The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 16, 1971 Page: 1 of 36
thirty six pages : ill. ; page 18 x 13 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
0 Holiday
y '
aspoon curry powder
micutfl, cut In strip*
jt biscuits as directed
ackage. Meanwhile,
ne remaining inured- '
except piinerro Cut
ts in half and top each
a teaspoon of turkey f
•e, Garnish with pi-
1 strip. Broil about 3
from heat 2 to 3 min-
ir until hot. Makes 20
once, £-
iv holidays.
JAM
on since 1795
p A- ■
STIltED AND BOTTUDBY
BEAM KENTUCKY
School
/ . >,
'«
lake it
me in
week
merits.
\
\
■ <<'
■ The Baytown Sun Invites
ELBERT L. ALBRITTON
712 Meadow fll—o
This Pass Good Through Dec. 22
At The Brunson Theatre Box Office
Now Showing
“THE ORGANIZATION”
fhe jtototon £>un
YOUR HOME
NEWSPAPER
OVER 50,000 READERS EVERY DAY
Vol. 50, No. 63
TELEPHONE NUMBER: 422-1302
Thursday, December 16, 1971
BAYTOWN, TEXAS, 77520
Ton Conti For Copy
’OTS
REL Choir
ROBERT E. Lee Choir will
sing at 4 p.m. Friday at Citi-
zens Savings and Loan Asso-
ciation building. The public ia
f invited.
Yuletide Party
A CHRISTMAS party for Youth
A division at Memorial Baptist
Oiurch will be at 6 15pm FYi-
day, instead of Thursday, at
the church.
Club Party
CEDAR BAYOU Past Matrons
Club will have their Christmas
party at 7 p.m. Friday at the
home of Mrs. Jack Fowler of
2HI Bayou Road,
Burglary Probed
A TOTAL OF $709 worth of
items were stolen from the
home of Hillyard Williaminson,
705 E. Gulf, between 7 a.m. and
9:30 p.m. Tuesday. Police said,
a rifle, a revolver, pota and
pans and about flOO worth of
meat were taken.
Realtor Board
BAY AREA Board of Realtors
will hold its regular meeting at
noon Monday, Dec. 20, at Holi-
day Inn. The board of directors
will meet at 11 a.m. A buffet
luncheon will be served.
HOUSTON
V
BAYTOWN
PASADENA
LA ROUTE
JAKE
yClTY
A
GALVES*
'Ttylof
Bayou
C Taylor l»k»
FARM ROAD 5281
L Forest Lakt ji\
\
BA YPORT DEEP CHANNEL PORT
AN IMMEDIATE $11 million expansion of the Bayport Division Into a deep channel port for
ocean-going ships wai announced Wednesday by the Houston Port Commission. The project Is
to be completed la 1972. The Bayport channel taio be dredged to a depth of M feet. The project
if to be financed by $14 million in revenue bondf which will be purchased by Humble Oil * Re-
fining Co. Humble is putting up $4.5 million in cnsh for the project.
Texas High Court Next * ■
Beach City To File Writ
Of Error In Annex Case
Degree Candidate
LESLIE JEAN Lammers,
By WANDA ORTON
BEACH CITY (Sp) - Beach
City Mayor Jimmy McClellan
Thursday said that a writ of er-
ror will be filed with the Texas
Supreme Court concerning the
After this rehearing request be sued in the county where we
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lo- change of venue ruling on the
” . city of Baytown’s suit contest-
ing the annexation of some
8,000 acres of land in West
Chambers County.
The writ of error will be Hied
well Lammers of 4815 St. An-
drews, and Maleom Orval
Brown Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
M. O. Brown of 9118 N. Main,
are among 380 tentative can-
didates for Hie bachelor
business administration de- Jenson of Anahuac,
gree to be given at the end of
the fall semester Dec. 22 at the
University of Texas in Austin,
was turned down, it wps decid-
ed to file application for writ of
error for referral to the Texas
Supreme Court.
The Texas Supreme Court
will grant or refuse the appli-
cation, Jenson told The Sun
Thursday. . ■ v /
“We are Just not going to
give up,” Beach City Mayor
McClellan said. “We contend
Eugene, that Chambers County is where The Baytown suit ia a three-
Beach we should be sued. We should (See ANNEX, Page 3)
Weather
And Tides
Grid Fee Receipts
Show Surplus In 71
CLOUDY AND continued
mild with a chance of rain, is
the Baytown area weather
forecast for Thursday.
Temperature, upper 50s to
low 70s.
\ : ■ .
MORGAN’S POINT tides
FYiday: High at 4:01 a.m,;
low at 2:55 p.m. .>
FRIDAY’S SUN will rise at
7:10a.m. and set at 5:25 p.m.
City’s attorney.
The Beach City Councilmen
have authorized Jenson to take
the case to the Texas Supreme
Court since the appeal was
turned down on change of ve-
nue, "
turned down Beach City’. ap-ES at fStball games kept
peal for a rehearing on the the cash register jingling dur-
court’s decision that the an-ljng 1971,
nexation suit be tried in Harris The income has enabled the
County. / school district to accumulate a
Spur 55 Bridge Across
.■■■■■ ■ ■ — ;J' ■ - ■ -rap1- - -■J v rT.i » ' •.
Cedar Bayou Approved
U.S. Coast
Guard OK’s
52-Ft. Span
By PRESTON PENDERGRASS
■ ThQ illS fluff Guard hu|..
approved construction of Spur
56 bridge across Cedar Bayou
with a vertical clearance of 52
feet above average high water
and has specified that con-
struction begin within three
five years.
Spur 55 would extend from
Highway 148 near Holiday Inn
in Baytown to Farm Road 1406
in West Chambers County.
The Department of Trans-
portation of the y.S. Coast
Guard’s New Orleans office no-
tified Baytown and Chambers
County officials of the bridge
approval by letter Wednesday
afternoon.
Chambers County officials
have refused to agree to the
purchase of necessary right-of-
way for Spur 55 in West Cham-
bers County unless the City of
Indian Army Triumphs
Pakistan Surrenders;
Fighting Is Stopped
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The Indian army triumphed
transact our city business.”
The 8,000 acres in question is Baytown agreed to reroute its
adjacent to the north city limit striP annexation lines in that
boundary of Beach City and
lies within Baytown’s extra-
territorial jurisdiction. When
Beach City annexed this acre-
age more than a year ago, Bay-
town contended that Beach
City had violated the law and
filed suit
on its eastern front today with
the unconditional surrender of
Pakistan’s army in East Paid-
Sixers
western front to stop fighting
Friday night in a unilateral
cease-fire. •*-
The Indian Cabinet’s decision
to call a pause in the Kashmir
area was made In the face of a
declaration by Pakistan’s presi-
dent that he would carry on the
war with India until the "occu-
pied areas are taken back.”
In announcing the Indian gov-
ernment’s decision, an official
spokesman said: “We have re-
peatedly declared that India
has no territorial ambition.
"Now that Pakistani armed
forces have surrendered in
our view to continue
present conflict.
"Therefore, in order to stop
bloodshed and unnecessary loss
of life, we have ordered our
armed forces to cease-fire ev-
erywhere on the western front,
with effect from 2000 hours In-
dian standard time on Friday,
Dec. 17,1971."
area.
The City of Baytown has re-
fused to redraw the annexation
lines and ia being supported in
its refusal tty the Chamber of
(See SPUR, Page 2)
School’s Out
Friday For
Yule Holidays
Baytown’s 14,000 school chil-
dren begin a two-week Christ-
mas holiday when school closes
Bangla Desh, and Bangla Desh diers marched victoriously Into
now is free, it is pointless in Dacca and Prime Minister In- PM*M* * *
dira Gandhi told her people: ^
capital of the East wing of Pak»f~r _
ifjt£n + HOUSTON-Texas Wa-
Mrs. Gandhi declared refu- ter B??rl *lt0™e>
-......
"It i, our Mmut hop, Uut d.. c.lfc tagla “***-,„, g5 ggS W EX
*13^ PAKISTAN, P... 1| I .djoummeo, ol II, k»
there will be a corresponding
immediate response from the
government of Pakistan.”
The time given ia 8 p.m. local
time, equivalent to 9:30 a.m.
EST.
The eastern and western
fronts are separated by about
1,000 miles, as are East and
West Pakistan
In East Pakistan, Indian sol-
School Vacation Means
Chiefs Big Job, Ahead
amount required for 1970 and
1971 payments on $80,000 in re-
Fridayfand most other area Jones ;
public schools will also be fol-
venue bonds used to finance the lo^ingJ,le f8™ •chedul®
The kids ir. Baytown will re-
turn to classes Jan. 3 and will
initial paving of parking lots at
Stallworth Stadium. . . . . , . ,
Some $8,859 of the surplus (“ve tw°mtor® weeks of sch°°1
Crosby ‘Grad’ Earns
Doctorate Front SMU
came from 1971 receipts and
the remainder came from 1970
redpts, Supt. Johnny Clark
says
The surplus will be used to
satisfy the demands of a re-
before the fall semester ends.
But Crosby students are taking
final examinations this week
and will begin the spring sem-
ester Jan. 3.
lee College started final ex-
CROSBY (Sp) - Joseph E.
Crosby High School, has been
granted a PhD degree in engi-
neering mechanics from
Southern Methodist Univer-
sity.
Tepera, son of Mrs. Helen
Tepera of Crosby and the late
Joe Tepera, completed the re-
quirement* for the degree
when he presented his disser-
tation, a theoretical study into
the characteristics of sound
scattered by a coated cylinder
Tommy submerged in water. The in-
home vestigation was supported un-
der the combined sponsorship
of the National Science Foun-
dation and the Office of Naval
Researcl).
Dr. Tepera began his college
studies at Louisiana State Uni-
versity, completing his bache-
lor of science degree in aero-
space engineering in 1961 at the
Dan and Carolyn Bomhoff University of Texas in Austin.
Tepera, a 1955 graduate of degree, Tepera began his PhD
1 for a visit.
Arthur Mae
does a special favor .
McDonald in a hurry to meet a
deadline . . . Richard Clayton
celebrates his 15th birthday
. . . Stefani Hurst being a big
help in wrapping.
After receiving his masters
serve fund set up in the bond “"illations Thursday to close
studies at the Institute of Tech-
nology at SMU. During the 35
months, he commuted an aver-
age of 95 miles a day between
his home in Ft. Worth and the
SMU campus in Dallas.
Tepera maintained an A
average throughout his grad-
uate studies. He has continued
participation in the Naval Re-
serves and was recently pro-
moted to the rank of lieutenant
commander.
Dr. Tepera is married to the
former Martha Gordon of
Pampa, Tex. They have six
children.
Dr. Tepera is now a member
of the technical staff of Texas
Instruments in Dallas and is
working in an advanced con-
cept? group,
MMaSiMM
' 1
agreement. The agreement
calls for 20 per cent of an aver-
age annual payment on the
bonds to be placed in a reserve
funds for the first five years.
The 20 per cent figure is calcu-| . .
lated by-the school district at re8lstratlon
$2,150 annually, or $10,750 total
The $80,000 in bonds is to be
retired over a 10-year period.
Park, concession and program
receipts are committed to pay-
ing them off, and if the receipts
are insufficient, school district
tax revenues are committed.
out its fall semester, and the
exam schedule floes not end
until next Wednesday. How-
ever, students will not have to
return to the efimpus until Jan.
12 and 13 for spring semester
Previous Balance: {2,188.88
Mr. and Mrs. John
Kubitz, in memory of
sonJ»r..-;.:7.T..-
In memory of Laura
Katherine Leather-
wood ..... 10.00
Mr. and Mrs. W. L.
Barnes ..........
Dora Wiener, in lieu of
Christmas Cards.
Mr. and Mrs, E. F.
10.09
Mr. and Mrs. Jim
Ferguson, in lieu of,,
Christmas Cards.. 8.81
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Tapp
in lieu of
Christmas Cards.. 15.00
Machinists Local
No. 1051 ...... 100.00
Robert E. Lee Junior
Optimises dub .. 25.00
Mr. and Mrs. J. G.
Callam, in lieufyf,
Christmas Cards.. 15.00
Philip J. Van
Natter........... ill
Anonymous....... LOO
39 Study Club .... 11.00
Mr. and Mrs. H. C.
Briggs............ 10.00
Goose Creek Assembly
No. 80, Order of
Rainbow For
+ HOUSTON —The Hous-
ton Post reports in a copy-
righted story that lobbyist
James C. Day won final
'Eagle Day’
Is Set In
Mont Belvieu
Goose Creek Rebekah
Lodge No. 453 ..... 10.00
TOTAL $2,437.88
By CHIEF GOODFELLOW
Friday will be the last day of
school for youngsters in the
Baytown area and then the
days really will be numbered
until Christmas.
When school Is out, the A-
cltement that begins to ebb
only after the thrill of Christ-
mas morning is underway,
There is just something
about Christmas and children.
The two go hand-ln-hand.
Christmas needs the Joy and
fun of little children to reach
full significance. That’s why
the thought of unhappy
children on Christmas Day is
more than Chief Goodfellow
can stand.'
That’s one of tlie reasons that
years ago he made a promise
to himself that no child nearl
him would be unhappy on|,
(See CHIEF’S, Page 3)
MONT BELVIEU (Sp) -
Mayor J. W. Grimes has pro-
claimed Saturday “Eagle
Appreciation Day” in Mont
Belvieu, honoring members
of the football team, its
coaches and managers.
"The Barbers Hill Eagles
have distinguished themsel-
ves as a state power In Class
A football, and as a result
5.00 have focused atteattoa of
sports fans across the state
on the City of Mont Belvieu,
home of the Eagles,” Mayor
Grimes’ proclamation said.
“I therefore proclaim
Saturday as ‘Eagle Appre-
ciation Day.’ The Eagles are
worthy of and entitled to the
loyalty, praise and luppprt of
fans throughout the greater
Mont Belvieu area.”
The Eagles, who have a 13-
0-1 record, will play for the
Class A state championship
at 7:10 p.m. Saturday at
Austin’s Nelson Field against
tradition-rich Sonora.
It will mark the first time
in the school’s history that a
Barbers Hill football team
has nude it to the finals.
Sonora will be making Ita
fourth trip to the finali In the
tag.”
+ WASHINGTON - If
I your doctor now charge* $16
for an office calf, he can tack
j on another 37(4 cents, but not
I a penny more unless the gov-
ernment approves It. A hos-
pital which charges $50 a day
for a room can add $3, but no
more unless the government
| says it’s okay.
+ DALLAS - A
spokesman for the Insurance
Information Institute said to-
day that the storm which
moved across Texas Tues-
day did an estimated $1.5
million in damage.
PLUS
7>--.-
s‘i: r
r ■ :
a ove!
■ .
a
to VIC! '
OUR OSCAR
Tk
s
/‘Tomorrow is your
past four years and fifth In (mother’s birthday, dear.
P° y°u think the Stores
■TurnetalM*’19M can meet the demand for
andm ’ Jcandles.”
4
T
and daughter Leslie of Des
Moines, Iowa, are spending the
Yule holidays with their par-
ents, the Rev. and Mrs. Harold Ron Homme Richard,
of the
Sydney, Australia, to spend
Christmas with her family.
CRIME STOP
Phone
427-6600
He was commissioned in the
U.S. Navy and served an active
ird the-U. S. S.
air-
duty tour aboard the I
Bomhoff and Mr. and
Jack Gregory. Carolyn is
art student at Drake Univer-
sity in Des Momes.. . Craig Dynamics in
and Lynda Camp are going to w .. ftn thp
After his stint in the Navy, he
•H
Ft Worth, working on the do-
sign rad development of the F-
ju ;'....... “ '
absence!
dies at the University of Toms
at Arlington, where in January
of 1969, he received a master of
science degree in engineering
mechanics.
JOSEPH E. TEPERA
By JOHNELLA BOYNTON
Imagine being a 12-year old
Since the surplus already ex-
ceeds the reserve require-
ments, the district may be able
. in the future to use any addi-
tional revenue to construct
more parking at Stallworth
Stadium or to pay off a $30,000 and moving here from Mexico,
loan the district will negotiate Speaking only Spanish, you en-
soon to pay off additional park- roll in Baytown schools.
I* '•**»*« «*« yoyfindyoimeHlockedtoa
SSliSKS
San Jac School Program
Bi-Lingual Laboratory Here
Is Aid To Learning Process
h™ TVia ing ability, you can’t under-
mSrSed^an SiStmK stand what is being taught in
SS5 teiSdSa. “»■“w* b““"
new revenue bond issue, but
t. Clark told the school -
board Monday night that a cjnto Elementary School offers
long-term loan will probably be a bi-lingual laboratory offering
made rather than issue reve- special instruction in speaking
1 nue bonds. and reading English as well as
special tutorial help in mathe-
matics.
Miss Mamie Calderon, the
teacher in the laboratory, is bi-
lingual herself and has a per,
sonal understanding of the
children’s problems in learning
in an English-speaking school
system.
During her six-period day,
she teaches 33 children ranging
from five to 14 years
some of the intricacies of the
English language and helps
student. Her room ia also I
equipped with a number of[
electronic aids at which a stu- [
dent'can listen to magnetic
tapes of spoken English and
hear his own voice speaking j
the unfamiliar words.
"What we want tp shoot for is (
by the time a 'student is nine
years old, he won’t need any
special help,” says Principal
Herb Zimmerman. He kMlk-.
ing about when a child enters
first grade as a six-year old.
you don’t know English.
To litlp wrti ariiM. ffafrfr *^*46* the csmnmnlca- “If they can let us have him for
tions gap in arithmetical equaL three years, we feel he won’t
tions.
Some children need her spe-
cial help only one period of the
I Convenient Banking
I No Service Charge
■Peoples State Bank
I ‘Baytown State cBsbI^
Mwnbtr F.D.I.C.
1 NO SERVICE CHARGE
Mtmbtr F.D.I.C.
J No iorvkt Chart*
Miss Calderon is assisted by
1 teacher aide, a volunteer aide
r a high school studml afate
have any problems,” he says.
The special program has;
three basic guidelines. First,
(See AID, Page 8)
51,.. derful Years
With Baytown
c II No
c Fu" Service
S,,rvice Charge
Citizens National Bank
F.D.I.C.
LISTENING, LEARNING
ARACELLY CANTU and Antonio Santos, foreground, listen to
oral English on a tape player, while In the background, bi-liu-
1 goal lab teacher, bliss Mamie Calderone works with another
group of Spanish-speaking youngsters, Herlinda Cantu, Maria
Quiros and Blanca Bocardo, In teaming the English names of
items In the pictures. (Sun Photo by Johnella Boynton)
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 50, No. 63, Ed. 1 Thursday, December 16, 1971, newspaper, December 16, 1971; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1065853/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.