The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 10, 1987 Page: 4 of 24
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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BAYTOWN SUN
Thuraday,
10, 1997
Jack Anderson
I
CIA confronts AIDS threat
WASHINGTON - Could Mata Hari have
operated in the age of AIDS?
“Like any laboratory test, there are false The CIA does not fire an employee found to
positive and false negative results,” the have AIDS. The internal report says it Is the
Without going into this idle historical ques- report adds. “By doing two different pro- Office of Medical Service policy “to regard
tion, the CIA has finally decided that it has to cedures and repeating them with a new sam- HIV infection of AIDS the same way as any
deal with the reality of the worldwide pie, the chances of a ‘false’ report are other illness and to expect that an employee
epidemic of Acquired Immune Deficiency minimized. Nevertheless, the Implications of will continue to work as long as he or she is
Syndrome. The agency has sent out urgent a ‘positive’ test are potentially devastating, able to do so.”
warnings to all its agents and has begun and for this reason every effort is made to in-
routine testing of applicants, employees and sure the utmost accuracy of the report and SELLOFF COMING? — The White House is
Yielding to public criticism, the House voted to strip protectlonotthep.tlenfscoolldenurtlt,.- toning and Mg with a new economic
from the massive $587 billion spending bill a proposed 3 Earlier this year, the CIA issued a special testing three specific groups, according to tion of assets as corporations and investors
percent pay hike for congressmen, federal judges and alert to its spies in 15 countries, warning the internal reportr raise the cash they need by selling their
top federal executives. them to be more careful about their sexual “1. Applicants for employment: stocks. Nearly a trillion dollars of net worth
In the face of mounting federal debt and deficit spen- contacts — whether recreational or on-the- “2. Employees and dependents over age 18 evaporated In the stock market's plunge
dine lawmakers were severely eritieived for nrnnnsine Job ~ wlU?lndividuals who mi8ht have the who have physical examinations for official from the end of August to late October Any
,, e e severely crilicizea tor proposing disease. The countries of highest risk were purposes (such as posting abroad); massive selloff to raise cash would, of
the pay raise. However, other federal workers may get a identified as Haiti, France, Italy, the United “3. Those recommended by a staff physi- course, send stock prices skidding again,
raise, although it may be cut to 2 percent before a final Kingdom, West Germany, the Central dan — (such as) persons who received trans- Bankruptcies would mushroom, as the plum-
version of the bill is ready for consideration. African Republic, Congo, Ivory Coast, fusions of blood products in the period 1978 to meting value of assets used as collateral
Despite opposition from most Republicans the House Kenya> Rwanda, Tanzania, Uganda, Zaire, the spring of 1985, hemophiliacs and selected would force banks to call in their loans.
The CIA has established a “protocol” or MINI EpiTORIAL — Onceagainlt^been
CIA’s Office of Medical Services, which set of administrative courtesies that are ex- dei?,onst.rat^ °lat .P®11*}0® ls
reveals that the agency “began routinely tended to individuals “who have a confirmed tauten oroteee of
At the outset, the House voted 236-177 to bring the testing” employees and job applicants last positive test” to the AIDS virus, now known P'rr’J"* was first
spending bill in line with the $76 billion, two-year deficit- n^ba,vejH canned. Pravda editor Viktor Afanasyev told
reduction accord between congressional leaders and S ^ a group of visiting American editor not to
t,_. j , D „ for the presence of antibodies to the AIDS directly by an agency physician, and the v * . ____., „
President Reagan. virus, which is easier than detecting the information will remain medically confi- «»artJli8ThP
The Senate IS expected to alter the measure to reflect Virus itself. dential, ” the report states, adding: Job in (where he started KThe
increases in military and foreign aid expenditures and a The first procedure is a blood test called “Applicants testing positive will be a T!?
reduction in domestic program outlays. ELISA, for Enzyme-Linked Immunosorbent counseled but disqualified from agency g P PJ . .
Environmentalists won a point when the House £ee ^ereBtor VS&" his new job; first deputy chairman o? the
amended the spending bill requiring a delay of eight gf use<i -should the Western bm read coaling and Kr medical e^Sion !Z
months instead Of 19 the threat Of economic sanctions positive, a second blood sample is drawn and will be made available. Depending upon the ^ ne\er n t
against cities failing to meet clean air standards, in- the entire three-step procedure is repeated,” state of HIV infection, overseas assignability da ng
eluding Houston. the internal CIA report states. would be limited as appropriate.” t>riM»VmiAtukiwria*tD*r‘$*ary
The huge spending bill covers virtually all govern-
ment operations in fiscal 1988, which began Oct. 1.
Military and domestic spending, which under normal
procedure is governed by 13 separate bills, was put into
a single bill.
The legislation prods Congress to meet its deficit-
cutting target, but it may have to go through the mill
again if President Reagan is not satisfied the measure
contains most of the compromises he reached with con-
gressional leaders.
Spending bill's
fate uncertain
The spy agency’s medical officers are nightmare: the prospective massive liquida-
W
ar
Sc
Ai
approved the spending measure, 248-170, and sent it to
the Senate amid reports President Reagan may veto it
because of attached controversies.
We’ve obtained an internal report by the
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Today in history
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Two hundred years ago, on
Dec 10, 1787, Thortias H:.
Gallaudet, a pioneer of
educating the deaf, was born in
Philadelphia. In his lifetime.
Gallaudet devoted himself to
learning techniques for teaching
the hearing-impaired, and open-
ed the first American schools for
the deaf in 1817. GaJIaduet - for
whom Gallaudet College in
Washington, D C., is named —
died ip Hartford, Conn., In 1851.
On this date:
In 1520, Martin Luther publicly
burned the papal edict deman-
ding that he recant or face ex-' ‘
communication.
In 1817, Mississippi was admit-
ted to the Union as the 20th state.
In 1830, poet Emily Dickinson
was born in Amherst, Mass
In 1869, women were granted
the right to vote in the Wyoming
Territory
In 1898, a treaty was signed in
"Paris officially ending the
Spanish-Americai
s>
A,1st
\
Brian
Herna
Bobby
Tomrr
Alan 1
Murra
Picou.
Rami
Adriai
From Sun files
s
* e
*
f
f
Causey promoted to
commander in 1967
1
i
k
o<5>
e
ner.
0
Rodrij
From The Baytown Sun files, the store’s toy department,
this is the way it was: Around Town: Jenny Richards
55 YEARS AGO excited about the new cafeteria
Sam Tanner, Baytown boxing plans.at Lee College ... Art
promoter, announces plans for League members have paintings
the next fights here. The on display at the Contemporary
schedule includes local star Ed Art Museum in Houston.
Dunaway meeting Mickey Mc-
Clure of South Dakota. Other
o
Also
o
Ph^
shead,
Single)
Swindi
Jadloc
fward
Patric
and Mi
• * “ ■
20 YEARS AGO
JA
Bruce Causey Jr. is promoted
events will be between Battling (0 commander in the Navy. Sta-
Bobo of Baytown and Promise tioned in Philadelphia, he serves
Green of Goose Creek, Chuck as assistant for - international
Baker of Barbers Hill and Frank logistics in the weapons system m
Harris of Alabama, Kid Zamora division,
and Kid Gilbert, both of
Baytown.
'TYSWfWNS
It| th
••avvv^tjiaaMMarasa -A'-Vik.- tyvan
resident Theodore test R
Roosevelt became the first m,rs
American to be awarded the ■ [ lsa
Nobel Peace Prize, for helping to jy avf^
mediate an end to the Russo poetrv
Japanese War. p|ace
In 1920. President Woodrow Sanger
Wilson received the Nobel Peace |n poet
Prize. took se
In 1931, Jane Addams was
named a co-recipient of the
Nobel Peace Prize, the first
American woman so honored.
In 1948, the United Nations
General Assembly adopted its
Declaration on Human Rights.
In 1950, Ralph J. Bunche was
presented the Nobel Peace
Prize, the first black American
to receive the award.
In- 1958, the first domestic
passenger jet flight took place in
the U.S. as a National Airlines
three times last summer after contaminants either' New Jersey, shore in 1986, although all were Boeing 707 flew 111 passengers
Lee College gets a $73,000 washed ashore or elevated bacteria counts in the relatively brief and involved limited areas. from ^ York to Miami in
_ST about two and a-half hours. *
Ocean pollution is hardly unknown elsewhere in . — tn nut? singer Otis Reddina
the country Until recently, the sludge that remain- TOQdy, the Only U.b, lQCSlltieS jn crash of his private
ed after sewage wastes were processed in Los that ctill ratnilarlv Hicnnct* nf
Angeles was piped seven miles offshore, then, , . C1111 regUldny aibpVbC UI
their untreated waste at sea
are New York City, seven su-
burban counties in New York
Robert Walters
Robert E. Lee High School stu-
dent Jane Parker is named a
winner in the National Council of
W.K. Robbins files as a can-
didate for the Goose Creek City Teacher of English Achievement
Commission position. Awards competition. Iris Harr-
ington, also a student at REL, is
Sea of garbage
v
% -
50 YEARS AGO
Ten families are selected to a runner-up.
occupy the first homes com-
Serving on a capital im-
pleted in the Sam Houston Farm provements committee for the
Project at Highlands. Marvin L. city are Theo Wjlburn, Tillman
Rees, project engineer, expects O’Brien Sr., Gentry Hathaway,
all 64 units will be occupied in Harry Massey, Robert P. Kerr,
time for spring planting.
The
area I
Countv
■“Mm
magazi
Colum
Assoc i;
The Mi
on the 1
excella
magazi
Ange
editor!
of "Mil
staff w
SEASIDE PARK, hftj. — The summer of ’87 is York City, seven suburban counties in New York
only a memory now irfthis resort community — but and, New Jersey, and three New Jersey com-
the recollections of those warmer days cannot fade munities
fast enough for the owners of motels, restaurants
and other seasonal businesses here.
“It was the worst disaster that ever happened to N J., group seeking to halt the practice. “Twenty
us here in 20 years,” says motel operator June Bor- million tons of contaminanted . . waste are
ton. “We can’t go through another summer like dumped within 15 miles of our coast each year.”
Those wastes have devastated ocean fishing
Barton’s dismay is directly attributable to Atlan- grounds and now are migrating' to ,the coast, rals-
man andO.T. Manning, commis-J Frederick €. Brandt of tic Ocean pollution so severe that state and Ideal ing fecal coiiform bacteria counts to dangerously
Highlands is serving in the Army public health officials closed the beaches here high levels. There were 12 beach closings alopg the
in Vietnam.
“New Jersey is the ocean dumping capital of the
world,” says Clean Ocean Action, a Sea Bright,
T.L. “Doc” Satterwhite, J.
Bryan Stratton, Jack Saunders,
H. Frank Goss is re-elected W.D. Hinson, Norman Foote,
chairman of the East Harris Thelma Sanders, E.C. “Jack”
County Boy Scout District. Kimmons, Bill Strickler, W.L. that.”
William F. White is vice chair- “Dub” Ward and Allen Rice.
40 YEARS AGO
sioner.
30 YEARS AGO
Students of the Cerebral Palsy
Center are guests of Sears grant from the Moody Founda- water to dangerous levels
Manager V.V. Wright on a trip to tion of Galveston.
missior
Februa
Submit
conside
Great
for the 1
' Eddy
Alva Jo
Grimsl
Riley,
Willia
plane in Wisconsin. He was 26.
In 1975, Yelena Bonner, wife of
Soviet dissident Andrei
Sakharov, accepted her hus-
band’s Nobel Peace Prize.
In 1984, South African Bishop
Desmond Tutu received his
Nobel Peace Prize.
Ten years ago: Angry farmers
drove their tractors in a caravan
through Washington, threaten-
ing a strike unless the Carter ad-
ministration backed their
demands for 100-percent parity.;
This year, however, the number of closings in- Five years ago: NATO foreign
designated to receive a different material such as creased and one was especially memorable: In ministers meeting in Brussels,
sewage sludge, dredge spoils, acid wastes, in- August, a 50-mile-long garbage slick came ashore, Belgium, issued a communique
cinerator ash and industrial chemicals. ^ depositing human tissue, hypodermic syringes and saying the Western alliance was
Every weekday, barges dump 28 tons of sewage other forms of hospital waste. ready to respond to Soviet in-
residue and other forms of waste at one site 12 Vacationers fled oceanside communities. At the itiatives for improved relations,
miles from shore. Large portions of the ocean floor Charlroy Motel here, owned by June and Chuck provided Moscow produce^
are totally covered with sludge. At one such die, Borton and another couple, reservations for 100 “tangible evidence” of Its inten-
the ocean itself is dead and can no longer support
Then shall thy light break
forth as the morning, and thine
health shall spring forth speedi-
ly: and they righteousness shall
go before thee: the glory of the
Lord shall be thy reward.
Bible
released into the Pacific Ocean.
In Boston, raw sewage and human waste that
have been treated only slightly are dumped into
the Atlantic. In Seattle, five of six sewage handling
plants provide only minimal treatment for wastes a[}(j New Jersey and three
then released into open waters. .. , *'•* ...
New Jersey communities.
i(New Jersey is the ocean
dumping capital of the world,
verse
tj-
Isaiah 58:8
t
But nowhere is the problem as severe as in the
New York Bight — a vast expanse of ocean off the
nation’s most densely populated metropolitan
area. It roughly includes the portion of the Atlantic
Editor ond publisher that lies both south of Long Island and east of New ca uc Cl pan CiCPUT) Action
Editor and publisher, 1950 1974 Jersey. ^
The 1
formed
pantom
parents
Theat
Rober
monolof
“‘Daug
student;
Leslie
duet see
Derrii
William
from -
Gobert
formed
God”
Angella
scene fn
Theati
origins
Eilzabel
Clndl P<
ft fate
Tryout I
Candl
Cljr $aj>toUm ^>mn
Leon Brown.
Fred Hartman
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Each of a half-dozen offshore dump sites is
Wanda Orton
Bruce Guynn
.........Managing editor
Associate monoging editor
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
Russell Moroney
Janie Halter
Advertising manager
. . Classified manager
CIRCULATION
Circulation manager
Gary Dobbs
PRODUCTION
room nights were canceled in August, following 62 tions.
cancellations In July and 12 in June. One year ago:
.. . . ..... _ , , . I know motel owners who now are taking In vlvor Elie Wiesel. a human
disposal of sewage will continue Beginning next wel/are clients . . to earn enough money to pay rights advocate, accepted the
year, the dumping will be transferred to a new site their mortgages, ’’ says June Borton, who aghast at 1** Nobel Peace Prize, saying
H Au»liesJ!! , , ,..., the primitive practice of "dumping raw garbage the honor belonged to all sur-
Ti» Anocmeii '»io fh# uu io» »oon» mwi oi,' AlUKllUn A Ii72 IMAfAl 1AW prOntDitAu 0C6AH into Ul€ OCCAfl. VlVOTi Of tlM NAXl dAAth CARipi
,* <^.i»<>•***< "^upw***•we''•"a* waworw*,. »««ik*iiih«!Wn,'k.^<ii>f.tiK4MKa>lw< dumping everywhere in the country, the New York Nothin that "a hurricane nniv laata a taw rUv« and their children
^ whara tha nractica dates back to the llSOs) but this could go on for years,“ Borton uys she and Today’s birthdays: Actress
are fed up. “We're so disgusted, we re Dorothy Lamour Is 73, Actor
Harold Gould Is 64 Actress
Press room foremort
Composing room foremon Aliy form Of life.
Buddy Jones ...............
Lynne Morris ................ 7............
The Baytown Sun (USPS 046 >60) n entarad at second dost mott* at ih* Boytown Teaat Post Office 77%22
^mdet the Act of Congress of Morch 3, 1879 Published afternoons Monday through Fndoy and Sundays at 1301
frtimoT y-f—77510 Suggested Sublcription Rotes By cornet 5550 pe* t
v#or single copy pnee 25 cents Doily 50 cents Sunday Mail rates on feguest Repre«ented notidnotty by CooHo
POSTMASTIB Senrfaddtess t Ranges to TMf BAYTQWN SUN PO Bo. 90 Boytuwr T. 7752V
: Holocaust sur-
That site now is being phased out — but the open
aareNmt
I>«*y Is 35
i.
n
i
..........- -
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Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 66, No. 35, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 10, 1987, newspaper, December 10, 1987; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1153075/m1/4/?q=Homecoming+queen+1966+North+Texas+State+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.