The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 248, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 10, 1962 Page: 1 of 10
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The Sun Invitee:
CLAUDIA BALL
Ohannelview
To The Bronson The.tt-r To 1
TOUCH OF MINK’
This coupon is rooO tor two tickets
the Brai
presented at the Bronson box office.
(Ultr iaijtmmi §mt
NEWSPA
Sx ■ 1
Serving SAT-TEX—TH* Golden Circle of Southeast Texas
VOL. 43, NO. 248
TELEPHONE NUMBER; 582-8302
Tuesday, July 10, 1962
BAYTOWN, TEXAS
Five Cents Par Copy
-;x
1962-’63 Budget Eyed
School Boari
Reduce Spending
Supplies For
Schools Cost
540,950.43
circle
spon- \
1 Gun
fS
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? catch-
itfishing
luch on
on sand
slow,
ig good,
best at
s king-
igs and
kjngfish
h some
of the
earing
Jinary
t of an
ittery,
ig aid /
, with /
sartip.
i curi,
The School Board of Trustees Ial standards," Board President
agreed without taking a vote on a J. T. Horeczy said,
proposed resolution at a regular "Every time we lose anem-
meeting Monday night to cut the | ploye, we. should look twice before
cost of school operations wherever replacing him. That's what every-
possible without impairing edu- one else is doing," Horeczy went
cational standards.
The board declined to adopt a
resolution setting a goal of a 10
per cent reduction in the cost of
all ‘items, except salaries and
fixed charges, during the. 1962-63
budget year. It was offered by
Trustee Karl Opryshek, who
pointed out that closer considera-
tion of budgeted items might en-
able the board to effect' some
'economies. For example he said,
the number of telephones in
schools might be reduced.
"I would be in agreement with'
the intent of cutting costs of op-
erations wherever we can and
when it wouldn’t impair education- tent’’ of the proposed resolution.
Led by Of '
on. "I believe weVe going to have' toiy and Stark; the school dis-
to find some money for some trict’s auditor. Gregg Waddiil of
teachers’ pay and we might do it
by cutting expenses wherever we
nan »
Supt, George H. Gentry-said he
felt Opryshek’s motion was pre-
mature “until we have had time
to present the facts.” He was re-
ferring to annual studies by the
board prior to preparation of the
budget.
Trustees Clifton Adams
Knox T. Beavers were absent.
The board will hold-"a prelimi-
11 bids on school supplies rec-
ommended for acceptance by Supt.
George H. Gentry were approved
by the Board, of Trustees at a
meeting Monday night. Purchases
totaled $40,950.43.
Bids on custodial supplies^ total-
ing $6,916.77, were accepted
HAS NEW IDEA
IN BERLIN
for the board to pass a resolution.
However, he and other board
members agreed with the “in-
| Sun Spots
Boot Stolen
FORMER MAYOR R. H. Red
Pruett, 612 W. Gulf, owner of wiu ^ held from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m.
Pruett Construction Co., reported Wednesday at Cedar Bayou Meth-
the theft of a mahogany 11-foot, - -
six-inch racing boat from his gar-
age. The boat, valued at $375 has
“Miss Gippo" painted on the side
and carried the number B-16.
Furniture Bids
THE BAYTOWN City Council’s
Library bid committee, composed
of Councilmen James M. (Jim)
Bryan and W. L. (Dub) Ward and
City Librarian Henry Blasick,
were to meet at Matheme’s at 1
Bp.m. Tuesday to tabulate bids on
furniture on the new Sterling Mu-
nicipal Library.
Awards Night
THE ANNUAL Awards Night Ban-
e.
R
?i
1962
MB.
quet will be held at 7:30 p.m.
friday' at Barbers HiJ High
School. The public is invued, ac-
cording to Supt. W. C. Under-
wood.
Sunfish Regatta
CASA MARE Girl Scout Camp
July 20 will be the scene of a
Junior Sunfish Regatta. A skip-
"—’ meeting will be held at 9:30
pers
a.m. and the first, race at 10 a.m.
It will be for girls and boys ages
18 and under. Interested persons
may call Rose Cbrder at La Porte,
LE 9-2181, or Ed DeJon, Houston,
MO 4-2312.
.ice Cream Supper
A CAKE AND ice cream supper
odist Church.
Houston, underwent qn hour-long
grilling about accounting proced-
ures. He was questioned, mainly
by Opryshek, about the method of
handling feed assets in the
school audit
Opryshek said he understood
from an explanation in the audit
that- the school district does not
have a system of recording the
disposition "of fixed assets. For ex-
LATE
NEWS
AUSTIN (APT
Kecsee today of driving a stolen
auto across state lines, thus re-
jecting his claim that he was
acting ad an agent of the Cen-
tral Intelligence Agency.
otherwise disposed of, the final
disposition is not reflected in the
audit.
In reply to a question as to
whether he considered this "good
accounting practice," Waddiil said
he did not but that an accounting
of the disposition of fixed assets
was not required by the state and
that few, if any, other school dis-
tricts accounted for them in their
audits. He said it was impractical
from the standpoint of cost to set
up a system that would reflect
the final disposition of feed as-
sets, but observed that the Texas
Education Agency probably would
get around to requiring it in the
future.
“What worries me,” Opryshek
a
vvuai wwuicb vpjouvn
said, "is that we are charged with
the obligation of protecting capi-
tal assets, and how can we con-
scientiously fulfill this obligation
to the taxpayers if we don’t know
what they (the assets) are."
“It would be an extremely ex-
jury convicted Sgt. Bobby Joe ords of such assets until such
★ ★ ★
time as you are required to do
by the state. It would take
many man-hours and require con-
siderable expense,” Waddiil said.
Hie fixed or capital assets of
the school district are carried on
the books and reflected in the
audit on an historical, or original,
PBCOf, Tex. (AP) - A new Op.yshek
grand- jury *u quietly set to ual system
work bora today, P«*
the (angled
delve Mat
indicted
Estes.
a goid-
anac-
system that would show
MM* feed
for the Blind, Lone Star Brush
Co. and Southwestern Paper Co.
These included paper towels, tri-
let'tissue, tile cleaner, wax, dis-
infectant, brushes, mop sticks and
mop heads. ’•. ..........
4 contract for the annual clean-
up, repair and maintenance of
typewriters and adding machines
during the 1962-63 school year
was awarded to the Baytown Type-
writer Exchange, which bid $6.50
each on manually - operated typer
writers and adding machines, and
$13. on electric typewriters
adding machines.
Contracts for printed forms used
by tile school district wiere award-
ed to Baytown Printers, $279.45;
Boyer Printing, $439.55; Federal
Envelope Co.; $318.38, and Sex-
ton’s Printing Co., $183. Total:
$1,220.38. Some of the firms sub-
mitting bids did not complete
them and one firm bid on an all-
or-nothing basis,
A contract to furnish drums and
cases fob1 the Lee Brigadiers was
awarded to Chet’s Music Shop of
Baytown on a total low bid of
$2,178.20.
Art supplies will be bought from
three bidders — American Desk
Manufacturing Co., $1,103.34; Bay-
town Blueprint- Co., $809.08, and
Texas Art Supply Co., $829.74. To-
tal of all bids: $2,742.16.
. Office supplies totaling $10,132.95
will be purchased from:
1. Benson Carbon and Ribbon
Co.. $1,206.49.
- 2. Carpenter Paper Co,, $2,-
217.07. : v
3. Ditto, foe., $71.70.
4, Frankel Carbon and Ribbon
Co., $206.40.
*5. Houston Paper Co., $3,013.
i Matheme’s, $1,408.77. ■"
7 Sexton’s Printing Co., $504.60.
8.
-..Inc., $95.64.
, 9 Stationers, Inc., $547.65.
Ifl. Wilson Stationery and Print-
Threat Of War
More Ominous'
MOSCOW (AP) — Premier States, said the Soviet Union has
Khrushchev declared today that
the war threat over Berlin has
become "ever more ominous" and
proposed that Western troops
there be replaced with a garrison'
of Norwegian-Danish or Belgian-
BULLETIN
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
United States disclosed today
that it has already rejected the
latest public proposal by Soviet
Premier Khrushchev for getting
United States, British and
French troops out of West Ber-
lin. *V
developed
and decla
an antimissile missile
ared Western "aggres-
sors” would perish in a- nuclear
inr.-. .....__L 1.,.
.vhrushchev denounced the cur-
rent series of American nuclear
tests as a “challenge to mankind”
and said further improvement qf
weapons by the Communist coun-
tries was now an "unavoidable
, >»
5*
BilUe Sol be set up, but no definite orders
be set up. but no detail
(See SCHOOLS, Page 2)
Dutch troops plus Czech and Po-
lish forces. . . .V ■
The proposal was made after he
had claimed much more powerful
weapons than those of the United
No More Classes
Held At Baytown
Bementary Sdiool
San Jacinto and Travis
mentary Schools this fall
absorb students who have been 0mes^NATO”
o Vlomontnnr 8reSS1Ve IOfCeS OI 1XA1U.
attending Baytown Elementary
School, Supt. George H. Gentry
said Monday night at a school
board meeting.
Baytown Elementary will be con-
verted to office space. John M.
Smith - Corona Merchant, Stuart, director of curriculum, and
W. W, Brawn, director of visual
- ,,, have their offlSSsJtati
at u>e Bay I own Ete-
necessity.
He spoke on the second day of
a World Peace Congress in the
Kremlin. About 2,000 delegates
from 118 countries are attending
It was the first time the Rus-
sians have proposed posting forc-
es of the smaller European Com-
munist and Western powers in
a
mm
West Berlin in place of the Amer-
ican, British and French garri-
sons.
Thfr new plan obviously was an
effort to get the big powers out of
the way in Berlin and leave the
Communists a freer hand.
Proposing the substitution of
troops, Khrushchev said: "If they
don’t agree to Norwegians and
Danes, then let it be Belgians and
Dutch.”
Khrushchev said "the hotbed of
war danger in the heart of Europe
is becoming ever more ominous"
in Berlin.
West- Germany and its erased
forces, he charged, "are already
becoming the backbone of the ag-
f
WELL-DONE SNAKE
GEORGE EASON, 604 Park, was a little
shaken after he yielded to an urge to “dean
out” toe oven of toe cook stove at his home.
He opened the door, peeked in and saw it—
(tree and one-half foot long Water mocca-
a three and one-half
sin. He got the only gun he had, a .22 caliber
ptatoL He fired four shoto-hlttbig the soaks
and putting four holes in the oven. Eason’s
wife was a little -shook” herself as too hai
pans from toe ovsn during too ..
afternoon.
ingCo., $861.63.
Purchases
of school furniture
totaling $9,782.85 were also ap-
(See SUPPLIES, Pay 2)
Constable Reserve
THE DEPUTY constable reserve
unit will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday
at the Baytown Chamber of Com-
merce Building. Guest speaker
will be a member of the Texas
Department of Public Safety.
;—* * . ,<q?r
Weather And TWe*
HOT THROUGH Wednesday. No
immediate relief in sight.
GALVESTON TIDES Wednesday
wIU be high at 12:61 a.m. and
16:38 a.m., low at fc:ll a.m.
aad 6:16 pjn.
c__—diabj
9
FANNIE MAUD and BiH Wright,
along with boys Johnny and Tom
njy, move into a new house. First
tragedy: furniture polish on the
carpet . , . Juanita Beaird picks
the top layer of a cake up off the
floor of the car-re* once, but
twice .Yvonna Coker disturbs
a wasp nest and discovers toe’s
not to wry good company
Ruby and Ed Chandler back
after a vacation. She claims ft’s
toe last time toe’ll ever travel to
an airplane. -
Irwin and Lada Simpson, 1521
house various Other
mitostrative offices. -
San Jadnto school's enrollment
will expand from last year’s 313
pupils to approximately 411 this
fall. Travis School to Lakewood
will increase from 336 pupils to
about 544.
Baytown Elementary, one of the
oldest schools in the Baytown dis-
trict, had an average enrollment
of 251 pupils.
The pupils who came frofelfelia-
try (Sub Oaks, Craigmont, G
and Decker Drive addresses
be transferred to Travis School in
Lakewood.
Those who lived in the Busch
Terrace area and all other ad-
dresses on Pine, Cherry, Cypress,
Magnolia and Airhart Drive, will
be transferred to San Jadnto Ele-
mentary.
San Jacinto’s building was ex-
panded a few years ago and it is ___
already large enough to absorb In toe Baytown area,
the extra pupfer.
Travis Schatirfiad 12 new class-
LUCKY ONE
ADUNE ENGLERT, center, won the trip to
Hawaii in the final drawing held at noon
Monday at Citizen* National Bank and Trust
start Aug. 5. Andy Andrews, right, won $66 of th
start Aug. S. Andy Andrews, right,
in the drawing for being toe salesman
name was on the winning coupon. The name
was drawn by Norman Hargrave in the lobby
of the bank. Present were Bank President
John C. Echols, Sun Advertising Manager
of toe RetaD Merchants Committee.
(Baytown Photos)
World's Fair On Itinerary ~
Adline Englert Wins Trip To Hawaii
Miss Adline Englert. 2009 New
Jersey, won the trip to Hawaii
- s dnr
Utah, hosting some relatives from
~ i - Maude
the grand prize drawing held
at noon Monday at Citizens Na-
tional Bank and Trtat Co.
The bank sponsored fee contest
during which 10 names were
drawn once every five weeks. The
names were deposited in boxes at
toe stores of 41 participating mere
v
[.ii
(ware publish- r
4i “U*SSL sw*
Funny Thing Happened on fee
Way to the Forum."
v Gerry Wayne Rosier, two-year-
old son of Mr. and Mrs. (Ren
' • doing fine.
Rost, m MoneU, k te S
hk vn* kkkl. M S&d*“
surgery Monday in Texas Chil-
drens’ Hospital in Houston.’
Oct. 22 is the opening night date
for "Mr. President.'’ toe Broad-
way* rausical which will Include
Ruytinyn'x Jerry Siriddei- in mie
of the leading roles. His parents
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Strickksr, have
' Ox tickets for toe shw opetung
. night. Going with them will be
-i Jerry’s grandmothers, Mrs. Ira
W. Strickler and Mrs. A. J. New-
- man, his sister,J&tocrine Sufck-
Irr. all of Baytown, and his aunt,
ter, all of Baytown,
Mrs. Bill Taylor of ■
•>t %<vi *nd Nanette F
ston af the hvtng
^brayan,
The 10 names that were drawn
each week comprised the 50 names
for the final drawing. Andy An-
big prize she lias ever won. Em-
ployed at Tha»l Feiion Ford Mo-
tor Co , she lias lived in Baytown
about 30 years. k
Miss Englert will leave kith a
special tour Aug, J, arranged by
Simone. Marshall.Travel agent at
k Bank. The group will in*
Mrs. C. T. (Bill)
Gtizens Bank.
Houston. Rob- acting as hostess for fee touf. antj
Mrs. C A. Shirley,
Mrs. Gwen
and Omm
Mrs. Ruth Royder. Mrs. V. R.
te. Miss Beulah Mae Jackson,
i Nira Jane Morcison of Hous-
and Mrs. R. B. Wame,
. Culver. Mrs; £ulalia
Katherfiie Davis, Mrs.
visit to Disneyland. On Aug. 8 Program. President W. D. Broyles
they will fly Pan American for will preside. - , ;
Honolulu. They will stay at toe Clinton for many years served
M. L. Edgar of Alvin, Mrs. Kim
Miller tad Sue — * ~ ‘
Miller, both of
Dubuque, Iowa; Mrs. Lilly Crock-
ett of Weslaco.
oecuu
r Aug. 5 tB They
to Los As- dorf 1
stay at feef The
Hotel for two days. Their
Airlines
geles where they will stay
Mayfair
Los Angeles trip will Include a
mentary building. This
SI I
.COSIVC AUIUCO VJ. Ainsv.
His statement on U.S. tests in
the Pacific and the high-altitude
hydrogen explosion Monday, was
unexpectedly mild.
Klirusuchev said the major se-
ries of tests of the United States
Were “a challenge to mankind."
High-altitude tests, he said,
.»^ wet’: “disrfgard%toe fart that
flSiC to^&sBts may have very
dangerous consequences for toe
conditions of man’s life.’’
The world was in the shadow of
12 New Teachers Join
School Faculties Here
-
catastrophe, Khrushchev said, be-
cause of the
the weight of armament
and. unless a disarmament plan
Is. agreed v&a “toe atoms will
start speaking for themselves.”
toe aggi
aggressors start a nu-
clear war,” he wait on, "they will
inevitably perish themselves in its
flames."
IHHi §§'
Twelve new teachers,
geographic backgrounds span
from Formosa to New York Gty,
were hired Monday night by the
School Board of Trustees.
Haldean* L. Brown will teach
chemistry at Robert E. Lee High
School, coming here from a U.S.
school in Formosa where he has
He attended the
University of^Wisconsin, Doane nally prepared to be a medical
in Nebraska, the Univer-1 doctor. She received
sity of Colorado and holds a mas- tor’s degree from Yeshiva
tor’s degree from Colorado State versity and her master's
College. His wife left Formosa from Hunter College in New
■3
last year and has been teaching at City. She has more than 100
San Jadnto Elementary for the
past year.
A hew srience teacher at Bay-
town Junior High will be Mrs.
Frances A, Mookhoek, who origi-
'acciite Given July 22--
’Polio Pill’ Volunteers Form
Volunteer help is being organ- acting a
ized for the Sabin oral vaedne the Salk
drive Sunday, July 22, to be bdd
at eight different sdiool locations
HS'W;TJ6dre'Jri,'l«wd«rt
of the Woman’s Auxiliary of the
rooms under construction this past Medical Society, ’ is chairman
the lay volunteers. She will obtain
year to anticipation of increased
enrollment.
The Baytown Elementary teach- fi
ers will be reassigned te these
schools.
'Clinton Day'
Wednesday
Proclaimed
Baytown.
The former Harris County Ag-
ricultural Agent, who recently re-
tired after more than 40 years'
service to his profession, will be
to* guret <of honor at a Baytown be accepted at toe stations but
Rotary Club luncheon at noon at
The Tower.
Jack Jacobs, program chairman
for the dub, has am
arranged the
too
town areas as county agent,
the last decade of his service he
had Special assistant assigned to
«.«kn £ tSSS
a week. Their Hawaii agenda will town areas as county agent. In
feature sightseeing around the
islands and many festivities.
On Aug.
SeaWy,.
Hotel in Seattle
J. R. Sender's Rites Held Tuesday
to Harris County and much to
Baytown,’’ Jacobs said. "We are
happy to have a chance to pay
him belated tribute for his con-
tribution here."
Clinton far many years has been
Houston ■
Ftoeral serviceg were held at
St. Mark’s Methodist Church at
■Miss Englert said Tuesday she R
has never traveled outside toe 2 p.m. Tuesday for Julius Richard fidated. The Cedar Bayou Lodge
•I t P AM n * mm KIawSaa __\ It !*M .< SM O n OtK i ni A % * .. . i ** m
U.S except on a trip to Mexico (Buddy) Seydter, 64. at 1218 E.
City. She added the* « tiie first James, utw died early Sunday
mooting at Provo, Utah.
Mr and Mrs, Seydter were en
Up tautoe m
when I
teck.
to-the World’s Fair in Se-
attle when he suffered a heart at-
He was retired from
town refinery to 1955 whereof
had been employed since May 11,
1920. Mrs. Seydler. too, is a for- Pallbcarrrji were Otis Ewl
w*e team te retire tenUmfetitoreon.
a member of the
Club in Houston and has
talks at all
personnel to staff the eight Sta-
"ons in the mass drive.
Virginia Stricklin of the East
Harris County Medical Assistants
will be to charge of volunteers
from that organization. James Sa-
veli will be in charge of obtaining
pharmacists and Louise Burke,
city nurae, aU registered
licensed vocational nurse* and
other nursing personnel.
- Mrs. E. H. Oliver alii Mrs
Bruce Ramsey will be to charge
of getting help from the various
hedds of parents councils and
PTAmwML
Anyone who would like to assist
to the drive may call Mrs. Jones
and give the name at the school.
The East Harris County Medi-
cal Society is sponsoring the
drive. Donations of 25 cents will
will not be required.
No one will be excluded from
iking the oral vaccine which is
iministered to liquid form. The
vaccine will be
six weeks and the third
time to fee following six week*.
A booster trtvalent will be given
next spring. It is believed the
complete series may afford a life-
time immunity to potto,
The Sabin vaccine is
quicker
Benentiiy Remedial
Heating Class Ned
Elementary <
to remedial
Bay
The Rev. Basti Jones, pastor of.Innumerable tal
St. Mark’s Methodist Church, of- town civic dubs.
>m.. '--j— ----T Many personal friends of Gin-
321 AFAAM wa« to dmtf ’-nt
graveside services. I
Burial was in Cedarcrest ceme-
tery under direction al Paul U.
Lee Funeral Hume.
Survivors are his widow, Mrs.
Grace Seydter of Baytown; a
brother. George Seydler of Gon-
zales and several nieces and neph-
ron, not members of the Rotary
Club, have been invited as special
guests.
Pallbearers were
i
*1
See
OUR WORLD
._fogo 2
reading have been filled for the
secortdTi
summer term at Lee Col-
lege. Dean Walter Rundell said
Tuesday, n
There are still openings for jun-
ior .high and senior high classes
in reading.
Kegtstidtwn for the secund term
will be held Friday. Huurs will
be from 9 a.m. to 1 pun. and
from 4 to 8 pan.
A total of 175 students regis-
tered to the early registration pe-
ms sag;
of
and more effective than
vaccine. .......E
The eight school Ideations lor
the drive are:
■once Maqn Junior Sigh, tit
Gedar Bayou Junior
vinta and Cedar
m High, Wallis-
Harlem Elementary, 8628
Broad, McNair
Carver School, Leo Drive and
Carver
Baytown Junior Righ, 3515
Baywigr Drive .•
De Zarate, 3010 Oakuood
Travis Etementaiy, 100 Robin,
Lakewood. -
s
Notice, Dog Seorckon!
Attention, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hushing)
Mrs. R. B. McDonald of Sjolandor Road; Phont 582-8527.
may Hava the dog that bit ImTe Jeanio.
Mrs. McDonald said a dog fitting the description of'on#
that bit Joania had baon hanging around her home two or
throe days, and that sha now has it tiad up. It is a collie
but otherwise fits the description of tho dog that bit Jeanio.
liiiei, oouineru me 1x1-
•sity graduate, wifl
and family living at
a graduate of REL
jL
V
The Sun's
New Weekend Feature
'What's The Answer?1
to science. _
Miss Molly D. Goodman, now
acher at Lamar Elementary,
holds a master’s degree from Col-
umbia University's Teachers Col-
lege in New York. A native of
Houston, she attended the Univer-
sities of Houston and Miami.
usasuasi
leal education at Robot E. Lee
High School. She received her
bachelor’s degree from Texas
Christian University and has beat
teaching at Burkbumette, Tex.
J. W. Gammel, Southern Meth-
odist University
teach hone and
REL. He is
and native of Highlands.
Mrs. Graee- M; Edwards, a Le*
College and University of Hous-
ton graduate, will teach home
economics at Baytown Junior
She was a substitute teach-
er here last year. —*”
Miss Georgtoe Hall, new physi-
cal education teacher at BJH, was
graduated from Texas Woman’s
University in Denton. She taught
at Anahuac.
Coming here from Rfo Hondo
will be Robert Mangier, assigned
to auto mechanics at REL He is
a graduate of Texas A and M
College.
Miss Carolyn Ann
originally from
teach at REL.
Texas!
Mrs, Lot Benes,
nian. returns to t*
assigned to Tamar
She graduated from 1
State College to Denton.
Two new teachers at
k"
Dunn,)
as
ceivedl
is for your enlightenment.
Phone, mail or bring your
questions to The Sun.
Those received this week
will be answered in
The Sun's Weekend Edition.
'4j
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 248, Ed. 1 Tuesday, July 10, 1962, newspaper, July 10, 1962; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1057452/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.