The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 16, 1967 Page: 4 of 22
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County Airport Study Begun None Too Soon
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Federal Bills Aimed at Pollution of Streams
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By BOB CONSIDINE
their old
of the food be-
person My assignment
cover the activities of pn
ition. I lived like a lord.
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advanced with urbanization in Orange County to
profit by the mistakes at other areas which already
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THE OFFBEAT NEWSBEAT ...
Columnist Makes List
Ki
4
v
. is cod)
coddle
*(
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ffhtine there on the side of the
But next June it will be 14
years since the last shot was
fired in Korea and we still have
agencies of government to make and keep this a
model urban county.
I
sphovadeb
in his
Leedy to
Of Experiences Missed
’ By HAL BOYLE
02
e .163
J
smell of peace in Vietnam.
The remainder of the White
at w. Erem
Jam*
YOUR HOROSCOPE ...
The Stars Say
i
The third would encourage federal as-
sistance to state, local and other govern-
They’re communicating and exploring ways and
means of improving their services and lowering
their costs through cooperation.
The county government has come to recognize
its proper role in the scheme of local government
and is facing up to its responsibilities, including
cooperation with the other entities.
The drainage district is beginning to operate
within the framework of the public policy which
was the basis for its crestion. This was evidenced
in the recent agreement pertaining to delineation of
responsibility for drainage work within the City of
Orange.
Another tangible result of the new spiri ot co-
operatiom between our local agencies of gov-
ernment will begin to pay off for the taxpayers
this year.
That is the arrangement under which the City of
Orange, the Orange Independent School District,
the county government, and perhaps one or more
other agencies will consolidate a part of their tax
office and tax appraisal work.
use byaircraft other than those of the air-
port’s owner has warded off the development
of an organized demand for a public facility
Put 15 pennies Into the fare
box ater ■ '^$1 - tf.al.aUaa
bus driver a
Leedy's
fective <x
r v
..4
thing will happen to you.
But I’ve been standing on the
street corners of life for half a
century, staring at the shop
windows of eternity, and have
never yet-
Danced a polka with Queen
Elizabeth.
Taken a Turkish bath in
Sweden. • '. ’
Learned to play chess.
Drawn a mustache and a
beard on a public poster at
Sophia Loren.
Gone fc- a walk atop the third
rail at the subway.
Tasted manna.
and send you a cable of con-
gratulations. The only time I
really got in bad with him was
in 1902 when I thought I was
doing the papers a favor by
commandeering a runabout and
chasing william K. Vanderbilt
and his bride across Paris from
Gone to a cocktail party on
time or left it when it was,
supposed to be through.
tury when I was James Gor-
don Bennett’s man in Paris and
FOR TOMORROW
Planetary influences will be somewhat adverse
on Friday — especially where personal matters
are concerned. Inauspicious stars could bring dis-
appointment or frustration in heart affairs and, un-
less you are careful, relationships with even the
most intimate at friends could become strained.
Tact!
FOR THE BIRTHDAY
If tomorrow is your birthday, this now year in
your life promises important gains If you exercise
initiative and are willing to forego some immediate
personal desires In the interest of more lasting
benefits. Both job and financial advancement are
indicated between now and April 15; also in mid-
July, early October and the three months begin-
ning with January, 1968. Special recognition for
creative workers — end Aquarius boasts many —
is due in June, September and next January.
If you are matrimonially-minded, you may, even
unexpectedly, wend your way to the altar in April,
August, late October or late December. Don’t con-
sider the "romances" of June or September too se-
riously, however. Family and home interests will
be governed by generous influences for most of the
year ahead, but be alert to possible tension - and
resultant friction — between early November and
mid Deember. Best periods for travel and social
activities: The weeks between June 1 and Sept. 15,
late October and late Decembers
A child born on this day will be warmhearted
and generous, extremely gregarious.
< Bill Mover, closing. Ms desk London. ^Beheveme, I wm t0
______ of prominent
Americana who came to Eu-
rope. My stories appeared si-
multeaneously in Bennett’s New
York Tribune and the Paris ed-
have undergone this kind of a trapsition and by
avoiding such blunders make this county what it
can and should be from the standpoint of livability.
• There will be no lack of economic resources for .
NlisBe
gde
2299g
022*
True Life Adventures1
E Ee MEkdT 3 x
- THE ORANGE LEADER
rvMWW week Oen M sondoy Mormne
ore Ledu puememea te. ime
doing that. There will be no lack of human re-
sources. Failure can result only from unwise or im-
proper use of the tools of local government.
And no matter how well equipped with good
tools the various segments of local government
may be, optimum use cannot be made of them un-
less there is close liaison and a high degree of co-
operation between the various agencies.
We are now moving in that direction with good
results and every reason for expecting even better
results in the future.
An outstanding example ofchisisthe extent
to which the varlous school dietricts are working
together in an effort to improve their programs
of education.
This, more than anything else, will serve to
brjak down the barriers currently preventing total
equalization of educational opportunities for Orange
County’s children.
It also will lead eventually to the establishment
in the county of a badly needed new educational
resource — a community college
There also has been noteworthy improvement in
relations and the measure of cooperation between
city governments in the county. . <
--
ON THE LINE . .
South Korea America9s
Best Showcase in Asui
Hr FUFF OF VueT a
... IA‘o, ‘4.21 4 A a A
A.
I
—---------------i------------------------------
THESE DAYS ...
Queer Pictures Emerge From China Unfacts
By JOHN CHAMBERLAIN
Three bills aimed at giving the federal assist and encourage industry to assume its
government broader powers over pollution responsibilities for preventing waste pollu-
control on the nation’s navigable waterways tionby properly treating its wastes."
have been introduced in Congress.
. Single Persons Finding
Ta x Situation Burdensome
For those of us who man its news beats one of
the most gratifying changes on the Orange County
scene in recent years has been the improvement in
relations between its various agencies of local
government -
This is highly important for many reasons. Prob-
ably the most significant of these is that it can be
extremely helpful in making Orange County a model
urban community.
There is no longer any questioning of the fact
that within a few years this county will be wall-to-
wall with industrial plants, business concerns and
neighborhoods. g *
We,who are familiar with other areas of the
country where that already has happened find the
prospects for it here to be both frightening and
challenging
K’s frightening because without close coopera-
Mon between capably administered local agencies
of government there will be somewhat less la the
way of human benefits from the current program
of economic development than we have a right to
expect. .. .
Arthur
and depu
Sty of 0
become a
ange Cou
- mre1i
Promised a red-haired girl to
show her the Taj Mahal by
moonlight.
Performed a tonsillectomy oa' < 29
a hippopotamus or fitted an alli-
gator with dentures.
L* V
•)
NEW YORK (AP) - A single
person with a taxable income of
$6,000 will pay $180 more in fed-
eral income tax this April than
a married couple will pay on the
same amount.
This situation has persisted
since the late 1940s despite the
inability of anyone to convince
the single taxpayer that it is
fair. To him, it amounts to a
subsity of marriages and
babies.
ing raised in China. They are
also demanding more land for
their private plots.
The sin of "economism," for-
sooth! Peasants who still be-
lieve in Mao are reported to
have gone into the cities to help
the cultural revolution. Well,
bow do you do your spring plant-
ing while demonstrating in Pe-
king?
■a
couple gets an automatic deduc-
lion of ,200,or $600 more than
the single person.
How did this situation devel-
op? .
In, the 1940s nine states had
laws, upheld later in the courts,
that said earned income and
property income belonged
equally to the husband and the
wife. More states made plans to
of building an airport for even the smaller
jet planes and providing It with the instru-
mentation necessary to make it serviceable
for all-weather use is quite high.
This naturally brings us to the point in
time when thought must be given to the
desirability and feasibility of a county air-
port, built and operated with public funds
and adequate for the jet age.
That is why representatives of the
Greater Orange Area Chamber of Commerce
aviation committee appeared before the Or-
ange County Commissioners Court with a
request that a study of the prospects for con-
sructing such an- airport be undertaken.
• 4 TM most nimMediate concern of the avia-
tion committee, as its spokesman pointed out,
1 ■
House staff must have head
colds. They pickup only the
stale spoor of rebuff, see no
victory in the classic meaning
ol.
to pay, according to the official
charts., a tax of $1,380. On this
same income the single taxpay-
er will pay $1,630, or $250 more.
At a taxable income of $24,000
this differences reaches a peak
QUOTABLE:
"The size of a man can be
measured by the site of the
things that make him angry."
—christopher Morley.
in percentage. At that figure the
married taxpayer pays $,560.
The single taxpayer pays $8,030,
or $3,470 or 29.8 per cent more.
Tax authorities now note that
there are many more workeri
in the $6,000 or higher catego-
spired press agent for some 300
Broadway plays, including "My
Fair Lad" and “Annie Get
Your Gun" retired at the age
of 78. At least be says be has.
White Way wiseacres are of-
fering 4 to 1 he’ll be back with
a fresh supply of the purple
prose that made him famous.
The equally renowned Broad-
way gaztee, Sam Zolotow, has
culled a typical bit of Maney
--9
My good friend Albert Ste-
vens Crockett, 93-year-old dean
of the Overseas Press Club’s
treasury of correspondents told
me over a cognac at the Jose-
phine Baird Home, where he is
in comfortable residence, that
he has had some most satisfy-
ing dreams of late. '
"I’ve been dreaming of the
happiest period of my life, the
time around the turn of the cen-
NEp.XORK (Spl) - People
Attended any function requir-
ing the wearing of white tie and
black tails.
Given advice to LBJ.
Traded diet secrets with Eliz-
abeth Taylor Burton.
Cooked a steak over charcoal.
Seen the little man that isn’t
there.
Ridden the rods on a freight
train. )
Headed off the rustlers at Ea-
gle Pass.
Figured out the new arithme-
tic.
Been weighed and found
wanting.
Taken snuff or smoked mar-
Juana.
Heard a Wagnerian opera all
the way through.
Shot an arrow into the air and
let it fan to earth I knew not
where.
Had a suspicious French hus-
band slap me in the face with
a glove and challenge me to a
duel at dawn.
Eaten a hamburger to the
House of Lords.
Hummed s hymn in the death
house st Sing Stag.
Read every word in the Long
blind Rall k 1 timetable.
The Orange LEADER
EDITORIAL PAGE
’ .’ - . ’ j , THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1967
struction of such a facility but of course a
substantial amount of local money would be
required. t.
On that point a word of caution is in
order. Federal Aviation Agency require-
ments with respect to matching funds for air-
port improvements can get the local sponsor
into very hot water unless these demands
are anticipated and provisions for compliance
made in advance. ; ...
Finally, it appears to be inevitable that at
some future date an international airport to
be built and operated by a regional airport
authority is going to be needed.
This is a point that also might well be
taken into consideration during the airport
study which the Orange County Government
is about to undertake.
In conclusion, let us add that in our
opinion this investigation is not beginning a
minute too soon.. we are definitely moving
toward a point of crisis in the aviation aspect
of our county’s development and the sooner
we begin to deal with it the easier it will be
to stave off.
ots. ' ..; .. .
A married taxpayer with $8
000 taxable income is schedule
if you apply logic to the inter-
pretation of unfacts off the non-
bottom, you
picture. The
mental units for the establishment of drain-
age basin agencies for comprehensive
pollution control planning.
All of this proposed legislation is further
evidence of the fact that unless state and
local agencies, joined by private enterprise,
exercise their responsibilities with respect to
the prevention of pollution of navigable
streams, the federal government is going to
move in on the problem full force.
aw. e. e. Box mi. or«M rnm not
S Mter- resnden nd Awniiw
giving a Manhattan
______a dollar bill and get-
ting 20nickels back to change.
Read a poem attacking infla-
tion at the Inauguration 0 a Re-
poblican president.
Back in the 19th Century a
tourist asked a missionary to
give him the “bottom.facts5’ on
China. The answer the tourist
got was “there is no bottom in
China and there are no facts.”
Reading the news that comes
out of China via, the Peking
variety of graffiti, or wall-writ-
ing, as transmitted by Japanese
correspondents who can read
Chinese ideograms but may for-
get that' these have taken on
different meanings over the cen-
turies in Japan, one thinks of
the old missionary. Neverthe-
less, the amateur Chinawatcher
must try. •
50,000 troops there. President
Park, the strongest of the new
crop of young Asian leaders,
would like to see U.S. troops
remain until 1978. All of which
makes more comprehensible the
prediction of Sir. Robert Thomp-
son, who straightened things
out for the British in Malaya, auentlv
that the United States will have
to bolster the Saigon govern-
ment for perhaps 20 years af-
ter peace breaks out.
then. Anyway. I got a tough
break. Vanderbilt turned Into a
side road when we hit Passy.
It was getting dark and conse-
I had to break off the
. Orange County has been extremely fortu- is the Met that industrial executives are
nate in having available for public use the * making more and more use of jet planes and
....... " " ,J the nearest point at which they can land in
this area is Jefferson County Airport.
Unquestionably, the existence of a jet-age
airport somewhere near the Orange County
industrial complex would be immensely
helpful to our future economic development.
Federal assistance is available for con-
COLDWATER, KAN., STAR: “Food for peace
is a grand-sounding designation tor a government
program, but when the program is used Indirectly
to toed our avowed enemies the people of the United
States may not think it is so grand. Communism
Is a society which can keep Ito people from starv-
ing only with aid from the freedom countries."
of that type.
And the county certainly owes Brown a
vote of thanks for the service he has pro-
vided with his airport. At the same time, it
must be remembered that the facility was
designed and builffor propeller-driven air-
craft and they are rapidly becoming a thing
of the past. ...
It also must be remembered that the cost
5 ■; I
present law was passed, and
that it can be argued that the
present tax setup is thus becom-
ing more discriminatory.
In answer to the argument
that a married couple is entitled ,
to a tax break they draw atten-
tion to the fact that a married
Saved a banker's blue-eyed
daughter from being hoofed
down by a runaway horse.
HM mprudoehihmadby an
editor who was also abl to
"iAhapnxaisintngtrompre.
stive that was worth carrying to
A pawnshop
"iyguwaht to know what Yep, they say if you just keep
yourwteggengtoqyoD. oin everythin hw“ “
Sanay"tumn"t"ngdoh ‘Buwhent
NEW YORK (AP)-They say Ridden an elephant in a circus
if you just keep living every- ’ parade.
Rented a Rolls-Royce tor a
weekend.
"Why did you stop just be-
cause it was getting dark?” I
asked.
The grand old man at jour-
nalism eyed me impatiently.
"To light my wicks," he
snapped. "I felt bad about toe-
ing Vanderbilt but worse when
Bennett chewed me out by ca-
ble for badgering his friend.
Bennett badgered everybody but
his friends were afways off
limits. He was the only dic-
tator I ever admired.
"It’s nice to meet him again
in my dreams . . "
—Moyer-. __-
at the White House, told Jimmy
Breslin that he sensed a sweet
I
d.‛
69,2
8
One of these would amend the Clean
Water Restoration Act of 1966 which pro-
hibited the dumping of oil from vessels and
ships into navigable waters.
The amendment would extend the pro-
hibition to sewage and refuse. It also would
make it a federal offense for shore installa-
tions and terminal facilities to dump oil,
sewage and refuse into navigable streams. *
Another of the proposed bills would pro-
vide a program of economic incentives “to
serAe"N"NY
Zvh
from the files. It wss
‛s fray of announcing Tal-
3ankhead‛s first forsy into
toe (ia 1953). "Tallulah
the Gare Nord. Then he had
given me a rude brushoff when
I tried to interview Mm, at
their honeymoon hideout in
Passy.
“The sight at two automobiles
so etore together was asensa-
tion in those dsys. The people
of Ports came to their curbs
to see us streak by. — linen
dusters flowing. I understand
Paris traffic has changed since
rather light candles than curse
the darkness.”
“I often quote myself. It adds
spire to my conversation.'’ —
Bernard Shaw. • .
It’s challenging because we are not yet too far All this is very heartening and we hope to see
* - - - — - -- . more and more joint efforts on the part of our local
gin work
nesday, 1
Fred For
8-."
infinitely more stable today than
South Vietnam can hope to be
at a comparable stage in its
post-war history. Its people are
tougher and more dilligent. Its
army is so rough that the Viet
Cong, the North Vietnam infif-
trators and the guerrillas are
warned by their commanders to
steer clear of the Korean units
get a very queer
________reporters for gov-
ernment radio and official news-
■ private airport constructed soon after World
’ War II by Edgar Brown Jr.
For almost two decades its availability for
11 --- -..... ..... ... -
Bankhead, as tearless s woman
as ever throttled s metaphor,
jng a qualm. She will
_____t up to and through next
Saturday night, at which Uma
she wil know whether she’s
been harboring a hand grenade
_____By BENNETT CERF
Maney, mercurial and in- or caressing the Kohinoor dia-
mond. Decoded, this means that
as of 9:01 on thst evening her
bones, her intuition and other
voodoo telegraphy accessible
only to postgraduate sibyls will
have cued her into a verdict.
Either she and television will
SSwS&SSF
large to spread the cultural
word be able to dominate 600
million peasants? One is re-
minded of the taunts flung st
the invading Nazis by the Nor-
wegian peasants: 'The files
have conquered the fly paper.”
By the admission of Mao’s ’
own radio, the peasants have
been making use at the present
chaos to appropriate more than
ve)
,oy52z8
..™, .. . .... .....—-t, . "He was a tyrant, Bernett.
of the word, no prospeck of But if you produced for him,
" . _ he’d give you the honor of a by-
line — rare in those days -
papers tell about Maoists" re-
aking one after another the
positions at power held by a
handful of party people taking
the capitalist road."
Query: how could a "handful"
surreptitiously seize and hold so
many positions needing to be
“retaken”? The broadcasters
and the official newspapers may
or may not be saying more by
their silence than by what they
choose to say or print. Who
knows?
One at the few real “facts”
that can be scraped off the
“bottom’’ is that China is a
peasant economy. Mao Tse-tung
prided himself on his "agra-
ian" revolution. But now, by
the tacit admission of Radio
Peking and the Peking People’s
Daily, it is the “agrarians" who
are rebelling against Mao.
Instead at the peasants follow-.
ing the precepts of "Mao-think,"
it is the Red Guardists out of
the cities which they have
adopted who constitute the Mao
cadres. There are a lot of Red
Guardists, but most of them are
supposed to go back to school
after the observance of the lu-
nar New Year.
Will the handful that is still at
ACROSS THE EDITOR’S DESK...
Local Governments Are Now Working Together
" 'fftft psunskowr: •
According to one unfact from
the non-bottom, Liu Shao-chi,
the. President of China who ei-
ther did or did not mean it
when be confessed to error, is
(a) under house arrest or (b) *
has been dedoseds
But the official Maoist press
makes Lu out to be a tremen-
dously powerful "class enemy"
who (a) is able to signal to the
peasants to stop planting crops
and (b) is in a position to stage
either a palace revolution or
pull oil an armed coup.
How can you be such a men-
ace when you are under house
arrest, yet? Maybe nobody
dares touch Liu for fear of en:
raging powerful generals. If
this is a fact and not an un-
fact, then who is running
China? .
------
: Momint of Meditation oo
... to 48; ‘
--—-----—----
THE BUSINESS MIRROR ...
05a -*22
MEMSER ASSOCIATED PRESS
"arm"-"-** *."*
sunscmipnioN nares
r er - vi a 3 e x
telepHONES:
omace ome «m crenate --------—ru aam
cireudetnen Dmortmem ---------—TV aea
So2,08083e"mr22 9 “ **** do"
443 -------------
■ __0
Madison Square Garden habi-
tues swear that one evening a
traffic cop came to see The
Knicks play the Celtics in bas-
ketball and fell sound asleep as
the Celtics pulled into a com-
manding lead. Late in the final
quarter the referee New a long
blast on his whistle. The cop
woke up, rushed out onto the
court, and started directing traf-
fic.
194c9
780
“35
■. -' __ /
Moreover, some single per-
sons sre finding the situation
becoming more burdensome.
The higher the Income the wider
is the payment disparity. And
more Americans are working up ------------------------
into these higher income brack- copy these laws.
V What did this mean? Well,
look st your Income tax sched-
ule of rates. It is progressive.
More, proportionately, is taken,
from an $8,000 income —a bit
more than 20 per cent—than
from a $6,000 income—about 19
per cent. The tax take esca-
lates.
So, the single taxpayer ‘with
$8,000 taxable income must pay
Under these state laws, how-
ever, the married taxpayer
-3 could divide his $8,000 income
_ ™ - .gu: catego- into two $4,000 incomes, one for
ries than in 1048, when the Mm and one for his wife.
there are
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The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 41, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 16, 1967, newspaper, February 16, 1967; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1531233/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.