The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 173, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 12, 1964 Page: 2 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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■ —' > ■ “ - - ••• ■ « * <
.. i. <«<•<> i mi«11Bini
-^
Qty* Bititanm ftnu Sunday, April 12, 1964
■EUM GAUG
, U.S. ECON
«2^£SS5VS
STEEL PRICING FORMULA
THRUST INTO FOREFRONT
LC Debate
Team Gets
'Good' Rdte
By SAM DAWSON
AP Ruslne** New* Analyst
NEW YORK (AP) - Prices
and Sow they're really arrived
at are again sharply to the fore
with th*^WBel antitrust indict-
ments* .
The average citizens' pocket-
book is affected desjiite the long
and often devious road
from the prime producer to the
' mtail *11 Mi' prod-
ucts. Ana he wonders just how
price is set. Is he getting a
So far the charges against
eight major steel companies, of
conspiring from 1955 to 1961 to
fix prices on carbon steel sheet
such as used in autos and
household appliances are only
that—the charges are yet to be
. ..proved i» court— -*--
\ But sure to be aired in com-
ing weeks and months is specu-
lation on how many industries
have conspired to fix prices and
also the question: What roles do
business ethics or fear of pros-
ecution play1 in fixing price's/or
steering clear of fixing them?
Federal antitrust suits in the j
electrical equipment, steel and i
other industries seek to answer i
these questions.
Or are prices just quietly ad- (
ministered, as often charged? i
crinntcin fttrv i
City Manager Fritz Lanham ;
described the city’s public rela-
tions as about 90 per cent get- ’
ting the work done and 10 per
cent actual public relations.
Lanham was the speaker at
the West Baytown Kiwanis Club '
mantinn on fKa olhr’e niiKlU ra_ •
Lee College debate team en-
tered a state toumantent in
Corpus Christi Thursday, parti-
cipating in four preliminary
rounds.
The team, composed of Don-
role of final arbiter of1 all aid
_______ and Stephanie Mea-
dows, defeated Tyler but lost
rounds to Blinn, Lon Morris and
Paris. The twosome received a
rating averaging "good," which
is place four on a live-place rat- 1
ing scale, Clarence Schulte
meeting on the city’s public re-
lations program.
He said that good communi-
cations between the taxpayers
and the city government were
essential and that Baytown was
opposed by neither I i U/amAfT Hofasl1
management, that wage de^ VTOil IVI3 1/vlvQI
mands weren’t fought against
isrpOTSS. eSL Louis 121-97
charge was complacency at the
“[JS c“m SAN FRANCISCO (AP)—“We
Urge '° Uy I want to wrap it up right there
mTh« fallen * st‘ Louis Sunday,” de-
The theory in a democracy is |4Jjwlg^ gftn Coach
that priees are set by» ^ jffiTmT BBRW
fS? 1 J«*!? ,hos.pita' cas.es.
coach said.
The tournament was at the
:ch As-
Quality makes the difference in
‘TTcm/th
'^COLOR
THE HANDCRAFTED COLOR TV
Texas Junior College Spee<
sociatlon session held a.
Mar College. Twenly-one junior
WILLIAM M. (RILL) Batten
will take Ihe oath of office a*
judge of Harris County Court
it Domestic Relation* No.
2 at 10 a.m. April 15 in the
Jury a»*embly room of the old
court hou*e in Houston, corner
of Preston and Fannin.
. I in St, Louis on Sunday,” de-teams from six junior colleges
> ...iclarod Sun Francisco Coach entered the linal elimination
' * Alex Hnnnum after his band of rounds. These included Lan Mor.
^.l l^!WHrtor--ho?”ita! ca-s whipped ris °f Jacksonville. Blinn of
la Ithp Hawks and took a 3‘2 Brenham; Temple, San Jacinto,
nmM. leaa ln ,hpir best-of-seven West- Tyler and Paris junior colleges.
,cn‘ it’sP a ern pIayoff f,nak' ’ Schultz said, the LC team met
The winner meets Boston to four of the eight teams that en-
ndiict In rein jdecide the National,. Basketball tered the finals and ”our cOm-
of tt_nrW« Association title, and as of now petition was among the bust
cnine nn^whe^demnnd exceeds Warriors ^ an ed»e de- there.” He said that Magiii and
sunX and dimZ len un-1spi,e their Miss Meadows were a ”3ifflcult
sold* sunnlies oile ud Boston’s Celtics won the East- tram to defeat. For example,
Funeral
Notices
“Do yo
tonij
I^P^PIP
eras, uie ruev. n. u. tiuiunu, xjv.
David Norton. Dr. Richard
Thompson and Dr, Harold Ford.
primarily U a politicoecoooalt
weapon.
SKRLA
Mr,. Stanch* Skrta, 64. of J34 Church
In Crttf, wo* “lied by God at 2:40
«.m. Friday.
Mr,. Skria wot a rnlctant s» Crosby
Jl year,. Survivors art two dauahtars,
Miss Zdonky Skrta of Houston and Mrs.
Georgia Krauskopf of Crosby; one son,
St*v» skrfa of Crosby; one brother, Jsr-
ry Baletka of Houston; and two half-,1,,
fors in Czochaslovaklo. Also surviving
or*,,six grandchildren and several nieces
and nephews. .
Services will be field d» J p.m. Satur-
day of th» Crosby BnsHiorn Church with
the Rev. Albert Mlehallk In charge. In-
terment was In the SPJST Cemetwy un-
der the direction of Earth man High-
land, Funeral Home,
Mrs. Skrta was a member ot the Amor-
lean Legion Awlllorv, Unit 4SI, ond a
momber ot SPJST No. «.
In lieu of flowers, the family has re-
quested remembrance, be donations to
the Crosbv Brsthem building fund or the
Cancer Research Fund.
A study approved by the coun-
cil said the volumes of Soviet
oil available for export to West-
WASHING
Defense D«
dered a halt
tary peraotu
tieing discrii
-it was disc
S. Paul, ,a»
defense, sent
all service
heads Of mg
keep prices from responding to tory which the Warriors insured
supply and demand. The U.S. by scoring, nine straight points wry close and that both
government used to set the [ to open the second half after St. were good. -
price of sugar by ' raising or I Louis had narrowed its deficit This meet completed th
lowering the amount that could from 20 to nine points at the son for the LC team. Tt
be imported. x~ - end of the second Quarter. members have debated to
It now enters into, or dis- Hannum isn’t positive who at three previous meets
cusses, international agree-i he’ll start in St. Louis, but prob- six won, six loss record,
ments that regulate?the supr iy, I ably the same five that'opened ' r*
and therefore the price, of such before# the 10,628 Cow Palace
Mrs. BHnoskfs
Rites Held Today
Rites Set Sunday
For Crosby Man
Funeral services will be at 2
p.m. Sunday at Crosby Baptist
Church for Frank J. Lavaria
of Crosby, who died Friday in a
Houston hospital.
Conducting the services will]
be the Rev. Burt O’Banion of
Highlands and the Rev, W. E.
Powell of Dayton. Funeral ar-
rangements are under the di-
Funeral services were held at
3 p.m. Saturday at the Imma-
culate Conception Catholic
Church in Liberty for Mrs. Vic-
toria Bilnoski, 66, of Highlands.
She died at 6:15 a.m. Thursday
in Austin.
Mrs. Bilnoski was a resident
of Highlands 35 years. She is
survived by her husband, Frank
Bilnoski of Highlands; three
sons, Marion B. Bilnoski and
Edmund Bilnoski of Highlands
and Clarence Bilnoski of Bay-
town; three daughters, Mrs. E.
L: Rice of Crosby, Mrs. O. G
Then’s a
mum
Admissions Ttsfs
ADMISSION TESTS wUl be
given at 9 a.m. and 6 p.m. Mon-
day at Lee College. Included
Kvlilliltlon Baseball
Friday’s Results
Chicago (N) 3^ Boston 1
> (A)"2
sveland 0
New York (A) 4, Washington
Houston vs. Milwaukee, can-
jaled. K\;
Today’s Games
Cincinnati vs. Chicago (A)
Houston vs. Okla. City (PCL)
Milwaukee vs. New York TA)
New York (N) vs. Baltimore
Philadelphia vs, Pittsburgh
St. Louis at Kansas City
Chicago (N) V*. Boston
Los Angeies (A) at Los An-
gles (N)
San Francisco vs. Cleveland
will be toe school and college
ability test and tests in math,
data processing and computer
programing. These will be giv-
en in the auditorium, Wallace
Meaner, director of counseling
and testing, said._
Pittsburgh 2, Philadelphia 1
Cincinnati 5, Chicago “
San Francisco 7, (Set
KOVARS
'“May I j$kg..this.. pppgrtUbttYi
SSte Teachers Meet
seat on our city council for an-
other term. I am deeply grate- The science and math depart-
ful and shall try to be worthy I ment instructors of Lee College
of your confidence."_ and Robert E. Lee High School
COLOR T.V. CENTER
221 i. T**o» Av«; Ph. 5824
WuMHutt-aitA
Pruett at Pearce Ph. M-Nlt
ters, Mrs. Eunice Hopkins, Mrs.
Thelma Schuster and Mrs. Mer-
tice Eastwood, ail of California.
Pallbearers will be Jake Par-
ish, Harrell Beal, Billy Beal,
Pursey Scott, all of Crosby, and
F. W. Hiltibrand and Giles Ross,
both of Houston.
I .1A |JAU|(. ueational problems
Lulu MUrfS Alvin Miles, as
“ Q and ■ chairman of-
.«* ,Tex^*, ^ph .and ,^am science departmen
Houston State Teacher College jege ^vlted the
remain on censure Ust. of members to parto
American Association of Uni- d&cusfiofi and to <
versi y Professors, which is lrends to ^ fiel(
meeting at St. Louis, because
of difficulties regarding dis- S
missal of faculty member,.
0 U.S. Secretary of State j cialized discussion.
Dean Rusk arrives in Manila The conference
for 10th anniversary meeting p.m. to Room 203*
of Southeast Asia Treaty Or- building.
ganization.
# Kennedy family meets in I f* £•*#>■ i|fw Lj*
Boston with 18 architects, de- *«v I OIUIIJ PH
signers and artists to talk over * . f* „
plans for $10-miliion John F. i AT L3rV6T L3fC
Kennedy Memorial Library.
Detroit vs. Minnesota
Sunday’s Game*
f N0NSEN8BM
50US0BACKT0
BED. COOKING A
MEAL B A SIMPUE
v OPERATION J
NCMtWEN-—'
MOWDOTOU
TURN ON THIS
" ANYBODY>
WITH AN I.Q.
OB 212
CAN DO IT/ J
SPECIAL
FOR
SUNDAY
cane Carla and the possibility'
of recurrence. His topic was the
proposed Brownwood levee.
Longnecker said there was an
E. Texas — Hwy. 148
LiTTLI HENRY
>T C«| Jbiderson
estimated $9 million to losses
during the hurricane to the
Brownwood and Lakewood area.
He said toe U. S. Corps of En-
gineers is now waiting for an
DECKER
0 Greek and Turkish Cy- i participated to Career day Fri-
priots exchange light gunfire dav at Carver High School.
atsWatsgk. Kyrenl.Pa^wito.i The speakeR! aml the areas
no ca*uaUies_ reported. The discussed included Wayrie Greg-
pa« is held by Turkish Cy- 10Iy and Hollis Latimer, business
-- education; Frank Maystorovich,
, language; Mrs. Carmen O’Neal,
Lamor Dads Meeting vocational nursing; Charles Lar-
appropriation from Congress to
make possible a study of toe
levee. The engineers, Longneck-
er said, are Hying to tie toe
-TONIGHT-—
"RACING YOUNG"
"CAPTAIN NEWMAN"
"THE CHOPPERS"
Dixie Twirlers To Be
Honored Here Tonight
Dixie Twirlers of Houston, a
teenage square dance group
that has performed throughout
Texas, will be honored guests
of Bay shore Wagon Wheel
Square Dance Club at S p.m.
Saturday at the Pythian Hall.
Leonard Morris, sponsor of
the group, will also he on toe tecl T horne*
program Other callers wiU be ghould another
from Beaumont, Houston, Pasa- ' m
dena and_ Texas City.
i»4X. UUU 4U4 0t Ul.XSt VJIVIOUUl nm
be hosts for the dance, and Ce-
cil Walker of Texas City will
mnetan r\( onvnmntlini'
Brownwood levee project into
one for rising water control that
would extend along the Gull
Coast to Corpus Cbristi.
Only a small: amount of the
losses were recovered from in-
surance, he said. He described
toe levee project as “now to a
dormant state as far as toe
• SUNDAY •
, THRU TUESDAY
ADULTS 75c
2 CHILL-THRILLERS
jCAPT. JAMES W. (Buddy)
Bridges, son-of Mr. and Mrs.
John J. Bridges Jr. of 1504 Mis-
sissippi, recently completed the
Marine helicopter course at Ma-
rine Corps Air Base to Santa
| Ana, Calif. He returned to ac-
tive duty to the Marine Corps
I Air Force to January to make
a career of the service. He re-
4- T\,e*4W* kies
SEC A BEAUTIFUL GIRL
CHANGED INTO A
PETRIFIED
MONSTER
before your eyes!
KSsi? **
He caUed on members of toe
Baytowp Chamber to help by
"getting behind the politicians.”
"Write to the Congressmen —
your Senators,” he said.
The speakers were introduced
by Paul Cater, president of tire
Wooster Chamber.
Among guests at the meeting
were Judge Sam Davis and BiU
Neeson of Houston, Joe Brack,
Rolland Pruett, Paul Best,
■ Frank Baker, Jack Collum, L.
NOW SHOWING
THRU WEDNESDAY
By A girl
yvWN defies a
M whole town
W to"Save
W ThatTiger!"
emeR)A sometimes t wmm
UP'. WE HAD OUR fiAMCS
DURINGTHBWEEK,
WAIT FOR US.
, QRANOMAv'.
sides to Tustin, Calif., with his
wife, Nan, son, Jim, and daugh-
ter, Elizabeth Ann, >
be master of ceremonies.
UNCLE SAM'S
hand in your
pocket is enough
ART
FORBES
FOR LEGISLATURE #2 IS
sisttog of Beverly Mills,
Roach and Carl Cantella,
IP’s Port Theater Has
Hew 'Fifth Back' Scats
n The Port Theater to La Porte
>{ has just been refurbished with
e all new “push back” seats, Man-
•- ager L. R. Rigby announced,
i- The rows are spaced 40 inches
e apart, giving everyone pienty of
s “leg” room. These are 1h,e.lat-
s est to theater seating and will
j assure the patrons more com-
fort, Rigby said. _
LOOKIN’.
m
i WAIT
ON Y3U.
SO TERRIFYING
coo/dnY
rememhe,
1 #* T, -TOSAvt
rA A HER
UFE!
BOB ECKHARDT
SPONSORED
INCOME TAX
BY STATE
COMPARETHE RECORDS
DANCE
■v.
Knights of Columbus HoH
BEETLE BAILEY
Yankee Moose
SPORTS
Wafa*
a Champ* j
( YOU SB# THIS?
SOT TO
l U9K (T/
npotsuTMf
TO PANIC, 6*.
.YOU WWB TO
X MEANT
HIS
I’M So COMFUSSP,*
BETWEEN TUB MBN,
THIS PAPERWORK AMP
MY OWN PR08LBMS,
I’M NOT SETTINS
ANYTHInS ponb.'-V
.ilivlijpiii psycho-shoc::
Baytown, Texas
NOW SHOWING
THRU TUESDAY
SORBES ECKHARDT
M b. *k '
leMiar* Mi y**r «nt«g*
F*MF*i.iUr,
PRESLET
Byrn# Gengrsl Aiwntly, 4th Degree
Knights of Cp'umbut
r - The
core curd
»-1
SCPY
WANTBO
J
■*. ■ V;
Jj
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 173, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 12, 1964, newspaper, April 12, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1055273/m1/2/?rotate=270: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.