The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 125, Ed. 1 Monday, December 18, 1967 Page: 4 of 21
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r
«*
II, 1967
Laws
mate
Selective Service director Lt Gen. Lewis B. Her-
they * roused widespread criticism recently tor his let-
ter advising the nation's 4,081 draft boards to revoke the
deferments of students engaging in antidraft or anti-
Vietnam war demonstrations.
Now the general is under attack from another
lean Association of Junior Colleges is pro-
its ruling of some five months’ standing that
enrolled in programs not leading to a Bachc-.
tor's degree are no longer to be classed as "college stu-
dents” with a II-S classification. . - -
According to the AAJC, more than 500,000 students
in Junior colleges, business colleges, as well as in four-
year universities and colleges are affected by this policy.
The association claims it is especially discriminatory
against young men from lower-income families, dis-
advantaged areas and minority groups for whom a two-
year occupational, technical or business-related pro-
gram may be their only chance beyond high school.
Such students may, under the ruling, be considered
for II-A classification, reserved for those in occupations
determined to be critical to the national interest This
is a temporary classification that can be ended at any
time.
This is only the latest charge of unfairness, incon-
sistency and discrimination in the Selective Service
system as it is presently administered. It is one more
reason why an alternative system which many people
have advocated deserves more consideration than it has
received.
This is the suggestion that the draft be run on a
lottery basis.
As long as one man must go into the sendee while
another, for whatever reason, is exempted, no system
can be entirely fair. But a lottery would at least put all
can be entirely fair. But a lottery would at least put all
. eligible men on a footing of equality, and equality of
obligation is, after all, supposed to be the philosophy
behind the draft.
'Comp' Executives
I
How’s your M.Q.? Mobility Quotient, that is.
Thanks to the computer and the new science of
"mobilography," a corporation president can now turn
to a scanning board and watch his potential successors
scrambling to succeed him, much as he would read the
tote board at a racetrack.
The computer must be properly programmed, of
course, says the inventor of mobilography, Dr. Eugene
E. Jennings of the University of Michigan. But he says
mobilography enabled him to predict nine out of 11 win-
ners in a Held of 206 candidates In Arms scheduled to
select' new presidents in 1966.
Executives are moving to the top faster today, says
Jennings. The average age of a new president has drop-
ped from 61-63 to 51-53 and the time required to make
the climb from the first managerial level has dropped
from 29 years to under 20.
Any man who holds the same position in a company
for more than five years today hasn’t left the starting
gate add can just about be scratched out of the execu-
tive race, says the professor.
Cyprus: All Hands Off
The burning fuse on Cyprus has been'snuffed out,
thanks mainly to the strenuous mediation efforts of
President Johnson’s emissary, Cyrus Vance.
The next immediate step is to remove at least some
of the more explosive elements which have made such
a powderkeg of this balmy Mediterranean island.
Agreements to enable 480,000 Greek Cypriots to
get along with 120,000 Turkish Cypriots exist Ofl paper.
What is needed is the will to make them work, not only
on Cyprus but in Athens and Ankara.
Greece must once and for all abandon the idea of
reuniting the island with itself and make genuine ef-
forts to see that the rights of the Turkish minority are
observed. v
Eventually, the more that both Greece and Turkey
are able to leave the Island and its peoples alone, the
better will be the chances for the Cypriots to forge a
real nation out of themselves in lasting peace.
Improved
Cars Not
Big Help
By PAUL HARVEY
You want to get the cold shiv-
er*? Stand on any stmt corner
lor 15 mkwtaa and study each
paaaer-by.
The elderly (ant with the thick
g lasses.
The larye woman with the va-
cant stare.
The hangover one with the
faltering step,
‘then tell yourself that min-
utes or hours or days from now
you are going to meet that
person sgain Next time he win
be hurting two ton of steel In
your direction a mile a min-
ute.
American! have suddenly be-
come hyperoanscious about safe-
ty features In automobllea, yet
we remain unperturbed by the
fact that the Improved can are
being driven by unimproved
people.
We are told that one In 10
Americans not now In a mental
hospital Is eligible — yet we per-
sist in passing out a driver’s
license to almost anybody. Moat
states do not even examine eye-
sight, much less physical re-
flexes and emotional stability.
If the states don't get busy
and unlkenae irresponsible driv-
ers, they art Inviting further
federal government snoopervt-
sk». Sure as shootbT, one of
these days another Ralph Nader
will come slung and use this
valid excuse to promote a fed-
eral license law.
“Since automobiles use feder-
al highways built by federal *
funds,’’ I can bear him say,
“the licensing of their drivers
is a federal responsibility.’’
We don’t went that, but we
are asking lor It IX the states
fall to act.
Presently only one state,
Utah, require* any preparation
h.v a driver’s license applicant.
No state requires • driver to
be road • tested an«4h* high-
way.
No stale requires a driver to
react to an emergency situation.
Yet with a “Usenet" any
driver can drive anywhere.
Thus does the negligent state
issue a license to kill. •
Several steles allow oral ex-
ams for Illiterate applicants.
Recently, the federal govern- .
ment has Increased require-
ments for licensed pilot* flying
our increasingly crowded sky-
ways In increasingly sophisti-
cated machines.
The pilot of the simplest pri-
vate plane must pass a thorough
physical, a three-hour written
exam and 40 hours of lessons
from a qualified instructor —
plus solo practice time and fel-
low up instruction.
He is flight • tested hi eras* ■
gency procedures and meneu-
vers. And after licensing he to
periodically re-examined.
With fast cars on crowded
road, the operator's responsibil-
ity to no less. And a* surely as
\ 1 /
X
X
Letters To
The Editor
me\
to!
M:
\
The Crown Jewels
Washington Merry-Go-Round-
Freedom Of Press, U.S.
War Diplomacy Clash
we continue to slaughter 10b-
phw persons per day on high-
ways. our federal government to
going to make drivers’ licensing
its business, too.
And too late there will be
weeping and wailing and gnash-
ing of teeth by those who insist
the Individual states are oom
petent to regulate their own af-
faire.
Before we back Into further
subservience under an already
top*- heavy burden of taxation,
bureaucracy and regimentation,
individual stales must make
their driver’s license examina-
tions and renewals meaningful.
Padded Interiors and bigger
bumpers ape .no protection if
# we’» a loose nut on the iteer-
By DREW PEARSON
and JACK ANDERSON
WASHINGTON - Freedom of
the preia and the efficiency of
diplomacy are dashing In Viet-
nam. American diplomats ap-
pear frustrated and furious over
American newspaper itorie*,
and have complained In dis-
patches to Washington that the
U. S. press' seems to be work-
ing against them. The press
alienates sensitive Asian lenders
faster than the diplomats can
placate them, It to alRpJb’
What happen* to that Asian
leaden read the American news-
paper! and news magarines av-
idly and setae upon the slightest
Insult, real or fancled.to blow
up a storm. Diplomats are con-
vinced that it was the American
press which turned both Prince
Sihanouk of Cambodia and Ne
Win of Burma against foe DA '
Prince Shihanouk has bitter-
ly resented glib pres* descrip-
tions of him a* “mercurial" and
itfle.
tog wheel,
“volatile.” References to his
saxophone • tootling, playboy
past have turned him purple
with rags.
One reason why the State De-
partment encouraged Jacqueline
-Kennedy to visit Cambodia was
to mellow Shihanouk toward the
U. S. But State Department dip-
lomats claim that American
newsmen took advantage of Si-
hanouk’s new leniency to do
some snooping. They discover-
ed what they claimed was a va-
cated Viet dong camp Inside
Cambodia. Angrily Sihanouk
returned to his rigid, anti-Amer-
ican stance and thereafter bar-
red all U. S. newsmen from his
country.
General Ne Win of Burma was
also softening toward America
when he read a recent Issue of
Time magazine which Incorrect-
ly reported that he whs Isolat-
ing himself from the public and
that the U- S. was supplying
him with counter - tosurgency
weapons to viols boo at bis neu-
trality policy. Like Sihanouk, the
general Immediately hardened
again toward Washington.
EVEN THAILAND’S King Bhu-
mtbol, strongly pro - American,
"has got his back up at time*
over U. A press reports. He
was Incensed, lor example, over
stories that he had been afraid
to step out of hi* helicopter dur-
ing a set - down In the doubled
northeast region of Ids country.
.'Aatesdr, he had started Out
boldly from the helicopter, but
hi* security guards pleaded with
him to come back.
He was furious, too, over press
description* of hi* troop* to
Vietnam as "mercenaries.” Ac-
tually they are poorly • paid
soldiers, many of them draftees,
from the regular Thai army.
Hie king waa alio upset over
embarrassing — and inaccurate
DAY UNTO DAY
A Prayer
Forgive us, Lord, when we
refuse to learn; when we go
rummaging through the dust-
bin of an empty mind for ran-
dom thoughts. Lord, teach us
that It matters not how drop
to the sincerity, how warm the
heirt, how vast the vision; it
It Isn’t based on knowledge It
win melt with summer, wilt
with fall, and there lie billed to
die winter earth.
— news report* that U. S.
plana* ware bombing communist
position* inside Thailand.
Aston leaders, who ' largely
control their own press, have
difficulty separating U. S news
accounts from official pro-
aouncements, They alga haven’t
developed tea American politi-
cians' tough skin regarding
preas criticism. Result: A news
story such as Tima's recent re-
l»rt on Burma can actually
fimf | ittbbck In
relations.
In this case. Time told of the
reposted shipments of U. A
rikinter - Insurgency weapon-s
to Burma and the presence of a
Mission to train Bunn*** pilots.
Time added that the U. A wee
not anxious to gat bagged down
to Burma, declaring: “The coun-
try's rapid rate of deterioration
makes South Vietnam seem al-
most a model of stability."
The story was lifted straight
out of the Far Eastern Econom-
ic Review, which published R
under the byline of Peter Boog.
He I* described to diplomatic
dispatches ss an "anreltabto"
news stringer who worked for
several years to Rurina snd
moved recently to Hong Kong.
, The truth fat that no U. S.
shipments of counter - Insurgen-
cy weapons have been requested
by Burma nor are any antici-
pated. Furthermore, Genera] Ne
Win was touring Burma, nteHl*.,
tog with Ms people first to North-
ern Burma then In southern Safe
r.ia, during, the period Time
magazine reported he “had not
been seen to publk.”
Editor, The Sun
Dear Sir:
Well, the wonderful General
To kepi tone Co. sura did a won-
derful Job of Improving the serv-
ice tor Its customers.
At least that Is what they
' would want you to believe.
Maybe they did help someone
In the city limits at beautiful T
Baytown. But II looks like the
phone company and Baytown
just kicked us to the ptnu and
said, do the .beat you can with
what you have.
Just be sure you pay Four bill;
each time It comes dug And.
oh yea, they did not mind add-
Ing : not her dollar to our Mil
each month. W# are aot getting
.any batter service But owe have
to pay more. Why?
Some time ago the Baytown
l Ity Council said that they were
going to do something about
phone service to the Baytown
•res. I wonder what happened?
And I guess I will always won-
dtr.
A very unhappy phone user of
SHILOH. Tax. (Formerly Bay-
town)
Maatrely Yours,
Jc* B. Clawson
Route L Box M0
Baytown T.Ttx.
Editor. Hi* Sun
Dear Mr:
- It Is not enough that w* have
to have eight - parly tinea. It
Is not enough that to the years .
’BWB iwrn —| MB
not been on* two - week period
go by that we have mt lost
l<Ume service—many time* for
weeks, not hours or days at a
time.
It is not enough that wt must
emit and wait for an operator to
piaea a long distance call, at
time* not getting on* at all. It
Is not enough that we pay aa
much for an right • party line
at others In other place* pay
lor a ring!* party aerate*.
No. tfaaaa Map wt wire taM
wgrela wbMi Oa—ri Trie-
ex-
We
were lad to believe that all this
would be over in December
when our direct hook-up with
Houston waa completed.
Bear with ue, you said, w« ere
doing it fur you. You went so
far as to tell Sen. John Tower
the same thing when he looked
Into your failure to provide serv-
ice for us.
You knew then that after all
was dune, not one thing would
Improve for us. We really felt
things couldn't got worse so they
must get bettor. Now w* know
how wrong we were.
I still cannot believe (hat Gen-
eral Tele|>hone or any company
can feel so great as to be abit
lo think up names lor towns,
places or whatever they are sup-
posed to be. and toll peo|He this
Is It; this te.THOty; this Is
where you live.
Where is Tri-City? There Is
no such place There never was
or will be such a place to the
area where we live How will
anyone know where or bow to
locate us? (Mr mailing addreet
la Baytown. Our school tax Is
paid to Baytown Our children
must go to Bay town schools, but
to ■ phone book we art Tri-
CKy.
Do you or did you even eon-
sldt r how unfair this BT Isn’t
it enough that you do not keep
your word? Why go out of your
wav to make the situation, bad
at bast, to much worse for us?
We have put up with and dans
—‘--*i Ins >n tong feat
K Is only right that we should
resent this last and worse wrong
done to us by you. (Mt of all
this the only thing we have gain-
ed from you to a new phone
number that no one will ever
be able to find, end the same
poor, poor sendee
Mrs. Robert J. Mnnaeh
Rout* 2. Box 2MC
phone 00. to provide us with i
tended and better service, t
Attend Churclr
Sunday
P lay B r idge
With Jacoby
By Oswald and Jams* Jacoby
- NORTH (O) U
A A K 10141
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♦ Q
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WEST EAST
4/975 4QI2
WK10 , WAQ79
♦ KJ9SJ 0 A1001
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Pa** IT Pass 54
Pass , Pass . Am* *
Opening lead-7-0 $
--W
Letter To
The Editor
■
Try Your Word Power
-NEA Feature —
Baseball
Antwtr to Previous
ACROSS 3 Motherly state
1 Eleven 4 Foe
inning — 8 Cypsjr husband
S Home —- | Jewish sacred
I Triple— object
13 Lending act 7 Link
13 Danish cote 3 Babbler
14Word of (Molten rock
reproach (Bib.) M Genus of
IS Mingle together maples
17 Avouch 11 Enclosure
II Narrow ledge 1« Stagger
, (var.) 20 Egyptian csbtl
41 Hot dog with 22 Ardor •* 34 Old Testament 41 Cushions
— 24 Stitches prophet 41 Egress
21 Court crier’s 25 Auricular 37Um*,— 50 Athens
call for silence 27Sotor , 40 Number llRebuke
23 Solicit
34 Masculine
relative
21 Permit
a Build
32 Creek letter
33 King of Judah
(Bib.)
39 Neither
to Peruke
37 Fruit
teThree times
(comb, form)
M Drama dMsiae
41 Sun
41 Milt fhtfp
44 Anger
41 Seasoning
41 Bag of hat —
S3 Urbane
SSSS.U
SgSKy
51 Food regime* 1
58 Musk for two
*0 Orderly
•a
<3 Voided
a Petitioner
30 Feminine
42 Endure
48 Musical study
appellation 47 Soil-enriching
31 (ftp, as the hair agent
I3C*1T« flesh
84 Italian noble
family
57 Weep
iT
Editor, The Stiff
Dear sir:
The "advertisement for bids"
by our school district to The
Sun on Peei 10 and 12 indicates
l>u«l* poor practice to our school ad-
ministration if lowest poesibl*
bids are desirable.
I sincerely hope that more
than the indicated 10 days hat
been given to prospective bid-
ders. Bids dose at 4 p.m. Dec.
20.
I believe the public is entitled
to an explanation of bidding
practices to our district. How
are prospective bidders given
the necessary 60 days or so for
bidding on work of the magni-
tude represented to the adver-
tisement? Who chooses which
prospective bidders should be
notified?
I would like to tee The Sun
publish a feature article on lo-
cal bidding practices to our
practices to our schools, city and
perhaps our country. ,
Ray Heinrich 5
Baytown
. . V
Oswald: "Here Is a letter
from Prof. Nathan Divinsky
of Vancouver, Canada. Dr,
Divinsky reached five clubs
and made it after East won
the diamond opening and
shifted to a trump. South ran
off seven clubs and West hung
on to the king of diamonds ana
s+L'l J CL |i a . mediately after the party In her four spades while East let all
Child Should Outgrow *»or. Miss Madeba headed his diamonds go, Then a dto-
n ~ . ...9 SSght for Tanzania to appear mond leaJ established a dfe
Bod Dreams, Night Terrors « *» «"» trick m <faci»w»hand.
Stokely Carmichael, where She
THE WELL CHILD *
•:.x| ■ HIMBMi
UNGRATEFUL GUEST - H*e
American Embassy to Zambia
gave a party honoring South Af-
rican folk linger Mlrian Make-
be, who has appeared on the
Ed Sullivan show and other TV
broadcasts to this country. Im-
other implicitly. East wtU
know West started with ex-
actly five diamonds, and West
will know that East started
. with four. With an original six
diamond*. West Mould discard
a diamond «n the fourth club.
With three dlameodi only.
Ka*t would have discarded
down and out and his play of
the eight denied anv lower
diamond Hence each would
know that declarer could not
bold more tifan two spades
tad hearts."
Jim: "On the fifth club
West should have let the five
oT spades go This should In-
form East that West was still
holding three spades, where-
upon East should drop hit
queen of apadec.’’
Oswald; "This would re-
quire a lot of intestinal forti-
tude on* the part of East. He
would know that If West had .
started with three hearts and
three spades, he would bavg
thrown a second heart."
Jim: "It sure is easy when
you see all the cards. Actu-
ally, 1 wonder if any pain
would he able to do this wall -
at the table""
(ftpirspopet Interpnie Asse.) -
* .a
II
V+enRDJ’fflJrite
, ■ •*
By WAYNE G BRANDSTADT, M.D,
' 'V: ■ , - ■ . ■
gets bloodshot eyes from time
to time. What causes this?
A—The most common cause
is infection. If the inflamma-
tion accompanies a head cold
it will clear up as the cold
goes away. If he has no cold,
allergy is a possibility. Soap
The most important steps a »« eye* « another You
parent can take are to make <*»“«<
the child’s waking environ cian t0 determine the exact
ment as calm as possible and
A mother writes that her
daughter, 3, has been crying
out In her sleep almost every
night. Night terrors in chil-
dren are most often seen be-
tween the ages of 3 and 8.
These children are often nerv-
ous and high-strung or sickly
dowk;
afcmSLt (toll.)
f
World’s Fore
By WICK FOWLER
About the only decision hand-
ed down unanimously by the U.
8. Supreme Court Is the one set-
with the help of a pediatri-
cian, get her in good physical
condition. When she cries out
at night the mother should go
Jo her, get her to tell what
was frightening her, then re-
assure her that it was all a
bad dream and that every-
thing is ail right. With this
treatment the child should
outgrow these spells in time.
#Q-My II-month-eld son
was born with a divided
spine. What causes this?
Would a second child be like-
ly to have the same defect?
A—When the right and left
halves of the vertebral col-
umn fail to fuse at some point
the child is born with spina
exact
cause so that the proper treat-
ment can be prescribed.
Q—Two of my six children
tingtife courts long vacation bifida or a divided spine. The
severity of the condition
■BHteMHteteBHKHHiteteteHtetei varies widely depending on
several factors. The defect is
fairly common but the
chances that a second child
would have this condition are
remote.
Want to Sail?
Sun Classified*
(Newspaper Ceterprbe AmJ
Q—My 18-month-old son
like to eat dirt. Is this harm-
fill? Do they lack some vita-
min or element of nutrition?
A—Maybe they have heard
the old wives’ tale that every
child must eat a peck of dirt
and they want to get it over
with. This is not a good idea,
however, because who can tell
what germs or poison may be
present in a random sample
of dirt? A lack of iron is a
more likely cause than a lack
of vitamin. Iron dextran com-
plex (Imferon) or iron sorbi-
tal citric acid (Jectofer) have
cured many children who
have a bizarre taste for dirt
due to an iron deficiency.
Both drugs require a doctor’s
prescription. «
(Newspaper leterprise Asm.)
rirest tend four questions mJ
comments to Woyne 6. Brandstadt,
M.D., In con of this popor. While
Dr. Ironditodt eonnot onewer inii-
tidval letters, ho mill answer letters
ot yonorol Interest in hten columns.
sang anti - American, pro-oom-
.munist songs. The rally was so
viciously anti -American and
stirred up such anti
sentiment that 12 American pas-
sengers aboard
Ware warned It
gerous for them to go ashore.
Greek Troublemaker — Gen.
George Grives, ordered home
from Cyprus to avert war be-
tween Greece end Turkey, ha*
been placed under guard. The
ruling military font* blame* Gri-
vas for precipitating the Cyprus
crisis by killing Turkish Cypri-
ots. Hi* Incident nearly pro-
voked war with Turkey and
forced the Greek military Junta
to make humiliating concessions.
Including the withdrawal of 18,-
000 Greek troop* from Cyrpu*.
This was what touched oft King
Constantine’s revolt.
GOP Gold Dust Twin* — The
two GOP congressmen frequent-
ly called the Gold Dust twins,
Albert Qule, Mtorr, snd Charles
Goodell N. Y.. finally came to
a parting of the. way* over the
OEO antipoverty bil. Qule voted
for the'bill, Goodell voted no.
Qule explained on the floor that
he had done * lot of soul-search-
ing, but did not reveal that he
was jmder heavy pressure from
civic awl church group* In Min-
nesota who want to jxwlde Job*
forth* poor.
Bible Verse
AND KNEW her not till *h* hod
brought forth her firstborn (on:
and he called his namt JESUS.
Matthew 1*
and he discarded two hearta
On dummy’s good spades. The Q—The bidding has
professor wonder* just how w*»t North East
East and West could find out l W
about the spade situation?” 2* Pass Pass
: Jim: "It I* always particu- You, South, hold:
J2 American pis- , ,„,y difficult to find out that 4AQ 1474,42 +AQ1S7
?» * £ E? a threat ,UM n? What do you do’
“ wottid •’•.dan- cause ft can t be lea, but this a—Bid three or four i
time East-West might have
found out. West should drop
the three of diamonds on the
third club and East the deuce.
On the fourth club, West
should discard the 10 of hearts
and East the eight of dia-
monds." <
Oswald: "In such situations
each partner must trust the
‘ enom* -»■.
A—Bid three or four spades.
We stirtitiy favor bidding eely
three, but two spade* weald be
decidedly Inadequate.
TODAY*8 QUESTION
You bid three, spade* snd
your partner bids four dia-
mond*. What do you do now?
Answer Tomorrow
■m
%Sasta«m ftm
Fred Hartman Editor and PuMIshao
Bill Hartman ............;..................... General Manager
John Wadley................................. Business Manager
Beulah Mao Jackson................ Assistant To The Publisher
Putman ....................... Assistant To The Publisher
B. Pritchett ................................Office Manager
Paul Putman
Ann
’ EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT f
Preston Pendergrass .......................... Managing Editor i
Homy Holcomb ..................... Assistant Managing Editor j
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
Dwight Moody..............................3... Retail Manager
Office under the Act of Congress of March 2,1S79. ,
Published afternoons, Monday through Friday,
and Sunday* by The Baytown Sun, Inc,
at 1991 Memorial Drive in Baytown. Texas.
P.O. Box 90, Baytown 77830
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 125, Ed. 1 Monday, December 18, 1967, newspaper, December 18, 1967; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1061999/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.