The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 111, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 1, 1963 Page: 4 of 10
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The year 1962 fadett Into history at the stroke
of midnight Monday, leaving behind a trail of amaz-
ing accomplishments unparalleled in world history.
It also left behfiTd a- nuclear war scare Americans
woh’t soon forget.
■ After a series of cold war skirmishes, the United
States and the free world faced-a real challenge to
world peace in Cuba when it was discovered that the
Soviet Union had amassed a nuclear missile-striking
■-force on the island that was capable of devastating
American cities and others ta, tjrei .Western Hemi-
Determnied to have a showdown with interna-
tional Communism that could have sparked a nuclear
holocaust for all the world, the United States Gov-
ernment challenged Russia. , . ' »y
It probably was “in the cards’’ for Russia to back
It probably was “m the cards’ tor Kussia to DacK
down in Cuba, but the United States didn’t know ® 4
that. Nor did we bank on a back-down. Instead, we
prepared for nuclear war. Our people were told by
President Kennedy of the dangerous implications of
the Cuban situation, and his stand was later vindi-
cated when Americans Jet him know they were ready
to call Russia’s bluff. j
But the problem of Cuba and others" we have
accumulated while^rying to live in peace will long
be with us. There is little hope that 1963 will bring
us anything but more grief on the cold war front,
and, of course; there is always the danger of a shoot-
ing, war by accident. There alsp^exists.the -possibility
i
that Russia will choose the time and place of the
. next shooting war and that we won’t have much
/"lotiee until it has been started.
The only thing we as peace-loving Americans can
do in 1963 and the years to follow is to work harder
for world peace. One of the ways we can do this is
to continue without abeyance our military prepared-
ness program. We. must be prepared always to bar-
gain for peace from a position of strength. Commu-
nism respects strength, not weakness.
For the most part, 1962 has been a good year for
most Baytonians. We have enjoyed prosperity, which
has given us hope of a brighter future. There, have,
of course, been some economic^njustmefits in our
area. These had been expectedfoj/years. Baytonians
will make the best of them. ,, * '
The Greater Baytown area cannot help but pros-
per in 1963 and the years to come. There are too
many things happening. Work is just getting under*'
way on the National Aeronautics and Space Adminis-
tration’s Manned Space Craft Center at Clear Lake.
This has sparked a building surge, and is bound to,
bring in new industry. Much of the unemployment
problem has been solved by These-developments, and
more manpower will be needed as NASA mushrooms.
We in Baytown have every reason to expect great
things next year and for the next several years.
•••*
.
“I . '
Washington Report---
■■■ ■' ■ ’ „ - -
---------- ----------jo _ i95i Hall t0]d the U.S. Com-
; munist Party’s National Conunit-
t'
> - By DREWPEARSON
WASHINGTON - It was two
yean ago this month that John F.
Kennedy came" into the White
House like a young Hon, full Of
restless energy, suddenly finding
himself king of the political jun-
jde. He felt exhilarated, cocksure
over Ms new powers, '
Asked by a friend how he liked
the White House, Kennedy en-
thused: "This is a damn fine
job!”
But in some ways, he acted like ’
- otpatwiy_____ ______
■— fices, riffle through the paperwork
By FULTON LEWIS JR.
WASHINGTON - Members of .
the House UnAmerican Activities tfe:
Committee may be proud. Their "It is necessary to widen tha
recent investigation into so-called struggle for peace, to raise its
peace groups was eminently sue- level, to involve far greater hum-
cessful, if the anguished cries of — here, to make it an issue in every
assorted leftists from New York community, every people’s organ-
to Moscow are any indication. _ ization, every labor union, every
‘ Soon after Radio Moscow broad- church’ ^
cast a withering blast at American evei7 P04**'of *atbenng a w
“witchhunters, members of Con- P^P16
gress began receiving mail from “It is imperative to bring every,
back home. Investigation showed one — men, women, youth and
- ‘ * yes, event children - into the
struggle.
_ . “It is essential to give full sup-
members. -—A- port to the existing peace botfies, ~-
With disclosure that various to their movemehts and the strug-
Ms fflte “guests.
I. F. Stone, a veteran Commu-
hK oval o«i£ ^
Rather than summon Ms secre- wh Th^HTlAC^fnvKtieation was
tary for dictation, he would stride ™ HUAC invMhgaUon was
into her office, shuffle through
mail, dictate a quick letter stand-
ing up. He was informal with Ms
aides, bantered with them, enjoyed
cracking dry jokes and playing
small pranks on Ms handyman,
Mugsey O’Leary. / '
The public saw little of this side
of the President, for few men
have been better schooled at con-
cealing their inner emotions! He
carefully set out to build up public
confidence in himself. People were
uneasy about Ms youth, Ms
Catholicism, his sudden rise to
power.
“the dirtiest such affair since the
days of McCarthy." • y-
The National Guardian, de-
scribed by a Congressional Com-
mittee as “the virtual official
propaganda arm of Soviet Rus-
sia,” made the hearings its
The National Guardian, de-,
scribed by a Congressional Cbm-;
mittee as “the virtual official
propaganda arm of Soviet Rus-
OWUlgUKIUllg Uivu
“It is also necessary to recog.'
nize the need for additional peace
organizations ... above all, Com-
munists will intensify their work
for peace and their efforts to build
up peace organizations.”
That many Comrhunists had fol-
lowed those instructions to. the let-
ter was clearly demonstrated by
the committee. That the commit-
tee then come under frontal at-
tack was not unexpected.
TEXAS’ JOHN Tower, slated sev-
eral months ago to become chair-
sia,” made the hearings its ma-
jor story. The “UnAmerieans’ at-
man of the Senate Republican
~ ’ " - , will not get
tack” was a vicious smear against
peace-loving women, toe publi-
cation reported in a story that be-
Campaign Committee, 1 , „ ^
the job. ■ , >
The reason: Northern liberal*
objected to Tower, a Southerner.
chairman is to raise funis, and
A SHIP'S LEAK THAT COULD BE FATAL
V
Sporadically Speaking
- T*™* fe : I “S JKS KU*
none of his youthful exuberance, ers” were roasted in a page one can have the position Reflected
none of his cocky confidence. He "Militant” story that praised by a comfortable majority in 1962,
» •*------ peace leaders for defying die corp- he knows party leaders and wont-
mittee. ' »ers across the country.
The “Weekly People,” published
by the Socialist Labor Party, saw
sought instead to appear moder-
ate, mature cautious. But inside
the White House, he was still the
young lion.
THE GREATEST throwing; arm ill
North America is not th% property
bf the National Football League
nor is its owner listed on the roll
*of either major baseball league.
.It. belongs -to the male tor'fe-
Feathers Falling
Among the commodities stockpiled by the federal
government for emergency use is feathers. And, it
seemed to a Senate committee investigating stock-
piling that the price of this commodity was declining.
Sen. Stuart Symington of Missouri, chairman of
the investigating committee, demonstrated the other
day that he has an ear for a pun.
When the acquisition of feathers during a de-
clining market came up for discussion, Symington
fixed the witness with a steady gaze and asked:
“How come the government was buying so many
feathers when we all knew that feathers were down?”
Try and Stop Me
—— By BENNETT CERF --
male) who delivers the morning
newspaper from the county seat
to our residence at approximately
5 a.m. each day.
We have a large circular hole in
the middle of our cement drive-
way.. It was left to avoid remov-
ing a small sickly oak iron Which
still ^projects wearily from its cen-
ter. Along the eastern inner rim
of this Hole there is a deep reit
made by an inaccurate driver
backing out of our driveway. This
crater is about two feet long and
just as wide as sn automobile tire.
When it rains, the Tut heroines .a
tiny lagoon of grey repellant wa-
ter. ’ 1
Cruising along at 20 miles per
hour through pitch-blackness the
invisible marksman hurtles the
rolled newspaper with absolute and
unvarying precision. Its graceful
30-foot arc terminates with a sod-
den splash right in the middle of
the little lake, On days when, rain
is stiil falling or when lowering
rain-pregnant clouds threaten, the
paper is snugly encased in a wa-
ter-tight cocoon of mied paper.
But pur lagoon retains its water
level for -several days after the
weather has cleared. On a recent
cloudless Thursday the ad-fat pe-
riodical was fished, grey and pul-
py- irom its watery cradle.
You can unroll a newspaper in
old and got arthreetis in my left
knee this kind of weather. You
ever tried to climb a rose bush,
Mister? Them thorns prickle
fierce, I, tell you.”
’I would forward a snarling mis-,
anthrope on a motorcycle to the
complaint's address. Usually,
he would return with the intelli-
gence that a neighborhood dog had
romped away with the subscriber’s
paper, or that it had been over-
- looked behind the porch swing.
Nbt only do I hesitate to join
the ranks of the querulous but
there is a hidden curiosity to
await longer days when I can
catch a glimpse of our carrier in
dawn’s'early light. If it turns out
that this marksman is the ap-
propriate age, size and gender, I
ing to tell the Houston Colts
am going t
about him.
. V Aft,
’And, although these remarks
cannot be construed as represent-
ing, the policy of the /publication in
which they appear, I should like to
add just a note of reassurance to
people who complain about de-
livery servici “ ‘
livery service. Keep calling. One
of the horrible recurrent night-
mares I used to have as a young
city editor was that some day
-some calamity wouid preventour
paper-from roiriitfg out at all. Not
a paper would appear op the
street. Not one would be delivered
to anybody’s home. :, 7, .
Andnobody.wrold complain-
How Do You Stand?
BY BARRY GOLDWATER
U.S. Senator, Arts.
TWO EVENTS jolted Kennedy
with the stark reality of the Jap-
anese destroyer which once
crunched into his PT boat in the
Pacific. One was the Bay of Pigs
fiasco, the-other Ms confrontation
with Khrushchev in Vienna.
A suddenly sober Jack Kennedy,
his confidence shaken, pulled back
into his oval lion’s den to iick his
wounds. This was a period of ago-
nizing personal reappraisal. He
surrounded himself with trusted
aidfs, tended to distrust the ex-
perts he had inherited, whose ad-
vice he had accepted without be-
ing able to evaluate it. He was a
lion whose mane had been singed
and who was going to approach
Ms next fire with utmost caution.
During the past year, Kennedy
has become better acquainted with
his technicians, and Ms old con-
fidence has been restored. But it
is a more mature, more cautious
confidence. He is now impressed
more with the responsibilities than
toe power of Ms great office.
toe HUAC hearings as. an attack
“the vested interests” upon to?
by’
peace movement.
NOTE: Committee investigators
discovered that Communist tone-
Bible Verse
tionaries were following the order
n of party boss Gus Hall when they
infiltrated certain peace groups.
Less thafi two years ago, on Jan.
AND THeS LORD God formed man
of the dust of the ground, and
breathed into his nostrils the
breath of-life; and man became A
living soul. Genesis 2: 7
Daily Crossword Puzzle^
to mean a policy of stupidity
whiclL ignores the reality of ag-
gression. This. is particularly ap-
parent in the present situation af-
fecting India. For here you have
the erstwhile leader and spokes-
man for all the nonaligned nations
in a death- straggle with the Chi-
nese Communists.
India has been invaded by a
ruthless enemy with which
It didn’t condemn China fbr illegal
aggression. In fact, it acted for ail
the world as though India, by be-
coming toe target for aggression,
was somehow as much at fault as
the Chinese Communists.
Following the conference in Co-
lombo„Ceylon, reports from New
Delhi claimed that Nehru was
OTHER CHANGES have occurred
In Jhe President during, toe past
year. More and more, he betray*
toe loneliness of great decision, •
the isolation of the presidency, He
has become more preoccupied,
more inclined to sit alone with
Ms thought- In deep crisis, he
sometimes seeks toe solitude he
used to shun.
He hasn’t lost Ms sense of hum-
or, but he seldom wisecracks now
during the discussion of ;a grave
ACROSS
LMm________
As tor, Am.
financier
6. Bum with
liquid
Mi Positive
electrode to
battery
Ml Japanese
temple gate-
B. Large
volumes
M. Salad
>
garnish
K. Viper*
16. Baffled
17. Baseball’s
it :. report.
thpughf it could live in peaceful.....group (
coexistence. All of Nehru’s ex- *w
Durocher
M. Boy's
nickname
19. Remain
2L Impudent
25. Excitable
(.Fur scarf
T. District ' - «»r.
8. Dry 17. J,
9. Dwell emblem
M. Perished 29. Enemy
». Eng. SI. Of
cathedral greater
city age
S3-Wide-
awake
Bin-
tempered
35. Cartoon**
36. Monster
37. Recruit
38. Plneapplat
So. Am.
40. Immerse
this condition by exercising great
' onable amount
A NOTHER CHOICE bit from the Marx Brothers repetoire
involved a secretary who announced, “A man named
Jennings has been waiting to see you for heure and he is
waxing wroth.” Grou- ----------
cho’s reply to this was,
“Tell Roth to wax Jen-
nings for a change.”
When Chico entered
the scene, Groucho com-
mented, “Hey, you look
a lot like a fellow named
Ravelli.” “Iam Ravelli,”
maintained Chico. “Aha,"
chortled Groucho, “that
accounts for the resem-
blance.”
caution and a reason
of dexterity. It may then lie
placed, section by section,, in a
moderately hot oven. „When it
emits smoke and a sweetish odor,
it is done. Its pages are now
stiff and crackly but dry and legi-
ble.,
NOW A NORMAL person might
just pick up the telephone and call
Hie hit inn ucrPnt f'flnwlailT.
his circulation agent to complain.
Blit there is stULa memory here
of the querulpus voices that used
jo come over the telephone when
your correspondent labored late
and alone in a, distant city room
on . some forgotten journalistic
epic.
"That boy ain’t never showed
up,” complains the householder.
Or "He throwed it right on top
■ of my rose bush I ain’t no billy
coexistence,
pressions of friendsMp for the Chi
nese Communists in years past
now count for nothing. All of In-
dia’s lecturing about sweetness
,ancF light and peace-through-neu-
tralitv stands out now as a monu-
.. ment to naivete in international af-
fairs during a period of coid-war
conflict between East and West.
But what do India’s former part-
ners in itonalignment think about
the situation? What about Ceyloa
and Burma, Ghana and Indonesia,
Egypt and Cambodia? Where do
they stand in the now clearly-de-
fined battle between Indian and
Communist China?
The answer is, they don’t stand
In the Cqlombo Con-
anywhere. ... ________
ference of the six nonaligned na-
tions recently ended, tMs group
couldn’t even make up its mind
about the rape of the Himalayas.
to have told the executive
his ruling Congress Party
that “ilhat is obvious to us is not
always obvious to the rest of the
world’’
What tMs adds up to is tMs:
Prime Minister Nehru is unhappy
that India’s plight was not defend-
ed, but he is still willing to make
excuses for file nations of the Co-
lombo Conference. TMs is perhaps
due more to an unhappy habit,
formed during many, years of
equivocation, of excusing the blind
policy of nonalignment in today’s
world.
Certainly Nehru can’t seriously
believe that the six nonaligned na-
tions aren’t aware of the Com-
munist aggression in India. That
is -not only obvious to the Indians,
but it is obvious to the entire
world and has been for many
months.
What motivated the Colombo
". (See GoMwater page 5)
of the way. ....... - —
toe tension with a light remark.
But his offhand remarks ari
Navy Paul Fay Jr., whether he
had built a bomb shelter.
"tfo,” saia Few, “I built a swim-
President - and he meant it
Kennedy’s work habits have also
changed. He takes more home-
work to Ms living quarters at
night, stays up longer to pore over
papers. The lighted window on the
toird - floor - rear of toe WMte
House at 2 a.m. is the President
alone with a problem.
28. Set of
boxes: Jap.
29. Younghorae
30. New
frontier for
space-agers
32. Cereal grain
35. To patch,
as shoes
38. Vaulter's
need
89.--
deal (very .
much)
40. Holland’s
embank-
ments
41. Lying flat
42. Inactive
43. Cartoonist
-Arno
_ Here are eleven basic
rules that story tellers
should remember before es-
saying a "life-of-the-party” role:
“ L Don’t make a stoiy too long.
2. Don’t forget your point in the middle of the story.
8. Don’t laugh too much yourself.
4. Don’t lay hands on your audience. , . .
5. Don’t tell your story more than once to the, same audience.
6. Don’t divUlge the point of the story before you Begin.
7. Don’t insist on telling a story af ter your victim Informs you
he has already heard it.
8. Don’t oversell your story in advance.
9. Don’t tell your stories at the wrong places.
10. Don’t tell your stories at the wrong time.
\ U. Don’t always “know another version.”
f ^
©Iff latjttmm $ntt
Published afternoons, -Midday through Friday,
** and Sundays by The Baytoi
. . aytown Sun, Inc,
at Pearce and Ashbtl In Baytown. Texas.
H
Fred Hartman ................. Editor and Publlshee
James H. Hale..................................General Manager
Preston Pendergrass
_ _ ...................Managing Editor
Beulah Mae Jackson............................ Office Manager
Robert K. Gilmore......................... Circulation Director
. ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
John Wadlsy ........i..,,.. Manager
Paul Putman .Retail.Manager
Corrie Laughlin ...............National Manager
„ Mall rates on request
*X'.
Entered as ssoaad class matter at the Baytown, Texas, Peat
Office under the Act of Congress of March 1. M79.
rwv
P. O. Box M. Baytown, Tsana
Rsptssented Nationally By
il ’ I,:s2£:7;‘s.R3srssi’sJr
mi 1— .1 I !■........
.. ; ■ , .
TODAYS GRAB BAG . i"KL
THE ANSWER, QUICKI FOLK OF FAME-GUESS THE NAME in Berlin. Who is he?
1 What kind of a crab oc- ■KMKf'3 ■PPRPHBM 2—Predecessor of the man at
tuples a cast-off mollusk shell? BP 1 |fL,A left as Berlin commander, this
. 2. What does a febrifuge get W !■< I' E general has been promoted af-
lid of?. *’| ter "an outstanding job" and
3. Can you name throe things fch (MW oomffiand of the 3rd Army
for which the initials D.C. 1 JBUBi Mf. at Ft McPherson, Ga. His back-
stand? . I i-MkIIB ground Is similar to his succes-
< 4. When the U.S. flag was B ’ li “r's- A native of ML Vernon,
first raised over San Francisco, DL, and 1930 graduate of West
What kind of a settlement was ’ ^eiy* to
Tin whit state is Great ObT ST H£ A Korean !t’’ar and a«aSH to
Band Dune! National Menu- f gt- J ■& A Europe recently, where he eom-
merit? \W manded an artlltoy division un-
17 HAFFINEG TODAY decorated veteran saw World
Eleven years ago today, antl-
Brltish riots broke out in the
Sues Canal Zone.
IT'S BEEN SAID i
Hen Would not lu>e long in
tociety if they were not the
dupes of each other,—Duo de
la Rochefoucauld.
WATCH YOUR LANGUAGE
DNDurr —
CONDOTT — (KON-dit) —
noun: * pipe, tube or such, for
conveying fluids; a similar nat-
ural passage. Origin:. Latto.
YOUR FUTURE
► of possible, basinese
Today’s child will be
' v ;
V-Ste
1—Camp McGraw in the Phil-
ippines was the birthplace of
this general. Of an Army fam-
ily, he graduated from West
Point In 1933, and has special-
ized since In mechanized cavalry
arid tank warfare. In World
War H he was on Normapdy
beachhead, at St Lo and In
Gen. George Patton's famed 3rd
Army drive across France, he
headed a mechanized reconnal-
sance regiment wMch often led
advances. He was decorated
three tjmcS for gallantly. In
the Korean War he was, an In-
telligence officer; he also had
experience In International se-
curity affaire for the Defame
P*PM tment This montt If
take* over as UA commander
War H service in Hawaii, Leyte,
Okinawa and Japan. Who Is ha?
(Names at bottom of oohmm)
t' HAFFY BIRTHDAY
To Bek Barry Ooldwater; J.
Sldgar Hoover, head of the
screen star Dam An-
PEOPLE
In The
NEWS
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By THE ASSOCIATED PRES
Princess Soraya of Iran arrived
at Mexico City by airliner and left
immediately by auto to spend a
short Vacation at nearby Cuema-
Know Your Bridge
—-By B. JAY BECKER
South dealer. • * t
East-West vulneraMe. ~
NORTH
The former queen of Shahn Mo-
hammed Reza PaMevi said shp
planned to spend New Year’s at
toe home of Italian-bom industri-
nliof fiimnn Dortltai end hie utifa
iiSlr*
♦ K83
«852
UiC llUliie W IVaiMUFWWUI IIIVIUOU4-
alist Bruno Pagliai and his wife,
—'i Oberon.
actress Merle
Pavel Popovich, one of the So-
viet Union’s space twins cosmo-
nauts, arrived in Havana heading
toe Soviet delegation to toe fourth
anniversary celebration of Prime
Minister Fidel Castro’s revolution.
drewe, and Earl Torgeson and
Foster Cattleman of haeebdU.
HOW'D YOU MAKE OUTF
1. -Hermit *
2. A fever.
3. District of Columbia, di-
rect current and da capo (mu-
sical team).
4. A Mexican trading poat
6. Colorado.
miot ig.-.mr
«->asr
■kf
'-■A
Miss Felicita Fernandez of Par-
aguay was named world sugar,
queen at the annual sugar fair at
Cali, Colombia. Miss Carolyn Lee
of the United State*, the 1961
queen, crowned Miss Fernandez.
Miss UMverse, Norma Nolan of
Buenos Aires, Argentina, has the
measles and won’t,be able to ride
on the city of Miami Beach float
in the Orange Bowl parade in Mi-
ami tonight, ,-
WEST - EAST
BQJX08538 -
B7 VJ1Q963
♦ 954 41072
*103 +QJ764
SOUTH
AKW7
*fK52
♦ AQJ6
♦ AK9
The bidding: ■
South West North
14 Pass If
8 NT Pass 6 NT
Opening lead — queen , of
spade*.
Let’* *ay you’re declarer at
six notrump and West leads the
East
Pass
queen of spades. Youi play low , teturn doesn’t really matter).
much more room In Ms hand fix
heart length than West whoa
hand contains seven spades.
By the same reasoning, yo*
can *lao spy that Bast ha* lota
of dubs, and then, if you carry
your thinking still further, that
East may later have trouble dis-
carding a* thS play goes bn. In
other words, there to the pros-
pect of a squeeze. ’’ 7
So you win with the king of
spades and take three rounds of
diamonds to learn more about
East’s hand. This develops fa-
vorably, because Bast shows up
with exactly three diamonds.
You then cash the king of
hearts, everybody following suit,
and now you can be certain of
making the contract t
To get into an effective posl.
tion for the squeeze, you- lead
the nine of spades and let West
win it Let’s say he takes th*£.
nine and returns a spade (hire
return rinoan’f ronllv matfreal V *
Miss United States, Macpl Lei-
lani Wilson, 19, of Honolulu, will
replace her and wear the evening
•r
gown created for Miss Universe, -
The gi
> girls have the same measure-
ments. ’
Keep Up With Sports
.. 1,/’
El The Sub
j*'
• a. „ 'a."..
from dummy and East Shows
out, discarding a club.
Before deciding whether or
not to take the king, you make
a mental note that West started
with seven spades and East
with none. You also see you
have only eleven sure tricks and
that apparently the only pros-
pect of making a twelfth to to
find the hearts divided 3-3.
This Isn’t much to baa* your
hopes on, because the odds are
that East, being void of spades,
" ' V', .
'V: mm***:’ ’7..'
V- ”
_
-o » «f»™, -uuwn w uawni Jine uurura
to(Hkclyto havemore than hto of guarding both *uit* 1* hi
Dummy wins, after which
you play a club to the king.
Your five cards now consist of
two low hearts, a diamond, and
the A-9. of cluba. East's flva
cards are three hearts and tha
Q-JvOf dubs.
When you cash the diamond
and discard a club from dum-
my. East gets squeezed. Ha
can't release a heart or a dub
without giving you the twelfth
trick In whichever not ha
chooses to discard. The iwdrei
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 111, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 1, 1963, newspaper, January 1, 1963; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057245/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.