The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 91, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 7, 1960 Page: 1 of 18
eighteen pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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The Baytown Sun Invite*
E. G. HENSON
3U» Ashby
to the Brunson Theater to aee
‘UNDER TEN FLAGS'
coupon la rood for two tk-krte when
presented at the Brunson box office.
took
in the
net ac-’-'J
1 Gos-
>-30 and
I Galves-
Ke 45-26
|e 19-18-
ne 26-10
i game,
1 Bud-
; 10
|to their
Hub-
Iwith 5
veil,
and
i had
lied all
1 ot the
had
half
| points
[Ter*
hytown
pr Fiy
stav-
lly for
■at the
>12 at
Ivay in
I points
Ipotots
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Serving BAY-TEX—The Golden Circle of Southeast Texas ;
THE SUN HAS
45.000 READERS
EVERY DAY
)L. 42. NO. 91
TELEPHONE NUMBER: JU 24302
Wednesday, December 7, I960
BAYTOWN. TEXAS
Rve Cents Per Copy
TAGE SET FOR HUMBLE BARGAINING VOTE
★ ★ ★
★ ★ ★
★ ★ ★
★ ★ ★
ir ;. ★ ★
★ ★ ★
★ ★ ★
★ ★ ★
★ * ★
tate Tax On Payroll Earnings Proposed
Latest News
Flashes
UNITED NATIONS, N.Y., • (A?)—The United States de-
randed today that Soviet Delegate Valerian A. Zorin dial
ualify himself as president of the U.N. Security Council
(urine the Congo debate. ,r-.
U. S. Ambassador James J. Wadsworth told the 11-nation
nunril Zorin should vacate the chair because of Die attack*
on the United Nations, Secretary-General Dag Hamiimrskjold
and Congo President Joseph Kasavubu.
NEW ORLEANS <AP)—Window-breaking and a threat
y mail underlined today the continuing bitterness over
chool integration in Ne# Orleans. ^
Vandals hurled two stones through the kitchen window of
he housing project apartment of Mr. and Mrs. James Gab-
rfelle during the night. Police mounted a guard there.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation began investigating
j the “general situation” surrounding the Rev. Lloyd Foreman,
[who reported receiving a threatening letter. Foreman’s house
victim of night-time vandals a day ago.
NEW YORK (AP)—President-elect John F. Kennedy today
| selected Rep. Stewart I’dall of Arizona to be his secretary of
' the interior—the third of the 10 Cabinet posts to be filled for
1th* new administration. v„
< Kennedy said in a statement that the 40-year-old congress-
(man will bring to the position “vigor and imagination,” for
[the important task of preserving and developing "America’*
■ vast and abundant natural resources.”
Sun Spots
iirglory Charge ‘
LY RICHARD Trahan, 29,
as charged in Justice of the
race Walter Queen's court with
urg)ary cif Horace Mann Ele-
mentary School and Documentary
ramtog Co. at 418 S. Pruett
Irosby Game
iUE TO A typographical error,
Uesday.-a lew copies of Hie Sun
wed the Class A semi-final foot-
ill game between Crosby and
hite Oak to be scheduled for
riday. The game will be played
t 7:30 p.m. Saturday at Liber-
chief Better
\YTOWN POLICE Chief Roy
Bontgomery is reported slightly
nproving at Hermann Hospital
i Houston after undergoing sur-
fcery last week. No visitors sl-
owed yet, however. —
\£L
'I
TEMPERATURES are expected
' to drop to the mld-40s tonight
as a cold front moves in. Cloudy
with occasional rain.
Thursday's Tides
GALVESTON TIDES Thursday
will be high at 12:51 aan. and low
at 9:20 p.m.
Employe And
Boss Would
Share Cost
AUSTIN TAP) — The Finance
Advisory Commission today pro-
posed a paiToll earningS TSic To'
provide 8214,967,000 in new money
#for state services during the next
two years.
It labelled the proposed one per
eent levy on payroll earnings as
“growth tax” designed not only
to retire the current genera! fund
deficit blit to take care of future
revenue needs. . ‘
The 36-member commission
named by Gov. Price Daniel sug-
gested Texas needs $106,384,000 in
new money for improvement' of
state services including public
schools and colleges in the next
two years.
It said $83,483,000 is needed for
continuation of state operations at
the present level, and estimated
the general fund deficit at the end
of the fiscal year 1961 will be $70
million compared to $76 now.
The commission of business and
industrial leaders mailed its pro-
posals Tuesday to members of. the
157th LegislatureJyhidx.meetsJan.
lO. John S. Redditt, Lufkin, is
chairman.
The new money would give
school teachers a $400 yearly
raise, the commission said, as
well as other improvements sug-
gested in the Hale-Aikin public
school program.
Yule Program The commission said it would
ROBERT E. LEE Chair will give ,1)0081 factllty Pay,.in, sta}e, caI'
lion*8'tSK S^nndded
rn'ih mt! in ’thp constitutional amendment
towi Kiwams Oub meehng at ^opt^ ^ 195*. expand facilities
Remember Pearl Harbor
Dec. 7,1941—Grim Piece Of History
PEARL HARBOR, Hawaii (AP)
—Hie memory of a grim piece of
history returned today—as it does •
each year—to remind Hawaii arid
the world of a searing lesson writ-
ten in bombs and blood.
Nineteen years ago—Dec. 7,
1941—more than 2,400 sailors, sol-
diers, Marines and civilians died
during the Japanese attack on
Pearl Harbor, called “the day of
infamy" by the late President
Franklin D. Roosevelt.
In the battleship Arizona alone,
1,102 men—from admiral to sea-
man-perished in a few minutes. -•
Those first U. S. dead of World
War II are still entombed in the
sunken hulk in Pearl Harbor's
. depths.
On that Sunday 19 years ago,
Pearl Harbor and Its 90-odd ships
were beginning to shake off the
night's slumber.
On. the northerly side of Ford
Island, in the middle of Pearl
Harbor, was Battleship Row. The
big ships, tied up singly and in<
pairs, were the Nevada, Arizona, '
Tennessee, West Virginia, Mary-
land, Oklahoma and California.
They were the core and backbone
of the Pacific battle fleet.
Out over the sea (he Japanese
air squadrons droned toward their
target. It was a beautiful morn-
ing.
Between 7 and 7:30 a. m. a sol-
dier picked up the approaching
attack force 132 miles at sea on
his search radar at Kahuku, the
northeast tip of Oahu.
He reported the sighting to his
superior.who did nothing because
he thought it was a group of ex-
pected B17s.
At 7:55 a. m. time ran odt.
Plunes came in waves—from the
east over Diamond Head, and
from the north.
They laid torpedoes in the har-
bor and dropped bombs. They
strafed airfields, swooping down
to a few feet from the ground.
The Arizona got it worst of all.
She took a school of torpedoes.
A bomb landed on deck. Flames
shot hundreds of feet into the air.
Rear Adm. Isaac C. Kidd was
killed.
A bomb went down the Ari-
zona’s stack, as some six more
hit the deck. Her magazine ex-
ploded, and 1,102 lives were for-
feit. The tortured Arizona, torn
in half, sank on the spot,
Gen. Emmett O'Donnell Jr., Pa-
cific Air Forces commander, said
in a Pearl Harbor Day state-
ent:
"Nineteen years ago military in-
stallations In Hawaii were the vic-
tims of a surprise attack that
started World War II. The cost of
that encounter was heavy*’ and
some of the scars still remain.
"These scars serve as a con-
stant reminder that we must nev-
er again permit ourselves to be
caught unprepared.”
, t „ / ■ v . I V , : ■
Davis Mountains Area
Struck By Ice Storm
,By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS I deluges in other parts qf the state.
An ice storm struck the Davis1 One man died in a traffic acci-
Mountains area of far West Texasldent on an ice-slick highway.
Wednesday following a day and State Highways 118 and 17 be-
night of snow, freezing rain and i came iced over throughout the
noon Thursday at the Tower.
Hubcaps Stolen
LOYDELL ONKEN of Channel-
view reported to Baytown police
that four hubcaps were stolen
from his car while it was parked
on a downtown parking lot Tues-
day night. ■
of the state hospitals; strengthen
the state prison, water, parks,
state advertising and other pro-
grams.
Half the proposed one per cent
levy upon payroll earnings of
more than $1,000 annually, would
be paid by the worker and half
by the employer.
d Aft
ernoon
From AF Wlrtt
• Church officials blame
Communists tor a shattering
bomb explosion in a Havana
Roman Catholic church whose
pastor is leading critic of Cas-
tro’s regime.
$327,000 For City Funds -
Annexation Final Thursday
Baytown City Council at 7 p.m.
Thursday will hold the final read-
ing of the annexation ordinance
which will take in enough land
and property to yield an addi-
tional $327,000 annually to the
city.
Parts of Humble Oil and Re-
fining Co,, Texas Eastern Trans-
mission Co, and United Rubber
and Chemical Go will be absorbed
into the city by the ordinance.
This is the final act of an agree-
ment reached by company officials
and Mayor R. H. (Red),. Pruett
Drive , and West Miriam will be
opened .
City Manager Le Fevre will in-
troduce two resolutions to trans-
fer money for remodeling the No.
3 fire station on West Main and
for the parking lot being installed
$300,000 out of baianCf.' *-
Three bids to sell the city a
library site write on hand Wednes-
day. Bids will be opened at the
Thursday meeting.
The council rejected all 14
bids at the last council meeting
and instructed City Manager Le
Fevre to readvertise for bids in
an effort to obtain a better library
location. A Sept. 20 library elec-
tion authorized a $350,000 bond
issue by the city to buy a site
lown
YOU ARE SO RIGHT. That was
Grace Gould you saw in Baytown
the other day. She’s visiting Glor-
ia Bruce for a few days
There is some question as to
whether Elaine Brunson would
fjaek up -* *<atemem‘few'%Tdte
about her pep when she was
Elaine Duke. Probably she would
not change it ' ■/:
Jap Bradshaw, just getting over
the seventh game of the World
Series, is beading east for fur-
ther convalescence next month
Wimpy Wismer doing some
ring and doublechecking ...
Yount making a visit to his
raping grounds feat are not
fee shadow of the big oak
,. , In case Charlie Tillery's
were red the other day —
s because some of bis bust
friends were bragging or
us Honeycutt being both 1
bov and an toforma-
vendor. His request will be
near Southern Pacific Railroad
track at Texas Ave.
A request for final approval of
two sections of Glen Arbor sub-
division will be-handed the coun-
cil.
?d passenger train and a loaded
1960-61 city budget was about
Gas Truck. Train Crash
In Nashua. N.H.; 5 Die
r high school basketbt
his 27-year-old wife, Patri-
NASHUA, N.H. (AP)—A crowd- former high school basketball
/star, his 27-year-old wife, Patri-
cia, and their two babies, six-
bottled gas truck collided at
grade crossing today, touching off
an ear-splitting explosion and fire
that killed, five persons and in-
jured more than a dozen others.'
The dead included the truck
driver, his wife and their two
small childrens and one of top
passengers aboard the train, a
Boston and Maine Railroad self-
propelled diesel car bound from
Laconia to Boston.
Bits of the truck, loaded with
small tanks of commercial gas
used by householders for cooking,
were blown in all directions.
and build a library.
Bids will also be opened for
a crawler tractor for the landfill the single-car train-which carried
garbage disposal system to be in- about 40 passengers, some
stalled,soon by the city. The roun-
cil will study bids on a lawn-
mower tractor for Roseland Park.
Bids on fencing city material and
supplies at toe city barn at Lee
were blown in all directions.
The resulting blaze spread into
ed
of
whom had boarded it in Concord
and Manchester.
Police identified toe dead as:
Robert Wrenn, 28, proprietor of
a Nashua bottled gas service and
OCAW OfficerBaBof Underway
Baytown Local 4-333 of the Oil,
Chemical and Atomic Workers
International Union began voting
War On Mi; Prices
Hasn't Reached Here
Baytown Housewives are not
benefiting from fee milk price
Tuesday on officers for toe com
ing year.
Voting will continue Thursday
the final day.
Candidates for president are
Ferd Oyer, light ends depart-
ment, and Louis E. Todd of toe
boilermakers. Cwtgoing president
J. B. Coulter is seeking election
as secretary-treasurer.
Vice presidential candidate* are
C. W. Camp, insulation, and C.
G. Swick, pipe. C. W. Poteet is
_ _ of the city’s discount houses which
iH out to toe last spoon ofl were offering milk at 41 cents a
butta’.
: L. Murphy attending South-
Life Insurance Co. basic
at company's home office
this week. >
Bolin and family return
Dallas where he ha* been
gSSgSfiSrs
market to meet the competition X works
in toe utilities department.
Also to be elected will be ar
alternate recording secretary,
chaplain, guide, trustees, execu-
tive board members and mem-
bers erf the Workmen’s Commit-
tee.
Nominations for the offices were
made in a recent meeting of the
local.
half gallon.
After fee Houston brands were
also offered at 41 cents, the dis-
count houses cut their price to 40
cents a half gallon. The Houston
dairies did the same.
Some observers say fee low
weeks-old Jennifer and 19-months-
old Christopher; and John S. Wil-
der.
Girl Remains
Unconscious;
Wreck Victim
Nearly a month after a tragu
automobik' accident which killed
three members of a Baytown fam-
ily apd later claimed the life of
her mother, 13-year-old Elaine
Kreuzer is still unconscious at San
Jacinto Memorial Hospital.
Doctors say that fee is doing
well, though, and expect her to
recover.
TV tragedy joccurred on * Sun-
day afterhoon, Nov. 13. on High-
way 146 near La Porte. Mr. and
Mrs. Rudolph Ourso and their 10-
year-old son, James Sid Elliot,
were dead on arrival at the hos-
pital.
Five members of Elaine's fam-
ily, the Paul O. Kreuzer* of Man-
vel, near. Alvin, were injured hi
the crash. Her mother, Mrs. Edith
Kreuzer, 34, died two days later.
Kreuzer, 36, received a frac-
tured collar bone. He was released
from the hospital a week after
the accident. Barbara Kreuzer, 8,
went home after about two weeks.
Her injuries included a leg frac-
ture and concussion.
Still In the hospital, also. Is Ken-
neth Kreuzer, 9, who received
fractures of fee arm and leg. He
is in traction. Kenneth may be
able to p hone before Christ-
mai.
The Kreuzer* were returning
home after a visit wife Mrs.
Kreuzer'* family in DoUardsviBe,
near Livingston, when the acci-
dent occurred. The Ourso family
had been to a birthday party for
Mrs. Ourso at Sea brook.
• Legislative probers who
stirred up stream of sensation
in Amarillo last spring shift
their wsr against organised
crime across state to Beaumont.
• Cuban diplomat, Felix En-
rique Hurfado, says in Wash-
ington that Cuban Ambassador
Quin tin Pino Machado threaten-
ed him with death for refusing
to return to Havana.
• Convicted of mistreating
her “sleeping beauty” daughters
by drugging them with barbit-
uates, Lillian Frantantonio of
Cleveland, Ohio, to undergo psy-
chiatric examination before she
la sentenced.
• Trial proceedings continue
in Tyler in case of former
Randall County Judge Roy Joe
Stevens, charged with IS-wets
of misconduct.
• Dallas School Board plans
to authorize attorney to prepare
motion asking (1. 8. Filth Cir-
cuit Court of Appeals to hear
oral arguments in Dallas’ pro-
posed school Integration plan.
• Coast Guard commander
brings possibility of sabotage In-
to proceedings against loading
mate in Houston who Is charged
with negligence In explosion and
tire aboard 88 Amoco Virginia
last year.
• National Council of Church-
es, nation's largest Christian or-
ganization, says United States
may soon have to subordinate
its will to that of United Na-
tions. Delegates urge support tor
strengthening the world body a*
a “power tor peace among the
nations.”
• Faced wtth conflicting rat
ing* by lower courts. Supreme
Court calls for arguments Involv-
ing validity of Sunday closing
laws, commonly known as bloc
Jaws,, hr Mmmrnehmem, Pennsyl-
vania and Maryland.
• New son of President-elect
Mm F. Kennedy to he bap-
tised Thursday In quiet, white-
walled chapel of Georgetown Uni-
versity Hospital.
• Right-wing rebel Gen. Phoo-
mi Nosavsn’s force hi Laos
withdraw IS to 28 mile* sooth
of Namkadinh River and tali
settles on cradal bntfletrsnt.
Hopes revived for rommipftoii orf
pence talk* ts three sided Lao-
tian civil war.
• Premier Khrushchev can-
ed* aD official appointments
due to chest esM. No Indies-
Davis Mountains to the north and
for 20 miles from Alpine In other
directions, Norman Miller, main-
tenance supervisor of the High-
way Department reported.
Ice built up to an inch In thick-
ness to toe area.
Miller said the highways could
be traveled, but unred extrern
caution. Hills and bridges were
being sanded.
Ice covered the ground, trees,
houses and automobiles at Alpine,
but at a late hour had not inter-
rupted utility service.
Snow let up in the Panhandle
after dumping two inches at Du-
mas and an inch at Dalhart.
Streets within Dumas remained
slick, but surrounding highways
were clear.
At dawn toe freezing line
reached as far as Vernon, Abilene
and Fort Stockton.
Dalhart reported the lowest
temperature to toe state with 17.
Other temperatures included
Lubbock 25, Marfa 28, Laredo 43,
Brownsville 67, Corpus Christl 58,
San 'Antonio 45, Austin 41, Dallas
40, Abilene 30 and San Angelo 33.
Tyler underwent a 5.27-toch
soaking in toe 24 hours ending at
6 a.m., with heavy rain at many
other points.
Waco reported 1.71 Inches, Cor-
sicana 3.45, Dallas 1.4)6, Abilene
1.04, Ennis 1.22, Carrollton 1.00,
Trinidad 3.36, Laredo 2.5, Corpus
Christi .77.
A half inch or less fell at Dal-
hart, Brownsville, San Antonio,
Austin. San Angelo, Wichita Falls,
Brownwood, Junction, Mineral
Wells and College Station.
At least one death Tuesday was
blamed on icy highways. And
freezing, misting ram forced can-
cellation of two airplane landings
at Abilene.
" -
m
■J4s - ■ v&x
m
/ ' 'V’gri#
4-HWINNERS
ROBERT BARR, II, Port Matilda, Pa., and Rebecca Amur
Parker, U, Benson, N. C., look over one of the storting silver
sets they receive. as 4-H Club achievement winners, at the
The prise* are awarded by
tney
4-H Clnb Congre- s In Chicago.
President Eisenhower,
Ride Fire Truck,
Help Goodfellows
Previously listed ......
Gene, Gary, Richard
Burrough ..............
Ashbel Smith FTA .....
Priscilla Chib..........
Ann Harrop ............
Anonymous ...........
Total .....
H0t .80
5.00
10.00
s.00
5.00
5.00
...... $129.80
By CHIEF GOODFELLOW
Wooster Volunteer Fire Depart-
ment’s big red truck will be busy
Sunday afternoon, but not for its
usual purpose of putting out fires.
Fire truck ride* will be offered
for Baytown area youngsters, and
all proceeds will go to the Good-
n
Brier has any mare serious
• Bwedtt actress Ingrid Berg-
man returns to Rome where fee
Bved brtofr divorcing Italian
film director Robert Rossellini.
Pina* to spend several day*
vtatttog her three children, now
staying wtth Booaefflto.
Hagtmim S>mt
Invites Readers To Call In Your Christmas
Plans To The Woman's Department.
' PhoneJU 2-8302
.
If you'r* planning « trip or having vissi&rs-
over the holidays, pleas# let us know. The
new* will be included in The Sun'* annuel
Chriitma* Edition.
Also, The Sun Invites children to
write letters to Santa in care of
The Sun. They, too, will ba pub-
lished in The Christmas Edition.
fellow drive. The cost of a ride
is a donation to the Goodfellow
fund, according to Louie M. Bis-
hop, chairman of fee group's pub-
licity committee.
Whether your child wishes to
pay a dime or a dollar, he will
enjoy fee thrill of riding on a
fire truck, and the money will go
to help less fortunate children to
enjoy Christmas,
Should the weather be- rainy
Sunday, the. fire truck rides will
be postponed until, the following
Sunday, Dec. 18. This has been
an annual project of the Woosti
volunteer firemen. Several of the
members will ride on the truck
to insure toe safety of toe child-
ren, so bring them out Sunday
from 1 p.m. on.
About $2,500 is needed to buy
toys, candy, fruits and nuts for
1,000 goodfellow bags which will
be distributed for Christmas day.
And don’t forget to mail to your
Goodfellow contribution to care of
Die Baytown Sun, or to bring it
by The Sun offices at Pearce and
Ashbel.
Listed above are the latest gen-
ermis contributors. Follow their ex-
ample by making your contribu-
tion goon. It doesn’t have to be a
large donation. Any amount will
hehi. ■
Two organizations are among
Wednesday’s contributors. They
are the Ashbel . Smith, PTA aod
toe Priscilla Club. Maybe your
organization would like to give
also. You couldn't find a more
worthy project.
Keep to mind, too, the upcom-
ing events which are being spon-
sored for the benefit of the Good-
fellows. This Friday you can see
the Leslie School of Dancing’s an-
nua! Goodfellow show at 7:30 p.m.
at the Humble Community House.
The program is entitled. “A
Dancer's Christmas.” Admlanon is
a contribution to the Goodfellows.
Refreshments will be served aft-
er the program.
Then there's the Pee Wee Char-
ity Bowl game at 7:30 p.m. Fri-
day, Dec, 16, at Memorial Sta-
dium. Tickets are 50 cents and
25 cent*. Halftime ceremonies by
Horace Maim Junior High and
Bavtown Junior High are planned.
On the same night, Dec. 16, a
Goodfellow Dance will be spon-
sored by fee Baytown Rod. Reel
and Gun Club at fee club build-
ing, 3223 Minnesota. Music by fee
Satellite*, a five-piece group, will
at 7:30 p.m. and last until
igfet Admission will be a
Goodfellow contribution.
Ballot Due
On Thursday
And Friday
Final preparations were made
Wednesday for a bargaining elec-
tion Thursday and Friday tor pro-
duction and maintenance workers
at Humble Oil and Refining Co.’s
Baytown Refinery.
Voters will hjve two choices—
OCAW Local 4-333 or fee Baytown
Employes Federation.
They are now represented by
the Oil, Chemical and Atomic
Workers,international Union,
which won control to a bargain-
ing election Aug. 6-7, 19§9. Pre-
viously, the BEF had represented
them since 1938.
This will be the second try at
deit i'mining which union a ma-
jority of fee employes now pre-
ler. On Nov. 10-11, a similar elec-
tion resulted in a rare tie vote
with 1,146 employes favoring each
side.
There were a total of 2,376 vote*
in the election, including 37 for
no union, 46 spoiled ballots and
one challenged vote. A total of
2,745 employes were eligible to
participate in the election, and
only 369 of them failed to do so.
Since fee tie election, both the
OCAW and BE}' have intensified
their effort* to win support. A
flood of bulletins and letters to
employ** have been Issued-,
with arguments and oounter-
arjuments concerning the meg*
tton of an topsnational union Vito
sus a local union.
National Labor Relations Board
employes from the Houston office,
who gave up one of their legal
holidays to conduct the Nov. lo-
ll election, will again be to charge
of the polling places. John F.
Burst, acting case supervisor from
the office will direct their work.
Six voting places, one more
than to the other election, will be
in operation. They are at the
East Gate, San Jacinto Gate,
Mato Clockhouse, Dock Entrance,?
Old Baytown Ordnance Work* En-
trance and Butyl Entrance.
Voting time is from 6 to 10
a.m. and from 2 to 4:45 p.m. both
days, except in the BOW Entrance
the Butyl Entrance and the San
Jacinto Gate will be open all day
Friday, a payday, lit the first
election, the polls closed at 4:15
p.m.
Ballots will be counted in the
Humble Community House Im-
mediately after the polls close
TURN TO FACE 6
A major bone of contention
between OCAW and the BEF
over filing of report* wtth
the CJS, Department of La-
bor is aired on Page ( in
statement* released by the
contending parties ip the
NLBR election Thursday
and Friday.
and results will then be announced.
A new system, which allows em-
ployes to choose their polling
place, is expected to result in
ic'.ve” bellots being challenged. A
vote is challenged when it is cast
r o'J- lhan the assigned poll-
ing place: This necessitates a
c.ieck Oi the polling lists to be
sure feat the person did not vote
at another p°Uin8 place, also.
In the first election, more than
a 100 ballots were challenged. All
except one were added to the
it after a check of fee rec-
ords.
To win the bargaining election,
one side must receive a dear ma-
jority of the votes Cast. In the
first election, it was necessary to
poll more votes than the other
side and fee votes Jar m. rr'-OT.,
combined. The “no union” dwlce
was eliminated from the ballot for
the run-off vote." ,
•hopping days toft
BSE CHRISTMAS SEALS
FIGHT TB
Xr,„:
L.
- .’■jti
I
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 91, Ed. 1 Wednesday, December 7, 1960, newspaper, December 7, 1960; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1044393/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.