Baytown Briefs (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, December 1, 1967 Page: 2 of 4
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How DI No. 13 Occurred
AERATOR PHOTOS
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UF Chairmen Give Highlights
Of Successful Drive In Plants
Need Federal Budget Reform
To Solve Futemre $ Problems
40-Year Man
Aubrey C. Williams, Refinery
Pipe Department, has completed
four decades of
service with
Humble. A native
of Jefferson, he
joined Pipe Oc-
tober 20, 1927,
and has served in
that department
for the past forty
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years—except for a two-year tour
of Navy duty beginning in 1945.
He became a pipe detail man in
December, 1953.
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Employees who attended the aerator startup ceremony, front row, left to right, are J. M. Ponder, Refinery
night superintendent; D. J. Joy, Enjay Technical Service; R. M. Love, Enjay Laboratory; S. L. Bruce, M&C
supervisor; M. E. Gillis, Enjay plant manager; R. IL Manis, M&C supervisor; E. T. Davis, M&C planner;
H. V* Meier, Refinery manager; and IL C. Lyles, Utilities. From left on back row are J. B. Arnold, Enjay
Engineering; Ray Robertson, Enjay night superintendent; T. B. Nelson, M&C supervisor; and E. K. Erwin,
. r. Sublett, IL F. Irchalek, and A. E. Oliphint, all Utilities. Some of aerators are shown in background.
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Lewis Now Associate
Coordinator Of Air,
Water Conservation
W. L. Lewis has been named
to the new position of associate
coordinator of air and water con-
servation in Humble's headquar-
ters Government Relations De-
partment.
Charles C. Keeble, department
manager, said the new position
was created because of the con-
tinued expansion of Humble's
participation in government-in-
dustry activities at all levels, the
increasing complexity of regula-
tions, and the coordination of
conservation efforts in all oper-
ating departments.
Keeble pointed out that Hum-
ble was the first oil company to
appoint a coordinator of air
and water conservation. H. H.
Meredith Jr. has held the posi-
tion since its creation in 1961.
Lewis was formerly staff engi-
neer in the Petroleum Technical
Department al Humble's Baton
Rouge Refinery. Since 1959 he
has been responsible for the re-
finery’s technical coordinal ion
and related public and govern-
mental contacts in the field of
air and water conservation.
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Baytown Briefs • December 1, 1967
ceeded their goals. These were
Refinery Administrative, which
reached 114 per cent of its goal;
Fuels, 101 per cent; Specialties,
102; Refinery Technical, 105;
Butyl and Chemicals, 102; Poly-
olefin, 107; Enjay Technical,
110; and ER&E, 105.
A total of 17 sectional groups
were in the “Fair Share” status—
that is, contributed amounts
equivalent to a day’s pay for each
member of the group. These
groups, and the percentage of
their goals donated were:
Refinery Accounting Adminis-
trative and Clerical, 185; Refin-
ery Laboratory Supervisory and
Clerical, 178; Public Relations,
168; Utilities Chief Operators,
154; Utilities Supervisory and
Clerical, 153; M&C Contract Ad-
ministration, 152; Conversion
Supervisory, 150; JTH group of
ER&E, 149; Butyl Supervisory
and Clerical, 148.
Refinery Technical Group 7,
146; Enjay Managers Office and
Employee Relations, 145; M&C
Fuels Zone, Distillation and
Treating Extra Board, and Utili-
ties Coordinators groups each
scored 143; HDU 2, Booster Sta-
tion 1, and Pipe Still 2 Chief
Operators group, and the ER&E
Administrative group each do-
nated 142 per cent; Refinery
Managers Office, 141.
Humble annuitants were an-
other bright spot in the commu-
nity drive. They contributed 105
per cent of their goal.
-05
Mower For Sale
A Massey Ferguson tractor
mower, Model 35, 1962, is for
sale on a bid basis. It is located
at the Refinery Rigger Building.
The tractor can be seen Tues-
day, December 5, from 7:30 a.m.
to 4 p.m. by contacting J. E.
Hylton, Ext. 2721.
Bids must be received at the
Purchasing Office by 4:30 p.m.,
December 8. If sent through U. S.
Mail (Humble Oil & Refining
Company, P. O. Box 4019, Bay-
town) they must be postmarked
no later than the above date.
Bidding instructions may be
obtained from Jack Gardner, Ext.
3311.
Two Enjay Employees
Given New Positions
D. A. Ellison, formerly a mem-
ber of Enjay’s management ser-
vices section in Baytown, has as-
sumed a new position in Enjay’s
newly created Distribution De-
partment in New York City.
A second Enjay man, T. 0.
Neely, has transferred to the Eco-
nomics and Planning Depart-
ment, and will work in the proj-
ect development section. Formerly
he worked in the chemicals sec-
tion.
may be too late to deal effec-
tively with our current problems,
but not at all too early to deal
with those we can anticipate.”
Walker, ER&E; to departmental
chairmen and solicitors:
A total of $99,768, or 100.2
per cent of employees’ goal, was
contributed by 96 per cent of the
employees.
Of the 181 sectional groups of
the three organizations, 117 met
or exceeded their goals, and 129
had 100 per cent participation.
Eight of the ten major divi-
sional groups in the drive ex-
HWL B-Ball Practice
Sessions Begin Soon
The Humble Club Hot Water
League basketball season is ap-
proaching once again.
Practice sessions will be held
on two Tuesdays, December 12
and 19, from 6:30-10 p.m. in the
Bay town Junior High gym on
Bayway Drive. League play
begins in January.
For further information con-
tact Jim Alcock, Ext. 3432, or
George Ward, Ext. 670.
2 12024
MVAPA1H
Employees of the three Bay-
town organizations did a good
job in this year’s United Fund
campaign.
Here are some highlights of a
report made by General Chair-
men George Crist, Enjay; Jody
Lander, Refinery; and Jack
feer
rcztes-
ose-—s ■
Sa
An employee demonstrates how a Refinery rigger sustained
the thirteenth disabling injury of the year November 3. The
rigger caught the little finger of his left hand in a crane’s
radiator fan while working at Hydroformer No. 1. The mangled
finger had to be amputated at the second joint.
Federal budget reforms, if in-
stituted now, could help solve
the fiscal difficulties which face
the nation in the future, M. A.
Wright, board chairman of Hum-
ble, said in Washington, D. C.,
recently.
He spoke at a Tax Institute
of America symposium on fed-
eral-slale-local fiscal relationships.
There are at least three steps
which the federal government
must take if fiscal policy is to
regain its effectiveness, Wright
told the group. The federal bud-
get must be used as an allocative
tool, he said, the government
must improve the manner in
which individual proposals arc
evaluated, and the budget itself
must be changed.
“These three reforms will not
eliminate our problems,” he ob-
served, “but unless they are in-
stituted, fiscal policy will tend
to be made by default, and the
kind of problems we face today
will continue to occur in the fu-
ture.”
Selling the stage for the solu-
tion of tomorrow's issues may
seem to be less important than
attempting to solve those that ex-
ist today, Wright said.
“However,” he added, “today
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Common Driving Hazard
Don't cause a rear-end crash
by following too closely. At 60
miles an hour it lakes at least
366 feet—or 23 car lengths—to
slop under good conditions. Keep
alert to traffic both ahead and
behind you.
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Aerial view shows aeration lagoon in operation.
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Lee, O. B. Baytown Briefs (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 15, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, December 1, 1967, newspaper, December 1, 1967; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1433452/m1/2/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.