now — when the first rep-
, resentative of a new generation goes to
court to contest his dismissal for wear-
ing his hair too short and for shaving
every day. . m ' ' •
the orchestra, and he believes .( ’ ‘ • ,
Banuelos and Davis played at ’ Washington MGfTy-GO-ROUnCl
least a year longer. A fourth . .
diamonds split but Sally*,
wasn’t looking at the’ East-
West hands. The line of play
she adopted was almost sure-
fire.
•: After winning the first club-
T she led a trump, ruffed- her
MR. AND MRS
nounce the appr<
Judith Ann of Mei
Tenn. His parents
Ga. Miss Pettis ho
teaches in a pr
.Georgia College e
will, be Sept. 27 i
Church of Pasade
five of clubs in dummy
Now Al Sits In the End Zone
By AL MELINGEJR
So far as is known here, the
most illustrious personage of
this or any other generation to
emerge from little River,
Tex., is George Wilbur Evans.
Actually, if I had never heard
of Wilbur - Evans, I would
eat chicken fried steak to-
gether in a place called
Schertz, Tex. We couldn’t eat
together oh the„ military!
premises because Evans was
a lieutenant and I was a buck
sergeant.
The
incredibly—
volume was sent by the
Baytonian joined them for a
year in the orchestra. He was
the late Darrell Tuck, who
played the timpani. Davis,
incidentally, played the
trombone alongside Seale.
Banuelos "played the bass
fiddle.
Seale brought some yellowed
’ clippings ; by the office the
- other day, along with copies of
symphony programs for the
aforementioned seasons. His
eye fell on an advertisement on
the page with an article about
the symphony. The ad was
offering men’s tuxedos for sale
at $25 each, and Tommy noted
That, was much too expensive
for him at the time^ He pur-
chased his for $15,
Ho Chi Minh Always A
Man Of Many Mysteries
drew the rest of
trumps while discarding dia-
nds ‘
By JACK ANDERSON
WASHINGTON - With the
most exhaustive intelligence
apparatus in the history of
mankind at their disposal, our
policymakers still have no real
idea what the effect of Ho Chi
Minh’s death will be on a *
Vietnam peace.
The Central. Intelligence-
Agency has some excellent
esteemed Evans who edited it
2, This volume XX contains all
the'scori$ in all the’athletic
encounters in the long history
of the Southwest Conference. It
probably never have heard of
, Little River. Evans crept into -
When, after the war, Evans
became., the longtime sports
my consciousness as, an,
unobtrusive aspirant for a
Texan of which 1 was-already.
hews director for The Uni-
versity of Texas T sat on the
He has been
gone a few years now and.
tells who ran the oftenest, the
iartherest and how effectively.
Equally as investing as the
ad were the other bit? of news
on the page There was a big
picture of the orchestra, and
another big picture of Harrfc
Countians getting readyforthe
J of burn %
punters and line busters, the
Baedeker of speed, endurance
and agility.
1940 census. An eight-column
headline told how the Houston
Washington with reliable mili-
tary and political intelligence.
However, the CIA has never
been able to crack the tight.
Tittle circle that rules North
Vietnam to gain much insight
into their intentions. -
name was, came out of hiding
after the Japanese surrender
in 1945 wearing white shorts
and a pith helmet and smiled at
the young revolutionaries who
knew him only by reputation,
then amazed them by lighting
up an American cigarette.
He continued to smoke
Salems, a constant fire hazard
to his wispy beard, while he
plotted against the United <
States.
Wallace. The handy maps also
show, in the districts won by
Wallace, whether tflfe runner-
up was Nixon or Humphrey
and whether the yote was
close . ■
monds from dummy.
Then she led a low spade
toward dummy. West ducked
and East'won with the king.
He made the best return
which was a low diamond.
Sally was in with the ace.
Now she led her queen of
spades. West made the cor-
rect decision that she had
started with three spades, so •
he ducked but this did the
defense no , good. Sally
simply abandoned spades
and led her queen of clubs to
wind up losing just' two more
tricks and bringing home
her* contract.
h ROM ALL points on the
compass, Na vy pilots ^suddenly
have scheduled “trair
flights” to Las Vegas the first
week in October. They will
COCA COLA’S J. Paul Austin
was summoned before a Senate*
■ subcommittee the other day to
answer charges that Cokes
contain caffeine but no .
vitamins or proteins. Yet Coke
machines abound in ghetto
neighborhoods whose scrawny
children would be better off
The hand isflT really dif-
ficult but it’s easy to go
wrong. One trump and one
trump lead only must be
made before ruffing a low
club, once the club is ruffed
trumps must be drawn and
finally when spades are led,
The first spade from, the-
closed hand must be a low
one. If the queen i$ Jed first!
something more nutritional.
• Georgia Sen. Herman
the declarer.
the sophisticated feature edi-
tor. We graduated and worked
on opposition newspapers in
Austin, We turned up in the
-same Air Force outfit and
"T since he changed jobs, I have About the only thing it lacks
been sitting in the end zone.- is how many gallons of high-
This train of thought is octane athletic perspiration it
awakened by receipt of the 1969 took to accumulate these
rosterandrecordbookof-the-—heroic statistics/ ..—..L
" ' The Evans-edited tract
should be indispensable to
lice had started a crack
campaign on drinking, at Jjigh
. .school football games. The
Japanese had shot down a
l DOCTOR'S MAILBAG
Periodical Checkups
Helpful in Diagnosis
'vmynfg: brands i Au i , m.u.~
those coffee counter evangel-
ists who speak in bushed
tones and with moist eyes of
the legendary; football prowess
of bygone pthletes, of Mule
Wilson and* Gerald Mann, of
Ki Aldrich and Mack Saxon.
Personally. 1 can’t wait until
British plane, and a book critic
reviewed Sholem Asch’s “The
Nazarene” and Christopher
Morley's “Kitty Foyle.” —
Sfale recalled that Hoffman
stayed as conducter of the
orchestra through most of the
1940s. Sometime during the
"war or itnnifdiateiy : af-~
Teaders are mystery men,
whose thinking processes
simply are beyond-the ken of
our intelligence analysts.
gambling capital to attend a . laidiadge, WlRTrotjes from
convention of the Tail Hood Coca Cola country- anxiously
Association, a Navy-chartered contacted each Senator on the
Subcommittee and appealed
W+CBRDJV/itf**
Although the CIA must have
anticipated the death of the 79-
year-old Ho as a matter of
simple geriatrics, there is no
organization of carrier pilots^
Q—The bidding has been:
MRS RAM
Q— How serious is a bp!
»an operation relieve it?
strong beat comes through.
I run into my next argument
about whether Chris Gilbert or
reliable indication whether
Hanoi will become more
belligerent or more pienable
with Ho out of the picture,
terwards, Efruin Kurtz. took .<*?the *****
over its direction, and still ^ HjT P°htt?ro’ f was
later the orchestra had a J™*8 the ™s
.__■ , „ . JL,. . c. Non one really knows all the
period under the batohs of Sir . , X,
- ■ - - • - ■ -facts of his life. He changed his
name many times to keep these
faete- f roffl- becoming-known
Tbe wing-ding has been
scheduled for the Oct. 3-5
weekertd, so reserve officers
can get away from their
John Barbirolli and I^eopold
Stokowski
Of course, most of us recall
civilian pursuits and fly down
for the fesUvitfes. After all,
they need flight training, too.
... ..Admiral Thomas Moorer, the.
Chief of Naval Operations, has
authorized his fly-boys to use
the taxpayers’ airplanes for
the Las Vegas flights on a not-
to - interfere- with - operations
basisrindeed, he intends to fly
- to-Ms J/egas. himself for-the-
for kindly treatment for the
Coca Cola king. At the hearing,
Talmadge set the tone that
■ prevailed at the Coca Cola
inquiry.
“When toy oldest son was
born,” said the senator from
Georgia, “the pediatrician was
named Dr. Patchinsky. Much
to my amazetoentf he was
prescribing Coca Cola for our
infant son.” '
West = North East
South
1 *
Dble
Pass 1 NT. Pass
?
/You; South, hold:
AA K 984 VQ 65 ♦ A K 104 #2
What do* you do n®w?
A—Bid two spades.
This
Marrie
shows you have a sound double
-with al leas! five spades. ,~7
TODAYS QUESTION
BOACHfS AN!
YoU bid'two spades and your*
partner bids two - no-trump.
What do you do now?
Answer Tomorrow
Jim Swink holds the con-
:—fpronco iwnrd for most yards
pretty forcefully the sym-
A—You -have skipped
A—A prolongation of ^ a beats, or extrasystoles. They
' part of the normal cycle of are very common and may
the heart beat seen on an be caused by excessive use
electrocardiogram (ECGi is of coffee, tea or tobacco and
interpreted as a blocking of' by worry. In persons under
the Impulses' originating In ’ 50, they ar
the nerve bundle that con- significance. But recent stud-
trols the heart rate. The ies indicate that in older per-
cause is usually a coronary sons they may be associated
____heart attack or an enlarge- with an increased risk of
rushing in a single season. It
was Bob Smith.
phony's most recent director,”
. Andre Previn, , who in-
There are
him: undertb
TIMELY QUOTES
ment of
heart. ' --
, Since the seriousness de-
pends on many factors in-
addition to your ECG trac-
ing. you should have check-
ups every four to six weeks
until your condition can be
-evaluated; - Ttie-
-a-
single river in the sea, as
many have believed, but
several swirling, colliding,
meandering torrents tum-
bling northward-
case,, an ECG and a cardiac
checkup should be made.
Oceanologist Jacques Pic-
Q—1 am a man 23, and
would like to know about hair
transplants for baldness.
Does the transplanted hair
continue to grow9 How long
____jacqm
card, on the 30-day drift-
ing voyage of the sub-
marine Ben Franklin in
the Gulf Stream.
cidentajly had been originally
scheduled to lead the, sym- .
phony on its Baytown ap-
pearance. .Previn's fiery
departure from the orchestra
made many headlines, and
now new director, Antonio de;
Almeida . will conduct the
Baytown performance
The Kiwanis Club is to be
birth, Nguyen Sinh Cung, and
the name of his youth,“Nguyen
who knew“ happy event.
of his'
P.UL1T1GAL MAPS, showing
how Southern school districts*"
Enrich Your Vocabulary
Tat Thanh. He became Nguyen
All Quoe when he went to
■ France in the closing days of
World War I, fell under the
influence of the Russian
'revolution and decided! to
become _Ngiiyen the Patriot.
In China, where he operated
as a Russjaetagent between the
wars; he 'used- at least" five
treatment is ^ayned at the
cause and is almost always
does the operation take? ‘
Well, it's too late for
grandchildren, so I might as
well settle tor1 children.
the sponsorship of the 1969 more names- He was kn°wn b>
—concert here. It has been too still other names in Russia. Not
many years without a visit untill9-f2didhebecomeHoChi
from the symphony. It is to be J Mmii, or Ho. the Enlightened,
hoped that the public response H° Chi.Minh, or whatever his
Will justify' the Kiwanians’
efforts.
• voted in the 1968 election, have,
appeared on the walls at the
Department of Health,
Education,-and Welfare. These
show officials at a glance, as
they ponder federal action
against* school districts that
have failed tq desegregate,
whether the districts voted for,
President Nixon.
HEW used student interns to
color the maps so officials
Brush Unce-Lwt*
Control roaches fine
safe way-brush pn J
No-Roach. This cplo
ing is effective for mo
ip use. Harmless to
need to move dishek.
Don't take chance#;., tak
O'BRIEN
FOOD STORl
could see which districts voted
for Richard Nixon, Hubert
Humphrey and George
medical rather than surgical.
Q—Since January, I have
been able to hear my heart
beat, especially when 1 am
down or sitting in a
A—In this treatment,
small skin grafts from /the
back and sides of the head
are relocated on top. The
hair falls out bujt grows hack
a few months later and con
-Robert B. Meynez, 61, for-
mer governor of New
Jersey, whose 41 -year-old
wife-w ex pec Utig-their
first child after 13 years
of marriage.
quick quiz • Iaytflttm §un
Qr-Wh ich was the
nation's worst coal mine dis-
aster?
A—The highest toll in a
T? S. mine-accident: was theT
Fred Hartman .,
Bill Hartman ;V
John Wadley
Paul Putman . . .,
Ahn B. Pritchett
....... Editor-an'4.Publisher
General' Manager
.......... Business Manager
Assistant TO The Publisher
........ Office Manager
lying down or sittimt Jir d tinues to grow. About 20 I hope that President Nix- ^^Sr^inc ^c^entT was the- ~ EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT '
quiet r^m. Two checkups.., small pinch grafts are made on will not get so- involved Preston'Pendergrass ........... Managing Editor
have not _shown ^anything at one time in the doctor’s. -ih-e- BteSfirYittion Of the Johnclla Boynton ..........Associate Managing Editor
wrong? What could cause'
this?
one time- ifi the doctor's ..
office. Each -session lasts *
one or two hours. Sessions
A—This tv a form of pal- —are
pitation - a type of self- ‘ervals [and may require
awareness that most per- several months depending
sons learn to ignore. Once on the area to be covered,
you get the habit of listening The pain is slight and the
for your heart to beat (sub- scarring insignificant ?
consciously reassuring your- INewspeper enterprise Assn.I .
If that you are still alive),
preservation of Jhe
present regime in Saigon
that he cannot make the in
... Associate Managing Edito
end this war.
—Sen.. Vance Hartke, D-Ind.
Tbe space proeram serves
as the cutting edge of tech-
nology. j
—Milton Klein, Atomic En-
it is hard to stop unless you
going on outside of your body
that you forget to listen,
Please send- your questions and
tnit to Wayne G. Brondstodt,
ergy Commission director
of space nuclear system. ‘
Q—ln the Olympic Games,
ho wds the first person to’ r
wm- both the decathlon and
pentathlon?
A—Jim Thorpe in 1912.
Later, officials took back his -
Olympic medals; charging
that he had previously ;
played professional baseball.
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
Dwight Moody ,...v..V............;............... Retail Manager
.Conte LaugpUn A____......... National Manager
Entered as second class matter at the Baytown, Texas, 77520
Post Office under the Act of Congress of March 3,1879. t. •
Published afternoons, Monday through Friday,
and Sundays by The Baytown Sun, Inc. „
’j™, at 130J Memorial Drive in Baytown, Texas. .,
P.O. Box 90, Baytown 77820
fiy
■ Q—Sometimes my heart
seems to stop, then a very
M.D., in core of this paper. While
Dr. Irandstadt cannot answer indi-
vidual letters, he will answer letters
el getterol interest in future columns.
TODAY IN HISTORY
SEPT. 9, 1776—Second Coa-
tinental Congress authorized
name “UnitedStitos”. ■
Q—1S the! president of the
jJnited States immune front
arrest7
A—There js npthi;
t h e Constitution
grants him immunity.
!»ng, in
which
(N«wipaptf Enierpriie AlMciotlM)
smarts orra: amoctatxd ntE» . .......
TXt Auoeisud .PrMs>u cnUtM exclusively to the use for rt(iubUc*.tlon io~
new* diepxtdwe credited to It or hot olherwlee credited In UUe peper end <
i of cponUneoue orlfln puhllehed herein. Rl|hU of repubHextlon ol
latter herein ere aUo retoryed. - » . a.
any
local ne»«______________
all other matter herein are aieo ree’erved.
■\i \
==54;-
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 305, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 9, 1969, newspaper, September 9, 1969; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1055828/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.