The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 85, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 1, 1967 Page: 1 of 22
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MX. AND MRS. EAR!/ D. EDWARD*
m X Humble
i Theater. This Coupon good
at Mw ftraassn ban ifflat
Oood Through November L
-HOUR Of THE OUST
m)t Paptoton Smn
OVER 50,000 READERS EVERY DAY
VOL 41, NO. W
IAYTOWN, TEXAS, 77*10
Wodnosdey, Novombor I, 1967
TELEPHONE 5424J02
CROP CoJIectiond
BAYTOWN YOUTHS collected
3453 for the Christian Over*™*
Relief Program Tuesday night
•oUtction
in • trick . or . treat
of funds. About 75 leer,
participated in the drive. Any
one who may have been missed
In the eolicltadon and would like
In contribute may call
Mark's Mettndlsi Church
aend contributions in by mail.
Motor Mm
MRS. ROSE HoUingsbead. M. of
Mont Belvteu died WedlMSd-
morning in a Baytown hospital.
Sha was ft* mother af Mm.
MMsr Leonard Met BsMeu
srith whom she made her home I
wui
Mrs. McKinney Dies
MRS. ETHEL Knowles McKin-
ney. S3, of ft*me died at
a m Wtdnaaday in Boerm. Mrs
McKinney, mother of Cart Me*
Kenney it. ot Baytown
Qtcrjp L McKinney of Boeme,
wsi S former resident of Bay-
town, runeral arrangements will
bo announced by the Raul
Lee runeral Horn# here
In Nett of othe
brancee, the family requests
that contributions be made
the Arabia Tempi# Crippled
ChAdrtm’s HoapitaL
Mount Sciwtond
Sr JOSEPH'S Catholic Church
nnaMMai that Maaaea will be
at • am., I:|» am, • am
I M am, 11 30 am and 5 JJ
p m. Thinday, AU Sauls Day
they feel art vlUI to the Institu-
tion's continued operation^H
Against this background of
added study snd self - examine
tkm. Regent Chairman *•■
lirsmlett said another election
will be called. No date has been
rd. but it wm the cno-
of those present that the
^ -.-lection should be called "soon".
Bruce Ramsey, attorney for
the collegl, utd there are n
laws prohibiting another elec
lion in the near future. "There
to be a statute that re*
be Qulred you to wait a year be*
fan bringing up the additional
taxing authority lseue, but that
has been
mH.
The main reason the regents
say they feel free to go back
to the voters again quickly Is
an the low turnout Saturday Only Flying a quarter of a mile high
UMbotom
HarOld geni
GENE L/mgbotham
aon of Mr. and Mrs H H Long
botham of 1750 HlUcreat Lane
has bam chosen to Who's Mho
Among Amortean I
and Cottages. Ha Is • senk-r
physics major at Stephen P|
Austin Mat# allege, where he
to a member af Alpha Chi and
Sigma. Phi Sigma, national
physics aodaty. and In the hon-
ors math program. He la abo
a tackle on (ho Lumberjack foot
ball team and active in the BSU
TOPS Meeting
EMMA WOOD, chief diatkiaa
at San Jacinto Methodist Hos-
pital, will ba guest speaker at
the TOPS matting to be held at
7 34 p.m, Thursday In the Gulf
Cbast dink- lobby. Interested
persons art invited to attend
St. Mart's Spatter
METHODIST MEN Of St 1
of St. Merit's
Methodist Church will meet at
Rf- iy In the FW-
6 45 pm Wednesday
kiwshlp HaU. Tom Cheat, La
Porte plant manager at Du
Pont, will speak on the economic
Importance at the Houston Ship
Channel. The Swtogtrs from
Sterling High School will provide
music, directed by Mrs Xtnn
Stone.
WmHmt Ate TMm
actiwiles even though a hospital
■avs been created
PARTLY CLOUDY through
Thursday. Warmer Wednesday
sad Tharaday. Tomporajirel
—r iga, if,g Wednesday, district may hava
MU* to'teWl**- A cloud w aarw the arta.|
blanket kept toe oversight M
temperature In the Baytown
area to the high 50s.
GALVEBTOJ4 TIDE* Thursday
will be high at tiM am. aad
S:M p.m. and tow M 544 MR
No Date Set Yet-
LC Bond, Tax Issues To
Go Before Voters Again
By HENRY HOLCOMB
Lee Cbllego officials spent two
hours Tuesday night searching
out the weightier factors in the
defeat Saturday of two proposals firm of Roy las, Winston and Ct
changed,” Ramsey
trict voters voioed no opinion on administration official to say (he
the issues
1 Th* anti * tax climate
John R Keller of the Houston
Inc., the college's fiscal agent,
said. “I think the anti. tax cli-
mate la as bad aa I’ve ever
seen it"
The climate hat been infhten
ntd by several local tax raises
and the threat of an Income tax
hike, ha said.
■ Some of the reasons given
by their patrons for the'negs-
tive vote were baaed on a "Mis-
understanding of the facta.”
One voter reportedly called an (lea BOND*, Page •)
was “for the college" but voted
(.gainst th# propose it because
"the workmen on the parking
lot the ooltage. It building art
loafing."
. She said she witched them
dally and "they art not giving
the taxpayers a full day’s work
lor a day’s pay.”
The parking iota are bull!
with revenue from the sal* of
student parking permits. 7 he
man art employed hy a con
tractor who submitted the low
bid on
the project, not the col-
lege Itself,
Humphrey Flies Over
Marine Battleground
DA NANG, Vietnam (AP) - squadron of Phantom* attacked
7,140 citizens toted.
They defeated the propsaed
71 5 million bond issue and a
request for » cents of-additional
taxing authority both by 3 to 1
iitotfm Th#-actual onto wm
TV tor and 1.395 against on the
■■ issue; and 752 for
bond Issue; and 752 for and 1
Ml against an th* taxing au-
thority issue. .
The result* were declared of-
ficial after votes were canvassed
Tuesday night.
"W#V# gof to go again.
■MaMt said. "Wa’ve got too
much at state. ■
^B’taty of reason were dis-
CMMd in OB Informal mactlngl
lEech regent «ni a number of
visitors talked about things they
I hid heard during the election
campaign and sines th* defeat
AB others comidrred two fac-
tors wen considered to be de-
termining:
L The low turnout - about
between the tang* of Commu-
nist machine gun* and missiles
Vice President Hubert H. Hum-
phrey surveyed tht U.4. Ma-
rinas’ battleground along the de
militarised sot* today. From
Ml ‘
he taw U J. 'artillery
tag Rad positions
As the vice president's ik/w
flying dll droned over ftaj
scarred terrain where 10-400
Marine* have been wounded *
killed this year, Humphrey
said; ‘1 taw th* firing of can-
none, and I could tea a rtestrn
ar offshore » ’ -*
Marina F4 Phantom and Af
Marauder jets flew cover above
the transport while It traveled
at 1.J0P feel out of range of ma
•-him guns and automatic strap-
ona and below the 7 000 foot lev
el at which ptanes become vul-
to Cpmmunlst mis
that may be positioned lust
of the sons. UJLta*ft
M par cent of the college dis- quarters reporu-d today that a
Constitution Change! To
Be CC Luncheon Subject
Mrs, R. E. Zumwalt, member to bo used for acquisition of
"f the Baytown League of Wo-
men Voters, will speak on pro-
posed smendments to Use Texas
Constitution at the noon Friday
meeting of the Bajusvn Cham-
ber of
Texan* will be voting on the
amendments Saturday, Nov 11,
K*ch year the Chamber of Com-
merce present# a program deal-
ing with amendments.
Hera is a brief description of be,n* ‘“•d between 4 a.m. and
! "__i» DJ« "w,rWuon ot % p m Itmw. *nd Friday*
and 8 a m. t-j 5 p.m. Tuesdays
the amendments.
1. Permits qountiei to piaoe
county taxes Into «M general
land without regard to the
source or putpoae of each tax.
2. Allow* cities snd other po-
litical subdivisions to engsg' to
public services related to mental
K?alth and related public health
3. Authorise* an Increase in
the total amount ot bond* that
may be Issued by th* Veterans
Land Board to $400 million from
the present 3200 million.
Authorizes each
the state to pay
rt for sheriffs, deputy sher-
iffs, constable#, deputy const*
bln and other law enforcement
officials injured in the taunt
l dutiet.
of official
lends for state perk sites.
• Authorizes certain non-elcc
Htto takto officers and employes
conditions
to hold under special
other non . elective office* and
positions in state or federal atrv
ices.
Absentee voting in the amend-
Hfl tftattraB undrawn# 'at
WBiflli OouMy QatgmSmn
Houston. Three machines art
p m. TUes
Wednesdays and Thundays
The absentee voting will end
Nov 7 in the election for twp
seats in the legislature, th* pro-
posed constitutional amendment*
and ■ proposition to change a
portion of th* Harris
County line.
Baytonians will vote on the:
constitutional amendments a n d
th* county line propositkxi, but
not the legislative candidate!.
Absentee voting it taking
place in the office of Bob Tur-
ten tine, Harris County clerk.
| suspected misaiis alto just
north of the DMZ Tuesday.
Humphrey, dressed in light
blue alack* and a sports shirt,
suggested tattling at Dong Ha.
the Marine baa* 17 miles south
af the 0MS. so h* could "taka a
little helicopter ride north
"You're Idddtag, sir," cm of
the Secret Service men replied
The Marines had made elabo-
rate preparations hi eat* th*
vice presidents plane went
down Four HI helicopters, two
helicopter gun*hips and
(entry force w*r» on the atari at
Dong
Humphrey ended hit visit to
South Vietnam tor the inaugur a-
non oi rretKiem pfguyrn vin
Thieu witt) a visit fa the Ma
rines at Da Nang before Hying
to the Malayaian capital of Kua.
la Lum;,ur
He told the Marines Ame-i
cam must be "patient with our-
velvet and patient with our *1-
Mm|
Bulletin
SAIGON (AF) - Viet Ceng
mortormea carried the attack
ea the Vletaainea* dtotrk-t
headquarter* at Lae Nlab late
th* fourth day today tort left
the Natlaual Day parade la
Saigon a Pm*. *
The Stt round barrage fired
at one of the American bat
taltaas defending Loc Ntah
wounded only one man. A total
St MS Ooromuniat# hava been
reported kilted la attempt* Ihh
wook to overran the town 71
mlleq,' «aKh ot Saigon, apf
•ally tor a propaganda victory
la taka same bloom off the
inaagurattea af President Nga-
yea Vaa Thieu.
UAW Pushes Plans
To Leave AFL-CIO
Peak Winds 136 MPH--
Hurricane Beulah Third
Largest Ever Recorded
In a broadcast earlier from
tigon, Humphrey told U.S. per-
mntl in Vietnam not to be
Saigon,
tonsil ■
distracted by the so-called
voices of dissent" at home. "By
and large,'' ht said, American*
support their government's ac-
tions In Vietnam.
American sources said Hum
phrey was highly pleased with
hln talks with President Thieu
and Vice President Nguyen Cso
Ry.
NAACP IS PLANNING
Voter Drive In Tow
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. <AP,~
The National Association for the
Advancement of Colored People
says It hopes to register men
than half a million potential
Negro voters in Texas.
W. C. Patton national asso-
ciate director of voter educe
tion, said Tuesday that 6?
NAACP college chapters and
Waller Youth Council* will conduct the
drive.
He said tha driv# wffl atai#
Dec. 3 in Houston for South and
East Texas and Dec, 10 in Dol-
ing for North and Northeast
Texas He added there are 700,
000 potential Negro voter* In
Texas.
REL-Sterling Clash Rates
Special Sun Souvenir 'Tab'
supplement to Tht Baytown Sun Rots
• asaggast,sk XfJK sx
I
only tc
. Ittlnsto
;■ Sun
MR. AND MRS. Jim Bryan take
a vacation to spend mors time
with their long • awaited
granddaughter, Let anna i
Brunson. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry
Brunson are th# proud parent*
and Dabby is bar big alitor.
Georgeann* Chandler wonder*
. how her slater Kathy get* her
name in the paper so often
Kerry Haiti*** plana • picnle
only to have It interrupted by a
rainstorm.
Sun Business Office Manager
Ann Pritchett find* a foae and a
note on bar desk when she
comes to work.
Mrs. «. E. Waugh Jr„ 407H
N. Gallia rd. is In San Jselnto
Methodist Hospital in Room 241
recovering from surgery. She
can have visitors.
Sandra Freeman, of High-I
lends, has a group of friend* In
Tueiday night tor "trick or
,rM?*nd Mt*. Joe A.Kiritland
and Mr. and Mrs. Willie Istio
visited Hodges Gardens between
Shreveport and Lake Charles
La-, recently.
RIVAL CLASH
PAT STAPLES of The Sun’* Advertising Department
and
the cover
Henry Hoieomb, auiatant managing editor,^prepare
or e *n er- ger Muven^progrerr^w^c ^ ^ ^ >(
Xangar
•d piement to the Sun7* Nov. I edition. Th* two lit
7;J0 pun. Friday, Nev. id, at Mamarial Stadlmw.
The game between the two
Baytown achoola will bt the first a*
varsity meeting between the two
12-4A rivals, whose Junior vet-
tie last year.
The tabloid program which
will be Included as a supple-
ment to both subscription and
news stand editions, will be
printed in maroon and blue, the
school colors of Lee and Sterl-
ing respectively.
The program will list all play
era for both teams, their num
bers and positions. In addition,
It will include feature, stories on
the bands and drill teams of
both schools and a history of
each school.
Non • subscribers and those
AUSTIN. Tex. (AP)- The
Weather Bureau said Tuesday
that Hurricane Beulah, one of
the greatest natural disasters In
away; some areas lost
three inches."
Thirteen person* died
result of the storm, the Weather
REGGIE BREWER
Reggie Brewer Is
President Of New
Bavtown Optimist
Reggie Brewer, a vice presi-
dent of Citizen* National Bank,
has been elected president of a
newly - organized Optimist club
in Baytown.
The Noon Optimist Club, which
will meet on Thundays, held Its
charter meeting at Wyatt s Cafe-
teria, with 23 charter member*
and eight guests attending.
Steele McDonald, president of
•he Baytown Evening Optimist
Club, opened the meeting and
introduced guest* Gov. John
Cummings of Houston and Lt.
Gov. Lester Alford of Baytown.
Ben Bradshaw, held represen-
tative of the Optimist Club from
Idaho, talked about club history
and wm In clnrgp of organiz.ng
■he chib.
Paul Klme of the by-law* com-
mittee discussed the by-lawi
and moved they be accepted by
the club. The membership voted
to adopt them
Other officer* serving with
Brewer are Paul Klme, vice
president; Tbm Walmsley, vlco
president; Hoyett Page, Ed
P.ichmond, Toylor Hammack
William Moreno, Larry Enderli
and N. V. McWilliams, directors.
Brewer appointed Tony Caro-
lina secretary and Ed Rutledge
treasurer subject to board ap-
proval.
pig
50 Persons Evacuated
As Gas Car Derailed
SHREVEPORT, La. (AP)
Railroad crews moved in early
today to pick up two tank cars
loaded with volatile gas. About
The first annual homecoming, the Robert E. Lee High School- 50 persons who live in the tmme-
area spent the night else-
track and overturned Tuesday
a Kansas City Southern
A railroad spokesman
slty teams played to a scoreless Were was no great danger of an
the program may obtain them
at The Baytown Sun office, Citi-
zens of Texas Savings and Loan,
Citizens National Bank, First
National Baric, Harris County
Federal Saving* and Loan ami
People* State Bank
Approximately 2,000 extra
copies of the Nov. 0 edition of
Th4 S<
Sun will be available to the
public.
explosion but precautions should
be taken Those who evacuated
stayed with friend* and rela-
tives.
The tanker* carried 60,000
gallons of highly inflammable
butadiene used In making ayn-
thetic robber.
Texas Splinter Groups
WH Run Candidates
servMiv, r»r'>" tlw'socWW C7^er
AUSTIN (AP)
Workers Party of Texas and
egfr# copies of the American *P*rty have n°tlj
fled the secretary oi state they - , mnmine
intend to nominate candidates
by convention next year.
The notification is a prelimi-
nary step toward getting a place
on the 1968 general election
ballot. The partiea must prove
they have 15,000 member*.
The American Party organized
last week for the purpose of
backing former Alabama’ Gov
George Wallace tor president if
he decides to nn.
the history of Texas, wai the'Bureau said. Five were from
tornadoes and eight from flood-
ing The number of injuries was
placed at 35,
The death toll.
third hugest hurricane of rec-
ced.
Beulah, which hit the Texas
coast near the mouth of the
Klo Grande Stpt. 20, was third
In size, after Carla of 1961 and
the great New England storm of
1938.
Beulah's winds hit a peak of
136 miles per hour recorded at
Brownsville. Tides as high as1
30 feet were recorded on South
Padre Island
However, the greatest dam
age was caused by "mammoth
Hooding" which followed the
storm's passage, the WeaUiet
Bureau said The heaviest off)-
total rainfall wm at Pettus In hydrocarbon wastes In metropol
up to far below other major disasters
■Mbs Texas,.
A hurricane that hit Calves
ion In 1900 was th* worst not
ural disaster in United States
history Loss of life was e*'i
mated at between 6,000 and 8,000
but the exact number was nev
however was er determined. „
Outdoor Oil Wastes
Burning Ban Fought
AUSTIN (AP) — Texas' major lieve It Js extremely Important
oil and gas associations And fault
with a proposal by the Texas
to give the regular party the
latitude of making a judgmen
Air Control Board to prohibit oOt- as to whether or not the out
door burning of spilled oil
Beene County where 27.38 Inches
Ml Sept. 20-24
The Weather Bureau said tli*
record breaking floods ensued
In the South Texas area with
record highs reported on sev-
eral stream*.
Hurricane Beulah generated a
record-breaking number of tor-
nadoes—85. ......
Property damage In Texas
was "conservatively estimated"
at 3100 million and crop losses
were put at 340 millior^ the
summary satfT
Fence damage slant in the
oded area is estimated to be
at least 310 million,” the sum-
mary said. "At least 3,000 head
of cattle were lost. Millions of
tom of rid) topsoil were washed
Weekend Games
Tickets Here
Tickets to tbe Robert E.
Lee-Sooth Houston game Fri-
day night and the Sterling
Sam Rayburn game Saturday
night both at Pasadena'* new
stadium off Spencer Highway,
art available ai the athletic
office* la Baytown at Memori
al Stadium*
Athletic Director Don Stall-
north said tickets for both
l will remain on ante
through 4 pan. Friday,
they man! be returned
itan areas.
The Texas Manufacturers As
soclstion and the Texas Chemi-
cal Council joined with oil and
gas men Tuesday in objecting
to the proposed air control regu-
jltttia.^^^^^^^1
The regulation which they op-
posed said oU "spilled or lost
from pipeline breaks" and
"waste hydrocarbons products
from oil exploration,
merit, or production operations
oil produced in testing an oil
well, and paraffin” may be
burned outdoors, but "the loca-
tion of the burring must be out-
side a defined standard metro-
politan area^^^^^^^^H
The outdoor proposal may be
well advised In some Texas
locales, but in the SMSA's of
Ector, Lubbock, Midland and
Tom Green this order can only
create undue hardship and ex-
pense," said a statement by Rus-
sell J. Ramsland, president, and
Ed Thompson, executive vice
president of the Permian Basin
Petroleum association.
"In each of Ihc above named
SMSA’s roughly 95 per cent of
the total population erf the re-
spective counties it centered in
a single city, i.e„ Odessa. Lub-
Reuther Is
Liquidating
$$ Interests
WASHINGTON (AP) - Wal-
ter Reuther appeal* to be liqui-
dating major financial interests
the AFL-CIO in preparation
for pulling his 1.5 million-
member United Auto Worker*
cut of th* labor federation, in-
formed sources say.
The AFLCIO's Industrial Un-
ion Department, Reuther s fast
remaining power base withi n
the federation, Is rapidly and
deliberately spending itself out
<rf money, It was reported.
Jack COnway, executive direc-
tor of th* Industrial Union De-
partment, denied any such sig-
nificance could be attached to
the mooey problem, but con-
firmed that more than 31 mil-
lion has been spent out of cash
reserves In the past 10 months.
This was more titan half the de-
partment's total cash.
It's nothing serious," said
Oonway, adding that much of
the money had been spent sup-
porting organizing drives
anwng teachers, farm workers
and Southern textile workers
and In helping other unions.
But another labor source
said: "It could mean that if
Reuther pulls out of the AFL-
CIO, he would leave the Indus-
trial Union Department empty-
handed."
Reuther has, been attacking
door burning is reasonably
cessary lor the protection of life
and property.
"It would be regrettable to sec
a regulation making it unlawfu
lor any of us to take such action.
For Instance, a hypothetical bu-
tane leak in a Une might in time
threaten an inhabited area but I'
might be safely lighted to pre-
vent such a threat from occur-
ring."
Also, Mid-Continent said: ________ ________
"W* assume the board will be ,j^"|ea(krship~of AFLCIp Pres-
reasonable In giving considera-
tion to hardship cases or situ-
(Kee WASTES, Pag* *)
dent George Meany tor more
than a year and making threat-
ening gestures to secede from
fhn Viln laknp Few
Parents Of
Poisoned
Kids Held
bock. Midland snd San Angelo."
statement added. “Other
the^WIPW
meaningful concentrations of
population range In distance
from 15 to 40 miles. Production
is located primarily away from
the population centers, and
there can be little justifications
for this order being applied to
these areas
ARCADIA, Fla. (AP) - The
parents of seven small children
who died last week of parathidh
were in jail today aft
I lie detector tests
which Desoto Gxinty Judge
Gordon Hays said showed the
father had “guilty knowledge o(
the poisoning."
James Rkhardson, 32, was _wnev
originally booked into -Desptc l » ,
County jail Tuesday night on a
charge of first degree murdei
but later warrants were issued
charging him and his wife, An-
nie Mae, 29, with child neglect.
Hays said, "We re going to Is-
sue murder warrants tomorrow
(Wcdnesdayl." The judge said
Stallworth
there are still plenty of tickets
available for the Nov. t* pent-
Robert
..
Ticket* to the Inter-city
lash sritt gq eo sale at 8
a.m. Monday.
js jsft rst
vision of the Texas Railroad «*»d undergo a li# datectar *Mt
Commission administer "any <h(s morning,
rules-or regulations Issued per- Richardson and his wile vol-
taining to pollution control, untsrily took the lie tests Tues-
where It concerns the oil and day while interviews were con-
gas industry." • ..... ducted by Sheriff Frank E
fc Texas Mid-Continent OI’ Cline, State AJty. Frank Schaub
the big labor federation the two
men founded 12 years ago.
The Auto Workers union has
long been the major financial
backer of the 60-u nion Industrial
Union Department that em-
braces some 6 million of the
AFLCIO's total 14 million
members..
Reuther quit as a vice presi-
dent of the AFLCIO nine
monihs ago and resigned all
other posts except the presiden-
cy erf the Industrial Union Dc-
l»rtmeW.
It’s not as jf he were spend-
ing other people's money," said
zie source, adding that, In ef-
fect, the Industrial Union De-
partment was getting rid of
largply contributed
the Auto Workers.
■And it;* not being wasted."
this source said, pointing out the
money was being spent helping
other unions and on community
action rogram* aimed at solv-
ing big-city slum problems.
These are two of the areas tat
which Reuther has severely
criticized Meany for not being
dynamic" enough,
Oriway. while denying the fi-
nancial straits had anything to
do with the Reuther-Meany dia-
said the Industrial Union
department's cash reserves had
dwindled from "slightly over $2
million" to "somewhere around
31 million" In the past year.
Educators Meet At Lee College
'Educational Innovations' Try-Out Is Urged Here
By JOHNKLLA BOYNTON retain enough coagulant to keep that art better than our present Russia ns orbHed Ihc^t Sput-
Some 215 public school and
community college representa-
tives were encouraged here
together."^
The basic goal, Dr. Fallon
said, is not innovation per se.
goals
Dr. Fallon said education be-
came involved In many "crash
nik. He listed tnnovatings in re-
garding, programs tor the aca-
demically gifted, science, math#-
innovation* but only after
tablishing clear objectives
the educational program.
consultants, who headed
nar was co-sponsored by the col
plementary Education Center
Bouwsma
learning resources t
tor at Miaml-Dade Junior C
mar Jolinson, professor of hig
Charles W. Mansfield, <
of the School of Tomon
at San Antonio. .
lohnson spoke to a
Tuesday morning, he and Bou-
wsma conducted section meet-
the public school educators.
If you want change In the
school district, we need to fig-
ure out some way to unfreeze
the frozen ideas." Dr. Fallon
told his group. "We need to re-
main loose enough eo that
change can take place and yet
NEW BOOK ON EDUCATION
need the seminar at
^ttteTft?^
DR BERIJE FALLON of Texas Tech, center,
•hows one ot hit new boohs on educational
innovation to Ray Spencer, assistant super-
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Christine Espars*, * member of Uw staff
of the Gulf School
tion Center, which
Lee College. Dr. Fatten
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 45, No. 85, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 1, 1967, newspaper, November 1, 1967; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1061440/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.