The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 272, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 5, 1966 Page: 3 of 22
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Tuotday, July 5, 1966
i.
TEXAS FIRMS' INVESTMENT
AGAINST POLLUTION RISES
WORKERS
c .
STRIKING
TO END MARCH IN AUSTIN
the hike to Corpus rfffisti, San (PASO). The group arrived, by
Antonio and Austin. - ,r butter a one-day stay.1
Six men are expected to make ' ”
the 59-day trek, including Judge
Alfred J. Hernandez of Hous-
ton, national chairjpa« of the
League of United Latin-Ameri-
caV Citizens. He marched Mon-
LBJ Keeping
Travel Plans
:kln
ion
.-X,,
r Run
AUSTIN — Texas' chemical For several years the council
companies have invested more has maintained an Air and wa-
• than $66 million in permanent ter conservation committee to
facilities to clean air and wa- help solve pollution problems
ter used in their plants. They and aid in interchange of infor-
- also spend more than $10 mil- mation about preservation of air
lion a year to operate these fa- end water quality.
Last fall Texas Chemical
Council joined with Manufactur-
ing Chemists’ Association to
sponsor a week-long pollution
control seminar at the- Univer-
sity of Texas. More than 30 pol-
7
lution control engineers attend:
cd. Another seminar is sched-
uled for Sept. 19-23 of this year.
The council is presently mak-
ing another.survey of the state's
chemical industry to determine
what efforts have been mad
toward conservation of water.
Reports already tabulated indi-
cate Texas chemical companies
are cleaning and re-using more
than 90 per cent of all the fresh
water pumped into their plants.
RIO GRANDE CITY, Tex.
Striking farm workers
launched an Independence Day
march that , union leader* say
will continue—on a small scale
—through several Texas cities
and end at a giant Labor Day
rally atthe state CapitolJn Aus-
<AP)
SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (APF-
President Johnson continues a
holiday stay at his ranch today
playing one of the games he
seems, .tov enjoy: bell: keeping
’m guessing. ~
Johnson, more secretive about
travel plans' than any president
in memory, was saying not n
word about his eventual return
to the White House,
admittedly uneducated, ranged
from tonight to next Monday/^,
-The President, flew to his
ranch home, some .60 miles
north of here, last Thursday
after making speeches con-
cerning Viet Nam in Omaha and
Des Moines. He ordered an ex-
haustive study of the military
draft Saturday and, on the
Fourth of July, signed a free-
dom of information bill designed
to build into federal law the^cmv
cept of "the people’s righfto'
know." * •' < 4 . -
With specified exceptions,
such' as national security, niafe
ters,.information in federal files
will have to be mada public to
' newsmen and private citfalens
starting July 4, 1967. - ‘
- If not, an individual can brjng
action Jn the federal courts
where the burden-of nrbof woul'd
be on the government to estab-
lish that Withheld Information
meets the. exemptions. >
Meanwhile, back at the ranch,
no one — with the possible ex-
ception of wife Lady Bird and
trusted aides — had any in-
formation about the President's
future plans, even a day ahead.
IY, Idaho (AP) -
F. Kennedy, D-
group of adven-
and relatives who
s-filled "River of
i boats, air mat-
kayak were back
oday..
J
HAVING TROUBLE HEARING7
or — Hear
but Don't Understand?
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cilities, '
'
Texas Chemical Council com-
piled these figures from reports
by 39 chemical companies which
operate 50plants in Texas. The
companies reporting employ
more, than 30,000 and represent
approximately 75'per , cent of
tile state’s chemical industry.
The survey showed jgore than
$7 million worth of permanent
facilities were added by the
Industry during 196&,
$4,844,169 for wafer improve-
ments a^id $2,589,170 for air im-
I ' pTOvements.’niirty-seven of the
t “ 39 reporting companies made,
, some type of improvement dur-
S- ing the year. «
Singe reporting . companies
range ip size from about 20 em-
.ployes to more than 5,000, the
survey reflected a wide range
. cf spending. One small company
reported a total, pollution, con-
trol Investment of“$^,5Q0and
an annual operating cost of $3,-
(i00. Six large companies report-
's ' ed investments at more than $5
' million each, with operating
, costs ranging up to $1,500,000 an-
i nually. '
day.
tin.
mericans will be
The union, seeks , a ,J1.25 an M« .
hour minimum wage for Starr urged to conDfcrgeon Austin for
County field hands who now « rally on the Capitol grounds
earn W cents to $1. Growers .Sept: 5, union Officials„ said,
claim the strike (is illegal and 4 H. Villarreal of Brownsville,
have halted much of the pick- Tex., a representative of die
eting through a court injunction. AFLCIQ, predicted his labor
The movement now appears organization would get out 50,000
to have implications beyond ^™ons for the_'ja y-
Starr Cbuntv There i*ere 74 persons mov-
Starr Uounty. ing |n sin«Ie-file behind- the
-The-mweh-ariglnally ibat tn ■ united Stotcs-fteg,-the-4mton
have ended Thursday in San banner-and a huge picture of
Juan, Ttx.; about 488 milesmast 0ur udy of Guadalupe when
of here. Before it began Mon- j[le of July march be-
day it was extended one day so gan.a short distance east of
that the -new Roman Cathoic here alongside U. S. 83, J,
Bishop for the Brownsville. protMfantfctena catholic
Tex-, .Diocese can join the c|erKiIm,.n , bOcGmiwmied
march in San Juan on Friday raarchers, wffo will be. trucked
and : say mass ter, ^-,8p,uP> hack and forth -ho the Starting
union officials sgid. 4 v point each day* , ~ ; > ,4
Then a group of clergymen } Porty petson. joined Into
and_ Latin-Amerlcan organiza- resent me Houston chapter of
tion leaders—including a Hous- th^, Political Association
ton corporation court judge — SpanlstySpeaklng Organizations.1 ",
announced they would continue
"■ Ik- \ ,,
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See our Ho
SMI*
?n’t back to rest
who shot the last
igh some of the
planned to flv
family today for
in Canada.
esse*.
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U. S. Air Force Product
Is Bolivia’s President
in-in-tkMir Wmutu*
heariitfiM Km mu*
is
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FREE REPLICA fa«Mpinti.D
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abandoned the
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Othar modal* Include the \
latest in eyeglass, behlnd-the-
efir aochbody type*.---------------
Com* in lor a FREE oudiomet -
ric test. Home appointment s.
Service and batteries for «jil
hearing oids. |
_
I CPL. HARRY R. SPARKS, USMC, right, eon of Mrs. L. O.
| Rhoden of 701 South Circle, receives the Purple Heart from
Major General B. A. Hochmuth for wounds received tn com-
bat In Viet Nam.
at W
-
—
•red boat with a
ddle for the rider
‘ halfway point in >
ip down the Sal-
liddle fork,
id ridden a kayak
t, but he maneu-
j steep, roaring"
rapids between
ind shot up off
rs at the bottom
LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) - A
U.S. Air Force -product who
waged Bolivia’s first political Born in the small town of Tar-
campaign by helicopter ii ata* in central Bolivia, Barrien-
scheduled to become his coun- tos was-an^Air Force student at
dry’s president Aug. 6. ' Randolph Field, Tlx., and was
Air Force tJen. Rene Barrien- graduated in 1953, He
■tos, 47, won an overwhelming President Victor Paz Es^ensso-
victqry in ^Sunday’s presidential ro’s Nationalist Revo
election. The latest revised tab-
ulation gave his Bolivian Revo-
lutionary Front — the FRB —
191,000 votes to 115,000-for the [ air force,
combined opposition;
Barrientos’ vice-presidential
running mate, Luis Adolfo Siles,
and most FRB candidates for
the 129-member Congress also
were elected, but the right-of-
center Christian Democratic
Community got enough .votes to
win the seats which the consti-
tution guarantees to the minori-
ty.
II
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41
^ILI^JAMSTOWN, N,J, (AP) -Fife Chief Edward Derrlckson
— ■William N, Bappert, a turkey sedt triicks to spray water over
farmer, called for,help W Jhe ■ rt.s surviJing ‘io,ooO birds
fire department when 5,000- of h .
his birds died in the. record- Monday and to create a mud
breaking heat waye. wallow for them.
1a
lonary
Movement — MNR — and in a
few years soared from captain
to general and command of the
Virgil SuthViantf,»
flad Consultant, will tie at tit«
Holly Inn, Hlway '14€, .B#iytown.
n W#dn#*o»y. July fth. 4^ j
rmuni»iiwwr twini
fler, Denver Uni-
: ■ u:.; tlv
i a kayak made
iroken part, over-
apids four times.
»kcr, a mountain
a close outdoor
Kennedys, over-
all once.
earlier -joined a ~
15 Kennedy chil-
ind friends riding
the river on air
T-Vr
In 1963 be launched a vigorous
campaign for the MNR's VJCe-
presidential nomination after
Paz Estehssoro changed the
constitution to allow his own re-
election to the presidency.
Despite Paz Estenssoro's oppo-
sition, the MNR convention in
January 1964 named the general
to the second place on the tick-
4
by Kate Osann
TIZZY
tel
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IN COOL COMFORT
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| The average pollution control
investment ■ per company was
approximately $1,700,000, and
the average annua). operating
cost more than ^50,WJg.a yCar.
The survey] indicates the 39
4 companies have invested about
equally for clean air and clean
water. Water investment totaled
$33,491,922 and aif - investment
: ; totaled $33,404,780. i /■ .
—Water'facilities' however, are
------ atarost - t^w as expensive-to
operate. Operational -costs for
water facilities dUHng 1965 to-
taled $6,368,316, while operation-
al costs for air facilities totaled
_$3,691,906.
Most pollution control expendi-
tures have been made along
the Gulf Coast, where chemical
■' plants are heavily concentrated.
. « The survey showed that' more
than half of the chemical 1n-
' , ' dustry’s total clean air-and Jwa-
. 'ter investment has been made
' within, a 50 mile radius of Hous-
ton. The 24 plants within that
radius have invested a total of
$33,951,978 for pollution control
|
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Are
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. — Wtiy «ntoRlwri>a rite-hooF-
> 2* • - IaE TUiti ft • 11 -1
trained person noI instaB a
. new a i r con> dition*r on
* your car.
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The final winners of the WCst
Indies Contest have been An-
nounced with Mrs, Waylano F.
Spear of 2618 Virginia winning
the grand prize. MnL Spear
registered at HenkeV
The winners And locations
they deposited entries are: Mrs.
Gene Moody, 1W3 Amy, "Odor-
less Cleanersj/Mrs: R, T,: Ty-
rock, 14 Dyer, Lion’s; Mrs.
Georgia Mge Saveli, 112 North
Magnoliaj/Highlands, Black’s/
Murl Pittman, 400 Casey, H-
Mart; /Eugene Krizak, 211L
Wyoming, Weingarten’s. V
Also Susan Burris 1602 Ceday
Bayou, Penny's; J. T. Irvin, 607.
Denby; White Star Laundj-y;
Mrs. J. A. Zatopek,jl0O4 New
Jersey, Glenn’s; Mrs, W. V.
Lawrence, Rt. 2 Box 87, Cul-
pepper’s; L- L. Hollman, ,2324
C&rolina, Hathaway’s.
The West Indies Contest is
sponsored by Baytown Retail
Merchants, the Citizens Nation*
al Bank and The Baytown Sun.
m
Texas Lawmen
et;
o
1
A month later Barrientos was
wounded in an attempt on his
life and was hospitalized in the
Panamg Canal Zone. After his
recovery, he was_*lected with
Paz EstenssoroV May; Then in
November he I and the com-
mander' of th4 armed forces,
Gen. Alfredo Oyando, overthrew
Paz, Estenssoro and set up a
ma with themselves as copres-
Barrientos is an extrovert
prone to long speeches to .the
people, -often in Quechua, the
language of the peasants ln‘1he
valleys: Eightjttempts on bis
life have becn rlcorded, but his
political enemies claim some of
them were rigged. '' ;
Political circles predicted the
military would give Barrientos
six months to two years to make
good on his promises of econom-
ic and social development. • '
Y
ft',’
the party — in-
oh n Glenn
singer Andy Wil-
id Lomoyne Bill-
York — swept
rubber boats,
iften walk around
pids, but every
» Kennedy party
them all.
led in the mile-
junction of the
nd main Salmon
Montana border
tal Divide late
”5
Seeking GuiiAian
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Three Youths Drown
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BRECKENRIDBE,-Tex. (AP>
—West Central Texas lawmen
pi’es'sed a search today for a
gunma'n who shot down a Breck-
enridge filling station operator
Monday and dumped his body-
in a highway ditch.
Clarence Swaim, 55, longtime
Breckenridge resident was
killed early Monday . when an
assailant held up his eastside
station, took $2U from the cash
.-egister and then abducted him.
A police department spokes-
■nai. Said officers believe the
/unman shot Swaim with the
victim’s own gun, a nickel-
; dated, pearl-handle .380 Colt
automatic 'pistol. The weapon
vas missing from the station.
Swaim was slain by four .380
caliber bullets.
A passing motorist found the
body southeast of Breckenridge
some 5p feet off Texas 207.
“All our leads, have faded
out,” a police spokesman said,
.- T7
NOW!
ENNIS; Tex. (AP) A small
me„tal boat carrying nine •chil-
dren and several adults was
capsized in Lake Bardwell Mon-
day. Three youngsters were
drowned, . '
The accident happened about
5:30 p.m. shme 75 feet offshore
in the year-old reservoir 7 miles
southeast of Ennis.
The victims were identified as
Marvin Lyon Garrett, 4; Arttett
Garrett, 6; and Annette Garrett,
9. ’They were the children of
Mr; and Mrs. M. 1* Barrett of
Ennis, a town located some 30
miles south of Dallas.
The bodies were recovered
two hours after the accident.
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WHilo Spe :i*l Lasts
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Climatic All*
Idents.
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Al,
7 All Models American Automobile?*, Fractory
trained personnel install your cnr>c onditioner.
Hi
>on.
>
lses carried the
ut of the wilder-
!un Valley where
he trip with an
? a
© 1*6 by NEA, fat. TW. I»f. U S. f«t. Off. ^
timmjLxsLmmvy
h
rnt the previous
tents on the open
river — fishing,
water fighting.
In their efforts to dean air
and water, chemical companies
reported use of, traps, skim-
mers, settling, ponds, biological
treatment plants, aerated Ik
goons, flltersrtlust collectors, oil
separators, treatment plants for
sanitary and storm sewers, acid
and caustic neutralizers, gas
scrubbers, distillers, electrostat-
ic precipitators, water oxida*
tion, evaporation* incinerators,,
mist removers, automatic alarm
systems, smokeless flares, ,river
.«surveys and continuous waste
• sampling. \L'.
Several companies have con-
structed deep* disposal wells,
permitting disposal of waste ma-
terials several -thousand feet be-
low the surface and cemented
off, from fresh water formations.
Othdrs put waste materials on
* \ barges, for disposal more than
JjOO miles into the Gulf of Mexl-
• Peactically all stressed the
importance of building pollution
control facilities into manufac-
turing processes and plant de-
signs. Most plants, for exam- ]
pie, are designed with enclos-
ures and basins which would
prevent flow out of the manu-
facturing area even during
heavy rains or emergency spills.
The most Important step to-
« ward control of water pollution
' may be the growing tendency of
aompanies to re-use water rath-
*r than dump 11. Several com.
------ panies report 90 to 95 per cent
re-use of skater, and some are
approaching total re-use. ~
Along with its monetary in-
evestment, the.ijhemlcsl Industry
also reported a sizable invest-
ment in pollution control per-
sonnel. The 39 companies re-
ported a total of 151 engineers
whose primary duty is the pres-
ervation of clear air and water.
In addition to the full y time
Engineers, who work more than
300,000- man-hours, per year, tt^t
companies report an incalcula-
ble number-of manhours by
regular operating personnel and
plant managers who handle pol-
lution problems as a part of
their normal duties.
The Texas Chemical Council
survey was made during April,
May, and June. Dr. Earle B.
Bamci, chairman of the Texaa
» Chemical Council Air and Wa-
ter Conservation Committee,
said the figure* produced by the
. survey are "Indicative of the
outstanding job most chemical
companies are doing to pre-
vent pollution of the state's air
and water resources This sur-
vey indicate* that most com-
panies have accepted their re-
sponsibilities and ere working
with their Ingenuity, manpower,
and money to handle a diffi-
cult problem." 7
Texas Chemical Council has
worked steadily for continued
v Improvement* In pollution cqn-
tool By unanimous vote of its
board of directors, the council
policy stating that "dischaitoe
./of any harmful substance into
the atmosphere or any public
body of water should be limited
to the lowest practical level."
It urged member companies
to individually assume resporv
toward that
I
"Oh, yes,, Philip writes to me every day. Only he waits
till Sunday and puts all the letters in one envelope!"
i—zi—x—ju—.— A— --———
Keep Baytown Clean?
The younger the leaf, the finer
the quality of the tea. For a
specially fine brand, only the
bud and the two end leaves qf
each shoot are picked,
v .
SINCE <
19S4
Classified
Owls depend on sound rather
than sight to help them catch
. I
603 M TEXAS v
1
582-81864
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WEAREVER TEFLON FRYING PAN
WEAREVER TEFLON COVERED SAUCE PAN
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 272, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 5, 1966, newspaper, July 5, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1144771/m1/3/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.