The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 25, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 29, 1981 Page: 2 of 40
forty pages : ill. ; page 18 x 12 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.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:
of 209
I riTf
• VI*
sm£
___ 'Timothy HUe* of 700Vi Aron reported
w_______Morton's vehl Saturday somebody took his 1971
left the roedwsy and struck a fence, Yamaha 100 motorcycle from the park-
j.. - —* ---------- ing lot of the Cltlxens Bank and Trust An-
nex at 319 W. Texas. The bike was green
and was valued at 3600.
btned with anotter her
btckle, called 1,4-D, to
make Agent Orange.
owned by Exxon, and a utility pole, own-
led by Houston Lighting k Power Co.
; Ms. Travis' vehicle also ran off the
•road and flipped over, the officer said.
; Ms. Travis was taken to San Jacinto
Methodist Hospital with bruises and
abrasions, Budd said. A hospital
spokeswoman said she left the hospital,
however, before receiving treatment.
Morton, who police sav also had
{bruises and abrasions, refused medical
MMlML
; A passenger In Morton's vehicle,
{Katherine Gatewood, SO, of 211 W.
'Republic, was taken to Gulf Coast
{Hospital by private vehicle. She was
{treated and released
* Ms. Travis was ticketed for following
itoo closely while Morton received a
{ticket for having no driver’s license,
police said
University of Illinois slstence, so that they
Medical Center in ultimately contaminate
Chicago say they bred a human bodies,” they said,
strain of bacteria that , , r,
— “aSEST’' MontBelvieufiremen
In using up the carbon _
_______jW® Fight Band Hall Blaze
TOPCANDTIatom«of the YMCA football team are, left to right: Scott Ramey, Wch'oropha ^ywetlc MQNT BELVIEU (Sp) at the Gulf Pump Road
Falcons, 12 cases; Steve Gomales, Texans (midget team), five cases; Lewis mlcrobeg degrade the -Shortly after 5 p.m.Frl- dump site.
••Pokey” Hoffman Jr„ Raiders (senior team), eight cases; Ray So^Ungwns, cbemlcal ^ r^,. It day firefighters from the
seven cases; Chad Owens, Raiders (midget team), 11 cases. Not pictured Is Thomas termless, they said. Mont Belvieu Volunteer Cove
Wade, Chargers, 11 cases.
__.... _____ The scientlsU tested the Fire ----
(Photoby Nadine Patterson) mlcrobeg on wU ^ called to a blare at the old
Burglaries
Chambers County
Lloyd Spell of Highlands was critically
■-sSh Tzrr. ss§»
SPfiCTS aswSKs ssssssst gSss9:
®ru iv * s--.»• —“ gssawjw jasssifti
Drl. Anaadi M. draafe.
Chakrabarty, Scott T. a 1973 Bulck was en route
Hrsapsi jssrssa ssssss
injureo in a acciueni r nuay iiiuuuuk. YuIp Parade Rites Pending OddfellOWS Meet terjee developed tne t* 'ZLrjjr~ynl "~wrr~~~r :~a
; Police Investigated several thefts and Spokesman for the Mont Belvieu Am- THE ANNUAL Christmas SERVICES ARE pending ODDFELLOWS LODGE microbes, a strain of the ^oun‘^er‘f in8 *horted out ,nd
{residential burglaries Friday and Satur- balance said(Spell was he ping[to.build a af Paul UHe Funeral No. 960 will host an open bacterium pseudomonas ‘nvestlgaUon. «re the man told
iday house °" ™ “2 Ba7town?Sber of Home for Rosa Leasing, house at 7 p.m. Nov. 30 at cepacia.
\ 'Alvin Ray Beaver of 301 E. Sterling Assembly of God Church when he fell wUl^tart at 6 82, a longtime Baytown the lodge hall, located at In 1978, Chakrabarty Crosby SSltS
reported someone took items from his from a ladder. Tuesdav at Robert resident Mrs Lensing the corner of South Fourth and General Electric Co.
home valued*! more than *500. Taken Mont Belvieu Ambulance transported ^edeariySaturday. and East Humble, became the first to |rnm *)ad5'T
were a rifle, shotgun, revolver, sewing him to Baytown Medical Center • and wH1 end at Members of all units of receive a patent on a man- Firemen f rom the days and that a law en-
raachlne and a border collie puppy. Hospital. He was then transferred by Drive behind Heart Attack the Independent Order of made life form, In that Crosby Volunteer Fire forcement officer waa
: ‘Jerry E. Black, 5109 Ashwood, Life Flight helicopter to Hermann J-ee D nve beh:ind HeanAttaCK oddfellows, their families case, a bacterium that ate Department were called .kind enough to gWe them
:reoorted his wife’s purse was taken from Hospltalin Houston. Memorial stadium, a w.A. McFARLAND is in - oll ~ t0 two small fires enough gasoline to return
i Ms*0home as well as a 1978 light blue S^kesman for Life Flight told The b* ^cr,t^al ^ ticipat? A repre Jntative “Our new microbe also simultaneously Friday. toPasadena
: Bulck Le Sabre, from his driveway. Sun Saturday morning that Spell was gi tennialPk HmJtnn He suffered a of the Bay Area is a type that doesn’t exist Spokesman for the
! -Mikki Hughes reported her red and listed in critical condition. Bicentennial Rehabilitation Center will in nature,” Chakrabarty Crosby fire department
¥r _ ,, _. heart attack luesaay. ak said In a telephone inter- said at noon they received
Kappa Delta Pi View. “The university is a report of a small grass
LAURA NORRIS has Silver WingS Lost Dog applying for a patent on fire on Zetak lane,
been Initiated into Kappa SECOND LT. Michael R. A RED AND WHITE the bug and the process He said a ^dent had
Delta Pi, an honor society Haron has completed his female Siberian husky used to make It, and we been burning trash and
in education at Southwest u. S. Air Force pilot train- has been lost in the East are in the process Of the fire got out of control.
Texas State University. ing and has received his Fayle area. She is wear- negotiating with two
The elementary education silver wings. Haron is the ing a rabies tag with the chemical companies on *J?amage
major is the daughter of son 0f Rose Marie number 326434. Anyone producing the bug.” reported.
ATLANTA (API - In the shadow of ed bv a team of 15 artists who worked on Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Thomason of Chan- knowing her whereabouts The environment has At the same time a call
—---.. ---.u„ knAi«ninrt intone Norris of 122 Caldwell. nelview. is asked to call 422-3551. become polluted with syn- came in about a trash fire
Civil War Still Rages
In Downtown Atlanta
!the downtown skyline, a bloody Civil It fdr 18 months, beginning in 1885.
{War battle rages on In a renovated it was given to the city in 1898 and was _ T
•theater here, returning modern-day moved in the mid-1930s to its current UVerSeaS lour
Rebels and Yankees to the day this city home, a building in Grant Park, where a PVT- DARIA A. Allen, a
! burned 117 years ago. leaky roof damaged the painting. Arid artillery survey com-
• The battle site is Atlanta’s 95-year-old Layers of dust) mold) oil and water Puter °Perator’ has
Zk Jtoptohm fcun
aa mmi dw Mr «T
*r Baytown. fm (Mfc*.
7TSJ0 Uw Art d
Mart* 3. IS*. PnWiekaJ altr
uoowa. Monday tKroMgi Frida,
Sunday* af 1)01 Malarial Drivr m
Baytown. Taiaa. P.O. Box 00.
Baytowa. Texaa. 7WI. -S^arription
Rate* By carritr. B4.2S par atamk.
I-SI .00 per year. Sin*V copy prier: JO
rent* Dad,. 25 ceota Snaday Mad
tinnal by Coaatal PaMirationa.
| Cyclorama - a 9-ton cylindrical pain- m£5eJe cleaned off and more than af!fed a tour af duty at
j ting which depicts the Battle of Atlanta, m holes and tears ranging from tiny West Germany. She is the
ling wnicn uop cu. iuc M hoies and tears, ranging from tmy ” Af ' rZr\*Z
when ^®n. William Tecumseh Sherman imperfections to rips several feet long, Jof! Chariene
{captured the city on his way to the sea. {. reoaired said Robert Jones coor- McNair of Highlands and
: Seated in one of the cushioned chairs, d(nator Jf the restoration project. ’ ?urtis Davis of DuPlessis-
: a visitor is whisked back to a dusty
■ hiiiside on Julv 22 1864 where blue and “u looks really beautiful now,” Jones
!^<^Srrom un- Army Training
dulatfng fields. fha«1 ™ any°ne can ^member in a pvTJ EDWADD;
lot of years.’
Officers ride by on horseback, direc- iot of years. Chandler has completed
{ting the seemingly haphazard battle. The restoration work involves about 14 u. S. Army Infantry basic
{Wisps of cannon smoke rise overhead, artists and is supervised by Gustav training. He is the son of
\ On the horizon is the dome of the Georgia Berger, an Austrian-born expert based Martha N. Trevizo of
Capitol. Kennesaw and Stone mountains in New York. Berger had to develop channelview and James
loom in the distance. ways to move the brittle canvas so it E chandler Sr. of
Add the boom of cannons and the call could be cleaned and restored. Workers Fairland, Okla.
of bugles from a 16-track stereo system, tested equipment and techniques on a
and all that is missing is the odor of the giant model before attempting to move
i gunpowder. the painting itself, Jones said.
The Cyclorama, painted by a team of Cyclorama official Tom Ferguson said
artists in 1886, came close to rotting much of the work “is applying basic
from neglect before city, state and restoration work on a grand scale,
private contributions provided the $9 Gustav is noted for taking unusual pro-
million necessary to restore and jects, things that other people consider
renovate the painting and its building. hopeless.”
The painting, 52 feet high and 400 feet Among the difficulties that had to be ubc. i
in circumference, and its accompanying overcome was the removal of a coat of Dayton School Board,
three-dimensional diorama have been linseed 0il applied to the canvas to pro- school administration
closed to the public since 1978 for the tect it ^ ^orks progress Administra- building in Dayton at 7:30
restoration work. tion artists during the 1930s, Jones said. p.m.
Because the linseed oil and the paint DEC.2
{Zt n?raM anU wm ,reafan“pam- Sad similar compositions, removing the La Porte City Council,
delicate structural work that saved the ficult- he said. Workers test«i a variety DEC. 3
painting already has been completed. of solvents and found one that removed Harris County Commis-
Cycloramas, which usually depict bat- the oil and not the paint. sioners Court, county ad-
tle scenes, were popular in the early When the Cyclorama is reopened, ministration building in
1800s and enjoyed a resurgence shortly visitors will view the cylindrical pain- Houston at 9 a.m.
; after the Civil War, but their popularity ting and the diorama from about four cove City Council, Cove
What, Where
And When
Public meetings for the
week are:
DEC. 1
after tne LIVu war, uui ineir pupuiamy ling anu me ««**« .*»L,uve ^uuiicu, ^uve
suffered with tl|e advent of photography, dozen-theater' seats built on a raised, community Building at
1 . The Atlanta painting, a tourist aftrac- rotating platform, in the centejr qf the 10- 7:30p.m.
: tion lor most of this century, was prodhc- sided buUdlng. ’ Community Develop-
PUBLIC DEFENDER -
. ment Advisory Commit-
tee, office in Baytown at
have many fine lawyers around the 7:30p.m.
»> he " ■' *“ "'* *'
From Page 1 country ” he adds. “But to order to keep
* ■" , , , the adversary system pure, you need to
; reservations about such a system, but have someone independent to represent
{ agrees it's worth a look. the defendant.”
; to about $2M or more for a day s work. AnH whpther or not adeauate counsel
Uw same, m,
Wbi e h^ pSints out ’that he has no there wUl be a competent defense,
i&fcjywa ■sr
i iSaass^ zssssg-s-
1 It is very important, Guyon says, that ways to save money,” he says.
: the people involved in the legal process But at the same time, he says such a
have confidence in the legal system. And system may encounter heavy
th# confidence might be eroded, he resistance. For one thing, it infringes on
says should a defendant perceive he the judges’ discretionary powers, “and
was’being both represented and pro- most judges are very jealous of toat
i -secutedby county employees. ----------- “The question is, who if not the judge
"'**• 'Tm sure the public defenders’ offices is competent to choose a lawyer? ”
Tides
SUNDAY
HIGH: +5:58a.m.
LOW: +2:31 a.m,, 3:17
P-m-
MONDAY
HIGH: 12:21 a.m.
LOW: 4:28 p.m.
, •; ■ : . '
Sun
SUNDAYi
S: 6:57 a.m.
MONDAY
SUNRISE: 6:58 a.m.
SUNSET: 5:22 p.m. w
BAYTOWN'S LARGEST AND MOST BEAUTIFUL
w
COAAMUNITY MAUSOLEUM
NOW COMPLETE
BEAUTIFUL
TREES
PLANTS
GARDENS
L . ___
LOCATED ON THE BEAUTIFUL GROUNDS OF
ga
■I
...II
*
t •
’ * v”;
| ... ’’g
« 41
AME:_
5*—
M
V •
Tr;r.. -
-----------------------------------------------
CUR AND MAIL FOR FREE FAMILY PORTFOLIO
JU
"I like
they give
she uid,
federal fi
ar
MAIL TO: WHITE CEMETERY
P.O. 10X325
HIGHLANDS, TEXAS 77562
i
■ ■ . : I.;-,:
-
gram.
Sheia or
aliens
Brownsvll
a total 29,4
Browns
along wit
districts a
tomey gei
order to
education
residing ti
Local i
cessfully i
emptkm I
They said
two in ten
from Ma
bring a
aliens In
A
301
Ti
S' a
Bronze
•I .
§g 1:
", !
u -
-■•-—Vs—-----
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.
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.
Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 25, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 29, 1981, newspaper, November 29, 1981; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1019134/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.