The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 62, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 1, 1966 Page: 1 of 13
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
The Sun Invite*
MR. AND MRS. JAMES ALLEN
14 IS Fayle
le the Reunion Theater. Title coupoa
Good Through Nov. IS
for two tlokete when presented
it the Brum........ office.
The movie now i ho win* la
"TEXAS ACROSS THE RIVER"
f • 0. Box eofo
•'9’Upft T«XR3 ?
Wyt Paptoton Sun
»•' * *’ e>
YOUR HOM
I
'
SERVING THE GOLDEN CIRCLE OF SOUTHEAST TEXAS
VOL 44, NO. 62
IAYTOWN, TEXAS, 77620
Tuesday, November I, 1964
TELEPHONE NUMBER: 682-8302
Ten Cents Per Copy
* ... TRICK-OR-TREAT AT 1906 KANSAS
XWhSE SSCT.1 S5
builtv4 ‘‘haunted home" out of cardboard near the front youngster*. Score* of youngsters participated In “trick-or-
entranfe to Tier home. The >ouns*t.r*-the one* that dared treat" call* throughout Baytown Monday night. Police reported
' ail to cr&vCl .through a umalJ opening and go Inside the. a quiet night. Little vandalism was reported.
OTS
42-Degree Low
A NORTHER BLEW into Bay-
town early Tuesday morning
and the U S. Weather Bureau ir.
> Houston has predicted a low of
42 degreesWednfsday morning-
No One Injured
FIRE DEPARTMENT officials
said Tuesday no dimage or in-
juries resulted from a small
' garage Hat Monday n%M at 881
Morrell. A spokesman for the
. department said the occupant
was cleaning mechanical pan-
. with gasoline and thf *wi
'ignited on contact with hot wa-
ter.
Major Strike Looms--
Automated Refineries,
OCAW Square Off
WASHINGTON ' (AP) — The I ion officials worried over big job logically, okay, but if they don't,
heavily automated oil refining losses. we're going to go all out," says
industry is heading-toto a show- “If the oil industry wants to President A. F. Grospiron of toe
dbwn bargaining battle with un-1 sit down and talk about this * “
VIET CONG BIG GUNS
‘ZERO IN’ ON SAIGON
Thousands idled-
Westing house
Strike Is On
PITTSBURGH (AP) - An
electrical Worker* Union
»trurk the giant We»tlnghou»e
Electric i Corp. today, idling
thousand* of employe*.
Officials of the Internatfon
al Brotherhood of Electrical
Workers, AFL-CIO, called the
•trike after the collapse of ne-
at midnight Monday. 1
hytow Munir
Bayfonian Hurt In Crash;
1 Of Her Friends Killed ■
>W
L ** a
GETTING COLDER
Baytown Weather
COOLER W EATHER is on the
area.
■Mis. Winoo Walh
ter ol Mr. and Mrs. Marvin G
daugh
way to the Baytown
Temperature range expected
Tuesday, 60 70 degree*. The
........' Tuesday was os degree, a*
~ colder weather pushed Into the
I
Wallace erf 213 Mlgiam, Is
hom*. recuperating from a car
acciifht Sunday night that took
the life of one of her close
friends and left another in criti-
cal condition.
Miss Wallace, now a teacher
4 Dallas, wa. the only one of
the three to escape. Dead is
Miss Pamela Renee Snowden,
21, a native of Houston. Miss
Mary Janie Young, 21, a native
of San Antonio is critically in-
jured. Miss Snowden was also
the nelce of Mr, and Mrs, W. W,
Cottle of 412 S. Burnet.
The trio, who had been close
friends since their freshman cMid-
years at Abilene Christian Col-
lege, were also rodmmates this
year in Dallas where they were
teaj:hlngrUieir first ptyfr
graduation. They had been to
Baytown this weekend as guests
of the Wallaces to buy a wed-
Tding dress for Miss Snowden,
who was tp Have been married
in December, '
r
crop in his favorite hunting ter* w$
i Is $235.8 MiHion
WASHINGTON (API
Gwen Baker due back from a
trip to Spain and Portugal next
weekend . . . Mrs. Charles
Scarborough calls about an Item
Eldon Berry cooks up a big
breakfast with Bob Stakes’ help
.. .Mrs. D. T. Smith works on
her own personal cookbook, but
agrees to share some of her fa-
vorite recipes through The Sun’s
cookbook. ■
LOW COST
AUTO LOANS
CITIZENS NATIONAL
Mentor' f.d.i.c. - '
them, Kellum said. Miss Snow-
Aah Aflhl.. Unnrlatr after-
MRS. J. R. SINGLETON makes
an early morning phone call...
« The Fletcher , Hickersons, who
are^attending a civil defense
conference in Louisville, Ky.,
send in gome news material.
t Dotma Burire's name was left ___ „______„„ .
late getting home from work
, ,.. Sandra and Susan Cravey
think up a new .commercial.. .
Joe Allen Jjsps part of his lurtch
hdur to get some personal busl-
ness qut. of the way. *'
E. E. Waugh Sr. brags about
reaching the age of 36.
Charlie Pharr checks on
downtow^ Mtuahon . . ■ O.
. Wilkinson checks on fee squirrel
They were returnirigtdDat- tton are ««®unUfta*
las Sunday night when the ac- —**“*
eident happened near Fairfield.
Highway Patrolman Jim Kel-
lum of Fairfield said M i ss
Young Vcarran off the right
side at the roadcausing hjHto
lose control as the* car swerved
into the southbound land of the
two-lane highway. Her car was
struck„from the front by anoth-
er car. -
Miss Snowden, who was in
lhe back seat, and Miss Young,
die driver, were trapped in the
wreckage for about 30 minutes
before rescue workers freed
and released
Her relatives
is jsSHPL,.-. ____.
cuts, but no broken bones.
Passengers and the idriver of
the other car, Mr. and Mrs. Ma-
ria Ivory and their son, Rod-
ney, escaped serious Injury. How-
ever. a fourth passenger, Mrs.
Nona Armstead, 71, of Houston
was listed in critical condition.
Mra “Ms Ijtoto.
den’s parents had both been se-
riously injured in an auto acci-
dent about six weeks ago and
were still patients in an Austin
hospital. Tuesday they were
Seeks Ban On
Machineguns
Baytown Mayor Seaborn Cra-
vey said Tuesday hie will ask
the city to adopt a policy that
no city employes be permitted
to own or have in their posses-
sion a machine-gun.
Mayor Cravey brought
matter to the attention of the
council at a special called .meet-
ing Tuesday. There wag no offi-
cial action on the machinegun
question. However, the mayor
said he expects the council to
PITTSBURGH (AP) - The
Westinghouse Electric Corp.
one of the nation’s largest elec-
trical products manufacturers,
was struck today by the 14,006-
member AFL-CIO International
Brotherhood of Electrical Work-
ers
Picket lines were reported at
a few Westinghouse-locations
throughout the country atT2:01
a.m. when the IBEW contract
expired.
Extent of the strike wag not
, .slseaflheMuteu iM thi-ewa-J.
“ Tlpokesman
.bargaining' headquarters said
"pickets are up at all locations
at the present time,” but a
Westinghouse official said, “as
far as we know, no plants in the
circuit have given indication
toejr will striked
However, a company spokes-
man at the firm’s Youngwood,
Pa., plant reported that about
200 IBEW workers walked off
the job at midnight and set up
picket lines at the plant gates.
Some 600 members of.the inde-
being transferred to a Houston for job guarantees in an indus-
hospital. Pamela was their onlyitry where fewer and fewtr men
Child, / ”■ iare doing the work. s ■
' - - .....................................'
I OurWorld Today
The possession of machine-
guns by Baytown policemen was
in focus this past week when a
Thompson submachtnegun WM
the home of a Bay-
AFLCIO Oil, Chemical and
Atomic Workers Union, v. ‘
This means, Grospiron said,______ ______________
the distinct possibility of a ma- dtousT it further in the near] Ptant
jor strike of some 80,000 oil future ‘
workers affecting about 70 per —
cent of the nation’s big refin-
ertet*
V ** ' ^ t talks how in progress
wi to a head before most
labor agreements in the indus-
try expire Dec. 31.
Grospiron hopes for a peaceful
settlement without a strike, but
said of prospects:
“It isn't going to be easy.
They (oil companies) negotiate
there was almost a strike toy
the union in last year's oil nego-
tiations. . -1
Unlike other recent major la-
bor disputes where cost of living
wage escalator clauses and pay
hikes were chief issues, the big
objective of the oil workers Is
stolen from the home of a
town -poUsemen. Several other
gun* Were also stolen from this
house and two other Jmatt
which were burglarized nearby
on to, .....
"I can pot see the purpose of
using a machinegun except in
war,” the mayor said. He said
from his experience in the
' armed services, such a weapon plants,
is little uae ln anything similar ^
to a riot. "*» May kill 10 peo- -
pie who lit* trying to stop a
riot at the same time you get
one or two who are instigating
<* ’’ the mayor said.
iV
FROM AP WHIES
’•''"Sea. ’ Warren ppjBpf
•ay* candidate* aero** the na.
■■P............ Ill
were being transferred to Bay-
lor Hospital in Dallas. ;
Miss Wallace was treated ov- . „___n__nlrt
in a Fairfield hospital. * •*
ernight
Missile Contract
’«■’ the
awarded
,1S235.»h1«lton ........ ....
production contract to
to-ground guided mu
igned to be carried within 50
miles of enemy defenses. I
It's a shorter-range relative to
toe Skybolt missile, on which
the governmentspent more
than $500 million before secre-
tary of Defense Robert 8. Me-
He doubted whether Skybolt
could be accurate over its
P^e^^"lnctoding $93.5
million for production of an un- ’
apathy that may friMahM Wk
change la political complexion
of Congress. r
• Nearly 250,000 of Ameri-
ca’s “cold war** veterans have
atnamod onto cxMoge «nmpue-
es this taU to conttope thefr
education with the aid of the
OI Bill.
• Soviet Communist Party
Chief Leonid Brezhnev appeals
for International cooperation
for peace.
• Halloween vandalism In
Clearwater, Ha., mushroom*
into rioting hy hundred* Of
Negroee who thfow bottles and
rock* ■ thrfagh niadows aid:
shot out afreet light*.
■2-'
ahead of
Tuesday’s deadline for prelim
inary expense reports to the
Texas Secretary of State, See.
jaha . Tower said be M*ent
9212,610 hi his re-election bid.
.-A
• Freezing temperatures
settle over eastern haH of ae-
t-foR-hi
trouble along Israeli ■ Syrian
• Mexican police MlOHC
iJfMBiM they had held
about eight hours alter aeme-
one blocked the International
bridge at Roma.
• Pennxon Co. haa called
off proposed $149 million sale
of retail dlvlalon of United
Gas Corp. United serves High
lauds and the Liberty are*
Texas Panhandle. Much colder
”and weather Is predicted Tuesday
night for most al the aaitea.
• Texas oilmen are warned
In Dallas ihat the nation can
expect an across - the • beard
Increase la taeome tax rates
next year.
lary Of u«mw«s* *w» t a. imv
Namara scrapped the project ]- current
specified number of missiles,
was awarded to Boeing Cb. of
Seattle, Wash. The other $142.3
million is for development.
Remaining *68 Fords
"Special Pricet**
TRAD FELTON
f jv,.. ; -ut '
ady with-
, next few days,
a meeting with a city am-
committee, the council
decided to request Baytown fun-
eral homes, Who had given not-
ice that ambulance service
would be discontinued on Dec.
Vto extend this sendee j uhtil
Jan. t By this time, toe city
feels an arrangement for a«n-
bulance service to the city can
be’Started, Maybr Seal
Rotdty Club
To Host
Steel Brass.
Harry Spitz, Baytown, and
Texas iVorks manager of U.S.
Steel, will be the principal
speaker, at noon Wednesday at
the Baytown Rotary Club lunch-
mn. . • - '
Earl Malick of Birmingham,
U.S. Steel .Vice President-South,
has been Invited to the lunch-
eon, and he is trying to arrange
his schedule to jet here.
There will be about six other
ttf, Steel oteelal* friJm Hous-
ton at toe luncheon.
Fred Hartman Will be pro-
gram chairman and will intro-
duce Spitz, who is scheduled to
move to Baytown prior to be-
ginning of construction of toe
Cit) Will Seek Bids
On Ambulance Service
The city council Tuesday
morning approved recommenda-
tions for ambulance tendeebid* discussion of the steel industry
for Baytown with a view to hav- and ,u cWef prodUct». He win
ing bid specifications ready with- use sUdes to illustrate toe talk.
Westinghouse’* Bath,
A check with several
plants reported work continuing
normally.
.. JMMl ’RHdtoMm .M'MTjlWI
■■
HEAT BEATER
pendent American Flint Glass}: John*°n’* we*come the country
Workers Union walked out at
BEATING THE HEAT in Malaysia, President Johnson takeo
b. (ha ■ ’ to toe capital.
Vietnamese
Celebration
Undlsnipted
SAIGON, South Viet Nam j
(AW - The Viet Cong un-
leashed an artillery bombard-
ment on the center of Saigon |
today in a spectacular but un-
successful attempt to disrupt s~.
South Viet Nam's National Day
observances. > t , |
Six Vietnamese and one - -
American were known dead.
ConflicUng reports listed up to * ~|
six more killed but these reports
could not be verified. The one '
American known dead waa a
Navy officer. • ----- --.I.
At least 30 Vietnamese and
five Americans were wounded 1
in the' bombardment, the first
Vtet QW ifadteAdte 4 ,
WUn 11 Nil1 IW
Th* Viet Gang tmriad 31
rounds of 75mm recoillew rifle
fire in and around toe pantye 1
route, U.S.. military headquar- ’ I
tors said. Vietnamese authori-
ties reported mortar shells also
struck during the shelling. -............1
The bombardment hit Sai-
gon’s Roman Catholic cathe-
dral, a Catholic school, the John
F. Kennedy Square, the Saigon
central market and the French- ,
built CraB Hospital, to* biggest |
1LBJ Goes To Field,
uSl. _ ■ _ _ ' • ml— I
both sides for 3% hours Monday
T. Medl-
before the talks broke off.
ators said "each side remained
adamant,” but added that they
would attempt to meet with toe
parties to effect an early settle-
ment. However hofurthertalks
were scheduled.
The union said'tt represents
14,000 workers at more than 60
union said it ordered
the walkout after Westinghouse
failed to agree to 13 stipulations
the union said were included in
agreements signed last month
Lauds Korea Troops
CAMP STANLEY, 'Korea
(AP) — ‘Keep your chin up and
your chest out — we are proud
of you and I came here to tell
you so," President Johnson to-
day told American troops con-
presented one to toe widow of
Maj. Lee Di-bo, who waa tolled
when he threw hhnself on a Viet
Cong grenade to shield his men.
After watching Korean ex-
perts at karate smash stacks of
agitmucilLS Mfiicu aaav inuicouj unu mb »
with the firm’s other major un- low voice Johnson in an off-the-
ions.
The issues, according to a un-
ion spokesman, included a union
Shop, geographic wage differ- Korea they were "doing a
entials, layoff benefits and full mighty good Job" of protecting
' freedom in the United States
arbitration.
BULLETIN
and many parts of the werid. He
said no matter what they may
read about anti-Viet Nam dem-
onstrators or draft card bur-
ners, the great bulk of Ameri-
cans are like them — standing
up for freedom,
Johnson.began.his..secpnd day
in South Korea with ah hour’s
meeting with President Chung
Spitz’s talk will be a general
use slides to illustrate toe talk
Baytown employes of U.S.
Steel will be guests of Baytown
Rotarians at the luncheon.
ey said.
‘The specifications will out-
ihe hfe "o^amzaTicm ami
quate ambulance service for the
town and will ask people in busi- w(> pnlIeotpd wflS
ness to offer proposals, the tnr ,„^i,
mayor added. He Said toe coun-
cil has been approached by a
Liberty firm and also by a Bay-
tonian interested in supplying
tries have indicated they w 111
enter into a contract with the
ambulance firm for ambulance
service to toe industries. "How-
ever, they do not want to ne-
gotiate with a private business
now because they don’t want to
be to on tot city's selection,
he added.
■
No Solicitation
BAYTOWN HOUSEWIVES Asso-
ciation has announced that no
member of the organization has
been authorized to solicit funds
for the organization. Mrs. Jack-
son L.
have!
Opened for traffic Tuesday
nftoajf Engineer Wiley .E.
Carmichael announced n No-
vember eentrnet totting for n
section of Hlghwny *28 from
the Shell Refinery east to the
Baytown • La Porte Highway,
This would provide an addi-
tional two lanes of traffic and
would give Baytown motorists
four lane traffic arteries be'
tween Houston on both sides
of the Ship Channel.
fronting the Communists in Ko- tile* with- their bare fists, toe
President took a helicopter to
Camp Stanley, where 5,0)0 U.S.
Army, Navy, Air Force and
Marine troops had been brought
by truck so the President could
see a cross section of American
forces in Korea. Normally
Camp Stanley houses only 900
engineering troops.
Johnson hopped out of his
Jeep during toe drive to the
camp messhaU and walked
along with hands outstretched
rea
The President traveled by
train- and helicopter into the
rugged South Korean country-
aide to pay tribute to Korean
and American troops guarding
the 151-mile border with Com-
munist North Korea.
Speaking earnestly and in
cuff speech told toe..troops 20
miles south of the demilitarized
zone between North and South
hint.
After his visit to the troops,
Johnson helicoptered down to
.. -a___
_ A portionyj| State Highway
225 between the la Porte
Freeway (919-East) and Rich .................
ey Street In PasadenaJva* Hee Park. They discussed Viet
S S’,
quest tor more U.S. funds to
equip troops to replace them at
HomeT~~ .;
After their talk, Johnson
Park drove through cheering,
flag-waving crowds to take a
special train for a 19-mile ride
to the headquarters of the 26th
Korean Infantry Division and
teiarby U.S, Camp Stanley.
At the Korean camp Johnson
conferred U.S. Silver Star med-
als on three S^th Korean her*
oes of toe Viet Nam war. He
Suwon, 30 miles youth of Seoul, on, were seized to toe
for a final countryside stop be- of toe parade route.
fore returning to the capital. (gee 8HKLUNP, page 2)
The bombardment, first of its
kind by toe Viet Cong against
Saigon, failed to interrupt the' ' -
massive parade marking the *
Dinh Diem. ,
For two hours and 30 minutes,
soldiers of the South Vietnam- , Ij
ese armed forces and the six
nations allied with them pa-
raded before tens of thousands ' tJ
and leading Vietnamese and
foreign dignitaries. • 4-~
U.S. military headquarters
said the shelling came from a
point 3H miles southeast of Sai-
gon near An Khanh Ka Six U.
S, gunship helicopters closed in f :
on the area and artillery spotter
planes were aloft. A ground £'■
force of allied troops also swept ^
the arta but the Viet Cong gun- -^-v-HPa
ners apparently escaped.
:u. S. headquarters announced. . |iri
that three Viet Cong were cap-
tured near toe parade grand-
stand* on Kennedy Square. A
spokesman sahi "they were
arerfisted men crowded around armed with grenades and small _- . f
aWM. ^Vietnamese spokesman Tl
said four more Wet Cong,
aimed wtthgtwaSafand weap-
- .....
1 ”
1_1
Baytown Jayeees Ready
For Country Music Show
The Texas Jamboree folks, | Mrs. Morrison, Eunice, has a |
including Loretta Lynn of the gospel album, "Welcome, Corte
' 1
ganization Mrs. Jack- Tenn., will arrive in Baytown] Since 1964. the Morrison Fam-
■s.s^S'S srr£jt? dsftrrssassss
contributions. “The onte money
lesumed pickets Tuesday at
five "chain” grocery stow* in 1
Baytown In a continuation of an
effort to negotiate with mer-
chants.
ALL DEPOSITS
NOW INSURED
FOR $16,000
WAS $10,(
1ST. NAT *
II—
western show -slated at 7 :301 Bast Texas Jamboree at Johnny
p.m. in the Robert E. Lee High j Morrison’s Hay Bam in Shep-
Sponsored by the Baytownlpersonar appearances and have
■■■ aho^m^JTl
of its kind to play in Ron Parrish, Jaycee presh
>wn. dent, said, "we’re encouraging
addition to Sftu lytm, a
' ~f" '* * ££'AA-'«m
h -
. 1
■etau w-
dra, has Just returned from a ment with skit, to keep young- 1
recording session In Nashville sters as well as adults enter*
with two new releases, "Happi- uined.”
££ tS?£A7S
d from Montreal, and h« *dult* ^ 50 cent* fqr cWWrfn
Just released two neW re- under 12 from any Jaycee and
—'~ ;l ■■
J:
'SwMthoart of I
■ Texas <_
—-——
-
’ 4
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 62, Ed. 1 Tuesday, November 1, 1966, newspaper, November 1, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1061193/m1/1/?q=1966+yearbook+north+texas+state+university: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.