The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 149, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 12, 1969 Page: 9 of 18
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Stc. I Wodnssday, March 12, 1969_Bfr fagtouni 0m f
7 believe in what they're
doing and I'll sing
WmkUVN
TOPtftAPVS
OFF, PlPfJ'T
. SOo!? J
ywHAPpy
arb you?
rea better
MOW? feel
UKEAftfr
their songs.'
By Howto Sdwtldtr
PRETOJOWG. TO R3BG6T
A 3J0MAWS KJAMG IS STILL
THE BEST VUAY TO GET
, A RISE oar OF HER.! j
THEY DOWT MAKE
UJONAEAJ LIRE THEY
USED TO I >
W, ,
SALLY!
HI, FRED!
Singer Speaks Up for Youth Revolution
ist. “I’ve been around them
a long time,” he explains.
“I like what they’re doing.
people. If there’s going'to be
finu cah/otinn fhat’c uthorn
CLEVELAND - (NEA) -
At 39, balladeer Glenn Yar-
brough is almost a decade
past the age at which today’s
turned-on youths say they
a vibrant tenor voice that
. . . well, poet-singer-com-
poser Rod McKuen describes
says. "We call it SCHOLE-
School for Children of Happi-
ness, Opportunity, Love and
Education. The word ‘schole,’
incidentally, is Greek for
‘house of (earning.’ ”
He reports that the school
will initially take in 10 to 15
orphans in one grade level,
then add another grade each
year as more children come
in. The school will eventually
accommodate up to 300
orphans.
"Our main object.” he
a long time," he explains.
"I like what they’re doing.
I have a lot of faith in young
nonnln Tf thora’c tfninrr tn Ka
any salvation, that’s “where
it’c crnincr tn Kn_urifh thorn M
it this way: "I am convinced
that there is more real music
in Glenn’s voice than in any
composition I’ve ever cre-
ated.”
Yarbrough’s voice is one
of the most familiar on the
musical scene today. Even
those who can’t hang a name
on it know it when they hear
It. He teamed with Lou Gott-
lieb and Alex Hassilev a few
years ago to form the Lime-
liters and it was Glenn’s
vocal style, along with the
humor of Gottlieb and Hassi-
lev, that made the group
click.
He plans to use this voice
in a feature film he is going
to produce on some of the
sub-cultures within our
don’t trust anybody. But they
can trust him. He’s an
avowed supporter of their
cause. ™
ITS A LKl BEAT-\
UP, BUT I GUESS
THERE’S NOTHIN'
t-r I CAN DO I
i al about y
1 ft 7 .THAT!y
( CEDRIC'LL l
* FETCH IT
FERYA, ELMER'
Sure he is, you might scoff.
He does a lot of his singing
on college and university
campuses, doesn’t he? There-
fore, kids are his bread and
butter, right?
Gravy might be more like
it. As Yarbrough points out,
"My bread and butter was
made a long time ago.”
Money has little to do with
his affinity for young people.
He’s already a millionaire,
and the loot keeps rolling In.
He could live comfortably
just on the royalties from
records and commercials.
Two of his three boats—an
85-foot schooner, the Tiki,
and a 96-foot ketch, the
Black Swan—earn a tidy In-
come for their owner carry-
ing tourists on Caribbean
cruises. He is a partner in
a music publishing company.
His real estate assets in-
clude homes in Los Angeles
and on the Hawaiian island
of Maui, an apartment house
in Beverly Hills and property
in New Zealand.
twu-u-mnr/
two-faced. Cut it out! We’r*
smarter thhn that!’ -
“It’s just not happening
here in this country. It’s hap
ly Corf Andmot
This maturity, Yarbrough
contends, “continues to grow
so that by the time they’ve
reached college, they have a
maturity level equal to or
surpassing our own.
“When you couple this ma-
turity with the exuberance
of a young man in his 2Qs,
-you have a combination
that’s hard to beat.
“I believe in what they’rel
doing and I’ll sing their
songs,*’ he says.
And sing them he does, in
affluence is the North Holly-
wood flower shop owned by
his petite, blonde, 28-year-old
wife Anne. “I used to tease
Glenn about never buying
me flowers ” she recalls.
“On my first birthday after
our marriage two years ago,
he gave me a business card
which said, TJower Circus.’
He bought me a whole shop.”
He obviously, then, doesn’t
have to cater to the young to
earn a living. He is sympa-
thetic with their ideals be-
cause he himself is an ideal-
ty Morf Wdkf and Pit Irow—
I THINK yOU MUST y
X THINK SHE
SNOOPS
MDU KIDS STAY
OUT OF THOSE
COOKIES/
BE SU PER A^OM, WITH
X-RAY VISION AND
LASER BRAINWAVES/
WHITEWALL OR RED CIRCLE
lummy mot mam.,
THE WILDEST OF
THE WIDE OVALS!
By Jomi and Ridgeway
ooo o
IT SEEMS THAT WITH MV PERSONALITY
THERE AREQWTE A FEW POSSIBILITIES'
I'M GOING
TO ASK THE
COMPUTER
WHATGAL
WOULD BE
A GOOD
DATE *
IE70-H
CONVENTIONAL
SIZE
TAX EACH
(735-1*)
Tube leu.
Plat Fed.
Ex. Tax of $2.33
and tmoolh tire
off toot ear.
0 o o o o o
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AH prices piui Vnl, E». tan »md1
OOO
By Mort Walker
Alley Cat” Tiger Paw
IS-yARD PENALTY
as
<KXL>;WU6N\
WB PLAY THESE \ /
COLLEGE TEAMS \L~
WS SOTTA LEARN /}
A WHOLE NEW /(O
SET OF RULES/AVI
Glenn Yarbrough
“Social reform were never achiev
______form of violence.”
without some
Mike Crichton Shuns
Medicine For Writing
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) — unmanned earth satellite that!
In 1065, when Michael Crichton carries lethal microbodies back
was about to enter medical from space,
school, he decided he had to do .Crichton said he got the idea
something about “keeping the while thumbing through Nation-
refrigerator full.” al Aeronautics and Space Ad-
He chose fiction writing, a ministration literature on con-
pastime he had dabbled in with lamination at the medical li-|
modest success since he was 13. brary where he was supposed to I
Now Crichton is about to be be reading medical tests,
graduated from Harvard Medi- "My editor and I agreed it I
cal School and he’s abandoning was a nice little book, but it I
medicine for a literary career, wasn’t going to do very much,.’’
He is married, his refrigera- Crichton said. “As far f| I'm I
tor is full and his latest book, concerned, it’s a fluke.”
his sixth published since 1965, is Before "Andromeda,” Crich-
a joint Book of the Month Club ton had written four paperback
selection for June. It has been mysteries under the pseudonym
purchased by Universal Pic- of John Lange and a hard cover)
lures for $250,000. mystery called “A Case of
All prief» plui Ffd, E«. T.x mJ imoolh lire off your nr.
By tni LowwB
SPEAKIN’OF HAND-ME-DOWNS ••
AFORE THAT SAWMILL VARMINT
GITS HERE - HAND ME DOWN ,
MV SHOOTIN' IRON '
GLOW BEH with
YOU WORKIN’ TIME AN A
HALF AN'DOUBLE TIME
LEETLE TATER WON’T
HAVE TO WEAR JUGHAIDS
HAND-ME-DOWNS
s__NO MORE
PM) IITH' SAWMILLS
LOOKIN' FER HIRED HANDS
AN’THAR'S A FELLER >
COMIN’OVER TODAY TO J
GIVE YEA JOB!!
H You've fried Hie Rest-Get The Best
FULLERS F-100 SAFETY TREADS
■ Vi . .
Guaranteed Just Like A Brand New Tire!
treads just life* new tint. . law
Save now! As
FJS.T.
"It’s hard to believe,” Crich-
...BUT THEY ARE RUMORED TO HAVE
MAGICAL PROPERTIES, SO B6 ;
CAREFUL HOW YOU USE TM. !
WELL THANKS, PHARAOH ) THE SEEPS IT CONTAINS CAN BRING
5 A NICE LITTLE BOX.1 J YOU SREAUER FORTUNE THAN I
. ANYTHING IN IT? COULP BESTOW UPON VOU-. r
ton said in an interview, over-
whelming a swivel chair with
his 6-foot-9 frame and resting
his feet on a cabinet that
seemed half way across the
roora. -Sure the money is going
to make a difference. It’s going
vard. "Besides, I thought the
medical school would look with
considerable disfavor upon my
efforts.
422-8171
51 #
Pi
only Uniroval makes The |j[g & TIGER PAW
J
w
L M-amm
| WIDE^OVAL CONVENTIONAL pRICE
FED. El.
TAX EACH
E70-14 735-14
• 2.35
F70-14 77&.14 | 4&96
G70.14 825-14 % 50J6
2.44
1170-14 855-14 6636
2.77
F70-15 775.15 4635
2.50
825-15 ,6036
2.69
1170-15 855-15 • 6636
2.85 _
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 47, No. 149, Ed. 1 Wednesday, March 12, 1969, newspaper, March 12, 1969; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057521/m1/9/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.