The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 1, 1966 Page: 14 of 18
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Thursday, September f, 1966
®ljf Imtman Owi Tf
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By NEG COCHRAN OUR BOARDING HOUSE with MAJOR HOOPLE
. (AAH/r A MAN. HAS a\
‘ TEMPORARY SETBACK..
AFTER AN UN8RDKEN
«TRlN6 0F SUCCESS )
- AND X5U CIRCLE AROUND J
LIKE VULTURES OVER A /
FALTERING ■STALHON.'
/ WHEN I TURN THE TABLES I
ON JAKE DON'T COME L
VAROUND TO THE VICTOR//
^\r\. CELEBRATION / /tsTL,
OUT OUR WAY
Six Bay-Texas
To Receive Recognition
Six Bay-Tex Masonic Lodges Shore Lodge 1353 will receive
honor roll awards, which are
given by the Grand Lodge of
Texas. The honors are, in recog-
nition of outstanding attendance .? •
at the spring series of Masonic
workshop programs. 5_ •
George Webb of La Porte,
chairman of the three-county
Masonic workshop, will present
the awards. - -
Nearly <P such meetings arc
held twice a year for officers
and members of over 970 Ma- ,
sonic Lodges in Texas. The Ma-
sonic fraternity is the state's .
largest fraternal group, number-
ing nearly 250,000 members.
DEFINITE DATE TO END WAR
PEACE TALK PREREQUISITE
HERE SHE COMES J SHOVE OFF ? WH/\ AN’ WHO'LL DIVERT
NOW.' LISTEN,lOU J WE'LL BE DOIN’ / HER ATTENTION ,
GUVS, DO ME A J VOU A FAVOR IF' < WHEN VOU GET TO
s FAVOR ANP ff WE HANG AROUND/1 BLUSHIN1? WE’LL ,
r v 1 SHOVE OFF, B WHO'LL KEEP THE J STICK WITH VOL)
. V WILL NOU f Jf CONVERSATION /BOy-A LOVE-SICK
gnv V--GOING WHEN VOU I PAL NEEDS ALL
nf lf~l 'Vjilli I »l GET TONGUE'] THE HELP HE CAN
TIED?
VOU SHOULD HAVE i,
LISTENED WHEN We
BLEW THE WHISTLE J
ON JAKE'S RAlNTING,
MAJOR.' I HEAR IT /
lost you * ISO loj
PLAY HARO OF/^L
HEARING
IT COULD HAVE '
BEEN WORSE/,
LIKE THE /
SLIPPER/ DEAL
JAKE GAVE HIM
ON STOCK IN j
-] Plastic
A NAPKINS
WELL,
AB6VW
TOO,
ISTh
*
will be honored at a workshop
at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Sept. 8,
in the Deer Park Masonic Lodge
Building.
Highlands, Cedar Bayou, Bay-
town, Channelview and North
While admitting hat "It is
Unbelievable that the American
military display should ever be
annihilated in the field," De
Gaulle said that only an agree-
ment along the lines of the 1951
Geneva accord could settle the
war. -
PHNOM PENH, Cambodia
■ • (AP) — French President
I ** Charles de Gaulle said today
| there was no chance of peace
f **• negotiations to end the Viet
? Nam war until the United States
agrees to a timetable for the
withdrawal of it* armed forces.
He told 60,000 cheering Cam- "Exactly as for the agree-
bodians that, although the time ment of 1954,” th* Frenclfpresi-
was not yet ripe for a negotiated dent declared, "the
settlemen, "short of the uni- this one Would be to
verse rolling toward catas- and guarantee the neutrality of house."
trophe, a political agreement the peoples of Indochina and "The political and military
alone could bring back peaoe." toelrright of self-determination autherity of the United'States
De Gaulle did not call for as these people actually are and established itself in its turn in
withdrawal of American forces leaving to each of them full re- South Viet Nam and, concur-
as a prelude to negotiations — sponslbllitie* for its own affairs, rently, war was rekindled there
"The contracting parties, in the form of national reslst-
therefore, would be the real ance,’’ he said,
powers in action there S.nd, p£ Gaulle said there was “no
among the other states, at least chance that the peoples of Asia
the five world powers." will submit to the law ofTfof-
The five world powers ns de- eigners from over the Pacific,
fined in the United Nations whatever their Intentions and
charter are France, Britain, the however powerful their arms.”
United States, the Soviet Union
and China. Since France recog-
nizes Communist China, De
Gaulle apparently included that
government among the five.
De Gauile praised Cambodia
for maintaining a neutral posi-
tion in Southeast Asia and told
the crowd “that is why your
country succeeded in salvaging
its body and soul, because i
remained toaster In its own
FIR
GET'
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Teacher Is Promoted
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FREEPORT, Tex. (AP)-Max
Walton, Brazosport High School
teacher who applied for work as
a U.S. interpreter in Viet Nam
got a promotion even before he
could go to work. He has been
appointed as assistant provin-
cial representative for the Agen-
cy for International Develop-
ment, He speaks French fluent-
ly. > i
object of
establish
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Complete Paint
l Body Shop
‘IMl/Of wrtck R«-building • Spm-
laity- Fraa EatlmaUa —I 14 hr.
Wrackar aarvlca. ' I . .
Rant cara available.
" LUMUS IAYTOWN
DODGE
tMO Market St
a* North Viet Nam and its
Communist supporters have de-
manded — but said:
"The possibility and even
more, the opening of such a vast
and difficult negotiation (to end
___ the war) would obviously de-
pend on the decisions and com-
mitments which America would
previously have chosen to take
and enter into to repatriate Its
forces at an appropriate and
fixed period of time."
No matter how long the war
goes on, De Gaulle sara,
"France holds as certain that It
wffl meet with no military solu-
tion." . •
There was no immediate com-
ment from the State Depart-
ment in Washington.
De Gaulle conferred for 35
~ mtmrtes Wednesday with Nguy-
rr.x-.-r-.~- —. ea- Tbuong.-Jiactb JVjet. flam's If
chief representative In Cam-1
---------bodia, and sounded him out onjl
Hanoi’s views. There was no I
Indication, however, that the I
call for American agreement to I
a withdrawal timetable was I
based on anything the North I ""
Vietnamese told him. I-
De Gaulle's speech in flag-1
* decked Phnom Penh Stadium I
was the highlight of his three* I
day state visit to Cambodia, I
whose chief of state, Prince No-1
todom Sihanouk, has beet) even I
more critical of the U. S. role in J
Viet Nam than the French pres-1
ident. . II
De Gaulle said for the United ||
States to give up "at) expedition |
* in faraway lands from the mo-1 .
ment It turned to be without |
benefit, or justification, and toj|
favor instead an international;|
arrangement organizing peace |
and progress in an important !!
area of the world would in no |
way finally injure its pride, |
thwart its ideas or jeopardize its l|.‘
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.......~"If This "daes not happeir.*"hi*f|- »-
-----XildT"hd medition will offer any||
prospect of success, and this is |
why France, tor its part, has |
never envisioned and does not |
envision proposing’ any.” j|
From late 1946 until the defeat I -
j, of its Army at Dien Bien Phu In I
" 1954, France waged a bitter bat- il
. tie tomaintainits rule overln-ll
dochina, including Cambodia, |
Laos and ail of Viet NNam. I
Following the military catas-1|
trophe, France agreed to nego- |
tiations which led to the Geneva!I
* agreements of 1954. giving inde-1
pendence to Cambodia, Laos I
and divided Viet Nam. I
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New Home
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AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) - Mr, I
and Mrs. Patrick J. Nugent || ,
have set up housekeeping in | r
their-brick duplex apartment, | "
guarded-by concealed closed-1
. circuit television cameras and | |
Secret Service men. |
- • , One of their first chores wasj|
to stock up on groceries, includ-1
ing frozen pizza and dog food. |
' President Johnson’s daughter, |
--J Luci, ahd her husbaftd eJr3?4j| :^^^^^^^^
weeks pulled up in front of j|
their apartment in Luci's dark-'
green, sport* car at 4:10 p.m.
; Wednesday. . * ‘
Since their Aug. 6 wedding,
> •*', elaborate security equipment
has been installed. Three closed-U
etrcuit television cameras, their | '
JenseiL barely'visible in wooden | 1
containers matching the trim | .
of the duplex, are trained on |.
, !*': the front,, side and back yards. |
A hut with a one-way gl,ass 1
window was built for the Secret |
, Service at the end of the. car-1
port. Also constructed Was a |
high privacy fence., along. the |
side and back. Their >refHgera-1
tor was moved in just 10 min-1
* ufes before they arrived! |
The Nugents parked across |
* iitho street and ran down the |
steep driveway to their apart-1
ment. »' 1 ' " r
''We’re awful tired from a |
lotig trip,” Luci told a bystand-1
er.
Less than two hours after
they arrived, they drove to a
nearby supermarket and bought
" 130.13 worth of grocerie*,' ^ ,
They took their time shopping
talking about many purchases,
sipping bottled soft drinks and
signing autographs for other
•hoppers.
--------------Lffi*-- mW WW-Rushim
^ Pat whistled In dismay when
the cashier rang up the total.
Me paid with a 550 bill. ?
. Their four bags of groceries
Included milk, cereal, scouring
pads, potato chips/, dill pickles,
■ pajjer towels, apple Juice,
canned mushroom# and mayon-
naise. ’ ” , r
Pat said the dog' food was
-"just to "have on hand" for
* Luci and Pat plan to attend
the University bf Texas this fall.
He will work on a master’s de-
gree in business administration,
She said recently she would not
go to school lull time, but would
take two liberal arts course!,
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wing sofa
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STORE HOURS:
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Op«n Thursday Til 8 P.M—
; CLOSED MONDAYS '
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BAYTOWN'S GREAT FURNITURE STORE
Liberal Trade-In AHowancai .
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612 W. TEXAS
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 10, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 1, 1966, newspaper, September 1, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145579/m1/14/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.