The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 300, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 7, 1966 Page: 2 of 22
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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63E8H
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m n
Sunday, August 7, -1966
2< ®lff ?UgtoBin 0mi
Being A Star's Son Is
Both Help And Hindrance
UNUSUAL TOOLS ARE USED
TO TEACH HANDICAPPED
Crost
Our World
OPEN DAILY 9-9
r"mmTK3BFm'^aMSSBUFTWKttBSSS3/r,^mmm*r‘Bmm—■ wm.. ^^^"1
Former Crosl
Allison Koonce
were honored t
at the home o;
Truman Reed w
Eddie Faust as
'Approximatel;
came to bid th
well. He is now
erintendent of tl
An autumna
was carried oi
shaded bronze
kins on the serv
coffee, sandwic
were served b;
Today
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Is play* a secret agent who with
being a star's son a help or a Stefanie Powers battles the evil
handicap to a young actor? forces ot THRUSH. Kirby plays
Both, say Noel Harrison and a trainee spy.
Randy Kirby. Each only slightly resembles
Noel, 32, singer, actor, Olym- hlg father. London-born Harri-
pic skier and son of Rex Harrl- son has shaggy, dark blond
son, " adds: “For a while I hair,, large blue eyes and gra- -
thought J'd never have an iden- clous manners. His nose was
tity of my own. Then I realized broken in skiing, a sport in
most clearly that part of my which he represented England
Identity fa befog Rex Harrison's §j the 1952 and. 1956 Olympic .
■" , Games.
Says Randy, 23, stage actor, His parents were divorced
radio and television commercial when he was 6, but he calls his
performer and son of televi- father, since married three
sion's Durward Kirby: “It’s no times, "a good friend." Did Rex
of wheat, putting them In a can
with a salt shaker top, then
shaking them out, helps teach
muscle control. One popular
spot with youngsters at the in-
stitute is a sand box filled with
wheat. •*
A child who has never walked
can find supreme delight in
bring strapped stomach down
on a low, wheeled cart and pro-
pelling himself ,with flailing
arms and legs, learning muscle
control.
Outside of classes, the lnsti-
of the brain might leave the mu-
sic receptor untouched. 7
Sometimes an accident may
result in brain damage and ap-
hasia -r- the loss of learned abil-
ity to speak — and sometimes
music can be the key tp reach-
ing the brain again.
Situated on SO acres of a Kan-
sas wheat field, the institute's SI
buildings have seen the passage
of 17,000 handicapped persons
through Its hails, victim* of cer-
ebral palsy, aphasia, stuttering,
WICHITA, Kan. (API - A
grand piano, a sandbox full of
Kansas wheat and a low-
wheeled cart are helping teach
handicapped children how to
talk — some for the first time in
their lives.
- Consider 9-year-old Timmy.
When he came to the Institute of
Logopedics here, he couldn't
speak, had withdrawn into him-
self and lived in his own secret
From AP Wires
• The Swiss Embassy, with
the cooperation of the Cuban
and Mexican government*, ar-
ranges for the evacuation of
Ml stranded D.8. citizens.
AUTO ViMMMt CENTER
dm
3 DAY
• Texas fugitive Ben Jack
Cage Is reported hiding out In
Sao Paulo while Brasilian au-
thortieo decide whether or not _ , „ , Ali
tn trv kin, Q,, embezzlement Robert Ralstln, an institute
to try him on em»etsiem«M . thought perhaps mu- and dozen* of speech problem.
m anjune taasad:'-8-
my'* world.
He stood the boy beside a
grand piano, opened the top and
plucked out simple scales on the
strings. Almost immediately,
Timmy's face brightened, and
he tried to crawl up this strange
box of sound.
Within months, Timmy and
his teacher were playing simple
duets on the xylophone, and
Timmy had embarked on what
will be likely a year's long path-
way to speech.
The late Dr- Martin. F. Pal-
mer, who founded the Institute
32 years ago, explained it this
way: the part of the brain that
responds to music is tucked
away in a well-protected area
and has a separate blood supply
than much of the rest of the
brain. Thus, an accident that
blocks blood and damages part
son
£\,
w
world.
' I
mil Bf* «g possible for- young
students. This is difficult for
many who come from other
states or countries for treat-
ment that may last fur years
or more.
Apartments are available for
youngsters whose parents move
here from distant points to
maintain family life. The Air
Force has been known to trans-
fer airmen to a nearby air base
so their children can attend the
institute.
A number of apartments at
foe Institute are staffed with
trained- * housemothers
youngsters who&e parent* cairT
be with them in sustained fra in-
king periods. r
One of Palmer’s’ many recol-
lections about his years of logo-
pedics work Was of a proud
mother who burst Into his office
with her 5-yearold son, an pathizers. . >
aphasic student, at foe institute.! The treats were handed put
to Vietnamese children and
she told Palmer, “but you can’tfadults at a "county fair” opera-
imagine what a satisfaction it
was. m prayed tor tije dap-wp
baby could talk.
"Well today I had to tell him
•I
The institute has a student
body of some 500 on campus, 1,-
000 more in 24 field centers in
the state. Last year It "graduat-
ed” three persons a day from
its programs, and back to new
Uvea.
For foe staff of 300 at the In-
stitute, music has been a valua-
ble tool.
Logopedfats may find a
rhythm to foe uncontrolled
shaking motions of some handi-
capped children. Perhaps such
a child will be furnished a drum
to beat on. The instructor at-
seenpts te pick :i$ a~ rtiyfom in
such beats on a piano. Slowly
perhaps In weeks — the teacher
begins taking foe lead in this
rhythm and gradually control-
ling it. V , . .
Medical history has shown
that speech handicaps are like|y
to accompany severe cases of
palsy. Children so afflicted must
learn the slow, groping tech-
Inlque of mastering the more
than 200t rebellious muscles that
control speech. Many of them
must learn first to control other
unruly muscles v how to walk,
pick up pencHes — before wres-
tling with the problems of lan-
guage. 7' ■’ :
Mechanical braces, often used
to push crooked, palsied limbs
Into line, are held to a minimum
at th* Institute. Therapists rea-
-sonfoat, wherever possible,..foe
twisted -muslces take over foe
job of contrplfrom the start.___
Football-helmets are part of
the regular attire for many pal-
sied youngsters, subject tofalls.
They sometimes have the side
effect of encouraging youthful
athletics.
The act of picking up grains
advice? "He advised me- at
3ome length, when I was 12, not
to go Into show business — then
probably decided I wasn't going
to take his advice.”
Of having a famous father,
Noel said: ‘Through much of
my life it was a handicap, which
I imposed on myself. Then I
realized it was a great help.
People remember your name,
'Friendship Kits'Help •snsettSK.
Soothe Hurt Viet Feelings t
school jtiays at Westchester's
complete with feathers-were BropxvMle High and since has
slipped into some kits,. '. stage-acted for five years.
Most bags contained packets "The first year I used another
of cigarettes, but some young- name Randy Young, because I
sters didn't resist the temptation want anybody to think I
to light up. The villagers were got the job because I was Dur-
also shown movie* and fciven ward Kirby’s son,” said the son.
medical treatment He switched back to the family
The "friendship kits" were name because 'Tve always
foe innovation of foe Denton been extra proud of my father." s
Hon in a tiny village about 10 Record-Chronicle. After three Durward Kirby’s fatherly ad-
mits northeast of Da Nanjr. '' months-- in-- Viet -Nam, the vice?
Record-Chronicle’s reporter, “He told me to treat acting
Wick Fowler, returned to Texas like a business, and if he_eveT|H
and began collections for more found I couldn’t put on the same
than 10,000 friendship kits. Each size hat he’d cut my head off.
packet carried a greeting from Also, he said: ‘Save your
Gov. John Connally of Texas, money.’ ”
Wapp, a marine platoon lead- HOLLYWOOD (AP4 — Twere
er who had been wounded three tieth Century-Fox has a 5100,000
time, in eight months, was as- collection of fake masterprices.
signed to the, civil affairs pro- The studio paid young Paris
artists ..that much to create 75
paintings and sculptures in the
style of old masters for "How to
said. "This gives me a great op- steal a Million.” —-
Each work is indelibly
stamped forgery on - its back.
But Henry Hopkins, a curator of
foe Los Angeles County Mu-
seum of Art, says an art forger
can peel off a painting and
transfer it to a new canvas — or
pastea new canvas on the back
of the old.
He says about three paintings
"are close enough to foe work of
the original artist to be a prob-
lem. be sure the,
palnttogg. nereesgri^out oL the
prop department." —;--------t—
HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Want
to act? Debating and oratory
are good training, reports Julie
Sommars. ;
In 1958 she was a varsity de-
bater at Central High School,
Aberdeen. S.D., and won the
state title — against 10 boys —
in foe American Legion’s orato-
ry contest.
Paradoxically soft-voiced and
shy, Julie, hazel-eyed, 5-foot-5,
and red-haired, has been de-
scribed by one director as a
combination Rita Hayworth and
Judy Holliday and by another as
a new Jean Arthur. After num-
erous television and stage roles,
she’ll be seen soon In foe movie
“The Pad.”
help
• A full autopsy report Mon-
day may further clarify the
anguish which drove ‘sniper
Charles Joseph Whitman to
MXLBUBN L. GREEN, Ms
rtne PFC, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Mearlon A. Green, MU
N. Redell Road, Baytown, was
graduated from the Aviation
Maintenance Administration-
man course at the Naval Air
Technical Training Center at
Memphis, Tenn., recently.
The two sons are working to-
gether In foe first television ser-
ies for both - “The Girl From
U:N.C.L.E.,’’ programming out-
growth of foe man from same,
Harrison, whose acting here-
tofore was in repertory and bit
parts of five English movies,
more from his perch In the
University of Texas tower.
• Actress Zsa Zsa Gabor,
objecting to alleged use °t “
Imitation of her voice to ad-
vertise hamburgers on the re-
1
dk>, sues lor $1*0,90® In dam
ages.
-t
• The death toll In Tneo
e at Quetta,
seven and the
diets.
—
/*
day's <*a
number o
for
DA NANG, *Vlet Nam (AP)-
‘Friendship kits" from Texas
were used to soothe hurt feel-
ings today when a South Viet-
namese hamlet was searched
for evidence of Viet Cong sym-
-r't”
T
.
"NOW SHOWING
THRU WEDNESDAY
:
IMPORTANT f NO ONE UNDER IS
WIU.BE admitted unless
accompanied by his parent
- SB
I ■jus) did a terrible thing,
FRESH KOLACHES
DONUT HOLE NO. 4
1
I
Such operations are routinely
a* w a »» A ... . carried out in hamleta of South
to Shut ^p. He was talking my viet Nam where ^ loyalty o{
ear0“ residents to foe government is
questionable. Local militiamen,
backed by U.S. marines, moved
the villagers out of their homes
for interrogation and a methodi-
cal search of the houses.
theP s?^^Jn foe JMe_^llage ^ng questioned-to determine- If f ^
in which they now. live." any residents were Communist»
While in Germany, Pierce sympathizers and to learn if1 ke bein8 with Wds- WapP
made many trips-with his fami- there had been any Communist
ly and with social and ediica- troops in foe area recently, the
tional groups to foe village.; women were given canned fish,
His first trip was with a group rice, cooking pots and stoves to
of AFS students to Berlin in prepare a community , lunch.
December. He found it very im- Ttewictivitv i* designed to make
pressjye_as acultural and ire tMparch for Communists more
dustrial center. lisa picnic or county fair than
Other trips included e skiing a military operation. “
jaunt to the Hare Mountains in Lt. Glenn'Wapp of Riverside,
foe eastern part of West Ger- Calif., who was running the
many near the border, a sight- show,’ said the Leathernecks
seeing trip to Paris wifo jiis tried to cook foe rice “but the
"family," a' 'tHprth^ the viaagecs-.didB't Jike that.’’, . j SAIGON,
Black Forest to Austria. * '"They wanted to'do It them- f apt — The war-rgpsgpri via-
camping journey to Denmark selves,” he said. "•*" namese countryside is a hazard-
with his family and a vacation After lunch, the "friendship 0Us p]ace t0 travel but it is
on foe island! of Hrifoland in kits” were passed out causing stm possible for civilians to buy
the Black Sea. a mad scramble among the vil- safety.
Commenting on the year, lage youngsters. The kits ire Gasoline tank trucks passere
Pierce said, "It was certainly eluded candy, toothpaste, tooth buseS( ^ other’ civilian
the most challenging and exclt-brushes, penolls and balloons, vehicles mow alone the roads
ing year of my life. What you Imitation Indian headbands- of Viet N^m rurniine un Cm
learn from the school, country . 1 - foe Ca Mau Peninsula, through
and travel and foe lifelong foe Mekong Delta past Saigon
friends you make make it worth an(j acr0ss ^ Hlgh.
missing your senior 4-ear at _ lands to Da Nang and Hue.
school. * [\lnk^'#AO , Much of this countryside Is In
"Something like this makes , ilU IC8 the hands of the Viet Cong or is
you realize how similar peoples , ~ a nreman’s land,
actually are when you get down TT _ _ • x.^1 Some journeys may take
to their basic characteristics. X lOSPltSl weeks because of delay* caused
Governments and politics sep- - , . * * by military operations and
arate people, not the people Admitted to Gulf Coast: downed bridges. But it can still
themselves.’ . . be done, and is done, by foou-
In Baytown, Pierce plans to Clark Farina, son of Mr. and sands of Vietnamese,
work wifo the AFS committee Mrs Anthony Farina, High- Safety could cost 1,000 pias-
to make it possible to send other landg Room 215, ters — about $10 — for a bus
students abroad and at the same jeroroe Driscoll, Houston, in driver at a Viet Cong checkpoint
time, make it possible to bring Room 201. . between Dalat and Saigon, or
more foreign students to Bay- ^ Abbie Tarveri 202 Wil- 200 piasters for the driver 8f a
town. Pierce also stated that he KamSi Room l/)4. compact car.
is willing to speakto any Mrs. Sandra Soltes, Baytown, A tank truck operator might
groups in town who wish to hear Room 105 have to pay as much as 2,500
about hi* Experiences. _ Mrs. Pauline Brock, 105 E. piasters at the same checkpoint.
Pierce, foe son of Mr. and Fayle( Room 111; If he doesn’t pay, his vehicle
Mrs. R-_P- Swriford Jr. of 425 —r-r-——-^—r--------— might be driven over an em-
Azalea Drive, will enroll as a Admitted to San Jacinto Meth- bankment, or the load drained
freshman in September at Rice away by a tum of a valve.
University. Clarence Nelson, 157 McArth- Safety is a relative thing In
ur, Room 346. Viet Nam. A vehicle owner who
John Leach, 2000 Aernlia, has paid his Viet Cong tax at a
Room 320. ' ■ checkpoint may be blown up
Mrs. Harry Blum, 501 N. farther down the road by a mine
Pruett, Room 206. planted to detonate under a mll-
Mrs. H. C. Feazell, 3707 Mas- itary cQnvoy.
sey - Tompkins, Room 310. The Viet Cong sometimes
Mrs. Charles Cornelius, 5309 blows up a few tank truck* to
CresmOnt, Room 332. block a road, or to make a prop-
Mrs. Max A. Brand, 1101 Sun- aganda point to a roadside vil-
set, Room 331. ? lage.
Mrs. G. C. Carlton, 800 S. dr- There is in no sense any
cle, Room 335. ' "freedom of movement” in Viet
Nam, other than by a steel-shod
military convoy. Civilian vehi-
cles are under surveillance by
the Viet Cong once they leave
government-held towns and vil-
Gillette CUSTOM
BATTERIES
INSTALLED FREE
NO MONEY DOWN
24 MONTH
GUARANTEE
19M NORTH MAIN
’
1
NOW SD0WK6
THRU WEDNESDAY
Pierce-
Ofl
■V:
(Continued From Page 1)
-
A hilar ious &
romantic T
misadventure!
.!
1949-54 Ch*vrol*ti, Dodg«i, Plymouthi, and
Ramblers
K0N6CSC6ALSAN0Y0B#e5
I*
portunity. to do that
Restriction Imposed
m
By Warner Bros. Nation
Wide Pass List Suspended
m
Safety Can
Be Bought
In Viet Nam
Matinee Mon. Thru Fri.
XU M* M>- L*
Afire 6:00 pm. and All
I
exchange
Day Sat. and Sun. MO
mm
SUNDAY SPECIAL
1956-65 Chevrolet, Chryzler, Plymouth,
Pontiac, Rambler, Studebaker
1955- 65 Volkswagen . .; .,,
1956- 65 Ford and Mercury . . ....,.... 13,97
T6.tr
...16.21
i
. ,-iJ- 11.97
... 13.21
CHICKEN DINNER
DECKER
UnS
•i
BEG. 85a
- “ENDS TONJGHT ,
....... "GIs'm Bottom Boaf"
"Wliere Th# Spies Are’*
Ride Vsquero" .
69c
’z-
1957-64 Cadillac .,, , ,
1954-64 Oldsmobile ....
MW
? ' *
m
BROWN’S
CHICKEN SHACK
V
SUN. THRU TUES.
_ *
WMS
ItCHMlCOlQR* |
NEWS
A delight
for NEW
million*!
901 E. Texao
NEW FISK
SPARK
PLUGS
BRAND NEW
jgLlEACTORY FRESH
8330
^5 each
FISK
BRAKE
/ FLUID
5 Good for ill
I
M
Dieneysfc
n
DANCE
15
brake zyitelns.
Canid/
pF ncHRicoioR- j
133«
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS NUl
2600 W. MAIN
BAYTOWN, TEXAS
oach
/A
2ND FEATURE
Alnotion picture you'll never forgrtf
_
'' ■ ' ' .. . .
SATURDAY, AUG. 13th, 9'till
MUSIC BY AL MARKS & ORCHESTRA
Mosauito Office
H A R R1S COUNTY Mosquito
Control Office in Highlands now
has a local telephone number.
The office, located on Clear
Lake Road near Harfa County
Precinct 2 barn, can be reached
PTEC Moots
MEMBERS -0F PTEC; Parents
and Teachers of Exceptional
Children, are urged to attend
a meeting at 2 p.m. Sunday in
the ' board room ot foe school
district office to discuss class-
room assignments for the com-
lng school year.
beak alongside a victim, sud-
denly snaps It, then repeatedly
releases lt to fit the catch
lengthwise Into Its throat.
BUL0
m
'■dfsSl
Deluxe _
AIR CONDITIONER
i
*-v
DANCE IN AIR-CONDITIONED COMFORT
2 T««r or 14,000
Mil* Warranty
NO' MONIY DOWN
14 Monthi to Pay
149”y
4-County Planning
Program Is OK'd
hailH UDeent
i
Efflzgg
HOUSTON (Sp) - Representa-
lives of the cities of Houston
and Galveston'and foe counties
of Brazoria, Fort Bend, Galves-
ton, and Harris approved the
“essence” of an agreement for
a regional planning commission.
The individual governing bodi-
es of foe two cities and four
counties must ratify the articles
of foe agreement and foe by-
'aw*-for foe Houston - Galves-
ton area council, which were
drawn up by a steering commit-
tee. Baytown would be repre-
sented on foe Houston - Galves-
ton area council if and when it
is adopted.
Each of foe six governmental
units are to report to Harris
County Judge Bill Elliott, tem-
porary Chairman of the steer-
ing committee, after It has studi-
ed foe agreement and passed on
COMPLETELY REMODELED, REOECORATEO. AND
REFURNISHED THE GALVEZ HOTEL HLM
TURNED TO REIGN AS QUEEN OF THE
GULF COAST RESORT HOTELS.
Origiaal Equ!pme*t Tvp<-
mock absobbers
Imtallallan
RE-
MiaaWAT 1*a AT LA POATt
I
1
last Night
LEGAL NOTICE '
Walt Disneys
• Regular
price 6.1$
• With Coupon
cr% 5S-
HR igSlzJd in,
Admlnlitrallon SvUdlito Nr Iha purm*i
wnwSrSJ
THE
New Arrivals: v ^
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Webb, of
Huffman, daughter, born Aug. 5
at Gulf Coast
Bambi
of ItM Doom
«►
COUPON EXPIM* AUOU6T 10, l>to ,
innnnnnnfimiQLiiiDfMifls'
lage
TECHNICOLOR
Occasionally, a Viet Cong
checkpoint explodes in shooting
when lt fa decided to make an
example of a traveler and to
execute him.
The Viet Cong get millions of
plasters in taxes from road
travelers.
The government knows this,
but short of using troops to
clear away all enemy check-
points, there Is little choice but
to accept foe situation
Foreign ®U companies also
know that vehicles carrying
their gasoline pay taxes to foe
Viet Cong.
A spokesman for Esso told
The Associated Press:
“We are aware that our con-
find it necessary on
E
2nd FEATURE
k WALT DISNEY-
Jaycees-
FULL 4-PLY
(Continued From Page l)
Southern Pacific Railroad Co.,
Which fa in the process of com-
pleting a spur track to the U.S.
Steel site in West Chambers
COUnty, brought an injunction
action against Mopac in an ef-
fort to prevent it from building
another spur. *
A federal court in Houston
held in favor of Mopac after
U.S. Steel had intervened on
behalf of Mopac’s request. U.S.
Steel officials testified at the
court hearing that the company
would delay plans for building
the mill just east of Baytown
unless it could have the serv-
ice of two spurt.
At a meeting of the Baytown
Chamber of Commerce last
week, Earl W- Malllck, vice
president of Ul„ Steel (South),
reiterated foe company's stand
that it would not build the min
without two spur track*. He
called oo4the Baytown City
CouncU to make an Immediate
decision granting Mopac the
right to cross four city streets
wifo the proposed spur, ’' *
Malllck fa expected to attend
Monday night's councty mfreting
When efforts will be mkde to
reach a compromise agreement
'on the *p«r. »
Those
Alford, Secretory
,100% NYLON
Ktubeless
Cl
PEI
R
11
August 4, I. t, INS
LEGAL NOTICE
May 1966 Production.
• run 4-PLY
• 100% NYLON
• 16,000 mil# or 27 month
guarantee ‘
Ird Feature
MUXMU
<
i
SOEY
o
otto be reexfved by th* Ot-
onSSrt ItnSbldb will be epmd In the
school estrld's boord Room, 14)5 Market
Street, bidders nm be prtsmt when bids
off opffiio.___
Street, Soyttum, Texas. The board St
it
ISJZMu. i ll Usl
UBUNREM
HtciRfinii
OUAOANTII
••WAY
there Is
i:r
•till Its
PIUS
Sunday Thru Tuesday
YOU*
ON LI
tractors
occasions to pay money to foe
Viet Cong to get through check-
points. We do not approve of
this practice, and do not con-
done it. ’"'j* 1 '
The U S,. 173rd ^jiborne Bri-
gade, operating north of Baria,
found doztybl of cache* of refrig-
erators, stove* and other goods
taken from vehicles as taxes.
Travel is still extremely dare
fterou* tor non-Vietnamese.
French citizens frequently trav-
el Viet Nam's roads, sometimes
paying a tax but often Just
showing their identity cards and
getting through. Several
Frenchmen have been kidnaped
and killed while traveling,
!!il
s
most °odvooto«K>i«CCt7>,|t
SOPHIA IPREN
jvm9
£
•a
Gwrgt M. OdRhy
T
14
7.5«i14
'4.10
August 4, INS;
a
\ rt-.'f.
TInS I
L22«m
1
ONE
2.34
Si
2 5
•SOxld
2S7
LEGAL NOTICE
a-roxi*
14.55
2.24
■
7.1 Ox IS 16.01 3.JS
7.40.1 S 117.55 | 2.35 ~
All prisos, bloskwalls, tubalass, t*ba
I
mm vii/Lja
TH*
I
rai
Qussn ot th. Gulf Ceest IS-
timm
tod hot.It HAM 1911. the
ot JM
tins Wsfoo Intsms
■ 5,000 imtssMa
this thirty yesfs M
footoring pod eflUi N
HMneefbH* tuu
ihNE iW
lh#nbwdg*t',to?*yw
th'F orJ material far the life of the
SPIES
.**
tsWjlhOf desk itfuctun,
ttis Gslvs; itow tncorpontes
eoots^owy tofutt aa.
m
A-
Th.
s
In
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•'iw (M l6H*/$MdeMt
Cslvsston. Tsiss 17550
W 71) M 6-7711
GO GO^
Ot
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Technicolor
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 43, No. 300, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 7, 1966, newspaper, August 7, 1966; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1145013/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.