The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 29, Ed. 1 Monday, November 6, 1961 Page: 1 of 10
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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’ flu. Btytowa Am bvMM
WILLIAM L FORD
MT Scarlett
to the Brunson Theator to aaa
•SECOND TIME AROUND*
coupon to food for ton ttokoto «
a tod at tba BrtuuNn bw ifllto
(Fltr iaxjtoum Sun
» *
M y* ft it %
YOUR HOME
I
Swvtag IAY-TEX-—'Th* GoMeii Circfc of
VOL. 43. NO. 24
TELEPHONE NUMBER: M2-I302
Monday, November A, 1961
BAYTOWN, TEXAS
Kva Canto Par Copy
AYTOWN SISTERS DIE IN PLANE CRASH
★ ★ ★
★ ★ ★
★ ★ ★#
★ ★ ★
★ ★ ★
★ ★ ★
★ ★ ★
★ ★ ★
Multi-Million Dollar Chemical Plant To Locate Near Refinery
Parents, Pilot
Gonzalez Is
REL Speaker
1Jm DK. 'NICHOLAS Nyiradt. former
/ 4M minister of finance in Hungary,
I W* will speak in a school asscmt
% Tuesday at Robert E. Lee HL
.W*. School. He will atoo MKtok on
-A] "Free Enterprise or Disaster’, at
7:30 p.m. Monday at the Commit-
Igg nity Houae to a group of Humble
r~
Volleyball Schedule
FIRST MEETING and practice d
the YMCA Women's Volleyball
League is scheduled for 7 p.m.
Monday (tonight) at Robert E.
Lee High School gymnasium.
m Church and commercial league
jg baskethall coaches will have their
initial meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday
at the YMCA Building, 1722 Mar-
ket.
LP Sets CC Meet
BAYSHORE-LA PORTE Chamber
of Commerce will have a luncheon
1 - meeting at noon Thursday at the
® La Porte Mexican Restaurant,
Reich, manager, asnoanwd.
Monday Sessioe
CATHOLIC DAUGHTERS of Amer-
ica, Mater Dei Court, will meet
ai 7:30 p.ra. Monday at St. Jo-
| seph’s school. Mrs. L. W. Maher
has planned a program.
Borg-Warner Corp.
Coming To Baytown |n New York
To Aid Dems
The new Borg-Warner Corp. pet-
rochemical plant announced early
Monday to be located “adjacent to
the Baytown Refinery" actually
will occupy a she between United
Rubber and Chemical and Baker
I Rogd.
Boundary of the new plant
tote are United Rubber on tooth.
Baker Road on north, maiden
tint neetton on. west igMp
Jacinto River Authority (tonal
on raft. Much of the toad to for-
merly a part of the Miller Dairy
tract. The plant probably will be
erected In the *outhea*t earner
of the acreage.
k At lento M penona Hkely will
be required to run the plant aft-
er completion.
Tbto information was learned
here after Initial announcement of
the new addition to Baytown’s in-
dustrial complex came from Mar-
bon Chemical of G^ry, Ind. (Chi-
cago), a division of Borg-Warner.
nouncement came from Enjay
Chemical, a Humble division, that
Enjay will supply ethylbenzlne to
Marbon from the Baytown Refin-
ery by pipeline.
Marbon will build a plant capa-
ble of producing 75,000,000 pounds
ol styrene a year. The exact size
of the plant and coat dollarwlse
were not revealed, but it was
learned that the installation could
be catagorized as “big."
Stymie is not a new product to
Baytown since it has been used
for nearly 20 years in this area as
a component in production of syn-
thetic rubber,
Styrene hu never been pro-
duced In Baytown, however, and
heretofore has been shipped in
from other plants.
There also were reports that
Humble-Enjay-feed stock ethylben-
zene might be produced tram a
that Humble might have to
here simultaneously with
erection of the Marbon unit.
Enjay spokesmen said comple-
tion of negotiations with Marbon
constitutes another step in sep-
arating Baytown Refinery (C - 8)
At die sartie time another an- aromatics into components for use
Board Will Review
Travis Plans And
School Insurance
Auxiliary To Meet
EAST HARRIS County Medical
Auxiliary will meet at 9:30 a.m,
Tuesday in the home of Mrs. H. V
Davis, 1316 E. James. Guest
speaker, Dr. Edward Hermann,
will speak m ”R*dtotk» and
Man.’’ Cohoe lasses will bt Mrs.
William Bridges and Mrs. J
Andrews.
Lucky Shopper
RUTH ANN MILLS of 505 W.
Pearce is the lucky Monday morn-
ing shopper. She received a cash
prize of *10, given by Baytown
merchants sponsoring the mer-
chandising promotion. Theme of
the promotion is "Shop at home
and save.”
(Continued On Page I)
Plans for a 12-classroom addi-
tion to Travis Elementary School]
will be further studied by schooll
trustees at a 5 p.m. Monday spe-
cial meeting of the school board.
The meeting is being held early
due to a conflict Monday night
Final approval could come an
die Travis plans. Trustees have
itudied the plans.
1 approval be granted, bids
: project Abe expected to be
tonnedtoMy.
taken
The Travis addition to part flt a
SHOO.000 bond issue already ap-
proved by school patrons,
projects to be built with the mon-
ey include six additional class*
rooms and a gymnasium tor Car-
ver High School and a cafeteria
for Carver Elementary, Plans for
these projects are also underway.
Steele M. McDonald, Odena
A LITTLE colder tonight with
occasional rain through Tues-
day.
Tuesday's Tides
GALVESTON TIDES Tuesday
will be high at 2:42 a.m. and 4:24
p.m.
p.m.
Childers and David Y. Arnett, all
members of the school district's
insurance board of managers, will
meet with trustees to report on
activities of the group and make
recommendations for the year.
McDonald is chairman.
About one third of the district’s
policies expire each year. Those
expiring this year were written on
a temporary basis while changes
were made in the insurance pur-
chasing policies of the district.
Recommendations for placement
of these policies pre scheduled to
low at 9:13 a.m. and 9:53 be made by the insurance group
at the Monday meeting.
chemical raw materials. We
already offer paraxylene in com-
mercial quantities and are pro-
ceeding with market development
work on metaxylene to complete
the full chemical utilization of this
material.
Work likely will be started by
Marbon before the end of the
year. National Industrial contrac-
tors, also well known in Baytown,
are reportedly competing for the
assignment. Completion is sched-
uled for early 1963.
Robert Shattuck, Marbon presi-
dent. said the plant will supply
raw materials for “Cycolac" plas-
tics.
Shattuck said the new plant will
have initial capacity of 75 MM
pounds of styrene monomer an-
nually, but that is being designed
so capacity can be expanded as
The plant will supply raw ma-
terials now purchased from out
side suppliers, for two Marbon
plants, Shattuck said.
At its plastics plant near Park-
ersburg, W. Va., Borg-Warner Di-
produce* "Cycolac” brand
used for high-impact
extrusions and calender-
ed sheets. At Gary, Ind., Marbon
produces h'gh-sty -cne reinforcing
resins for the rubber industry.
Feedstock for the Baytown oper-
ation will be cthylbenasne, sepa-
rated from toe mixed xylene
stream oi the Humble refinery,
the announcement said. A contract
agreement will be signed between
Borg-Warner and the Enjay Divi-
sion of Humble.
The announcement was the sec-
ond in less than a month con-
cerning an expansion move for
Marbon. In October the Division
purchased a site at Grangemouth,
Scotland, for a plant to produce
polymers in response to increased
overseas demand.
Marbon was founded in Gary,
Ind., in 1934 and became a Borg-
Warner Div;sion the same year.
Its West Virginia facility was
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Henry
Gonzalez, this city’s first new con-
gressman in 23 years, went to the
aid of the party today, the same
Democratic Party that came
his aid last week.
Gonzalez flew to New York
Sunday night to join in campaign-
ing for reelection of Mayor Robert
Wagner.
Meanwhile, his Saturday elec-
tion over Republican John Goode
Jr. and three other Democrats
kicked up a fuss over its signifi-
cance. Gonzalez said former Pres-
ident Eisenhower's visit here in
Goode’s behalf backfired to be-
come Democratic advantage.
Gonzalez called his victory “a
vote of confidence in the New
Frontier program and above all
in the Democratic Party." He will
succeed Democrat Paul Kilday,
who resigned as a member of the
House after 23 years to become
a judge of the U S. Court of Mili-
tary Appeals.
During a stop in Dallas Sunday
night en route to New York, Gon-
xalexiald: —
'Up to that time (Eisenhower's
appearance) the National Demo-
cratic headquarters hadn’t real-
ized what I knew and had said
all the time—the Republicans were
trying to make this election a na-
tional issue.
"After the Republicans brought
in their 50-megaton bomb, people
started getting agitated. Frankly,
I wag scared. But money started
coming in that I never dreamed
we would get for the campaign."
built in 1958.
Expansion Is
Underway At
St. Joseph's
Latest News
Flashes
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. (AP) — The main
U.N. Political Committee today approved a U.S.-
British resolution calling for immediate resump-
tion of East-West negotiations on a treaty to ban
nuclear bomb testing.
The vote in the 103-nation committee was 66-11
with 16 abstaining. The Soviet bloc, Mongolia and
Cuba cast the negative votes.
But the proposed talks appeared doomed in
advance. Soviet Delegate Semyon K. Tsarapkin
said:
"There will never be such riegotiations.”
Cold, Rainy
Weather Is
Holding On
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Cold, cloudy and windy weather
gripped Texas Monday, but—ex-
cept in the Panhandle—the clouds
held temperatures above the freez-
ing mark.
Scattered light rain-fell shortly
before dawi^ at Houston, -Browns-
ville, McAllen, El Paso and across
the state line at Shreveport, La.
A cold front that blew into the
state late Saturday had spread
uroay _ __
over the state by Monday morn- wrre' ta~k"en to“s1 Vincent’s Hofr
• Slight improvement n*i»itri-
ed in condition of House Speak-
er Sam Rayburn, 79. ill with
cancer, Hospital bulletin said,
“The speaker continues to be
weak, but better than yester-
day."
• Inga, the season's eighth
tropical storm, plows slowly
through the Gulf of Mexico with
little indication she will become
a hurricane. Disturbance poses
no immediate threat to any land
area. '/ ' 'M+ , 4
• Die 7,129-ton Scottish tank-
er Clan Keith explodes and sinks
hi heavy seas off north Tunisian
coast. Sixty-one of 6* European
officers and Pakistani crewmen
reported missing.
to mhre than t-,500 Baptist* ga-
thered for Woman’s Missionary
Union convention at Autoin.
• li. S.’ Justice Department
picks Las Vegas as launching
site for nqw drive against
tional crime syndicate. Ed Ol-
sen. chairman of State Gaming
Control Board, says probe
sounds "a bit sensational.’’
ing with thermometer readings in
the 40s and 50s across the south-
ern third of the state and in the
30s over most of the remainder
of Texas. The range was from 54
at Galveston to 31 at Amarillo.
Small craft warnings continued
up along the coast from Pori Ar-
thur to Brownsville and tropical
storm Inga moved northward at
Found Alive
Two Baytown children, daugh-
ters of Mr. and Mis. Wilson R.
Bond of 607 E. Wright, were
killed in the crash of a light air-
plane Sunday night near Ihe San-
tli'o W M An ivu-t Icifiuxi'iliul
The airplane, a chartered Cess-
na 182, - disappeared over a hill
north of the airport 12 mile* south-
the area were checked
airports in
1 when ra-
ta Fe, N.M., Airport, Associated dip contact was lost, but there
Press repotted at 1 p.m. Monday.
The plane, carry ing the children
and their parents and a Houston
pilot took off. from Houston at
12:30 p»m. Sunday tor Santa FT*.
The t\ash reportedly happened
about 7:35 p.m. Sunday.
Search Crews found Mr. and
Mr*. Wilson Bond and the pitot
alive, but badly injured. They
velocities of 20-30 knots were ex-
pected with gusts up to 45 knots.
Forecasts called for cloudy skies
over most of Texas with scattered
light rain mostly in southern and
central areas of the state.
‘"Tle"^iItftdf"B(S1%aQ §Sid teffi _ ..........
peratures would be a little lower xwo private _p 1 a n e * joined
itt the eastern TiaH of The "Slate National Guard helicopter at da)
Monday with a warming trend
pital in Santa Fe.
The plane was found about
three miles from Santa Fe Air-
port.
was no report of the plane.
A search during the night was
fruitless because of the snow*
fall and visibility was listed as
poor when; the search eofftinued
Monday morning.
Tower personnel at Santa Fe
fata
County Municipal Airport
Stover asked tor landing instruc-
tions and then the yellow airplane
circled thr field once, made a
wrong turn «n it* approach and
disappeared over a mil north of
the runway.
State police said terrain In toe
Aboard the plane were Mr. and (area Is rugged with a number of
Mrs. Bond and their two children, deep arroyos.
Laurie Lee, 2, and Tracey Lynn,
1, and pilot James L. Stover of
Houston. The Bonds left Houston
at 12:30 p.m. Sunday to return to
about- five miles per hour. Wind san)a » where Bond was work-
Stover, who had leased
(See PLANE, Page 2)
over the state Tuesday. Tempera-
tures Monday night were expect-
ed to again be in the 30s and 40s.
• Weekend violence In Texas
kills 17 persons with 1# of the
total dying to traffic accidents.
Wooster Water District
Elects Officers Jan. 2
iown
BENNY KILLINGSWORTO. soph-
omore at Texas A and M, has
been named a member of the
housing committee of the Seventh 1
Student Conference on National
Affairs to be held .Pec. 6-9 at Me-
morial Student Center, in College
Station. He is the sot of Mr. and
Mrs. PoyCe Killingsworth of Bay-
town . . . B. J. Anderson, R. A.
Wright, Jimmie Stewart, Bill
West, Dave Martin and Dr. Frank
Jaubert visit a Rotary Club-hieei-
ing.
Sara Sue Sheley, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Sheley, 5003
Five supervisors and a tax as-
sessor-collector for Harris County
Fresh Water Supply District No,
8 will be named in an election
set for Jan. 2, 1962.
Traffic Accidents
Here On Increase
Somerset Drive, was recently
elected Lantana Queen
Baytown has had 23 traffic ac-
cidents, six of them major, since
Nov. 1 and Baytown police will
begin cracking down on careless
driving, Police Chief Roy Mont-
gomery said Monday.
Accidents don’t happen, they
are caused, Chief Montgomery
at Texas
campus-wide elec-
ts a junior aqd from causing accidents.
A and I in
tlon. Miss
is the Alpha
heart A mem
• Epsilon sorority and the
(ion pf Women Students, she
, the Lantana Lady for 196(161. She
* will reign over Lantana Land as
queen next March.
Mrs. D. W. Kenny, 603 S. Bur-
nett, would like to locate the C.
H. Stevenson* whose home is at
178 Bayshore. Mrs. Kenny has
been keeping the Stevensons’ dog
since the hurricane.
Mrs. A. J. Lostak, 100 Faith,
said, and the police department
will try it* test to stop drivers
- H drivers are careful enough to
Highlands, has an anecdote print*
! Rail-
ed m the November issue of
er’s Digest In the "Humor in- Un-
“ ““““.....iwir'"
ital accident until Nov.
15, Baytown will have gone for
two years without a fatality — a
record.
Assistant Police Chief R. H.
(Bo) Turner blames the increase
accidents on cpld and Wet
weather. The recent cold spell has
caused drivers to begin driving
with Windows rolled up, heaters
an and radios playing. These dis-
tractions have hindered the at-
tention of drivers, Turner said.
Wet weather, the first rain in
more than a
Three men, two incumbents,
have already filed for the super-
visors’ posts. They are C. L. Um-
holtz and David C. Clark, the in-
cumbents, and Thomas E. Cook
No one has filed for the office of
tax assessor-collector. Terms of
office for all posts will be two
years. -
David G. Burnet and William B.
Travis Elementary Schools will
serve as polling places. Voting
machines will be used. Serving as
election judges will be J. F.
Hickerson at Burnet and Elwood
A. (Woody) Rose, Travis.
G. W. Robinson is now president
of the Board of Supervisors, Clark,
secretary and other members,
James Harrop, Umholtz and G, L.
Tharp, Mrs. R. A. McCain is now*
tax assegsor*collWtor.
Robinson has served two terms,
a total of four years. Other board
members have served two years.
Mrs. McCain id now serving a sec-
ond term a* tax assessor-collec-
tor, She was elected each time on
write-in votes, ■■■ ,, , .
The water district Is in the later
stages of Improvement programs
that include a sewer collecting
system, sewer treating improve-
ments, water distribution system
and a new water well. Also, a
one-half million gallon
age facility and a
An expansion program esti-
mated to cost *500,000 over
three-year period is underway at
St. Joseph’s Catholic Church
School.
Construction began Sept. 1 with
facilities for a gym. auditorium,
land room, six new classrooms
and kitchen for a cafeteria as an
addition to the parochial school.
This *250,000 unit is expected to
be completed about March 1 and,
is the first of three units.
St. Joseph’s school had six
grades until this year. They added
a seventh grade this fall and
will add an eighth grade next fidt
and a ninth grade the following
fall.
Rev. William Tinney, associate
pastor at St. Joseph’s, said im-
mediate plans do not call for a
high school, although the new fa-
cilities will feature social, recrea-
tional and religious education for
students of high school age at-
tending Robert E. Lee High1
•SrttoBfc- **
When the three units are com-
pleted St. Joseph’s School will be
able to accommodate about 600
students through the ninth grade.
A new convent and separatejunior
high building are part of 4he'bo%
struction.
Hollis Construction Co. of Pasa-
dena is general contractor and
Raymond R. Rapp of Galveston
is the architect.
Rev. Tinney said each organiza-
tion in the church has pledged
support of the building campaign
and has sponsored various project
to finance it.
St, Joseph’s has just completed
payments on the $500,000 church
and rectory constructed three
years ago. The buildings face Ken-
tucky and Carolina streets.
• Went Berlin police success-
fully defend workmen ripping
down 300 yard* of wire- fence in
a tear gas battle with border
guard* of Communist East Ger-
many. About ISO tear gas gre-
nades thrown, but no injuries re-
sult.
Baptist missionary
says homeless children being
taken out of Baptist orphanages
In Cuba and sent to Russia for
training. Mrs. T. E. Lee, general
field worker for Southern Bap-
tist Home Mtssto* Board, speaks
• British Cabinet minister ar-
rives in Accra, to determine If
bomb-planting opponents of Pres-
ident Kwame Nkromah threaten
safety of Queen Elizabeth if,
due Thursday for official visit
to West African member of toe
Commonwealth,
• Torrential rains, hall and
hurricane-force, winds lash Ath-
ens, Greece, area for four hours,
leaving 34 dead, at least 30 miss-
ing, 300 injured and 3,000 home-
less.
• Trigger-happy masked men
hold np Arcadia Park supermart
(Dallas), terrorizing clerks,
shoppers and children with gun-
fire and escape with sackful
of cash.
home on hi* army|
wrote them lab
the
liked
uutc turiii jw
! teinHy * W «
d him. Then
i/T kUnf
MIC* (Which MV
aeddem should
> every lO major ac
Channelview
Dedication
Big Affair
Itonfpll Over
Two Inches
A total ot 2.4 inches of rain
was recorded at Humble Oil and
Refining Co.’s Baytown Refin-
ery Research Center from 4
a.m. to 1 p.m. Sunday.
One-tento of an Inch was re-
corded from midnight to 4
a.m. Monday, making * total d
i'/i todies over the weekend.
On Nov, 2, the research -center
recorded LQ6 inches, bringing
the total rainfall tor November
to 3.53 incites so far.
i •' ‘ M ■ ■' I.,--*, ,
The best way to describe the
formal dedication Saturday of the
new Channelview post office is to
say they put the big pot in the
little one.
The Channelview High School
Band was there, the Channelettes
were there, the Channelview High
School Choir was on hand, and so
were the Boy Scouts and the Girl
Scouts.
There was a ’flag raising cere-
mony after Babb Tharp, a Chan-
nelview college student gave the
redtation of "I am the Hag.”
U.S. Rep, Albert Thomas, end-
ing a whirlwind visit of his home
district, was principal speaker.
Diey had to hold a plane for him.
“I wouldn’t have missed the vis-
it for anything,’’ he said.
Unexpected guests of honor
were Mrs. Albeit Thomas and
Mrs. Marie Ball, faithful and de-
voted Thomas secretary during
most of his congressional career.
Frdd H. Clampitt represented
the Post Office Department. A
veteran of ihe service in this part
of the world, Clampitt is now Dis-
tribution ' and Traffic manager
lor the Texaa-Louisiana region of
the postal service,
Master of ceremonies was Coun-
ktbmULJL&wm,
3ev. James A. Brannon, pastor
,Oid River Methodist Church,
gave the invocation. The benedic-
tion was given by Rev. Dan
Stribble, pastor of the Frist Bap-
tist Church of Channelview.
Mrs. Bonnie Summers, the post-
master opened the program after
a brief,band concert. She present-
ed Commissioner Ramsey, and the
Show was on.
After the progr am;’ visitors and
homefolks were entertained ai an
open house. Members of the Chan-
nelview Garden Club were host-
esses at the reception. Local 2708
Of the United Steel Workers of
(See DEDICATION. Page 2)
ing on a Holiday Inn Motel build-
ing project.
The pilot was identified by Fed-
eral Aviation Agency authorities
in Houston as a building superin-
tendent, fop Tex-Craft Ejuiktere,
Inc., of Houston
a
at dawn
Monday in a search for the Bonds'
plane, reported to have made
wrong turn on its approach to the
Santa Fe Airport at 7:35 p.m.
(Baytown time) Sunday. The
search was hampered by a steady
snowfall and freezing tempera-
tures.
Bond's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
William J. Bond, and Mr. and
Mrs. Guy F. Gore, parents of Mrs.
Suzanne (W. R.) Bond, left Hous-
ton Monday morning for Santa Fe
in a chartered plane. The elder
Bonds live at 701 Peggy. He «
manager of Allen Rice’s Humble
Service Station at 500 Alexander
Drive. The Gores operate the
Gore Trucking Co. at 1920 Hill.
Bond, 24, was employed by the
United Fund
Drive Short
$53,402.45
A total of $53,402.45 is needed
to complete the United Fund cam-
paign in Baytown, E. C. (Jack)
Kimmons, genera! chairman, said
Monday.
Thirty-six Red Feather agencies
depend on United Fund support,
Kimmons reminded contributors.
It the United Fund drive falls
short of its goal, many human
services will have been failed by
the public, he said.
Kimmons urged solicitor* to
work especially hard this week to
meet the quota. He added the
campaign should be concluded be-
fore it has to compete with Christ-
mas shopping.
Last week the Baytown Refinery
went over the top in its UF drive.
The drive netted $6.19 more than
Texas Plumbing Co., Inc., of its quota of $99,700.
Houston. He was with his wife, 23, The Baytown school system also
ami their two children. Bond’s —-----““ — ~ ---
brother, Dale, is in Santa Fe
working on the motel construction
project.
went over the top in its campaign.
School employes contributed *12,-
636 which is 109 per cent of the
quota.
Six Baytown Students
Attend Rice Lectures
Six Robert E. Lee students this
month are attending lectures at
Rice University by Dr. Edward
Teller, noted nuchear scientist.
They are Ricky Rawley, Helen
Rose, James A. Mears, Ray Cook,
Dan Brian, all seniors, and Kirk
Franklin, a junior. The classes are
3,000 Workers
Off At PA Gulf
'LOADED DOWN'
B. M, TODHOfTER, 401 Qriijiviile, used «wd* from on orang*
PORT ARTHUR (AP) - More
than 3,000 other workers refused
■to“g*<4cMitow<jeilto*Vtt!« bjg;£iill
Oil Corp. refinery here at mid-
night when striking machinists
posted pickets.
Company officials said they had
reached no decision on the plant's
operations. They closed it Oct. 22
when the 180 machinists of Local
823 struck.
The plant employs more than
4,400, about 3.500 of them mem-
bers of the OH, Chemical and
Kromitt, Workers' Union.
The .;qCAW refused tp
lilies
cross
Qct 22 and forced the
wad * grapefruit to plant two fruit tree* about five year* ago.
1 UNITED™
;. .
„ .......^
-t. ■!- ■
For ai least three year* noW the trees hare been bearing
HMelly large Iruit. Right m>« mil trees, are **
with orange* and grapefruit. A retired carpenter,
K<) years old. He has lived in the Baytown and Cedar Bayou
are* since he. eame here from Oregon In the early 1900>».
Todhunter Is the father-indaw ^ (Bert^resham, ,
picket-
piarn to defer- bid Went back to
wdik * wstk liter when the ma-
chinists withdrew pickets for ne-
bustoew agent
V rr
-.“zrer-rr-.-J.:/.:
fa
ists say the dispute in-
volves job ttecurity. The OCAW
has worked the past week without
a contract, They have (ailed to
read! 'agreement on a hew pact
[because * to. same tost*
in 'sf&Wf *
•. .
hi, iX' n \ t’.htS-’ ■-
Three REL
Singers In
State-Ohoir
Nelda Day. first soprano in
the Robert E. Lee High School
Choir, was named to the all-state
choir for the second year in suc-
cession Saturday at try-outs, held
iii the REL music building,
Other all-state choir members
from REL are James Colley, buss
held at 4:30 p.m. every Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday.
The students attended the first
lecture last Wednesday. They are
accompanied on toe lecture trips
by Jeanne Gelber. Edith Hodges
and Thomas Hendrix, REL sci-
ence teachers.
A total of 138 high school *tu-
dents in the Houston area have
been invited to the lectures at
Rice.
Dr. Teller will be a guest speak-
er Nov 16 in a school-wide as-
sembly program at Robert E. Lee
High School. His lectures at Rice
. m gpcnmiffitii bv A
Welch Foundation, an organization
which promotes science confer-
ences and gives research .grants.
His appearance at REL is made
possible by Dr. J. L. Franklin of
Baytown. Dr. Franklin is a Welch
scholar and teaches parttime at
Rice. He is a research chemist at
Humble Oil and Refining Co.’s
Baytown Refinery:.
Dr. Teller was the chief arehi-
£ y.”ygJriir■ ^
schools to have three all-state win-
ners. There were 192 contestants.
Schools with two all-state win-
ners are Brazosport, Pasadena and
Spring Branch! Schools who had
one state-winner each were Ga-
lena Park, Jesse Jones,, Stephen
F. Austin, Waitrip, Sweeny and
West Columbia.
All-state winners are automati-
cally members ol the all-region
choir. REL students who won all-
region honors are Mary Kline,
sceortd soprano; Syd Bynum, first
alto; Fat Divert, second alto; and
Sylvia Linscome, first alto who al-
so is an alternate all-state mem-
fm.
The all-region choir will meet
in January at Camp ManisSn near
Friendswood. The all-state choir
will meet in February in Dallas.
Judges tor the try-outs Satur-
day were Bill Decker and Charles
Ryan, both of Wharton Junior Col-
lege; Marie Boyle, music instruc- |
al Baptist Church;
Sphubert, minister of music at
Grave Methodist Church; Joseph
Lemo ciwul director at North-
jhare Junior High; Charles S«-
phenson, cnainuan of the tine arts
department at Lee College; Sam
Jamison, choral director at High-
lands Junior High,
Thomas Stone,
at Lee College,, was t
accompanists. Ann ‘
director u< cduvalton tor
’’ Chemical and Atomic
Loral No. 4,310; Clames ter Jay
worker* wIH be from 7 p.im •«
9 p,m. In the Baytown Junior
High cafeteria. The algbt shift
of worker* Will hare (rom
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 29, Ed. 1 Monday, November 6, 1961, newspaper, November 6, 1961; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057020/m1/1/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 14, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.