The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 75, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 28, 1961 Page: 3 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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By dick LEONARD “I'm concerned," says Clark D,
HUNTINGTON W. V*. (API- J? d*J£{
b- workln? wlth ,h« CabeU-Wayne
SyETE.‘HJS^L^l ^development commtarion to help
M I,*r1 ,he program here. *‘I thought
designed to helo.
«T>o"*C.
Only about 750 of the estimated
7,000 to 8,000 unemployed in West
Virginia's Cabell and Wayne cqun- to get Jobs,” says D. W. Fa* Jr.
"Some of our unemployed peo-
ple are just going to have to faoe
facts and change their vocations
tics—rail, coal mining and indus- He is coordinator of the Hunting-
employed have been certified for Hu^^^pk^nf' rtfke
explains, "Besides many in the
campaign
teaching w
portunities
the aim of
sstjs s&s ™ »• •** aa•
portuni
use in new, less depressed voca
723 a week subsistence pay of-
fered while in training.
Some people anticipated a tre-
to be called back
Added icing to the cake was ^
5< TO $1°.° STORES
EARLY
SPRING
REMNANTS!
Colorfost—Wflshoble
•a aa “lady lkdM 0»d start lha family's spring wardrobes.
A wide assortment of colorful cottons lo choosa from in
various prints and solids. Don't miss this special low prioo.
. Stock up now and saual
1-10 Yard Lengths
39* To 59“ Yd. Values
The Huntington office lists 6,542
unemployed in its active file
l people in the two-
ty area who have Hied o
nrwed their unemployment pay
claims. Many draw the maximum
of $32 a week for aa tong aa 39
hwffhi.TB
Gunnoe’s staff contacted 1,015
of the likeliest prospects for re-
training. Of theae, 640 can
Interviews and Information, with
475 intereated enough to take ap-
titude tests
Gunnoe reports 52 per cent of
the tested applicants did not show
aptitude for the courses offered—
in small appliance repair, stenog-
' I automatic
inks the Helds offered
the employment peo-
. . _ . basis of job. needing
workers-may be part of ihe prob-
(Ml,
"It'd been our exper
people wanting typing also want
shorthand,'' he says. '’So they can
enroll for stenography, where they
get both.
Route salesmanship needs
man who is a born salesman He
to work in can't be trained as a salesman
construction People don't think they need
training to become waitresses and
waiters In fact, many of the
are taking courses in
nursing aid because of higher pay
in that field."
The employment office staff
generally got one of three an
swers from the unemployed pros
wts contacted about the retrain-
ig program.
1 I'm just not interested,
2. I expect to be called back to
work soon.
3. I'm too old to be starting all
over again.
But Gunnoe. who has been man-
ner of the employment mm
here tor 24 years, isn’t dii
rnphy nursing aid,
transmission repair, typing route
salesmanship and table waiting.
Classes in three of the fields
started earlier this month. Anoth-
er, in automatic transmission re-
"This to strictly an experiment-
al program,’’ he lays. "Alter all.
we re the first In the nation with
this on the federal level. It's just
like a laboratory, and we’re MB-
tap from the ground up."
Dr. Mead Suggests Bomb
Shelter For Honeymooner
DENVER. Colo. (AP)-Anthro- operates by means of a finely in-
I pologist Margaret Mead urges tegrated division of labor, the fire
I bomb proof, shelters
27*
Mm f YAH
Better Quality
REMNANTS!
world’s newlyweds—to assun con-
tinuance of the human race in the
1 event of nuclear war,
Dr. Mead, of the American Mu-
I seum of Natural History, offered
the suggestion in a talk to the
128th meeting of the American As-
sociation tor the Advancement of
I Science.
"Let the United States propose,’'
I she suggested, “that the United
Nations be asked to debate the
feasibility of an international)! fi-
nanced shelter system in which a
cross-section of the most produc-
tive and highly motivated mem-
bers of every country on every
| continent could be saved
in
to
"Let us propose a program
| which each country to assisted
build a blast-proof shelter suffici-
ent to accommodate all of the
people married in that country
1 during a two week period (and
¥
that) during the first six months
after marriage (they) spend two
weeks in the shelter.
SAVE
HOfl
• Prints A Sol'd*
ibuiout aoflacHon of Am motoric*
including Drip Dry, Woih Rinsa and other
Premium Finish*!. Choosa from 10 square
cotton prints, cotton par coles, cotton suN-
tags and cotton twills, to mention a taw.
1-10 Yd. tong*
• Polka Dots, Stripes
• Embossed Materials
• Wovan Sportswear
• Superfine Whiles
• Novelty Prints
• Checks A Squorcs
• Paisley Prints a
• Roiabud Prink
39c To 79< Yd. Valves
kwkr
c
yard!
I Mead sajd such a shelter system
for newlyweds would enable the
survival of a group that “would
be the most highly motivated to
try to continue their lives together
and to reproduce themselves.'
“They would be." she said “the
! stuff of which young immigrants
are made, and they would indeed
be immigrating—if there were to
be an allout nuclear war—into a
world that no man has ever
| known.”
Seymour Meiman, an associate
I professor of industrial and man-
agement engineering at Columbia
| University, told the symposium:
"In-so-far as American industry
effect alone of a modest-sized nu-
clear attack would render this so-
ciety no longer viable as a tig-
nificant production center of the
world."
He said that « the 65 major
industrial centers of the country
were each hit by 20-megaton
bomba, the immediate effect from
‘fire storms” would be to reduce
the United State* to a third-rate
industrial nation.
Noon
Stock Quota
(Courtesy, Merrill Lynch,
Pierce, Former and Smith)
EFFECTIVE JANUARY T. 1962
WE WILL PAY SEMI-ANNUALLY THE
FOLLOWING MAXIMUM RATES ON
SAYINGS DEPOSITS:
■ - I.
u
per annum for funds on deposits for a per annum for funds on deposit for less
period of one year after Hie effective than one year thereafter,
date
Tit* obovt rat* oppltos to Hm* deposits
and cortificata of dtposit aceopftd by
.
mC. . - '= -
Tht above raft applies to time deposits
and certificates of deposit accepted by
us.
%
IIIGHLAN
HIGHLAND*,TEXAS
Member Federal Deposit insurance Corporation
Alieg Ludlum ...............49%
Allis-Chalmers ............19%
Amer Cyan .................44%
Amef Tel k Tel.............137
Am Visco ...................53
Anaconda Cop...............49
Armco ......................72%
AtTpiSF..................''27%
Baxter Lab..................33
Beth Steel...................43
Celanese ....................35
Cetotex 33%
Chrysler ................... 50%
Cities Serv..................53%
Columb Gas-28%
Creole ..................A. 39%
Delta Air L..............:.. 47%
Diamond Aik .....64%
Dow Chan .••••••••••*••*••• 73
Du Pont.....................247%
Eastman Kodak.............Ill
El Paso.....................25%
Ford ........................11S%
Freeport Sulp...............27%
Gen Electric................74%
Gen Motors..................57%
Ckw Tele ......................
Gen Tire .67%
Georgia gac ................56%
Gillette Saf..................55
Tire 43%
..............25
..............41%
Gulf State Util..............40
Gustin-Bac ............No Sale
■ LaidPO................115%
IBM ............. 584
Inti Harv ..... 51%
Int’l Min ....................49
Int’l Nickel .................85%
Jones k Laugh .............74%
Kerr-McGee.................42%
Libby McN.............. 13%
Liggett and Myers..........109
Louis Land ..................74%
Monsanto ........... 53%
Nat Dairy Prod .............71%
Nat Dist ....................27%
Newp News .......>..v..-...-£'54%
Ohio Oil ........ 41%
OHn-Math ............... 39%
Otis Elev ..........*........74
Pancoastal Oil.............. 1
Parke-Davis ................35%
Morris ...............108
Petr................59
Wmmm.............33%
Royal Dutch ................35%
Seore ....................t.. wt
Shell .......................39
Sinclair ..................... 38
Socony-Mob ................51
Sou Pacific ................. 27%
Sperry-Rand ...............23%
Stan Calif...................54%
Stan Ihd.................... 55
N J ...... sn%
Stan Ohio ................... 53
Stanley-Wamer ............40
Stude-Packard .............10
Sun Oil............No Sale
Sunray-Mid Cont ..........No Sale
Tennessee Gas ............., 24%
Texas Co 58
Texa* Eastern ..............16
Texas Gulf Prod ............39
Texas Gulf Sulp ............. 21
Tidewater .................. 20
Timken ....... No Sale
Trans Am Corp .......;..NNoSaIe
Union Cafrbide ..............122
Un Oil of Calif 67
Airlines............. 39
Carbon ...........No Sale
john Drug ............No Sale
S Steel ................80
'eslthghouse .............. 39
erox ...................... 161
ew Orl Cotton........tjp 5 dn 5
cwnpauv
Philip Me
Phillips P
Pure Oil
Contract Awarded For
Hew Wortham Hospital
MEXIA (AP)—Langston Build-
ers of Mexia has been awarded
a contract to build Wortham’s
first hospital.
Construction will begin in Janu-
ary on the 380,000 building. The
hospital will have 15 beds arid
will contain 8,200 square feet of
floor space.
A drive for funds to build the
nearby city’s first hospital was
I conducted by the Wortham Local
• Development Corp.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 75, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 28, 1961, newspaper, December 28, 1961; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1056946/m1/3/?q=%22%22~1&rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.