The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 26, Ed. 1 Monday, October 26, 1970 Page: 1 of 14
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The Baytown Sun Invites
MR. AND MRS. ROBERT E. DUNAWAY
400 River Bend
Good For Two Tickets When Presented
At the Brunson Theater Box Office
This Pass Good Through Oct. 31.
Now Showing
“MONTE WALSH”
ptoton &un
YOUR HOME
NEWSPAPER
OVER 50,000 READERS EVERY DAY
VOL. 49, No. 26
TELEPHONE NUMBER: 422-830?
Monday, October 26, 1970
BAYTOWN, TEXAS, 77520
Ton Cents Per Copy
'OTS
Our
World
mil
322
AB|P UP
set a toasty den or
ie! Warms a room
tly with a forward
et of warmth. The
Dearborn Cool
lifetime Hi-Crown
d EZ-Atrol for. no-
irmostat’optional,
our whole line of
Funeral Rites
FUNERAL SERVICES for
Mrs. Sue Black of San Juan,
Tex., formerly of the Wooster
area in Baytown, will be held at
4 p.m. Tuesday at the Skinner
Funeral Home in Pharr, Tex.
Mrs. Black died at 12:30ia.m.
Sunday. She was the wife of C.
E. Black.
Lodge Meeting
GOOSE CREEK Rebekah
Lodge No. 453 Past Noble
Grand Club will meet at 7 p.m.
Monday at the home of Mrs.
Mamie Iford at 1704 Fort
Worth.
Youth Fair
BAYTOWN YOUTH Fair
Association will have a called
meeting at 6:30 p.m. Monday
at the fair grounds. A short
business meeting will follow
dinner. Each family is asked to
bring a salad and dessert.
Prospective members are in-
vited.
V Jr ~‘
pi
OIL SLICK SOURCE SOUGHT
School Board
THE SCHOOL board will not
have its regular meeting Mon-
day night. The meeting has
been canceled because Supt.
*, piH . p I
JOHN WEBER, chemist for the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department based in Seabrook, and
Benny L. Stephenson, operator of Thompson’s Fishing Camp on Tri-City Beach Road, inspect
the oil slick that was along the Trinity Bay waterfront Saturday morning. Weber, who was out
in a boat making'an inspection early Saturday morning, said the source of the oil slick has not
been determined.___(Sun Photo by Linda Cassity)
American Guns Help - -
S.Viet Troops Mount
Cambodian Offensive
From AP Wires
+UNITED NATIONS,
N.Y. (AP)—In opening de-
bate on the Middle East sit-
uation, Egypt has sought to
enlist the United Nations
General Assembly In its
drive to force Israel from the
territory It occupied .during
the 19(7 war,
+SANTUGO, Chile (AP)-
—The Chilean army is plan-
ning a big funeral for its as-
sassinated commander-in-
chief as police hunt the kil-
I Police Raids Shocking
iTo Arrested Canadians
MONTREAL (AP)
doorbellrang. It rang again. Dr.
Henri Bellemare, chief of inter-
nal medicine at Sacred Heart
Hospital, rolled over in bed and
looked at theclock: 5.10 a.m.
In pajamas, he padded to his
front door.
“Yes, who’s there?”
“Police.”
He opened the door. An in-
spector flashed his card.
“Vousetes sous arrestation—
Hie But one prisoner, a lawyer, says member of any group the gov- olent street demonstrations, the
he heard others crying in pain: j emment outlaws.
“Let me go... Don’t beat me:”! Prime Minister Pierre Elliot
For Bellemare the war meas- Trudeau, appearing on televi-
ures meant confiscation 0f1 sion the ^ he lnvoked ^e acL
material he was using as a City; conceded that the measures are
Council candidate and five days | “strong - sweeping u ex-
srfSrL-i'srasfiS.ai.
lers among Chile’s extreme jYou’reunder arrest.”
rightists. The general was So began a nightmare for Dr.
SAIGON (AP)—Spearheaded
by two armored columns and
supported by American artil-
Johnny Clark is out of town at- lery, 6,000 South Vietnamese namese losses so far are three
tending a school administra-"
from which American forces
are being withdrawn rapidly.
A spokesman said South Viet-
427-1341
tors’meeting. The board’s next
meeting is scheduled for Nov.
Child Burned
■ C ELIZABETH ANN Hartman,
13-month-old daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Bill Hartman, was
hospitalized overnight Sunday
after being burned at her home
troops pushed into the war-rav- killed and 31 wounded, a kill ra-
aged Cambodian town of Snuol tio of 46 enemy to one South
today in a new offensive.
Informed sources said the
American 175mm and 8-inch ar-
tillery guns were firing from
bases in Vietnam, and there
were no American troops with
theadvancingVietnamese. 1— w—.
Action was reported light as
the drive began Sunday. Two
North Vietnamese and a South
Vietnamese.
The South Vietnamese korces
in Cambodia are operating in
Arobbery^sevwite . . .
but her body was shielded by of gnuol, and another! clerk WaS forced 1080
^"w*l’a85aS5S
™!°ASDMI&Sui Schulze I grtw-S Oro«ry. IMSIK. jurtay morning Police U. B.
G E Wl. h 'Bf ^Iizfating along three key highways *"? Baker
YMCA. Class
YMCA CLASSES for women
conducted by Ben Shaw are
still open for registration.
Class is from 7 to 9 p.m. Mon-
- i used by the North Vietnamese
as supply and infiltration routes
into the southern half of South
Vietnam.
South Vietnamese headquar
ters claimed a total of 139 North
Vietnamese and Viet Cong aretes.
days for seven weeks. In- __
7 can another operation began Satur-
day. The offensive is aimed at
tonight and register.
. ;jc.*■
GROUND
countering a North Vietnamese
threat to Saigon and 11 sur-iketMfe in his right hand,"
rounding provinces, a region 'lice said.
1 B, C. LITTLEFIELD is in
Room 420 at San Jacinto
Methodist Hospital. He can
have visitors now.
troops killed in Cambodia since! He^ulkd a kfiife on her ani
demanded that she put all the
the Fish Hook region 80 miles
north of Saigon and in the Par-
rot’s Beak 50 miles west of Sai-
gon,
Informed sources said Ameri-
can observation planes had
spotted "considerable activity”
intheMimotarea.
9 ~
W ■
-
slain within 24 hours of Mar-
xist Salvador Allende’s for-
mal election to the nation’s
presidency.
+MOSCOW(AP)—Two
U.S. consuls have flown to
Soviet Armenia to interview
two American generals held
since their light plane
crossed the Turkish border
into Soviet territory Wednes-
day. It was the U.S. govern-
ment’s first contact with the*
officers.
+DETROIT (Ap)—Fifteen
black youths have been
charged with murder In the
shooting death of a Detroit
policeman near the head-
quarters of an organizing
group. Acting Mayor Mel
Ravitz acted as a shield to
guarantee the safe surrender
of 12 of the youths.
.
+SAN ANTONIO, Tex.
(AP)—One of two women
fully qualified to enter the
ministry in the American
Henri Bellemare and for more
than 370 others taken into custo-
dy in 1,600 raids since Canada
suspended civil liberties lOdays
ago and invoked its War Meas-
ures Act.------------------------
But he says he never
learned the reason for his deten-
tion.
•' «-* ' • ‘ " *:•'
He thinks it was because he
wants independence 'for
Quebec.
, Under the War Measures Act
soldiers and police can arrest
authorities said, and continued
through 250 bombing attacks. It
was now in a stage of “spectac-
ular” kidnapings and wouldcul-
minate in “selective assassina-
tion ” of public figures.
Trudeau said the war meas-
ures were necessary “to permit
the police to deal with persons
who advocate or promote the vi-
minister for the province of olent overthrow of our demo-
Quebec, and James R. Cross, Icratic system."
Britain’s senior trade commis-; The police entered Belle-
sioner in Canada, had been kid-
napped by the Quebec Libera-
tion Front, the FLQ, and threat-
ened with death.
Hie kidnapings, authorities
without a warrant. Theminister :said, were part of a four-step men in full uniform, inch
of justice can jail anyone suspi* terrorist cainpaignbymembers sidearms and nightsticks,
cious for up to 21 days without |oftheFLQ, separatist becoming him past his wife and four of his
chargesor bail. Property cafi be increasingly Marxist and talk- young daughters to his bed-
held for 90 days. The govern-ling of creating a socialist state room. The police hatched while
mare ’shouse and searched him.
He asked to see their warrant.
They had none.
Thenoneplainclothesmanand
three other provincial police-
More than half have been re-
leased.Most described their im-
prisonment as a psychological
shock. Some tell of police break- ment can censor. And a person; in Quebec as a “model to the he dressed,
ing through doors without warn- can get five years in jail for world,
ing. The police deny brutality, being or assisting in any way a) The campaign began with vi- (See ARftESTS, Page 2.)
2nd Arrest
May Solve
Burglar!
Several burglaries
Houston area may be cleared
with the arrest of the jecond
suspect in the Michael’s Cloth-
ing Store burglary, police said.
When Monroe R. Strickland,
28, was arrested in Houston
Friday night, police found
Loth.™ chnrt. lb'
group’' Milo! Saturday to * h goods
Keep Police Busy
into tiie storeroom and remain
there until he left.
admit women to its clergy is
a step toward a broader
recognition of women’s role
in the church.
+TEL AVIV (AP)—The
chief of Israel’s military in-
m
V
the U-Totem , On routine patrol early Sat- teU,*ence department says
iAAC At , n «f t i n «. TTffvni and Qndaf TTnlnn
JSL
man with an Afro haircpt at
10:58 p.m. Friday,
Police said the clerk was get-
ting ready to close' the store
when the man entered and
asked for a package of cig-
Egypt and the Soviet Union
...n.t » ...... WCKeu .“have set up one of the most
zone along the Suez Canal,
Ausley found a door “Idcked
in" at the
goods taken has not beep de-
termined yet, Lt. Ausley said.
Because several packages of
cigarettes were scattered on
the floor, police believe the
burglars may have been
included new motorcycles, new
sewing machines and a variety
of other items.
Strickland was charged,
burglary and felonytheft in
Justice of the Peace Glenn Vic-
kery’s office Friday night.
.............H) , HR H) ,
of Houstqn was arrested by1 MAYOR GLEN WALKER has crossed out the three R’s after seeing nfew innovations in educa*
Baytown police early Friday tlon and has declared Tuesday “Ross Sterling High School Day.” The public Is invited to’ ob-
........serve demonstration classes and displays in banks, savings and loan associations, Sterling Mu-
nicipal Library and the Civic Center from 11:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. A Parents Night program will be
held ai the school from 6:30to Jp.m. >• (Photo By Kim Richardson)
I
I
THREE R’S’NOW OUT OF. STYLE
J(Sce BURGLARS. Page 2 )
.-(-STOCKHOLM (AP)—
Paul A. Samuelson of 1Massa-
chusetts Institute of Tech-
nology has been awarded the
1970 Nobel Prize in eco-
:rJ5%3fti^jLa Porte Parachutist
I in connection with the
; in which an at-
t was made to steal $4,880
worth qf clothing from
Michael’s at 2316 N. Alexander
Drive.
A $1,500 bond on burglary
and $1,000 bond on felony theft
were set for each of the uu-
pects By Monday morning
Carnosld had posted bond,)
Judge Vickery said.
#*§1
"Plunges To Her Death
LA PORTE (Sp) — Funeral School, Mrs. Alban attended
arrangements for Mrs. Helene
Darlene Alban, 20, of La Porte
are pending at Art Simpson
Funeral Home here.
Mrs. Alban was killed Sun-
day in a skydiving accident
near Millican, 16 milersouth of
| the Texas A&M campus and 10
miles north of Navasota. She
reportedly
cemetery about one mile west
of Millican.
Mrs. Alban, an employe in
the university’s food service
department, fell 12,500 feet in
what was to have been a 60-
second free fall before her
chute began opening about 100
[ feet above the ground. She was
fdiving with the Tetti A&M
Skydiving Club.
|. Members of the club said her
(chute never fully opened dur-
; ing the 3 p.m. jump.
Mrs. Alban bad made 31
Texas A&M two years. She was
a member of the A&M Sky
Divers, a former Girl Scout
and a member of the La Porte
Community Church.
Her grandfather, T.
Adams, is the former owner
the La Porte Liberal, now the
La Porte-Bayshore Sun.
Sa-viHffiLindttde
band, A. James Alban III of La
Porte; her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Kenneth Adams of La
Porte; and her grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Adams and
Mrs. Marquerite Miller, all of
La Porte.
Education Innovation
'
Sterling Takes Classroom
To The People Tuesday
_ _ a !Citizens Savings and Loan; National departments, Civic
Koss Sterling High School jtudent-teacher story hour, j Center; drafting and wood-
students and teachers will take]g^iing Municipal Library; work, Civic Certtgr.
the classroom to the business Also, Stars and girls physical i Representatives from sev-
community and to other mem-;e(jucatjoni citizens Savings eral departments will be at
bers of the public Tuesday. ^ homemaking, Bank Highlands State Bank.
Traveling by school bus to|of Baytown; language, Harris, From 6:30 to 7 p.m, parents
various locations in the school Savings; business, Bay-; of Sterling students, as well as
district, students will perform]^^ Bank; band, Bay- other members of the com-
in classroom situations, showj town State Bank, choir, Citi- munity, are invited to Sterling
displays and exhibit various zens National Bank; drama High School for a social hour.
SS ,peech'
£
Still Do Some Walking
Weather .. „
. And Tides | Is Ba>town
CLOUDY AND continued State Bank VP
ZJr* ! c,,t- Temperatnre range ex- town ^ ^ has been an-II
pected, upper IDs to mid-'
mid-air hookup.
Club sponsor, Jon Botsford,
an engineering instructor, said MORGAN’S POINT tide* for
sgsasifta
nounced by B. E. Greer, presi-
dent of the bank. -7,?
Brett has assumed his duties
KISSING CHAMPS
has a busy day at Astroworld. | rjck CHASE, a junior student from Baytown, and San An-
i tonio sophomore Cindy Prince are pictured doing their owi
thing at the first Southwest Texas State University annual
Inter-Fraternity Comictl Kissing Marathon. Chase and Miss
Prince broke the national record set by Notre Dame Uaiver-
sity in 19M in- six and one-ball hours bid placed second ia the
contest, bowing to two couples who tied after nine boors and 13
minutes. The Chase-Prince time was nine boors, nine minutes.
free fall from 12,500 feet. He
-'said most of the other eight
] jumpers had their parachutes
open at 3,600 feet.
Mrs. Alban was taken to a
Navasota hospital by Lindley
Robertson Funeral Home am-
bulance of Navasota. She
dead on arrival at the hospotal
at 4 pjn.
A graduate of La Porte High
a.m and 1:37 p.m. Brett comes to Baytown from
mm. £,££,3^2
1:31a.m. aad set at 5:31p.m. president. He waa '
ments. * r , .
Retired Postman Will
lie durinv the noon hour. The
demonstrations will be heid
frwn 11:30 a.m. to 1 pm.
tt
First National Bank; social ^
studies at the Civic Center; ^ fr°m
science, Peoples State Bank; Baytown Post Office after
arts and crafts, Sterling Muni- ® fears °f “™ce-
cipal Library; mHthsnatics, b<lieve h,s **** Pr<!8eF«fd
zr.-Ulor,try* “ ’ that he walk two to three miles
a day?
He received 4 medical re- merce.
tirement after two heart at- Futrell worked under four
Ucks and open heart surgeryipostmasUrs during his 62
at Methodist Hospital in April, | years’ service—Miss Flo Mc-
1970. Elhaney, Mrs. A. M. Thomas,
When Futrell came to Bay- N. D. Ballard and M. L Neal,
town in 1936, he was just hitch- He is a native of Kildare,
hiking through. He stopped off i married to the former Sara Lee
at the port office, went ln and Gibson of Apple Springs,
asked A. C. Coker, who was Mrs. Futrell is a nurse at
working there then, for a job. i Gulf Coast Hospital. f7“”
After passing the civil ser- Both Futrells enjoy traveling
vice examination and working, and have done quite a bit of it.
at odd Jobs to support himself They have driven from Florida
At the time he began, there
were 14 employes, three letter
routes and one rural route at
the Baytown port office. Today
there are 85 employes, 32 letter
f&utesand three ruralroutes—
growth that ought to satisfy
even the Chamber of'Com-
J
mm
e was No :
spotal A f
charter president of the Spring j
Optimist Club and a member of
:St. Matthew Lutheran Church.!
His wife, Judy, and two rL” 1
sfren, Kim, i, and 1
looting forward to moving 1
mnwctiiTM owj their new borne in
Acres Of
Convenient Parking
No Service Charge
For Checking ~
GORDON FUTRELL
for six to eight months, Futrell
was notified by Coker that he
had the job.
Starting as a city route car-
rier, Futrell has worked in
phase of port
then. He was foreman of car-
riers when he retired in July,
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 49, No. 26, Ed. 1 Monday, October 26, 1970, newspaper, October 26, 1970; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1063418/m1/1/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.