The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 51, Ed. 1 Monday, November 23, 1964 Page: 1 of 24
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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m^ct an? iiu\ c
SSSSis?'
sjwwiir"*'
Fnnibvrl a
s 60/60 today/
SUN
Spots
' ‘
The Sn Invitee
w2?K£!iin!* '
KeBev Lane
te the Brunson Theater. This coupe'
ta *»«d through November 9
_... g—rrufod
M the Brunson hex office. '
The movie now showing is
“TOI’kAPr
- . .
V~ • •* **' ..--V .
| Attend Funeral
MR. AND MRS. Ralph Lam-
bnght. Mrs. Nancy Biiello and
Mrs. Edah Mae Bass have re-
mcd fromTet«pfo,whereThey
• • i
.
„ ' • .
Serving BAY-TEX—The Golden Circle of Southeast Texas
88 i
A
imkican olonv nouse*
fO - 408 .VEST T£ \a1
m
ter, Timine,
nplete Me-j.
Cost*.
fALUE!
D
te
5873OT * **
attended funeral services of Jo?
was Mrs. Nancy BifofiosVron
and Mrs. Umbnghfs .brother.
Senior* ww* held Sunday. His
wife ditd two weeks ago.
Rotary Club
THE REV. A. L. Jordan, pastor
of Memorial Baptist Church, win
present a Thanksgiving talk at
noon Wednesday to the Bay-
town Rptaty dub at the Tower,
Blood Needed
* L'UDOP DONORS are needed for
H. F. Pash at San Jacinto Meth-
odist Hospital. Donations are
taken from 9:30 a.m. to - 4:30
p m. Monday through Friday,
with other times arranged i -
speciar arrangement. with. ‘
Hospital.
Bake Sale
CRAIGMONT Garden dub will
> sponsor a bake sale from 9 a.m.
to 6 'p.m.Tuesriay.st Lews and
Coker Supermarket,- Bayway
Drive. Mrs. Walter DePrang is
chairman.
Airborne Exercise
ARMY So. I Ronald B Mor-
row, ioffttf Thomas EL-Morrow.
. 5315 Reddell Road, .Baytown
participated in a recent air-
home training, exercise in Ger-
many. w-* -
Barbecue Postponed
. VFW AUXILIARY membership
barbecue, originally scheduled
for Tuesday night has been tem-
porarily postponed. A regular
social will be held instead.
:thd Mission
A SPECIAL fellowship meeting
will be held at 7:30 p.m. Mon?
. day at Bethel Mission. 425 Vv.
Main. The public is I nvited. ~
Cental Assistants
DR. GENE Hightower of Pasa-
dena will speak, at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday to the Baytown District
Dental Assistants Association in
Dr. G, L. Smith's office.
Coin Club
BAYSHORE COIN dub will
meet at 7 p.m. Monday at Sterl-
ing Municipal library. An auc-
H*n will be held. The puUitq is
invited.
YOUR HOME
NEWSPAPER
—---Ton Cotrti Per Copy
Jet Airliner Hits Grader
In Rome- 50 Are Killed
HER FAVORITE ASTRONAUT
JEST ASK Teresa Dawn Cernan who lier
-.favorite astronaut is ami the answer wilt be
“Daddy." ller mother, Mr*. Gene Oman.
former Barbara Atehley of Baytown. Is hold-
ing a picture of “Daddy," who is one’of Ibe
14 Apollo moon project astronauts.
Astronaut's Wife Is REL Grad"
Mrs. Cernan Renews Old Ties
By WANDA ORTON
It wa:
when I
ing with
her home neap the Manned
- Spacer Aft Center.
Shrine Club ' ■*' Mrs. Gene Oman, whose hus-
912 SsS vss?* swatfe*' ■ sw
bara Jean Atehley, she used to
Ig ht 7 pint. Monday at
ighway 146.
elect new
nwctwg h
the( clubhouse on Highway 146.
Stag Dinner
. TICKETS-OTLl, be available al
the dnor Monday night for the
mutual stag dinner of University
of Texas ami Texas A AM alu-
mini at Goose Creek Country
Club. A social hour will begin
at 6:30 p.m,, followed by a din-
ner at 7:30 p.m.
* ★ *
Weather and Tide*
CONSIDERABLE cloud in cm
Monday and Tueadav. Cold
again Monday night. A little
warmer Tueadav. Moderate
northeaalerly winds' beroming
' iriahio Monday night nnd on
Tuesday. Temperatures will
range from » to M degrees.
GALVESTON TIDES Tuesday
will be high at I*:2t p.m. and
low at 1:4J p.m.
“School. . . -
Barbara asked eagerly about
her Baytown friends, wanting to
know where they lived, where
they worked, i gave her some
idione numbers and brought her
up to date of many of our mu-
tual friends.
Since site moved back to this
area lasf January, Barbara said
she hasn't had « chance yet to
visit much in Baytown. They've
been very busy getting their
new home built tn Nassau Eav.
It's a beautiful home, by the
way — spacious and comforta-
ble. And y ou can really toll tin
astronaut lives lure.
Down the hallway ut;e colored
photographs of space -ships of
"the seven original astronauts.
These are autographed ami in-
elude pentonal greetings such as
In their den is an oil painting
of the. moon, , a "crater land*
scape." In the dktaoce'tfie earth
is pictured as seen from (he
moon. Barbara said this was
painted by a friend in California-
shortly aftet Sputnik. When
Gene was picked for the astro-
naut program, 'he friend gave fi
him the (tainting.
It is also apparent that, the
man of the house likes jet air-
planes. He has decorated his
interview was a blonde charmer
named Teresa Dawn Cernan,
who will tte two next March, les:
Barbara said, Teresa hus, be* inti
coine a "real daddy's girt"
here lately.
While we were visiting, Gene,
called and Teresa picked IlfTM
extension phone to share in the
n.nvrsation. Gene has just re-
turned tiome from one of those
many trainihg trips the astro-
nauts take. ,
Barbara said they were plan-
ning to have some couples over
for bridge that night.
t Astronauts' wives stay pretty-
much together, she said, with
frequent coffees and visiting.
Barbara said the newer asms
‘ongo Chief
Reprieves
Missionary
LEOPOLDVILLE, the Congo
(AP» — Rebel leader Chnstophe
Gbenye- has stayed the execu-
tion of Anwrkatr ri»*it< to-mow ■
sionary Dr. Paul Carlson
but he says the stay ml;
today.
Central government troops’led
by white mercenaries resumed
their advance on rebel Stan-
lyville. They raptured the !<»ui.
of Luhutu. about 120 mils
southeast of the rebel capital
In a Stanleyville radio broad-
cast heard in the Central Afri-
can Republic, Gbenye added:
"Wo exjirrj results «.f the lust
negotiations before 24 hours.”
Gbenye was speaking of talks in
Kenya on tlie fate ol Dr. Carfoon
and about 1.<W) white hostages
held by his'fo’nes '...........
A good road links Lubutu with
Slanleyvillp, and. the attack
force e.\()ected f» encounter lit-
tle opixrsition. * '
"Under normal circumstances
you can beach Stanleyville from
Lubutu in four or five hours
driving," a military source* in
Leopoldville said.
Observers predicted Shut-
II thifi u*
20 Escape
Before Fiery
Explosion
ROME (Apr — A four-jet air-
liner • carry ing -72 persons ex-
I ploded in flames todagt,after
I coliiihiig with a road grader and
I1' tfenrtwrhT
' reported killed_______ ,L . .
Tlte plane, a Trans World Air-
lines Boeing 707, was. gathering
speed for a takeoff at Fiumicino
Airport, hut suddenly wobbled,
hit the road grader and explod-
ed
Of the 72 persons aboard — 55
passengers and a double crew
~ totaling T7 - at least 20 sur-
viveil. Most suffered’grave in-
jures and were rushed to hospi-
i.ils. Among the
V
leyville would fall litis week un-
Ihe commando units run
into unexpected resistance.
Rebel Foreign Minister Thom-
i Kanzn arrived in Nairobi
Sunday for talks with Kenya
Prime Minister. 'Jdmo.Jjenyatti,
on the fate of -1:060 white has--
tages in rebel territory. They
include 60 Americans and more
than 600 Belgians.
Kenystta told newsmen after
unday's talks that Kama told
him: "All fmvign civilian pris-
oners of war- ate safe."
The rebel broadcast said::
'Kenyatta has asked that Ibe
execution of Major Paul Carlson
stayed ip order to iiermit
S*
TOMMY JONES (Lj, HARRY YERRINGTON,AFTER RESCUE'
They Spent Saturday Night Out In 37 Dagret Weather
Recovering From Exposure- ’
Baytown Boys Rescued
From Chcmnel Oil Rio
nautri families, because tliey aty negotiations, and out of respect
Writ qg wall imnudv nova hod -I "
not as well known, have had
lime to really settle dow«,-make
fnri-Africa we agreed , ,
decorated his time to really settle dovmv-make The rehels have charged that tt'hi
study with models of planes and friends and enjoy their new sur- Carlson is a U S. major cap-1'""
ie 36-year-oid
tolling Hills,
Calif., was sentenced to die last I Jones
(See CONGO, Page I)
By BEE I-ANDRI U * tsaid they rowed out to Hog Js-
Two Baytown youngsters w’ereh 'ud in an eight - foot vessel
still liospitali/ed Monday to re- «itl«mt either notifying bis par-
eoYer from eximsure to Satur- re's where they (were going, ■
Alter arriving a* Hog Island
jhere are several photograjihs of roundings,
jets in the den. Gene is a for-| The blare of publicity Ir.te;
j|j}y flight's 37-degree weather
while stranded on an oil well
rig in the Houston Ship Otan-
mpr Navy jet flier
An active participant in
ferred with lives "of the original
our'(See HIKE. Page 2)
a t .v . ...
tuned in combat. The 36-year-old j nc!
missionary from Rolling^ Hills, | Harty Yemngton and Tommy
d. B. LEE inquire* about some
t>hoio sizes . r . Mr*. Willie
ltollaway stiwrt fliq. phone 6n
a very busy day and relaj* a
■ message ,to her husband . . a
Anna Kiltough is on vuealion
these days . . . Charles Tekyl
brings in some church news
Mrs. Hulen Wilder telD
about an employment bureau
being set up for the holiday*
bv die Human Relation* Coun-
cil.
Eileen and Dianne Horacefleld
have a party -.. Janice Roach
(days her fiddle and guitar ..
Frances KwdtoR calls m .a news
MbS- -i ■ .?fNW(i Archer .ana
Linda Nutt mb* a hootenannj
Kelly obve and Bennie Bond
mux are die ban moat import
ant VIPs on the REL campus,
winners of the Mr. and Mia*
manager, is U1 with the mump*
, TvW, Ned Lofart^head at
the astronauiv' dtvtsion erf the
|!wn *.d be 'a helpful friend
of this newspaper.
ldoux and Mike
great big bref.
... Jay u
have fun
playing tn
■ Hope and Tom Hoffman filling
,!l?!,Dr&rt*Mw»S«^t ha*
a hahdmakr eiock over 2j> yea"
old that rata ■.. Brrtir **ew«t.
Hob Martin and wives went back
for the deer they MM to get
on the first trip . .: Acie Drew
■fSgwjrw‘JS*.
Yule Tide
Sweeos In
On Baytown
Baylotvn's Chrisimas rush Is
on. with new sbipmems of deco-
rajions ami toys t timing in near*
l.v every day m stores. ;
Merchants have already been
swani|ied wifit applications from
student* and housewives, for
pari lime work during the hofi-
daya, Dave Shemn; chnirinan
of tfte Chamber <■( Commerce
retail mirehjints committee,
jlMjrfl ^ .
Many of these ex'ra fmploves
start wsirk moii after Thanks'riv-
ing holidays. "
Late Christmas shopping
hours will begin Dec. 10. Sher-
ron said, and will continue
through Dec. 23.' Stores will be
open every night until ft p.m.,
w+h .the exceptirn of those that
normally stay open to 9 p.m.
The Buy timn Sun will again
sponsor it* Gnodfeflow promo-
tion to provide toys for needv
, children at Chrisimas. Chief
Goodfellow said his aim is Jo
make sure there is nor an emp-
ty slocking in town.
Names oT needy childrea will
be taken by Chief Goodfellow
beginning Friday. All school
principals are being contacted
to help compile the lists of the
underprivileged, Chiel Gonrtfrl-
1 i and 15 years of age
e the object -of a 45-hour
idvolvini: at least five
helicojitcr- and some
rsons
pet
ngslets. who lelt fiont
a tw nt dock* or Hn
w , ,1 *; alx'Ht 2 p m S.iturd.
were
search
boat*,
tw o do/f
'tlte yc
the shrimp bent dock* on Hteh-
day,
were discovered on the oil well
■ ; <t v,i - <XMd n .
They were brought to. the Bay-
town !»|ice station by two fjulf
Oil Corp. employes who had
been cheeking *wt pmiueitnf’dil
wells in the area Sunday-jg^wn-
- fiarry 1* the son of Mr. and
Mroe-Hol. .Isis'll. \m Oregon,
and Tommy lives w i*h his moth-
Mrs. M. R. Jones, and a.
on Cher R(vt» 12. at ITOI Mfl*’
inm. His f ijher. serving in the
VS, Army, » stationed at St.
Andre*. France, near Paris,
The iwys, friend* -for a year
and aJn&3L~M£ Utth sevenih-
irrttde stuAenl* »t Horace Mann
Jimti-r ffieh School. This was
their first time to g/> dumfing
to"#tlier.
Tammy, who has bad eon*id-
erable'cxjteiienee in small boats
alsHit .1 p t
jiroximately two hours on the is-
land. including time used for
rowing to the west side of the
mainland and returning
About 5 o'clock they decided
to return home. But then the
BULLETIN
DALLAA (API - I X DM.
•tiulge S iniii Hughes forfeited
the Sia.000 hood of eum hied
prmnofer Billie ‘">1 Estes to-
day and told the I nlteil States
marshall to take him Into
, rtastod v.
It marked the first lime that
Estes had been confined since
Ills flrst arrest by the EBI
Marrb », !•«?.
Ijde was mrt and their txiat yva
str.it dnl in a mud flat. The;
man tge.1 to nme approximately
150 feet away from Hog Island,
with H; try wading in the mud
and pushing and Tommy helje
ing posh with an i«r from tive
boat
But Harry stepik*! into a
tretii h atmnt two feet deep, mid
the buy*, who then were only
15 feet fror
e ided
Ilk- a.ilety of the offshore
stiRatkHi
Tommy said they believed the
mud to iie several feet deco at
|d ■«' II,try ronsktered
trying to swim approximately
halt a mile to the east m-iir,-
land. hut Tommy urged him to
stay on the rig.
Hv that time, darkness was
falling, the two svet, mud-plas-
tered youngster* huddled togeth-
er cn the rig platform to await
Iheir rescue the next day.
In addition to sufferin'- from
the bitjrrft, cold, !*>th already
(Vr Kf^Pm Page tt
jiassengers
■ 56 TWA cm-
Among
w ere re|ioried to he !
ployes and Lundies.
One of .those listed as aboard
Was Joseph SanUULOt Dallas ______
Among the survivors was the
tiuSKcS^-r™
The flight. TWA X00, ori-
ginated' in Kansas City, Mo ,
anil slopped in Chicago, New
York, Paris- and Milan before
reaching Rome. It was headed-
from-Rome to Athens and Cairo. -
Accounts : of mechanics and
other workers at the scene said
the.cnish^qccurred this way:
The plane was speeding down
% tjudwav when flames erupt-
ed trom iiiie or the'wheel assem- ■
lilies.
The plane started to wobble
a* the .captain applied die
breaks. By this lime die plan*
had passed the end of the rims
way and crossed on into a cross-
ronway-under repair.
The plane s right outside mo-
tor knocked over « parked road
grader. As the plane skidded fo
a half, doors ojiened and (ias-
■sengers Iiegan jumping out.
There was an expbhion. the
plane burst into flames. Then
••■her explosions stuttered the
wreckage..
Brought to hoepltals were a
Martin Chappler, Ernest Haveli
Jones, an American serviceman
front Louisiana, and two Kthio.
pian citizens. Didane Kenu. 23,
and Tospaye Tefle. 24. Thev
„ were only slightly injured. , '
om an otl well ng, de- . )Vijnesse* said fuel (mured
abandon their boat for fn'ni one of the plane's tanks
...... * “ '^e JET. Page 1)
RFL Junior-Senior Rond
WinsMarching Confesf
Trustee Sate
ft 7; A
Monday at \Yvr' administration
buildih". Aeltog . Sum TV. D.
by oSrf'GroM; *«J" hnnnuncad
The meri ne has tieen called
fer two ponnse*. Hferom sold.
Th^ ho.'.".: wilt evtlsider r ri'tmet
yaccovmting procedure* by G
K:, Sue**- o' H thorn .md Prentice sqid, "Your size gives , "i1*,-.81!'
Snes«e, new school district and I- you ouite a Mt M weigto to "??.SC ,,, -
somethin^..
Tir«. /was ius! one of the
iudgbr Ntmpliments maid to-the
IPjjkTt E, la-e High School jun-
lef-senior band when 11 won first
tllviskin Saturday jrr Intersrho-
to*tic Iz- tgue, Region 5 maw-h-
big contest in Katy:.. in Class 4-A
eompetitiofi.
Hie sojibomore band alsojion
fir t in Class >A. drawing sucTt
ktdge*' comments as "fine ver-
satility . .. nice canto . . , very
impressive group "
s, Jud-ev were band directors
Jack Briggs, Bryan Nigh
Mmol; J. E, Peters. Belton
High School; and Fred Prentice.
Wuhit.- Fall* High School.
you are really riett S.indcr*. Theresa Nelson,
Ik bliie Sarvor. Sleffani Warren.
Mitala Shoemaker and Iucy Her-
nandez. A first went to a jun-
kro-sentor qumtet romp|io*nl of
Jeanie James. Kathy -Garvey,
l-ury Hemarxie7, Harriett San-
der* and iTieryl Molatson...
So|)hoijiore twirters winning
lirst* i n solos were Kandy Mar-
shall, Brenda Harmod, Rene
Carroll. Olivia MrOelUnd ml
Ann Tillery. A first division was
awanied a sofJktmqre quariet
which included Ann Tillery.
Ca’hy Hcmnch. Rene Carroll
andOlivto McCldiatto.
In another marching eontest
in Galena Perk Saturday' a first
division w as aw aided. Carv er
HE'LL CHANGE HIS TUNE
toys
up on nuts,
fruit for the
s dehcaeies.
This )/ the biggest season for
th- for-.iw.iy business, too. Many
like to plan ahead have
us items
% social caiemLir is
jra«f**have marhrd the Arte*
to: a >m.al yute [ut1.es.
Olir- of he he-hbehts -of the
srurn is the annual Chrisimas
Pilgrimage Dec. it and J, spoo-
isra nit, rm**i
CITIZENS NATIONAL
_ -BANK
Minutes nf the.Ortulier bteei-
tate- tfosiHl! atosideito lor :-<>■
prov al' Tl» se*’ minutes were
challenged t the Land'* rrB
for November meeting as being
noo-inctusivk A revision >* th
mtnutes w t* requested with ad-
dition* included.
throw around and you certainly
fintofs «*' well;- both mbreMK
irto playi ng"
rre Twenty - seven first division
»; medals- were won fo twirling
competipori. JuBtoMenior ggfo
winning fir*division* to solo
■Cedar Bayou Junior High
P- «d earned a first divMnn i n
Civs, U' el the Katv meet.
7tle REL Bands are directed
-Qfrtw %rw, *«*isfid by
Don Muery. E. C Csitwright to
tor of the Carver Bend end
Police Say
9 Salesmen
Registered
At least nine of the magazine
sales (le' MMts who swept through
Baytown Fru’ y. S ' •
tirofoihly Mqpday, are registered
at the istore station fo aeverd- -
ance with the law, -
Thev signed fo Fridav morn-
ing. Seven young men and two
young women.
- A*toe from H 'rmipte of tatt-
plaint* that ».|jgle*mAn‘st'a* be- -
ing a little benw-handed fo hi*
Uipnwch. no "trouble" has l«*er
reinried from the nine.
Baytoqri bar r-n ordinance re*
qttiring al' itinerant merchant*
to register ft the .station art *e-
cure an operating license flyer
city hall. '
The. requirement, according to
police official*, has reduced for
number of roropUfob received
from amoved resident* -that .-
salesmen Were either obnoxious
or vcftirtly tnminal in their
dealini'-
"Te used to have a role r _
all tbo*c profoler* re ijytfo. .
graphed aedTtmrerprtofcd " ,s,.to
me of tire r. "That really rut
down the number hitting town
...when they knr* ihev*d he
muggW aw. printed, thev were
not anxkxi* to do bustors* Here."
he said.
Most isle* grew* peddling
magazine fttharrint torn arehm- .
quartered fo Houston. A erew
•manager" will drive fotn
five lalremm to Baytown or La
P rtf «to leave them ail dav
Police ffot the crew* aektotn
rontests were Kay Reeder H an- Douglas Wallace direct* the Ce- stay in one area more than too
d-s Smith. Jeuifo Jamcs, -Hai- dar Bayou ju ninr High Bano or itiree days- .
CINDERELLA’S CHRISTMAS PARTY
IT WALT DISNEY
fonuumoNS Pen CHmswaw
- AtZEONitttt Wear :*,svg 4i,*eto
nvMrv'a, rrwflHwriN^M
ivaoNts.t Haw* a*w
m
*- ■.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 42, No. 51, Ed. 1 Monday, November 23, 1964, newspaper, November 23, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1058072/m1/1/?q=About+the+Alto+Herald+Collection: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.