The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 302, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 17, 1982 Page: 2 of 53
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2-A
THE BAYTOWN SUN
Sunday, October 17, 19«2
Police Beat
* \
Freeport Man Jailed
In Burglary Of Home
United States Threatens To
Drop From United Nations
A Freeport man is being held
Saturday in lieu of $20,000 bond,
police say, in connection with
charges of burglary of a
residence.
Richard Lee Hulsey, 1120‘A N.
Fourth St., reported the burglary
of his residence, around 3:45 p.m.
Friday, in which a pistol was
taken, police said.
When police arrived, Hulsey
said he had a suspect in mind who
had been seen at his residence by
a neighbor.
Hulsey told police he had
earlier shown the pistol and its
hiding place to the suspect, John
David Towery, who rode to work
with Hulsey. ■ ,
Hulsey took police to Towery’s
residence, where they arrested
him on a warrapt issued out of the
232nd District mUrf.
Concealed Weapon
A man was arrested Friday in
connection wtyh misdemeanor
charges of unlawfully carrying a
concealeawea|>oh, police said.
Police stopped the man after
observing his car “weaving” at
7:23 p.m. Friday on North Main
near the Ward Road intersection.
Police reported noticing the im-
pression of a pair of brass
knuckles in his shirt pocket and
upon searching his car, also found
a handgun.
Thefts, Etc.
•An employee of Peck & Peck,
San Jacinto Mall — Reported the
theft of clothes, valued at $314,
around 8 p.m. Wednesday.
•Sharon S. Vaughn, 3209 Ohio —
Reported the theft of $250 from
her purse in her residence
sometime between 10 p.m. Thurs-
day and 6 a.m. Friday.
Court Cases
• Gary Lee Davis, 33, of 3201
New Meadow has been sentenced
to 10 years probation and fined
$1,500 after he pleaded guilty to
sexual abuse of a child.
A female juvenile relative told
Baytown police Davis forced her
to have sexual relations with him
at his home in late April.
The sentence was handed down
from the 174th District Court with
Judge Jon Hughes presiding. ’
• Juanita Charge Lantz, 19, of
6227 Highway 146 has been con- ,
victed of forgery and sentenced to
five years in the Texas Depart-
mentotCorrections. ,
-Ms.- Lentz t was arrested , by
Baytown ptfice after she forged a
check for the purchase of a $21,000
sports car from a Baytown
dealership in July.
The case was tried in the 262nd
District Court with Judge Doug
Shaver presiding.
• Mable Lucille Brown, 61, of
1903 Dorris has been sentenced to
A WINDMAKER device as large as this one
even obscures the workman Installing It. The
huge airblower is being Installed on the
Houston Ship Channel, where Tenneco and
USS Chemicals Division of U. S. Steel Corp.
are building a facility to make 2-ethyl hexanol
and phthalic anhydride. Products will be used
as raw materials for plasticizers, polyester
resins, synthetic lubricants and other special-
ty chemicals.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States
today threatened to withdraw from the United
Nations General Assembly and withhold all
payments to the U.N. if the General Assembly
votes to exclude Israel.
Secretary of State George P. Shultz also
said the United States will withdraw its
delegation from the U.N.-affiliated Interna-
tional Telecommunications Conference in
Nairobi, Kenya, and suspend further
payments to it if an Arab plan to exclude
Israel succeeds.
The United States three weeks ago
withdrew from a U.N.-affiliated International
Atomic Energy Agency conference following
the conference’s vote to deny Israel creden-
tlals.
Shultz said Saturday that thte United States
is withholding all further payments to the
IAEA, a U.N. agency that polices the use of
nuclear technology around the world, pending
a reassessment of U.S. participation.
“The United States views these threats with
grave concern,” Shultz said of recent pro-
posals to exclude Israel from U.N. bodies.
“We will take such action in other United Na-
tions organizations if there are similar
moves.”-
Shultz said the efforts to exclude Israel from
U.N. bodies and agencies “defeats the very
purpose of the United Nations — to resolve
disputes among nations — by creating further
conflict and division.”
"In the case of the General Assembly, it
would be a clear cut violation of the United
Nations Charter,” he said. "If Israel were ex-
cluded ... the United States would withdraw
from participation in the Assembly and would
withhold payments to the United Nations until
Israel’s right to participate is restored."
Shultz said the the recent anti-Israel moves
also threaten the progress being made toward
bringing peace to the Middle East, a goal to
which he said the United States and virtually
all U.N. members are committed.
“It would be a tragic irony, if such moves •
against Israel in tbe United Nations system
were to succeed just at the time where there is
renewed hope for progress in the Middle
East,” Shultz said.
Warning that further attacks on Israel in
U.N. agenices pose “grave dangers,” Shultz
called on the majority of U.N. members to
“work to turn aside such inititives.”
^4?
SUNSPOTS
'Ta''
Poland’s Uilrest Continues
WARSAW, Poland
(AP) r- Defiant
Poles, mourning the
death of 20-year-old
man mortally wound-
ed by police gunfire
street fighting
resumed Friday
night when about
1,000 Poles emerged
from church services
in memory of Bodgan
Services Pending
FUNERAL SERVICES for Em-
in a..,,., ma Lee Munson, 72, of Mont
10 days in jail and fined $100 after geivjeu are nendine at Sterling
she was pleaded guilty in the Belvieu are pena,ng at Mer,lng
Funeral Home in Dayton. Mrs.
Munson died Friday night in an
Anahuac hospital.
A*-employee- of Bayshonr
Motors reported the burglaries of
three cars which were there for
service.
Radios were taken from a 1978
Ford Pinto belonging to James E.
Burns Jr., a 1978 Mazda belonging
to Charles W. Bennett and a 1978
Mercury Cougar belonging Alex
Martin, police said.
•Marguerite Young, 6411
Decker — Reported the theft of
her boat and trailer, valued at
$8,500, sometime between 7 p.m.
Friday and 2:44 a.m. Saturday.
The boat was locked to a fence at
her residence.
•Albert O. Williams, 1411
Willow St. — Reported the
burglary of his residence in which
$700 in cash, two pistols and a gold
pocket watch were taken
sometime between 1 p.m. and
3:30 p.m. Thursday.
•Janice Elaine Sessions, 605
Massey-Tompkins Road —
Dodge Van parked at her apart-
ment complex ‘in which a radar
detecter, citizen’s band radio and
radio, valued at $729, were stolen
sometime Thursday night.
•Stephen L. Lusk, 605 Massey-
Tompkins — Reported the
burglary of his 1978 Ford pickup
parked at his apartment complex
in which tapes and tools, valued
at $300, were stolen sometime
Thursday night.
•Elida Medina, 1016 Sunset —
Reported the burglary of her
residence in which $500 in cash,
jewelry and a radio were stolen
sometime between .7 a.m. and
3:30 p.m. Friday.
Street dosings *
183rd District Court to. misde-
meanor theft charges.
Ms. Brown, was originally
charged with
’receiving in August when stolen
traveler’s checks were found in THE CITY will close West Wright
her home by police executing a Avenue from North Commerce to
search warrant. The case was Gaillard Street from 7:30 a.m. to
heard by Judge Joseph Guarino, 5:30 p.m. Oct. 18 through Nov. 1
who reduced the charge to a anc* will close Aron Avenue from
misdemeanor. Fourth to Eighth streets from
• Bruce Calvin Jimmerson, 21, 7:30 a m- to 5:30 p.m. Oct. 20
of 2510 Harris pleaded guilty to through Nov. 3. Both streets are
burglary of a motor vehicle and being improved by a city contrac-
felony theft in the 174th District tor.
Court. Judge Jon Hughes sentenc- Qrosby Benefit Dance
ssssr proba'lon«■
Jimmerson was arrested in ?ye a country-western dance
August for allegedly stealing hub- °ct- 1(\at NewP°rt Country Club
caps off cars in the Baytown Proceedsjo for constructmn of
' Medical Center parking lot. ~ i
Spaghetti Dinner
OLD RIVER Winfree is having a
spaghetti dinner Oct. 16 from 11
a.m. to 7 p.m. in the Old River
Community Building on FM 565.
Donations are $3.50 each. A bake
sale will also be held. For more
information call 576-6781.
in an earlier pro—Wlosik, a 20-year-old
S o 1 i d a r i t y steel mill electrician.
demonstration, battl-
ed police for the third
consecutive night in
southern city of Nowa
Huta.
Polish officials said
some of those in the
crowd hurled
, in on the crowd firing
tear gas and high-
pressure water can-
n o n as the
demonstrators
chanted “Solidari-
ty!” and “The army
is with us!”
The acrid smell of
tear gas from the
previous two nights
of rioting still hung
over the city and
streets were littered
Newport fire station.
Harris County
Sterling FFA Dance
THE ROSS S. Sterling High
School FFA alumni will sponsor a
CR°SBy h ' 1 H°T BaXnraSSundt
man was killed and another
Gospel Singing
THE BAYTOWN FAMILY Opry
at 5003 Sjolander will feature an
all gospel program beginning at 8
p.m. Oct. 16. Featured enter-
tainers will be the Gospel
Messengers, Heaven’s Echos and
the McDonald Sisters.
KC Dance
KNIGHTS OF Columbus will
sponsor a dance Oct. 16, featuring
the Music Kings at the KC Hall.
Hours will be from 9 p.m! to 1
a.m.
Free Concert
BAYTOWN SYMPHONY Or-
chestra will offer a free concert
beginning at 7:30 p.m. Oct. 17 in
Gentry Junior School auditorium.
Andrea Bostow will be the soloist.
gastrihrehombs, ’set-"' Thewtttiessesrwh'O'
ting fires in the have been reliable in
Wlosik died Thurs-
day, a day after he
was shot during the
first round of
demonstrations in
Nowa Huta against
the outlawing of the ^ wjth rocks, broken
Solidarity union. t^rricades qtyfl toTBr......
up street car rails.
steelmaking suburb
of Krakow. Police
f o u g h t t h e
demonstrators with
tear gas, water can-
non and flares.
Witnesses said the
the past, said police
had ringed the square
outside the St. Mary
Queen of Poland
Church, leaving the
crowd no avenue of
escape.Police moved
The fighting in
Nowa Huta, a model
Communist city
established in the
1950s, was the latest
in a series of anti-
government protests.
@5 General Nutrition Centers
America s Best Nutrition Values are at GNC—Nearly 1000 Stores Coast to Coast
.criUcan.injuigin a hvo carag,, - JftgMjl jll\M||6t j “Stti
2ioo Friday afternoon. SJ Service Corp
James Howard Hill, 40, was SAN JAClNTO Methodist
pronounced dead at the scene. Hospital Service Corp will have
The driver of the other vehicle, its annual salad luncheon Oct. 19
George Franklin Saxon, 68, of at Grace United Methodist
Houston was taken by Life Flight Church from 11 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
helicopter to Hermann Hospital in There will be a board of directors
Houston where he is listed in meeting following the luncheon,
criticial condition in the surgical ‘ •'
intensive care unit. r, ____
Harris County Sheriff deputies Catholic Daughters
said Hill was headed north on FM NEW MEMBERS of Catholic
2100 when he attempted to pass Daughters will be received into
three vehicles by traveling on the area courts at a 6 P m- mass Sun-
right shoulder. Hill’s car struck a day at st- John's Catholic Church,
culvert, veered across the road-
JULIA KADER of Elyria, Ohio,
has been admitted to the hospital
in that city. She is the mother of
the late Capt. John Kader of
Baytown.
Coffee Klatch
EXPECTANT PARENTS are in-
vited Sunday at 3 p.m. to a coffee
klatch in Gulf Coast Hospital’s
conference room. The event,
sponsored by the hospital aux-
iliary, will include refreshments
and the awarding of a gift cer-
tificate.
way into the southbound lane hit-
ting Saxon’s car head-on.
TYLENOL HEARING
California Comic Bakes
Pumpkin Pie For 400
From Page 1
MANTECA, Calif.
(A P ) — Joey
Bavaresco decided to
celebrate Halloween
by cooking the
world’s largest pum-
pkinpie.
“They say it was
crazy to make this,”
Bavaresco, a San
Francisco comic,
said Thursday, look-
ing over his graham
cracker, crust
achievement. “If
you’re going to have
a party for 400, this is
it.-’
The finished pro-
duct was made with
100 cans of seasoned
pumpkin, 7 5
packages of instant
pudding, 20 quarts of
dry milk powder, two
pounds of gelatin and
two pounds of sugar.
It measures 8 feet 3
inches from crust to
crust and cost about
$250 to make with the
help of Manteca
baker Dennis Kent.
The pie, which will
be cut into about 1,000
pieces, will be served
with whipped cream
FIRE DISTRICT --
* The Chamber of Commerce
made its request last month, and
some members of the fire depart-
ment board felt it came too late in
view of progress already made.
“Crosby’s Fire Department is
in good shape financially. We’re
operating this year on $51,000
budget and next year it will pro-
bably go to $55,000. Huffman and
some of the surrounding depart-
ments aren’t getting that kind of
support,” Nevel said.
If approved, the legal fire
should have been, even to visual
inspection in terms of discolora-
tion, malformation, crushing and
the like,” he told the House
Energy and Commerce subcom-
mittee on health and the environ-
Manteca Pumpkin ment-
Festival The San “One bottle contained two dif-
ferent kinds of capsules and ob-
viously had been mixed by the
itself* the Halloween Perpetrator or whoever,” Hayes
pumpkin capital of testified.
He said an FDA regulation re-
quiring tamper-resistant packag-
ing will be ready by the first week
in November.
He estimated that manufac-
turers of over-the-counter drugs
would be able to comply by about
He says he already 90 days later» but a spokesman for
y J an industry trade group said
manufacturers already are mov-
ing to make their packages safer.
Daniel F. O’Keefe Jr., general
counsel of the Proprietary
’Association,;said drug companies*
valorum tax on property owners produets into tamper-resistant
packages. Some drugs already
are sold this way.
COUPON
salted unsalteo
SESAME
STICK snacks
s 59
^EXPIRES I0j£82
COUPON
ROLLED
OATS
m 59!.
EXPIRES 10-1682
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LOW SALT
CORN
FLAKES
si? 59
EXPIRES 10-16 82
RICE CAKES
rhi 7QC
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REDEMPTION OF COUPONS LIMITED TO ONE OF EACH KIND PER FAMILY.
at the 8th annual
Joaquin County com-
munity considers
5 I
apital
the world with more
than 700 acres
planted in the area.
Bavaresco wants
the pie added to the
Guinness Books of
Records.
He says
holds records for a
200-gallon milkshake,
24 hours of chimney
sitting. **
“This industry will move as
quickly as industrial capacity
permits,” he said. “I do not think
this will ultimately result in
significant consumer cost in the j
long run for over-the-counter pro-
ducts.”
O’Keefe showed the subcom-
mittee some package samples
and described recommendations
for industry-wide packaging re-
quirements that the association
sent the FDA on Thursday.
David E. Collins, board chair-
man of McNeil Consumer Pro-
ducts Co., which makes Tylenol,
said the company intends to
resume selling Tylenol capsules
but only when tamper-resistant
packages are available. He said
he Uould not estimate when this
would occur.
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500-53.55 ! 300-51.29 ! 500-53.99 ! 500-52.19 j 500-58.95
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to go for the fhaximum, 3 cents
per $100 of assessed value, initial-
ly. The plan is expected to bring
in about $72,000 to $75,000 per
year. .
The Crosby Fire Department is
currently supported entirely by
donations, much of which comes
from a number of fund raising
events held in the community.
Residents are also given the op-
tion of contributing $2 per month
to the department through pay-
ment of their M.U.D. bills.
»-tEftt PaptoUm &uit
Entered as second class matter at the
Baytown, Texas, Po9t Office. 77520
under thifAct of Congress of March 3,
1879. Published afternoons. Monday
through Friday and Sundays at 1301
Memorial Drive in Baytown, Texas.
P.O. Box 90.-Baytown, Texas. 77520.
Subscription Rates: By carrier. $4.25
itional by Coastal 1
T
Tides
'SUNDAY
HIGH: 9:14 a.m., 10:36p.m.
LOW: 3:42 a.m. 3:40 p.m.
“ ’ 'tfONDAY
HIGH: 9:25 a.m., 11:33 p.m.
LOW: 4:24 atm., 4:12p.m.
Sun
SUNDAY
SUNRISE: 7:24 a.m.
SUNSET: 6:49 p.m.
MONDAY
SUNRISE: 7:25 a.m.
SUNSET: 6:48p.m.
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Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 60, No. 302, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 17, 1982, newspaper, October 17, 1982; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1074220/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.