The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 139, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 25, 1975 Page: 9 of 16
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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CLYN Bulkin,
Mr. and Mrs.
ion Jr. dr Chan-
rhomas E. Buf-
n celebrates Jier
ly Tuesday with
has two sisters
Sherri 7 and a
6. Grandpar-
Bufkin of Bay-
Mrs. W. J. Perk-
dr. and Mrs. D.
laywood, Floyd
and Mrs. Billie
of Pasadena,
ents are Mr.
. Perkins, Mrs.
all of Crosby,
ett of Houston
foston of Pasa-
lj •
Mike Finley - -
,,
Welcome To Plano
A Winning Traditior
Plano has something Baytown needs. A sign
boosting the success of its football team.
Coming into and out of Plano, located just
north of Dallas on Highway 75, there are two
large signs saying “Welcome to Plano: A Winn-
ing tradition.
The signs go on to say the Wildcats have been
district champions 13 times since 1957 and have
Hie District 20-AAAA track championships
are also just around the comer, coming up April
16 and 18 at Memorial Stadium.
Five teams-Robert E. Lee, Sterling, Klein,
Smiley and Forest Brook-figure they have a
chance to win the title.
Gene Bosse’s Ganders "are the defending
champions and odds have it they will win it
outfit.
I had a strange experience on the way back
from Durant, Okla., Saturday. While in Dallas I
started fiddling with the radio, trying to get
some country and western music. But, instead, I It
stumbled®onto Radio Station WHO, which is fair,
based, of all places, in Des Moines, Iowa.
To my surprise, the station was broadcasting
the state high school basketball tournament. I
thought I would listen for a minute, knowing
full well I would more than likely lose the sta-
tion in 10 or 15 miles.
It didn’t happen. I kept the station until I got
to Conroe.
In case you are interested, St. Mary’s of
Clinton defeated Grunde City, 71-53, for the
Class A title and bes Moines Lincoln won its
first state championship ever by defeating the
Little Cyclones of Ames, 56-51, in the Class AAA
title game.
Lincoln went undefeated for the season, but
the announeer forgot to inform his listeners
what lts final record was.
Barbers Hill will host its annual track meet
Saturday at the BH track.
It will be a two division—boys and girls—af-
There is no more Charlton-Pollard High
School in Beaumont.
Half of C-P’s students will go to French and
the other half will go to Beaumont High. They
will change the name of Beaumont High to
Beaumont-Charlton Pollard, and also the school
colors and mascot will be changed.
Speaking of Beaumont, there is a strong
rumor in the Golden Triangle one of two things
will happen"'the next time -the University
Interscholastic League makes district
assignments.
■» One of the best track meets of the season on
the Gulf Coast could comp April 5. It’s the an-
nual Baytown Relays.
Sterling track coach Drew Dunlap is ex-
pecting some 30 to 40 teams to enter this year’s
cinder carnival.
One is the consolidation of District 21-AAAA
and District 22-AAAA. District 42 takes in the
four Beaumont schools and District 22 is Port
Arthur Jefferson, Port Arthur Lincoln, Port
Neches, Vidor and Nederland.
Another rumor has Vidor going into the Beau-
mont district and Robert E. Lee and Sterling
joining Jeff, Lincoln, Port Neches and
Nederland.
Cardinals’ Gibson Looking
For Big Comeback In 1975
ARD HAR-
r. and Mrs.
rs of 211 Ha-
is first birth-
irandparents
dills, Calvin
Harbers, all
at-grandpar-
>nes Single-
. E. H. Har-
Ester Shef-
hurch
mem
£
ST. PETERSBURG, Fla.
lAP) - If the St. Louis Cardi-
nals win the National League
pennant in 1975, fi could pro-
duce a comeback "award for
Bob Gibson.
Paraphrased, such a prospect
means the Cards are relying
that heavily on the re-emer-
.gence of Gibson as a topflight
pitcher to- ascend such baseball
heights.
Gibson, who was handicapped
severely by the effects of pre-
vious knee surgery in 1974,
struggled painfullf to compile a
sub-par 11-13 record.
But, if his early labor in
spring training is an indication,
me two-time Cy Young Award
winner may be prepared to cap
his illustrious career with a
flourish.
"Gibson has pitched better
this spring than he has the last
three springs," declared Bob
Kennedy, the Cards' personnel
director, only last week.
“I'm confident some of our
other starters, will begin com-
ing around," Manager Red
Schoendienst noted, “but Gib-
sons still the guy you count on
the most."
Last summer’s late fade by
right-hander Lynn McGlothen,
16-12, and chronic control prob-
lems encountered by left-hand-
er Claude Osteen, 9-11, point up
the importance of Gibson’s
starting role.
The tournament will be a
And the Cards, who in 1974 double elimination event,
again narrowly missed division All games in the league and
honors in the NL East, are tournament will be played at
more hopeful than certain that the Baytown Sports Complex,
Bob Forsch, 7-4, will mature! located on East Road just
and John Curtis, 10-14, will im-| north of Sterling,
prove.
We'have some other guys Cards capable catching and
who could help us if, we need also a- productive bat with
them," Schoendienst said opti-
mistically, “but those look like
the five who’ll start.”
Left-hander Ray Sadecki,
quired from the New. York
Mets, and.....two right-handers,
John Denny and Tommy
Moore, are the others to whom
which is anchored by .Al Hra-
bosky and Mike Garman, the
addition of hard-throwing Elias
Sosa could establish the club as
the NL’s best
Seasoned and still young Ted
Simmons, 25, provides the
Thursday is the final day a
team can enter the summer
softball league Sponsored by
the Parks and Recreation
Department.
To enter, men’s teams must
pay an entry fee of $146, while
women’s team pay $90.
Registration in the pre-
season tournament is also
Thursday, according|- to
Recreation Supt. Bobby
Rountree. Entry fee is ‘$30.
Henry Hock has
17 reasons why you
should come to us
for income tax help.
Reason 12. Our people havebeen
specially trained... and keep
abreast of all the latest tax laws. We
will do our best in preparing your
return. And then we’ll carefully
check it for accuracy. *
r
KM&BLOCK
THE INCOME TAX PEOPLE
Two Convenient Locations
Sears
OPEN 9-9 Mon. An Sit
105 W. TEXAS
427-5128
OpatllMMMFii
IMM.Ua
double plays, and 21-year-old
Keith Hernandez will be at first
base following the departure of
Joe Torre in exchange for, Sa-
decki.
“He’s a line drive type hit-
ter,” Schoendienst said in ref-
erence to the 6-foot Hernandez.
“He’ll make the plays, and he
can help us wih his bat.
“Ron Fairly will help
too,” Schoendienst asserted" in
appraising the talents of a 36-
year-old first baseman-out-
fielder obtained from the Mon-
treal Expos.
Backed by Fairly, the Cards’
outfield" could rank again
among the league’s most prolif-
ic at the plate in addition to its
establishment as the swiftest.
“There may be a faster out-
field in baseball, but if there is
you’d have to show it to me,”
Schoendienst said in reference
to Lou Brock, Bake McBride
and Reggie Smith.
Brock stole a record 118 sto-
len bases last season while hit-
ting .306. His lifetime batting
average is .294.
And McBride, who was the
NL’s top rookie a year ago, hit
.309 and swiped 30 bases in
1974. “Bake has come so fast
that when he talks about steal-
ing 50 to 60 bases and hitting
maybe .340.you’ve got to re-
spect his views and goals,”
Brock said. ;■ ,f V
The 29-year-old Smith^nce-:
controversial AmericaiTOpgui
figure, adapted quickly./last
year to NL surroundings and
hit .309 with 100 RBI.
UviomT Ali Is Full Of
Area Track
Standings
106-yard dash: Clifton LeDa,
Anahuac, 9.7, at
Jefferson; Junior Holmes,
REL, 10.Q, at Strake Jesuit;
George Griffin, Sterling, 16.8,
at Bellaire.
220-yard dash: Junior
Holmes, REL, 22.1, at A&M;
Ken Almond, Dayton, 22.4, at
Dayton; Clifton LeDa, Ana-
440-yard dash: Freddie
Bradshaw, REL, 49.9,
Strake Jesuit; William Winn,
REL, 50.8, at Strake Jesuit;
Curtis Stevenson, Dayton, 51.3,
at Dayton.
880-yard run: Bo Rouse,
Sterling, 1:55.4, at Bellaire;
Mike Webb, REL, 1:58.7, at
Pasadena; Clint Nicholson,
REL, 1:58.9, at Pasadena.
Mile run: Bert Warren,
.REL, 4:23.2, at Pasadena;
Gary Barrow, Sterling, 4:27.78,
at Rice; Bo Rouse, Sterling,
4:31.8, at Dickinson.
High hurdles: Tommy ^ ^
Yackel, at ninth for a disputed knockdown
CLEVELAND (API “1 (crowd of 14,847 in the Cleveland
tried to.kill him, I tried to an- Coliseum yelled wildly—Ali on
nihilate him, he was a dirty the other side of the ring,
fighter ... eye for an eye, slumped to the floor,
tooth for a tooth.” He ^ ^ momentarily-
Musbm- Muhammad Ah as d unconscious from exhaus-
reached mto the able to find ^ TOere were moments of
words to describe the bitterness hi h tension R appeared to *
Quick Wepner that praerved ^ ^ >s ^ ac.
bf wrorld heavyweight boxing tor w6asson sta*e *ain.
championship Monday night.
It wasn’t one of Ali’s most “Too many fools were climb-
glorious hours. ing into the ring,” he said. "J,
For 14 rounds and most of just lay down "
the 15th, the big, awkward, bar p, one breath, Ali praised
strands of the ropes in the )
which he last year drove in 103
runs.
Elsewhere afield the club has
strengthened itself further by
obtaining slick-fielding Ed
Brinkman, who will take over
for Mike Tyson at shortstop.
^jrr^rjssj •»<•»**«
that last year led the NL In' IfflWWL Yackel,
Sweeny; Murrey Rhoades,
Sterling, 15.2, at Clear Lake;
Stewart Duke, 15,8, at Aldine.
336-hurdles: LaFour,
Dayton, 41.1, at Dayton;
Richard Auzenne, Sterling,
41.5, at Clear Lake; Danny
Shrum, Sterling, 42.4, at Clear
Lake.
446-yard relay: REL, 42.8, at
Strake Jesuit; Sterling, 43.9, at
Bellaire; La Porte, 43.9, at La
Porte.
Mile relay: REL, 3:24.8, at
Strake Jesuit; Sterling, 3:27.6;
Anahuac, 3:27.9, at Dayton.
Shot put: Steve Timmons,
Sterling, 55-5 1-4, at Bellaire;
Harold Norfleet, Sterling, 51-5,
at Bellaire; David Morgan, 48-
1, at Strake Jesuit. •
Discus: Scott Huntington,
REL, 161-2, at A&M; Ron
Sopchak, Huffman, 154-1J 1-2.
Pole vault: Lee Murphy, 13-
0, at Madison and A&M; Casey
Dyer, La Porte, 13-9, at La
Porte; Bo Gotten, Sterling, 12-
9, at Clear Lake.
High jump: David Parkin-
Crosby, 6-3, at Sweeny; Dod-
son, La
Porte, 6-1 1-2, at La
Porte.
Long jump: David Parkin-
son, Sterling, 23-16, at Clear
Lake; Arthur Bettes,
Channelview, 22-4 1-2, at
Humble; George Griffin,
Sterling, 22-1, at Clear Lake.
Bitterness After
Whipping Wepner
room brawler from New Jersey Wepner as a creditable fight-
stood toe to toe with the world „« _____
., ... . ... , .. "better than you all gave
title-holder, taking Ali’s best him credit for. George Fore-
shots without buckling. man and Ken Norton were eas-
The peat Ali was booed in ier,”—and in the next breath he
the sixth round when he stood lashed out at both the ring tac-
in the comer, covering his face yes of his opponent and the
from Wepner’s marshmallow performance of Perez, the ref-
left hooks and looping rights, eree
Ali dropped to the lower
He was only a shadow of the
great fighter that battled his QuQJ'f'y Seiy’S
way to the heavyweight crown
only to have it taken from Mm , n
unjustly and then regain it. Jj£ S Retiring
He wasn’t the Ali who fought
’*■ After Defeat
dragged to Ms comer by man-
ager A1 Braverman—wMle the
Pressure Off - -
Retired Ara Is
Enjoying Life*
SOUTH BEND, Ind. (AP) -
Ara Parseghian is taking life a
lot easier these days and his
friends, colleagues and faipily
say it’s much easier being
around Mm
“He's a lot looser. You can
tell the difference,” says Roger
Valdiserri, sports information
director at Notre Dame.
Valdiserri said “you could
tell the strain” in Parseghian
before he resigned as football
coach of the Fighting Irish
after their Orange Bowl victory
over Alabama.
Parseghian admits the strain
of 25 years in coaching had got-
ten to Him; “I just felt emotion-
ally and physically drained,”
be sftid in an interview in his
new office at the rear of the
Athletic And Convocation Cen-
to-. vi -
A num who normally
Sun Outdoor Guide
By CHESTER ROGERS
WIND, WATER AND TIDES - Mild and partly cloudy weath-
er will continue through Wednesday, according to the National
Weather Service in Houston. —r
South and east winds will be moderate to 10-15 mph to leave
bay and lake waters slightly choppy. Offshore wave beighths will
be two to four feet. Temperature range will be in the 60 and 70
BUTCH BRANDON ON HIS WAY TO WIN AT BAYTOWN RACEWAY
In tMs particular race, Brandon won 250 cc class
zier and smashed George Fore-
man into submission last Octo- NEW YORK (AP) - Jerry
berina're.Africa-andhead- Quarry his face meted and
m”te“ . , covered with blood after a dev-
But, like a choreographer, he astatjng loss ■ to N Ken Norton,
rallied for a stirring finish that qUjetjy announced his retire*
toft his legion of followers -ment (rom 5^ Monday and
ag?/Lchantl.n?>,^;„^’Ai!;. exited Madison Spare Garden .
nu, nu.
Wito seconds ieft in the 15th asking that he ^ allowed to
round, the champion unleashed keep his pride
Blass Bombed
Former Buc Ace
May Be Finished
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS defeated the Pirates 16-4 Mon-
devastating attack. He nailed
Wepner with a left and then Harassed by photographers’
shot a straight right to the jaw {lash bulbs after being stopped
tfct had the iinpact of a sledge- in the flftb round of the sched-
hammer. uled 12-rounder, Quarry said:
Wepner was bleeding from a" "N° more damn pictures,
cut over the left eye and Ms "I want to go with a little
face was reddened and bruised pride."
ShesT«S Norton repeatedly
the mes and dE to he throu«hout closed
fanvaXastS™ ‘°
tSX'* S atte Zl “gf com-
of nine but referee Tony Perez b J "
interceded. Ali was the winner Norton, 29 like Quarry, im-
a technical knockout in 2:41 mediately thrust himself back
of the 15th round. It will be into the heavyweight champion-
recorded as a knockout because ship , picture when he opened a
TKO’s are not counted in gash above Quarry’s right eye
heavyweight title fights. in the third round and then
As Wepner was literally ^ Quarry's ri«ht ^in the
fifth.
Norton scored with aw left-
right combination, landed an-
other hard right, then a left jab
and referee John LoBianco
stepped in and stopped the fight
at 2:29 of the fifth round.
“I couldn’t see,” said Quarry,
whose only real flurry of scor-
ing punches came in the third
round. “We gave it a try.”
“The time has come to quit,”
the heavyweight said as he was
escorted into a private elevator
wouldn t even take an aspirin with Ms wife and left the Gar-
for a headache, last fall Par-
seghian found himself downing
two blood pressure pills a day,
a tranquilizer and an occasion-
al sleeping pill.
“That’s no way for a guy to
live," the 51-year-old French-
Armenian from Akron, Ohio,
told Mmself. “I had a warning
from my doctor four years' ago
that I had to slow down. Not a
warning in the sense that any-
thing of major consequence
would happen, but I should"
somehow or other slow my
pace down.
Friends say ParsegMan’s
wife played, a major role in his
decision to step downy leaving
behind a record of 94 victories,
17 losses and 4 ties, second only
to the 105-12-5 record of Knute
Rockne. -
- “The pressure of recruiting is
off," he said. The pressure of
the season is gone. When the
season comes around again, I wben y°u f>e* ^ die final four,
den area in a taxicab.
“Same old stuff, eh?” Steve
Blass said, looking up wearily
from the" stool in front of his
locker.
“What do you think now?”
the questioner asked.
“I don’t know; I just don’t
know,” This time-he didn’t look
up.
It was another disastrous out-
ing, one of many the 32-year-
old Pittsburgh right-hander has
experienced since his career Mt
the skids altera 19-8 record in
1972.
He allowed 10 runs and 11
walks as the Chicago WMte Sox
Gander JV
Spurts Late
To Nip Ross
Robert E. Lee scored three
runs in the bottom of the sixth
inning Monday afternoon at
Memorial Stadium to defeat
Sterling, 5-2, in a junior varsity
tasebafi game g0 tack t0 the minors.
Richard Godwin went all the -i was oulling so ha
day to split an exhibition base-
ball doubleheader. The Pirates
won the opener 8-2 and got
some good pitching news when
right-hander Bob Moose, who
was sidelined most of last sea-
son after surgery to remove a
blood clot from his pitching
arm, allowed only two hits and
two runs-on Brian Downing’s
homer-in five innings.
Blass, the 1971 World Series
hero who spent last season in
the minors battling control
problems, started the nightcap
and allowed two runs over the
first three innings. His moder-
ate success came to an abrupt
halt in the fourth when he
walked home five of Chicago’s
eight runs in the inning before
being lifted.
It may have marked the end
way, allowing 10 hits wMle strik-
ing out five. Curt Flippo was cre-
dited with the loss after coming
in for starter Jeff Holloway.
Timmy Delgado had a double
to pace REL in hitting. Russell
Cannon. Robert Holt, Oscar
Chapa, Jimmy Gammon and
Godwin had singles.
Wade Hicks picked up three
hits for Sterling. David Balke
and Brent Miller had two each,
with Arthur Watkins, Glenn
Odom and Holloway getting one
each.
Wooden: There’s
No More Upsets
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Coach John Wooden says his
UCLA Bruins might be on top
Of thp college basketball ratings
but it wouldn't be an upset if
they last m the NCAA cham-
pionship playoffs.
“It might sound Uke a cliche,
but when you get this fa^alonl;
anyone can beat :anyone.
Wooden said of the^NCAA semi-
finals and finals this weekend
in San Diego. *
"If anyone is. weak, they’ve
fallen by the wayside. There is
hardly such a thing as an upset
degree range. Two Wednesday Mgh tides will be at 3:09 a.m. and
3:28 p.m. while the two low tides will be at 9:33 a.m., and 9:38
GALVESTON — It was choppy and sandy for the beach water
lor pier fishermen but crowds of fishermen continued to string
sand trout, gaff-tops, wMting, and bull reds. Bait shrimp are hard
to find in the Galveston area: Even .the shrimpers are finding
them difficult to locate.
TRINITY BAY - Conditions continue to improve in Trinity
Bay, all the way from Smith’s Point to the Light Company dis-
charge canal. School sized specs show up in catches at the canal.
Now and then a go^ared red wifi be on the stringers, Bait in the
Baytown area continue to show up in plentiful amounts^ and can
be found at most camps.
night in most places., WMte bass started running on the old 190
Roadbed, but high winds early'in the morning blew most of the
fishermen back into dock protection. Top water lures work on
bass in the coves that are protected from the March winds. Top
fishing in this ara will come when the spring weather warms up
few more
Broaddus. reports be has had trouble takinghis limit btdj’, and play.
counts it j good (by when he can even score on a few good fish?’
HepredictsgoodfistogwiTrefcBtitotoppitohwbeiitteweath-
er "warms up a few more degrees.
won’t have to worry about it. I
feel much more comfortable
now than I did before.”
heads for Milt's Grill, where he
reads the Chicago Tribune, Chi-
cago Sun-Times and Wall Street
Journal over breakfast.
But don’t be deceived by talk
of a slower schedule. Parseg-
hian was on the road five of the
first seven weeks after his res-
ignation
When he’s in South Bend, he
still gets up by 5:30 a.m. and held four of ^ s“ t0P 5PoU in
huHi tnr u:iiv ___i____,__the noil
Wooden said.
The Bruins, after an 89-75
victory over Arizona State to
win the West Regional, were
voted No. 1 in The Associated
Press Major college basketball
poll as they looked towards
their ninth NCAA title in 111
years.
The tour teams in the finals
the poll.
Kentucky, an upset 92-90 win-
ner over. previously unbeaten
and top-ranked Indiana, won
REL Wins In Tennis
the Mideast Regional and was
voted second with Indiana, 31-1,
tMrd.
Lousville, wMch won the MuL
west Region from Maryland
was fourth with Maryland,
fifth, ending its season 24-5
Sixth-ranked Syracuse upset
im
In doubles, Bill Maloy and
Bkyan Swdew took out Darrell
Evans and Santos Little,«, 6-3.
6-2 and Allen Watson and Ronme
Blystone defeated Larry Valk
and David Pope, 64), 6-0.
Robot E. Lee picked up a pair
of District 20-AAAA tennis
matches by defeating North
Shore and Aldine by identical 541
scores.
In the North Shore match,
Geoffrey Guill defeated Ron
Lerakrman, 6-4, 74, Tim Bum- xTiT
pass bumped Scott Hewlett, 64, TombnSOn 7"5
6-2 and Pat Bridges defeated
Against Aldine. Guill took out
Juan Aguilar. 6-1,6-1, Bumpass
won over David Ratcliff, 74,6-1,
and Watson defeated Mike
In doubles, Maloy and Sandpw
North Carolina to. win thb
The- falling of Indiana from
the top rippled through the poll
standings and saw Louisville
drop a notch from third even
though they defeated last
week’s No. 4 ..team, Maryland.
Syracuse jumped all the way
from 20th to among the leaders.
Rounding out the Top 10 are
Arizona State as number seven,
followed by North Carolina
Spite, North Carolina and Mar-
quette. -
UCLA takes a 26-3 record into
the semifinals, where the
Bruins will face Louisville, 27-2
Syracuse, 23^7, opposes Ken-
tucky, 25-4.
"Some thought it was an up-
set when Kentucky defeated In-
ina," Wooden said
1 had picked Indiana to go
to the championsMp but I still
didn't consider that an upset.
As I said, when it’s this far
along there are no real sur-
prises
Wooden said, “There is a lot]
you could say about making
any one of the teams the favor-
ite.
“ft could be Louisville since
they have a good team and the
fewest defeats. You could have
Kentucky, they beat Indiana
And Syracuse knocked out
North Carolina, the team
_____was a j
The-way^” v .
And. added- Wood*, “Yes.
Blass Manager .Danny Mur-
taugh sat in his office after-
ward, Ms rocking chair going
at a faster pace than usual, and
said he was undecided whether
Blass would get another
chance. Blass has said he won’t
Shields Win
Pair Of Races
At Raceway
Tommy Shields was a double
winner Sunday in the weekly
motorcycle races at the Baytown
Raceway. ------<-:~-
Shields won the 100 cc and 125
cc classes.
Butch Brandon won one event
and placed in a pair of others.
Brandon captured top honors in
the 250 cc while finishing second
in the 100 cc and third in the 200
cc division.
Donald Hamilton,. Johnny
Johnson and Joe Davis were 1-2-
3 in the mini class. Hamilton was
also third in the 100 cc race.
Kenny Biggs won the 200 cc class
and finished second in 125 and
250..
Harold Hicks was third at 125,
Tom Elkins second at 200 and
Donnie Gosch third at 250.
Roger Sterling won the open
class, with Jerry Turner second
and Lee Smith third.
Biggs won the small bike
trophy, Sterling the large bike
crash and burn tropfi’y.
Hawks Win
Again In
Houston Meet
I was pulling so hard for.
sjssit 1'a
E^ere, £.<*** » RE
seven runs with a pair of Houston 0pen soft-,
homers and the Us Angeles) ball Tournament.
Dodgers hung on for a 13-12 David Acosta pitched a one-
victory over the Boston Red hitter to get the victory.
Sox in a wild game featuring 36 Alan Acosta and Richard
hits, 17 of them for extra bases. Lop®; had doubles for the
Bill Lee, who took a cortisone Hawks, who were scheduled to
shot for an achtng elbow one play again Tuesday night,
week ago, was tagged for 12 Sixteen teams remain in the
hits and six runs in five innings tournament from 68 original
but insisted his arm was fine, 'entries.
I
v H 6-3, while
med with Alex
defeat James Hunt
Crisraan, 64,64 Jyou could ray UCLA, too.
a:
RE-ELECT
Filly" DITTMAN
CITY COUNCILMAN DIST. 2
"Judge the men by his pest perfor-
mance”
Has supported improved
drainage S streets
Has worked diligently end
honestly for the betterment
of the community
HAS NOT BEEN
AFRAID TO SPEAK
OUTI
PnH PriMal A*. Paid lor by:
0nr#e reuse. 1006 mrtkwNd. kfim
I
_
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Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 53, No. 139, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 25, 1975, newspaper, March 25, 1975; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1104890/m1/9/?rotate=90: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.