The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 280, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 29, 1953 Page: 4 of 20
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PAGE 4 — THE BAYTOWN SUN, TUESDAY, APRIL 28, 1953
Princeton Students In 'We Want Sex' Riot
Parade Called Off When Expulsion Is Threatened
PRINCETON, N
—Nearly 1.000 Prn
undergraduates e»
“we want sex"
J April 29 UP
Wednesda
cml threa
BRUJISPII
COMING HAY 7
Warner Bros. 3-D
Picture
'HOUSE OF WAX"
NOW
His ♦
fistiest-
lustiest
laughm'est
hit ever!
ENDS TONITE
HOTEL RABAHA • TAXI
want
THURSDAY
THRU
SAT.
MAUREEN O’HARA
in
"REDHEAD
FROM WYOMING"
HUMPHREY BOGART
in .
"CASA BLANCA"
WARS
DRIVE IN THEATRE
on highway no. mb
T€L€PH0n6 3-1462
Box Office Opens
Show Starts ____—
. fit.90
.7:15
ENDS. TONITE
“SINT,IN’ IN RAIN”
“MR. WALICIE TALKS”
THURSDAY ONLY
NO. 1—
ROD CAMERON
in
"WAGONS WEST"
JOHHNY SHEFFIELD
in ■
"JUNGLE GIRL"
DECKER
DRIVE IN THEATRE
DECKER Oft.- mflflKET ST. R 0 A D
TELEPHOOE 3-1451
Box Office Opens
Show Starts _______
fi:00
.7:15
HURRY - LAST SHOWING
★ TONIGHT ★
"THE STRIP"
MICKtY ROONEY
* AMO *
"DEVIL'S OOC9 WAY"
ROBERT TAYUtR
Princeton thr
the frolic who
lv after midni
hack In his r
utes would h(
The riot ende
The student
in the fracas which
a mock air raid drill
hrough the streets of
three hours. A threat-
id on a women's dor-
i arbv Westminster
failed to materialize
leaded off the shout-
•is B Godolphin of
•w a wet blanket on
i he announced short-
3ht that everyone no'
10m within two min-
liable to expulsion.
1 abruptly.
: had flocked out of
They
dormitories at 9 30 p nr
the lights went out in an un-
defense air raid
d another group
holding an outdoor student election
rally and began shouting "we want
sex" as they marched through the
campus.
On the way to« the campus of co-
educational Westminster College,
he students invaded a movie the-
ater and marched through
Taft Says Ike's
Program On Time
Despite Tidelands
WASHINGTON, April 29 -UP— her two smi
Sena e Republican leader Robert mitted to th(
A. Taft said Wednesday he is con- none were
fident Congress can polish off jured. Shade
Rain-
community
Austin, vvl
home and
LIVESTOCK
Residents Ask Change
In Middlesex Road
President Eisenhower', must legis-
lative program by the end of July
in spite of the tidelands filibuster.
Taft s^id the talkathon on the
bill to give states the submerged
Stock Quotes
Special To The Baytown Sun
Warner Bros, happily present
'Rouble Along
the Way'
Mw* e’lf'iwXRa,
SHERRY JACKSON wivuu aavusw ■xu«i
.ABCHAO. CURIIZ h—
CARTOON * KISS ME CAT
LATEST NEWS EVENTS
CHILDREN 25c
Alleg Ludlum .........
......351«
Allls-Ohalmers ........
Amcriran Hepub ......
A T and T ............
Amor Woolens .......
Anaconda Copper
Am Cvanamid..........
...... 484
Barium Steel .........
Beth Steel ............
Oalvan Oil ............
Calumet and Hec .....
Canada So Oil ........
Celanese ..............
Celotex ...............
Chi Corp .............
Chrysler Corp ........
...... 794
Coiumb Gas ..........
...... 134
Creole Pet ............
......684
Cities Service .........
Coaetal Cari ..........
Davidson Chem .......
Dow Chem ...........
Du Pont Chem .......
Kastman Kodak ......
El Paso Natural Gas ..
Fairchild Rng ........
Freeport Sulph .......
Gen Electric ..........
(Jen Motors ..........
Gen Tire and Rub ....
Gillette Saf ...........
Then they swept through the lands off their coasts has not
Pennsylvania Railroad Station and seriously disrupted the program,
paraded in and out of the cars of He conceded, however, that it had
a standing train thrown it "a couple of weeks" be-
Patrolman John Markuson and hind schedule.
William F. Wright Jr., a student The tidelands opposition threw in
from Princeton, were injured when the'sponge Tuesday, agreeing to a
a battling group plunged through a vote on the controversial bill be-
plate glass store window. Marku- ginning next Tuesday. Taft was
son was hospitalised with laoera- obviously jubilant. He had threat-
tions. ened round-the-glock sessions if
Tad Hammond, a freshman from the filibuster had continued.
Omaha, Neb., was arrested in one Passage of the administration-
of the many scraps-between stu- backed legislation now appears
dents and police. The town's en- certain in spite of the effort of a
tire 21-man police force wa, called small band of foes to build up
out to handle the rioters, ehough opposition through lengthy
, Police and university
steered the marchers awav from
the girl’s sleeping quarters at West-
minster which apparently was the
intended target of a panty raid.
Teachers --
(Continued From Page One)
the voting later indicated it.
Mrs. Busch was the first faculty
member to come up for a decision.
The board was Split three to three
with Mills, Presnali and Smith
voting to renew the contract, Mrs.
Furr, Barber and Irish against and
Matthews breaking the tie.
Mrs. Scarborogh was re-elected
unanimously.
Mills and Presnali voted to re-
new Gill's contract but the rest of
the trustees voted against It. The
aa'me vote was recorded when
Scarborough's name came up
ehough opposition
proctors speeches to defeat it.
Other developments:
MAIL FRAUD
The he
hit north Central
with some towns r
as 10 inches unoff
rain reported to th
bureau was 6.31 i
A “terrific low
moved into the,
winds spawned dust storms that
cut visibility to as lit'le as one
block at Plainview.
The San Antonio w
said^ it had definite
that two funnels from the same
tornadic formation descended
almost' simultaneously northwest
and northeast of the Alamo city
about 9 p.m. Tuesday night.
First reports indicated at least
12 persons were injured, but 12
hour., afier the storm authorities
admitted their information was
probably incomplete because of
the difficulty of .getting into the
Page One)
lies southo:
demolishec
FORT WORTH. April 29 -UP—
Cattle L300. Steady to strong.
ide idon'iifif
ns. All wet
i an
Mature s eers scarce; good a»d
choice slaughter yearlings. 18.50-
22.25: utility and eammereial, 13-
1 17.50; few beef cows, 12-14. most
thville clinii
but
of the run comprised canner and
ed serious]
[y in-
cutter cows at 8-12: bulls. 10-15;
nfall of the
vear
few medium and good stocker steer
yearlings. 13-18.
and East 1
>xa.s
•Calves 200. Steady to slrong:
e Dallas we
■ather
idkin.
' high
good and choice slaughter calves,
18,50-22.§0; utility and commercial,
11-17; culls, 8-10; medium to
choice stockers. 13-20; choice
pressure ,
slate, mid
around 400 lbs., 20; few 300 lbs.,
■)i
requ
stm
man
April 29-UP
.irned down a
x Road be re-
BEI.MONT, Calif.,
-The cltv council 1
est that Middles
ed Windsor Road.
answer to complaints the
>t name was inspiring .too
y “Christine"t jokes, Mayor
Wallace Benson said “we don't
think this fad is a lasting thing.”
fainted
Sites*
1a8ltmn
rr bur
stablis
bed
Hogs 200; Butche
steady; choi<
24; lattpr'pr
and
bage-fed hogs. 23.50;
180 lbs., 21.50-23.50;
21; odd head to 22.
I sows full.v
199-260 lbs., 23.75-
paid by packers
few choice gar-
Picked Wrong Woman
DETROIT, April 29-UP,- Willi-
am J. Simpson, 25, flirted with the
wrong woman in a downtown
movie house, police said Wednes
day,
Her escort, George Hallett,
arrested Simpson. Hallett is a de-
tective.
Xr.d
n, ft
* p"«”tt"
'» 01 M,.
choice 160-
19.50-
stricken areas of Helotes, northeast
A House judiciary subcommittee verSVoad. nwthwestd the mty'
headed by Rep. Kenneth B. Seat- ^ oniv identified dead person
ing (B-N.Y.) opened hearings on a -Alrs Alwua> Rittiman, 72. who
seven year old mail fraud case to waj pjt*ed uptake twister and
see if there ^was^any^ skiilchiggeir> carr)ed 300 yartSwfore she was
hurled into a pasture. The injured
included her son-in-law and daugh-
ter, Mr, and Mrs. Clarence Grote,
their three children.
The state highway patrol dis
patcher at Boer tie. Jack Holt, said
one of his cars reported another
involved in the Truman adminis-
tration's sudden decision to drop
criminal charges against a Kansas
City bond dealer.
NATO
Secretary of State John Fosle:
Dulles , and Mutual Security Dip
tor Harold E. Stessen told eon- (ipa(i pprson at Helotes
gressional committees the North
A 11 a ntic Pact Organization
stretching out its rearmament
gram but that they hoped more
was not confirmed
but this
bv other
The dead at Kilgore, all Negroes.
n,or? were Mrs. Christine Beck, 34: her
Assistant Fire Chief Claude Hale
said burning oil from the tank en-
Goodyear Tire ..t...e.......53’i
Greyhound Bus ............ 124
Gulf Oil .............1......454
Gulf Stat Util ........ 29',
Houston Oil ................ 704
H L and P Co ..............244
Humble Oil ......... f>44
I>e Tourneau ........'.... No Sale
Jones latughlin .............234
Imperial Oil ................324
Interlake Iron ............... 18
Inti Nickel ................. 404
Kirby Pet ................... 32
Libby McN ................ 94
Liggett and,Myers ..........774
Loews Inc .................. 124
Iei Land .................No Sale
Mathieson Chem ....... 404
Monsanto Chem .............87%
Mack Trucks ................ 12%
Mid Con Pet ................ 594
Mont-Dakota Util ...........244
Nat Dairy Prod ......59
Ohio Oil .................... 50H
Pacific Pet Ltd .............. 3544
Packard Motors-.......... 54
Panacoastal Pet ............. 2
Panhandle Oil ......... 774
Penney's Inc ............... 684
Phillips Pet ..... 614
Pure Oil ....... 554
Pacific W’estcrn ••.......«... 38
defense could be obtained for less i^miro." six;* tier 'daughter
monev' aiMMiiviTinv Elizabeth, four; B-r e n.d a Joyce
e „ AMMUNITION_ Coleman, six. and Allie Bohannon,
Sen. Harry F. Bvrd (D-Va.) re- w
vealed he has asked Chairman
Omar N. Bradley whether he ^
Repeated efforts to bring into signed a Joint Chiefs of Staff esti- pjjVed'the victims' homes so fast
the open the objection of the mate that the Korean war would be thpy didn't have time to flee to
trustee* to the teachers whose, con- over quickly as former Defense safptv A lotal of seven homes
tracts were not renewed proved to Secretary George C. Marshall said were destroyed and several others
be a failure. last week in a New York Times ; .
Trustee Mills, after the vote on interview. The optimistic estimate jjeaVy rains, which started
Scarborough, asked if any of the figured in the Senate ammunition aj about dawn Tuesday, were
other trustees would telKhlm their shortage nowhere more welcome than they
objection but the only answer he _ „ lSrlU,„ jT Tj. . were at Dallas, plagued since last
received was silence.' . Se,n- J1®!™8" summer with the city's worst wa-
disclosed that the Senate Internal ^ shortage
Earlier, an effort to move the
^ r.??UtlV* dence'to
Motor* worker s story that he stole
•Ion came to a d'ad halt. H”* h."’itote 100 earlv 10 kn0W exactIy hoW
Mr. e.rr .nd Irish ™ pm.!S
SftTS Its S «« 5ft ft ft. ftft
AFTER five years of app»eri.ticeshlp
and five days of required, gruelling
tests, Mrs. Elsi Gschwind, 216-year-
old Zurich housewife and mother,
is awarded the first master di-
ploma in watch repair‘ever'to go
to a woman in Switzerland. Switz-
erland has been famous for pre-
cision watchmaking for more than
three centuriea. (International)
ING
"good, average two-inch rain-
fall” all over the watershed.
meetings of the board again and and providing construction guaran-
again," Jenson pointed out. “I tees to spur construction of new
can't see how you can exclude hme* for ex-servicemen The weather bureau s; .d the low
them now. PUBLIC FOW ’ pressure area, Which centered over
“Your motion died for lack of a Public power advocates looked Quvmon Okla at m i d n i g h t
second, Mrs. Farr,” said Board to the Senate to restore at least spawned' ^ fre'akish: weather. The
President Matthews. part <X the 940 million for govern- fron( w8s on a ]ine drawn east of
The crowd gave him a big hand, ment power facilities which the Amarillo, east of Lubbock, between
Mrs. Farr said something that House erased from an aPPr°Pria'.. Abilene and Mineral Wells, east of
was lost In the crowd noise, but
it dbvlously nettled Matthews.
“Anybody who doesn't like the
way I run this meeting, can try to
do better!1' Matthews said.
Two women members of the au-
dience^ W'ho refused to give their
tions measure Tuesday.
Truce--
(Continued From Page One)
San Angelo and Junction, stretch-
ing down just east of Del Rio.
A forecaster said it was a fast
moving front, and "will move
completely out of the state by
. a.m. tomorrow."
The maximum
—....................— uiei!i;c nuo reiuaro w xive meir — ------------- temperature
W52::::::::::::::::Si a?&r"**"“**“*"^ftteat
SrtftSl?.::::::::::::S aft*-*•*~-■" ftftftSSg.C-’S
1951. Marfa and Dalhart, with the high
When the truce talks were re- minimum 77 degrees at Browns-
sumed Sunday; after an interrup- v,Hp
tion since last Oct. 8, there were -'-rr-——:— ------------
re-elected
There was no answer from any
board member, then Irish said he
could speak on his objection to
Gill. He said that It doesn’t seem
that he <Gill) can explain the pro-
blems properly to the children.”
Gjh is a mathematics teacher.
J. A. McDaniel, former trustee
who was defeated in the April 4
■election, asked, "Have you ever
been in one of Gill’s classes to see
how It is conducted?”
“No," replied Irish,
• jyoin
a'Tla ti
dispute on prisoner
repatriation, which is the last ob-
stacle to an armistice:
1. Selection of a neutral country
as custodian of prisoners who re-
fuse repatriation.
2. The question where these pris-
oners shall be kept. The UN in-
sists they be kept in Korea, the
Communists that thev be kept in
'There were many rumors about ..^f custodian country,
when these petitions were signed,” ■ , °‘ time-the prisoners
Mrs. Farr said toward the end of fa 1 be kept in custody pending
the meeting. “One of them was fS^er“ °Lthj
that I wanted to be superlnten- J16 UN suggests 60 6®ys The
dent. I am not qualified to be Communists want to allow three
superintendent, even If .I ever had )m“n‘-bs,for them to get to the neu-
any s uheidea. Mr. McDaniel, you Lra c®untry. then keeD them there
- - J-
“You’d run it if you could, sis-
ter,” McDaniel declared.
And the partisan crowd laughed.
Hot Rod Driver
Escapes Roasting
tion officers try to induce
them to go home.
4. Final.disposition of prisoners.
The UN insists they must not be
forced to go home. The Commu-
nists want their future decided -by
a political'conference.
It is indicated-jbere will be no
more trouble over Point 1. The
question where the prisoners shall
be sent — Point 2 — is a vital one
on which there is complete dis-
agreement. Nam said Wednesday
Sinclair Oil ...... 39*4
Socony-Vac ............. 334
Sou Pacif ................... 454
Stan Oil Calif ............... 52
Stan Oil Ind ............. 714
Stan Oil Ohio ...... 344
Stan Oil N. J. .............. 70*4
Sun Oil .................i.No Sale
Sunray Oil .......... 184
Texas Co .............. 534
Texas Gulf Prod ......... 49%
Tex Gulf Sulph............. 924
Tidewater Corp . • . •iv;'4ifW«.r224
Union Oil of OaHf .......... 39
U. S. Steel ....... ...404
Wilson and Co .......104
Woodley Pet ■ ...... 60*4
May N. O. Cotton ....Down, 27 Fts.
Legislature-
(Continued From Page One)
move by Sen. Carios Ashley of
Llano indicated the bill probably
was dead for the session.
The Senate approved. 23 to 7. a
constitutional amendment to per-
mit women on Texas juries. The
proposal goes, back to the House
for concurrence in Senate amend
merits. ■
The House gave indirect ap- CINCINNATI, April 29 -UP-
proval to repeal of the controver- Thomas Gibbs outraced a fire r________ _______ -............
sial crossfiling provision of the which started when a leakv gas J* *’a* Wllllne » negotiate Point Hants, England, the Duke of Edin-
state election 4:0de. when it voted ta[rk on his hot rod spilled fuel on ^.'Rjwe.is complete disagreement ^ h climbs ,nto the cockpit of a
down. 75 to 60, an effort to kill the highway and a loose bumper on Point ■ which involves the final 1U__
repeal amendment • • '......
No Matter How Far
You Live From
BAYTOWN...
It WiH Pay You to
Ded With
FERGUSON
MOTORS, INC.
700 W. TEXAS AVE.
YOUR
PONTIAC-CADILLAC
DEALER
th* Ajr
on Bayt'own Sun
/
w
DURING A VISIT to tne Vicks Su-
prrmarine works at Chilbolton,
1360 ON YOUR AM DIAL
92.1 MG. ON YOUR FM
IVKDN'KSDAT EVE.N4NQ
6:00— Sports Review
8:05—World News Round Up
8:15—Altar Fires
8:30—La Porte News
6.4,V-Hports Diary
7:00—Harlem at Seven
8:o0—Student Council of
8 :30—Facts Foru
10:00—Night Kdlt
10: J 5—Df ea mt I me
10:55—Sign Off N
11:00—Sign Off
THURSDAY MORN:
6:00—-Reveille Roundup
7:00—Late Nsws
7.02—Trinity Valley Tures
7:15—Wornihgy Devotiona* *
7:30—Latin Hour
9:00—-Church of Chru
9:15—World News Roundup
9:30—Hank's Hansrout
10:00— Ra y tow n Ne \v h
10:05—-Society Page of
10:15—Star Time
10:30—Smokey Stover
THURSDAY AFTERNOON
Roundup
12 :L>-A Greater"Ameitat!0ni
12:30— ~
7
7v
the long-stemmed look
In butcher rayon
/
12; 00— World News R
12:13—Noon Stock Qu
12:15—A Greater America
-Baytown
-Latin Hoi
The House did not vote directly
on the amendment, by Hep. A. D.
25-Year-Lease
effort to kill lne nignwa.v and a loose . , , .
dragging behind ignited it. lssue of forced or voluntary repa
Gibbs, noticing the fire, stepped fr'al'on
_ on the accelerator and kept going
Downer of Center. . ’ until he ran out of gas, Fire Capt.
In anotner vote, the House re- Harry Stull said Gibbs was “the DALLAS. April 29 -UP-Also
fused to require annual renewals of fjrst man I ever knew to outrace nett Hotels, a Southwestern chain,
poll tax. excemption certificates a fire." will begin a 25-year lease of the
granted persons of 60 or older. ------- Jefferson Hotel here next Friday.
Amendments, to the election code The chain now operates six hotels
which were adopted included those Theodore Roosevelt, at 42, was in Texas, at Lubbock. Waco,
to move the candidates’ filing the youngest man to become Pres- Denison. Texarkana, and two at
deadline from midnight on the first ident of the United States. Port Arthur.
Monday ip May to 5 n.m. on that '___■ ~____________j________1-____........~—
date, and to require filing fees to
.be paid within a week after filing,
except for legislative candidates,
who would pay when they applied
for a spot on the ballot.
It’s the smartesf look
you' (ten .give your Summer wardrobe. Ne’.’y Don'
orrow-pocicef dress featured in Good Houseleep'
with slot pockets and embroidered .arrows drama!
the slim, sleeveless lines. Wfinkle-r^sisfanf butcher
rayon in navy, black, red, brown with white trim.
Also white with contrasting trim. 10 to 20. 12.95
Irene’s
FIRST IN QUALITY— FINEST IN FASI
Baytown's Exclusive Store For Wome
3207 Minnesota
115 E. Texas
Swift, - Britaii>s- faster-than-sound
fighter. (International)
CASH-AND CARRY
$AVE$ YOU 20% ;
Lowry & Martin
Cleaner* A. Dyer*
3006 Market 1311 So. Main
J
3 m DAYS starting
THURSDAY — AASiL 30TH
"ROAD TO BAIC
(la TECHNICOLOR).
«STARRING)
BING CR/>)Br
BOB HOPE
DOROTHY I.AMOIR
i( ADDED FEATURE -k
"FLATTOP".
(IN THRILLING COLOR)
t» —with— ' ,
8TERLINGHAY5»FN
RICHARD UAI#nt
Search For Lost Ball
Turns Up Pocketbook
CHAMPAIGN, 111.,' April 29 m-
Two grade school boys' went fish-
ing with a pole to recover a ball
they bad dropped Into a creek—
and hit pay dirt.
They recovered a billfold lost
three "weeks earlier in a heavy
rainatorm. It contained $83wet
but intact.
The owner, a University of
Illinois student, 0&id it slipped
from his hands into a drain dur-
ing the storm and got away befor*
he could grab It.
Mexico Couple Kiled
NOME, Tex.. April 29 -UP-Mr.
and Mrs. Edualrdo LuqUe Diaz of
Mexico City were killed Tuesday
when their car collided with one
driven by T. O. Davis, 68, Center,
Tex., attorney, who was injured,
seriously. The accident occurred
on UiS. 90. a half Aiie west oi
Nome.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 33, No. 280, Ed. 1 Wednesday, April 29, 1953, newspaper, April 29, 1953; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1041839/m1/4/: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.