The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 111, Ed. 1 Friday, December 1, 1967 Page: 4 of 14
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I, If47
ire
usable
ioofs' Costly
* foreifR ItnctMlt, spend the money to ship him to his
^er*T^,po*^ t*Wn have to tend him home again In
themlddle of his two-year tour of duty to answer a draft
Yet this Is happening to more and more Peace Corps
volunteers, complains director Jack Hood Vaughn.
Local draft boards, often hard-pressed to meet their
Quotas, are not entirely to blaihe. Within the past year,
die Presidential Appeal Board, the final arbiter of draft
deferment requests, has turned down 60 appeals from
Peace Corps volunteers, says Vaughn.
There are only about 7,200 male corpsmen overseas
currently, and of these between 80 and 90 per cent are
eligible for the draft That makes a maximum of 6,480
men who could be drafted in one bunch - which, of
course, they wouldn’t be.
In. view of the universally acclaimed Job the corps
Is doing, It would seem that the nation could get along
without the military services of this relative handful of
men, at least until they had completed their assign-
ments In the cause of peace.
Life Span Impasse
Like the folks in Kansas City in the song, we seem
to have gone about as far as we can go in increasing
We fiSS&SS&JR: t*lng anyway.
Between 1*)0 and 1956, expected life span at birth
for all persons increased by over 20 years, say statistic-
Ians at Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. Since then, It
has Improved by leas than a year. -
Marriage
Triangle
Advice
By PAUL HARVEY
What’s ft* fOcfcum that holds
some marria*** tofttherf h as
srs wt»n statistics say « per
east of all marriages sod Is
divorce (though this flfure
should be and is not sdjustsd
n- -----ess
how come
Average length of life In 1965, last year for which
1,
many mates live to celebrate
their golden wedding day?
I*ve been watching tor some
common denominator In these
taxable partnerships. What is It
that dtoUnguMei We firm hitch
Irom the slipknots?
With medicine eitending hu-
man We. more and more Amer-
icans are happy - ever - aftertax
tor 78-plus y*«n together. Is
theta ■ secret! b Were a •‘fac-
tor X" in some marriages which
enables them to survive the in-
ternal so) external pressures
wMeh cause so many to fly
apart? 1 think there la.
I hast invited information or
the moat-married oouptos this
yMT.
It aeemed wholeeome to focus
■ little attention on these in an
effect to counteract the most
publicised divorces, that we
might beep ow perspartho. To
ignore the matohhw aide of the
ledger h to tones the Impree-
•km that al marriages end in
court and mow stm don't
Daily, local newspapers nc-
ttonadde hay* advised my office
atom tonal.r<>uia<a i*u«i tip
niftcant mllritnnae »
Careful scrutiny of these,
seeking common denominator!,
has revealed only one: moat are
AP Special Report-
Secrecy No!
Yet Explained
Delicate Operation
m s
such g if
final figures are available, was 70.2 years, the same at
It was in 1964 and 1961
The change In the first half of the century was due
feet*
» ... every branch
on the average expectation of life.
We now seems to nave reached an Impasse with
respect to the diseases of middle and old age, particul-
arly heart disease and cancer.
Not until these two are vanquished, and until we
learn more about the process of aging itself, will there
be any breakthrough much beyond the traditional three-
score and ten.
Try Your Word Power
— • Faafcire ........
Earth
Answer to Prsstoyi Puuls
ICksrad ImS
• totoSsM
noSe^aSST
If UbriesM
to Craggy h>U
B WortcUl
7 Cutting tool
lYagsdtv lead
im l Romas)
UfUetsre to
» mow
li Harem i
B Flow ee
Midas
~dili«ntfv 8 Min t
ttoS) MOrjrwawy to Eleemebraack
eHai'i title 8 risk eauce flih
» Yield 41 Lover limb
li Ewepeaa region 44 “-Land"
Slew 4SCold diet)
a Tenninstni 47 Me4eriet'i lidi
a Betfjr a< water to Depraved
Maty la anctsot • JWm river
■ Hjea^tte Pkitofrla 11
MSpK:d!ur.j
activity
Mfaapist
„K253L.
I WlagShe part
■wipes, Da-—
M Stream ia
Amfeta
to Trait drink
57 Decompose
Mltoedtto
woabt
• SvSUtom
(I verde)
• Body part
«1 Skayaapsarasa
ktog
« Legal petal
• PeaMiedbeea
• AfkmaUvt
47 Mab adult!
■ Turkish
BOa the eceaa
HAapeveratee
M Lent country
•1 Center of
1 Ariel country
i
» Notes
I Mae
TIMELY QUOTES!
We must make the man in improved through the
the street realize he can make
Congress do what he wants if
he will only speak out.
—Betty Furness, President’s
adviser on consumer af-
fairs.
Merit partners to these long-
time marriages appear to have
a tout that’s "bigger than both
of them.” Almost every biogra-
phy of these indestructible duos
mentions "regular church st-
During g dozen days In early
November. 1SS7, these down
couples were celebrating the
most years together:
In West Palm Beach, Fla ,
the Dobsons. 91 years. He's •
long-time Presbyterian minister.
Longmont, Colo., Fima end
Ben dark. "We’ve been honey-
mooning lor g? years ... regu-
larly attend the Methodist
Church."
In Man, Pa., Olive snd Kline
Jordan, SI yean. 'Kline ttfll
stop to the Methodist Church
choir.’’
a presume the tact that so
many Methodists married in No-
vember so long ago Is coinci-
dence.)
Margaret and Ed Martin of
Portland, Or*., married «
- yean. Ed to a retired Baptist
In Tampa, Fla., Pearl and
darenoe Patch, 82 yean. "a
leader of his church."
In Howard, Kan., Myrtle and
Frank Simons, "happy together
for 88 years." He to “on the
board of the Methodist Church."
In Dorchester, Mass., the Wil-
liam Pickerings, IB yean” sin-
cere Christian witness.”
In Battle Creek, Mich., the
Floyd Skidmoree, 85 years
••wonderfully compatible," act-
ive members of the First Con-
gregational Church.
BoonevQle. Mo., the John
Lohses, m yean of "happy-ever.
altering, faithful to church at--
tendance.”
Alliance, Ohio, the W. H. Che-
note, 73 yean married. "Faith-
ful members of the Methodist
Church."
And In WDUamsport, Ohio, the
Charles Kfltons, married 0
years, "attend church regular-
&•" ■_.. _ -v>«» „ *•
Geor graphically, no pattern
apparent No single national ori-
gin predominates. Only one
oommon denominator and It Is
■ conspicuous one: these are
the couples “whom God hath
Jofctod."
Washington Merry-Go-Round-
McNamara 's Enemies
• ■ ■ ■ n a - & to* *■■■•*■
On The Hill Got Him ffissisS
WASHINGTON (AP) - Rob-
ert S. McNamara's almost mys-
terious switch In Jabs from sec-
retary of defense to the presi-
dency of the World Bank Is Just
about complete after a public
relatione mix-up with tow
equals.
Although McNamara as secre-
tary has one of the moat impor-
tant poets in government the
news of hie leaving came not
as ■ public announcement at the
White House but as a report
from London tost Mostday.
It wasn't until Wednssday
night that President Johnson
and McNamara, to separate
public announcements, eon-
firmed It
On Monday the London Finan-
cial Times reported Mc-
Namara's departure on the ba-
sis Of information supplied by •
wono twnk airvcior.
That afternoon at a news
briefing in the White Haute the
President's press secretary. •
George Christian, was asked
about the report His reply was.
This Was almost the same u
K’i trae.’’ n would
bffn indeed •tnn(i if
story sbout a man la
•udl | high wu untrue
and flto White House didn't hss-
ten to refute M.
Johnsou end McNamara kept .
mum Monday lu*«ls> snd uie
til Wednesday night.
But American reporters had
other sources of information be- .
•Ides the White Houee-Mc-
Nsmer* himself would ley
nothing—end they went to work
on them and got newer*.
*
An
WAS l
ago. I f
Louis la I
able th f
the Hot
mittee,
thor* o I
coopen
Secrets
mart.
The | t
new 6 I
Service I
Riven
and ueJ !
the civ
gon, wt
minis I
ran hi
the hop
not rep
binges.
Todaj
ti ■ slits
niwn
“got” t
Thee
only Set
tory wt
the mill
own toll
he frit I
on Cap
the Prei
good rel
that en
bomb* i
tog the
Bomb
Hardy,]
bitter ci
chief by genwals and admirals.
Bomb No. 3 — Sen. John Me-
Clellan, D-Ark., would continue
Ms hearings on the TTX air-
plane contract.
Bomb No, 3 - Sen. John Sten-
nto, Man., showed no sign sus-
pending his hearings on McNa-
mara's civilian control of the
Pentagon.
These end other factors had
caused McNamara to consider
for some time retiring as Secre-
tary of Defense. He flgurad that
if he did so next year, an elec-
tion year, tt would hurt Lyndon
Johnson politically. Thfe was the
last thing he wanted to do. The
President has shown great loy-
alty to the Secretary of Defense.
So McNamara made the deci-
sion to nwfflowt Ms retirement
new.
OTHER FACTORS were also In-
volved in addition to Ms sour
relations on Capitol Hill which
he knew concerned a President
who had served 31 years on the
Hill, McNamara nurses a nag-
ging concern to his own consci-
ence ever bombing at North
Vietnam. He bad gone along
with It but he had reservations,
and some of Ms blunt doubts up-
set the generals and admirals.
He was among the very dose
circle of advfeen consulted by
iL. tin ■ alifuri .f.n,U - -t--ai--
mt rresKient uochji extfnaing
the bombing holiday this Christ-
mas and New Year’s, snd wss
strong tor It However, since
Gen. William Westmoreland •
visit to Washington, the Prask
DOCTOR’S MAILBAO
Dem-
ocratic system.
—Sen. Edward W. Brooks,
R-Mass., on election of
Negroes as mayors of Cleve-
land and Gary, Ind.
This Day.
In History
The argument that you in-
crease interest rates to halt
inflation is a fake. There’s
nothing to it. High interest
rates wiped out at least 500,-
000 new housing starts in the
last year alone.
—Rep. Wright Patman, D.-
TtZ.
It would be very difficult tor
the militants to argue now
that the Negro lot cannot be
We are willing to negotiate
with each Arab state for the
establishment of a peace
treaty defining mutual rights
and obligations and insuring
security for all.
—Israeli Foreign Mtnister
Abba Ebon.
' The mighty mountain hat
given birth to a tiny mouse.
—Saigon
cism
new
m politician, in criti-
of South Vietnam’s
cabinet.
311ft Saytmtm £utt
Fred Hartaaa ......
BM Hartman ........
John Wsdlsy........
Beulah Mas Jackson
Paul Putman .........
Ann B. Pritchett ....
MISlfMISMI
Editor and Publisher
____General Manager
... Buaineas Manager
Aasistant To Tbs Publisher
Assistant To The Publisher
.............Office Manager
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Preston Psndsrgraas.......................... Managing Editor
Msnqr Holcomb ..................... Aartsiant Managing Editor
ADVERTTRUfO DEPARTMENT
Dwight Moody..................................Retail Manager
Oorrie Lnuchiia .............................. Nations! Manager
Entered as second dam matter at the Baytown, Texas, mao Past
Office under the Act of Congress cf March S, 1ST*.
Published afternoons, Monday through Friday,
and Sundays by 'the Baytown Sun, Inn,
at 3IH Memorial Drive hi Baytown, Tsoml
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■redo Copy Prioe lOe
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Represented Nationally By
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Today Is Friday, Dec. L the
335th day of 1987. Thera are 30
days left la the year.
Today’s highlight to history:
On this date to 1913, the
Serbs, Croats and Stovenes
formed a stogie nation — Yugo-
slavia.
Oa this dale:
b 1824, a deaedlock developed
among four vs. presidential
candidates — John Quincy Ad-
ama, Andrew Jackson, William
H. Crawford and Henry Clay.
Then the election was turned
over to the House of Represen-
In 1917, the British completed
the take-over of German East
Africa during World War L
In 1936, President Franklin D.
Roosevelt optaad an Inter-
American conference at Buenos
Abes, Argentina.
In 1942, gasoline was rationed
to the United Mates during
World Warn.
In 1344, the World War U bat-
tie for the Saar Basin to Ger-
many began. ®
Ten years ago: It was an-
nounced at Cape Canaveral.
Fla , that the United Stiles
would try to pot ha lint earth
satellite Into ortlt within a few
days.'
Bible Verse
FOR HE hath made him to be
sin for us, who knew no tin;
that we might be made the
righteousness of God to him. U
Pyjipblrni IfA
Q-My sister, 49, has had a
burning, sore, swollen tongue
for over a year. She has been
to three doctors who have
given her vitamins and al-
lergy shots but these haven’t
■ helped her. What would you
advise?
A—A swelling or a burning
pain in the tongue may be
caused by a vitamin deficien-
cy, iron deficiency, thyroid
deficiency, anemia, excessive
smoking, rough lagged teeth,
allergy to lipstick, trichinosis
or neuralgia. In many per-
sons, however, the cause can-
not be identified. The condi-
Swollen, Burning Tongue
May Have Many Causes
■■■ *.
By WAYNI G IRANWTADT, M.D.
Q—Since February I have
had what my doctor calls a
black hairy tongue. I have
been using hydrogen peroxide
as a mouthwash but it doesn’t
help, is it cancer? How can
I get rid of it?
A—Black hairy tongue is
caused by a fungus. It is not
related to cancer. If it cannot
be removed by brushing your
tongue with a toothbrush, you
should see your doctor.
dent has indicated hs was not
going to take McNamara’s ad-
vice. ’
There has aim bean a Mb
ntog-flra series of disagree ments
with the Joint Chief, of Staff.
There have not been abrasive or
bitter. They have been sincere
an<1 reasonable, dfferencei be-
tween men who had the wttfuv
of their oountry at heart. But .
the hawks on Capital Hill have
tinned them into disturbing pro-
portions
The chief dUferanoes wen:
1 "The TFX Contract, aMf
which McNamara got Admiral
Gconse Anderson transferred
from Chief at Naval Operations
IP b( embessudor to Portugal
On this, McNamara taws proved
wrong. The TFX has not been
suitable for Navy carriers. *
2. Nuclear Ship*, which the
Admiral* wanted but which Mc-
Namara overruled on the ground
cf cost-effectiveness. He beeps
hammering on. this. The mtit-
tiry keep hammering on nation-
al security tegirdleta of oast.
E The Anti-Ballistic MM*
System. This also Involved se-
curity vt. cost efficiency. NcNa-
man argued that scientific prog-
rare was to test that the anti-
ballistic ml**lie system would
be out of date before R was
built, that there wu no un
spenfBng 340 billion on R.
A compromise wu readied
whereby we are spending $5 bil-
lion on • thin ABM system to
against Chinese mistilta.
MrNamara a#4!1 ImU
Mcnamara mu iwu
Llltl__■*------ »l . a—a—
oi li ion down u* urwPq.
4. Manpower. Westmoreland
still man more than 525,000
man In Vietnam, though ha’s tak-
ing this figure u th* minimum. .
On thteTsfeNsma!* Is to the '
middle between the military and
the President, >vho doesn’t «|8|’. .
to call out the reserves or in-
crease the draft McNamara,
however, feels Westmoreland
has been extravagant with man.
need too many on housekeeping
chores, rather than combat; has
not trained enough South Vkt-
dency R wasn’t certain Mc-
Namara would get the Job until
the board at dfeectors approved
But it »*s dbsnt as aartoto as
anything could be because in
Amariean hag haaiad tot bank
since It was opened lor bswtoeu
In IS46- However, IN board was
not scheduled to mast until
Wednesday.
Mtoa the board wu almost
which R did' ^Wedncsdey aftlft •
noon the reticence of Johnson
and MaNamars In saying any-
thing until the board acted could
be interpreted *s deference to
the board or a desire not to It
Mowed at trying to srtaMM K.
Shortly after McNamara got
approval—the board w« ask
him formally to be proaldsnt
after - some other necessary
steps tr, taken - he issued a
statement saying he is resigning
u defense secretary to be presi-
dent of the bank.
Johnson followed this speedily
with a statement of his own.
Ths President spoke In the high-
est term* of McNamara’s serv-
ice in the Defense Department
but, to this writer, his language
seemed rigid if not frigid. \
And there wu even a bit of
f' the mysterious in what ths two
men said.
McNamara said that last
April the outgoing president of
the bank, George D. Woods,
asked him if ne would be inter-
ested in being president and
added the secretary didn't have
to make a decision then.
McNamara said hr seas inter-
ested in the. kind of Job the bank
does helping in the economic
development of backward eoun-
tries—and told Johnson later
about Ms conversation with
Woods.
In October, McNamara said,
Johnson told him the nomina-
tion tor bank president would
soon have to be made and asked ;
If McNamara were still interest-
ed The secretary said ha was
McNamara mentioned In Mg
statement Wednesday no tor
ther talk with Johnson about R.
And MaNaasare'e aaasatatoe -
s4d Wednesday he was bewti-
dsrsd when newt of the nomina-
1km leaked out this week.
' In Ms own statement. Johnson
mentioned a conversation with
McNamara "some time ago"
about the Job and said Mc-
Namara expressed wMtogBMS
to accept tt if the President
wtxdd consent But Jotuyon dM
not Indicate he had tatted with
McNamara since October or
rven told him he teas bring re*- ;
emawM-
This create* a btt at * new
mystery With the going of
McNamara, who wanted a
much more restrained kind of
war to Vietnam than the Joint*
Chiefs of Staff thought neces-
sary. « should be no surprise U
now th* war taka* a tougher
tun.
DAY UNTO DAY
A Prsysr
• Lord, may wt learn that
faith is art a way around but
through misfortunes; not a
guarisn agatart, but a guar-
antee of suffering Teach US th*
lesson that we tsnoot make We
easy lor the simple res son Thou
Act wish to make men strong-
Play Bridge
With Jacoby
I? Ocwald and James Jacoby
I
*33
WKJT342
4 108
- ——- •-»jf*- " •—■---
WE8T EAST (D)
4 AJI 4H
V A Q 10 6 W 91
♦ 83 4KQJS752
A A Q 4 2 A 94
SOUTH
AKQ10874
W8
t ♦ A4
A K108 7
Horth-South vulnerable
Wert Nerta Bert X.uth
Dbl. Put Pms Pats
Opening lead— 9 •
Q—r have migratory glos-
sitis or geographic tongue.
What causes it? Is there any
cure for It?
Upn is commonly seen in A-Tbe cause of this patchy
women who ar$ in their 50s redness of the tongue is not
and age emotionally high-
strung. Fear of cancer may
cause them to magnify the
soreness in the tongue out of
ail proportion. In such cases,
after a thorough examination
to make sure no serious dis-
ease is present, a short course
of tranquilizer often helps,
Q—Every morning on arte
ing my tongue is heavily
coated. What causes it and
what can I do for it?
A—The cause
like. Thorough chewing of
these foods removes the coat-
ing of dead cells that is con-
stantly accumulating on the...
surface of your tongue. If for
any reason you can’t eat
these foods, you may use a
small cloth to hold the tip of
your tongue and brush the
surface once or twice a day
with a toothbrush.
> tongue is
known. The condition is not
serious. The chances are that
no one will know you have it
if you don’t brag about it. No
treatment is required and it
usually clears up in a few
days, but it may return.
(Howie*rt' fsts'W'M Aim.)
Moo to send 10V qooithm oo4
commotio to Wsfss G. Ssssditodt,
M.D., is ton oi I Am popor. WkHo
Or Irssditodt cease! saswoe iarfi-
itiuoi Mon ho will otnwot lofton
of tooorol (stored lo fetor* colotsas.
thoughts
For 1 do not do the good l
want, but the evil I do not
want is what l do.—Romans
7.19. ~ '
war with vices, at
.W-, v
5. THE ELECTRONIC Bar-
rier The military have contended
tills wu foolish, tied up too
many troops to build and guard
’t; that the construction crews
AnJarsi41nft Vf a rina anesre eil
ana aeipnaing Marine* are •>
ready under North Vietnam ar-
Ulleiy fire.
8. The Chief Difference, how-
ever, hu been over bombing
North Vietnam. The mUltigy
leaders have always pressed for
more and mere targets: McNa-
mara has held back on risky
targets. He has been flatly op-
ined to bombing too close to
th* Chinese line, or against hit-
ting the docks In Haiphong
Harbor.
In the end, the generals snd
admirals generally have won.
We are now bombing within sov-
en miles of the Chinese border
and the warehouses not far
from the Haiphong docks.
The military complain that In
the end the Secretary of Defense
comet around to their viewpoint,
but only after a delay which
gives the enemy time to
strengthen defenses around tar-
gets.
The Joint Chiefs are loyal to
McNamara, and once a decision
is made they stick to It. How- —— .»* -,,vh,v, u.amv/nu,
ever, the differencci have con- and it didn't matter whether
tinued; at times they have run
deep. Therefore, the only Sec-
trlcki’in the play and been .
art only 100 ” '
Do you see how? There X
wore two ways. One wooM/ .
hove been to lead the king
of spades at trick two The
other would have been to dis
TTMrd hs king of clubs when
the thir i diamoni was lad, in-
stead of ruffing with the ten
as he actually did.
in any «vent we prefer to ’
credit East with a successful
pre4Mnpt and to sympathize
with North and South.
(Howtpopv tofvprm Amp) .
I
VACnROJc/ucto
Q—Ttw bidding has been:
Weal ' North Bail. k - . -
1A IA
Fees > A Pass 2A
gtos. 3# Pass 44
Pass 4 A . Pass ?
You, South, hqld;
The .
Idoftobfe’ZsSSS.t
kirks rioht h.rV .1 1,7** ” sou, oouin, 17910:
Wy, deliEhlful dividend,. (MrtMr m»U tevi
South could have passed bid four spades directly. Tb*
over the three diamond open- r,et that h* mads tw# etber
ing, but South was not going M the way Indicates that
to be shut out and we can’t be la stem minded. Year hand is
blame him. He didn’t need to » dam »r»e. but yen should
find much in the North hand f*k* *•*' ""v* «rway. We
to have a good shot at three f*vor * b,d « **' m*"
spades or even more, and you TODAY’S QUESTION
*urnr thin«0Und iad tW You hld YOUf
sure things. partner bids six clubs. What do
|f ra-
west had hts sure thing. He
doubled and opened the eight
of diamonds. South took the
trick and tried to sneak in
his singleton heart, but West
went right up with the ace
and led a n 01 h e r diamond
a.'JEsst was in and played his
five of clubs. West took two
club tricks and led a third
club for his partner to ruff.
East continued with the
slaughter by leading a third
diamond. South stuck in the
ten of trumps, but West, was
ready with the jack. A fourth
club was led and East was
able to overruff dummy. Then
another diamond,
you do now?
Answer Tomorrow
QUIZ
East led
Be at
pea
let evi
a
Franklin,
pher.
ice with your neighbor and
ery
better
new year find you
r man.—Benjamin
American philoso-
retary of Defense In history who
has carried out the law that ci-
vilians shall run the all-powerful
Department of Defense which
spends two-thirds of the national
budget. Is now bowing out to
th* generals, the admiral* and
to the hawks on Capitol Hill.
QUICK
0—Wkot tree Has bud
scales that look like flowers?
A- Flowering dogwood has
little gray "shoe buttons."
Whjw they open, the bud
scales expand enormously and
bacome the big whit* “petals
of the famous dogwood
flowers,
Q—How many nations have
a diplomatic representative in
Vatican City?
A—A total of 58 nations.
The United States is hot rep-
resented among them.
O—/» there any animal
’hich can run backwards1
South ruffed high or low. It
he ruffed low, West would
make his nine of trumps Im-
mediately. If he ruffed high.
wm wt*srs m b*",w,rd “
said, "My bidding wasn't that
bad I could have saved two
as easily as It can move for-
ward.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 111, Ed. 1 Friday, December 1, 1967, newspaper, December 1, 1967; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1061443/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.