The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 299, Ed. 1 Friday, August 5, 1966 Page: 1 of 14
fourteen pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
-tW
r
I
T
>
Sales A Service
i... c. Bpx 8066 • .
lall«8 Texas 78205
\
"i-
■x-
ir
l
KP) - The
metope popu-
>y 4 per cent /
State Parks
artment re-
\
Hm Sub Invttsa
file im’tokm
i
~ SHARON STRICKLINO --------
801 South Clide Drive
to the Brunaon Theater.. This coupon ,
Good Through August It
for two ticket* when presented
at the Brunson hot office.
The movie now showing b
"LT. ROBIN CRUSOE, UJLN."
YOUR HOME
[
4
kid, however,
Nay many
[altered and .
t they could
surveys.'
NEWSFAPER
*
r
\
\
Serving BAY-TEX—The Golden Circle, of Southeast Texas
%
f
Ten Cents Per Copy
TELEPHONE NUMBER: 582-8302
Friday, August 5, 1966
■r Car
Prices
BAYTOWN. TEXAS, 77520
VOL.43. NO. 299
f
u
T
STERLING HIGH TOURS SET THIS WEEKEND
I .
IDAY
Students To
Show Public
New School
'1
Dean Rundell Quits LC Post
m>0TSi
To Be Sent
By Baytown
Southern, Association dt^Colleges
andSecondarySchools. :
Also, Rundell is former secre-
tary of Southern Association of, ......—erwIN :
Junior Colleges, formed secre-.j* , •....... ■
RondcII ..id hi, qpntract at 1> °l*"
Id years on Commission on ocnooj saiuraay ano sunuay. j
Standards and Accreditation, As- Tours for the public will fbe\
sedation of Texas Colleges , and conducted from 9 a m. to 5 p.m.
Univcrritic- Saturday and from 2 to 5 p.m.
• He* also seritfLii* 'tWTeM }
presidents of the the tour a#e asked to enter the ______^
v ^building at the front entrance
facing Baker Road. -
Seventy . five Sterling stu-■
dents will serve as guides for
the open house, which wjll begin
with registration in the front
corridor and proceed to the
commons area, from which the
guests will begin the tour, Mrs. .
Jim Bailey is in charge of
guides.
Members of the Community
Relations Committee, with Mrs.
Eugene Lovering as chairman,
will register guests.
Groups of 1/) to 15 will be as-
signed to a guide and will be
taken on a tour of the building
which Will last from one to one
and one-half hours. ‘V
Faculty members will be sta-
tioned in various- departments ^
to answer questions about the
building.* - —= ~
- Commissioner V, V. Ramsey —
of Precinct 2 has told Sterling
Principal Winnie Brown that
Baker Road will be temporarily
Lt. Merle Wells said police opened for the open house, but
hinfr «mt *»>*rThursday By TOS'-^WaTden; ^ wir*‘"6e'
University of Texas student after Sunday. ...............j
from San Antonio', and Miss Tour officials and guides can
Cheryl Botts, 18, of Rockdale, be identified by ribbon? bearing
the name of the school and the
name of the person wearing the
ribbon. ’
Persons making the tour are
asked to use the Garth Road or
882-8148
V-
favor of naming a new college I University, where he was fed^-toY*******
president member of the English depart- can no longer be helpful. I am,
---------'? therefore, submitting my resig-
board, Dr. Richard D. Strahan I Rundell, who lives with hist nation to become effective-uii
3b,=of the University of Hous- wife, the former Olive Similar, Feb. 1. 1967,”
ton was named president at a also of Austin, at 107 Milner
120,000 . per - year salary. Stra-
han will assume his duties on.
Sept. 1.
Also at that meeting, Regent
.E,.^-Gamt.-.moved--.th;tt. Ruth,
dell be elevated to the college
president's !>ost. Gunn and Re-
gent Dr. Sam, Hastings voted for'
Gunn’s motion. Other regents
voted for Dr. Strahan.
Rundell Joined the Lee Col-
lege faculty at the school's be-
ginning in 1934. He was named
dean in 1945..
’ .The dean Is. a native of Aus-
tin, Tex., arid came^to Lee Col-
lege from Mississippi State
Walter Rundell, Dean at Lee
College since July-1, 1945, has
submitted, bis resignation effee*
tive Feb. 1, 1967.
The resignation was given in
writing on July 29 to Sam
Bramlett, president of LeeCol-
lege Board .of Regents,
Though no official announce-
ment of' Rundell's resignation
Faifbeen mad?Ttundeu verTfied"
it Friday morning.
Rundell said he bad "no state-
ment to make” concerning his
resignation. However, in the let-
ter to Bramlett* Rundell stated
DEAN WALTER RUNDELL that he felt his services to the
college “can no longer be help-
ful.”’ • ■■■■: * , ,
The letter to Bramlett was
dated the next day after- the
board of regents'; voted 6r2 in
I
A total of 78 men will be sent
for induction into the army by
the Baytown Draft Board this
month, the second highest call
since May.
Drive, said 'he had made'no
plans for the future. The Run-
delis have-one son — Dr. Wal-
ter Rundell Jr., a historian —
whoTiyes in ■ Arlington, Va;, and
works in Washington, I>.C7"
. His letter of resignation fol-
lows: " - F-
,
School Board
THE SCHOOL board will meet
to regular -monthly-session-At
tirement Age. “But I choose not
to stay until then,” he said. .....
The dean is a past member
F:"
|
MiyAbtgail Frazier, c. h.iic-f
clerk of Selective Service Board
No. 63, said Friday the board
has not received quotas for Sep-
tember, but she expects them
to be higher than normal.
Meanwhile, it was announced
in Washington that the Sep -
tember call, notionwide hau
been increased from 31,300 to
37,000 beeauSe of the need for
military replacements in Viet
Nam.
The Pentagon said the Octo-
ber draft call would be 46,200
the highest since the Korean
War,
July's Baytown quota called
for .50 young men to report for
physicals while May’s high
total was 84. -
Mrs. Frazier also wanted to
stress the importance of boys
registering within five days af-
ter their 18th birthdays.
“If anyone is willfully delin-
quent, in registering’ they are
subject to prosecution which
could result in up to five years’
imprisonment and - or a $10,-
000 fine,” she said. • -
7:30 p.m. Monday
of the board of directors' of
Traffic Council
BAYTOWN CITIZENS Traffic
Council will meet at 7 a.m.
Wednesday, Aug. 10, in the Red
Room at Holiday Inn, Ruth
Richards, secretary, announced
Friday. One of the itepis to be
discussed?!* a driver training
program.
Baytown YMCA, past president
of Rotary Club of Baytown and
fbrmer member of the. board
of trustees at Grace Methodist
’Church,,
He is an associate teacher of
a men’s Bible class at his
church and- a former member
’for six years on Commission on
Colleges and Universities of
second vice
Association of Texas .Colleges
and Universities,- He is a form-
er member of Committee on Re-
search and Service, Southern
Association 'of Colleges and
Schools and former president of
the Association Of Texas and
Universities (1963-641. He is list-
ed in Who’s Who in America.
’ “Vyith a deep appreciation
for the many opportunities that
my service at' Lee College has
offered me and with some hope
that I have contributed in at
least a small way to the de-
velopment ofrthe college from
its very modest beginning to its
present status, I come now to
ING
RE
-F
Our World
si< ; Wcgon Wheelers <
CENE DILDE and Alex Bean
will be masters Of ceremonies
for the Bayshore Wagon Wheel-
ers' dance at 8 p.m. Saturday
■ at Knights of Pythias Hall. Mr.
and Mrs. A1 Martin will be
Today
Pair Talked
To Whitman
In UT Tower
Senate OKs Measure -
Rights Bill
Passage In
House Seen
House Begins Work
To End Airline Strike
"From AP Wires
• Secretary of State Dctui
Rusk calls for strengthening
the International Control Com-
mission staff In Viet Nam to
prevent violations of the em-
battled buffer zone between
the North and South and to
protect Cambodia.
• A Selective Service spokes-
man says the big dralt call for
October Is not expected to al-
to® ts.
Clean-Up
SATURDAY will be Clean - up
day at the Baytown Youth
Fair and Rodeo Association’s
. grounds on North Main. A l l
members are urged to be at the
grounds at 9 a.m. in work
clothes.
AUSTIN (APt -Police said to-
day a young couple who saw
Charles J. Whitman Just alter
he apparently had killed his
first victim “are Just lucky to
be alive.”
The
WASHINGTON (AP)
House came to grips today with
the controversial open housing
provision—a cornerstone of the
new Civil Rights Bill.
House leaders appeared con-
fafes* they
small but firm majority to stand
by the provision that would open
large apartments and newly
sentatives who run .for re-elec-
tion this year .go back to their
states, you're- all going to be
charged with being strikebreak-
ers. That may be unjust, it may
be unfair, but it’s a political fact
There were
union of' slower work if. Con-
gress orders the strike halted,
“Men don’t like to be forced
To work against their will,” said
P. L. Seimiller, union president.
And Sen. Norris Cotton, R-
N.H., said he doubted the men
would go back to their jobs if
(See HOUSE, Page *)
WASHINGTON (AP) - Politi-legislation. But he did relay
caUy wary House members j word that if Mierc was to be 'a
begin their attempt to deal with law, he preferred the version
the marathon airlines strike approved by the Senate to one
but any government which would have assigned him
the whole task of,, issuing any
agam remstined days-nsway. (-)MD»weirk commands.. - - ^
With organized labor bitterly
opposed to legislation, and with
all 435 House seats at stake in
November's elections, Sen. Jo-
seph S. Clark, D-Pa., sounded a
warning which seemed certain
to resound across the Capitol.
He said: “When you get back
to your state, i when the mem-
bers of the House of Reprt-
today
action to get the planes flying
call
\
D. C. MURRAY at S66-WI riffs the hlghert 'sk**;'ttrnri&m
out-oftown relatives1 coming to sought in May 1953, near the
town over the weekend and he end of the Korean War.
)8 interested In obtaining four With some 283,000 men now
or less tickets to the Astro- lit Viet Nam, the armed serv-
Dodger game in the Astrodome ices already have surpassed
Sunday. , - * their announced strength goal
of 3J»3,000 a year ahead of
tlme and indications are that
-the buildup will continue.
Just how big the increase will
be is not certain.
The thrCe million - plug level
was not scheduled to be reached
until next June 30, but the
mark was reached and slightly
surpassed by June 30.
JSSSE
• Laercio Pellegrino, one-
time lawyer of BenJack Cage,
says he feels the former Tex-‘
as Insurance company official
may have been kidnapped or
gone into hiding. Cage fled to
BrazlT^fter drawing a 10-year
prison sentence in Texas for
embezzling $100,000 from in-
surance companies that went
bankrupt. , v
• Today is rehearsal day for
Lucl Johnson and Patrick J.
Nugent. They will bo married
Saturday._
The election year battle which
raged before the- Senate passed
s tr i k e-stopping
legislation
can afford them.
The measure still would be
subject to final approval when
the entire bill is put to a roll
call on final passage. .
After the housing section'"®
finished, titles dealing with
school desegregation and anti-
violence laws remain to be con-
sidered.
The House made two changes
section
Thursday. One,: adopted amid
boisterous laughter, would pre-
vet discrimination against fam-
ilies with children in the sale
or rental of housing.
It was offered by Rep. Bob
Casey, D-Tex., and supported by
Rep. Hugh Carey, D-N.Y. Be-
tween them, they are the lead-
ing fathers in the House. Carey
has 14 and Casey 10 children.
Supporters of the bill fought
it but were outnumbered, 99 to
50 by Southern Democrats and
Republicans. "_;
Also approved'by voice vote
was an amendment that would
prohibit the practice known as
"blockbusting’’ by real estate
agents.
Rep. Jonathan Bingham, D-
N.Y., who proposed it, described
blockbusting as "scaring proper-
ty owners into selling their
homes below the proper value
by telling them Negroes arc
moving into the neighborhood
newed — perhaps intensified —
in the House.
The first step there: A.public
hearing before the Commerce
Committee, with testimony
from Secretary of Labar W. Wfl-
lard Wirtz; William J. Curtin,
top negotiator for the five # _ _ # _ . ------
grounded airlines; and Joseph CprT|A|l Of AlfllSTflO UGVY1
W. Ramsey, who speaks for the iICVIIWII ^1 F4IIII3IUM vwl11
7:C;™: Collapse,; Worker Dies
W.Va., the chairman, said the
hearings probably would contin-
ue for two or three days, per-
haps until next Tuesday or
Wednesday.
Then the committee would
have to decide whether to ac-
cept, reject or alter the joint
resolution the Senate passed.
I The Senate move would have
Congress order striking mem-
bers of the AFLCIO Interna-
tional Association of Machinists
back to work for 30 days, and
hand President Johnson author-
ityextenO®_'Mrio^to six
months.
"That proposal will never go
anyplace over here,” said Rep.
WilHam It Ayres, R-Ohio.
“We’ll give the President the
tools to settle it if he feels a na-
tional emergency exists.”
Johnson ignored the demands
of debating senators — Demo-
crats and Republicans — that
he take a stand on strike-ending
“There is no doubt they saw
and talked with the killer,”
Wells said today. “Apparently
Whjtman had just knocked the
receptionist in the head and was
hiding her body back of a coueh
when they saw him.”
Walden, who is working in a
bus station this summer, told
the Austin American he and
Miss Botts went to the top of the
^university tower about 11 a.m „ M M
MondayrHeTvanted to show het; Eh?8'. Brown said
the view from the 307-foot ob- P*ridng lot* are located on
servation platform: and west slde* 01
Miss Bottg told the American ,
they were goiii to wait until Most. dassrtxtms and study
noon to leave so they could hear rooms have the student desks
the chimes again, but decided ««* teachers’ desks totalled but
to leave about 11:50 a.m. Don other equipment has not yet
said they left about 11:40 a.m. been; finished.
The first report of the sniper J™* ^rf'tm ha?« 7
shooting, wa, received by uni- £
versity police at 11.48 a.m. *e auditorium has been ftoUh-
Both Walden and Miss Botts ed. Railing lintog the balcony .
agree that when they entered i
the foyer that is the entrance floor "*• °*en tosuned, so
to the tower deck, they noticed ** «e asking everyone to stay
the receptionist who-had greeted
them upon their arrival was not
at her desk.
Walden said he noticed a blond
man bending over a couch over
near the wall.
Just then Cheryl called Wal-
den’s attention to a "dark stain”
smeared across the floor near
the empty receptionist’s desk.
She warned him not to step to
the “stuff” and gingerly stepped
across it.
Walden told the American the
blond man picked up two rifles
and turned toward the young
couple. *
"We smiled and said Hello,’ ’’
Cheryl said. "He smiled back
real big and said ’Hi, how are
yqu’ to us.”
(See WHITMAN, Page t)
★ ★ 4r
Weather And Tide
CLOUDY with daytime show-
ers.and temperature range of
78-98 degree* expected. Thurs-
day’s range wa# 75-91 degree*
with an 84-degree reading al
8 a.m. Friday at the Son
weather station. Rainfall gaug.
Ytog
to prevent a bottleneck of traf-
fic at the main entrance.
"There Is going to be a lot
of walking for those making the.
tour, so it would be advisable
for women to wear comfortable
4th Time In Week--
Demilitarized Zone
Of Viet Hit Again
perflclal injuries, doctors re-
ported.
Witnesses said the accident oc-
curred about 112:30 a.m. '(GST)
as workmen were going across
the dam structure to what is
known as a monolith section on
the American side of the river.
DEL RIO, Tex. (AP)-Forms
holding freshly poured concrete
collapsed at the giant Amistad
Dam project on the Rio Grande
today, killing one workman and
injuring three others.
The $78 million dam, a joint
project of the United States and
Mexico, is being built 12 miles
upstream from Del Rio,
At Val Verde Memorial Hos-
pital here, authorities identified
the man crushed to death under
the semi-liquid concrete as B.
C. Vela of Monterrey, Mexico.
The others were dug free and
two were taken to a San Antonio
hospital. Attendants said one of
the pair, Enrique Vela, 21, was
in grave condition with head,
chest and leg injuries. The oth-
er, Leandro Gallegos, 38, of Del
Rio, suffered a badly fractured
A fourth man, Gilbert Lopez,
35, of Laredo, escaped with su-
GALVE8TON TIDES Saturday
will be high at 18:18 a.m.,
1:14 a.m., 1:48 p.m. and 7:18
p.m. No low tide.
JR0UND
aggression” and to drive the
Americans deeper into an "end-
less tunnel." The declaration in
the North Vietnamese Commu-
nist party newspaper Nhan Dan
was broadcast by Radio Hanoi
to mark the raid by U.S. plabes
on North Vietnamese naval in-
stallations Aug. 5, 1964, after
clashes between Communist PT
boats and U.S. destroyers to the
Gulf of Tonkin.
Iq South Viet Nam, U.S. pilots
reported destroying or damag-
ing 607 enemy huts, 21 bunkers,
and 20 sampans in a total of 455
(8ee VIET NAM,-Page 2)
SAIGON, South Viet Nam
(AP) — U-S. B52s bombed the
demilitarized zone for the fourth
time to a week today, then
pounded two North Vietnamese
positions close to the Cambo-
dian border.
The bombers struck before
dawn at North Vietnamese Infil-
tration routes, supply dumps
and gUn positions in the buffer
zone separating North and
South Viet Nam. "
In two more raids only 2(4
mile* apart, other B52s ham-
mered at the Chu Pong Moun-
tain lair Of North Vietnamese
regulars four miles east of the
Cambodian frontier.
The latter attacks apparently
Intended to block the
THOUGHTS
dIA
“Ypu Shan come to your
grave to ripe old age, aa a
shock of grain comes up to
the threshing floor to its lea-
st tout four feet from the bal-
cony," Mrs. Brown said. —
Members of the Community
Relation* Committee have erect-
ed departmental and directional
sign* around the plant to aid
the. guides
John Mt
ley have j
Members of the
charge of the open
than chairman Mrs. Levering
and guides chairman Mrs. Bai-
ley include W. J. (BUI) Strfck-
(See STERLING, Page I)
son." Job B:8«.
MR. AND MRS. Elmer R. Har-
gis, Ross and Mary Jane, have
returned from a vacation to Al-
_ berta and British Columbia ..
James (Slick) EUls drops by
for a chat .,.. . Peggy White
phones to a news story.
Leroy Masterson seeks tome
information . . . Jerry Don
— Smith and David Evans com-
plete plan* for organizing the
SterUng High Booster Club . . .
' Lynn Gray gets a new assign-
ment .. Clay Hooper proves
helpful again with some needed
information . . . Andy Braswell
comments on the muggy westh-
Those who love deeply never
grow old; they may die of old
age, but they die young. — Sir
Arthur Wing Pinero, English
dramatist
and visitor*,
rtto and E. W. Brad-
rspared the signs.
ittee in
leg
commit
I house
other
i
Steel May Have Won Hike
were „ .
North Vietnamese from pulling
back into Cambodian sanctuary.
A force of North Vietnamese
army regulars had . NMN
U.S. Infantrymen and cavalry-
men to this central plateau area
to a series of short Intense
Ranger Club
Going After
Membership
backed down. The compromise quoted to recent months as say-
was described by Johnson as lng price relief was needed,
within the guidelines. They expressed open dis-
Gardner Ackley, chairman of pleasure with the guidelines
the President’* Council of Ec> The industry cited Increased
nomlc Advisers, had wired the labor and material costs as fac-
12 largest cotnpanies after In- tors to the decision to boost
land began the latest parade of prices.
Increases asking them to hold The nation's three largest pro-
the line until they discussed the ducers — U.S. Steel; Bethlehem
matter with the government. and RepubUc — announced to-
Only Bethlehem Steel sent a creeses Thursday. /
representative to meet with ^National Steel and Jones A
Ackley, and it later announced Laughlto had announced to-
increased prices. , creases earlier, rounding out
"This Is not an hour in which the top five producers. Other
this business leadership of firm* besides Inland which also
America can take pride,” was announced increases through
part of Ackley's reaction to the Thursday night were Armco,
announcements. Kaiser,
Inland conceded when it an- Youngstown Sheet A Tube and
nounced the Increases that It IntsrUk*.
would have to back down If oth- , Bethlehem said the Increases
er companies didn’t fall into will boost the cost of raw ma-
tin*. They did. terial for a clothes dryer by 27
Inland's announcement on cents, t refrigerator by 21
Tuesday apparently caught the cents, a room a'.r-condltioner by
administration by surprise, al- 10 cents, ■ toaster by three-
though officials for it least five tenths of a cent and an automo-
major producer* have been bile by $3.87
been violated by the price deci-
sions. He said it wa* the Presi-
dent’s view that the effect of the
price increases won't be Visible
immediately but will show up in
A nothing he could do to force a
price roll back.
If the increases stick, as now
appears likely, it will mark the
second major economic defeat
for the Johnson administration
within a week. J,
Only last weekend, striking
airline machinists over-
whelmingly rejected a contract
agreement worked out under
White House auspice* which
called for a 6 to 7 per cent in-
crease In wages and other bene-
fits, well beyond the administra-
tion's 3.2 per cent wage-price
guidelines.
Those same guidelines call for
relative price stability.
WASHINGTON (AP)
united steel Industry appeared
to have emerged the victor to-
day to a war of nerve* to raise
prices on some of its products in
the face of White House pres-
sure to hold the price line.
The $2-and $3-per-ton in-
creases in the price of steel
sheet and strip — the kind used
in automobiles and other con-
sumer goods — were called
modest and inconsequential by
the industry but denounced by
the Johnson administration os
irresponsible and Inflationary.
Through Thursday night, how-
ever, 11 companies — including
the giants of the Industry — had
announced price Increases ef-
fective next Wednesday > on
about 30 per cent of their out-
er.
fights earlier this week.;
The U.S. command said
enemy broke contact with 10,
men of the U.S. 25th Infantry
and 1st Cavalry, Airmobile, Di-
visions 25 miles southwest of
Pleiku City Thursday.
Elsewhere in South Viet Nam,
there was only scattered, minor
ground action.
In the air war against North
Viet Nam, U.S. pilots flew 83
weather-hampered missions
Tuhrsday Including a raid on
the northeast regional military
headquarters 24 miles northeast
of Haiphong. /
Navy pilots from the aircraft
carrier Constellation attacked
the headquarters complex with
rockets and 500- and 1.000-pound
bombs. They reported de-
stroying four large buildings
and damaging seven others.
■UP The N«vy pilots sighted three
Beverly, Terry, Scott and Pst- surfsce-Uxlr missiles within. 10 hike stand. The Post said that
rick Guy are proud owner* of miles of Haiphong but all- three the President, without anger or
autograph from fBm star Stave missed, a U S spokesman said, emotion, decided there was
No American planes were re-
ported lost Thursday.
Other tsrgct* Included nine oil
Installations. Pilots said they
damaged or destroyed 50
barges, 38 itoraga buildings,
nine bridges and 20 trucks.
North Viet Nam noted the sec-
ond anniversary today of the
first America air attack on It
Bob Jones phones to a news
tip . . . Frank Krystyniak and
--. Mike Clark, former Sun staffers,
make a conference call to Bay-
town Chester and Frances
Rogers >r* beginning a long
vacation.
■ Mrs. Jackie Hooper, who Is
handling prop* for the Baytown
Little Theater production, “See
How They Run,” Is looking for
British newspapers and mags-
sines especially copies of
"Punch" or "Film Pictorial”
. ..Gay Taylor of Longview Is
visiting friends to Baytown .. .
Mrs. W. Taylor Hammack talks
Police. Dogs
The Deputy Rangers are after
...........
In case you're not sure what
a Deputy Ranger is, he’s a
member of the newly organised
Ross Sterling athletic booster
club.
An Ice cream supper to kick-
off the membership
been scheduled for 7 p.m., Aug.
11, at O'Brien’* Food Market
on Highway 146.
A membership fee of $1 Is
acquired. In addition to mem-
bership, this fee also entities
member, to attend the Icecream
Membership blanks
available at Citize
uank, Gregory's Fa
National Bank, all
and in Highlands
Foods, Cauthen's &
Highlands State E
inn. Long’s Texaco
‘ton and Dunks’ Hui
Ration.
Tickets can
feom any of the
til the athlete*.
>f the Deputy Ra
time
Disperse Rioters
Moyers declined to say what
further action, if any, might be
taken and added: "No one can
force them to do what they do
not want to do.”
President John F. Kennedy
forced a rollback to steel price
Increases In 1962 through moves
which included a shift in De-
fense Department orders to
companie* which had held the
price tine.
And earlier this year a divld-
President Johnson withheld ed steel Industry was forced to
direct comment on th* -steel roll back partially some price
pric* Increases which snow- increases. Bethlehem Steel an-
bHlled Thursday with announce- nounced last New Year's Eve a
menu by eight companies. $5-a-ton Increase for structured
Three others had announced steel. Inland went along with
hikes earlier, beginning with the boost a few days later.
Inland Steel on Tuesday night. But under heavy admlnistra-
Bill D. Moyers, Whit* House tion pressure, U.S. Steel in-
press secretary, said the Presl- nounced only a $2.74 Increase
dent felt Ott public Interest had snd both Inland and Bethlehem
MENLO PARK, Calif. (AP) -
An advancing tine of 20 police-
men accompanied by dogs to-
day dispersed a crowd of 300 to
400 Negro youth* who screamed
epithet* at them and hurled
rocks and bottles.
Another tO officer* with dogs
and riot guns had been called to
the Negro neighborhood by a
dispute that followed a cafe
drive has
.)
'
Pittsburgh Steel
8
fight.
Alan Erwin tries to "con” a
*.
Two Negroes were arretted.
Several policemen and Negroes
suffered minor injuries, and
freezer of Ice cream from •
put
neighbor . . . Kathleen Richard,
son modal* for a picture.
Maxine Hutchinson tries to get
tickets to an Astro gam*.
‘I
i-i
The Washington Post reported
that Johnson definitely has
decided to let the steel price
many windows were broken to
stores and autos.
Trouble began before mid-
night Thursday to the east part
of Mento Park, a suburb of
about 30,000 south of San Fran
cisco. Two policemen were
called to stop a fight at a cafe to
the Negro neighborhood.
Police ended that fight with
out making an arrest but wen
attacked by a crowd of Negn
youths after they returned t. •,
their patrol car. The scuffh
with police started, officer.
2 i
McQueen on tlW let of "Sand
Pebble.”
FOR S250 DEPOSITS
New Phone Number
882-8121 .
ALL DBFABTMENTS i
TOAD FELTON ‘
Dearee Recipient
JERRY W. RUTLEDGE of Bay-
town, is aihong University of
Oklahoma students who will re-
ceive degrees Sunday. He will
receive a Master of Arts de-
urn 5.85%
Horn* From Hospital
W. B. RAStf&AKTfs now ltom*
at 200 Pecan Drive after a sik-
week stay in Houston’s Method-
lit Hospital.
Astro Tickets
MRS. DORA LEE Shelley has.
seven tickets to the Saturday
night Astro game she would tike
to sell. She can be reached at
5&2U6.
FREE GIFIS
CITIZENS NATIONAL
ice cream
twra will r
CITIZENS OP TEXAS
SAVINGS
MwsISr r.o.LC.
SINCS
1IM
said, when Negroes started tickets to S
shouting obscenities. to 1966.
With B VOW to defeat "US
*»
gre*.
#>
V
v
*
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 299, Ed. 1 Friday, August 5, 1966, newspaper, August 5, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1144994/m1/1/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.