HomeMy WebLinkAbout1964 Record Breaking Snowale
y had moved small
up to the border as
lence appeared to
spatch reporting that
wever, also said that
n the zone itself was
semblance of normal-
WITH THE an-
nt of the shift of con -
entagon relayed word
ara and Flemming are
g Friday, Jan. 17, as a
rayer throughout the
ie in memory of the
lost their lives "in the
ce of their duty dur-
vents that transpired
rsday, Jan. 9."
American servicemen
anamanians were re-
illed in the disorders
lowed a dispute over
f Canal Zone high
dents to fly the Stars
es alone at their school
nder a U. S.- Panama
t the Panamanian flag
flown alongside the
er in public displays.
Group
s New
t Rule
(1P1 — The 13- nation
mmit conference has
set up a joint mili-
mand in an effort to
Israel's diversion of
iver waters.
emarkable display of
e often feuding lead -
0 million Arabs voted
y night to establish a
committee with "ad-
BRYAN-COLLEGE STATION. TEXAS THURSDAY, JANUARY 16, 1964
Record reaking Snow
Hits _Many 'Texas Cities
= 44
_ = '
.-
• • •
Eighteen Pages in Two Sections
AND IT LOOKS IT !
The street sign says Winter Street — and it sure looks it ! This picture was made in
Bryan this morning near the College Avenue South "Y" shortly after snow bean
standing on the ground. The snowfall began at 9:50 a.m. and was still coming down
in large, wet flakes at presstime this afternoon. (Eagle Photo by Gene Dennis)
PRICE 5 CENTS
Traffic Slowed
In B -CS Vicinity
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
Record breaking snow dipping as far into the state as
Bryan - College Station snarled traffic caused deaths
and brought damage today to a wide area of Texas.
Virtually all schools closed in the heavy snow area in
Northeast Texas around Dallas and Fort Worth.
Dallas measured 7.2 inches at 9:23 a.m. — the heaviest
fall ever officially recorded there.
Although no records of snow fall are kept in Brazos
County, long -time residents say today's snow in 33- degree
weather was the most seen here
since a storm in the late 1940s.
Precipitation since 6 a.m. mea-
sured .45.
In Dallas at least 200 auto-
mobiles were stacked up and
unable to move on one highway.
Another 100 were blocked on
another stretch.
MANY WORKERS were late
by hours at their offices and
stores. Buses scrapped their
schedules. Moisture froze in the
brakes on many buses making
them useless.
Fort Worth police tried to un-
snarl traffic. A few For Worth
power lines snapped under the
weight of the unusually water- City Manager Fred Sandlin
heavy snow. said the commisson met in spe-
At least two persons died in cial session last night to name
traffic during the snow. the auditorium, authorize tak-
HOMER NEW, 39, was found ing of bids on three school pro -
dead in a doorway in Fort jects and to award contracts
Worth. A justice of the peace on electrical sub - station erec-
said exposure could have been.
a contributing factor. All three items were on the
iri 4 . fh.•
It's Official --
`Bryan Civic
Auditorium'
"Bryan Civic Auditorium"
will be the name of the com-
munity's proposed city - school
auditorum to be constructed on
Stephen F. Austin High School
grounds by 1965.
r
1
Snow __
(Continued From Page 2)
der into Louisiana and on east
ward.
On the north - south line, th
snow stretched from south o
Austin deep in Central Texa
northward into Oklahoma.
The Weather Bureau issued
hazardous driving warnings for
all the snow area, including por-
tions of Oklahoma, southern
Arkansas and Louisiana east-
ward. The State Highway De
partment added its warning.
AT AUSTIN, where snow i
rare, the white mantle baffl
drivers. Thirteen collisions oc
curred during the first hour
snowfall.
The snow, heavy with wate
and falling with little wind t
blow r' - g tightly.
oofs and tree limb'
rings, r
broke and fell under the nea
mantle.
The snow's weight collapsed
a roof at the Hunt Planing Mill
in Fort Worth's Riverside sec-
tion.
A PORTION of a roof at a
Fort Worth Coca -Cola bottling
plant collapsed over a dock with
an estimated $30,000 loss.
At the planing mill, an em-
ploye, Archie Singletery, 37,
said he arrived early to start
fires and heard the roof creak-
ing and cracking. Then a 25x25
foot section at the rear crashed
down.
Temperatures in the snow
area were only moderately be-
low freezing, but a hard freeze
was forecast for most areas by
early Friday.
The 14 inches of snow was re-
ported unofficially between Fort
Worth and Weatherford.
OTHER SNOW measurements
included:
Athens 2.5, Llano 2, Waxaha-
chie 6 to 7, Hico 12, Burleson
10, Aquilla 6, Chalk Mountain
11, Pidcoke 7, Lipan 9, Denton
7.5, Frisco 5, Krum 7.5, Argyle
6.5, Tioga 8, McKinney 7, San-
ger 7, Decatur 7, Prosper 7, Val-
ley View 7.5, Lake Dallas 6.5,
Pilot Point 7, Lewisville 8.
Also Richland 4, Trinidad 2.5,
Boyd 9, Kaufman 7, Little Elm
7, Winkler 3.5, Greenville 6.5,
Wolfe City 3, Edgewood 7, Car-
thage sleet, Marble Falls 2, Tay-
lor 1, Waco 1, Dallas 7.2, Arling-
ton 6, Abilene 2, Wichita Falls 1,
Mineral Wells 6, Carrollton 6,
Gunter 6, Sherman 7.
Also Richland 4, Crandall 7,
Gainesville 7, West 1.5, Frost 6,
Tyler 5, west of Brownwood up
to '7.5, Stephenville 9. Cleburne
7, Grapevine 6 to 7, Fort Worth
better than 6.
In midmorning, the Weather
Bureau radar showed a broken
bank of snow 80 to 120 miles
wide falling from 25 miles
southeast of Hamilton to Green-
ville and a band 10 miles south-
west of Eastland to 20 miles
south - southwest of Wichita
Falls.