The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 45, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 28, 1972 Page: 4 of 14
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4-THE BAYTOWN SUN-T»M^ XB.1M
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SomeGoodNews
About Tuition
An idea being adopted by a number of colleges and
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to students—and their parents—from soaring tuition
costs. - •
Entering freshmen are given a guarantee that their
tuitions will not increase during their four years of
Study. - • -......... ...... ................
With tuitions rising by as much as 10 per cent an-
nually at jsome schools in recent years, it is estimated
that a student could save in the neighborhood of $1,000
during his or her college career, depending upon the
initial tuition.
Officials cite two major advantages of guaranteed or
fixed tuition: It should lead to an increase in the
number of freshmen entering a school, and a decrease
~ in the number of upperclassmen tranSferring to other
■ schools before they get their degrees. Any losses due to
continuing inflation would, it is hoped, be offset by the
increased student retention rate.
Officials of private schools also believe that more
parents would be willing to send their children to
private colleges or universities if they knew what the
-exact cost would be and could plan accordingly.'
At least one college will adopt a five-year guaranteed
tuition plan in the fall of 1973, citing an additional
advantage.
Since more and more students seem to want to take a
hiatus in their college experience to work or travel or
' study abroad, the five-year plan will enable them to do
this. —---------------------’ •—-—
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72
I Thought I Had Forgotten How to Rumba!"
WANDERING
Jack Anderson Says
By WANDA ORTON
Baytown has some of the
finest city officials, bothiiro-
. fessional and elected, of any
town in Texas. The fact that
leaders in other municipalities
think so top is evident in the
many important offices held
by our people.
Among latest' honors are
titles brought home from the
annual meeting of Texas
Municipal League in Dallas.
Our mayor, Glen Walker, was
elected second vice president
of the Texas Association of
Mayors and Councilmen at the
T|JL event. And our city at-
torney, Neel Richardson, was
elected a director of the Texas
Cities Attorneys Association.
Mayor Walker also is a
member of the TML board and
is president of the Harris
County Mayors and Council-
men's Association.
Terry Dopson, director of the
city’s parks and recreation ^
department, is the new editor V
of the magazine published by
Texas Recreation and Parks
Society and is a member of the
board of that organization.
Dopson also is a state baseball
commissioner in the Texas,
Amateur Athletic Federation.
City Manager Fritz
Lanham serves on the execu-
tive committee of the Texas
Criminal Justice Council and is
chairman of its corrections
subcommittee. There are 10
members of the executive
committee, appointed by the
governor. It meets once a
month, usually in Austin. Its
three subcommittees include
corrections, police and courts.
The city’s purchasing agent,
Don. Cooke, is second vice,
president of the Southern
Pip-chasing Institute, a large
organization that spans many
states. ’ '
Police Chief John Wilkinson
, serves as chairman of the
board of the Harris County
Crimp Control Unit which is
responsible for intelligence
work in crime investigations.
City Sanitarian Otis Muen-
nink was chairman of the re-
cent Gulf Coast Chapter of
Sanitarians regional meeting
here. Gerald Landry, assistant
sanitarian, is president of this
chapter. Two other members
of the city’s health department
staff hold offlces_iazegiQnsl—
organization, with Tom Col-
well serving as secretary and
Howard Brister as a member
of the governing council.
Baytown City Councilman
Allen Cannon is a member of
the executive committee of the
Houston-Galveston Area Coun-
cil while Councilman Tom
Gentry serves on the board of
the Harris County Community
Action Association. _____________
Baytown Police Sgt. Herman
Steele is third vice president of
the Texas Municipal Police
Association which has some
6,800 members. Sgt. Steele has
the longest tenure of service
with the Baytown Police
Department with 25 years job
here.
Nixon No Longer Studies
,0 • ’ '
Peace Talk Transcripts
By ERNEST CUNEO
WASHINGTON - The at-
tempt by the McGovemites to
read John Connally, George
Wallace and the South out-of
the Democratic Party is about
as convincing is Father
Berrigan attempting to ex-
communicate the Pope.
Furthermore, the airy ex-
pulsion of President George
Meany of the AFL-CIO by Sen.
McGovern with the politically
. suicidal statement, “Well see
if he is dead,” carries about as
much weight as, for example,
Marshal Ney’s order to
Napoleon’s Guard not to join
the Emperor when he escaped
from Elba.
TheNew South has been sup-
planted by the Great' South,
and the South is burgeoning
into, a greatness it hasn’t had
since the Virginia presidents.
As is Usual with the myopic
intelligentsia, the short-
comings of Gov. George Wal-
lace were magnified, as if the
South didn’t know them. But
Gov. Wallace did not typify the
South. On the contrary, his
tremendous shortcomings
underlined the desperate
search of the Great South for
an instrument for its new
expression.
A
. : ..
I
Stevenson’s Tennessee
Kefauver - as well as Nixon’s
Free State Agnew weren’t
political accidents. Finally, it
was the love of Texas electoral,
votes, not love gf Lyndon John-
son, that forced John Kennedy
to seek LBJ as a running mate.
of the opposite party. So did the
South. And so did the majority
or near-majority of the Demo-
crats throughout the nation.
But the remaining McGovern
colonels a
The South and the border
states voted solid in 1972. They
voted solid against McGovern.
Democrat John Connally, as
did Republican Henry Stimson
tnI940, supported a president"
s are attempting to read
him out of the party. But who is
the Democrat, John Connallf
or Bella Abzug? ,
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North-
West N
Pass 1
Pass
Openin
Book's superintendent of
antiquities says it will cost
9515,556 to make the
Colosseum safe again for
tourists.
WASHINGTON - President
Nixon has such complete con-
fidence in Henry Kissinger’s
negotiating-skills that he
stopped reading the complete
transcripts of the secret truce
talks long ago.
He used to go over every
word of the transcript until he
found that Kissinger was re-
sponding with precisely the
points the President himself
would have made.
North Vietnamese troops in
South Vietnam. He-has worked
opt a secret formula to reduce
the number of . North Viet?
namese troops in the South.
Under , the proposal, Hanoi
would deploy the bulk of its
troops into evacuation areas.
Eventually, they would be
flown and shipped back to the
North. Only 20,000 troops
would stay behind to police the
Viet Cong-controlled areas.
followed by another shooting,
spree* by three men who hi-
jacked a Southern Airways
plane ih Alabama and forced it
to fly to Cuba.
'Castro slammed the hi-
jackers of both planes in jail
and suddenly showed an inter-
est in seeking a way to stop the
incidents.
The first evidence of his new
attitude came in the form of a
note, dated Oct. 29, and signed
pleased with .Kissinger’s
ability to keep the negotiations
on the main track and not be-
come distracted by side issues.
Nor has he allowed the com-
munists to panic him intomak-
ing hasty statements or agree-
ing to unintended concessions.
- At the latest Paris meetings, —
Kissinger has placed great
stress on international super-
vision at the very start of the
cease-fire. He brought with
him to Paris secret intel-
ligence reports warning that
both governmjnt and Com-
munist cadres were preparing
their forces for furiousfighting
to improve their positions be-
tween the time a cease-fire is
declared and the time inter-
national supervisors arrive to
enforce it.
As one captured Communist
document declares, “the big
guns will cease firing, but the
small guns will still fire.”.
The biggest issue that Kis-
singer sought to resolve, how-
ever, was the presence of
ment is that Hanoi has main-
tained all along that no North
Vietnamese troops are
stationed in South Vietnam.
Hanoi can’t sign a public
agreement, therefore, that it
will remove troops it claims
aren’t there. And Kissinger
THE FACT that Gov. Wallace
outpolled all other Democrats
in the primaries indicates that
he as a person was underesti-
mated;, but it even mare
strongly emphasizes that there
isn’t the slightest ebneept of
the rising Great South north of
the Mason-Dixon Line and
particularly in the opinion-
making mass-meaia centers.
But the Great South is here.
Today, no president can be
elected with the Solid South
against him, except by a
miracle; and no president,
Republican or Democratic,
can govern without its
"We feel we hove here the ultimate in planned *
communities, and it's 'impenetrable'!"
By Oswal
Thewh
carding ii
fool your
him a pro
who false
ly freque
ponents.
South '
automatic
was delig]
lead since
was the
dropped h
East’s 10
the 10 of <
. East toi
turned tb
South ros
but it was
The defen
tricks to
ready, in t
“Nice £
“I was si
turn your
East sa
theory the
educate y
South’s^!
king-t
ace
at least tl
If South
the first
queen, Ea
a really t<
‘ queen pla;
been fron
in which <
* turn woul
winning d<
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The biddi
West No
cia. The note, delivered to the
United States by the Swiss, re-
ported the arrest of the men
who hijacked the Eastern jet
and expressed an interest in
negotiating a skyjacking
agreement.
ments will be made public. It’s
unlikely Hanoi will repudiate
its past public statements. It’s
more likely that'Kissinger will
agree to a secret understand-
ing.
CUBA’S FIDEL Castro
changed his mind about
negotiating a skyjacking
agreement with the United
States apparently because of
the criminal violence involved
in the latest air piracy.
The Cuban leader was re-
ported to be upset over the trail
of murder and robberies, left
by four hijackers who took
over an Eastern airlines plane
in Houston last month and or-
dered it to Havana. This was
DR. LAWRENCE f. LAMB
Good Variety Is Po
What Can 86-Year-Old Eat?
shouldn’t eat excessive places are excellent^ Sher-
iatherosclero- shouldn’t eat excessive prae
r, n i omh i w sis i. mere is no reason you amounts. But there isn’t any bet wouiu « u«u
«*&«!£* *»_.«* S?ETJS IwK“ ■ '«*
the arteries
sisi. There is no reason you
£%Wvk aSESSEss
diPtwt for manv vears for trim away, all of the fat be- or rump roasts in which the - - - *'-*—■*
chronic colRif - recentW fore you book it and broil it fat has been removed before
quite" a generous diet. Being in a bght^oiled pan .or one preparing it.
anemic for a long time I ate that has been treated with a you can
SOME OF-THE big hospital
chains are trying to charge off
part of their normal admin-
istrative costs to the tax-
payers.
Other profit-making com-
panies must hire their own fin-
ancial agents lawyers and ac-
countants; most also pay for
their own stockholder reports,
annual meetings and newslet-
ters.
But some hospital chains
want the taxpayers to help foot
these bills. Since most in-
vestor-owned hospitals care
for medicare patients, the hos-
pital officials contend that
medicare money should be
used to defray administrative
expenses. ,
The hospital chains, Working
through the Federation of
American Hospitals, are
bringing pressure on the
Health Insurance Benefits Ad-
visory Council. This is a com-
mittee of health-care profes-
sionals who advise the Social
Security Administration.
But a Social Security spokes-
man told us pointedly: “We
tfilT' consider HIBAC’s recom-
mendations, but we don’t have
to take their advice.”
cooperation because, among
other.things, the nine key Sen-
ate chairmanships are held by
southerners.
In comparison, the Big Ten
states, between them, hold one
chairmanship, Sen. Harrison
Williams of New Jersey, who
leadathe Committee on Labor
and Public Welfare.
The cornerstone of the South
is Texas, which has pulled up
even with Illinois and Ohio and
is only one electoral vgte
behind mighty Pennsylvania.
Since the last war, it was
apparent that the South, or a
border state, had to be on a na-
tional ticket.
Cfje Paptoton &un
Fred Hartman ................... .......Editor and Publisher
. JohnWadley................................GeneralManager
Paul Putman ..v.T...1;.:.........l Assistant io Publisher
Ann B. Pritchett............................... Of flee Manager
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT*
Preston Pendergrass ........................ ..Executive Editor.
Jim Finley.................................. .Managing Editor
Wanda Orton .............. .....Associate Managing Editor
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
Paul Putman........ ........... ................... .Director*
Dwight Moody ................................Retail Manager
Leon Brown ........ *. ..............Classified Manager
You, Sou-
+ AK65 ¥
What do ;
A—If yoi
bid as a i
should pass
show your
TODA
Instead <
trump over
ner has bic
do you do i
- Ansi
Sundays, at IWI Mamorial Dri»t in Baytown, Tam, O. 0. Box *f, Baytown 17m.
Subscription Ratos: By carrior, SMS par month; S1S.M par yoar; sinplo copy prica, IB
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TRUMAN’S KENTUCKY
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Sparkman and subsequently
tss Inc..
MEMI
The ad,
bird— star
high—rela
common in
Asia and /
The AssociiUod Pros* is ontitlod exclusively
not otherwise credited In this paper and local news ot s
dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper and local news of spon-
taneous origin p
taneous origin published heroin. Rights ot republicatlottef all other matter herein are
also reserved.
liver until it made me sick no-sfick: preparation, so you
3s32S£
round steak are from fat.
and so forth. Now—no more
liver shots as before and on
the last test I had a perfect
report. Now. they tell me j
have hardening of the arte-
ries and must not eat
grease. I am almost 86
years of age and my present
problem is what may I eat’
I never eat fat meat or
very little meat except beef
How about butter. Cheddar
cheese — medium aged.
Yoar advice will be greatly
and if you want to look at it
in'terms of weight meas-
urement. only five per cent
of the weight of lean round
steak after the visible fat
has been removed is fat.
You can also use fryer
chicken and fish. By alter-
nating between these three
types of meats—beef, fish
and chicken-you should be
doing rather well. Beef is a
-much better choice than but-
ter or any of the processed
cheeses such as Cheddar
entirely from your diet and
think you should try to get
beef, chicken or fish at
least once or twice a day as
use the lean
long as you
meat, fish and chicken prod-
ucts. From your letter I
would say you are doing
very well at 86 years of age
and the real problem is to
be sure you have a balanced
diet to provide enough pro-
' “ ‘ nd minerals.
This is within the limits com-
monly set for the amount
of fat people can eat in ret
..........» of
The softer margarines are
fine in terms of decreasing
the amount of saturated
latiooship to the problem
hardening of the arteries.
The only difficulties with
meat such as beef is that it
tein, vitaitiins and
Be sure and have a check-
up regularly to make certain
that your anemia doesn't
return and sneak up on you.
INDIANS HAVE a ready
answer for officials eager to
prosecute them for demolish-
ing the Bureau of Indian Af-
fairs building during-Their
seven-day sit-in. They cite a
1969 Interior Department re-
gulation aimed at several
Indian tribes in Oregon and
Washington.
Posted after an Indian pro-
test, the order reads that the
Indian’s own “struc-
tures. . .may be removed,
demolished or otherwise dis-
is relatively low in pobruD-
d fat and a tittle
Dear Reader
Almost
saturated fat and
higher in the saturated fats
are
so
you don’t want to use too
much of them. Two per cent
milk is ae Improvement over
whole milk in terms of tout-
ing fat in the diet, bid one
BIBLE VERSE
posed of, with or without prior
notice.” The order goes on to
per cent milk is better and
tbi, Man «*cufcU U» *»«*"“* J"g£
LTto am hardening ol vonM llie: ther^S. me «*» aeniUMt in rn«
FOR THE Lord God is a sun
and tiueM: the Lord wfll give
grace and glory: no good thing
will be withhold from them
that walk uprightly Psalms
•4:11
say that the coat of “such dis-
position shall be assessed
against the penon roponaaie
tor the structure."
Attend Church
Sundsy )
t - * •
Labor Turnover Rates (1962-1971)
(per 100 employes)
-Resignations
---Layoffs
to bob New Employes
llllll Total Separations
, (Resignations and layoffs)
5.3
ACROS!
1 City in
Nebraska
7 Arrange
in order
13 Lecturer
14 One who
Da uses.
15 Tie a shot
anew
16 Affectedl
modest
' 17 Scottish
* negaUve
18 Driving
command
20 Moths
21 Having h
a will
IK
32 Wave top
33 Thing
34 Violin mi
35 Hourly
36 Made nv
toward
one end
39 Eaten aw
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V'
m
a"
5"
32
34
36
«A
68 70
86 68 70 72
■■ of leher Statistics
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 45, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 28, 1972, newspaper, November 28, 1972; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1105111/m1/4/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.