The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 84, Ed. 1 Monday, November 28, 1960 Page: 1 of 12
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The Baytown Sun IavitM
BILL MrtUtIDE
*11 & Orel*
to the B-u—on Theater to Mo
•NORTH TO ALASKA*
This coupon to food for two ticket* when
preoented at the Brunson box office.
• ;. . f *
®li? laijtflum %>nn
Serving BAY-TEX—The GoMo* Cirelo of SfcrttNart Two*
THE SUN HAS
45,000 READERS
EVERT DAT
VOL 42, NO. 84
TELEPHONE NUMBER: JU 24302
Monday, Novambar 28, I960
IAYTOWN, TEXAS
fiv# Cants Par Copy
BLAKLEY SAYS HE’LL TAKE SENATE POST
Will Also Be
Candidate In
Special Vote
un Spots
■PHHHpPPHHV'L’:
Deer Processing
THE CITY OF Baytown** new
meat inspection ordinance does
not allow any uninspected meat
in the city's markets, and there-
fore deer cannot be processed in
a meat market in the city. This
was pointed out Monday by Odis
Hours Changed
HOURS OF THE masseur at the
YMCA Mens Health Club have
been changed to 8:30 a.m. to 4:30
p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Fri-
day, and 11 a.m. to 7:30 p.m,
Tuesday and Thursday. The club
.. . - .. ; , - „ ____ is equipped with exercise equip-
Muennmk, city health director, ment aixl a steam room. Guest
who said be had received several
inquiries from meat processors.
BULLETIN
Harris County Commissioner*
Court Monday passed a formal
order authorising Texas and
New Orleans Railroad Oo. to
buy necessary rigtits-ol way and
to move a four-mile section of
its tracks from 8hell to Sinclair
Refineries In Pasadena to make
way for construction of the
Pasadena Freeway. The county
agreed to pay all costs of rights-
of-way and moving the tracks.
f K Slates
Hard News'
Meet Today
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi-
dent-elect John F. Kennedy, re-
porting progress on shaping his
new administration, keeps digging
today at the job of filling high
' level positions and charting a pol-
icy course.
Kennedy’s press secretary,
Pierre Salinger, promised what he
called a "hard news” announce-
ment during the day but would
nrovide no clue as to, fee nature
of it.
Salinger did Indicate fee an-
nouncement would be something
.('her than fee president-elect's
choice of a budget director, ex-
pected to be disclosed this week.
The press secretary repeated
•hat while Kennedy is consulting
daily with advisers regarding the
picking of his Cabinet, disclosure
of fee first selections probably
won’t come before next week.
In between visit* to fee hospital
to see his wife and newborn son,
the presidentelect had a busy
weekend preparing to take over
direction of the government Jan.
20.
H* had a dinner conference at
his Georgetown home Sunday
night wife Vice President-elect
Lyndon B. Johnson. Kennedy re-
ported afterward feat he has been
making progress planning fee new
Democratic regime.
health club passes are available.
Family Swimming
BAYTOWN YMCA will sponsor a
fatally swim at fee REL pool
from 7:30 p.m. to 8:30,pjn..Tues-
day night and each Tuesday and
Thursday night thereafter. Admis-
is 25' cents for members and
40 cent* for non-members. The
family 'swim will fqjlpw regular
lessons. ^
Brotherhood Meeting
MEMORIAL BAPTIST Church
Brotherhood will meet at 6:30 p.m.
Tuesday at fee church. Following
the supper, Mrs. James A. Davis
will present a program on the
needs of Latin-America missionar-
ies.
Special Meeting
BAYTOWN Volunteer Fire Depart-
ment Emergency Corps will hold
special meeting at 7 p.m. Tues-
day at the corps headquarters on
South Main.
Civic Gathering
LEE HEIGHTS Civic Club will
meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday at the
Optimist Club building. Entertain-
ment, refreshments and door
prizes are included on the pro-
gram.
TIRO'S INNARDS
BILL FALSER, Minneapolis Honeywell engineer, is shown
with the electronic Innards of the Tiros II weather satellite
before it was roeketeij into orbit at Cape Canaveral, Fit
There are three tiny gyroscopes capable of measuring mo-
tion 8,900 time* slower than the h'our hand of a watch. They
weigh only 14 ounces, and are no larger than a can of frozen
orange Juice, but each contains nearly 390 parts.
Holiday Ends
With Deaths
Nearing 600
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Traffic ......................430
Fires ................... 40
Miscellaneous ........ 100
TOTAL ........... 5*8
Violent accidents claimed s
staggering toll of lives over the
extended Thanksgiving holiday
weekend and, as expected, traffic
deaths led the grim total.
The final figures from across
the nation were not complete. But
With fee coulit ended at midnight
(local time) Sunday, covering a
period of 102 hours from 6 p.m.
Wednesday, the latest figures
showed: 430 killed in traffic acci-
dents; 49 perished in fires and 109
lost their lives in miscellaneous
type accidents. The over-all total
was 588, an average of nearly six
per hour.
Highway death took a sharp
rise in the final hours of the four-
day holiday as 'highways were
jammed with Sunday drivers and
other thousands returning home
from holiday trips. Generally fair
weathwer prevailed in most of the
country but rain, snow and fog
added to the driving hazards in
some sections.
Belated reports may boost the
traffic death toil above the 445
killed on the highways during last
year's four-day Thanksgiving holi-
day weekend. However, this year’s
toll in fires and other kinds of
accidents apparently will run be-
low last year’s 70 fire deaths and
135 in miscellaneous mishaps.
COLD
m
m
Goodies For Kiddies
Goodfellows Need Help
Previously Listed ........118.00
Carried Over From 1950. 12.06
Anonymous ........... 1.00
Jay Smith................ 2.00
Total ................... *33.06
' By CHIEF GOODFELLOW
This is fee time of year when
Baytown organizations — from the
Tired Housewives Club to church
sewing circles — begin chipping
in to support fee Goodfellow
cause so that nb child will be
without a bag of goodies on Christ-
mas morning.
The first contribution to fee
Goodfellows this year, comes from
fee THW Club (Tired Housewives).
The 12 women who compose this
unique club sent in *12 and best
wishes for a successful 1960 Good-
fellow drive. The club was
ganized seven years ago and has
five charter members.
So, you nee. You find Goodfel-
lows everywhere. There are hun-
dreds of them in every Baytown
organization, and Chief Goodfellow
is gratefu because these organi-
zations contribute a large share
at the money it takes to provide
Christmas bags for needy children
each year. „
One' at the most loyal Gopdfel-
lows in Baytown is seven-year-old
Jay Smith, sonof Mr. and Mrs.
GOLD tonight m front moves. B. D. Shift of 2 High St, who
There isn’t much time left. We Send your contribution to Chief
have got to have the money before I Goodfellow, in care of The Bay-
Christmas so we can plan the I town Sun, P. O. Box 90, Baytown,
buying of items for the Goodfel- or drop by The Sun office and
low bags. _ I make it personally._
places throughout this capital city
today, Three persons have been
killed and 100 wounded in three
previous days of rioting.
Demonstrators clashed with po-
lice this morning along the Aveni
ida Sucre which
Catia, a crowded workers’ housing
district in the western part of the
This year’s traffic death toil was
close to the 433 total reported inj™6 L m
New Orleans Outlook
School Boycott
Mars Reopening
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - White
students from two nearly inte-
grated public schools flocked to
nearby segregated schools today
in a boycott .nearly 100 per cent
complete. ......'*’
Three Negro girls entered Mo-
Donogh No. 19—one of the two
integrated-schools — at 8:45 a.m.
(CST) . today. One woman among
the 100 or so white spectators
yelled:
You’ve got toe whole school to
yourself now.”
opened after a week's vacation I suspend temporarily the Integra-
due to a teachers’ convention. ButLjon order pending the settlement
fl- « “ ^renceo.
ordered by a federal judge. opinion was expected today. ..............
President Armand Duvio of the Chartered buses look , fee'boy- panic! will appoint fee inter*
education cooperative at the Wil-Wting white children tq schools
Ham Frantz school — where one
Negro «rl attends the first grade
—said buses took 104 Frantz stu-
dents to schools in neighboring St
Barnard Parish (county).
The city tensely waited for the
ruling of a three-judge federal tri
The city’s public schools re- bunal, considering a request to
New Rioting Erupts
Today In Caracas
CARACAS, Venezuela (AP)— were closed today for fee second
Rioting broke out anew in several
Police reported groups carrying
bottled gasoline bombs were as-
sembling at Plaza Carabobo on the
eastern edge of fee downtown
fejainess district.
likifgtbimt of President Romu-
1<^ Betancourt was ^totted into
emergency session to deal With
fee political and economic unrest
which sparked the rioting, carried
ing the 102-hour period between
6 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 9, and
midnight Sunday, Nov. 13. The
AP’s count also showed 69 fire
deaths and 144 in other accidents
lor an over-all total of 646,
No pre-holiday estimate at fee
traffic deaths was made by the
National ’Safety Council, which
said travel on the Thanksgiving
weekend is not as heavy as on
other major holidays during fee
year. However, the NSC did esti-
mate that 460 persons could die
on the highways during a four-day
weekend at this time of year.
Program For 1960s- , ^
Ike's Goals Call For More Spending
torn*; s r^- w^ sent fee ^viri Union .on any reason-
ia. Low expected la lower 40s.
Scattered showers preceding
front.
Tuesday's Tides
GALVESTON'TIDES Tuesday will
be high at 12:52 a.m. and 2:41
p.m. and low at 7:57 am. And
8:41 p.m ’
THE R. L. PARKERS are busy
moving from 405 Park to 701H
Gresham where they will live un-
til they're ready to begin build-
-. tag « new home. in. Eva Maud
subdivision ... Odis Muennink
drops by for a visit , . . Police
Chief Roy Montgomery entered
day morning for exploratory sur-
gery. He is expected to be out of
action tor two weeks or longer.
Joe Speck and Bruce Ramaey
enjoy an early morning cup of
coffee . . . Mr.: and Mrs. L. D.
Wilburn plan to eat at home for
a change on Sunday . . . Prof.
George H. Gentry gets sore mus-
cles by bolding up his grandchil-
dren so they can see the Thanks-
giving parade in Houston.
Jim Hale off to Alvin to lend
a helping band . . . Miss Beulah
Mae Jackson back ban a Thanks-
giving sojourn to fee Valley ...
Blair Mann arguing wife his fam-
ily about a Sunday newspaper ...
He won fee argument . . . Judge
C. A. (Bud) Pound* of Chambers
County say* he ordered two north-
made his annual contribution
over fee weekend. Jay, who Sent
in two crisp *1 bills, has been a
Goodfellow since he was 11
months old. And he intends to re-
main a Goodfellow.
That’s all it takes, folks — just
a contribution. No matter how
small or how large. Once you
contribute you become a member
St the Goodfellows. And you don’t
have to contribute in your own
name. You can make a contri-
bution in fee name of someone
else or you can contribute anony-
mously. Chief Goodfellow Will hon-
or your anonymity when publish-
ing a list at contributors. After
all, some of fee greatest gifts
come from persons who want no
recognition.
Chief Goodfellow also wishes to
these other -faithful
’ellows — Denise and Lynda
Reineke and Mike Donovan, who
gave *6. Also, a belated "thank
you” to fee members: of Baytown
Vefanteer Fife Department, Sta-
tion No. 4, whd contributed *10
last year feat Didn’t make fee
published list because Chief Good
Hermann Hospital in Houston Mon- fellow had closed out his books
for fee year. In addition, there
was a total of *2.06 in Goodfel-
low canisters that were not col-
lected until after fee books had
been closed for 1959.
There is no way to measure
toe benefits of your gift to the
Goodfellows, no mater how small
or how large, because fee Good-
fellow campaign is a community
effort and it takes the help of
everyone to put it over.
The Goodfellows need YOUR
help. Don’t put off contributing
any longer. Do it now. so that
every underprivileged chBd in
Baytown will awaken to the joys
of Christinas on Christmas morn-
ing. Unless you help out, there
won’t be enough bags to go
_ ________around. More than 1.M0 bags wfli
era but couldn't get anything but be, needed few vmr.and feat will
80-degree weather.
sort mote than &&
WASHINGTON (AP) - Presi-
dent Eisenhower’s commission on
national goals has outlined a pro-
gram tor America in the 1960s
that would cost billions of dollars
more of government spending.
This could mean a tax increase,
the commission' of 11 distinguished
Americans concluded in a 30-page
report made public by the White
to Presidentelect John F. Ken-
nedy.
Specifically, the commission
urged the nation to arm adequate-
ly no matter what fee cost and
wi education, foreign aid,
search and cities.
The national goals proposed by
the commission also included fee
elimination of racial segregation,
the reduction of unemployment,
and a foreign policy that pre-
serves fee United Nations while
remaining ready to negotiate with
able basis,
The commission and its report
stem from President Eisenhow-
er’s State of the Union message
almost two. years ago. In it, fee
to spend billions of dollars more President sail! the nation should
shopping days loft
USE CHRISTMAS SEALS
FIGHT TB
I960
I t Smith, 53,
Dies Jn Houston
Funeral services for Newman
Clarence Smith, 53, of 201 Cedar
Bayou Road, will he held at 2
p.m. Tuesday at Paul U. Lee Fun-
eral Home.
A Baytown resident 30 years,
Smith -died Sunday in a Houston
nursing home. He was retired
from Humble Oil and Refining
Co.’s Baytown R^nery where he
had worked as a gauger at the
docks 24 years. In 1953, he re-
tired because of ill health. Smith
was a native of Port Lavaca.
Rev. C. T. Carothers of Peace
Tahernacte will offirtate at fee
services. Burial will be in Cedar-
crest Cemetery.
Survivors are a son. Floyd
Smith at Baytown; three brothers,
Thurman Smith. Fred B. Smith
and C. E. Smith of Baytown,
one sister, Mra. Opal Hail of
tom. * ,
of Bay-
Good
Afternoon
• Texas Republicans, rebuffed
in earlier attempts to obtain in-
vestigation and recount of Nov.
8 election, plan challenge of
Friday’s official canvass which
certified Democrats as winners.
• Fugitive from mental Instt-
Hon Is questioned by New York
police concerning city’s recent
rash ot bombings. Police say
Walter Long, 2*. admits steal-
ing explosives from construction
jobs and that he was in vicinity
ot all blasts except one but de-
nies he set them off.
define Its national purpose and
goals.
The report now serves as a leg-
acy from the Eisenhower admin-
»tra)ion to the incoming Kennedy
administration. In several re-
spects, the recommendations re-
semble fee "Naw Frontiers” pro-
gram outlined by Kennedy in his
campaign.
Eisenhower created fee commis-
sion last January, naming Dr.
Henry M. Wriston as chairman.
Dr. Wriston is president-emeritus
of Brown University and president
of the American Assembly, an ed-
ucational institution.
Frank’ Pace'Jr., chairman of
General Dynamics Carp., and a
former secretary of the army, is
vice chairman. On the NBC ra
dio-Tv' program "Meet the Press”..
Sunday, Pace' said efforts would
be made to distribute the report
widely and to promote discussions
at its recommendations,
Members of the commission did
hot agree on all goals. Among
them, AFL-CK) President George
Meany dissented from several
recommendations.
The commission said racial seg-
regation should be wiped out by
1970 and barriers in education,
voting, housing and other fields
should be sharply lowered by that
date.
The commission said the United
States should maintain and
strengthen fee military alliances
of the free world. But nuclear dis-
armament should be file ultimate
goal.
Foreign aid, the report said,
should be increased anil shared
by all major, free nations.
Tax revision also was proposed
mainly by the militant left.
National Guardsmen patrolled toe
city.
time in a month.
Students demanding closer ties
between Betancourt’s government
and Castro’s Cuba were barri-
caded in the Fermi n Toro High
School, only two blocks from fee
presidential palace. The school
runs through was surrounded by national
guardsmen.
Betancourt asked Ramon J.
Velasquez, secretary-general - of
fee presidency and one of his
closest advisers, to take over the
education ministry in the absence
of its chief, Rafael Pizani, who is
in the United States for medical
treatment.
in,St. Bernard Parish-
There were no incidents at ei-
ther school.
Divio said collections for pri-
vate schools for Frantz and Mc-
Donogh No. 19 students over the
weekend totaled "a little over
nnn» l
right ordered integral
ades Nov. 14.
tion ot first
*2,non.
u.s.
Wri|
grai
Die panel considering the school
board’s petition includes Judge
Richard T. Rives, chief judge of
the U.S. 5to Circuit Court of Ap-
peals, U.S. Dist. Judge J. Herbert
Christenberg, and Wright
The panel also had before it a
state suit asking that all school
integration orders be tossed out,
and a federal petition that the
state be permanently restrained
from interfering with public school
administration,
The conflict left a legal tangle
that caused New Orleans public
school "teachers to miss last
Wednesday’s monthly payday. The
school hoard said the legislature
DALLAS (AP) — Former Sen.
William A. Blakley said today he
will accept appointment to the
U.S. Senate seat which win be -
vacated by Vice President-elect
Lyndon Johnson, and also will be
a candidate ht fee special Senate,
election.
’rice Daniel earlier said-
Blakley is to chofoe fat-fee Sen,.
tm senator.
Blakley was. appointed in 1957
liy Allan Shivers, (hen governor,
to the unexpired term of Price
Daniel, who resigned from the
Senate to become governor.
Blakley did not run in the spe-
cial sudden-death election which
Ralph Yarborough won to fill Dan-
■■■ . .. _ „ iel’a unexpired Senate term. He
Dist. Judge J Skelly did run in the Democratic pri-
mary of 1958, but was defeated
by Yarborough, who still is sena-
tor.
I am grateful for the
had stripped it of funds to meet
the *2,525.000 payroll.
The legislature then appropri-
ated funds,' and teachers were told
they would begin receiving their
_ 'paychecks today.
35
The outburst was attributed to
Betancourt's left-wing opponents
some of them recently defected
from his moderate Socialist coali-
tion to attack him in anti-Ameri-
can tones similar to the line oi
Cuban Prime Minister Fidel Cas-
tro.
Despite Betancourt’s two-years
in power trying to spread the
wealth of this oil-rich country
more evenly, there was wide-
spread pessimism about the out-
look in this new crisis. ’
One man died of bullet wounds
and at least 21 were wounded in
Sunday's clashes. Many more
were bruised by rorks or suffered
from the effects of tear gas as
police apd national guardsmen
drove off roaming bands that
stoned them, burned automohiles
and attacked three police stations
in working class sections.
High schools and normal schools
• Asian and African nations,
suspicious of Soviet Premier
Khrushchev's plan to end all col-
op with mefude more liberal depreciation
their own UN proposal for end to
foreign control of territories.
• After 32 years on the air.
Amos ’a Andy radio aretes fi-
nally comes to end Television
series now to occupy their time.
• Lana Turner, whose two
decades of movie stardom in-
clude hex-office triumph and
personal tragedy, honeymoons
with fifth, husband, rancher-
sportsman Fred May. 43, after
• Tonmdfo winds, (hander-
storms, Mtadtog dost and twirl-
ing mom drive across Great
storm moves eastward tots Mia-
■Wppl Valley.
• Lang Thaakagfriag holiday
__week sad In Texas sms SI toast
and 44 presins die violent deaths
■with traffic mishaps
for 21 «f the fatafities.
allowances for industry and the
closing of tax loopholes
___ _ Dec.
The commit’ .said tto’"would U round about trip to West Vir-
Knowles Among
Arctic Travelers
Capt. Billy M. Knowles of 708
N. Circle landed one of three C19
“flying boxcars” fresn Ellington
Field Sunday at Elmendorf Air
Force Base, Alaska,
Chester Rogers, Baytown news-
man. was aboard to view fee arc-
tie maneuvers in which fee units,
from the 446th Troop Carrier Wing |
at Ellington will participate.
- An undisclosed number ot planes
converged on Alaska for the 10-day
training exercise with the U. S.
Army. Maj. Victor M. Coale of
Houston is in charge of the 15
men and three planes from Elling-
ton.
The arctic exercise is part of
the constant reserve training
which is taking place to keep the
nation's Armed Forces combat
ready. Knowles and Rogers will
return to Baytown Dec. 7 after
ginia where - the ;
will transport some
tiripants in the
(EJje Sagtanm Unit
Invites Readers To Call In Your Christmas
Plans To The Woman's Department.
Phone JU 2-8302
If you're planning e trip or having visitors
over the holidays, please let us know. The
news will be included -in The Sun'* annual
Christmas Edition.
Also, The Sun invites children to
write letters to Santa in care of
The Sun. They, too, will be pub-
lished in The Christmas Edition.
oppor-
tunity given to me by Gov. Price
Daniel to scree Texas and the na-
tion in the U.S. Senate.
"After careful consideration, I
have decided to accept fee
pointment and be a candidate
the ubcxplred term.”
Johnson has not said when he
will resign. At one time he indi-
cated that he did not plan to re-
sign until shortly before becoming
vice president.
At any rate, the Texas election
laws set up a time schedule
which means a senator canrtot be
elected before Congress convenes
in January, and it is mandatory
that Daniel appoint an interim
senator.
Blakley is a political conserva-
tive. His active entry into the race
probably means that some of the
. numerous conservatives named as
J possible candidates will drop out.
The former senator, 60, once a
ranch hand, is a self-made multi-
millionaire wife widespread inter-
ests.
He has extensive oil holdings;
owns several insurance compa-
nies; is the largest single stock-
holder of Braniff Airways; owns
two ranches; and owns at least
one "shopping center and a bank.
He heads a law firm, but it en-
gages in no private practice, keep-
ing occupied with to varied en-
terprises. y.
Blakley was a virtual unknown
except in financial circles when
he was appointed senator in 1957.
Even his political affiliation was
unknown.
Yule Season Moves Into City Of Baytown
The Christmas season moved in-1 Baytown stores will remain open
to Baytown over the Thanksgiving I until 8 p.m. each shopping day
weekend, with this year's never:
equaled Texas Ave. decorations
and the extensive decoration pro-
gram undertaken by Baytown
merchant*. —
Texas Ave. decorations have not
yet been seen in complete bril-
liance because of wiring compli-
cations brought about by rain tost
week, but full lighting » expect-
ed lor Tuesday or Wednesday
night. _ '
beginning Dec. 12, and extending
through Dec. 23. Stores are sched-
uled to close at 5 p.m. on Christ-
mas. Eve...... ........ ............................
9ioppers are urged to start and
complete Christmas shopping as,
early*** possibie-to relieve eon- , , .
gestiou during -the fast few days jgeoiativp. temperatures . Maided.
Coldest Weather.
Of Season Heads
For Lower Texas
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The season’s coldest weather
swep.t into the Texas Panhandle
early Monday and below-freezing
temperatures were predicted for
most of the state by Tuesday.
Forecasts called for a hard
freeze in the Panhandle with a
slim chance of snow Hurries.
The freeze line-was expected to
reach almost to the coast.
A Pacific cold front and an
Arctic cold front met in Texas to
send temperatures skidding.
The Pacific front reached the
state Sunday, from the West. It
whipped up gusty winds of more
than 50 mile* an hour and brought
blinding dust.
By dawn Monday it extended
from Dallas to Waco and Cotulla.
At that time, the Arctic cold
from, which carried the most
punch, had moved southward to
jusi north of Wichita Falls and
Lubbock.
Temperatures dropped to the 208
in parts of the Panhandle, to the
40s in tlie West Texas Plains and
the mild 60s ahead of fee fronts.
By 7 a.m. Tuesday, Dalhart re-
fxjrted the lowest temperature in
Texas at 21 degrees. Perryton,
like Dalhart in the top of the Pan-
handle, reported 26. Other repre-
before Christmas. Those days are
fast approaching, with only 23
shopping days left._____
Amarillo 27, Lubbock 40, El Paso
•33. Abilene 47, Dallas 66. Austin
69, Corpus Christ! 72. Houston 66.
Fetor Pan’s Christmas Stor
donY miss the greatest
ALL STAR CHRISTMAS
STCKy EVER...
fi t
Sfr/yfeyTETEg BMWTiRKEg bell}
/CHRISTMAS, m!
) JlNSLE BELLS/
V -CAROLS/BAH/
by Walt Disney
MISTER SMEE.
^CAPTAINHOOIQ^
rj V\E.IGH'HO-UEIGU-HO! p
„.T(4E SEVEhJ W/ARF5'
(from. a*/tm
$£VSH
,..tnd SANTA CLAU5 himself
ftTllt ’ f
PETER FAN'S
* CHRISTMAS STORY
k, AmsTicak ■
&Toryt«ll«r
WALT DISNEY__
—
4
t
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 84, Ed. 1 Monday, November 28, 1960, newspaper, November 28, 1960; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1044023/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.