The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 77, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 7, 1979 Page: 5 of 28
twenty eight pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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January 8,1979
Much can be accomplished this
qpfning year in your work or
career .'You will have a chance
to 'put to good use all the
knowledge you've long been
acquiring.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19)
Don't make promises you'll
have a difficult time keeping
Rather than let someone de-
pend upon you, it would be
better to say “No” in the first
place. Like to find out- mbre
about yourself? Seng for your
copy of Astro-Grlph Letter by
mailing $1 for each and a fong,
self-addressed, stamped enve-
lope to Astro-Graph, P.O, Box
489, Radio City Station, N.Y.
10019. Be sure to specify birth
sign.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 19)
Pretending to be other than
AMUSEMENT PAGE
TV Guide • Astro-Graph t Crossword t Comics
AP Religion Writer
The establishment of U. S,
diplomatic relations with Com-
. ____ ______ ________ munist China has stirred mixed
what you really are could turn' reactions in the churches, but
others off today. Be nothing
bOt- your sweet self and the
world will love you.
PISCES (Feb. 20-March 20)
People can’t always be what
we’d like (hem to be. DonXbe
too disappointed today , when
someone doesn’t come up to
your expectations.
ARIES (March 21-ApYil 19) To,
day you may experience one of.
those moments when you wish
you could disappear after say-
ing all the wrong things to4he
wrong person. Try to think
before you speak. *
TAURUS (April 20-May 20)
You're barking up the wrong
the leadership of mainline Prot-
estant and Eastern Orthodox
/denominations long has favored
it.
Their representatives hailed
the step by President Carter as
greatly enhancing “the pros-
pect of peace in the world.”
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tense, wins acceptance. _________
GEMlNI(May21-June 20)Don’t
deal in a condescending man-
. ner today. It wi It produce unde-
sirablb results. Treat everyone
as an equal. Forego any form of
ond-upmanship.
CANCER-(June 21-July 22) It'll
be very easy to sweep tasks
you're not in the mood to do
under the rug today. Attempt-
ing to catch up will be twidethe
chore.
LE&(Juiy23-Aug. 22) Insincere
flaUery will be quickly detected
- today and you could be labeled
a shallow person. If you don’t
honestly think well of some-
one, don’t say anything.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Thinking bio alone doesn’t as-
sure you’ll wear the laurels of
_ victory. First, you have to earn
them through concentrated ef-
fort: and application.
LIBRA (Sepl. 23-Oet. 23) In-
stead of viewing things realisti-
cally you have a tendency
today to color facts to suit your
desires. It won't do you any
good; you could even get'
burned.
SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 22) The
world doesn’t owe you a free
ride today, even though It may
. be hard to convince yourself
otherwise,Don’t expect more
thari you deserve’ and you
won’t get hurt.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec.
little har/ntess flirtation could
be just the opposite to the one
to whom you owe your loyalty.
He or she could be deeply hurt.
Mixed Church Reactions
Greet China Relations
By GEORGE W. CORNELL step was seen as culmination of and arduous journey toward
ter’s actionhas been very posi-
tive,” said the Rev. Franklin
Woo, a Chinese American and
long-time missionary in Hong
Kong who now heads the Na-
tional Council’s China desk,
“But there’s a lot of work re-
maining to be done in grass-
roots education to get people to
look at the situation histc
We’ve been in a cold-war
legacy for almost 30 years, and
we have to break out of it.
cern for the® people of Taiwan,
that they have a right to a say
in their future and that they not
become political victims be-
tween Peking and Washington.”
An uproar of criticism hit the
Council when its governing
board of denominational repre-
sentatives in 1966 first called
relaU«is-with|^
China and a study of the possi-
bility of full diplomatic ties.
Carter’s decision to take that
a process initiated .on a nation-
al organized basis by. the
churches.
They’ve been working over
the years “toward better under-
standing of the people of
China,” the Council’s general
secretary Claire Randall and
president William P. Thompson
said in a letter to Carter ap-
plauding his action.
They said normalization of
full diplomatic relations “is a
empathetic understanding” be-
tween peoples of the two coun-
Nashville Concert A
‘New Year’s Eve
Sbme Christian leaders said it necessary next step in a long! in China,
also increased the eventual pos-
sibilities for.. resumption of
church work in-China.
But there was some individ-
ual dissent and the nation’s Ro-
man Catholic bishops never
have taken an official position
on the matter, although in-
formed assessments were that
most of them favored recogni-
tion. •: r~r
Most major Protestant and
Orthodox bodies, acting jointly
through the National Council of
Churches, have been on record
for 12 years for steps toward
normalizing relations between
the two countries
“On the whole thb reaction
among church leaders to Car-
We believe the prospect of
peace in the world, and of Asia
in particular are greatly en-
hanced by your decision.”
In a recent conference on
that subject sponsored by the
Lutheran Church in America,
mission experts said Christian
missionaries will have to earn
the right to proclaim the gosfiel
Hr • •
By JOE EDWARDS
Associated Press Writer
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -
‘It’s our New Year’s Eve.
year. To us, having fun is ma-
kin’ music with good friends.”
That’s how Southern rock
band leader Charlie Daniels de-
scribes his annual Nashville school student ordered 50 tick-
concert, which this year is Vol-
unteer Jam V on Jan; 13 at* the
Municipal Auditorium. An au-
dience of 10,000 is expected
Zant-Gaines fund for educating
the children of members of the
Lynyrd Skynyrd band killed in
a plane crash last year,
The annual concert has been
the source of two record al-
bums,“Fire on the Mountain”
and “Volunteer Jam HI and
IV,” and a movie, “Volunteer
‘There also is continuing con- jam.” The first album sold al-
most a million copies.
Daniels personally invites the
performing guests and the
names of those appearing are
not known until show time.
We just don’t know until
they show up,” Daniels said
By Oswald Jacoby
and Alan Sontag
Confucius said,
trur
son, the Allman Brothers, the
Marshall Tucker Band, Wet
Willie, Sea Level, Grind-
erswitch, the Winters Brothfti ___
and BandL and .Bonnie Bramlett, trumps are _yottt,.besL.
everything else rolled into one. Papa John Creach, Mylon Le-
It’s the most fun we have all Fevre and the Stoney Mountain
Cloggers.
Last year, ticket orders came
from as far as New York and
California. This year.one high
ets and plans to bring a bus-
load of friends from New York.
WDCN, Nashville’s public
television station, will tape the
Proceeds fill go to the Van concert for future" broadcast
w . . over public Broadcasting Serv-
ice stations, It also will be
taped for a radio documentary
and will be carried live on ra-
dio stations throughput Ten-
nessee and on WLIR in Long
bland, N.Y. - - ,
Last year’s concert was car-
ried live on a 250-station radio
network, .. . *.;-V
NORTH
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SOUTH
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Vulnerable: North-South
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BRIDGE
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Portugal
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13 Authoress •
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Within recortl
(comp.wd.) ■
15 Builder
17 Avoirdupois .
weight
18 Soar
19 Club fees
21 Select
: 24 Acqire
L-26 Psalm
26 Tough
27 Auxiliary verb
28 Fizzed
30 Figures of
- speech
4 V In step (abbr.)
42 Erin
43 Strike lightly
45 Ship part" ^
47 River arm
50 Not so much
5J-Canohized
woman (Fr.)
52 Master of
ceremonies .
53 Jubilant
54 Words (Fr.)
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‘ ge (Ger.)---------14 Flower ~
37 Cut ' 15 Energy unit
1 Earliest bom 20 Heighten sounds •
2 Chopped meat 22 Before (prefix) 38 Wprn away
33 Kppck
■ 34 Son.
23 Basebalfer —39 Skin tumor
» Williams 41 Deluge
25 Cush's father 42 Select
__26 Summer time 44 Close relative
(abbr.) - . ,, 46 Patron saint
27 Hand of sailors,
implement 47 Compass
29 Resentment point
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32 Inactivity 52 Measure of
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By YARDENAARAR
Associated Press Writer
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - After
spending five years finding out
that their whole is greater than
un of their individual
the Moody Blues have
quietly back into suc-
cessful collectivity. „
Notice the careful avoidance
of the word “comeback.” Hie
comeback in pop music is al-
South wasn’t a disciple of
the great Chinese sage. West
cashed the king and ace of
diamonds and continued and
South promptly tuffed with
dummy’s five Of trumps.
East overruffed with his
nine and led back the king of
spades.
South found himself in
dummy and had no way to
get back to his hand to pull
trumps. He started to play
high clubs. If clubs Would be
nice enough to brefak 3-3,
SouthTould discard his jack
and seven of spades, unror-
tunately for Squill, West
trumped the gecond club and
led a spade to East’s queen.
Down two.
If South; just knew about
Confucius, he would not
have trumped that third dia-
mond. West would have
three tricks. If he shifted to a
spade, South would take
dummy ’s ace, lead thatlittle
five of trumps, draw trumps
and then get his spade dis-
cards.
If West led a fourth dia-
mond, East might ruff with
ruff, pull trumps and stiiy^.
home safely
You hold;
♦ AQ x
♦ KJxx
v ; ♦ Kix.
keyboard player Mike Pinder ♦ K 10 x
and drummer Graeme Edge With everyone vulnerabie>
were just another bunch of - - ' ’
struggling solo artists — not
hugely successful ones, either.
It’s hard to tell what would
have happened had even one of
them made a huge break-
through. In any case, they de-
cided to go back to the studio
as a group in September 1977.
The result — “Octave” -
In past years, concert pro-
ceeds have been donated to leu-
kemia research and a local
mental health " center. Last
year’s concert grossed more
than 255,000.
Traditionally, the jariT ends'in
"You can’t plan a jam. It’s a the early hours Sunday with
spontaneous event.”, “Tennessee Waltz.”
past years include Willie Nel- marizes.
Moody Blues Are Back
Successful Collectivity
most as commonplace as smog was clearly a welcome shot in
in Los Angeles, and arouses ! the arm.
about as much enthusiasm.
Besides, it’s almost ridiculous
to talk about comebacks when
you’re dealing with a band like
the Moodies.Of course, diehard
Moody Blues fans (the group
used to be referred to as a cult
band but the word cult is also
iff ill repute these days) noticed
that the concerts and flow of
platinum albums that began in
1965 stopped in 1973 with the re-
lease of “Seventh Sojourn,”
a year earlier.
But for many casual rock
music listeners, the Moodies’
disappearance didn’t register,
Their classics of the late ’60s
and early ’70s — “Nights-in
White Satin” and “Tuesday
Afternoon” for example - re-
mained staples on most rock
stations. Their albums sold at a
greater clip in their absence
than in their public presence -
some 30 million copies to date
The illusion of their presence
was never shattered by any for-
mal announcement they were
splitting up. They prefmed -
and still do - {o talk m terms
of rests, personal bouseeleaning
and the like.
But while the Moody Blues
remained fondly ensconced in
the public mind, guitarist Jffi;
tin Hayward, bass player John
Lodge, flutist Ray Thomas, |»
you wouio smite uunng nappy noun
your left-hand opponent
opens one notrump. ’This i§ '' WINTHROP
passed around to you, A
Michigan, reader wants to
know what we do.
We pass. We do have 16
>ints, but West is right in
>ck of us with 16 points of
his own. His are better
placed and any bid will al-
most surely cost us.
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Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 57, No. 77, Ed. 1 Sunday, January 7, 1979, newspaper, January 7, 1979; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1075061/m1/5/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.