The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 13, 1966 Page: 1 of 21
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,
Mioromm 8«le« * Service
f. e. Box P066
Bailee Texas 78206
At San Invttw
MISS ANNA SAWBERGER
-— 17M Mississippi
to the Brunson Theater. This aoupon
Good Through October 15
(or two tteketo whoa presented
ot the Brunaon box Office,
Z.~ The movie now showing lg
“THE GOSPEL AOOORDING TO
ST. MATTHEW” .
®|)C Paptoton g>un
VOL 44. NO. 46
BAYTOWN, TEXAS. 77520
Serving Tim Golden Circle of Sontheoit Texas
Thursday, October II 1966
Ton Conti hr Copy
OTS
^4
Monday Luncheon
MAYOR SEABORN.Crsyeywill
Introduce Mrs. John Tower at
a luncheon at 11:30 a,m. Mon-
day at Youngblood'*. Reserva-
tions may be phoned to Tower
headquarters, 582-8177, or Mix,
Bert Wilkins.
Fish Fry
*mStdub
will hold its annua! fish fry
from 11 a m. until 7 p.m. Satur*
day akCrawley’s fishing camp
The public it invited. Tickets
are fL.....
Missionary Meet
A MISSIONARY convention will
be held at Congregational Meth-
odist Church, 1908 Lee Drive, at
7:30 p.m. Friday and all day
Saturday, starting at 9:30 a.m.,
with lunch being served. Guest
speakers will be Leroy and Gene
Utile, missionaries on furlough
from Burundi, Africa, and the
Rev. W. E. Bruce, Mission
Board chairman from Houston.
Slides of the African work will
' be shown. ——».—— ~4~
MB Beauty *
LINDA DIANE DYE. one of
three candidates tor the Mont
Belvieu homecoming queen, is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs
Harry Kibodeaux and not Mr.
and Mrs. M. D. . Dye, as was
listed in The Sun Tuesday,
BAYTOWN UNITED FUND GETS BIG BOOST
Engine*
checks
fry, wh
HftrrJ*'
general
CONTRIBUTIONS TO THE Baytown and Eaat Harris Coun-
ty United Fund drive were Increased considerably hy these
checks being presented to Connie Magourik, second from right,
who is etobtaat general chairman of the drive. The checks;
laalrihatlsno from three Bay-
end Ease Rcaearch and
Its,000, are company contrih
-sanitation*—HumbjfcjBnpy, ;
Engineering. Managers of three organizations presenting the
checks are, from left, T. S. Farmer, ERAE; J. J. Coatee, En-
who is also general chairman of the Baytown and East
County UK drive; and & H, Meier, Humble Refinery
manager. - - .w ■
60 Pet. Of Goal In-
Baytown's United Fund
Contributions *123,000
The United Fund in Baytown national arid state health agen- sy Center for theraphy and re-
Coll«dAway
MRS, FRANK CUtbirth has
been called to Pslestine’because
of the illness of her daughter,
Mrs. Naomi Hawk*.
Shrimp Ticktts
TWiffri for the
shrimp dimer preceding Fri
■aitei
efialmm .ummeMr Servtoj
will be from 5 to I p.m. in
Robert E. Lee High School cafe-
teria. A take - out service i*
also available. For tickets call
Mrs. Sanders, 583-5198 or Mrs.
Tommy Carpenter, 582-9208.TTck-
ets are $1.25.
Attending Funeral
GEORGE DAY and John Wes
ley Day, both of Baytown, and,*-.
their families left Thursday nrv
nwmlng far Brookhaven, Miss
to attend funeral services
their father, J1. W. Day, 92. He
died Wednesday night
Nephew KU’ed
FRANk B. LUCKETT Jr.; 15,
of Nachltochcs, La., the nephew
of Henry Liles of 1801 Mississip-
pi, we* killed Sunday in a car-
motor scooter accident injs’achi-
, toches. La. Services were held
Tuesday. The son of Mr. and
Mrs, f. Luckett Sr., he was an
occasional visitor In Baytown.
Weather ^
PARTLY CLOUDY and more
scatteredshowers are predtet-
ed for tha Bnytowa area
Thursday. Temperature range
expected, 7158 degree*.
ISS.,
for
It
KATHRYN NEAD presides at
a meeting and welcomes some
of Baytown's outstanding new
citizens . ■ . Mrs. Milton Rami
sey provide* impetus for 4
' luncheon . . . Sharon Richard-
son volunteers to get some pro-
grams together . Mark White
Of La Porte Shtfres some Of his
13di birthday cake with a total
• stranger ... Mrs. G. A. Laugh-
lin gets a- committee together
■ ‘" ta plan a dance at thgOountry
dub ,r. Mrs. R. J- Thomson
x “v^rsj»ss!s
MU» . . Barby M.y.
hands out mickles and dimes at
Irr^yta?^ b” d*Uehte"
8 Mark Duane Cooper. •«> of
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Cooper,
will be on Kitirik Thursday. He
wUl be five years old Friday
... Ask Rev. Bob Cheek about
Ida "baseball" scripture . . .
, Have you seen Neill Sealey’s
„ MW lookf He resembles Mitch i
Miller id technisolor.
LOW COST
AUTO LOANS
has hit a high of $123,000 60
per cent of the $203,029 goal.
John Coates, general chair?
man, in announcing the new fig-
ure said he was delighted with
the progress. Coates has, asked
aU chairmen and solicitors to
redouble their efforts this week
to be ready to report their prog
ress again early next week.
"I am veiy much enoourgged
fNrp over-ail picture,” the
iWMtt' said. '
He said there are many neW
Quota maters in the Humble Oil
and Refinery Co.’s Baytown de-
partments this week and that
the drive is getting into full
swing in the downtown area.
Those firms reporting 100 per sf
cent participation bjr Wednes- ■/
day are the Credit Bureau of
Greater Baytown, Harris Coun-
ty Federal Savings and loan
Association, Harris County In-
surance Agency, Kem - Tech,
J. W. Ainsworth, Greg-
ory's, Tours and Travel, Moore's
Shoe Store, the Book Stall, Max
Altman's and House of Fashion
The campaign opened official-
ly 10 working days ago on Oct.
3. '
"The response of the people
and the enthusiasm of the solid-
tors aptly demonstrates the high
quality df citizenship we have in
Baytown,” Coates said.
"More than eighty per cent of
these funds will go directly into
agencies In Baytown. The re-
mainder will go to agencies lo-
cated in the surrounding area
cies for medical research ami
medical care.Uessthan two per
cent is used .for campaign costs
this primarily to provide the
printed materials needed Ail of Baytown Opportunity School and
the workers donate their time,
the chairman added. -V'“
The 10 Baytown agencies sup-
poctod by United Ftmd eontribu-
tions are tog HeMlfi League, a
fret CMt-patient clinic and re-
ferral service in . the basement
of. ten Jacinto Methodist
ar,
free sc
the Thrift Exchange, for alao transports
acbooi luntche* and doth-
habilitation and schooling; the
Welfare league for case weak
and indigent services. Also, Boy
and Girl Scouts;, the.. YMCA:
Workshop for the retarded chil-
dren and young people; two
Child Care Centers,' which pro-
vide day care for children of
working mothers; and the Amer-
ican Red Cross, 220 E. Defee,
which assists veterans and
members of armed forces and
town patients per l
fog for ehtldrtn ; Oerebral Pal- leg and hospital*.
m Bay-
ito elta-
Month's First Rain
Here Is 2.38 Inches
month hit Baytown Wednesday
The Sun’s weather station re-
corded 2.38 inches of rain all
day Wednesday and 2.9 inches
of rainfall wejj* recorded Wed,
nesday at the | Harris County
Mosquito Control District's
gauge at Rebel Inh Motel on
Alexander Drive.
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
More than a foot of rain
descended in rural', areas and
smaller cloudburst filled
Beaumont streets with water
Wednesday. .
These deluges and light show-
ers dotting Southeast and South
that service Baytonlans and to Gentral Texas descended as a
first heavy rainfall of the dying cool front *» trying to
U.S. 'Goof Put Baytown
Hospital On Wrong List
The Bayfown Hospital is now
and has been desegregated ac-
cording to the ‘Civil Rights Ait
of 1964.
Thl* statement was made by
spokesmanat the hospital
Thursday iteming. .
This apparently clears the
hospital as oomplying with de-
segregation' rules of the ‘U.S.
Public Health, Service, making
Office of U.S. Health, Education
and Welfare) in Dallas, indicat-
ed to The Sun by telephone
Thursday morning that Baytown
Hospital and a hospital In Tex-
as City should not have received
the notices from Washington to
the first place.
"The hospital at Baytown
and the one at Texas City .were
just victims of circumstabBes,"
thrust southward into the Gulf
of Mexico.
Another mass of chilled sir
already was approaching the
Texas: Panhandle today with a
promise of more moisture and
dropping temperatures.
, As much as 12.5 inches of
rain poured doWn at Fannett,
a rice farming community
southwest Of Beaumont. Grow-
ers said two-thirds of the rice
crop had been harvested in that
vicinity but there probably was
damage to the remainder.
MNamara Sees No
Expansion Of War
Too Many 'Dangerous'-
Lyndon Warns Against
j|ecting Republicans
Operations
Exceeding
U.S. Hopes
J ■ '■ vas. . .........
WILMINGTON, Del.'(AP) — — it was his shortest speech of F. Kennedy font a President
tha day. - then left the dining - ■ -
President Johnson, cam-
palgnlng to Delaware after ,^
^ _ .. ■ m
MAYBE I'VE HAP ENOUGH
* - 4m. 0.-. -
Our World
Today
From AP Wire*
• An Intensive manhunt is
tafoer, way fo the, Cincinnati
area after a rapist strangler
•tritea for the (earth time in
• Gathedtaue Jen Arthur
is disappointed ever the can-
cellation of her television ae-
rlee but says she’s -‘relieved
that I don’t have to read any
of those awful scripts.”
fog an. anfibacklash
Brooklyn, N.Y., said today the
nation could "falter and fall
back and fail” if too many Re-
publicans are elected in Novem-
ber. __
Johnson, fo remarks prepared
for an outdoor rally here, said
the Nov. 8 balloting will be fate-
ful.
“Vote for th^minapity party
— and we could falter and fall
back and fail. Vote to return a
strong Democratic Congress.
The President pictured the
Democratic party as fulfilling
it* campaign promises in educa-
tion, aid for the aged, antipover-
ty efforts, and attempts to build
a lasting peace.
,. Ad<lJ^m .an Italian-Ameri-
can audience in Brooklyn
Wednesday night — it was Co-
lumbus Day — Johnson re-
mi nded his listeners that "it
hasn’t been too many years
since Italian-Americans have
felt the raw pain of discrimina-
tion fish* hare fo America."
In his first appeal of this sort
since "backlash" begaii figuring
as an election-year issue, John-
son said:
"For Those other Americans
who are not* feefong -that trite
for fairness to all, regardless of
religion, ancestry or race. I ask
those of you who have creased
over the river to extend to them
a helping hand."
The response was cheers from
the dinner audience fo Brook-
lyn’s Hotel fo.- George.
Johnson stayed overnight in
vole- hall but turned the spotlight
a m over to Vice President;'
id ap-
public
H. Humphrey, who had been
billed in advance as the speaker
of the evening.
It was the first time since the
assassination of President John Democratic.
and vice,. president had
peared together at a
outside Washington,
Most of Johnson’s earlier ap-
pearances. fo Brooklyn, Staten
'island and Nassau County, had
featured a stogie theme: “Vote
Mediator On Hand-
GEStrikeTalks
Said Stymied
u .those mtliti
deployment
ot U.S. fofees here
in the months ahead.
McNamara talked with news-
men after a four-day tour in
which he inspected American
military centers from the Sai-
gon area to the rugged Marine
battiefront on the edge of the
demilitarized
the border between the two Viet J
Nams. f
WASHINGTON (AP) - Nego-| ing 13.5 million workers in the [ J^agS S^a^^rtag^
labor federation. ' ^^^^^^jhfiraHgjj)ra|jj|jS
Johnson reportedly
tiations aimed at averting
General Electric Co. strike con-
tinue today in a pessimistic at-
mosphere. The talks were de-
affm&telSteU8SSdcfeSBi^pirating. J
injunction to keep General Elec-
center."
About 125,000 members of 11
unions are threatening to strike
the huge company at 12:01 a.m.
Monday.
The government has been
making a major effort to avert
the strike, claiming the flrtn’a
' 'is vital to the UJS.
war effort to Viet Nam. .
The company mate; a new
offer Wednesday which Secre-
| | company manufactures
engines for jet fighter planes
and helicopters, radar , and
bomb sights, aircraft eanBons
and machine guns used to Viet
Nam.
The new company offer
for.
The unions said the new offer
did notiifog toward thetr de-|
4ary of Cbmmenri John T. Con- mands for new arbitration pro-
nor described a* a "sfigfo fovbtefoM^teMfoMMMte||MB
provement.” The unions reject-
ed it.
Paul Jennings, president cf
the AFL-CIO International Un-
ion of Electrical Workers, which
cedures to solve grievances
which now lead to frequent
strikes or to raise tower wage
scales in the South
Rusk says the United States
doe* not accept aa Anal the
Communist’s public rejection
ot the latest American pence
prapuMte.
• Secretary of Defease Rob-
ert S. McNamara tours the
Marine battiefront along the
demilitarised zone.
• The Army buries Spec. 4
John F, Barzan la h toag Is-
land N.Y., cemetery. He waa
tite first American victim of
the Viet Nam war for whom
Beaumont measured 5.63 no next of Un could be found,
inches but there was no word
^arlWWg»ia6»>* BULLETIN ST.'SttSr:
today with Prince Souvanna contract dispute, called the new
phouma, neutralist prime tnta- ctxnpany otter ‘Insignificant."
of rpajor damage. The rainfall
lasted from midmoming to
dusk. . .
Except tor clear. skies itt
West Texas, it was mostly
cloudy over the state this morn-
ing and a good bit of early
morning drizzle and fog over-
hung the state’s north central
and northeast sections.
Fog. cut visibility to less than
one mile at Texarkana and
Lufkin after daylight Fort
Worth and Dallas were among
other points with a mixture of
drizzle an! fog.
Moisture amounts at other
points for the 24 hours ending
at 6 a.m. included Houston .55
ister of La, .
En route back to Washington,
where he holds an afternoon
news conference, Johnson
scheduled a campaign appear-
ance at Wilmington, Del,
In four formal speeches in the
New York area, the President
was an unrestrained partisan
seeking Democratic votes in the
Nov, 8 election — until his final
appearance before toe Italian
American Professional aha
The new offer was made at
the first joint negotiating ses-
sion since shortly after .Presi-
dent Johnson won a two week
strike postponement and moved
toe talks here from New York.%
Relations between toe two
sides w«te eirtremely'touchy.
AFL-CIO President George
Meany called a meeting for Fri-
day of the chief officers of the
11 unions to map strike plans
WASHINGTON (AP) - Ef-
forts to negotiate an antitrust
exemption for * combined Na-
tional had American Football
League collapsed today, dim-
ming prospect* that the
leagues and the House Anti-
trust Subcommittee to agree on
proposed exemptioa law
>Iy a bill can be
It unlikely i
passed before C
American uroiessionai anu a unions e-- joums.
"aSS^SS^ofos ^byaJmduhtore embra£ JS '^hfrteen s!t
SAIGON, South Viet Nam S3
(AP) - Defense Secretary Roto ,. 3
ert 3. McNamara, winding up
his eighth visit to Wet Nam,
said tonight the rate of progreaa
fo fitiHtary operations during
the past year "has exceeded ouT
expectations."
He told newsmen he sees J
nothing that would indicate a
substantial change in the rate of ,■
ntilttary pwrattona. or
• -~l*T
Communist troops and war sup-
Only small ground
were reported, but U.S. airmen
Viet Cong no respite from
bombing attacks. Three Ameri-
can planes were reported shot
down, one fo toe North and two
in the South.
wearing khaU ~
Wednesday Unproved only- 4ts during hi, writs, to toe field!
cost of living wage increase of- said "military operations have
during toe
Pressure on the Viet Cong has
saif'He "exSmeTtoM*thi
pressure referred to casualties ■
dealt to the enemy and their . .
supplies, and their effect on ■
Communist morale.
Progress to the South Viet-
'TUKTJR.'Aa'.
the economy of an influx of mil-
itary forces and aid. He said the
government of South Viet Nam
had shown great political cour-
age to tevalutog the .Vietnam- ’ '
ese currency last June and that
inflation has been stemmed.^.
toe South Vietnames^program
of pacification, which now goea
under toe name of revolution-
ary development, has proved _
sound. He said the leadership of—
• The threat ot a new Mid-
dle East eriri* arises ss la-
reel charge* Syrian aggrea •
and aak* for an urgeui
U.N......Geaeral Aaseinfoy
Retiring LC
Dean To Be
Feted Nov. 19
McNamara lauded the “inch-
viduai and collective" actions
of ti.S. forces serving fo Viet
Nani.
"I never come here without
being imprassed by the morale
and performance -of UA
troops," he said.
Dean Walter Rundell, who will
retire in February after,
years of service at J«-Pcdlege,
the Ja^UflBMffl^ for McCain said "I was at the inch, palaelos .38, Corpus Chris- ner Nov. 18.
tain federal funds, including tone and had been working with H * Tra„u “p™
Medicare.
Several days ago, the Bay-
town Hdipital WM 43
in eight southern states that
were sent notices by the USPHS
office in Washington, DC., giv-
ing toe hospitals 48 hours to de-
cide whether to comply with de-
segregation guidelines and. to
report what steps they would
take far compliance.
Claude McCain, a field inves-
tigator in- the Office of Equal
Health Opportunity Regional
these too hospitals
notices .were
wheti
The
£V*
Bay-
town hospital had sent me toe LMigVieW 02.
requested data and I had mailed
it on to Washington when the
notices were sent out,” he said.
"Ite data (which he indicat-
ed cleared the Baytown Hos-
Wash-
Hospital
the mail,'
Lute New,
MONTREAL (AP) - Po*
ribly |1 mflliou la cash was
In It mail bags stolen from
the maliroom at Montreal In 1
ternational Airport early to-
day, a police spokesman said.
Police in suburban Dorval
neur tte airport said the ten
surrounding the maHraora
were cot at about 5 a.m. while
were -'efoewhwra«,' In
the tefldfog fat their iuaCh
the person I Mis working with
•t the Baytown Hospital became
ill-,and the tefifww under-
standable." .
At the time the notice
received by the Baytown
a spokesman at the hoe-
told The Sun that “we are
inly willing to cooperate fo
this thing, and will mate every
attempt to correct the things
they say are wrong.”
The spokesman said there was
no question of desegregation fo
the Baytown Hospital.
CITIZENS national
Hunter r.B ltt '
he delivered
hanks la Montreal. '
were'-
bills af var-
leattaed.Ja..
to chartered
WNW1
- 1967 FOHDSr
Non On Display '
TRAD FELTON
1SS4
mmi
Baytown Grid
Schedules
The fint meeting af Robert
E, Lee and Sterling High
to due at 4 p.m. Thursday
teams clash at Msmettoi Sta-
dium. Ttie oompleto Bayfowa
grid schedule:
THURSDAY - Rom Stor-
ifog v*. Braaaaport
Squad, tite pfoti, 1
Field; Robert E. Lee
men vs- Boa* Marne*
r-iis
E. Lee Suicide
•quad vs. Ball High sopho-
mores, 4 p.m., Galveston.
FRIDAY - Robert E. Loo
vs. Ban High, 7:80 p.m., Me-
morial Stadium. « .
SATURDAY - Cedar Bayou
7th and 801 vs. Horace Man*
■d Mi» a.m.,
will be honot|d at a public din-
Travis Porter, chairman
the committee mapping plans
Jte„. opcaMbn, said the din- |
ner will be held tt Stt
School cafeteria. ,
“We know that peopl, of this
community are appreciative Of |
toe many years of service Dean
Rundell has rendered and that
they will want an opportunity
to express this feeling," Porter
said.
Dr. Sam Hastings, a member
of toe Board of Regents, is vice
chairman of the committee.
Heading ticket sales is Charles
Tillery.
ig committee are La .
Robert McGraw, W. J. Strick
ler arid Roy Comeaux.
The group had its organiza-
meeting fo the office of
chard Strahan, LC presi-
VMw.- Richarf
dent.
Jhyone wishing to btiy a tick-
et to the dinner may do so by
calling any member of the com-
mittee or toe public relation!
college.
stantial changes in
srsr ■
rate of
months
The Mstrict 12-3A Executive
Committee was to hold a closed w ;
mooting at noon Thursday n'isJ
League rote* by Channelview.
According to School SupL fL
C. Schoehler, Channelview High
School Principal William Har-
vey discovered last week that
one of the Falcons' football
player* is ineligible under Utt.
rides. Hervey reported the in-
fraction to district executive
committee members and Utt,
officials in Austin.
Head coach Mack Anderson
said the boy has played fo three
of the Falcons’ four games.
Channelview is undefeated so
far this season, but -
started district competit
The boy was
under,.foe Hf-
utoteh
7th and 8th, • and
{today
toads vs. Carver, 9 a.m., Me-
morial Stadium.
A '
ASK THE DEALER
TO FINANCE YOUR
NEW CAR WITH
NATIONAL lANlTl
OP BAYTOWN
mmamtJtJA....... ^
GROUND BROKEN JVWEWJAV
r7r-TMaefS"-»s-*
, .
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 46, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 13, 1966, newspaper, October 13, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1061497/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.