The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 158, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 5, 1962 Page: 1 of 24
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I®' i- f • *4 *>“£•
The Sun Invito* . ..
FRED H. CANSLEB
IM W. Murrlll
T» At Brunson Theater To Ban
•STATE FAIR’
THU eoupon la good tor tom ttofcoto wtaa
presented at the Bran to* km afriee.
2%S^omti Bm
y ' Serving IAY-TEX—The Golden Circle of Sotrfheott Texas
} 1
your home
VOL. 43. NO, 151
TELEPHONE NUMBER: 5*•
Thursday, April 5. 1962
BAYTOWN, TEXAS
Fbw Canto to Capg
JFK ASKS MILLIONS FOR TRAFFIC FIGHT
$UH
Spots
Voting Place Change
SCHOOL DISTRICT voters in Pre-
cinct 100 are reminded that a
change in the voting place lor
the precinct ha* been made for
Saturday's election. Balloting will
take place at Ashbel Smith school,
rather than at Wilkenfeld's, where
elections have been held in the
past.
Fashion Modeling
HOUESEWN fashions will be
mbdeled by 100 Baytonians at the
style show sponsored by Ameri-
can Association ol University
Women at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in
the Community House. .Tickets
selling for $1 will be available
at the door.
CV Sweetheart Contest
CHANNELVIEW Future Farmers
of America will sponsor the an-
nual sweetheart contest and talent
show at 8 p.m. Thursday in th*
high school auditorium. Top en-
tertainers from 29 high schools in
Harris and Montgomery counties
will perform and the prettiest
girls from these schools will com-
pete in the sweetheart contest. Ad-
mission is SO cents.
Paronts To Moot
HORACE MANN Parents Council
will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday
in the Harris County Savings and
Loan Building.
i
Rtfinery Seminar
DR. HAROLD Kwart, professor of
chemistry at the University of
Delaware, conducted a seminar at
Baytown Refinery Thursday at the
research center, Dr. A. R. Pad-
‘ ~ “ ' holds
_______JP. fti
Mayor To Spook
TEXAS SOaEIY of MaaimM
Enginei* will hear Mayor AI
> srswflRiS
sttasrAv
cj la,.*! •
LATE
NEWS
in. Walk
WWtmau
READY FOR DEBUT
a 15-minute weekoot over th* ItimaMl Ocean. The 101-foot
racketlainttagralsir.' .1 . .
WASHINGTON (AP) - Edwin
A- Walker, former Army ma-
jor general, tendfird today that
he regard* Secretary of State
Dean Bunk a* a link with a
myateriou* secret apparatus bent
w a ■‘•ell-out” of thi* eoun-
Wnlker also named Walt
Rostow, a top State
Department planner, as Influen-
tial in a aecret ‘‘control appar-
atus” which the ex-general said
always followed “the soft line
on communism.”
* •>"**».I afti1. •wltaan''
RENO, Nov, (AP) - Five
persons still wore unaccounted
for today as firemen prepared
to tear down the walls of the
fire ravaged New Golden Hotel.
The only body recovered ao
far waa
Gertrude
Francisco.
Thoae still unaccounted tor
were identified as:
Carol Mayo, to, a showgirl
from Downey, Calif.
Lucia Pedlar, about IS, a real-
dent.
Nathaniel Banka, II, porter.
Marie Coiner, Sacramento,
Calif.
Walter H. Witz, Hertong, Calif.
'888
★ ★ ★
EL PASO (AP) - George
K rattle*, 49, an accountant
questioned In the affairs of Bil-
lie Sol Estes, waa found dead
today, apparently by «dcMe.
Some States Require Them -
Seat Belts Help Prevent Death
road, the patrol cat- slanted off and died. The officer wa* belted land* of serious injuries.
MILWAUKEE (AP)-A woman
drove the family car along a city
street, it veered slightly, a wheel
struck the curb and a door swung
open. She bounced helplessly to
the concrete. Cause of death:
fractured skull.
On a counlry road, a Wiscon-
sin traffic patrol squad car
shrieked after a fugitive at speeds
close to 100 miles an hour. An-
other car blundered out of a side rated them.'
’S
Cities Would
Get Handouts
StacssHiM
S3KS.7.S
the road, struck a utility pole,
spun through a field and back
onto the highway, upside down
and a total wreck.
But the patrolman inside
crawled out, finished his tour of
duty in another car.
Those are two moments when
life and death were very close
together. Only a seat belt sepa-
4. The woman had none,
in and lived.
That summarizes th* record of
the past six months, since Wiscon
sin became the first of the 50
states to require seat belt* in
new automobiles.
“I am proud to have signed the
bill into law,” Gev. Gaylord Nel-
son says simply. "It can save
i- many hundreds of lives in the
, coming years and prevent thou-
Since the act requires belt in-
stallation only in new cars, it has
given authorities an effective—if
grim—field test of the safety fac-
tor worked out previously in lim-
ited surveys.
The state has 1,338,876 passen-
ger cars
1962 models
the law went into effect last Oo-
fltoa BELTS, Page I)
registered. Some 70,000
its have been sold since
Red China’s Leaden
.♦ __K
jr Purge
Student Doom _ ,
the school e-vmnasium. “non of (
Goal-Inn in the school gymnasium.
It will start at 7:30 p.m. ' -•
Fuller To Spook v
lc,
which hat created hunger and un-
QM m
ROY FULLER, school board prea- midway through an ultra-secret
S-ST KS
day at the VFW Hall. nists’ rubber-stamp parHameet.
tom. MM* JWWEF
THURSDAY FORUM wfll meet at to bureaucraqr,
” sft su as Ssra*.
from fte mas«M.and do
w—
of Mrs.
erset Drive, IHHI ^
'***■
★ * *
Woolfcor And TMof
.c
GALVEfiTON TIDES wifi ba high dui
at ItM aun. and CM pja. and go
lew at 11:47 ajn. and 11:» p.m.
Friday.
Effik
HP- Jajg
Lae C«J lag* Day wfil-be efo-
served April 13 when the coll
* agaSr5T*
■w*.
gEKSl
, ^ Jto
task for us to
portance of
Hod,"
* us to understand the im-
ANN MATYSIAK changes jobs
locations from one part of town
to another. She will he missed by
missed bv
the Texas Ave. career crew . . .
Bob Perry has difficulties with a
stubborn Oatemaddnemd final-
S£5~&to«
s
: : i
Traffic Accident
AS1**0'
one startl-
• great leap forward”-the crash
program to make China a
worn industrial power-hat been
Oomtamism, shelved because ef agriculture
M say. failures. H
Rally For
Trustee Job
Seekers Set
Highlands patrons of the school
district will hear trustee candi-
dates at a rally at 7:30 p.m.
Thursday at the Highlands Ele-
mentary School Auditorium.
All six candidates in the race
have been invited to present their
views. Earle Lumpkin will serve
as moderator for the program,
and coffee will be served to per-
sons attending.
Co-sponsors of the rally are Wal-
lis Hunt, Democratic committee-
man from Precinct 96; W. N.
Ponder, tor conservative Demo-
crats; A. V. Jones, for the Re-
publicans; Precinct 96 Democrats
School Board
Hopefuls In
Homestretch
Six candidates for three posi-
tions on the School Board of Trus-
tees went into the home stretch
Thursday with only one full day
left for campaigning.
Voters will choose three trustees
in balloting Saturday from 7 a.m.
to 7 p.m.
Few, if any issues, have been
H WASHINGTON (AP)-Preaidcnt 5
Kennedy proposed a 1500 million
handout to traffic-atrangied cities
today and dangled hope* of even-
tual bargain rates before the n* i
tion’s air, (tail and bus travelers.
Kennedy bundled up his ideas
in a 10,000-word transportation
message and sent It off to Con-
[gross. He ignored tenner Pwra
sdent Dwight D. Eisenbower’a rec-
lommendation for creation of a I
npUtaMfclABr.
The J500 million sfllMMM
a first installment,
J would bs only
WM
mentary P-T/
lands Garden Club, and the High-
lands Book Review Club.
Hunt, spokesman for the group
sponsoring the rafly, said "selec-
tion of school • • •
trustees transcends
I of — —
We all love ’our
considerations of party or faction.
children, and the
jjTigiriari M» ( g—
Iterating pta-) when be*an-
Bounced as a candidate tor
ached trustee. Stark, the beam-
strrsLs.'SS
Kloeset, a Bberal.
'CHRISTENING' PROTEST
JOINING HIS OLD Senate colleague* at the ■christening- of
their new reception room at the Cnpltol in Washington,
President Kennedy is greeted by OOP leader Everett Dirksen,
Illinois. In the center is Democratic trader Mike Mansfield,
Montana. While the “christening" waa going on, Sen, Whyaa
Morse, D-Ore„ stood in the Senate chamber and denounced
imbibing in those hallowed hall* aa "constituting deaeeratian.*
Excessive Profits
Denied By Douglas
e&STnJSttSB'
bitterly dSued they reaped ex
April 13
A receptioo from 8;30 p.m. to
):J0 pan. w® be bdd in the new
library, hi file receiving line will
nra j
•Bed fids "arithmetical
^ JMEL1Z *conomic frivolity., gross Ms-
*, n n -L «n
company* president, accused totaled 1939 million, “and our
aides of a Senate Investigations profit from tho* sales before ted,
"red- enU tocater taxfii MfptvKimm
p J29.8 million, a rate of loss ten
. M y » ^rhy.aB SSI*
ly. *o that Hightands patrons wU
“ “rapsS'te
and Mrs. Alvin
“““S'
(gee CAREI
■
BMiaiMAfe-g^ggaa
be College President and
Walter Rundri^’^Start'1 to better acquaint voters with to- Robot |L Dunne, staff invofr
area during the past few days
Bob Wli- sues and stands of candidates in gator, said this Was equtelMt to
instructor and the. forthcoming elertions April 7
by Douglas at its . own planis.
Dunne said the profits, figures
against the work done by Douglas
and May 5.
Baytown Professionals
RELC
have been criticized by challeng-
ing candidates.
The only requirement for voting
to the trustee election is s valid
poll tax receipt, provided voters
meet other requirements of state
election laws.
Here is the ballot!
■
POSITION 5;
Roy I* Fuller, bran
preateent of the board
po8moNrtolT
DrJ■ T.Baraew, raappsss*
liJHtoiiaiii. i .
ttfSW.
totaled 945.581
ifieil
moot pf the work.
MM Hurt « **lertio^Mra. Xina
musical selections
Stone, mezzo - soprano, accom-
panied by Tom Stone st the pi-
ano; aelectiofil by “
choir under the
A Channelview man is In fefr Charles Stephenson;
to Tidejands Hospital remltag by Nmqt
tSiSt'SSrt:-"
winrc'S-
home at 16034 Ckesmeadow Drive may attend
torn bis job at Baker Oil Tool " ' “
threw Cobb out and
.raoewvw uu* TTun.*
over on top of Mm. No
were filed. \
I I
letSsfJXt
pl toStte Rarriicn discusaed
mer plana ... Sybil Jordan
with a tenner student . . .
SsssslS1”
subject* as art, biology, business,
chemistry, developmental reading,
nutring, aptt physic*.
By WANDA ORTON
Talks on catjwn were
Carter aontotento from toe
_aytown area included Charles W.
^^Tarttv^
agricultureTlMne* A,
chitects; Sgt. Ronald Nusshaum;
Ssis2®S
1*aL, Mrs. Efafine Ltode^tfe.
cal and .jenaShStef'work; Bill
(Mr. Chris) Christmas, rosmetoi- „IJUIU(
- * %/£
MR«bert
John Guernple, ucenset „
-- Nurstog training at Lra
Ben Rliodes, mathemat-
I Pmtfy, t^,hnjcj.
era. ministers and
modelin
music;-Mrs.
TOiel and puWlc ma-l
set; Jack Hunter, oppor-
tunities to
Reilly, pers
Um' \ HIH
Also, James Savril, pharma-
cists; Alton Laird, physical edu-
cation; Mrs. Mary Beto McFJroy,
‘ l educrttom Mtos
t; Mrs. Louie
Otehpany em-
JteriOiri.WAC;
i's Marine
“ -j
1 meetings
morning,
period
mm
fail semester
ii
toe toe 1961-
Wanda
Tt&
I Inrun fiVlrim
rrom lOKyo,
essmen Man Battlements
Plan To Brea
WASHINGTON (APHCim^tejlhriMl11
n. Oliver, r ranx uoss, ja
»aW:.T: * ***.=?
■Kid
7.6 per
totaling 1962.74 million
fitevmns components
charts and flanked at the witness
table by a half dozen subordi-
pas.
than tegt of (hot
Bectri!”^ toSSirateTte
me
Douglas officials take toe L
2
&tPrednct
School, -'.l
13 - David 6. Burnet
JJ^^HighUnd, Urn
-•fTsdnst ^ ddtorir (te*
n£A - Baytown
mdnet 103 — Stephen F. Aus-
in Elementary School
Precinct Hfl-San Jacinto Be-
-rl
He Doesn't Tire E«
School.
! system. la El«n«it^ ItS8™ R
“• * •*and* 2 ~ G* W‘ °*m
Precinct 249 - Junes Bowie
leroenta ry School . ^ '
_ IVecmct 250 - Ruin Elemen-
/tary fchool at McNair.
three years, to h
agendas. They
some partially
and rat te oomhtoed 'federal,
local money few "the ravitaliz*.
tion and needed axpanrion *f
public mass transportation."
“rtoe traveling public and few
freight—grain, coal ort-aai
1 and fishery products, KtO>
r recommended But Congress
minimum ntif DITBCribedl
f iiS2^** a, what tea
might get lower rates to tune was
not spelled out But federal offi-
cials said they hoped tor some
"bargain rates to attract people
away from son’' as oral rate
congressional action to pnwit
The rate aad mass transit reo>
ommendathms, and a string af
others, were parts '
long-range attack on
controversial proble
said “ora burdening
transportation syster
isEr
transport and for wtott
fundamental, far-re*
form* in
designed
and subs
era “fit, lean
MSas-i
U*T)a,0S,te.to *****
i things stand now,
iers have toe.
respect to bull
motor carrier)
warders with respect t_
I
I
3 i
Six-Year-Old toy Describes Circus'
3fc? Fzsri.-
Relief From - ***
KcllfrT rrom 006 h d A man came cut ft#n on a
Dry Spell
A total ef U totes ef rate
is ^^55
TZSZ-ZTZZZ: stiSfXS'Sn-*2Maj,
whole world. £bri only ^ or Burarn^* Briley) toraterted
»s Ihe first time store Dee.
srjrfir-’ia
W tl^'u^totee of ratotofi, YpJlt j
«q> teh foil bteya. »:*» pre.
aad toll pm. Weteeday. with
tttce-tenttis af aa tack record-
.^.o.srss",
saw was a cute little
ed bejwera t:*f aad t:to *Ja. hbThand out fo^raeto
were left to New
t get tired Wednesday me to a raggedy clown who looks
The rainfall for toe year
far ara totals IM laches.
Through toe month ol Mi
Baytown had recorded
Inches ef rain, eight aad
halt Inches beta* (hr no
“ humm Mc,vin «ri * wbite peacock
ie ^ »VM»trro- a very long neck test's a tafl,---------- ------
- but it looks te a king neck. rode a bicycle and then* weretoa
I had to laugh at him although water In tl
mv mother says when we see one five stories
on the street you shouldn’t laugh down on a
but I tell her I’m just laughing again. Then I
: caught it on hi* hand,
hen he put the glasses
er to them on top of
says when we see one five stories of glasses and put
*mta.<Then*h!rdkHt with f
18 stories of riaaaes.' .
at lion* and tigers, an) a bear I
show with a big bear like humm, <
walking on his two feet. The bear
\ m
wa. M of acts like
near us.
tog file man
great big cannon up
and down into a net.
about But ufut l
at a 1
HI -1
men opened lire
m
major battle to oei
f awgjgg* «
3.001 and
IwA
Rep.
will of the Congreia."
nits Ui
ll
m
3 the revo-
a ol Ncbru-
- .
'fi }<v. rM
■ ■
■ -------.......
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 158, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 5, 1962, newspaper, April 5, 1962; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1058004/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.