Baytown Briefs (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 08, Ed. 1, August 1974 Page: 4 of 8
eight pages : ill. ; page 14 x 10 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Boy town Briefs • August, 1974
4
EXPANSION
- - Continued From Page 1
F
8gje
Twwv
3
ES
9
c
5
t
I
t
'. —cu
l
/
--4
n
{
These Have Retired
i
Donnie L. Garey
L
V
C
r-^l.
Y, ,
William II. Powers
16441
-
ea
1
)
1
Shown above arc Refinery Manager Jo Graves, IBEW Representative
Art Brandon, Bob Evans (of Exxon Engineering), and BEF President
Ronnie Cornelius.
come in, of course. We arc for-
tunate at Baytown to have dedi-
cated and skilled employees to
a
X
. )
Exxon USA Refining Vice President Fred Dennstedt discusses project
with GCIWU Outgoing President Ed Laza, ER&E Manager Bob Ep-
perly, and GCIWU Business Agent Pete Brewer.
N
D
Hiram C. Lensing
Hiram C. Lensing, mechanical
craftsman. Refinery Maintenance
and Construction Division. Em-
ployed 5-29-47.
Sidney W. Kelley
Sidney W. Kelley, process tech-
nician, Refinery Operating Ser-
vices, Oil Movements. Employed
6-9-42.
Charles P. Zarsky
Charles P. Zarsky, mechanical
craftsman, Refinery Maintenance
and Construction Division. Em-
ployed 10-19-4 L
Clyde R. Biggers
Clyde R. Biggers, mechanical
supervisor, Refinery Maintenance
and Construction Division. Em-
ployed 8-19-35.
Earl C. Sampson
m Earl C. Samp-
; $g
bt $
E5207
Woodrow W. Walker
Wood row W.
Walker, mechan-
ical craftsman,
Refinery Mainte-
nance and Con-
st ruction Divis-
ion. Employed 3-
1-39.
(
manage the construction of this
immense project, and to operate
these facilities when they are
g
- ■
_V
U7- sg
9
Herbert L. Hanson
Herbert L. Hanson, electrician, .
Refinery Maintenance and Con-
struction Division. Employed 11-
19-42.
Horace M. Chatham
Horace M. Chatham, mechan-
ical craftsman, Refinery Mainte-
nance and Construction Division.
Employed 5-19-47.
KaiN
N
42
/PusN
Ices
geg-im»d
l gada, y 4
IL-eseeIAAh
9
1 V
25
Syicu 1
B*
4
Paf
•M2
--2
4/417,
15
son, warehouse-
man, Chemical
Plant Elastomers
Operations. Em-
ployed 5-25-42.
Fuels Expansion Project Team members shown above at valve storage
yard arc Houston Schweitzer and Cleon Easley.
—ss gape _
■ mmdddsg r *
fs,
I 80)
-2
Leonard E. Dugat
Leonard E. Du-
gat. packaging
technician, start-
ing, Refinery
Packaging and
Lube Blending
Department. Em-
ployed 4-16-51.
George M. Worthy, Jr.
George M. Worthy, Jr., me-
chanical crafts m a n, Chemical
Plant Mechanical. Employed 9.
16-16. " •
“Pi~
/k 1
9e,a
8243”
(119438
20
{ 3,
5 /
79 4
Plant Northwest
Chemical area.
Employed 5-13-
36.
Lorraine W. Massey
Lorraine W. Massey, staff as-
sistant planner, Refinery Mainte-
nance and Construction Division.
Employed 1-22-37.
Alta G. Partin
Alta G. Partin, senior tele-
phone operator, Refinery General
Services Department. Employed
3-1-51.
Members of the project team shown at a regular weekly meeting are, seated from left, Houston Schweitzer,
Hugh Price, Ed Cocetti, Bert Warren, John Racz (project executive), Al Bordelon, Al Haley, Victor Dias,
and Dr. Ralph Dockendorff. Standing are Lawrence Salge, Woodrow Pruitt, and Chris Newman.
#27999/4
Vzgs
--=2-
Li——35557
=—02.
W illia m H.
Powers, Labora-
tory Supervisor.
Refinery Labora-
tory. Employed
1-2-35.
: A 5208 2985
ANlm2c658ak
--- -—-a Wa-ME-E-TF--
Mayor Tom Gentry looks at drawing displayed at groundbreaking cere-
monies which shows layout of Fuels Expansion Project units.
Robert M. Purvis Samuel B. Cox
Robert M. Purvis, mechanical Samuel B. Cox, process tech-
craftsman, Refinery Maintenance nician. Refinery Operating Ser-
and Construction Division. Em- vices, Oil Movements. Employed
ployed 5-12-36. 8-7-42.
,37’
age
• -31
#. *$*3
( g ’
M
"‘2
V ■" 'x
bA
),5974.%
92-233
Donnie L. Ga-
A rey, process tech-
H nician, Chemical
g2gag, ivoqape
"2um
completed,” he said.
John Racz, fuels expansion
project executive, says some half
a dozen major operating facili-
ties will be constructed in the
expansion project.
These will include a 250,000-
barrel-a-day atmospheric pipe
still, a naphtha reformer, sulfur
removal and recovery units, re-
siduum processing equipment,
and a utilities block that will
supply power and other utilities
for these units.
These facilities will meet all
local, state, and federal air and
water quality standards. In addi-
tion, they will use surface water.
All of the new process facilities
will be located south of Park
Street, Racz says.
The Bay town project repre-
sents a major portion of a na-
lionwide Exxon USA program
of modernization and debottle-
necking to increase the com-
pany’s fuel-processing capabilities
by about 350,000 barrels a day.
1 1
F
9F-2s*ee
32428=*
“435*9-5
#27--95b2*, *
4236,
ahh\4
Ie A
23256852
dyge2s=7=e
Mggge 2
V-i E: 3 dhn < B-e ■ y idH
•mmmusmse 632227*: -.7 Ul a-CN-MMSM-32MSS
Jo Graves greets GCIWU Incoming President Walter Askew and
IAM&AW President Hector Meza at groundbreaking.
E2EASa.. i
V A ; NVN
V ' . 42
H i nin ■ ,
A, ।
iiX /
P' -LL
s
gKF
4, gugua
BRC12y ,
Mak
dME"
d28gmy
w
A'y
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View two places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Lee, O. B. Baytown Briefs (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 22, No. 08, Ed. 1, August 1974, newspaper, August 1974; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1433595/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.