The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 294, Ed. 1 Friday, July 7, 1967 Page: 4 of 12
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tip Vagtomn 6nfl
Friday, July 7, 1967
| Editorials—Features |
laniaiiiiaiMmirtgga^^ Ow/Of W
Leaping
Constitution
Propositions
Baytown voters will Join others in Texas on Nov.
11 of this year in considering six proposed changes in
the State Constitution.
i The proposed changes were approved by the re-
cently ended 60th session of the Texas Legislature,
which consistently rejected all efforts to set up machin-
ery to rewrite the state’s much-amended Constitution.
If approved by Texas voters, the following changes
- would be made in the Constitution:
1. Authorize counties to pay medical, doctor and
hospital bills of county law enforcement officers injur-
ed in line of duty.
$74 million- parks development
fund bond issue.
3. Revive the Veterans’ Land Program and au-
thorize a total of $400 million in bonds to finance it.
4. Allow counties to place tax money in one gen-
eral fund.
5. Permit state officers and employes to hold other
^ non-elective positions under the state or tJ.S. govern-
ments where there is no conflict of interest and where
the state might actually benefit
6. Allow cities and other units within hospital dis-
tricts to levy taxes for participation in mental health
and mental retardation community centers.
Fourteen additional amendments were approved
by the legislature for voters’ consideration on Nov. 5,
1968. These include the following:
1. Giving the legislature power to authorize cities
and counties to issue revenue bonds to build industrial
.plants for operation by private concerns.
2. Revising provisions for investment of the state
employes’ retirement system funds and changing pro-
visions for its administration.
3. Provide for contributions to the teacher retire-
ment system on the basis of full salary of members
(contributions are now limited to $504 a year).
4. Permitting the legislature to exempt from ad
valorem taxes equipment used in air or water pollu-
tion control.
5. Abolishing the state property tax by 1976.
6. Allowing Dallas County to issue road bonds bya
vote of a majority of property owners there.
: 7. Raising the state welfare spending ceiling from
$60 million to $75 million a year. -
8. Providing for ad valorem tax exemption for
property in temporary custody of a warehouse.
9.. Altering investment procedures for the Univer-
sity of Texas permanent fund.
.......■ 10..Specifying that legislators will not be ineligible
for other offices because thelr terms extend a few days
into January.
11. Eliminating the requirement that the governor,
secretary of state, and the state comptroller approve
contracts for printing and paper.
12. Authorizing the legislature to provide for the:
refund fit taxes on cigars arid tobacco products sold at
retail prices in Texarkana.
13. Permitting consolidation of offices and govern-
mental fractions in El Paso and Tarrant counties.
14. Raising legislators’ salaries from $4,800 to $8,400
a year and-extending the per diem (per day) expense
allowance from 120 to 140 days of the regular session.
Baytown voters should give careful consideration
to these proposed changes in the state’s basic law and
should: determine whpt benefits will accrue to all the
people of Texas if the changes are approved. .
T^he fact that so many amendments to the Consti-
tution appear to be needed, it is incumbent upon the
next session of the legislature to give more serious con-
sideration to rewriting the entire document.
It has been said—and rightfully so—that Texas is
trying to live by a "horse-and-buggy" Constitution in
the 20th Century.
There is no need for any citizen to fear that the
basic Concepts of the Constiution would be destroyed,
or ever? altered, if the document were rewritten. The 4
final draft of any new Constitution would have to be
finally approved by the voters before it could become
effective, and they would have the final say if they
didn’t like the way the new document was written.
AP Special Report-
Silence Speaks
For Nasser
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (AP)—Jumping
to conclusions;
Fat-may be unhealthy, but It
sometimes makes for enduring
marriages. Fat women tend to
ba more forgiving toward their
husbands than are skinny wom-
en, and they seek fewer di-
vorces,
Afore and more people today
seem to be reading their news-
papers backward, starting at
the last page, so they can put
eta* long as possible having to
lead the bad news on the front
page.
There are few sights in civili-
zation as wistful as seeing two
crowded intellectuals trying to
play a game of cheuduring the
train ride from thi suburbs to
the city.
Style-minded beatniks ... in
Greenwich Village are now
going in for minibeards.
Die reason your doctor keeps
old copies of the National Geo-
graphic magazine in his waiting
room is that they don't contain
articles about new medical dis-
coveries the patient can read
and confront him with-
When you meet a follow with
a flattened nose, you can be
sure of one thing about him: He
n't likely to poke it
ill
Icooi!
brt>!
liwsfw
twfli,
fafci
$MOKlN6\
probably isn't
into someone fclse'i business as
he was some time ago.
Cornbread will always satisfy
more tomach than caviar.
Inflation has made people
more careless about money.
; Cashiers say that 1 out of 20
persons who hand them a $5 bill
for a pack of cigarettes will
walk away happy if they are
simply given change for a rt
bill.
Nothing calls more attention to
5 his bald spot than a man’s art-
ful attempts to comb his hair
to cover it. ’ ~—-----
The first girl to kick off her
shoes at a cocktail part is usu-
ally the last to leave.
Male nonentiUes who marry
lady entertainment stars are
sometimes referred to, behind
their backs, as by other
people in show business. The
initial stand for “baggage han-
' dfijr”" ...... ...........
If you meet a guy smoking a
long slender cigar, the odds are
that he is a reformed cigarette
smoker. Your confirmed cigar
man, as “did‘Winston Churchill,
prefers a thick cigar he can get
his teeth into.
A draft-card burner isn’t like-
ly to wind tq> his career in a
blaze ot glory.
“It’r still a man’s world, and
Women know it, and whenever
they get a chance to vent their
spite over this fact, they leap a*
it. That's why women feel their
day is made anytme they can
catch a defenseless male in a
supermarket and bark his shins
with a shopping cart.
When a man brags that his is
an unlisted phone, you can bet
he'll wind up by insisting that
you take down^he number-end
then call you in a couple of days
to be sure you got if right
Whodda Yo Read?
Washington Merry-Go-Round-
McCormack Is Cool To
Code Of Ethics Action
By DREW PEARSON
AM JACK ANDERSON
WASHINGTON - It looks as
if Congress will move with Jess
than deliberate speed in setting
up a new code of ethics.
In the House of Representa-
tives, kindly, doting Speaker
John McCormack, who has the
instincts of a mother hen tow-
ard congressmen, has declared
his determination to protect his
congressional chicks from pre-
datory columnists. He has told
colleagues that he wants no
more embarrassing investiga-
tions, such as foe Adam Pow-
ell and Tom Dodd cases, on his
side of the osqpitol. Jf. /
took pains to
losing his chairmanship,
from losing !
-,The Speaker
keep reformers
Ethics Committw
Committee, which he put
under the chairmanship of old
reliable Rep. Mel Price, D-fil.
Mel's Instructions are to confine
his hearings to generalities and
avoid getting down to hard
cases. -
McCormack also arranged
with the Republicans to give the
Ethics Committee vice chair-
manship to Rep. Charles Hal-
leck, R-Ind, who used to be
■itoWSli lsl1 A ssfsss, sir
Try Your Word Power
•NEA Feature
I Bud Men find Good
ACROSS ; 5 Masculine
SAsros —, ,JSStM
•oft palate
Hamilton's
slayer
10 Evening party
Antwar to Pravloua Puzala
I
11 Assert
14 Benedict,
deserter
15 Gautama —,
Hindu saint
IS Occult power
17 English city
18 Traditional
profligate
(2 words) '
(2 wot
22 Rebel
8 Rat
8 Boorish
10 Diminutive
of Samuel
12 Chaldron tab.)
13 Possesses -1&
» Month of first 27 Unless (Latin)
French republic 28 Populace
20 Prison wsrden (comb, form)
21 Remove from 31 Vehicles
wagon . designed far
22 Stupid person be hauled
(slang) .. 37 Parisian
.siS®"*
32 Contend 2* Wicked 42 Bitter vetch
33 Above icontr.)
34 Ot the sun
35 Distinctive
doctrine.
38 Explosive devic
38 Harem
40 indisposition
- to lcuosr i ■
42 Having notched
againi
ntion
43 Decay '
44 Geological
eskers
48 Self-propelled
vehicle (coll.)
47 Ingredient W
ceramic glass
41 Affirmative
response
50 Roman bronze
51 Bg way of
sSSb"* ism*
49 Plait orms
51 Pad Used as
brush for
....... .silk hats
52 Perish with
hunger
53 inflammation
.MiltoTLiZ..
54 Kind of deer
(pU
55 Nick scarf
DOWN
1 Adriatic
cold wind
2 Circlet
3 Coldlike alloy;
: 4 Greets on
arrival
who wears polka-dot bow ties
.» 0nd pacta »flask of bourbon on
his hip. But where da,you fipd
an executive like that any
more?
Nothing is lonelier than a
middle-aged single woman look-
ing in a jewelry store window at
. engagement rings other girls
will get ahd mentally picking
out the one she’d like most ot
have if only.
Many a man could cure his
Insomnia if he’d simply throw
away aD tta credif cards irt his
wallet.
This Day
In History
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
jw* u ***** 7*
188th day of 18CT. There are 17
days left In the year.
Today's highlight to history:
On this date in 1*67,' the Stoo-
Japanese War began with a
clash between Japanese and
Chinese coldiers at the Marco
Polo Bridge near Peking.
On this date:
In 1745, King's College opened .
in New York. City under charter
from King George n of Eng-
land. Vr “•
In 1853 f- *—^-=-
modore, Mai
rived in Japan.
- '-ms-f-
keep his
ily suplied with Gadiiacs dur-
ing the postwar automobile
shortage. Charlie's own close
association with the special In-
terests .and pressure groups
should keep him from investigat-
ing anyone rise’s ethics too
closely.
From the beginning, McCoff
mack has done his utmost to
protect his colleagues from the
searching glare of the public
spotlight, which they love to
turnon other* but don’t like
beaming inward upon their own '
practices.
>Spi|pip|HR||_________
then from losing his seat Aa a
footnote, it is worth reporting
that Powell last .year had
placed one of McOormack’s
cronies on the House Labor
Committee payroll at a *15,438
•alary. t
•The Speaker's friend, a Mas-
sachusetts politician named
Thomas Burke needed another
year on the federal payroll to
qualify for a government pen-
sion. Powell obligingly employed
Burke as a “counsel” though he
did virtually no work fix' the
committee.
When Powell was stripped ot
his chairmanship and succeeded
by strpightlaced R«P- Carl Per-
kins, D*y., the new chairman
promptly lopped Burke off the
payroll. The Speaker pleaded
with Perkins that Burke needed
only one more month to quali-
fy for his pension.
Though sympathetic, Perkins
refused to stick the taxpayers
tor work that wasn’t performed.
Instead, he placed Burke on his
own office payroll at a greatly
reduced salary and gave him
enough work to do to earn his
pay. Burke has now gone back
to Massachusetts where he will
be happily collecting his govern-
ment pension ever after.
In contrast, McCormack
learned from his dose friend
Sen. Tom Dodd that one of the
Senator's accusers, Jim Body,
had found a new Job with the
House Public Works Commit-
tee. McCormack phoned Chair-
man George Fallon, D-Md., and
persuaded him to get rid of
Body who, incidentally, U Still
out of work while Dodd retains
his seniority and chairmanships.
McCormack has also used his
influence to protect Rep. L.
Mendel Rivers, foe House
Armed Services chairman,
whose alcoholism has made Mm
foe American com
iatthew Peny, ar-
'23Rg2fWi|£ . -urify ri* McCormack „
DOCTOR’S MAIL BAG
'Numerous Heart Attack'
Claims Sometimes Colitis
ly WAYNE G. BRANDSTADT, M.D.
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
no relation betwe
diseases.
Although a victrin of spas....
colitis may have several loose \
stools a day they are not as
numerous as those of ulcera-
tive colitis and do not cont
blood. A person with spastic
colitis can usually maintain a
^•swa&asa.:
Q—What are the symptoms
of colitis? Can it cause con-
stipation?
A—The chief symptoms are
loose stools often flecked with
mucus, excessive gas in the
intestines sometimes accom-
panied by rumbling noises
and diffuse’abdominal distress
SSvlTcrtmK in cite-of the food thifpa^s
complices of John Wilkes Booth pains. There may be pains in through him undigested, but
in foe assassination of President the chest. Many a neurotic the person with ulcerative co-
QUICK QUIZ
Q—How many states in the
Union are known as com-
monwealths?
world and, to this day, • book
of maps is called an atlas.
Q—What country was
A—Four — Pennsylvania, iQ—What country was
Massachusetts, Virginia and riamed after a circle on the
Kentucky. - earth? ,
: v j A—Ecuador,which is the
Qir-Why is a' oo6k of maps Spanish word for "equator.”
tied™ atlas?: ' • .....7
. G H.* * roythology. Q—Does an octopus have a
Atlas was condemned to Sear sheU»
the heavens and the earth on A—None whatever, al-
ius-shoulders. Earliest books though all its closer
a picture of Atlas carryingthe
..........
in foe assassination of President
Abraham Linocln. ;
In 1896 fite United States an-
nexed foe Hawaiian Islands.
In 1958 President Dwight D.
Eisenhower signed the Alaska
statehood bill.
- Ten years ago — The French
minister in Algeria accused U.S.
Sen. John F. Kennedy of talk-
ing like a blind and deaf man
in his support of foe Algerian
rebellion.
Five years ago — A low-yirid
nuclear weapon was exploded
a few feet above ground In Ne-
vada — In file first above-
ground test In the continental
United States in four years.
One year ago India's Prime
Minister Indira Gitofol proposed
a new Geneva conference to re-
store peace in Vietnam.
and a nervous
Many a neurotic
woman who complains of fre-
quent heart attacks has
IrHtibi
Colitis is at the opposite
constipfotii
iperiy —
stools that are hard and dry
litis has a progressive loss of
weight unless the disease can
be controlled.
eaRhy heart
rritable colon.
ColKls it at me opposite A.V, tZ
Q—Is it harmful to take
Did You Know?
\ dollar bill has an avenge
^ axpentancy of 18 months to'
and difficult to pass. Many a
person with colitis, however,
overempties the bowel, then
skips a day. He may mis-
takenly refer to this as con-
stipation.
Q—What is the difference
between a spastic colon and
ulcerative colitis? Could a
spastic colon loud to ulcera-
tive colitis? 7 _ _
A—Spastic or mucous coll- anemia
tls is the less serious of thf but not spastic colitis
two. It is caused by emotional -_
upsets, by taking laxatives MW pm qmstioes tei
and other irritants or by over- temmeeu to Wejet a. tneiaoet
indulgence in fruit and vege- m o., m con of Ms paper. White
tables, especially when eaten Dr Brondstodt cannot tester Mi-
raw. The cause of ulcerative rHea! letters he win easwtr Utters
colitis is unknown. There is el vsn.ro/ interest in Man columns
extract or injections of vita-
min B-12 help?
A—Azulfldinc, one of the
sulfa drugs, is usually given
for ulcerative rather than
spastic colitis. It should be
taken only under close medi-
cal supervision which should
include periodic Mood counts.
Since malt soup extract is a
laxative it should not be taken
routinely by anyone and never
by a person with a tendency
to loose stools. Vitamin B-12
a soapbox ^anti-communist who
considers himself a champion of
national security. When it came
to a congressional crony, how-
ever, the Speaker unhesitatingly
put friendship ahead of securi-
ty- .
At I recent luncheon McCor-
mack praised Riven as one of
the great statesmen of our age.
Meanwhile, the Speaker is see-
ing to it that not only Rivers,
but all other Congressmen re-
ceive immunity from any ethics
investigation.
NEW ATTY. GEN, Ramsey
Clark has drafted highly re-,
spec ted Warren Christopher of
Los Angeles for the No. 2 job
in the Justice Department, Dep-
uty Attorney General.
Christopher, however, has one
• spot In an otherwise disfin- -
guised career which bean
watching. He was attorney'for
General Moton on the West
Coast Simultaneously, the Jus-
tice Department is handling
thrfe vitally important cases in-
volving General Motors. They
are:
1 A federal grand jury probe
of alleged attempts by the Big
Four of the auto Industry to
side-track development of an
anti-exhaust device to prevent
smog and air pollution.
2. A recommendation by the
jataff of the Antitrust Division to
force General Moton to spin
eft Chervolet under the Sher-
man Act on the ground that
Chevrolet constitutes too large
■ party of the auto Industry.
. A request by Sen. Abe Rlbl-
coff, D-Conn., to Investigate al-
leged perjury by General Mb-
ton officials when they told a
Senate committee that they:
hired a detective to shadow
Ralph Nader for foe purpose of *
ascertaining whether Nader waa
involved In the Cbrvair probe.
In contrast, the detective, Vin-
cent Gillen, testified that he was
told by General Motors to shad-
ow Nader because Nader waa
getting in Its hair. Riblcoff
wants the Justice Department .
to see who is telli ng foe troth.’
It will be interesting to see
how foe Justice Department
handles these cases now that its
No. 2 man is a former $M at-
torney.
THE U. N. DEBATE over foe
Near East crisis may not be
winning too many countries over
to the side of the USA, but it
ha!"' woti a record number of
Americans. ................
It has stirred up the greatest
volume of matt received by the
Americairi aetegation to the U.N.
latawrfoe Cuban missile crisis.
A total of 28,000 pieces of mail
. have been received by Ambassa-
dor Arthur Goldberg, only one
_ per cent opposed to the Ameri-
can position. * . .
The letter writers, the majori-
ty non-Jewish, have been strong
in the praise of the forthright
way Goldberg has handled the
cate for the U.S.
Simultaneously the White Hou 4
Simultaneously the White
House has received approxi-
mately 100,000 letters MrOr11'
Near East crisis and the meet-
, tog with Premier Kosygin, more
than 99 per cent favorable.
'
Bible Verse
FOR THE SON of man is come
to seek and’lojSve that which
was tost Luke 19:10 f
By WILLIAM U i*AN
AP Special Csrrssptadsot
President Gamal Abdel Nas-
ser's silence since toe end of the
Arab-Israeli war speaks louder
than his accustomed resounding
oratory. »'
Not since the night of June »
when he offered to resign -r an
offer rejected by his rubber-
stamp National Assembly — has
the Egyptian president had any-
thing to say publicly. This reti-
cence strengthens in impres-
sion that foe man who sought to
e foe leader of all Arabs is not
yet cut of danger from the rep-
ercussions of Arab defeat and
humiliation.
The silence can create a void
■ -to-Egypt, an,, atmosphere for
whispered nanon and gradual-
ly Increasing resentment as
Egyptians react to foe delayed
wallop of their losses.
Nobody has told foe Egyp-
tians where they go from here.
Nobody in high office, not even
- jfoeir idolized Nasser, has come
forward to tell them how to bind
up the wounds, how to-restore
their self-respect, how to seek
new confidence.
What they have learned, grad-
ually, is that foe war cost them
dearly, not only In killed and
wounded and not only to the loas
of their Soviet arms and equlp-
- ment, but to the severe shock to
an economy which already was
rocky. The Egyptian* are learn-
ing that there is even more belt
tightening In store tor them.
Nasser has s new government
in which he is both president
and premier. Ttois he assumes
personally all the responsibility
for measures which must be
undertaken. Agencies of this
new government have been
cutting costs to foe bone. Tens
of thousands of workers em-
ployed by the government, to
say nothing of those to the
armed forces, will be directly
affected.
Nasser’s silence has fascinat-
ed some who have considered
themselves his friends, for ex-
ample, the Yugoslav .Commu-
nists. A dispatch from Cairo to
the Cbmmunist party newspa-
per Borba in Belgrade has come
up with some intriguing lines of
speculation.
The dispatch noted that mill-
tary uniforms have disappeared
gradually from Cairo’s streets.
It said that army officers travel
to civilian clothes to their posts
and, after work, change from
uniforms for the trip home.
“A number of cases have
been known of spontaneous
popular indignation against this
group, which openly enjoyed
numerous privilege* in society
because of its particularly im-
portant role and responsibility,
which, however it failed to ful-
fill,” the dispatch went on.
It described officers gathering
once again at their swank offi-
cer’s club and noted that “pass-
ers-by do not refrain from fre-
quently spiteful comments and
remarks betraying ill feeling."
—TSimit, the professional sol-
dier who was the hero of all a
month ago is getting unpopular.
Nasser’s acceptance of Soviet
terms for r.ew arms and equip-
ment to replace what he lost
can prove dangerous to him
since a large conservative ele-
ment among his followers balkr
. at, any further expansion of
Communist in!la*Me to Egypt.
The Russians this time are in-
sisting font Nasser agree to a
heavy Influx of Soviet advisers
and technicians to make sure
that Moscow's Investment does
not go down the drain , again.
Nasser obviously had adopted
caution as hi* watchword as he
weighs the cumulative impact
on his people and all Arabs of
the Egyptian military and diplo-
matic disasters. It is notable
that influential voices now are
being raised In Cairo for a more
realistic look at Israel. One of
the most knowledgeable jour-
nalists in Egypt wrote that the
potion of destroying Israel as a
nation was a basic mistake
which contributed heavily to
Egypt's calamity.
Nasser is-receiving new arms, ,
but Egypt and the Arabs are
going to be weak fix' a long
time. The weakness will be ag-
gravated by economic difficul-
ties among a hungry population
growing at such a rate that even
the prized Aswan Dam being
built by the Russians. cannot........
reclaim enough land to keep
food production ahead of pop-
ulation increase.
Play Bridge
With Jacoby.
- Jerry led a high heart, Wert
would have returned a dia-
north 7
AQ3
V J8 3 -
4AKQ9852
WEST EAST (D)
AK 9 5 * 872
VK52 A 10964
♦ 10 6 ♦ A Q J5 3
* J 10 64 3 * Void'
SOUTH
* A J 1064 i
VQ7
♦ K 9 8 7 4
North-South vulnerable
West North East South
ir, i*
3 ♦ 4f Pass
Pass 4 A Dble Pass
Pass Pass
Opening lead—432
mond.) Jerry ruffed low and
led back'a low diamond. Most
players would have cashed
the ace for a sure profit, but
Jerry knew his partner had to
hold either the spade or the
diamond king for his heart
raise. Jerry was after big
things.
South rose with the king,
ruffed a diamond with the
- three of spades, discarded a
diamond on the jack of
hearts and led a high club.
Jerry’s seven of trumps
. forced the ten. Another, dia-
mond was ruffed with dum-
my’s queen of spades. West
: discarded a club. Another
was
and
' aqoftme MVWMl'S jack
South was down To the ace-
. ..P.IaH# A# maJaa Me1am.
Rubber bridge players con-
sider duplicate bridge as a
game of small swings while
they play for the big ones.
Tournament players also go
after big ones, as may be
seen from the way Jerry
Michaud of Wichita manu-
factured 800 points for his
side in the Missouri Valley
Regional.
Sitting East, his jump to
four hearts was the start of
Operation Slaughter. He did
not know whether he could
make it. Actually he couldn’t,
and probably wouldn’t make
even three, but he knew North
was unlikely to let him have
the contract.*" 4
Sure enough, North went to
four spades and Jerry
doubled. He didn’t know if
he could set the contract, but
he didn’t want to hear a five _
heart bid from his partner. ba
" Jerry won the heart lead’
with his ace and returned his -■ „ „ - ------- >m
lowest- heart. West won with ■ bid four no-trump. Your
the. king and dutifully re- .....rt*rtner bids five diamonds to,
turned the four of clubs. (Had *hc>v^ one What do you do ;
k I
warn,-----— ____
six-four of spades and i low
diamond: There was no way
for him to make more than
one trick. He played thr^j "
and four of spades, but this
gave Wert the last four tricks.
Jerry had opened the bid-
ding, jumped after a single
raise, doubled and took only
two of his side’s six tricks,
but his partner had no com-
plaints.
Q—The bidding has been:
W*rt North East Sooth
,1* Pass
Pass 1* Pass 2*
Pass 2 * Pass • ~ ?
You, South, hold:
*2 VAQ10 6AKJ9 5AAQJ4
What do you do now?
are willing to play
hold an
oven if partner does not
mTsiU—
now?
Sip Sajjtoum fern
Fred Hartman
BUI Hartman
John Wadley
Preoton Pendergrass
Mao Jackson
NQT BY WORKS of righteous-
ness which we have done, but
us, by foe washing of regener-
ation, and renewing of the Holy
Ghost Titus 3:5
................Editor and Pubttdm
......... General Mamger
.............. Business Manager
Beulah Mi* Jaduoa ......"\V.'.'.'.'.''jtartrt^i T^S^SSS
Am B^PriSirti.....................Assistant To The Publisher
VfMMMXKBB* Office Manager
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
sssyssL..................................... *«•««
Corrie Laughlin .............................National Manager
Entered as second class matter at the Baytown, Texas, 77520 Port
0““.u".d,er “«* Act of Congress of March R1S79,
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 294, Ed. 1 Friday, July 7, 1967, newspaper, July 7, 1967; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1061161/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.