The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 138, Ed. 1 Friday, March 5, 1965 Page: 8 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Friday, March 5, 1965
s Keene On First Unit-
Saturday, March. 6; ?965:
R
• 8,
lies Secure Nine Spots
.1
Barters Hill enjoyed complete
dominance in the Z7-A basket-
baU circle this
perfect record fnboth
girl* competition, (tad
have nine all district selections
to show f»r it, five boys and
lour
Other first team guards were
Jc Nageli of Waller, Gloria Cal-
laway and Betty Sims of New
Caney, Patricia Collins of
Splendors and Julie Tribe of
Spring.
Crosby took a third place pos-
ition in the boys race behind the
Eagles and the Spring Lions. BH
took the race with a perfect 14-0
record and went on to take a
one-point win against Blooming-
ton in bi-district and a 3-point
loss to eventual regional cham-
pion Woodsboro in the regional
tourney.
The Barters Hill girls rushed
through district foes with a per-
fect slate of 13-0, losing to ™e-
haven of District 28-A, 63-43, In
the first game out of the loop.
The team was selected by the
coaches at a district meeting and
the only Bay-Tex returnees from
last season were Keene, Petka,
Leonard, McGinty and Whitney.
candidate and leading scorer, plied the one-two scoring pro-
and Bums are juniors. The other duction for the Ealle ferns and
three Eagles are seniors, many authoritative sources as
The Croaby Buffs listed only most outstanding guard in
one man on the top 10 group,
senior all stater Roger Keene. Crosby s Sharon Allen was the
Johnny Clifton and Johnny-Pes- only Buff to make either team
ka drew honorable mention ere- ^ she notched an honorable
decrial* for the Buffs. mention forward position.
u. The first team girls list was
SJwiriwv finished with forwards Sandra
Burse of New Caney, Duke 0f Spelndora, Brenda Loyd
of Waller. Nancy Williams and
Sharon Reome of Spring.
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DAY OF DECIS ON
. ... • | •
P-eit A Ca- Se
Aj Low As $<
Per Day
Cali
.ret-nu
season, with a
now they
...
- Bay-Tex neighbor Crosby place
three boys and one girl on the
it-A honor team.
Barbers Hills’ Joe Kilgore and
RJcfiard Perry received first
.team recognition on the 10 man
** squad while the other three
starter*, Bill Bums, Ramie Cot-
ten and Mike Flower*, .drew
honorable mention listings.
Kilgore, the Eagle’s all state
THAD FEL
was Jamt
Phillip C
Gene Meyers of
Nelson of Willis, George Howard
of Spring, Walter Rape of Hemp-
stead and Joe Woods, an all
state footballer, from Waller.
Barters Hill girls
13-partteipant first team were
forwards Desiree McGinty and
Carvelynne, Leonard. BH‘s Kay
Whitney placed at the guard pos-
ition on the first twelvesome.
Forward
honorable
the only other Barter* Ml
liitee.
Desiree and Carvelynne sup-
"f Splendora,
FOR
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making the
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The $5.7 million Bond Electron to provide funds for needed city im-
provements will be frtldI Saturday, March 6. Should these bonds be
approved by Baytown's taxpayers, the maximum increase in city tax-*
es will be 7'/2%. This means that if you're now paying $100 in city tax-
es annually, tnese city improvements will cost you an extra $7.50 a year
or 2c a day.
WHAT DO YOU GET FOR YOUR MONEY?
Frankly, {list bode necessities. No MBs. No luxuries. No hidden extras. AE you get is whot your I
city has to have so that it can provide needed services tor its citizens. I
• • • ■ ■ . y ■
WHO SAYS Wf HAVE TO HAW THESE THINGS?
Meet of the city's eeeds are prattyohwhoos.Tho ioprav—uti wore wcewwjidedbycoioo?*
side consulting firm. These recommendations were then gene over with a fine-tooth comb and
trimmed down by a committee of over 100 citizens.
IUT, HOW CAN BASIC NEEDS ADD UP TO ALMOST $6 MILLION IN A CITY OUR SIZE?
Glad you asked, neighbor. As Al Smith used to say, "Let's look at the record.
Wl
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Open IsAcr New
Maaftfemeht
1
ALL ms
*
EZRA B
TEXGAS
mention lorSf'
an
I
was
Barry Dyer, Owner-Mgr.
722 Park 582-6501
BOM
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Wf KILGORE, PERRY; CRONY'S KEWE Ml
Junior, Two Senior* On 27-A Honor Ceq* Team
DIS
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IS:
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Nobody Even Close
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Swimmers Continue
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PASADENA. (Sp) — It must meet in 24 entries. But this meet, to* a first and
o« a aet rule for the Baytown year the swimmers are trying place Thursday. His first pi* cc
swimmers this year to nor give to keep a better than a bun- came in file 400 yard freestyle
died average in total point pro- after he had come in second hi
score over a hundred points per duction. the 200 yard freestyle His times
meet themselves. They did ao Baytown again dominated the in these events were 4:5LJ and
•Oto Yhureday nfcpt a* they as they won the two re- 2:U.4. ____.
wor. with. 10754 points. w* and brought home five in- Platt took his usual’two wins
The rule fhott net gMxg the di&uM PM mfclal*. lour «fl- ahorltf Stance! ftm-
other team a chance has aK v»r awj four bronze - style races. The 30 yard free-
way* been true for the Ganderl " ^ v*. ttyle was his in the time of 2bi4-
swimmers imderCoaco BooKra-. J* and the MS freeatpia was
mer for he lias only lost one j^ame* of ^30*2, Tommy Pau" Maoreow by Platt In th* time of
sel began the race for Baytown
followed by Roger Ward and
Ray Heinrich on the second and
third laps. John McCJintock an-
chored the team.
The 200 yard freestyle relay
JUST THE THINS TO WEAR
■AROUND THE HOUSE
M
.ar
HERE'S WHAT YOU'LL H VOTING ON SATURDAY, MARCH 6, ITEM BY ITEM;
STREETS
the other teams a chance and
A State Farm Homeowners policy. It's the low-cost
X
tects you w case of lawsuits, too. And surprisingly, this
complete package of protection is yours at /-.......4
a rate that’s 15% to 25% lower than the »*««•"
Mine coverages would cost under separate
-X policies. Sound like the same good deal as W9
\ our car insurance? You bet! Call me today. "•“>•*•<‘5,
1
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ALL ITEMS I
$1,661,000
,;..a.Os.aa^
Anyone who hat driven (or tried to) over our *tre’et$ knows wHy
this is included. $613,000 is earmarked to put present thorough-
fares in good condition, with the county participating in the cost.
Another $978,000 is for improving streets on j^irticipation basis
with property owners.
IN-
V
CABIN STILL
amoirsoR
QB.YBR
37.5
’ ■: Rce MkkfiMM whowok iauru
place in the 50 yard freestyle
in 2SiS came back m Uw 100
yard freestyle for second placv
with a time of 50.7. W
Paulscl took the 100 >*rt1
backstroke in 1.07.3 fotiosTOd
closely by teammate MeCUntock
who cam* In secood with at
WHO IS
John O. Mitchell 4 MYERS B.
CURTIS?
v<:
son
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$130,000
DRAINAGE ....
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N«. 1-3309 Mo
No. 2-4015 Bo
No 5-12749 Ml
MRS. SAM I
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Although drainage has improved, we still have a few areas which
need drainage. Funds ere provided for channels in four areas to ,
nage ditches end creeks. Storm sew- -
channels.
X
clocked in the time of 1:42J.
The team members were Ron
Middleton, Jimmy Robertsoa
Chuck MUier. and George Platt
. Rusty Bogpess, « double .....
rwr last week to the Baysewa
X.
/
I 2005 North High^4l
Phone 513-7337
■ /
king of. 1.07 5.
The final tint
clnc
pravida outlets to existino droii
ers can be drained into those prop
►
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■place winner
was Mark Meigs who won tht
100 yard breaststroke in the rim*
of 1:13J. Charlie UggfttalB
third place in this event with al
docking of 1:1TA
In the 2<# yard freestyle P«N
ry DuBOse had a time at 2:15.6
for a third pUc* medal.
Denttis Wnfiems' 5 mfouWel
nd enough for him to
place in the 400 yard
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win-
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$740,000
COMMUNITY CENTER .......
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Many T*xai citiei the sizo of BaytOwn Isome tmoRarl hava fine
community centers where adults end yotitti alike can go to play
garni, relax, hold mooting! Und all fhtraH. Isn’t • community eon-
tar a better alternativ* for a place to gather than a street comar?
r.
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MEDICAL CARE
take
freaatyl*-
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held the third and
> slots in the 20P
■ual medley. Jtmmy
Robert son tied for second piece
Baytown
fourth pld
/
$300,000
cmr hall
.
yard
.. . e »
x.,
Our pralent City Hall is not only on tyesoro, it’s an inadequate fa-
oilfty in which to conduct the j^sinoss pf our growing city. Funds _
or# provided to build a City Hall w# can be proud of; one that wifl
impress visitor, looking for a place talivo or locate new induttry.
with BaU High s Baker but
er was awnrded second place
and thf medal. Thetr rim* was
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In the event In the
fourth place In
time ati-Oi.
Heinrich was
two-tenth-
FIRE STATION
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place
of a second out
WHICH DO YOU WAHT? v
is ht
•X
in the 1» yart hi
rwrord^d 1 -OIL _
took fifth plane la the event wW>
a 1:132 clockhg.
As usual
O’j'ionrnt wri
on North Mein. It
This station wiH bo built on aity owned property
ii definteiy needed to serve this area. Thf new high school of
course, makes the new fire itotian and TlPlBNfMjxpumpli tUparf-
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Baytown’s eloaaat
a boot TO point, be-
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was
hind.
V.
H.R. 1) lo not needed. ‘ Nedkare” MmGU
are very limited, covering akeot ewa qaartar
EXAS today has one of the nation’s
finest, most comprehensive programs
T
, meet with S7 point*
___ closely by Pasadenans
36 pc*-1* and Sam Rayburn's
?:YJ:
up la
V
$241,000 x
V
PARKS
Baytown hi only one-fifth of tho park land we need. Fundi era pro-
posed in this election fur thro# park siti: one O4J tike forth side,
on* on the wit side, oof t tf-ocre pork ta b# locatod m^p
community center area. We need to set ftide this parkland now,
wJptf tha Land is still evedebit.
SANITARY SEWBIS
of medical care for the aged. Thee*
programs—the Texas approach, we call it—
.*
(254$) of the total yearly health care costs
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at the average aged person. "Medicare”
would net cover physicians' services or aai- X
recipients and extensive health cost gical
nor weald It cover the cost
idGKW
at drugs outside of institutional care.
protection through the use of special ia-
MC* I
plan* for the aged. Tht Texas iegis-
X 0
vaaa
Tha "medicare” proposal is an extremely
1
medical care plaa for those whe an aet ea
expensive on*. While we ell an starting to
enjoy a redaction in federal
w a result of action by Congress 1ee4 pear, tha
weald east an satiaretsd
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M A|iiMRMi M,i6B 4# iMi Mb
4.
$1,175,000
VI
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'mi*
w me
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m times
• 225,000 steady egad, representing 30 par
cent of Texas’ satire aged pepulation, sow
Bins Cnee-Blue Shield 1_T
peticp peM for hp the State,
id tower lints to bombs not now con-
This
..
fLT hflUsa dorian fa rJJUinrl fa
tv
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fint yvfcr. *MidkareH woukl
naefad. It wfll increase th, eopfeity of existing trootment plants;
'bu ld a now plant wifh o lino to th# Stophfn F. Austin school, and
provide service for the new high school under construction. Thia
pygfaMrirf nuts far Baytown.
X
£* trj
xg& mn to
t
tha wealthy. The employ** whs saw paps a
tax *f 3174
*
\
£ \ t
iJS
'
.
-
■ f!S>r
staS
um*I ltTL
^ tv l_
, $1,171400
*1*1,
a.'-
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WATEFK.^
—SUmU
i 15J
Mr!
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• 72% of the aged ht Tex** new
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Adequate water supply is essential to the health end growth of our
city. Lest yoer, the Fire Insurance Board found Baytown's ground
»*oraqe feciliti*i we^e 60*. deficient. Funds or# provided for 300,
i\
tiff*
er BMM fa# faretaMfpefiti^
X
The Texas approach *f
in
• Areagh the
aaa%Haa,”
tnd hoip/A, r~a~+ to thoM ^ho nr^d
\
It iea
/ ■my
000 gallons ot q^oued »t0r#q# ~e another well end motf
ice,” sad ethar
Ganders Lose;
Play Saturday
ALVI NiSpt -^TTw^Rohen
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tht and by
m
is iTiilibit to all who want it at A
for m
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$250,000 I
AIRPORT
tiw
Vi
boning tha
at
Baytown needs new industry to grow and prosper. A private airport
wi« help us attract new industry. Surveys show that one of the first
things that industries look for is on airport which con handle their
executive planes and aircraft. Let new industry Lend in leytown.
available ia Texas
the aged
’
| x.s
aai vast help fa paptag
th-
to
\i\
with the Alvin Y
(there aged weald hi covered
(H R. m7), which
at U4A iDd af*r
nr*.
by tho profnm
\ Tarn
*are”fa
bp'tfa*
■
of th*
•L
.
• for thow few
facts, th*
faf
of
Total: $5,730jl00
five er-
Urn
ia seeded hefa.
(the
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ta
There you have 0. Uht we wid, ao luxuries, just basic
M,
al et
hi the
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For Further Information, Writ*
THE HARRIS COUNTY MEDICAL SOOETY
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tied-
IIUM.D.
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- Paid for bp leytaniose far Freyrare. I
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 138, Ed. 1 Friday, March 5, 1965, newspaper, March 5, 1965; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145046/m1/8/: accessed June 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.