The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 38, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 7, 1962 Page: 1 of 12
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■ . * ; ’
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f:
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« . ' .....•
.....-> . . . • . r. __
^“JS
by Gov.
of Wash-
by mart
t that the
becoming
em dec-
or a de-
Gambling Texans'
-
in 1952 sent the Ganders on to the up to a fourth-and-11 situation at
4A finals and probably cost Stages their1 own 25 yard line. Kelly
th&jstate crown Rushing ran. Tommy Graves’ 35-
• :■ v.
By JIMMIE WOODS
Sin Sports Editor
“Bill Stages must be one hell-
uva poker player,” a man said
over a cup of coffee in Pete Sul-
tis’ kitchen an hoUr or so after
Baytown's, stunning 214 upset of
state-ranked' JQorpus Christi Ray
was a matter ^.record.
‘Tve never
- - - H**- -
Neither had any of the #.066 as-
sembled here Friday night to
watch Baytown take its lumps by
anything up to three touchdowns.
And particularly not from Ray s
Texans; not, it least, since a
memorable fourth down gamble
anything like
the Texans had run
first offensive play Friday
they were behind 7-6, arid before
they hid run more than three
plays they were down 144
down to stajt.
From there on in, Ray gambled
» field, and
except for a
the
sustained 80-yard
yard boot back to the
six plays later Riehard
and Robert Oliver hooked up a
38-yard scoring pass to go with
and Kenneth Parker’s opening i-yard
(gunge.
Ray never gavejp the football
Tex*ns
nine times
half and lost it on downs four
times. Including twice when the
dock intervened, Ray failed to and half thi
make the first down on a fourth Baytown’s
-down gamble six times.
Baytown, meanwhile, had 1o
third period duel, and it was the talized
; Ray to the i
were released later Friday ver, Gerald Teel and backs Rush-
second offensive unit
tried very gallantly to make that
two second half scores, driving
punt only twice, both times in the from the Gander 25 to the Ray
second period and both times for 13 in the fading minutes of the
Except for Baytown's kicking
game, the Ganders did a marvel-
and surprisingly solid job ail ed, however, on two field goal
The defense, noted mOre
Ray never gave up t
willingly again. The
coughed up the ball i
march in the sbcond quarter, you altogether, including the lone
.....kickoff after Pat Gibson’s touch-
down midway of the second quar-
ter.
They kicked it once, lost it on
**»
never saw anybody more fatally
snakebit.
The only time the Texans punfe
ed was at the end of their first
offensive series when they came1 fumbles three
it once, lost l
times in the
short yardage. Hie Ganders gave
up the football once on a pass in-
terception, twice on fumbles and
twice after missing field goals.
Rushing, who paced the Gander
ground attack with ' 76 yards,
scored the game’s final touch-
down early in the fourth quarter
on a 43-yard sprint through
tackle. It followed a scoreless
final p e r fid. Fullback David
Mangum, getting into action for
the first tune in two weeks, lost
the ball there on a fumble.
At some points, the hit
terrifying. Half a dozen
went to the sideline
from Nows on the field, and
rd Jim Boiler and tackle
; hitting was
ozen Texans
temporarily
man
Geor;
around. The defense,
for its tenacity than its
ing power this year, coped with
the multi-faceted Ray offense
very well despite surrendering
was 75# yards to the Texans. When it
had to stand up, it did.
Linebackers Mike Ferrell, Da-
vis McCauley and Steve McAfee,
linemen George Ferguson,
Danny Botkin, Frank Terry, Oil- holds
ing and Virgil McGabee carried
the defensive toad.
David Conway’s kicking suffer-
S5JW
attempts and under the pressure
of strong rushes on the two puifits.
Ho got off a meager 22-vard punt
that set up a Texan drive to the
Baytown 6 yard line, and a 35-
yarder. - ' ~ T.
He missed a first quarter field
goal from the 31 yard line, and
a third quarter effort from the
21 yard line. The first quarter
ball down for
_____ try-
Conway did punch home all
three extra points, however, im-
proving on his l-for-3 effort at
Port Neches last week. The kicks
brought to four his successful con-
versions this season. ,
Few thtogs hurt a gambler
more than a novice who draws
to a straight Audi and hits it
to beat a pat hand. *
Ray’s pat hand Friday was No.
6 ranking in Texas 4A circles,
a massive and unpredictable of-
fense, a hefty, experienced de-
Wise were briefly hospi- Cunningham, Melvin Hecki e r, kick was wide, but McAfee, who fense and a bevy of 18 backs who (See GANDERS,
fi§lgf:
The Sun Invites
BELLY MARTIN
Grantham Road
To The Brunson Theater. This coupon
is good for two tickets when presented
at the Brunson box office. The movie
now showing is
THE 866 SPARTANS’
mm
igtg
WEEKEND
EDITION
VOL 44, NO. 38
Serving lAY-TEX—The Golden Circle of Southeast Texas
TELEPHONE NUMBER: 582-8302
Sunday, October 7, 1962
BAYTOWN, TEXAS
Spots
Speaker Named 1 Humble Permit
JOHN WOODARD, special educa- HUMBLE OIL and Refining Co.
lion director for Baytown Schools, has applied to the U. S. Army Dis-
will be the speaker at 7:30 p.m. trict Engineer for a permit to
> Monday at a meeting at the Bay- lay two fciffch parallel pipelines
town - Opportunity School. The across the botfom of Tabbs Bay
meeting is open to the public. from Well No. 57 in the portion of
. ... the bay formerly known as Gail-
Reserves To Moot . lard Peninsula, shoreward toward
BTSffSSpSS iHRAWSW
P-m. Monday at the Police Ad- * c..
ministration Building. Chief Flet- OOnOOf
cher Hickerson urges all mem- KAPPA KAPPA Chapter of Beta
bera to attend. Sigma Phi will have its prefer-
foK. Saturday
- MOOSE LODGE No. 1050 will S' D0Uve' 5521 B,yway Drive-
sponsor a dance beginning at 9 eip *_
a.m. Saturday and continuing un- *0 Practice
111 1 a m. The dance will be at CIVIL AIR Patrol will meet at
515 W. Main and public is invited. 2 p.m. Sunday at the Baytown
Cost will be 31 per person. airport on North Main for drill
Scholarship Winner , O. •
JUDY FRAZIER, daughter of Mr. Cah* 5a,e
and Mrs. T. L. Satterwhite, 122 KJZT WILL have a cake and pie
Forrest, has been awarded a Lula sale after masses Sunday at St.
Haywood Scholarship from the Joseph’* Catholic Church.
Ordered For Walker
WASHINGTON (AP)—A psych!-,a political prisoner. The gwem-
attric examination was ordered for ment has been given until Tues-|into the federal court’s
Smith’s affidavit was entered
- * — - record
Edwin A. Walker, former day to Show- why Walker should|with the commitment order at Ox- Gaulle decided today to dissolve
Army major general, aftera goy- not be freed from the Federal j ford. The oommitaent order was the French National Assembly and
University. This award was given
on the basis of her scholastic rec-
ord at Robert.E. Lee High School
and in recognition of her poten-
fi.lO.r --
Tyler. Survivors include a sister. BAYTOWN QUARTERLY
will be held Saturday and
Mrs. Helen Jordan of Baytown.
She jiad been ill a long time.
Demo Reception
HARRIS COUNTY
Campaign 7
. _ headquarters, 1513 ?:S8 p.m. Saturday at the Bay-
Mam, Houston, will have Its of- town City Han and at 10 a m.
vith a reception at Sunday at Roseland Park. A bas-
SfiSaSL
is invited to attend. Most of the
Democratic nominees will be pres-
SdM CoUftrcnc*
O. M. GRAHAM, manager of the
Omir- ket lunch will be served Sunday.
The public is invited. '
Gosl-lm# Hoori
GOSL-INN will be open fog mem-
bers from 7j30 p.m. to 16 p.m.
J, L. Dunn, a sales representa-
tive tor the paint concern, are at-
products, as well as merchandis-
at the meeting.
' dr
♦ dr
7't
Weather And Tides
PARTLY CLOUDY with little
change in temperature through
Sunday. Temperature range Sat-
urday and Sunday 68-88 degrees.
; \ ' ' “ " ■""
GALVESTON TIDES Sunday
will be high at 12:20 a.m. and
low at 4:26 p.m. Monday, the
high wll) be at 1:08 a.m. and
the low at 5:81 p.m.
:*.v ■ r: . •
Arouhd
«T own.
MRS. LA VERNE Troutman wants
her friends to know she is,a pa-
tient in Room 206 at San Jacinto
Hospital.
Diane McIntyre found a black
purse Friday night at Texas Ave-
nue and Main. The owner can
claim it at the Baytown police
station . . . W. H. Syer has found
a Nue piegeon with metal bands
on each leg. He cannot determ inr
Where the pigeon came from. Any-
one who knows how he could find
out may call 582-9703.
Kim Worden has six tickets on
the 40-yard line to the Houston
■Oilers5 Buffalo Bills'game’Sunday.
Houston Meeting
coffee Tor ffi
READY FOR BIG JOB AHEAD
» Bed Further on J. F. Beit UF fund* In the oil production and serv-
S, Dean looks on. W. -
emment psychiatrist reported his
medical history and accounts of
his recent behavior might indicate
an "underlying mental disturb-
ance.” '
Thie findings were contained in
~~ aiuaffidavit signed by Dr. Charles
E. Smith, medical director and
chief psychiatrist of the Federal
Prison Bureau, it was learned
Fndatjf;; HHHNW
The affidavit was sent to U.S.
Oct. 6 and 7, according to J. D,
Reavis, president. Special guests
will be the Bell Family from Tern-
The singing trill be
Saturday at Baytown Junior _
gym- -•■jESgj |
Radio
THE CITIZENS Banders Bay,
shore Area Club will meet at T/"
p.m. Tuesday, OcL 9, at toe
own Chamber of Commerce !
ing. Entertainment will consist of
v*
Toon Canteen Slate
HORACE MANN Teen Canteen will
be open town 7:30 to 9:30 p.m.
Saturday in the girls’ gym at HM
_ , [OL
t pSSwaMaaftassgs
" hig beginning day arrives Mon- ment, the H e a 11 h and Welfare
dav — the first day of Baytown’s Leagues would suffer, Jackson
United Fund Drive. /■. pointed out
toued. The Boy Seottolr-^
JffiZafS S2S“*5
Cross and Community Chart ad-
to throe on i county, state and ministration, receive UF aid. ]
national level. Such organizations as the Amer-
By combining 36 different agen- ican Heart Association, National
cies into one drive, it has proven Mental Health Association and
more practical tor toe contributors many state and^countywide agen-
and the various services that bene- des are included,
lit-from the driv*>. Jackson, point- “It. is-Mt a .matter of afford-
ed out. ing to give — it is a matter real-
S'At a & g M
W^_are so .vital to toe peo-
mmmm
some needy school children would Refining Co.’s Baytown refinery
go without lunches, the mentally Drive, assisted by A. R, Knox.
LATE
NEWS
DALLAS (AP) - One of for-
mer Maj. Gen. Edwin A. Walk-
er’s attorneys asserted today
that the medical director of fed-
eral prisons should be fired.
Dr, Robert Morris of Dallas, the
attorney, said Dr. Charles E.
Smith, medical director and
chief psychiatrist for the fed-
eral prisons should be “sum-
marily removed from his posi-
tion.” The attorney criticized Dr.
Smith because, said Morris, he
apparently based his report on
Walker's condition partially on
news accounts of his agttons.
He can be reached at* 583-4441.
Kim cannot attend the game and
will be happy to let the tickets- gp. pany of United Rubber and Chem-
fT; W. Crcger says he can't un- leal Co. of Baytown. The planned
dersland how newspapermen judge
4Isa noire “If T uiurc tn nfiini (hn
If I were to paint the oouneed Tuesday.--
k-> (.alii Cimil'il UniiX AaLlnnfl linn oloj
town red,” he said, “you’d havd
my name in toe paper. I’m paint
ing my hotel, why can't that be
put in the paper?” /
Charles OiankeusWp, 116 E.
Lobit, rcporti" to Baytown Police
Friday night that the hubcaps and
radio ae*al were stolen from his
car while it was parked at the
Baytown - Corpus Christi football
.WHIG, ■ |
United May Sell ^
For $137 Million
Industrial experts have esti-
mated the proposed sale of United
Carbon Co. of Houston to Ashland
Oil and Refining Co. of Ashland,
fea&t'-fe'ssfe
Press.
United Carbon Is parent corn-
sale of United Carbon was an-
Co. of Shreveport in building a
67-mile pipeline in Louisiana.
The pipeline will extend frofn
Searcy to Delhi. Construction is
scheduled to begin «ext week with
completion by the end of the year.
The 12-incrt line will begin oper-
ation at 14,000 barrels a day with
a capacity of 60,000 barrels.
■ .
Doctors Huddle Monday
On Oct. 14 Polio Clinics
Final plan! for the Type 3 Sabin they are all paralytic. Our Sabin
oral polio vaccine make-up clinics
Oct. 14 will be made at a meet-
ing at ,7:30 pan. Monday at the
Texas National Bank in HdUston
by toe Harris County Medical So-
ciety and Houston Jnnior Cham-
ber of Commerce.
' Baytown doctors and polio drive
officials arc invited to the meet- safe from
ing. Dr. Jack Hild, director of
the Harris County’s polio program
will have charge of the meeting,
“More than 1,020,000 persons
took the vaccine on sugar cubes
on Sept. Dr. HiW said. “That
means about 225,000 residents of
Houston and Harris County didn’t
take it and should get the Type
3 vaccine on Oct. 14.
“It's just as important to each
individual, and to the community
as a whole, to get the Type 3 vac-
cine as the Ttype ll vaccine we
gave in July,” Dr. Hild said.
“Pplio takes three different
forms. Everyone should immunize
himself from all three types, since
oral polio vaccine is an effective,
which type he has. In any case
Prison Medical Center at Spring- issued on the motion of toe gov- call new elections,
field, Mb. I eminent. r A communique from Elysee Pal-
ace — the French White House
said De Gaulle had "takerf
s” of the resignation of Pre-
...........Luurr Georges Pompidou, suhtnilv.
ted this morning. Pompidou was
asked to stay at his post until
the new assembly is elected and
installed.
'Must' Bills Hold
Congress On 'Hill'
before the judge ordered the ex-
gmlnotiriw -1 q of—
|
«-"4 if*
• HAVANA (AP)—Berta Bar-
reto de Lm Heron, coordinator
of a committee negotiating for
release of the Bay of Pigs to-
speeches were be-
ing muzzled. He contended that ■;
m11wj pigp|.ae.
rted_ report, from Miami that «*
freedom^the captive, has
at St. Patrick’s
dence of Francis---
nun. No one, tadudtag _r
who was .asleep on second floor,
is injured. ’’'■4T *
John F. !
apparatus’^ IhaHir said
followed the “soft line on com-
munism:"
After the hearing, Walker
punched a reporter who tried to
ask him a question.
Smith’s affidavit said in part,
“f have jffipiiite£^ai«fiflty-,vw-
was lead-
E..,_ s WffMi
States.
• East Gennan guarts bar
Btfiteh army aiKi WesT teSp
Red cross ambulances fromgb-
of maa wounded oo
• Iron Curtain is lifting to
permit delegates from at least
three Soviet Bloc countries to
attend Se&nd Vatican Council
of Roman Catholic Church. .?
• America’s champion astro-
naut. Walter M. Schirra Jr.,
steams slowly toward bis first
thunderous welcome — massed
greeting in Hawaii.
he is in the grip of a painful,
crippling, disease. Our task is to
see that the community is made
i all three types
be achieved by
of polio.
This will be achieved by the Vic-
tory Over Polio program," Dr.
Hild said. ,
“The second phase of our mass
immunization program will be ac-
complished on Oct. 14, and the
third type of polio will be dealt
with some six weeks from now,
with the third phase of the Vic-
tory Over Polio program, which
will offer Type 2 oral vaccine.”
The 22 polio makeup clinics —
staffed by Medical Society mem-
bers and volunteer nurses, phar-
macists, and workers — will be
open from noon until 6 p.m. Oct.
14 in schools throughout Houston
(See HUDDLE, Page 2)
Baytonian's Mother Hurt In Bus Crash
Oklahoma bus accident early Sat-
way 77 about 15 miles north, of
Perry. The truck, had become
stuck in some mud on the high-
urday'which also injured 14'other way^ the Associated Press re- thre&quarters^tiQ^g
..j -
Mrs. E. U. Jones, about 67, fi!
Ardmore, Okla., had her* gght
loot removed in surgery after toe
Ashland ha* also announced aocident near Perry, UKia. mls.
it will join with the Placid Off Jones is the mother of Mrs, James
Peftrd. 703 Idlewood.
Hospital authorities at the Bap-
tist Hospital in Oklahoma City
said Mis. Jones' condition was
fair following surgery,
Highwav Trooper Elmo Wilker-
son said the Continental Trallways
bus _s)4d into a*5semi - trailer
truck that had stopped on High- when the accident occurred.
The bus skidded on the mud
,-pid the right side of the bus
slammed unto, ttye left rear of the
truck. It was unknown how the
mud got on the highway.
One passenger, Mrs. Ruth Aut-
son of Long Beach, Calif., was
critically Injured. Mis. Jones and
another passenger were seriously
injured, and the other 12 persons
were leas seriously hurt.
Mrs. Peard said her mother was
trailer on the way to Kansas City, Mo.,
pick-
1961.
sweeps through Michigan and
into Minnesota with familiar
plea that he needs strong Dem-
ocratic Congress to get the M-
tion moving economically.
• Federal grand jury In New
York indicts Cornelius Drum-
mond, 33, veteran of 16 years to
Navy, on charges of wholesale
sellout of American defense sec-
rets to Soviet Russia.
• Secretary of State Dean
Rusk expected to try to learn
how far Soviet Union aims to
go on Berlin when he meets
with Foreign Minister Andrei A.
Gromyko. ,
They'll Roll Out Red
Carpet For SpSce Hero
Houston will unfurl an official
red carpet Sunday for America’s
newest space hero.
Astronaut Walter M. Schirra Jr.
will be the guest of honor in a 3
he circled the globe five and
it mss uiiivu.
JamesvE. Wcbbr head of the
National Aeronautics and Space
Administration, Secretary of the
Naw Fred Korth, Rep. Bob Casey
of Houston, Rep. Qlin Teague of
Bryan, and possibly Rep. Albert
Thomas of Houston, are expected
to participate in toe parade.
The other six members of the
original seven man Mercury .astro-
naut team also will take part.
The parade will move fn
downtown Houston to Rice Uni-
versity, where Schitrn will hold
his first press conference.
his findings on Walker’s medical
history that included, it 4tes un-
derstood, his Army records, and
new* accounts of the former gen-
eral’s actions in the University ~
Mississippi integration riot a
his appearance last spring
Capitol Hill.
Walker then testified before a
Senate committee investigating
charges lhat military officers’
anti-Commurtst “ ........
a question msrk on when it will
quit.
dosed shop urttt Monday,
Leaders tossed in toe sponge
Friday in their fight to finish the
session this week.. They set no
new tazget date, "iH '
“Anywhere from next Tuesday
no chances on jeopardizing it fro
ladt^of a House majority next
Hfiy: House members already
tavedeft to^twign for re-elec-
tion ».sot. month’s congression-
al voting. Many of them don’t
Woody Rose
Heads Demos
ForJackCox
. has been named cam-
paign chairman to the Baytown -
Highlands area by the County Ad-
visory Committee of the r—
County Democrats lor Cox,
There are 103 mOTbers « the
committee, many of whom are
widely tow* for their, work in
the Deomcratic Party in toe past-
appearance before the
Committee of the U.S. Senate on
Armed Forces in April of this __________________, _
year and news reports of hts ap- visory Committee of the Harris
pearanees on the university cam- ~
pus during the past several
’There are also Indications in
his medical history of functional
an<1 recently sent a telegram
be prwursors of fte more to Republican Jack Cox, prwnis-
" ' ing to support his campaign for
governor.
Wright Morrow of Houston, for-
mer Democratic National Com-
mitteeman from Texas, and for-
mer Democratic Gov. Coke Stev-
enson are co-chairmen of toe
state organization of Democrats
for Cox.
Harris County officers of toe or-
ganization are: Roland Sledge,
chairman; Adrian Burk, Francis
Dunigan, Fred E. Gray and Wal-
ter Keith, vice chairman; and
Mrs. Mary Ellen Morris, secre-
UAim uc pcc-uiouio
serious disorder whito his present
behavior suggests. . *
“From this and other informa-
tion available to me I believe his
recent behavjor has been out of
keeping with that of a person of
his station, background and train-
ing and that as such it may be
indicative of an underlying men-
tal disturbance.” W
News dispatches from Oxford,
Miss., said Walker led rioters in
a charge against U.S. marshals.
He was arrested and charged
with conspiracy to incite rebellion
or insurrection.
Walker’s attorneys charge he is tary.
S“>w».btKTS
members on hand, the House
would net he able to transact any
major business next week.
. House took final action Fri-
day on one major measure,
sent to toe President a bill rais-
ing postal rates-indndtog a pen-
PARIS (AP)
•tered an unusual Saturday ses- ^ t0 delay the balloting until
Pompidou qient 40 minutes wito
After receiving Pompidou’a^es-
him about the advisability of caD-
tog new elections. The Assembly
It normally was due to be renewed
- 'next spring after a five-year . |
president of the Senate, and
tortocr^ to tetters
million postal and classified gov-
ernment employes by an average
10 to 11 per cent, g
The House also sent to toe Sen- three men before deciding on dis-
ate a resolution saying Congress
favors i
nectary to uphold AlUed ^
nual water projects bill, common-
ly known as the “p«k barrel"
measure because it authorizes
hundreds of federal construction
projects throughout the nation.
Sponsors dispute the description,
arguing the projects will produce
benefits greater than their cost.
, As passed by the House, the
measure carried $2.25 billion for
water projects, but the sum was
raised to $4 billion by the Senate.
Without clearance from the
attractive bill can’t get to a Sen-
ate-House conference to reconcile
the differences. The Rules Com-
mittee’s chairman, Rep. Howard
(get CONGRESS. Page 2)
the preside, ______
Hie decree dissolving the As-
wiH have to. appear in the
been noti-
e Assemhty, stopped by
it Elysee Palace. _ 7:
met the constitution, De
Gaulle j* required to consult these
sdutiOn.
opponents of De Gaulle’s plaik to
xsssssgti. 3
ace only a matter of minutes, in-
dicating that the meeting was as
cool as it was brief.
Pompidou seemed rested and re-
laxed following fhis defeat, bring-
ing about the first cabinet crisis
in more than four years.
Informants close-to De Gaulle
said that while he will accept
Pompidou's resignation he will
ask him to remain on with full
policy making powers for the
iresent. Past tradition has been
hat an ousted premier becomes
Rules Committee, toe politically a mere caretaker until a new
government is fromqd.
De Gaulle wants to revise the ±
constitution by referendum go that
future presidents will be elected
* by. popular vote.
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 44, No. 38, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 7, 1962, newspaper, October 7, 1962; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1100211/m1/1/: accessed June 24, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.