The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 96, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 20, 1991 Page: 5 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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THE BAYTOWN SUN Wednesday, February 20, 1991
a week’s
post. Less
rferted for
tin going
1 proccss-
pment.
boarded a
di Arabia,
1 the sche-
tainty and
and wait”
ict. He is
l all those
aps. .
lr concern
ea, it just
te in that
m several
i wife and
to Hunts-
rris came
; in Janu-
ust before
nurse, Vvc
bill up to
t Fon Sill,
; I wanted
t. I could
him to be
i away, 1
' God...”
ce major.
ihere Bar-
it was a
public of
called it
mes back
dcst little
\ ■■
house he
ent Place,
y’s mem-
Republic
year won
militia.
I as com-
ss forced
rea to his
Jr., was
me of his
lalveston.
umet, are
netery in
of Sher-
)r of The
and U.S.
1 Saddam
r because
jividuals.
)um Sad-
iture —
l assur-
: in the
am Ku-
icre.
1 to the
Ives,
odshed
it is for
to take
ce Sad-
de, and
resolu-
loving
and col-
r has re-
il politics
designer
66. Jazz
y Sainte-
ss Sandy
ass is 44.
3. News-
tie of
ce to
4:16
SCHOOL MENUS
. . THURSDAY
BAYTOWN
Breakfast: Sausage link, pan-
cake with syrup, banana half and
milk.
ELEMENTARY
Lunch: Lasagna, Italian veg-
etables', tossed salad with ranch
dressing, cherry crisp and milk.
SECONDARY
Lunch: Chicken fried steak
with gravy, barbecue sausage
links, hamburger, cheeseburger,
french fries, mashed potatoes
with gravy, broccoli blend, yel-
low squash, fruit cocktail, tossed
salad, hot rolls, milk, punch and
tea.
BARBERS HILL
Breakfast: Enchilada, juice
and fnilk.
Lunch: Enchilada,' Spanish
. rice, beans, lettuce and tomato
salad, Mexican com bread, fly-
<s ing saucer cookie and milk.
DAYTON
Breakfast: Apple kolache,
\ fruit juice and milk.
Lunch: Hamburger or bar-
becue on bun, french fries, let-
tuce and pickles, fruit cobbler
and milk.
Army planners keep
Murphy’s Law in mind
Wu? ROMA WAREHOUSE JfA,
Bavtown BEVERAGE MART, INC. SaS?
422-6080 Garth Rd. & Park St. Feb. 2o??3D 1991
WASHINGTON (AP) — A
lot would have to go right, in-
credibly right, for U.S. and al-
lied forces to achieve quick vic-
tory in a ground offensive
against Iraq, military analysts
say.
Amty planners like-to say in
preparing for any battle they
keep uppermost in their minds
the likely role of Murphy’s Law:
anything that can go wrong,
will. They say they plan for a
worst-case scenario to minimize
ugly surprises.
x On the harsh terrain and forti - /
Tied beaches that would bp the'
battlefield for allied and Irabi
alii
g<V
land forces,, plenty could gfy
wrong. But if the allied armies
arc as prepared as they say, and ,
Iraq’s forces are as heavily da-
maged as the Pentagon claims,
the expected glitches might be
only minor setbacks.
The best-case scenario from
the allied soldiers’ viewpoint
would have Iraq starting a with-
drawal from Kuwait before the
anticipated ground campaign be-
gins. But if the ground fighting
starts in earnest, the best the al-
lied forces probably could hope
for would be an Iraqi capitula-
tion witlfin a couple of weeks.
Here arc some of the things
that would have to go. right to
achieve that quitk victory:
—The allied forces gain the
benefit of “tactical surprise”
against Iraq by deceiving Iraqi
commanders and intelligence
units about the main point oj
points of attack. In U.S. Army
war-fighting doctrine, this is an f
essential element. . r- . 1
—U.S. armored ancl air as-
sault units make full use of their
extensive training in fighting
under the cover of darkness. The
Army claims its night-vision
goggles and thermal imaging
sights for Mi-Al tanks and
Bradley infantry fighting vehi-
cles give it a night-fighting ca-
pability that the Iraqis can’t
match. The Iraqis have shown,
however, that they can man-
euver at night.
—Allied communications
hold up. It’s an accepted fact,
that communications links be-
tween commanders and their,
troops are one of the most vul-
nerable aspects of war. ■ *».
-^Thc weather cooperates.
Debilitating sandstorms can hit
suddenly.
BRANDY
PfflEBlDENTE BRANDY 1.75.
.am 19.75
RON RICO RUM 1.75........
.am 13.99
mrrnivwm
SEAGRAM'S 71.75...............
.am 13.75
JIM BEAM 1.75._........
... 8m14.95
W.L WELLER 1.75................
.am 18.75
GILBEY'S GIN 1.75...............
.am 13-59
VODKA
MC CORMICK VODKA 1.75 ao»’8.95.t
KEGS
MLLER UTE or BUD
<6 sal. naMM*! $43.00
SCOTCH
J.W. RED SCOTCH ns.....86° 26.95
COURVOSIER V.S 750 ml b<H8.95
CHARRO TEQUILA, 175 80° 10,49
SEABASTIANI
WHITE ZINFANDEL i s..
3.95
COORS REG. OR LITE
SUITCASE 24-12 OZ. CANS...
10.89
CHECK OUR
EVERYDAY LOW PRICES
ON BEER & CIGARETTES
Ste-phen V. Day
Po-di'a-trist, n.
Rep. Fields appointed
to House committees
WASHINGTON — U.S. Rc».
Jack Fields has received his sub-
committee assignments for"the
102nd Congress, and he says
one of those assignments in par-
- tieular will allow him to help en-
sure that the Houston Ship
Channel remains a 'safe and
himtd-frcc waterway that will
coTOhu'c to benefit the Houston
area, economy.
Fields will continue to serve
on the House Energy and C0fc-
mcrcc Committee and the House
Merchant Marine and Fisheries
Committee,<"but there are some
changes in his subcommittee as-
signments within those
committees.
0n the Energy and Commerce
Committee, Fields will serve on
these subcommittees in the new
Congress:
•Health and the Environment
— handles issues associated
with public health, hospital con-
struction,; mental health and re-
search, “biomedical programs
and health protection in general,
including" Medicaid and national
health insurance, foods and
drugs, drug abuse, and the Clean
Air Act and environmental pro-
tection in general, including the
Safe Drinking Water Act.
•Telecommunications and Fi-
nance — handles issues asso-
ciated with interstate and foreign
telecommunications including,
but not limited to, all telecom-
munication and information
transmission by broadcast, ra-
dio, wire, microwave, satellite,
or other mode; and securities
and finance.
•Transportation and Hazard-
ous Materials — handles issues
associated with railroads, rail-
road retirement and railway la-
bor, regulation of travel and
tourism, regulation of commer-
cial practices (the Federal Trade
Commission), all matters per-
taining to inland waterways,
solid waste, hazardous waste
and toxic substances, noise pol-
lution control, time and motor
vehicle safety.
On the Merchant Marine and
serve on these subcommittees in
the new Congress:
•Merchant Marine — handles
issues associated with sabotage
laws, cargo preference, ports
and port matters, including
deepwater ports, foreign flag
passenger ships, international
maritime activities, intcrmodal
transportation, marine insurance,
maritime statistics, maritime
aids and technology, maritime
training, merchant marine offic-
ers and seamen, and many mea-
sures related to the regulation of
common carriers by water.
•Coast Guard and Navigation
— handles issues associated
with the U.S. Coast Guard, in-
cluding its life-saving service,
light houses, light ships, ocean
derelicts, communications, radar
and other aids to navigation; re-
gistration and licensing of ves-
sels, including small boats, navi-
gation and the laws relating
thereto, including pilotage, reg-
ulation of recreational boats and
their operation, inspection of
merchant vessels, lights and sig-
nals, life-saving equipment and
fire protection on such vessels;
rules and international arrange-
ments to prevent collisions at
sea, enforcement of laws and
treaties and marine pollution
control, regulation of the trans-
portation and storage of lique-
fied natural gas and other vola-
tile gases, the U.S. Coast Guard
Academy, the Panama Canal
and the maintenance and opera-
tion of the Canal consistent with
the treaty with Panama and the
implementation legislation
enacted pursuant to that treaty,
and interoceanic canals
generally.
concerned with the diagnosis
and/or medical, surgical or *4
physical treatment of the
diseases, injuries and
Dr. Day is qualified and experienced in the elective
and reconstructive surgical procedures for the foot.
He specializes in the diagnosis, treatment and
prevention of all foot and ankle problems for all ages.
Call for an appointment
(713) 427-1802
1610 James Bowie Drive, Suite A-102
(next to Baytown Medical Center)
■ Diplomate, American Board of Podiatric Surgery
■ Fellow, American College of Foot Surgeons
it
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• -»
\llenuis,' lrb<m Company, i "7 ■-
wh moved their otttas to-
l-iv-rTri----'■— v-— -——— --■-—------
.
here
r> pi ENGLISH
IvuJ, Suite I). BrtVtlHV!'
i'Uv't00F«i\ w!V4?N-j
<"'S 7* Mendolovit /
AUcmus
. Urban
Company
ft IT'S MY CHILD'S GRADE,
BUT I FEEL LIKE THE FAILURE.
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FOR INFORMATION CALL: 421-2603
1501 1-10 East, Suite 126
Baytown, Texas
(Lone Star Building)
| J Sylvan Learning Center
[ I ielping kids do better.
■
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READING ■ MATH ■ WRITING ■ M l l)\ SKILLS
SCHOOLRFADINKSS ■ (OI IK.F PRF.1*
I l’Rhl* ■ AK.FBKA B BK.INNIM. RFADIM.
■
■
Homeless man
with 9 cent$
returns $29,200
ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) — For
a few minutes, Darrel Teel, a
homeless man, could include a
bundle of cash among his
worldly possessions: a piece of
carpet, a tom tarpaulin, a cooler,
a radio without an antenna and
nine cents.
Teel admits he was tempted
to keep all those $100 bills that
'he found Sunday night. He
didn’t know it then, but the total
was $29,200.
“1 carried them bills around
for about 20 minutes,” said Teel,
58. “It was more money than I
ever saw in my life. I thought,
—m-get-me_a damn suit. I’ll get
my hair cut.’”
But he said he just couldn't.
“I was too afraid of God.”
Teel, who lives outside near a
lake, had bought a six-pack of
beer and was looking for ci-
garette butts to smoke when he
came upon the neatly packaged
envelopes of cash Sunday night.
He had 9 cents in his pocket
when he walked more than a
mile to the Orange County shcr-
i iff’s office to hand over the
cash.
Sheriff’s officers said the mo-
ney was the life savings of an
elderly woman who worried that
people- would now knuw how
much money she had.'
She gave Teel $200 for re-
turning her savings, and he spent
$40 of it Monday on “boOze and
food.” And whole cigarettes, not
just the butts.
Family To Family Service Since 1889
EARTHMAN
X^FUNERAL directors
“For over a hundred years, the Earthman family has been
helping other families through difficult times with pride, dignity,
and sensitivity.”
Since 1889, when J. B. Earthman first began helping his neighbors with family funerals, he set a
pattern of concerned care that has been handed down through four generations. The Earthman family
still takes pride in serving families with the sensitivity of neighbors and the competence of dedicated
professionals. It’s what you would naturally expect from Baytown’s most respected funeral directors.
(Seated) Jane Touchet, Lannle Earthman, Blanche Earthman, Anita Wood, Betty [
Cheryl Falk. (Standing)'Jo Hastings, John Earthman, Jim Earthman, LaRoy Maste
Bruce Earthman, Gary Anderson, Jack Rachele, Bill Earthman, Lydia Munos, W
Barton, Paul Touchet.
ion, Pau,
"““We’re here when you heed us.
Just like we’ve been since 1889.
■BAYTOWN CHAPEL
3919 Garth Rd.
422-8181
MEMORY GARDENS CEMETERY
8624 Garth Rd. 421-1-288
H GHLANDS CHAPEL
203 Battlebell
425-2216
•s,
PRtce™
NONE OVER-
I
■
I
I
fi
9 WEST-NATUGAUZER.
5ELBy»REDCROSS*GW.ICO
fir-tCO's MORE./
I VISA ARETHA? TER CARD DISCOVER
J 4537 GARTH f _____
■ %ARKR (Kroger__420-3344 _
■ Center) R ■
bay to Wo sheltering arn^s
0PEN ARMS 4 HELPING HANDS FOR THE HOMELESS
^ .* 422-0448
r J ■■■ ' ■ ■ 7
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Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 96, Ed. 1 Wednesday, February 20, 1991, newspaper, February 20, 1991; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1051382/m1/5/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.