Baytown Briefs (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1967 Page: 2 of 4
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Baytown Briefs • May 5, 1967
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TDU Turnaround Begins
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began last Friday. Members of
the Baytown group packed 42
gallons of oysters and 235 pounds 1|
will be held the night before at
the Knights of Columbus Hall.
‘ Music will be provided from 8-
12 p.m. by Jules Cerulli and his
band. Tickets are $2 per couple
for Humble Club members, and
$4 for non-members.
dance.
Tickets for the event, which
ill begin at 7 p.m., are available
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Baytonians Turn The Table,
Cook For Chuck Wagon Gang
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Turnabout was great play for a
Baytown group which flew to
Odessa last weekend.
Because good seafood is as
scarce in Odessa as sand is plenti-
ful, the Odessa Chuck Wagon
Gang invited four employees, an
annuitant, his son, and their
wives to bring Gulf Coast seafood
to Odessa and cook it.
For years the Chuck Wagon
Gang has cooked barbecue beef
for Humble Day. So, the Odessa
group decided it was about lime
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Burnet grew up near Richards.
He had been a Harris County
resident for 22 years. Prior to
joining Humble M&C in 1947. he
worked as a truck driver for a
service company here.
Burnet’s survivors include his
for Baytown to cook them some
seafood.
Included in the Baytown group
were Mr. and Mrs. G. R. Curtin
and Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Canet,
M&C Supervisory; Mr. and Mrs.
L. J. Kessler, Refinery Pipe; Mr.
and Mrs. J. M. Breeland, Re-
finery Rigging; Mr. and Mrs.
E. C. Huron, annuitant; Mr. and
Mrs. D. M. Huron, who works
for a Baytown gas company.
Sponsored by the Chuck
Wagon Gang, the weekend jaunt
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Other directors are Annuitants
R. J. Dietz, Charlie Caldwell, and
C. S. Carter: J. W. Boyd. Fire
Protection; E. C. Harvey, Tech-
nical; C. F. Sheeley, Plant Pro-
tection; C. F. (Babe) Shires,
Enjay Mechanical; and M. C.
Wallace, M&C.
Tickets to the banquet will also
be available at the monthly
games night meeting to be held
by the club at the Holiday Inn
tonight at seven.
Club memberships are also
available to eligible employees
(those with 20 years or more of
service) and all annuitants. Dues
are SI per year.
J. W. Burnet Dies
James Wesley Burnet
James Wesley Burnet, 47, Re-
finery Insulation Department,
died Tuesday.
May 2, at his * aget
home in Baytown. g“
The Pioneer Club will hold its
annual banquet Saturday, May
20, at the Holiday Inn. The meet-
ing will feature a steak dinner,
a program of entertainment, and
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Services were |
held May 4 in
Bay town and in-
terment was in •
In addition, EMD instrument
and electrical employees are mak-
ing extensive revisions to various
control system instruments to im-
prove operations.
A relatively new unit, the TDU
went on stream in January 1962.
The process, which was developed
by Baytown ER&E and Humble
employees, converts toluene to
benzene which is in high demand.
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7/ llu^bluCub.?an^ Pioneer Club Annual Dinner
# Being Held May e ba A
As a prelude lo Humble Day 3cheduled ror at., Mav 20
on Saturday, May 13, a dance " •
Enjay Mechanical Department
employees have begun work on a
major turnaround for the Toluene
Dealkylation Unit.
One of the turnaround’s first
stages was to lift out one of the
two reactors which is being modi-
fied to improve operations. Be-
sides the general maintenance and
repair work being done, prepara-
tions are being made for lie-ins
for future connections.
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of shrimp—enough to feed more
than 750 persons.
After a nice flight from Hous-
ton on a commercial airline, the
group landed in Odessa. They
were asked to de-plane last, and
when they stepped from the plane
a long red carpel had been rolled
out by some Chuck Wagon Gang
greelers.
Late Saturday afternoon the
cooking began inside the Chuck
Wagon Gang’s huge facilities.
"Gang” members served the large
throng which included their fam-
ilies and guests. The food was so
good that all the shrimp was
eaten and most of the oysters.
All of the Baytown group had
Tigers on their shirts and blouses,
and the “Gang” had placed a
Tiger as a centerpiece.
The next morning men in the
Baytown group attended a Bible
class meeting, then “Gang” mem-
bers gave the Baytonians a lour
of Odessa. They flew out of
Odessa that afternoon just as a
sand storm was approaching. “We
had a ball.” Curl in said.
from any club officer or director.
They are $2 each for members
and $3.50 each for guests.
The half-hour program of en-
tertainment following the dinner
will feature songs by Mr. and
Mrs. Bill Schubert. He is minister
of music at Grace Methodist
Church. Following that will be a
dance from nine to twelve.
Officers of the Pioneer Club
for this year are W. P. Smith,
annuitant, president; Frank Bach-
meyer. Reclamation, vice presi-
dent; and R. H. Weaver, annui-
la n t, sec rel ary -1 reasurer.
/ . ■32 8E
d2____.________LL_. SM • EeMaa-
State Science Contestant
Robert D. Zubik, son of Bob Zubik, Enjay Technical, is one of
Texas’ eight lop high school scientists. Robert is a senior at Robert
E. Lee High School.
He and another student from the Gulf Coast area will comprise
one of ihe four regional teams competing in the University Inter-
scholastic League science contest in Austin Saturday.
Robert is pictured above with his science instructor, Art Hodges.
The two-hour test the four teams will take covers theory and
principles of biology, chemistry, and physics.
Robert previously won district science honors April 8 at Pasa-
dena, then regional honors April 22 in competition held at Hous-
ton Baptist College. Earlier this year, he won second place in
the State Technical Writing contest.
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Lee Cemetery
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iE*“gggA8TT- • Jersey Declares
yVmz ‘6, ^0~Cent Dividend
=M4- - ...... The Board of Directors of
Pipefilters J. R. Coker, right, and R. E. Kotrla replace regulator valves Standard Oil Company (New Jer-
during work in a major TDU turnaround. sey) recently declared a cash
dividend of 80 cents per share on
the capital stock, payable June
12, 1967, to shareholders of
record at the close of business
May 11, 1967.
This will bring dividend pay-
ments for the first half of 1967
to a loal of S1.60 per share, the
same as for the first half of 1966.
17a 1 wife, Mrs. Marie Burnet, Bay-
— J ! town; a daughter, Cheryl Burnet,
gfagUjWB Baytown; his parents, Mr. and
ES—- Mrs. O. L. Burnet, Richards; a
4pa sister, Mrs. Juanita Morelock,
, ---------—MSNa Richards; and two brothers
Rigger C. L. Jackson, left, and Pipefitter L. V. Gregg have a breezy job Taking the head off an exchanger arc Pipefitters H. B. Graves, and W. P. Doyal Burnet, Richards in 4
taking a head off the top of a I DU reactor. Hoppe during turnaround on TDU. Nolan Burnet Houston
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Lee, O. B. Baytown Briefs (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1967, newspaper, May 5, 1967; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1433423/m1/2/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.