The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 181, Ed. 1 Friday, March 20, 1964 Page: 1 of 16
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YOUR HOME
NEWSPAPE
Itnhf IAY-TIX—TW €»Mmi CM* of SootWoit Toms
VOL 41, NO. (II
IAYTOWN, TEXAS
Frida* March 20, 19*4
TELEPHONE NUMBER: BI24I02
Tm CmN Ptr Cum
SUN
Spots
No VMtort
JOHNNY WOI/T, lit Robert t.
Le* H*h School football player
wt*> had brain surgery about
ton** «Mka *fo, can nut Hava ,
tof tkltor. at thu tunr but will ,i,
m>>y canto from his fnand*. Ht
It In Method
Belli't Successor Speaks-
Foreman Confident Ofl
New Trial For Ruby
mmttm, rm. an - j«* ituh», o*utt. n> tm jtm Sktti1W!l
In Jail, then file th* standard
motion tor a new trial on Mno-1
day If at* hM not beta flltd by
Ruby's new attorney I* confi-
dent Mt chant will
tom .mil1
death In Teaaa' electric chair.
lIMtedist Hospital tn Ho* fl»
faSBJffni
leu**. Attorney* and paobably laa. and
ttw brat known utmtoal lawyer night
to Trim, agreed Thunday to Belli art
cead Melvin M. ■■ ■ ■
from Delia* to Horn ton to *•*
Foreman.
Hi* family raid BelU we*
And by special delivery letter,
ilcned by Jack Ruby and Ut-
il* tar. Eva Grant of Dak
~ Malted
morning In *
La Grume ho***!. Several
grandnchOdrea and greal-g I
chtklrea a too survive him.
THE MV. EVERETT Martto.
ewmito tad Wada DtiRaaa,
aong leader, wffl nuUnui revival
amVHMJt 7 » p.m. Friday at
Bapttet TSsnpte. Youth r*Dow-
ddp will ba held after th*
i Ruby
tor (laying
th* sc-
President
John r. Kennedy, last Nov. 8.
mill, who ina handled
ttm MO eapMal oftenw
and tot only one defmi-
m to toa eto^SjShrw
hbed by three brother* and
*to>r ol Ruby hour* eftrr they
(bed BeUl, a famou* CalllonUa
'onTof th# raraaktlng Ruby at
Wray*. Joe Tonatol of Jasper,
Tex.. Mid he would file « mo-
tion for a raw trial In Judge Jo#
& Brawn * court kxtaf sltoough
Foreman he* not *aM
u la taut* will be.
Forrman agU he _
contract with Eileen Kamtoky,
• Aator af.Ruby. and with three
af Ruby's brother*. Hyman Ru-
_arriving at hla Ian Fran-
cisco home Thursday night, said
he will meet newtimn at hla of-
fice at 10 am. today to make
t (tatement.
"If w* ana eucceuful to get-
ting a reversal of this case and
a new iriaJ, I don't think Mr.
DAIXAS (AT) - PM Barte-
m. an* at the etolf *f alter-,
ray* tetot defended hut Baby,
filed 4 modea today to Mri
Jw Rrewi'i eanrt tor a raw
total to Baby, to to to
m autheetied le Me the me-
Ho* by Ferry Foremen ef
Howto, «ho baa been bind
to defend Baby.
RUby will ever be executed,"
Foreman. Cl. told raw*men.
Hi* family Mid Forman. •
ZUkpoundtr who stand* M, was
■of Bu Bay-
Reel rad Gw* dub
FOUR
Oh.re Rod, Reel
art atterateg ■■
toe Oitoeevatlm of Natural Re-
Source* to Austin Th«y an
Mr*. M. T. VaddeO. Mi*. W. to
Htnotpraa, Mra V. E. to "A
and Dr. 8. E. Brausaan
tone • day eonfemte*
Thunday. Ike toWto —» to
an a ftoM trip SMwday^H
Li
APPOINTMENT* with a manta1
health roneultant from tot Hah
n. County Mental Health A.«v
elation may be mad* by r' ‘
MC-7VU an Monday, f
or Thunday morning. H
niltant la in Baytown tech Oral
and toM Thunday to BB ap-
potafntenti here.
* ♦ # • “
WmHmt/MTMm
C1EAR TO PARTLY to
tonagb Intmday wtto ma
ale ta Meek neefkeriy w*
Cbator Friday. TMnyanf
rang* enpattoi Friday, fl
Net nwk ebang* to knp
tar* enpaetod Friday.
OALVnTON IBM Mar
wto ba Mgfc at 1 tol poa. i
tow M ftl* nun.
I their choice as chief attorney
bSk°ts-.,aR^ ^-^’rAsas's
approached Foreman crossed
them up.
Foreman said he oelieve*
Dul Judge J(w h. Brown of
Dallas committed at least two
reversible errors tn the trial.
He should have not seated
any Jurors who witnessed the
rnme on television," Foreman
laid, ' and he should not have
admitted the statement* Ruby
made after he was in jail
No statutory warning wi
given him. and the statemen
were not reduced to writing."
Forrman said he was confi-
dent of a reversal hut he added
he did not expect Ruby tor*
trial again for a year or two.
"We will go to the Supreme
Court If we have to," he laid
"But I den t think well have to
g,. that far
N» mid eat
Ato«r trial aail determine
*er he*w?rl seek a change
tm* out of Dallas as Belli
thin by Ruby's remaktog trial |
lawyer*, TonahUl and Phil
leaon of Dallas, w. - ... -
Forrman said It has not t>een|
decided yet whether they will
stay an th* cam with him. He
raid he wanted to talk to Tuna-1
MB first.
The family declined to discuss
to* contents of to* letter or why
Belli was dismissed with
men
thnra
*d shortly
tout R weal______,___
(ton wlto He toM edlliea today
end tout H bed seld Ml etrirai-
toltoa fito to toe Mooetaa
(Ifotldi,
t * *
MOUMENTO. Calif. (AP)
—Pierre bwhager came bound-
teg semsi the California poll
Ural arena today aea preepe*
111 e taea-fntaute Candida te far
to* OJA tonal*. It arant so
■rack a a—Uan tent to* prsee
esiMtoeycflni pwMWRk
tend* I* name bom* to ran la
n Democratic race which al-
ready boa spilt tee party.
H was, can be?
bulletins Storms Cavort As
Spring Moves In
Winter Bids
Panhandle
Icy Adieu
MAt ^
Mr* Kamlraky asked____
■R6-* - - *—Rites Saturday
Hyman Rubinstrm Mid Belli1
"put oi a great big clreue," i ____ ____________
mm. mekiftBataw
ray representing the ( • «> IF town Nnpltal.
(Hee fonemaN, Peg* «)_ FgMraT sendee* wtR be held
i iafi Grace MefiMIst Churah at
• a.m. Saturday with the Rev.
Edwin T. Summer*, th# paetor.
officiating. Gr*reside service*
wOl be h*M at * t-m. Sunday
in Pin* Bluff. Aril., near her
native community of Double
Well*. Ark. •
Th# CUlpepperi were charter
member* of Grace Methodist
Culpepper founded the T. L Cul-
pepper Furniture Go. which (till
beers his name.
rived by
O'Neal.
Dr.KMoatrick’s
Rites Wn Be At
WO Saturday
Funeral services will be at
9:30 a.m. Saturday at the
Church of Jeeua Christ of Latter
Martin Conducts
Services Here
g« "**• **" BA! SS&X. S
Dr Kkktwtriek a dentist end Mrs. N W. Wslker. both of Bay-
effiffisrSas - a-«*d
the Houston Stake of the Chwwh Mgtgreet rt#e#*^*«awtve
of Jesus Christ of Utter Day y*"
b|
Bryon Amferaon. jniferweoo! ^ m th,
\Arvll StFfVofU Mneinn TBjteL I HJid OfT DfOpif CATTH* TO Ulf
man. ail members nf the Jra*^1 wist rramGmnectlcut.
church', High Council of which I ^
rtoffTK Vmaral^yfams '*rY sctlv* Mf* to this eommun-
-.n*2L° miZirtriSLJIS? S^fteWe* a DtomtorMth* to nearly 100
to .t KtLSS; 2^522
rgg^.^Jm'iBaig (m»SM
South America 7ftp Set-
De Gaulle Wants More
Latin American Sway
MEXICO CITY (API - Presi-
dent Charles de Gaulle's visit to
Mexico this week was heralded
as the sun of • drive to extend
French Influence through Latin
America
I)e Gaulle plant a tour of
South Amcnc* m the fall. What
effect did hit our days in Mex-
ico have on Mexican policyT
"Nothing ha* really changed"
tome Mexican officials o
mented
The 73-yesrold French hero
was unsparing In the prafaw he
heaped on Mexico
Texican* responded with
their limitless hospitality, even
giving De Gaulle the unprece-
dented honor of add retting the
Mexiran nation from the bal-
cony of the National Palace.
De Gaulle mixed his compli-
ments to Mexico in equal pro-
portion with praise for France
Mexicans, while returning the
oompliments. let De Gaulle
know they had basic differences
In policy.
President Adolo Lopez Mate-
os, a champion of the limited
nuclear test ban, said in :
luncheon toast to De Gaulle:-
"We do not want our history
to disappear amid atomic radi-
ations. We must all make ef-
forts to maintain international
harmony and peace, and to fos-
ter a general and absolute dis-
armament.'
This runs counter to D*
Gaulle's determination to con-
tinue nuclear testing until
France develop* Its own nucle-
ar strike force.
Neither disarmament nor nu-
clear testing was mentioned in
the Joint communique the two
presidents Issued.
Lopet Mateos stated shortly
before De Gaulle arrived he had
intention of following the
Frenchman * move in recogniz-
ing Red Chin*, although Mexico brother.
ha* begun to sell cotton and
wheat to Pelting.
De Gaulle took a cue from lo-
pe* Mateos who said In his wel-
coming speech that the French-
Mexican alliance was not de-
signed "against anyone or any
thing " De Gaulle immediately,
and on two other occasions, said
his visit was not intended to
affect Mexico's good relations
with the United States-
Mexico's trade with the Unit-
ed SUtaa Is vastly greater than
It* trade with France.
Now that the confetti has been
swept away, Mexico, while wel-
coming French aid and friend-
ship, will continue to pursue its
own policy of independence.
De Gaulle may have tried to
project an image of himself as
a helpful big brother, but he
may have found that many La-
tin Americans don't want a big
Rep. Eckhardt Hints
At Shell Price Probe
all services. Mrs
efth King will be organist.
The Rev. G. Ray Logan, die-
people are invited.
W. W. Schubert wfll ^to>le(jiee
■TOPJNfetatoNraagraraearaneet
Bishop Marlin will lead a die-
eraetm of the seven sayings ofl
Christ on the cross. »
JStJA TZ Jamu1
Area Methodist Church, wiB eon- H
duet Holy Week gerrices to Bay- trisl
• * ‘ " **-—jvtel
The series will begta BUU~ *: to* Good Friday sendee,
night and eratinra through Fit
day. Meltings with* from 1341
to 13:30 p.m. and at 7:30 p.m.
* dir at Grace
M In ton raw.
itftrt porucipooni wnn
Grace era Cedar Bayou. Mont
Betvieu. La Porto. Sea brook, St.
Mark's, St. Johns *r*l St
mn, ‘
Sunday night the choirs of St.
John , and Grace will ,«g. Mu-
hr nreeenled on suo-
nlghts by SL Milk's.
_____ _ Cedsr Bayou, Tuesday;
_ -aA. .4 Sara
combiiwa yout* cnoin or mt
area. Wednesday, and St. Paulk
Choir oi Thursday.
Tnt vanout M^tnoriut minit* *
a m--- |f n-^-lA— -a ak-.. araM- *
ttfl WUl pimKMr It Uldi Mr?*
Bishop Martin, who is a mem-
ber of the board of dim-tors of
Saa Jacinto Methodist Hospital,
began his work as a minister
at the Cedar HUT Methodist
Church to Dallas in M22. He
served his entire mbiMry In the
North Texas Conference until he
jmnkbatod-to theeptompeerin
1M4 and was assigned to the
Aikansas-I/xitslaiMi area At the
Jurisdictional Conference in I960
be was rarigrad to the Houston
Aril
ll a trustee of Southern
Untveretty, Southwest-
, Lon Moms CoF
Methodist Atsem-
American
Methodist
kmte degrees from Southwest-
(lea Ap.BTOBH
Hmtt
Rep. Grover To Sp«ak Al
College Loan Fond Meet
is. Yule said Paul 9
t and Is dotag very State Rep, Henry C Gram CBfton Adame of Highland* is
^xii’uSilrttorhrirtm Ethe
imbBi
trkpatrick of Hillister, Dr
! I. Kirkpatrick of Port ArtB
Walter1 ['
|S&SSTMld% c“ i» *«** •»
mitts*, will be the
at the April 11
ton Lae
Plane for mettt.
anoiawM Wednaaday by
George Lerch. chairman of the
meeting, *ft^c... a
steering ootwnittee
■of Am membership
committee Those attending the
■«iun Dr. Percy Faylel
John McClintock,
le, Jeff TUler, C.
Suetse, Joe H*rd-
WBUame.
SHtcn
iatl«j
CITIZENS
NATIONAL
Member PMC ■
Heme-Owned
I-errh said that Grover's talk
111 Include some financial faci
the benefit to- n ecBamsli!
educating their people.
fund wto be set up
tn the school dls-
■ junior and sen-
yeara.|i with ynkd
Wane an also in the offing
i have a panel representing the
atoaring committee on the pro-
gram to answer questions on the
loan fund, *,
Brown will be In charge of
contacting tach Baytown organ-
tzatton to request thitr'a rapre-
sesotativs from toe loan funnd
groopbe allowed to apeak at club
Rmnd. The talks are to be five to
10 minute* long.
Adam* to to oontect each High-
land* Club with the same re-
QUMt.
Suetse announced that 39.000
receipt* will be printed by April
1 in connection with the sollci-
tation drive for the loan fund.
Organization of solicitor* will
begin after the community meet-
Ktwanit Club, served as U*u- «Wy•
tenant governor of District 3 Ki-I The late T. L Culpepper was
Mfiasaft
Shrine Club. Knighte Templar,
Ruthven Commendeiy, Houeton,
District Dental keoditi™ C flj
STS \Everythijig
8sj& nsr {..y hor
tpilNALC Fete
i niitorY I p
' • J. Staley LwWrmfirmklugtoB.
sunk, letrimafru* v Ravtn»n-ID'C - cecretary-treasurer of the j,
mrtoa Kirtcyti^jf Ba^town , I N|lUoBal d Letter
petnek^S'HUl^Air Force bLUWS?®
In Utah; Jesse Beck Klikpat- "•* S***™
rick, a senior student *♦ *k«I W* « a dmmr at
University of 'Ti
of Texes
Branch and held rm
In the Houston CMc
soctetinn and the
Chamber of Com me roe.
Survivor* an his widow, Mrs.
Rep. Bob Eekhirdt of Houston
looks for sn increase in the
price of oyster shell — and pos-
sibly a price-fixing probe.
The attorney, who represents
•portomens and oystermen'*
group* In * running tight on
dredging of oyster shall reefs la
Trinity end Galveston bays,
made the observation in a talk
sportsmen and
_ monthly meeting of
the Baythore Rod, Reel and Gun
Club
If the sheD supply in Trinity
and Galveston bay* Is about to
run nut. then it must be as-
sumed that shell dredgers are
among the most stupid business
industrialists in the country,
Ekhardt noted
“It would be very startling if
a dwindling supply of shell were
not- eceomtianled by a decrease
to production and an Increase tn
oricee.” he said.
Ekhardt noted that shell is
produced in five Texas bays,
and is Increasing rather than de-
creasing.
He said price* are difficult to
obtain, but added that evidence
Indicates the price of shell did
“They want to cover up i
kill the oysters on Todd’s Du:
and get that easily obtain
thus cheap in price, shell near I
the surface, then go on down to I
Dollar Reef when they take
notion," he said.
Eckhardt said an investigation
into possible price fixing in the
shell industry could be consid-
ered.
"Shell prices are remarkably
dose," he said.
The shell dredging industry
know* there is an almost inex-
haustible supply of shell beneath
the floors of the bay. but they
will have to devise more expen-
sive machinery to dig deeper to
get It. Eckhardt said.
&
mk
p. ^ J
tr v v
REP. BOB ECKHARDT
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
. Three storms i«undol differ
ent section* of the nation with
destructive winds, snow and
rainstorms at tiering cera# to-
day after renegade tomadoe# v
ended the winter season wtto A
king-sued punch at Texas..
Spring officially bram at
910 a.m. (Eastern Standard
Time).
Tornadoes and strong winds
•kipped along the Texas coast
Thursday, causing an estimated
600,000 damage in Baytown
and injuring at least 13 person*
in Nederland.
A disturbance In eastern Kan-
sas can a witter scene over
By THE ASSOCIATED PRFJto
W inter said aa ley goodbys
to Texaa today te tee fens of
a blinding snowstorm ta toa
northeast Panhandle.
Three hoar* bet ore raring
officially arrived, toa aaow-
storm »truck Prrrytoo, te ten
upper Panhandle.
At least one school, to tea
Bake community I* mils*
■outburst of Prrrytoo, re-
mained cloned as bUadteg anew
and sa-mtle aa boor wtedi
made highway travel hasatri-
«».
Dr. John Needham of Perry-
too. who had started far Dum-
as during the early nwratag.
said be waa forced to torn
bark beraaae of the anew.
Trmperatoras te tea Perry-
ton area were te teo low Ms
at mld-naoratag.
The Panhandle stores was
tee edge of a bttsxard which
swept across Kansu.
Elsewhere ta Texaa, wtada
kicked ep dwt te arena ef
Went Texaa and chilled Meet
of tee aorteere half af te*
lint*.
most nf the central and north-
ern Plains and in th* Upper
Mississippi VaOer.
Blizzard conditions occurred
from eastern Colorado and west-
ern Kansas through Minnesota
and the eastern Dakotas. On*
to three - inch snowfalls were
(dee STORMS, Pag* I)
He Will Go To Unden, NJ.~
Dr. A. R. Padgett Joins Esso Research
'S
not jtfmp appreciably until after
a good aeal ef publicity was glv-
the notion that the supply
was diminishing.
Eokhardt said -a "Rave Our
i" movement misrepresents
facts because no one ever
d that the shell dredging be
completely stopped.
"We simply want them to stay
at least 1,200 feet, or possi-
I PI as tics
search.
and Chemical* Re-
ministrative, Engineering, and as department head in cfuurge^of
Technical Information Depart-
ment with Dr. E. W. Bower-
man as head. The engineering
section under A. M. Souby was
made a part of this department
Humble Oil and Refining Co,
announced Friday that Dr. A
R. Padgett, department head in
it* Baytown Research and De-
velopment Division, will join_____ _____ _ .
Esso Research and Engineering which will also* lie resiwnsible changed e:
Bj^'^^tton room must be cleared
bly 1,500 feet, from what Is left
of our natural oyster supply,”
Eckhardt said.
He noted that dredgers are
now working over live oyster
bed* on Todd’s Dump when they
eoukl be just as well working on
Dollar Reef, which Is "dead”
as far as oyster production is
concerned,
Co. in Linden. N.J., May 1,
His initial assignment will be
assistant director of the Analyti-
cal Research Division
In filling toe vacanrg created
by Dr. Padgett’s transfer, to Es-
so Research, several organiza-
tional changes were made, ef-
fective Friday in the Research
and Development Division
Among the changes was the
forming of two new depart-
ments. One is an derations and
Business with E. Q. Camp a:
head. It is responsible for main
tenance, construction, services
and supplies, pilot unit opera
tlons, accounting, budget and
labor relations.
The other new one Is an ad-
fot patent activities, recruiting,
public relations, manpower de-
velopment, the library and file*,
and coordination of experiment-
Tom FarinflrwtR. promoted
to department head to charge of
Specialties Research, and Dr. J.
C. Schiller, who recently re-
turned from a special assign-
ment with International Petrol
The Fuels and Analytieel De-
partment, headed by R. B. Wil-
liams, 'remains essentially un-
to a the techni-
■xmt
cal information activity was
transferred to the new Adminis-
trative department. No change*
Hiade
were
tn the Exploratory
Fuels section, headed by Dr. 3.
A Dinwfddic.
Dr. Padgett, in Abe meantime,
has been relieved of fi’H’datira .
as department head to assist in
the orderly transition of respon-
sibilities brought about by these
eum Co., resumed his position organizational change*.
door. I
This mark* the first time for
District 1 Letter Carriers to have
a meeting in Baytown. District
1 is thetnird^raHMj^^^H
largest letter car-
rier* district in th* U.S. and the
Gulf Coast ____________________
• I , 1# * * I largest of five districts in Texas.
Union Votes
a /X , - . dent is R. R. McClennan of La
On Contract K; AStts Kiffi 3
A v |ef toa Baytown Branch No. 3964.
CraClte O'ijer officers are Cedi Pow«,
__ and David
voting Friday on ratifleatkm of |Thoma», -secretary,_
a three-year contract for pro- ‘ “ 1
auction and maintenance work-in, t_....... m MJ to G,rth
^ffisSSSPL1??
5 By Car
oordtog to a'anton ■poEmnaB?* Five-yea cold Ricky Strange,
(Tabulation of the‘votes «U»> jof Mr. and Mra. William
In at 5 p.m. Friday and re- Clinton Strange, 209 W. Homan,
I should be known by 7 p.m.1* to Gulf Coast Hospital for ob-
W proposed contract 5o*. rarvattonjafter being hit by •
___call for a blanket warn in- car Thursday afternoon on Har-
cresse, but there are some min- vnrd Street, north of toe inter-
or wag* adjustment!. A wage section of Harvard and Homan,
increase became effective last Tbe car wae driven by Brook-
August. . >to Janice Taylor, 104 Llva Oak.
Acceptance of the contract No charges have been filed,
has been recommended by toe The accident report said Mrs.
union's itogotiattag committee, Taylor waa going north on Har- fir
according to Roy D. Kilough, vard whan toa child ran m front ha'
president of toe union. , of s parked vehicle into toe “
Ballots were mailed to union I path of the oar.
members last Thursday.! Mrs. Taylor was reixirted go-
The new contract will not be-Ling 25 miles per hour to a 3b-
Houston Will Surrender
Claim To Baytown Land
Saturday Is Deadline On
BCA Membership 'Buys'
Deadline for buying member- and Mrs. A. J. Froehner, Mrs.
in toe Ftoystwre -Oncert Jon Gunderson, David. D. Glenn,
"UonJ5.at *±m- Sa,ur- Mra^’neto^
Houston will officially release
its first reading (by ordinance)
■■claim on protective land strips
annexed 1>y Baytown last Aug-
GV. wt. It wu dtoeuMd at a meet-
ing of Baytown city councilmenj
City Attorney George Chandler
and Houston M^ra
Welch Thursday in
The. land dispute involves
corridor along Interstate High-
Mayor Lo
in Houston.
Louie
|lbkd.|
Councilmen Jack Huron, Ken-
neto Radgett, EMI Lively and
not be-1 tog 25 mil
come effective until signed by [mile tone. .
official* of both tot company Investigating officer was
and toe Union. I James Lankford.
A
Chandler met with Welch to dis-
cuu toe afiuatiaii. Chandler said
Baytown will receive a letter
from Houston saying the city
realizes that Houston's first
reading on toe property was
null and void because of provi-
sions of a recently-enacted state
law defining annexation.
The dispute aroae when Hous-
n had a tint reading <
land ram to August, toe tame
land that had been under a first
reading by Baytown for several
years, Chandler said;
Immediately after Houston's
irst reading, Baytown moved to
ava final tnadtagrai tote area
and a land strip from Garth
Road north to it* terminus.
Chandler said Houston will
withdraw its claim to any land
east of San Jacinto River.
or Lewi* Cutrer. Welch said he
wants to "continue good rela-
tions between Houston and Bay-
town." :
' Chandler said Welch was
"gracious and accommodating."
Horace Mast fends To'
Bre Spring Concert
The Seventh Grade Band ^
Vmd the C&M*rTBand itf M^®
Horace Mann Junior High
ships
Association
day, Mrs. Hulen Wilder, mem
bership chairman, said
Headquarters for the drive are
at the Baytown Chamber of
Commerce bu(lding. Those who
have not been contacted may
call the headquarters, 582-7660;
For convenience of member*
next year, all concerts will be
scheduled on Saturday nights
They will be held in the Robert
School will present their spring
cohcert at 7:30 p.m, Monday at
the school auditorium.
The younger group will play
eight selections including an ar-
rangement by Victor Herbert,
“Toyland Waltz.” Douglas Dou-
ty, Melissa Mullins and Billie
Ann Ott, featured as a comet
trio, will play "March of toe
Missilemen.”
1962 Ford Foundation Grant
Award. He has performed with
the Chicago Symphohy Orches-
tra, had lead roles With the San-
ta Fe Opera Co. and has toured
with the Goldovsky Grand Op-
era Theater. Milnes hat ap-
red throughout the U.S. and
The Concert Band Will play ari And)
olo, tebeny, Ari
Mrs. Dougl;
pea
Europe.
, Workers In the 1964 member-
ship drive are Mr, and Mt*.
Andy Anderson, Mrs. Dan S. At-
, Arthur Babin, Mr. and
T Hammack.
Hickerson, Mrs. A. K. Hall, Her-
bert V. Herbert, Mrs. Robert
Hester, Mrs. W. K. Hinton, Mr*.
Roy G. Holzheuser.
Also, Mrs. Thad M. Johnson,
Mrs. Sheldon Kline,' Mr*. Frank
Kominek, Mrs. Keith' King, Mrs.
W. O. Kubik, John Longbotoam,
Mrs. N. p. Lpngnecker, Elaine
McDonald. Mrs. H. W, Mara-
ble; Dr. and Mrs. H. W. H.
E. Lee High,$phool auditorium. Meyer Jr„ Me. and Mrs. Earl
ve* memtWrs rdf me tmm A. Mftat;1«k. Ptt*r F; Jttbre.'
season will be special guest*
Tuesday night at the last concert
of the current series at REL au-
ditorium.
Mr. and Mrs. W. A, MOrgan.
Mrs. Clarence Paul, Mrs. David
L. Norton, Mrs. J. A. Pridmore,
_________ Mrs. Jack Powers, Mr. and Mrs.
GuosteJrtU-wUl..t»,,9»aUlA^Road. Mr, apd.Mrs. Wit-,
[lines, baritone, winner <rf ge Sehuhert.
Also, Mrs: Nolan H. Schulze;
Dr. and Mrs. Joseph Satterfield,
Frank Sqiito, Mrs. Bobbie. Sut-
arrangement of the piano solo|
"Prelude to G Minor/’ by Rach- sara. v,
Mat^and0cK™Casey tdTl M^Wre. BiH E CtaybaSgh:
vrith Mra. Roy E, Cochrum, _Mrs.
ilay "Clarinet Escapade" with
>and accompaniment.
Bands are under the direction
of Fred Parker. Both bands have
total enrollment of 140 stu-
dents.
phin, Mr?. Ray L. Spear, Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Stephenson,
Mr. and Mr*. Tom M. Stone,
Mrs. David L. Shall, Mrs. C. T,
Shewell, Mrs. A. F, Treyblg,
Mrs. R. E. Tutt, Mr*. G. E.
Vaught, Mr. and Mrs.- Hulen L.
Wilder, Mr*. Roger Wylie and
Mrs. Billie Wheaton.
tom, mi, ana Also Jay Meadors, Mrs. E.
C. Benton, Mrs. de la Santos, Mrs. J. W. West-
moreland, and Mr*. E. G. Huri-
bert, all of La Porto; Ken Pace
and Mr*. Oswald Harmon both
of Highlands; Mrs. L. L. Ander-
— ■“ 301
IRI Vl wail uauimi nivvi. uvsitn< V at a /
The first reading was during Parker said the public is invit-
the office tenure Of former May- ed to attend. ,
>y
Charles G. Caldwell, H, Bruce
Day Jr.. Dr. and Mrs. W. G.
Depierri, Mrs. Eulalia Davitr,
Mrs. A. E: Drew, Mrs. Roy
Elms, Hubert Enoch, Mrs., Law-
rence French, Dr Kenneth
Ford, Mrs. J. L. Franklin, Mr,
r
son, John Bennett, Mb*. C. A.
Fortner, Mrs. Lucille Hare, Mrs.
Leslie Hinton, Jerry Prochazka
and Truman Reed all of Cros-
by; Mrs. J. C. Brooks erf Ana-
—--- ii..
'v
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 181, Ed. 1 Friday, March 20, 1964, newspaper, March 20, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1056580/m1/1/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.