Baytown Briefs (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 18, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1967 Page: 4 of 4
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4
Baytown Briefs • May 5, 1967
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TEAGLE - - - ■ Continued From P. 1
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Wright Says Businessmen Can Help
Local Government Whip Inefficiency
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2288-7 .
Teagle Scholarship winners
who have graduated from regular
colleges recently include the fol-
lowing: John Daniel Brian, son
of J. D. Brian, Technical: and
Mrs. Jack C. Cook, formerly
Beverly Gallin, daughter of W. E.
Gallin, deceased employee. Both
Brian and Mrs. Cook graduated
from Rice University.
Teagle Nursing graduates in-
clude Mrs. Raymond Fellers, for-
merly Carol Jeanne Post, daugh-
ter of H. L. Post, Technical;
Cathy Novosad, daughter of An-
nuitant A. J. Novosad; Margaret
Martinez, daughter of Annuitant
Alfonso Martinez; Jane Didrik-
sen, daughter of A. S. Didriksen,
Technical; and Mrs. Charlotte
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Instruction: After you have onswered each question
by circling a letter or word, the correct answer will
be given in the movie. If you selected the right
answer, place a check mark in the square at the
right margin. Do NOT sign this form.
SECTION A (Circle A, S or C)
No
No
No
No
No
No
No
or C)
C
C
C
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485
■
Quite A Mess
V. E. Hudgins, Business Services, left, and brother-in-law J. E.
Orms, Docks, caught this mess of fish in Pearland recently. “There
was a hard wind out of the East and it’s unusual to catch anything
in weather like that,” Hudgins commented. As you can see, they
did all right, though, catching catfish, bass and while perch by
using minnows and a rod and reel.
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/1 / 5
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BARE FACTS----
Continued From P. 1
hand traps. Employees will grade
themselves at the end of the quiz,
and are asked to remember their
score to compare it with general
plant scores.
Although the score sheets will
be turned in, individual scores
will not be identified nor re-
corded. The scores will be used
only to compile a general score.
Schedules for attendance at the
hour-long program, to be held
in the Safely and Training Build-
ing auditorium, will be sent to
supervisors during the next few
days.
THE HANDTRAP TEST FORM
list of new and different public
needs.” observed Wright, who
also is board chairman of Hum-
ble.
Streamlining operations, co-
ordinating and consolidating pro-
grams is the effort needed by
state and local governments, he
said.
Wright warned that the federal
government will assume the re-
sponsibility traditionally and log-
ically belonging to state and local
governments unless machinery to
do the job is developed at the
local level.
He described state and local
governments as “a growth indus-
try of the first magnitude.”
Reasons for government
growth, he said, include:
• Rapid increase in popula-
tion, accompanied by a shift to
urban areas—areas housing 70%
of all Americans.
• Nation’s growing commit-
ment to education. School and
college enrollments increased
50% in 10 years.
Increased industrialization and
economic affluence. U. S. family
income is half again as large as
that in any other nation—creal-
Lal
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SECTION D (Place Check Mark on Line
Below for Each Hondtrap You See)
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TriCo Members Honored
in lop photo, Refiner)’ Administrative Manager F. G. Turpin,
right, congratulates four TriCo officers at a Junior Achievement
banquet held April 28. Sponsored by Humble and Enjay, I riCo
was named the most outstanding JA company in the Houston area.
With Turpin, left to right, are Jack Besperka, president; Randy
Tickner, vice president of sales; Judy McNab, treasurer; and
Kathy Jacobs, secretary. Besperka was voted the outstanding IriCo
Achiever, and the other three were named the outstanding sopho-
more, junior, and senior, respectively. All arc Robert E. Lee
students.
Bottom photo shows TriCo advisors with Besperka, center, at
the JA awards banquet held Monday night, May 1, in Houston.
From left are J. K. Creecy, Refinery Accounting; G. M. Sewell
and R. W. Upchurch, Refinery Technical; and A. J. Dodson,
Enjay Economics and Planning.
2 H
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Man's Sweater Found
North Of Storehouse
A man’s sweater was found
April 27 on the north side of the
Storehouse al the order desk. The
woolen sweater has black sleeves
and back with a striped while
and gray front. The owner may
claim the sweater by contacting
George Binder on Ext. 2677 or
2430 at the Storehouse.
McCully, daughter of G. N. Mun-
ger, Sheet Metal.
Mrs. Fellers graduated from
Texas Woman’s University. Miss
Novosad graduated from Incar-
nate Word College in San Antonio,
Miss Martinez graduated from
Lee College, and Mrs. McCully
graduated from the University of
Texas.
☆ ☆ ☆
Now is the lime to turn in ap-
plications for Teagle Nursing
Scholarships. The deadline ic
July 1 for the school year begin
ning September 1967. Decembe.
31 is the deadline for regular
university scholarships effective
in the Fall of 1968.
Businessmen can help state and
local governments become more
receptive to change and moderni-
zation by acting as “management
consultants” for improving effi-
ciency.
Factors currently hampering
efficient government operations,
said National Chamber President
M. A. Wright in an address
before the Oklahoma State Cham-
ber of Commerce, are fragmen-
tation of jurisdiction, duplication
of effort, inadequate lax reve-
nues. and the proliferation of
federal programs aimed at solv-
ing local problems.
“State and local governments
are being placed under inlense
pressure to satisfy a growing
ammFk8?
—meie,3
ing a demand for more and bet-
ter services.
Affluence has created ils own
problems, Wright observed. Local
and state government efforts to
solve the problems of air and
water pollution, urban blight,
traffic congestion and social un-
rest have been impeded by gov-
ernment fragmentation.
“There are more than 80.000
local governments in the U. S.
doing the job that one source
estimates could be done effec-
tively by 16,000 units,” he said,
adding that fragmentation has
left few units large enough to
apply modern efficient methods
to their problems.
5. Yes
6. Yes
7. Yes
8. Yes
9. Yes
10. Yes
SECTION C (Circle A, B
11. A B
12. A B
13. A B
1. A B C
2. A B C
3. A B C
SECTION B (Circle Yes or No)
“12.1,7
Lynx In Tank?
Rigging’s Lester Moorhead has the right idea but the wrong
cal. The one he needs is the well-known Tiger. Then watch his
“bug” go. Moorhead took the purr out of this 32-pound lynx’s
motor while hunting in Montgomery County. The lynx had been
killing his brother’s hogs, and Moorhead put a stop to it—the
first lynx he had ever killed. Moorhead used a varmint call to
attract the cat.
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OPINION QUESTIONS:
Did You Like The Movie? Yes No
Did You Like Toking The Test? Yes No
Other Comments________________________________
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TOTAL CORRECT ANSWERS 1____]
YOUR SCORE i____j
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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/m1/4/: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.