Baytown Briefs (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, September 20, 1968 Page: 2 of 4
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2
40-Year Men
2
Bcissel
ABWA "Boss Of The Year”
HEADS UP!
filled in for the employee—by
For Safety
28 A
groups meeting
16 with inter-
4
Two Technical Division Men
Accept Overseas Assignments
Revised Benefit Statements
To Be Sent Employees Soon
computer. The only blanks not
completed will be the amount of
the employee’s Thrift Fund bal-
actual dollars and cents, as of
June 30, 1968.
On the revised statement, most
of the blanks will already be
A native of
| Powell, he began
I his career with
’ Humble at Mc-
Camey in 1928,
! transferring to
I Baytown in 1930.
I Lindsey joined
■ the Utilities
Services Held For Enjay
Employee, Humble Annuitant
ring to the IHB in 1943. In 1954
he became a chief operator at
that unit.
■Chemicals; H. T. Sample, Light
Ends; H. M. McKay, Lube Pro-
cessing; H. N. Black, A. E.
Capps, Gilberto Garcia, and Sam
Rayon, M&C.
Those who have not visited the
Briefs office for their retirement
story interview are asked to come
e28
-kh.
60*"
vrer"i;
group in 1942, and has been an
operator 1st in that department
since 1962.
■ ▲ A
Reynolds
R. A. Brown
Roy A. Brown, Enjay Butyl
Department, is a new 40-year
G. H. Sheffield
George H. Sheffield, Machinist
Department, has completed four
VhaeVh Joseph’s Ceme-
X" A tery in Temple.
E i A Zucha, 56. was
born in Seaton.
He joined Humble’s maintenance
group in 1942, transferring to
the Insulation Department in
Employees Earn Cash
Through CYI Plan
Fourteen Refinery employees
were third quarter Coin-Your-
Ideas winners.
Receiving initial awards were
C. N. Adams, J. W. Griffin, and
B. B. Knox, Distillation and
Treating; B. M. Clopton and T.
C. Saxon, Light Ends.
J. S. Carter, Machinist; J. C.
Cast, 1 tililies; Ed Laza, Store-
house; C. P. Giles and C. B. *
Skeeters, Pipe.
Supplemental award winners
include L. L. Everett, Boiler-
maker; D. L. Kerr and B. W.
Phillips, Oil Movements; and A.
W. Theiss, Paint.
or exceeding
i
E2
Sim
"eg—
“942
22i
M
2 M
4122
next year. Sheffield became a ma-
chinist 1st in 1948.
Don Brown Transfers To
Houston Chemical Plant
D. K. Brown, a member of the
Chemical Plant Technical Service
Department, has accepted a trans-
fer to the Plant Engineering De-
partment of Enjay’s Houston
Chemical Plant.
ment at St.
decades of ser-
vice with Hum-
i ble.
n He joined the
• Refinery’s Me-
h chanical Depart-
ft ment in 1928.
■ transferring to
Machinist the
Baytown Briefs • September 20, 1968
Ingrown Board
1 his ingrown board between an oak and a pine on company
property behind the old Baytown Elementary School has no doubt
been sat on by many Baytonians, and is still sturdy. Both trees
have grown out around the 2 x 10 plank, with the oak clutching
the board with 12 inches of growth. Manuel Ortiz and Morris
Frank, Refinery painters who were working in the area recently,
estimate that the board was nailed between the trees some 40
years ago.
UNITED FUND...
Continued From Page 1
ments by the various groups in
the plants, we feel that employees
will extend good cooperation to
the solicitors this year, and that
we will exceed our goal again, as
we have for the past several
years,” Steve Zucha
in Jasl year’s drive, employees Steve Zucha, Enjay employee,
contributed 100.3 per cent of the died September 15 in a Baytown
goal, with a total of 112 plants hospital. Funeral
S. L. McLain
Humble Annuitant Sidney
Lawrence McLain died Seplem-
__ her 15 in a Bay-
l town hospital.
, 3 Funeral services
ge'a were held Sep-
2‘ tember 17 with
‘#d • interment in
9),, Memory Gardens
A Cemetery.
! McLain, 66,
by before starting their vacation joined the company’s mainten-
prior to retirement. The Briefs ance group in 1943, transferring
office is located on the second to the Docks that same year. He
floor of the First Aid Building. retired from that department in
1959.
Survivors include his wife,
Mrs. Rose McLain, Baytown;
four sons, Lloyd McLain of An-
gleton; Heubirt, Bobby, and Jim
McLain, all of Baytown; and two
daughters, Mrs. Merdis Alford,
Palestine; and Mrs. Betty Alford,
Houston.
, services were
. held September
employee. •
Brown was
born in Red Oak
and joined the
Baytown Re-
finery in 1928.
| He worked at
I various locations
1 before transfer-
Replacing him as engineering
supervisor of the light ends sec-
tion is G. M. Sewell, formerly a
member of the fuel products sec-
tion.
Beissel received his BS and MS
degrees in chemical engineering
from the University of Michigan
and joined Humble in 1959. He
became an engineering supervisor
in 1967.
Effective October 16, Reynolds
will become Technical superin-
tendent of the new Singapore Re-
finery. He will be located for ap-
proximately nine months at Esso
Standard Eastern, Inc., head-
quarters in New York.
F. H. Kendall, staff engineer
in the fuels planning section, will
replace him as head of the sec-
tion.
Reynolds joined the Refinery’s
Technical Division in 1957 after
receiving his BS and MS degrees
in chemical engineering from
Georgia Institute of Technology.
He became an engineering super-
visor in 1967.
formula by which an employee
can estimate his retirement in-
come if he retires before age 65.
R. C. Lindsey
R. C. Lindsey, Utilities, has
become a 40-year man.
14 Employees Plan
Retirements During
October, November
The following employees are
scheduled to retire October 1:
E. B. Fahey, Refinery Techni-
cal; G. A. Hargon and M. S.
Horton, Distillation and Treat-
ing; M. J. Wimmer, Walter
Cooper, and N. E. McCarter, Oil
Movements; and N. L. Durio,
M&C.
Becoming annuitants on No-
vember 1 are V. A. Dixon, Enjay
A revised annual Benefit Plan
Statement will be sent to em-
ployees in the latter part of Sep-
tember. The statement will show
how each individual employee
and his family are protected by
company benefits, in terms of
1943. He became an Enjay in-
sulator 1st in 1965.
Survivors include his wife,
Mrs. Steve Zucha, Baytown;
three sons, D. S. Zucha, Pasa-
dena; A. J. Zucha, Deer Park;
and James M. Zucha, who is sta-
tioned with the Army in Ger-
many. Three brothers, two sisters,
and seven grandchildren also
survive.
ance under the heading “Protec-
tion for Your Family,” and the
estimated Thrift Fund balance
information under the heading
”The Thrift Fund: A Supplement
To Retirement Income.”
Included on the statements will
be information on company and
employee contributions to the em-
ployee’s Thrift Fund account, in-
surance protection, disability
protection, normal retirement in-
come, and an easy-to-complete
Two employees of Humble’s
Technical Division—J. R. Beissel
and G. P. Reynolds—have ac-
cepted overseas assignments.
Beissel has accepted a position
as Process Engineering Division
superintendent with Lago Oil &
Transport Company, Ltd., at
Aruba. His new assignment be-
came effective September 12.
X a
ds
their specific goals. A total of
3,817 employees made contribu-
tions in the 1967 campaign.
Of the 112 groups making
their quotas, 81 had 100 per cent
participation, and 19 hit the
"fair share” mark—that is, their
contribution was the equivalent
of a day’s pay for each member
of the group.
One of Enjay’s “bosses,” R. M. Love, received a special honor
recently from the American Business Women’s Association by
being named “Boss of the Year” for 1968. Mrs. Pal Anderson,
Chemical Plant Laboratory technician, presents the award to Love
at the 7th annual ABWA dinner, held September 9 at the Tower.
Love, who is head of the Chemical Plant Lab, was chosen by a
committee of three judges from a letter submitted by Mrs. An-
derson, ABWA treasurer. Guest speaker at the dinner was Justice
of the Peace Glenn Vickery, who gave a talk on the “Importance
of Voting.” Fred Hartman, editor and publisher of The Bay-
toivn Sun, was master of ceremonies.
agmgep ' ’
P9
‘ee ge5 ■
42
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P "*z
V i a
J. M. Haggard
Another employee to complete
40 years of service is James M.
Haggard, Lube
-n, Processing.
" Haggard was
a-a born in Bonita
-IV and began his
wen. Humble career at _
SzeA Breckenridge in
dTA 1928. The next
year he joined
the Development Department at
Baytown, transferring to Pipe in
1931.
Haggard has been a training
supervisor in Lube Processing
since 1965.
08
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Lee, O. B. Baytown Briefs (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 35, Ed. 1 Friday, September 20, 1968, newspaper, September 20, 1968; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1433489/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.