The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 217, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 5, 1962 Page: 1 of 10
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fc.
V.
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sections of McNair aijjrttiff *
Highway 73.
In Highlands, water tewed «
the entrance to Seven’s Grocery
on Main and Wallisvilte Road, ana
some intersections were impaat*
able until the water receded.
There were no reports at Bee-
sons bdng evacuated from their
homes.
Several intersections were aim
flooded in Craigmont Place oa
Decker Drive, but no homes were
reported flooded. At one «f the
intersections, thgwater was top
deep lor a car to ford, and an
emergency vehicle of Wooster Firw
Department drowned out aa it at-
tempted to come through. How-
ever, the occupants got toe truck
started and dkinThave to be tow-
ed out..
that in
Sun Carrier Jot McChasnoy Wades
To DoHvar Paper In Craigmont
1,378 Attending Summer
Classes In Schools, LC
said the rain was much heavier
than at any time during Hurri- - j
cane Carla. . I
Most of the intersections east
from Sjolander Road to Four Cor-
ners were flooded and some were
impassable for several hours attar
the rain. S
Rainfall in Baytown » tar this
month totals 2.75 inches. On June
1, .10 of an inch was recorded;
.35 on June 2; ,25 on June 3, and - I
two indies on June 4. j
Several chickens were reporte!
to have drowned hi the McNair 1
. area, i ]
fun ion a 1 ait porx, mey I
1 reach that velocity in the Bay- |
town area. There was no lug 1
ahd no tornadoes died. j
Little if any street damage was 1
reported to Baytown, but Pub- j
Baytown’s summer school crowd Haskel, Kenneth Marshall, Oar-
•eludes 1,378 students ranging ence Schulte, John Guemple, No-
bm pre-schoolers through junior lan M{a) ^ Guy
r^met ration an tar Wa»™
Gregory, Pauline Kopecky, Paul
primary election today.
Two key questions awaited an
answer in the former vice presi-
dent’s quest for the GOP nomin-
ation for governor against a hard-
charging conservative candidate
who calls his followers "the new
breed of California Republicans.”
1. Could the party’s 1960 presi-
dential candidate overcome the
vigorous challenge by a political
upstart, Assemblyman Joseph C.
shows a total of 671 students,
largest of the summer school to-
J, JTOUU_____.
Price, Milton Johnson, 1
lette. Joe Gilliland, Bel
kowitz, Embry Wilson,
Niril, George Nelson, B
(See SUMMER, Page 2)
tals. Robert E. Lee High School
ha* 355 students; Horace Maim
Junior High has 225j*Anson Jones
Elementary, 76; and DeZavala’s
preschool English class, SL
Summer school to Junior high
and elementary levels is conduct-
velfare of all persons concerned.
"We’re certainly not de-rating
tnyonris religion to taking this
lotion,” Trustee Beavers said.
‘Very Serious study ha* been »v-
■n this problem by members of
he board, and I’m sure we ail
Cel that toe right of all the pep-
ed on a remedial basis, Reading
and arithmetic are taught to ele-
mentary schooL Teachers at An-
CTIY MANAGER and Mrs. J. B,
LeFevre will leave next Monday
on a three-week vacation-that will
take them first to Abilene, where
LeFevre will attend a city man-
agers’ convention, and later up
east into Tennessee and toe Caro-
linas — maybe on to New York
and Washington, depending on
JOSEPH SHELL
pie to the factor we wwt eon#
^Trustee Stark said that his ate
Jones are Mootezc Botkins
U/rwl tt? f Hop.
U te Oamtorj prindla!.
ZRl'il&S&i
e Higby and Claud Muston
Works Director W. C. <1
antham said Ferry Road
be barricaded because of I
iters from Cedar Bayou Stn
AtSMS?
May Building Permits Total $741,583
......-
gft wss
Baptist Church, $65,000; R. V. R. Irons, addition to reside
aZT***.' _______’ nr. cAn. d tTOrt. r V Pnrlrjsr new 1
(See SCHOOL,
of incum-
■ -
bents are
department of toe
vtsiffA
>ly in hto final preelection
ment. -t> ‘' .
SaSSiS
.-raww
t whether he would win but,
MV much.
are teught in JPhtorWgh-
aremCT Ses*
neyL.9
of the ci
J. B. to
Jerry
ated from i
ChA favire Fyjri i
i VIfH JCITlVv LAwll j
I
from toe University
Jerry has accepted a p
mjfa:
T^srsa
• church
of toe
t 0:30 p.m. June 1
Ail applicants for
§•*> it
f^Cis, mif
at Houston’s St. Luk
where he underwent 1
and to now to a cast.
■I "Hus f
Jk***OKx§*
Itwl
The Sun Invites
JOANNA ETHRIDGE
814 Williams
To The Brunson Theater To See
•CAPE FEAR’
This eoupoi
presented a
at the Brunson box office.
®lif latjtnum Srat
Serving BAY-TEX—Th« Golden Circle of Southeast Texas
YOUR HOME
NEWSPAPER
VOL. 43, NO. 217
TELEPHONE NUMBER; 5824302
Tuesday, June 5, 1962
BAYTOWN, TEXAS
Nre Cents Nr Copy
mya&g
Wfi? «•. vfp|
wihv^auMteteMi
Vzk X
Bam Mud
Wtimm
H / SM
Thit It Louise Street In Craigmont Place On Decker Drive. No l^omes
Were flooded But Intersections Were Impassable
Water Entered Several Homes In The McNair Community And Most
Intersections Were Under Water, Somu Impassable
On# Of McNair’s Main Streets Was flooded And Water Lapped At
Doorsteps Of Homes On Both Sides Of Street
OUTLYING AREAS FLOODED DY HEAVY RAIN
Spots |
GOP Speaker
TONY FARRIS, Republican can-
didate for Congress, District 8,
will speak at 7:30 p.m. Thursday
at the Baytown Chamber of Com-
merce Building. Everyone inter-
ested in hearing him speak is in-
vited. Farris will be running
against incumbent Democrtic
candidate Albert Thomas in the
November general election.
Swimming Classes
LEE COLLEGE will offer recrea-
tional swimming c'asses from 6:30
p.m. to 8 p.m. Mondays and
Thursdays at the college pool. Any
adult interested may sign up for
the classes. The fee will be $5 for
a six-week period.
Corps Sets Meet
MEMBERS OF the Baytown
Emergency Corps will meet at
7 p.m. Tuesday at the corps barn.
All members are urged to be
present.
Cadets To Meet
BAYTOWN CIVIL Air Patrol Ca-
det Squadron will meet at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday at Baytown airport.
Public information officer Mary Tr„„-i
Ogden said members are urged ,ravei '-,|UD lo meeT
to attend and visitors will be
welcomed. ,* 7
Gardeners Meet
DIRT GARDENERS Hodfculture
Club will meet at 9:30 a At. Wed-
nesday at the home of Mrs. C. H,
Tipton, 2006 Wright, with Mrs. Ol-
lie Gay Pelly as co-hostess.
League Begins
TOE WEDNESDAY
women's Coffeebreakers _
league wig begin its summer
tog action at 9:15 a.m. Wedrj
at Bay Lanes. Any team
dividual interested should?
BA Degree
VON L. EVANS, son of Mr.
Mrs. Don L. Evans, 1421 Edis
has received his BA degree fr<
Sam Houston State, College
Huntsville and has accepted a pos-
ition as sales-service engineer with
Baroid Co.
* >- to to
Weather And Tides
NO CHANGE. Partly cloudy,
warm and scattered showers
through Wednesday.
GALVESTON TIDES Wednesday
will be high at 8:20 a.m.
Around
IT own>N
, „ 2 w. fetoI tm
program of two films will be pro
sented by Sabena Belgian World
Airlines. The public to invited.
School Bids Dim
special
e Supt
to
lor
OUR
WORLD
TODAY
• Secret Army Organization
orders new wave ot terror toil
only two killings reported to
Algiers.
• Treasury Secretary Doog
las Dillon says administration
proposer, lop - to . bottom re-
duction to Income tax rates for
enactment by Congress next
year.
0 Stock market pulls out of
early retreat and posts some
good gains.
Eondren Foundation. ? v.
L Newborn* adds
Orleans’ only (too daily
School Board Amends
Immunization Policy
The School Board of Trustees
Monday night amended the j dis-
trict's immunization policy. *
One trustee, Karl Opryshek, ab-
stained from the voting after the
board declined to accept his rec-
ommendation that consideration
be given to exempting children
from immunization
grounds.
The vote to favor of amending
the policy to require all school
personnel, as well as students, to
be immunized against poliomye-
litis was six for.
Polio was added to the list of
REL Anticipating
Enrollment
mi
ot. .toned On Page Two)
• Samuel
New
newspapers t(
publishing em
more than IS! mHOen, believ-
ed to be record amount for
newspaper property. -
• Soviet government follows
up sharp price increase on meat
and butter with orders to fisher-
men to catch more fish for So-
viet population.
• Angry mob lynches police
official in Naraujal, Ecuador, af-
ter the officer killed four per-
sons In drunken shooting spree.
to set a new r&
with an estiitthtt r
entering the dom
opens. Last year,
rolled at the '
■ School officiate sail
300 more students wi
tog die school than|
for two
new
Robert L.
at Robert
.Ramey,
i .Umar
religious other immunization requirements
by Trustee A. R. (Von) Stark, who
made the motion to amend the
policy.
The amended policy states that
immunizations will be required for
smallpox within the last five
years, diphtheria and whooping
cough boosters within the last two
years before starting school, and
a completed series of polio vac-
cinations. A complete record
signed by a physician or public
health nurse must be submitted at
the time of registration.
The only exception allowed by
“ for medical rear
*• "* >i <* *.v ;
said W
)l boards
upon religkws
rights guaranteed by the constitu-
tion by requiring immunization
against communicable diseases.
He said toe Texas Supreme Court
had sustained rulings to this ef-
fect by lower courts.
Some school districts to Texas
■'•v-,: elsewhere,^eatemr f t’ dents on
■nuimted at REL tote ’ktoeir 'tor i con-
and estimated that itw«f*f|CE$ IN THIS EARLY AMERICAN rf-Spt’ Ante
SWSBSTt LIVING ROOM GROUP - „
SdtoR board members Middox-Jasoer'1 are the ltf%o f this fine living room tyjT*
night authorized Supt. Georg<®U 9*? Brovlfi*s,o me ical\cha.r, two Jaipur end )mmend
Gentry to conduct interviews witoMr cotfe#vwl, ev^wHlie lamps. »•*„ J<tw ovrever,
prospective teachers for the six V; u teach, ji ^ OKfci > % iWm than
11 Carver orsut s. ,e«tts iu the school
W ^ * .Jutct at the most would be un»
, ’ _i. _ v able to take immunization, may-
be no more than one or two.
Trustee L. D. Victory offered an
amendment to Stark’s motion add-
ing tetanus to toe list of required
immunizations but it was not in-
cluded because other members of
the board said they felt tetanus
was not contagious and that the
primary aim of the board was to
protect the school population
against communicable diseases.
Board members, including Pres-
ident ,J, T. Horeczy, Knox %
Beavers, Clifton Adams «sd
Stark, emphasized that the board
was not being arbitrary in require
tog all students to be immunized.
positions. Positions (yen will be I Carver
? f .::i
Highlands,
McNair Are
Hardest Hit
A seven and oneMf inch rate,
described as much heavier than
a.m. and 2 p.m. Monday, noocBDC
some homes, many streets ani
intersections.
Hardest hit by wind residents
described as a cloudburst were
toe McNair - Highlands areas
where a number of residences had
as much as an inch of water in-
side. Water " ’
steps of other
outbuildings.
1 in
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 217, Ed. 1 Tuesday, June 5, 1962, newspaper, June 5, 1962; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057191/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.