The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 350, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 23, 1957 Page: 1 of 23
twenty three pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Serving tot Hofrit «rf Ckmnbft CowiHtt_ -
iimiox
Flash!
LATE
NEWS:
(From UP Wire)
AUSTIN—Gov. Price Dealer*
segregation program, the reoroo
far Ike second special tcostoa
of the Legislature, was post II*
Senate test today.
★ ★ ★ * .{ ,
rt. LEAVKNWORTR Kaad-
01 tom-oat Edward Dickeasea
walked out a4 the U. *. dlsctp.
■nary barrack* a free man to-
day-
* ★ ★ *
WAUTOMA, W'fac. - Ed Oela,
"the butcher ot PlaUifletd," to-
day awaited traaehr to the
tat Institution where he may
•pend the reot of hb Me-
* 4t 4 *
HAN SCUM AIK FOKLw BASE,
Maw.—Air force specialist* said
Friday night wHne of the arttfr
rial meteors launched Into apace
from the New Mexico desert
have "unquestionably” escaped
Into Interplanetary area*.
. * ★ ★ *
MOSCOW — The Common!*!
parties *1 94 nations laoaed »
"peace manifesto" Friday nigh!
appealing* far a ban on mmtenr
wre^MM and an Immediate end
fa nuclear testa.
* ★ * *
MOSCOW—Vugoafavtarefuoed
to algo the Conuwmlat btoc
-riter declaration because “we
Yugoslav Ambawadm VJelko
Mteaoovtc *ald Friday night.
* * ★ *
HOUSTON - Three Negro H-
jncfcer* waited until a super-
market ekwed Friday night, tj»*»
herded two employee tatoareri-
er and fled wtth aa eatlmated
gs.ooo in cash.
It's ONE Above In Lubbock, Dalhart
WEATHER BLAMED
FOR 10 DEATHS
DOYLE
EDDTE
ALL IN THE SAME FAMILY-Four flue deer hung long
enough in Eddie Huron’s new garage, *1* West Sterling, Fri-
day *o Horace Helms, Baytown Sun Photographer, could
this fine hunting picture. The deer slayers, left to
right. Doyle, Eddie and lack Huron. Eddie, of eouroe, showed
his boys how to do it and nailed * pair of the deer, Their hunt
wa* made on Corky’* Ranch near Comfort, Texas.
(Baytown Photos)
1
jSue To
Bad Weather
Free plane ride ticket* are
still being given out for the
Cerebral P»tey Fly*thon despite
' event ha* been post-
Inltely, according to
of the Baytown Flying
who will sponsor the
*flkish-Hush' Report
Hin I 1 11 iii -
■■
man » ttUAii*aa*j» "
O’Brien has announced.
wm:
Several hbndred donations to
the Cerebral Palsy fund have al-
ready W received.
To each person who makes i
donation to Ihe fund, a free tick-
et to fife Flyathon la tsaued.
Ticket co-chairmen are BUI
Bound* and Mrs. Bill Turner.
Thfc* Flyathon, originally
‘ * ’ weekend, was
of wet rmways
n airport.
"We are so helplessly watered
tn at the present time we can t
even egt a’ new
U S. Warned Russia's
Missile Power Grows
WAiuUWGTON (UP)-Sen. John
Stennis today urged Senate mls-
with enough authority to effective- teor* such as those launched over
ly coordinate and speed up rocket New Mexio° re<*n,ly may provldf
ordinates overseeing
missile and scientific program*.
At the same time a blue ribbon
presidential panel has submitted a
husb-hush report to the White
House warning that an all-out ef-
fort was needed to build a defense
against Russia’s growing missile
power,.
The report, now said to be cir-
culating at the highest levels of
the Defense Department and the
Office of Defense Mobilization,
was. reliably reported to have
Stressed the possibility that Rus-
sian long-range missiles may he
able to offset the U.S. Strategic
Air Command’s bombers In an-
whether Ei*
_____ Mississippi Democrat is
vice chairman of the Senate pre-
paredness subcommittee which
will open a sweeping investigation
Monday into the U.S. missile pro-
gram. Lea doff witness will be Dr.
Edward Teller, reoognized as the
“father" of the hydrogen bomb.
Stennis told a reporter it is ‘es-
sential’’ that the subcommittee
find out if succient power has been
riven Dr. Jame* R, Killian, the
President's new scientific adviser,
and William M. Holaday, Defense
Department missile director.
"I have urged that we have
someone at the top, right next to
the President.. .as an overall di-
rector of various missile programs
with complete authority, he said.
In another development, Air
New Mexico recently may provide
' important new Jata for future
space builder*. The tiny meteors,
actually aluminum pellets, were
fired from an Aerobce rocket and
reached speeds exceeding 40,000
miles an hour.
The new report on the danger
of Russia's misaile threat wa* pre-
asked
lions that
'^’‘rdine ^VV (WBiU) questioned wneuier ru- *» •-
- hccordingjt^W. a ((Biu) senhower ^ lnvestec| anyone Force officers said artificial me- eratlon*
however, that the,
Valuable Collection
be honored then •”
pared by a group headed jointly
by William C. Foster, deputy de-
fense secretary in the Truman ad*
ministration, and Robert Sprague,
a New England industrialist and
Resident Eisenhower set up the
committee to study methods of de-
fending against atomic attack by
aircraft and missile*. Member* in-
chided Dr, Killian; Lt. Gen. Jame*
H, Doolittle, chairman of the Na-
tional Advisory Committee for Ae-
ronautics, and Adm. Robert B-
Carney, former chief of naval op-
I avoided in basket
faT'lLir own
tfRSS
MRS MARY NUGENT, 901
Jones, reported to Baytown po-
lice Friday the theft of her
child’* red Schwinn bicycle from
Horace Mato) school between
8:15 a.m. and 3:80 p.m. Friday.
' T"v
Asthma Caused Lee College
'Prof' To Start Stamp Hobby
■
Baytown Has
5-Inch Rain,
Low Of 37
Five Inches of rein fell In
Baytown from & p.m Thursday
until the time that It stopped
about v a m. Saturday.
The fall was almost continuous
during the to-hmir-apan.
An official Baytown rain
gauge measured th» rain at
1S5 Inches between fl pm. Fri-
day and the time 11 stopped
Saturday morning.
Between 5 p m Thursday and
noon Friday, 3 12 Inches had
come down)
And slightly more than half
t Inch fell between noon and
6 p.m. Friday.
Friday night s low tempera-
ture was pegged at 37 degrees
In Baytown.
By 10 am. Saturday it had
risen only two points to stand
at a chilly 39 degree* only sev-
en above the freeilng mark.
With the end of rainfall Sat-
urday morning, the weatherman
called for slowly clearing skies,
He said, however, tempera-
ture* will remain low with Sat-
urday's minimum mark about
freezing
The only hope he could offer
was a "possible'' break in the
cold by Monday,
Right Foot,
Not Left
On the cover page of The
Sun's TV pull-oul (la the Sun-
day bonus aeellon) I* * pic-
ture of a football player on a
television screen.
Bv coincidence, the player
la No. 44, the same number
at Aggie star, John Crow. The
picture Is representing the
Texaa-A and M clash Thanks
giving Day.
There’s oaly one thing wrong
—Crow kicks with Ms right
foot, not his left, as the photo
shows.
Lee Colleae
Honor Roll
Lists 24
Lee college honor roll for the
first term, announced Saturday
by Dean Walter Rundell, ln*f
eludes the following students
MR AND MRS. R. T. DUNLAP
Ural Stop. Saudi Arabia
MR AND MRS, B. T. DUNLAP of Morgan road take a final
irjffWRS
daughter and her family In Saudi Arabia.
Leave Sunday-
They Plan To Spend
Yule In Holy Land
Christmas in Jerusalem will be| miles across Saudi
. . , _ ■ „ - nr the Persian Gulf to Beirut,
rwgtr point Of « Lebanon.
tqiir of the Middle East that Mr. J H(> ^ Mnt Xuratf( 8a,Hn
and Mrs, B. T, Dunlap of Mor jArahlg whcn he joined TAB Oct,
gan road will begin Sunday. jl3, 1B*6, and has not been back
Of even greater Interest, how .I to lire United Stales since,
ever Is the prosjiect of betngl Mrs, Quick am! the children
with their MMf nj gg gg.ft,*" thB *** rteaTeri 5»7lUSTof Ml
l„w, Mr, and Mrs R. J- Q* wl|. , covering vast expanse* of Wes
and their Ihr^e grarMchUflren, Tht trip, however will not (Tnaut and the Panhandle.
Debra Gale, 7: Janice ElMteth, Ufi pleura fat | Hmw clouds hung low ove>
« .....i Di,h,ni Martel i is to tira combination pleasure- f*enU'al Texas prcdlcttx
lows In (ho upper 20* did not ma
toriofire. Light
at lylor.
M Coldest Ever
This Soon In
West Texas
By UNITED PRESS
The coldest weather
in history this early in
the season — one decree
below gero—chilled Lub-
bock and Dalhart today.
The sub-zero weather
followed two days of
snow, sleet and freei-
ing rain. The weather
was blamed for 10
deaths on slippery high-
ways.
Freezing Tonight
A low of SI degree* I* lore-
oa»t for Baytown Saturday
nlghl. The ueotheemoa aay*
Sunday’* high wilt be 4» de-
gree*. Skie* will continue lo be
cloudy, but no rain I* forecast.
_ The one - below • zero
reading at Lubbock was
15 degrees lower than
any previous reading
for November. The
freeze line extended
along the western edge
of a cloudy area from
about Sherman to Junc-
tion to the Big Bend
country.
Other low readings
included Amarillo 5 de-
grees, Sift Flat 12, El
Paso and Midland 19,
Abilene 24, Wichita
Fall* 26, San Angelo 28,
Mineral Wells 30, Fort
Worth 33, Dallas 34,
Lufkin 35, Houston 39,
Galveston 41 and
Browniville 42,
Light rain or drizzle fell ovn
South G “ ‘
---Central and Southeast Tex
a*. Cloud* began breaking over
North Central Texas, and It waa
clear In West Texas
The weather bureau said th*
revere cold came after »ki»
and Richard Martel, 2, „ —
It has been eight month* since work lour,
the Dunlap* have seen their In addition to being *»le* man-
daughter. the former Audrey lager at the Neat Dieken* Motor
Faye Dunlap, and the grand-1 Co , he t* also new* director-
children. commentator for Pasadena radio
They have not seen their son-j sbitlon KRCT
in-tow in more than a year. . During the (wo month*, Dunlap
Quick Is employed bv the j will make tape recording* of on-
Trans-Are blah Pipe Line Co. j Urn-spot Interview* with person*
(TAPi a* coordinator of supplies t whom he meet* in the ..several
for the line which extend* 1,0001 (Hee Yi'IJC, Itok* Two)
but melted
today at
iy.
Rainfall reports for 24 hour*
ended at 1 a. m, included Lufkin
1.29 Indie*, Port Arthur .91, Hous-
ton ,W, BUaeto* .SO, Beevtlle 95,
Texarkana .37, College Station. 36,
Austin IS. DnJIa* .14, AMlene and
Ufae WEATHER. Pago Two)
T4MJ*
By WANDA ORTON
By WANDA ORTOJ
wM, a Beal- gun BUrif Writer
of the Bay- y it hadn’t been for a)
college Instructor
was 10 when he started the j
stamp hobby. Haring asthma, |
not have hi
collection.
1 The Lee
was 10 wh
F7 ■*-* .”"7 stamp hobby. Having asthma,
night at the of- he had *tay Indoor* ^ lot
Raybora John- An(, gtamp t0jiectlng answered
---------- • th* heed for a “quiet sport.”
«'*>«•“ '&'**? ”**: Since then the asthma-in.plr-
t*nhu,“?ed hobby ha* '‘eveto^d into]
\1L a serious collection. Dr. f
1M*’ ha* no Idea ju.t how m
of La Porte (st#mps he; haa, but there
about IS albums,
/"and" artSlaTeWIbou£t°Wi
:amps aa the history lesson* be
udes the following '
Sandra Evonne Abshier. ^'iCypian Student —
i Rochelle Huddle, Zana I/<u J /« I a ri J t U U V 111
Hill.. fk... IfaWa/ilA o
Language Didn't Keep 'Sam'
From Baytown College Class
Lummus, Billy Rex McNee*e
Gail Tubb*, and Marie Jone*
Vinson, These fulltime student*
had a grade point average of 2 «
or above- .
Part-time student* who made
all A’s were mentioned for hon-
or. Among these were Clara
Petrtine Jame* and Nora L«e
Maxwell, both enrolled for tour
course*. On the list of thole
enrolled for three courses were
i lege French Instructor, Dm In- Stamp, issued during Hitler’s enrolled to thro* «wree» Wffa
vtted Dr EUls to show thl* reign. He *ald he wa* especially Mary Cameron Andrew*. Aden
. mi. • * •* a **^_ *___ i #-a i_ au,yao gfamni whirh t/knfw> BnlflCi Judith LynW
rnw| ,IkVAJ ------ivifSD MV ' 7, '
____ for asthma, French album to her claw. n teres ted in th-xc stamps which
♦f Ar- Dr John Elite probably would Dr. Em*’ album or, German featured ve^ fine engrarinf.
have hi* outsanding *tamp stamp, include* nearly every! (See STAMPS, Fake Two)
Louree Bruce, Judith Lynn
Bureh, Billy Frank Bussy, Jenny
Carlton, Carolyn Dunaway.
Also, Mile Gillespie Hull, Iris
14-nn Jenkins, Billy Paul Jones.
Garnett E McCTanahan, Gtenn
Boyce Mason. Carlo* Lavon
Morer, Nancy Ruth Offer, Ed-
ward J. Sawberger. William
Harold Bteil and John A. Wad-
1 toy Jr., and Betty Overstreet.
y
. m * ‘ ■ ’yvji
Dr* Elite*began an
um on French stamps. Many
of these have elaborate, intri-
cate designs, and particularly
totereiting is the special te*ue
character* In French *
i. .’91 J'
Mrs.
connection between the ani-
mal and vegetable king-
GEORGIE; “Yes. ma’am;
like Georgle got
ttiat one 6 tittle bit "mixed
up.” But, by uiing your »un
Gift Gold* you can avoid the
“mix up” and confusion that
come* with the Christmas
*hMakc* your shopping ttet
and selection i In the cd
f°By°'uiImg a
a Syrian mailufaaturer of soap*
ami cottonseed <glx
Me wa* to fcf! followed by five
more brothers and one slater,
He grew up In Damascus and
attended high ichopl at Beirut.
Lebanon whitro I* only 43 mile*
from the Syrian capital.
After cwipteting high school
In 1982. he returned to Damas-
cus where !he worked In hi*
sosip factory and en-
rolled in a Syrian college to the
fall of 1954.
It wa* about the same time
your own home. -
the Gift Q«fide
■re you
saving
HI \ -
, \
*
, mm
■
ucu mm W=.r you do yOUf
■iilaklMlllin ikveuidh eko niff
Guido found in ^Clarei-
- - ■ item. Don’t wait!
^ON PAGE «
fled ad
Use It
mm.
EDITOR’S NOTE; Thl. 1.
the ft rat In a serin* of article*
that resulted from an Inter-
view with Baronin Eltounl,
Syrian student at Lw eollege.
Additional pieces deal with Ms
views on polities, religion *nd
life in the United Stole*.)
By FRANK HILDEBRAND
Sun Staff Writer cw w,
Going off to a unlveralty in a ^he,’*
foreign country with next to
no knowledge of the language
spoken there would be an awe- Jt w;i| atNR» ttie same time
some prospect for most 20-JW- i thal the Eltouht family was hoot
old Americans. ’ *-----———,
Yet Basaam Eitoum of Da-
mascus, Syria, was confronted
with an identical situation fe»a
than two years ago when he left
bis home for an American col-
lege education. .
Today he Is one of four for-
eign; born student* at lit cot-
,PlJy fall he hope* to have retis-
fied all pre-engineering require-
men;» and be accepted R
student of mechanical engineer-
ing at the University of Texas.
•Sam", as he 1* affectionate-
ly known, arrived in this cotro-
Qy -Jan 2«. 1995, equipped with
SX3E
Of Snglisn icarncq «.>»...* — -
high school course* and a burn-
ing desire for on American en-
gineering education. »
Twenty-two months and four
-Hah courses Uter, he
language fluently-, •
to John Neat, dean of foreign
students at the University ot
Texas
Sam’s younger brother, Ou-
sama. was a freshman .at Austin
and Neat visited hi* parents to
report on the boy’s progress.
Hearing Neal’s description ot
American college life, Sam wa*
enthralled with the Idea of
coming to the United States,
He admitted that he had a
time convincing his father to
let him come since om; *on wag
already here and another waa
studying architecture in Ger-
,1 many - o
"But my father, a self-edu-
cated man, realized the need for
* sound college education," Baa-
*am continued,
“And when John Neal totd
him 1 would learn English In
three months, it was decided that
1 too would go to America."
Having been accepted, .at the
University of Wisconsin, Bas-
ssm was tsaued a student visa
and flow to the U.S., landing In ]
N-w York. 1
Ho decided to visit his brother
at Austin b'fore reporting to
Madison for the spring semester
that began tn February, 1955,
fflRU™* fi*LU »L.: 3l»vu*W WC
roll tn the University, of Texas . . •
and .tie remained. : :
He leafr.nd t.xi late - that there - ,
were already ;,*)0 loretgn studenta
at UT and tHat the deadline hod
paased for registering for the
looming semester. . S* ’ '
I (8oa SAM, Page Tw«i
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 37, No. 350, Ed. 1 Saturday, November 23, 1957, newspaper, November 23, 1957; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1043692/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.