The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, November 5, 1971 Page: 2 of 20
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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THE BAYTOWN SUN
Friday, November j. 1871
Bicycle Rider
Gets Ticket
In Collision
A bicycle rider was given a
ticket (or failure to yield right-
otway Friday in a bike-auto
collision on Highway 146 at
Pleasant Drive.
The bicyclist was Charles
Robert Irwin, 14, of 1300 E.
Fayle. Police said he was at-
tempting to ride Ns'bicycle
across the northbound lane of
Highway 146 when it hit the left
door of a northbound car driv-
en by Wanda Hall Carothers of
3806 Hardin.
No injuries were reported
The Navajo Reservation has
nearly 16 million acres of range
lands extending through Ari-
zona. New Mexico and Utah.
City To Allow Concrete
Pipe In Sewer Line Jobs
Concrete pipe will be allowed
for sanitary sewer lines in the
city with the addition of lime-
stone aggregate.
The council Tuesday night
was considering an ordinance
that would ban concrete alto-
gether from sewer lines when a
developer, Joe Aylor, asked
them to amend the ordinance
to change the aggregate in the
concrete1 pipe to limestone.
Limestone, Aylor explained,
could extend the life of a pipe
by 60 per cant.
The failure of concrete pipe
in Baytown, Aylor went on, was
■ ‘segregated, isolated
cases." Aylor said he apw)
with Public Works Director
Jack Morton that concrete pipe
should not be used in certain
cases but should not be eli-
minated by an ordinance. This
could be controlled by the dty be so advanced that “every
engineer, he said, who is “well
versed on the facts where new
lines put in with low flow. All
this should be left to his judg
ment.”
Councilman Ted Kloesel, ob-
jecting to concrete pipe, said
concrete pipe has been collap-
sing after 13 years here, even
before the bond money is paid
off.
Pol’l THEATER
DO MSI HUS Dl JUS
NOW SHOWING
THRU TUESDAY
J) A story of love.
zilmed by David Lean
Ryan’s
Daughter
ROBERT MTTCHUM TREVOR HOWARD
CHRISTOPHER JONES JEH9MUS ^ .
LEO McKERN.. SARAH MIES
mprooouw m aren (wnmoon1•
SUf'
I Sl’l 11 ISO l|| THU!
NOW SHOWING
THRU TUESDAY
A
GWRLTOM
HGTON
m
oim
MAN
■liwrfrar
•waiterSELT2€R»ooucifflecos;»»w»c ANTHONY ZERBE'ROSALIND CASE
. ..JOHN WILLI4Uand JOVCE H CORRINGTON *w..W«lTEII SELTZER »• , BORIS SAGAl
PAWVISION* TECHNICOLOR- FROM WARNER BROS. A KINNEY LEISURE SERVICE gj
Put in gold pipe and it will
last forever,” Leonard Stasney
later commented, pointing out
that the council had to decide
what “we want to pay for.”
Stasney had heard that the City
of Victoha was having accept-
Oyster Fry
Set Saturday
In La Parte
LA PORTE (Sp (-The La
Porte Booster Chib and the La
Porte Food Service Association
are co-sponsoring an oyster fry
from UtJPirjfi. to .6:30 pin.
Saturday in La Porte High
School cafeteria.
able service with limestone ag-
gregate pipe
Stasney said if the service
life of a pipe is extended four
times, by then technology will
little home may have its re-
cycling plant.”
Clarence Johnson of Bay-
town, a hydrologist with the
Texas Water Quality Board,
suggested the city contact
other cities with experience
with concrete sewer lines. “A
number of other cities," John-
son said, “can give you estim-
ates on the expense of concrete
sewer line
Johnson added that enforce-
ment against infiltration in
9ewer lines has been "lenient
up to now."
The ordinance was proposed
to be amended to include the
specifications of the American
Standards of Technical Mat-
ters, stipulating limestone ag-
gregate in pipe. Opposing the
amendment were Kloesel and
Mayor Gten Walker.
The amended ordinance
the only dissenter.
Texas Auto
Dealers To
Meet Nov. 11
I EPA Complaint On
HL&P Plant Probed
GALVESTON (Sp) - The
New laws affecting the Army Corps of Engineers is In. of on«ite construction
r«nT. “SutW lobbyist for the National Asso-
I Continued From Page 1)
an inferior education?” she
asked. “Where were your
voices crying about busing
charge channel groins because I then?"
HOUSE AMENDMEN
■This is a disgraceful per-
Rep. EmanuelCeller, D-N.Y.,
forma nee," said Rep. Parren J.
Mitchell, D-Md., one of the
black members.
Mitchell’s brother, Clarence
J, Mitchell, chief civil rights
advised the corps we will re- U the civil rights laws enacted
turn to the original plans,” he during the last decade, chided
elation for the Advancement of
Colored People, who watched
said.
members for acting in the entire session from the gal-
lery, issued a stinging stole-
EPA’s letter of protest also I “hute and hysteria” and 1
complained th.1 0, to«.k a ~
state's multi-million-dollar au- vestigating a new Envlron-
tomoblie business will be a mental Protection Agency
principal subject of discussion complaint against Houston
at the Texas Automobile Deal- Lighting and Power Co.’s new
ers Association (all workshop Cedar Bayou Generating Sta-
te be held at the Shamrock
Hilton Hold in Houston on] ^e EPA has complained to company supplied no monitor-1 remedy forthe busing program
Thursday, Nov. 11, according the corps that HL6tP has not ing data from its plant last L Abusing amendments sional district should study the
to Jimmie W. Lumus of Bay- wtowed the dredging plans it summer on the effects of its were rejected. "* ” ‘ “
town, area director for the submitted to the corps for its heated cooling water on gut the House was in no
Texas Automobile Dealers discharge point on Trinity Bay marine life in Trinity Bay. The mood to listen. Theamendment
A?**!"'- u , T4 •*! 1* ‘hereby causing en- HL&P spokesman said the prohibiting federal expend!
Joe Prichard of Houston, TA- vironmentaf damage to a company's only completed tures for busing was adopted
DA regional vice president, ruppia bed. Ruppia is an un- generating unit was down du-L, a vote 0f 233 to 124; the
who will preside at the one-day derwater grass used by shrimp ring the summer because of L^y on COUrt-ordered bus-
meeting, said new car dealers and other marine life as a feed-mechanical problems and noL 125 125 and the one
from approximately 28 coun-j^ ^ hiding area. data was suppUed because preventing the federal gov
emmentfrom requiring a state
finance busing carried by
231-126 vote.
ties will attend the workshop,! The EPA has asked the corps none was available
one of seten being held in dif-1 to stop the dredging and sus-
ferent areas of Texas. pend HL&P’s 1968 permit until
jfsSt s
Licensing Law will be made by uation. The EPA request was
William R. Crocker of Austin, touched off by an HL&P re-
executive director of the T«ias Lieet for an extension of the
Motor Vehicle Commission. Lfredging permit.
Under the new tow, dealers, | Col. Notan C. Rhodes, Gal
Funeral
Notices
roll calls on busing," he said.
‘This is a reliable list of the
true racists and promoters of
discord in the United States."
■ ‘They may wear the business
suits of congressmen but in
their hearts they wear the
robes of the Ku Kiux Ktan and
this night they have put the
torch to the Constitution of the
United States.
The antibusing amendments
JAMES C. WEST
Crocker wUl exptato the prose- partment of the Interior has ^ ^ Rev. A. E.
dures to be followed in apply- also asked for additional time Weatherly officiating.
ueoaiewas si-..^ ^-. tion aid measure over-
Criesof“Vote!Vote!’drowned,^ ^ Hnn„ ^
| out sane speakers.
LATE
NEWS:
passed 6-1, with Kloesel being ing for and getting such licen-|to study the matter. A resident of Baytown
EPA previously filed a pro- yearg) West died Thursday In
SCHOOLS FUTURE--
(Continued FmnW$ J) He told of one boy from al”**1'^ P0™1
town veterinarian, Dr. Henry Houston ghetto neighborhood | Cfl^gep^p'
Dismukes, who calls nearly to the schpol with a cleft palate.
_ . . ... ,, , every week to say, “What can I This has been corrected with
The price is $2 for adults and ^ fflr you?» surgery
31 for children under 12 for all
you can eat. Tickets will be
available at the door
The menu includes oysters
frgnch fries, onions, pickles
and iced tear
ItrllllSOtl THEATRE
}|| W>T THIS in- - I?? IJII
KIDDIE SHOW
SATURDAY "
MORNING
Box OHM
Optm
9:30 A.M.
Show
. Sttrti
10:00 A.M
8 CARTOONS
1 COMEDY
PLUS THIS FEATURE
"BLAST OFF'
18-50c PIECES
GIVEN AWAY!
CONTEST ON STAGE
JAC,K£QIJ0^AWlNG
THIS AD AjiDONE
■dadmissioH
PAID ADMISSION
WILL ADMIT TWO!
“And Lee College has almost
"This boy is one of the
West and James C. West Jr. of
adopted Chinquapin School,” smartest kids I have ever seenl T FTTFffSi - - Ba>'town! tw0 sisters- Mrs
Moore went on. He told how the in my life,” Moore commented. Evelyn Bender of Baytown and
science instructor, R. G. "He has a fine mind." - I (Continued From Page 1) Mrs. Louise Rains of Arkan-
McGraw, has taught science to He said the boy wants to do their cities, he said. sas; three brothers, Ira Lee
the Chinquapin boys and Don one thing in life—to come back Although none has yet been West and^Chafles Ray West of p|,ere 0f increasing antago-
Perry teaches them a pro- one day and teach at Chinqua- filed in Houston, Clark said Livingston and O.J. West Jr. of | nism between congressional
grammed math course. Mike pin School. business people in Dallas and Baytown.
Hefley, physical education in- Moore, who taught 18 years San Ajitonio have filed peti- Burial will be in the Veterans
structor at LC, coaches basket- at a private school, St. John’s dons in courts there to form the Cemetery in Houston under di-
ball for the Chinquapin in River Oaks, believes that metre districts. rection of Earthman Funeral
Burrs.” ‘ "all kids are pretty much the "The seven large school dis-Home.
The black and white colored atone.” I tricts of Texas have organized Pallbeareres will he F. W.
Chinquapin School bus, Moore, “I taught the ‘cream of so- and they see the metro system Brown, W. W. Brown, Johnny
added, Is now being repaired In ciety’(andIsaythatiriquotes)|as the answer to their prob- Bird, Bobby Bird, Andy Bates] night in two years,
the Lee College garage. . at St. John's and have not oriel lems,” Clark said. “They have and A. L. Bird. • • I
Chinquapin School, Moore bitter thought about it. I gave gained such strength that in a
it."
test against an HL&P applica- Houston hospital.
“ ■ to the corps for a<fredging survivors include his Wife,
permit to construct a 2,6«Hicn> Mrs. winola West of Baytown;
near —-
+ SAIGON-Secretary of
Defense Melvin R. Laird was
understood to have told
Resident Nguyen Van Tbleu
today that U J. withdrawals
from VietaawwqieWn step-
fore the ffouse. They were
lead-
added to It because House lead-
ers tried to keep the deseg-
the d*8' four daughter, ./4ra. Maria pd up immediately to send
. . . ' Ann Shugart, Mias Vivian F. thousands of troops home for
An HUP spokesman said Westi Miss Dawn F. west and
the company had slightly Mrs. chera Jackson, all of
altered Its plans far the dis- Baytown; tw0 Mllg) zane C.
Christmas.
+ WASHINGTON -
Separate congressional ef-
forts to rescue foreign aid
from last week’s Senate re-
jection are headed for debate
in both houses In an atmos-
crltlcs and the Nixon admin-
istration.
+ BELFAST, Northern
Ireland — Drenching rain
Thursday night brought
Northern Ireland Its quietest
regation bill from the floor in
order to avoid the busing fight.
Before becoming entangled in
the busing dispute, the House
refused to ban sex dis-
crimination in the admissions
policies of undergraduate col-
leges.
By narrow maTglns on two
occasions it adopted an amend-
ment that would exempt under-
graduate colleges, which enroll
95 per cent of college students,
from a provision prohibiting
sex discrimination in higher
education.
The higher education bill, a
massive bill loaded with con-
troversies, of its own, extends a
number of existing programs
for five more years and creates
a major new Il-billion-a-year
program of direct federal sup-
port for colleges.
It also calls for establishment
of a National Institute of Edu-
cation to conduct research on
teaching fnethods and the
learning procewt
explained, is composed of 45 some of the best years of my recent meeting of the seven Ar.’, ..,,
perJeent black boys, 45 per cent life to that school and it gave superintendents and their /VnilCO VJlVeil
"oxic Order
browns, and 10 per cent whites, me a lot in return.” board presidents, Dr. J. W. Ed-
There are 48 students. Only Moore pointed out that Chin- gar, State Commissioner, pre- FrOHl
oneboy has ever left the school quapin School could not have sided.” * •
voluntarily, Moore said, and he been started without the help Clark said that accreditation
called four months later and from his former students at St. visits this year are being made
asked to come back. John’s. When he got the idea on the basis of the terms of _
Boys have been expelled, forthe school, he wrote letters Judge Wayne Justice of U.S. ®”S™?vex,A,, L „ '
however, when they did not “fit to his former students, about District Court in Tyler who D“tCourt J^ge Allen .nan-
in our apple barrel” and could half of whom responded and ruled on the Civil Action 5281 nay,h“stay, ane®™er order
not make It in a democratic have since helped financially I case1'and not the Texas Edu- Pro‘ublt,nB Armco Steel Corp.
operation. - and in numerous other ways, cation Agency. The team that from tbschargmg toxic wastes
"Some are simply too far Moore said J. D. Salinger’s visits, he said, unhesitatingly ln “1118 Housto" “‘P r1,8 ,'
gone for us,’! he said, explain- novel, “Catcher in the Rye,” tells the school district that H“inaygaveArmco60daysin
ing that Chinquapin School is taught him the greatest lession this is a new approach. , , h to obt8,n a.State Permit
■ w«/uwt«n h.n’■ tupurilurBMl ■jitiMtoi ‘,‘AitoteIiiMto8i”lto«to)) “to
ti ttft tlto l^taiarter tad Just wants tfr be listened] determining educational^01'sy8‘emf® aisposalpurpos-
years the school has been in to,” he said. "He doesn’t want] standards.”
flmhjjBi iMBp ^ ^ incjdiiaCc^
his wife can, only been subjec- Moore believes that Is ureiawiiuarus, umm saiu, is mm , r - ,
tive about0 the results. "But key to the success of Chinqua- with school programs, but withtbe^, s-Justlce DePartment in
there are kids who are making pin Sdiool - listening to the staff assignments, class^enroll-0,8 Thursday action.
+ WASHINGTON - Swift
& Co. says it will not sell
50,000 contaminated turkeys
for human consumption even
if the Agriculture Depart-
ment says it may.
N-O-W
THRU TUESDAY
Colonial “R|V.[J
816 CRIST lANI .;b;
BOX OFFICE OPENS 6:00
FEATURES AT S:30- 10:30
NOW SHOWING
+ ATLANTA, Ga. -*■ U.
Col. Anthony Herbert, the
moat decorated. American
enlisted man in the Korenn
War, has been the target of
continuing harassment by
superiors and was given in-
structions in the proper man-
ner for saluting, his civilian
lawyer alleges. »
+ NEW ORLEANS -
Union pickets struck four
Ybu*vet|ot
due process, Mothers
Day* supermarkets,
theFBI,Metficare,air
conditioning, AT&T,
T£X. 1
ience between a black and white problems of integration. system by July 7, 1972, and for
kid. They all know when you’re The school superintendent to Vvocat|0|’ ol the staY order lf
listening to them and when asking that letters be written Armco fails to comply,
you’re not.urgingaconstitutionalamend-
Moore invited everyone to ment that would prevent the
come visit the sdiool, promis- courts from consolidating inde-
ing visitors they will find well- pendent school districts into channel. The Texas^Wator Qual-
disciplined, happy kids. He metro districts,
alluded to Robert Frost’s “Schools ought to be control-
day and a port official
labeled the move “just an-
other way to tie up the port.”
ENJOY A FAMILY STYLE
GftTFISti
DINNER
EVERY FRIDAY NIGffTf
ADULTS
S1.50
$1.00
• ■ '.. * •-1
CHILDREN1
UNDER 12
Hannayearlierorderedatotal
ban on discharging of cyanides
and other toxic wastes into the
sougl
ribuiuvnu/, he asm. ITv UV.I I
ing easy in the harness.” want a Houston school board
There is that kind of “har-| operating tax-supported
...
ity Board had authorized the
plant to drill injection wells for
Exercise Reforger
ARMY Sp. 4 Bernard C. Olive
Jr., whose wife, Kathy, lives at
4521 Yupin,, is participating
with more than 11,000 troops in
Exercise Reforger III in
Germany.
counbydubs, ^ 2
Congress, a 2-car
garage, state troopers,
ness" at Chinquapin School, schools here. We don’t want to
with the kids learning they have to bus youngsters out of
must live as brothers and sis- our community to be educated
ters in a democratic society,;or have them bused here,
‘‘Each community should
the Constitution
color television
In everyone’s life there’s a
SUMMER OF ’42
and democracy.
I’ve got
BIL
JACK
FROM THE NATIONAL BEST SELLER
A Robert Mulligan/Richard A. Roth Production,
JENNIFER O’NEILL • GARY GRIMES
J^RRY HOUSER • OLIVER CONANT
Written by . Producadby
HERMAN RAUCHER RKHARO A. ROTH
Dfractcdb, thnicb,
.ROBERT MULLIGAN MICHEL LEGRANO
KRANZE
TICHMCOLOA* ,,
In1 . 1*~T 1—I mmmnmlnt
|XXj AfUMrLMV*SM««
VOTE BY A WHISPER
PORT MORESBY, New
Guinea (AP) - “Whisper
votes” with pictures of candi-
dates are to be used in next
year’s House of Assembly gen-
eral election. Illiterate villagers
will be able to point to the pic-
ture of a candidate and whisper
to an official that he is his
choice. ,
keep the responsibility for edu-
cating its own children,”- he
said.
Another factor is the costs of
busing that would spiral as
youngsters are transported
from one area to another. The
danger-of busing children in Armc0 has h88" °P*rating at
today s FUNNY
highly urbanized areas is also
to be considered, he said.
“The main premise, how-
ever, "is the belief in a local
JOM LAUGHLIN • DELORES TAYLOR;
- cosiamnv CLARK HOWAT w* t, tm m teresa Christina
«f by MARY R0SC SOLTI OttKid by T C f RANK A National Student Film Corporation Production
NICOLOR*
'ENJOY FUN,
FOOD, AND
FRIENDS’
| irongate !
NOW APPEARING NIGHTLY
QtiCteAL souao nwx MWic n>o« m
[GPl au ao4i AoawTTtt Pj-nKCAHHwcv WWW9N« 01&
msk
Mn. 0
Flint, Mkh.
! MOTION FiCtUBE «tu» MCA
SECOND NIT AT 1:3
"HARPER”
PLUS "SPLENDOR IN THE GRASS"
Todovi FUNKY *W » SI 00 (of
toch orioM “fooiif" inf Sond 009s
It: Todor't FUNNY, 1200 Woit Third
Sf., Ckrtlood, Ohio 44113.
"REGGIE ROGER
TRIO"
al Environmental Protection
Agency objected. '
Under Thursday's agreement,
Armco would be subject to $5,-
000 per day fine for any viola-
tions in a three-year period aft-
er completionof the incinerator.
Arinco must apply by Nov. 30
to build and operate Use incin-
erator. Federal officials also
wereauthorizedtomakeinspec-
turns and take samples of waste
discharge at any time.
Since Hannay’s initial order,
aboutBO percent capacity. Com-
pany officials said Hannay’s or-
der would permit them toretum
to full capacity production.
DANCE
■:N;
•"xr-
V
CROSBY AMERICAN LEGION
Nov.i3th............... Drovers
Nov,20th....... ... . GilBaca
Nov, 27th...;...... Clarence Baca
I’
As:o
Tv
Si Si Senor Senorita. This is Mexican Food Country and
in Baytown The Gonzalez’s prepare their food daily es-
pecially for you.
Monday thru Thursday, II a.m. to 9 p.m.
FRIDAY & SATURDAY, 11 a.m. to l?p.m.
CLOSED SUNDAY
Gonzalez Mexican
Patio & Restaurant
CALL 427-2839
II
3417 WISCONSIN
Tel
5:30 PM
( 2) NBC News
( 8) Mlstrrogrrs' N
hood ,
(111 CBS Newt
(13) ABC Newa '
(261 Highway Pstrol
(38) Dick Van Dyke
_JI pn
( 2), 111), (13) News
( 8) The Electric Compan
(26) Star Trek
(39) 1 Dream of Jeannle
Oinn* M
BARBARA (DIM
LARRY NAGMAN star
•n "I D wm ol
Joann i#
8:38 PM
( 8) Viewpoint - Discuss
of Cuba . ’
(13) 13 News Magazine
"Shock Room: Ben Tau
Emergency Center” is repe
ed as a special edition
(38) Rifleman - A young gt
man threatens to kill the m
shal
7 PM
( 2) The DA’s case against
child molester seems about
fall apart
• ( 8) Designing Women
(11) Chicago Teddy Bears
Story to be announced
(13) The Brady Bunch
picked as the ideal family for
soap commercial ■
(26) Movie - “Devil’s Cai
yon” (1953) Virginia May
Dale Robertson, Stephe
McNally
(39) Wild, Wild West - D
ME
jk
*4
E
BE THERE I
COMES
f.
■ '.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 28, Ed. 1 Friday, November 5, 1971, newspaper, November 5, 1971; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1065907/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.