Baytown Briefs (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 01, Ed. 1, January 1975 Page: 3 of 8
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Baytown Briefs • January, 1975
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Exxon Club Operating Under
New Financing Arrangement
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67
Elected At December Meeting Of Directors
Jennings Heads Exxon Club
M&C; Charles Whitley, Utilities and Environmental Control; Louis
Matysiak, Chemical Plant Process; Norvell Locker, Refinery Technical;
Wayne York, ER&E; Fred Ernst, M&C. Not shown, Lillie Lockhart,
Administrative; Ignacio Tamayo, M&C, and Jack Fowler, Specialties.
New Exxon Club directors are shown above. From left, front row, are
Andy Hoyle, Production; Jerry Matula, M&C; Ed Malick, Fuels; Ivan
Burns, Chemical Plant Technical; Jim Ryan and Leroy Veselka, M&C;
and Jack Rogers, Chemical Plant Mechanical. Back row, Troy Sorrels,
Dennstedt Urges FEA To Rescind
Self-Defeating Refinery Fuel Rule
Outgoing Exxon Club President Horton Bridges, left, Chemical Plant
Engineering Technical Department, passes gavel to this year’s president
Leroy Jennings. Bridges receives appreciation plaque for his services.
i
y
Henderson, and Glen Walker,
Refinery M&C; John Bird, Spe-
cialties; John Bob Peters, Refin-
ery Technical; Leroy Jennings,
ER&E.
Also, Dennis Cernosek, Fuels;
Vernon Hill, Oil Movements; Ed
Sheffield, Refinery Laboratory;
and Harold Murphy and Horace
Graves, Chemical Plant Mechan-
ical.
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Exxon Club’s new officers, from left to right, are John Peters, Membership chairman; John Thomas, Partici-
pation and Activities; Vernon Hill, Constitution and By-laws; Ed Sheffield, Finance; Dennis Cernosek, Athletic;
Leonard Mazoch, Entertainment; Frank Henderson, Chibs; and John Bird, vice president. Not shown is James
Taylor, chairman of the Scholarship committee.
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This Year's MBA Directors
Officers and directors for the Baytown Mutual Benefit Asso-
ciation are shown above. Officers, sealed from left, are Johnny
Armstrong, Refinery Accounting, secretary-treasurer; R. L. Parker,
Plant Security, president; R. H. Weaver, annuitant, vice president.
Standing, from left, Jack Shoemake, Refinery machinist; Joyce
Rawe, annuitant; Waller Boucher, Refinery electrician; Jimmy
Carroll, annuitant; Jess Stovall, Chemical Plant Mechanical;
W. C. Jackson, annuitant.
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adequate for half a year. The
justification for continued prod-
uct price controls and allocation
regulations has passed.”
Dennstedt said that instead of
phasing out controls, “the FEA
has stacked regulation upon reg-
ulation to the point where end
results are counter-productive.
This is particularly evident in
the propane area.”
Dennstedt noted that FEA
rules have restricted propane
prices below the equivalent heal-
ing value of other fuels. He said
that gas liquid pricing rules pub-
lished by the FEA on December
24 further discourage recovery
of propane and butane for sale.
As a result, he said, the FEA
issued the emergency refinery
fuel rules limiting the use of pro-
pane and butane as fuel in re-
fineries.
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The Baytown Exxon Club’s
officers for 1975 began the year
operating the club under a new
financing arrangement.
On a two-months’ trial basis,
the club will receive 5 percent of
the gross sales from vending ma-
chines in the plants and the Main
Office and from the mini-cafe-
teria at the Main Office. The
club’s receipts from these sources
will be reduced by the cost of
bottles lost.
Under the new arrangement,
the Exxon Club will be respon-
sible for coordinating operation
and repair of vending machines
in the plants. For service to ma-
chines employees should continue
to call the vendor on extension
2116. Problems with vending
machine service may be referred
to Exxon Club President Leroy
Jennings on extension 3576.
y— /V.
MEeEsE
===============
b-LseNE
Leroy Jennings, ER&E, is this
year’s president of the Baytown
Exxon Club. He was one of 10
officers and committee chairmen
elected al a meeting of the club’s
32 directors held December 19.
A total of 17 new directors
were elecled for two-year terms
by the club membership in an
election held late in November.
These new directors, and groups
they represent, are as follows:
Fred Ernst, Jerry Matula, Jim
Ryan, Leroy Veselka, Troy Sor-
rells, and Ignacio Tamayo, Re-
finery M&C; Perry Beauchamp,
M/C/S; Lillie Lockhart, Refin-
ery Administrative; Ed Malick,
Fuels; Jack Fowler, Specialties;
Charles Whitley, Utilities and En-
vironmental Control.
Also, Norvell Locker, Refinery
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Fred Dennstedt. Exxon USA’s
vice president for refining, has
urged the Federal Energy Ad-
ministration to concentrate on
creating conditions which will
permit the oil industry to meet
the long-term energy needs of the
nation, rather than issuing rules
based on short-term expediency.
Dennstedt testified January 9 at
an FEA public hearing in Wash-
ington, D.C. on an emergency
amendment limiting the use of
propane and butane as fuels in
- refineries.
“The primary intent of the
Emergency Petroleum Allocation
Act was to require equitable allo-
* cation of energy supplies under
shortage conditions such as those
created by the Arab oil em-
bargo,” Dennstedt said. “The
embargo ended 10 months ago,
and energy supplies have been
-C.
5521
Technical; Andy Hoyle, Bay-
town Production; Wayne York,
ER&E; Ivan Burns, Chemical
Plant Technical; Louis Matysiak,
Chemical Plant Process; and
Jack Rogers, Chemical Plant
Mechanical.
Serving their second year on
the board are John Thomas,
Stores; Leonard Mazoch, Pete
Krejci, James Taylor, Frank
2 ■ I■ ■ 1
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"We encourage all employees
to support vending machines and
cafeteria activities,” Jennings
says. “We feel that with the sup-
port of employees, this new
arrangement will provide the
Exxon Club additional income to
improve its operations.”
Income from vending outlets
in the plants will supplement the
club’s receipts from membership
dues, which are S3 per year for
each member. All money received
by the club is used in financing
the wide variety of activities pro-
vided for club members. Em-
ployees of Baytown Exxon in-
stallations are eligible for mem-
bership in the Exxon Club.
The biggest of the activities
sponsored by the club is Exxon
Day, held on a Saturday in May
each year for club members and
their families. This year’s big
family picnic—the 55th for em-
ployees of the Baytown installa-
tions—will be May 3.
At the annual picnic, each
member receives two free plates
of barbecue. Plates for depen-
dents and guests of members are
sold at prices well below the cost
to the club.
Other activities sponsored by
the Exxon Club include several
dances for members each year,
and an in-plant athletic program
that includes Hot Water League
basketball and softball. Several
member clubs partially spon-
sored by the Exxon Club include
the Camera, Tennis, Bridge, and
Pioneer clubs.
In addition, the Bay town
Exxon Club participates with the
Houston Exxon Club in arrang-
ing vacation trips for members
and their families at discount
rates.
Also available to Exxon Club
members are discounts from nu-
merous business establishments
in the Baytown-Houston area.
These include discounts on pur-
chases of a wide variety of con-
sumer goods such as household
appliances and furnishings, jew-
elry, optical equipment, and auto-
mobiles. John Thomas, Participa-
tion chairman, can supply a list
of firms offering discounts. He
can be reached on extension
3281.
Discounts on tickets to some
20 Tercar theaters in the Bay-
town-Houston area have proved
popular during recent years.
Tickets to these theaters, good
anytime, may be purchased at
the Baytown Exxon Credit Union
for 81.25 each. All theaters in
Baytown are part of the Tercar
chain.
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Lee, O. B. Baytown Briefs (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 01, Ed. 1, January 1975, newspaper, January 1975; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1433600/m1/3/: accessed July 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.