Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 13, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 30, 1966 Page: 16 of 30
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brownwood Bulletin and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Brownwood Public Library.
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Record Baptist Budget Looms
largest in the history of the 18
! MONDAY {
)
FINE PRINTED
I
j
DRAPERY
AND
CURTAIN
k-
DRESSES
.2
FABRICS
VALUES TO 59c
Brown County.
Site is 1.970 feet from the north
Having a proposed depth of and 1,980 feet from the east lines
• RAYON BROCADES
• COTTON TAPESTRIES
• STRIPE TICKINGS
1 V
b
T1
g’e
Bags for all Occasions
MAIL TO
Brownwood High Ex-Students' Assn.
S
/
Name
Class
1
Address
I!
and
barbecue tickets at $2.00 each for Brownwood
*
*8
High School homecoming Nov. 4-5.
Enclosed is my check for $ .... . to cover my tickets
and my $2 membership in the BHS Ex-Students' Assn.
03
-85
• too*.. MISC. FIBERS
,)
#
3
#.
HIGGINBOTHAM'S
ANNOUNCES
A NEW MEMBER TO THEIR STORE
• 28 YEARS LUMBER
EXPERIENCE WITH
OR
HIGGINBOTHAM'S
HIGGINBOTHAM
12
• HAS VAST KNOWLEDGE
LUMBER CO.
OF BUILDING
eg
• ANXIOUS TO MEET
1
AND WORK WITH
IN "QUALITY"
V
HIS CUSTOMERS ON
MERCHANDISE
ANY SIZE PROJECT.
CONTROL
2
SIZES
6 TO 18
v
1
!
I
I
LEVINE'S
SPECIALS
RUG ENSEMBLE j
3333
4
LAYAWAY YOUR RUGS TODAY AT LEVINES!
L
«
MN
BLEACHED WHITE!
U.S. Faced With Big Decision
On Nike X Missile Program
New Well Staked
Near Brookesmith
LEVINECS FANTASTIC SPECIAL BUY!
THREE PIECE BRAIDED
COME in and get
acquainted
THREE RUGS FOR ONE
LOW PRICE AT LEVINE'S!
EX-STUDENT COUPON - Although more than
3,000 letters telling Brownwood High School ex-stu-
dent* about plans for the school's first homecoming
Nov. 4-5 have already been mailed, names and ad-
dresses of those not contacted are still being sought.
BHS exes who have not received a letter concern-
ing the event are asked to clip the above form, fill
it in, and return to the ox-student association at
Box 1668, Brownwood. The football tickets are for
YOUR CHOICE1
LAMINATED
COTTON
CORDUROY
VINYL SUEDE!
FOUR STYLES OF IMPORTED
BOX BAGS
RATED
"TOPS''
million member convention.
The convention's Human Wel-
fare Commission asks $1 980 40
SIX DOZEN
FALL AND WINTER
MR. BRACK
SONES
1
e Mii •
MR BRACK SONIS
MEI
CO
[• ECONOMY
1 TO 10 YARD
’ LENGTHS
New Shipment of FALL HATS
JUST UNPACKED
3325
Mhl
REVERSIBLE
IN BROWN,
GREEN OR
•22*,, REDI
.
i
»
sr-
Box 1668
Srownwood, Texes, 76801
BEETGSand
pcmuu c
EASTLAND— F O Calvert of
Cisco will drill No 1 Helen R.
Crawford in Eastland County
Regular Field
Having a proposed depth of
500 feet with cable tools, it is
34 miles southeast of Nimrod.
Site is 1,190 feet from the north
and 150 feet from the east lines
138)
17"
duaa
Shapely Satin Ravissant, $6.
Short, Average, Tall, 30 to 12
Also Petites
h
• LODEN • ANTELOBE
• CRANBERRY • shown
• CAMEL COLOR • ELUE
LAVISH
LAMB FUR
COLLARS
No 1 J. C Parker, W H King
Survey 737. wildcat two miles
southeast of Coleman, was plug-
ged at 2,094 feet.
SKIN C
(Mil
ANAL
TRY I
Mil I
- BY
WHH
MEI
cos
I Leatrice
•10 Center
.2
Nov. 4, while
i homecoming
1,
•M.2
Efes',.
16
Cenard Oil & Gas Co of Pal foot cable tool wildcat was stak-
las staked No. 7 McNurlen & ed four miles south of Burkett.
Kirkpatrick in the Brookesmith. It is Closuit & Closuit of Fort
East (Marble Falls) Field in Worth No. 1 A. I. Edwards
A,, A-
ER ATH—Miles Production Co
of Dallas filed application to
re-enter to 4,890 feet to test
the Marble Falls at an aban-
doned wildcat 14 miles north-
west of Hico. ■
It is No 1 Dwain Wolfe.
1980 feet from the southeast
and 660 feet from the northeast
lines of Josiah Taylor Survey,
pDALtAS., Tex.(AP-Texas althatszan editor comes in.con- and itss medical college in Hous- Payne College in Brownwood, missions, evanglism, steward-
spptsts ar,5 Pected.to. adopt tactwithreligious news of the ton $127,584 $169102 Mary Hardin Baylor in ship and other activities.
arecord 12.225,000 budget when world and his interpretation of Other amounts to colleges in- Belton $138 782 Uni verity of Among the special gifts are
ithezemeetherpuhiswepkt. thatunewsi bound to affect the clude Dallas Baptist College, ^$^ V sso,000n%BiShoPCoilegeinpaf
.mhe.exas ..Baptist Brother. thinking..af many persons, 8164.319; East Texas Baptist land Baptist College in Plain- las. $5,500 to the Texas Alco-
iThsptdgoerdbudgmzto.be Maras imeeg Uhivetit,7Sh B^pta*IAcXm^nd$^5<MMarCOS zboareprgeestnescanaomqa
5valuated by.the.Baptists, is the Abilene. $196,970: Houston Bap- The State MisSions Commis- ini ted for Separation of Church
""1° tat College, $140,355; Howard budget is for $1,607,587 for and State. "
30
the Brownwood-Childress game here I
the barbecue tickets are for the nhon
luncheon at the high school Nov. 5.
I program envisioned would cost
$15 to $20 billion.
There is important disagree-
ment even on the type of shelter
program needed A Pentagon
engineer said: “Only fallout, not
blast shelters, are necessary;
not because of direct fallout
overhead. but because the ene-
my can target undefended ar-
eas. and ground-level fallout,
more lethal than high-level, can
be spread by the wind to de-
fended metropolitan areas ”
But Dr. Jerome B Wiesner,
former presidential science ad-
' viser and missile authority, be-
lieves a blast shelter program
1 — that might cost $40 to $50 bil-
of J R Montgomery Survey,
COLEMAN—A proposed 600- A 1403.
By EVERETI S. ALLEN might render the system inef- deployment, there must be sub- T . -___
New Bedford Standard-Times fective during the time it takes stantial money recommended hood Convention Monday and
For The Associated Pre** to produce it. or that he might late this year when the budget Tuesday is expected to attract
The United States faces a do many other things, other is put to bed ” 2.500 laymen and pastors with
multibillion-dollar decision in than just sitting still, to make it Secretary of Defense Robert the theme of Every Man a
major cold war" weaponry — cost more or accomplish less S. McNamara estimates that a Missionary ”
involving what a top-level ex- The task of the Army-con- surprise full-scale Soviet nu- The Baptist General Conven-
pert in Washington calls the na- trolled defense setup would be dear attack on the United tion of Texas meeting opens
tion’s most important defense this In 20 minutes or less, de- States would cause 130 million Tuesday for three days, with
____„ .. ---. . - - ■ for hospitals in San Antonio,
question in a decade , tect enemy missiles approach- casualties the keys items adoption of the Beaumont. San Angelo Abilene
The question is whether to ing the United States at 18.000 A $30 billion Nike X pro- budget and giving E. S James Waco, Houston. Harlingen and
build and deploy the antiballis- miles an hour, determine which gram protecting 50 metropolitan the annual Public Relations Dallas and for childrens homes
tic missile system called Nike are real and which decoys, di areas specifically, and the en- Award in Dallas Houston San Antonio
X. at a probable cost of from $8 rect defending missiles to inter- tire nation generally, might James is retiring as editor of Lubbock Burnet Pettus and
bilion to $30 billion initially, cept and destroy the incoming take 10 years to build and would the Baptist Standard, the larg- Round Rock
and annual expenditures nuclear warheads before they be expected to cut fatalities in est Protestant weekly in the aree hndoc alocotion ■
thereafter estimated at from $1 reach American targets. half, plus saving billions of dol- world with 370 000 circulation u nos vs oDudEe e0 cation
billion to $5 billion, depending A decision may be close at lars worth of propertv He has been editor 12 years ... 6n:”c8n5. mesmoutn.
on the expansion rate hand after years of government The $30-billion figure includes In an interview. James said enonaPdrvscnvenunn." an-06
Even these cost estimates are hedging A Pentagon engineer asts5 billion ^Iter nro- he believed both the paper and segondlargest qmountof8.29-
highly eontroversial for they intimately familiar with the gram without whichts Pre the editor must have editorial 7atdessinatedaforchristianed-
are. in the words of one of the Nike X program comments ested theant"tamittit misus. freedom to be meaningful in ucation in Texas.. „ .
nation s top missile scientists. “All the studying of military _ ARM _ mvstam armssue Baptist work -Among the schools. Baylor
“extrapolations of todays and systems analysts must ness might E reduced more “I don't believe there is any U niversity at Waco is scheduled
threat." In other words, they do come to a head this fall when than 30 . , way to estimate the influence of to receive $488,846. its dental
not take into account the possi- the 68 budget is under prepara- tists suggest this shelter cost a Southern Baptist state paper college in Dallas $132,545. its
biity that a clever opponent tion. In order to go ahead with estimate is far too low that the in any of the states It is natur- nursing school in Dallas $14,485 (
-
1,400 feet with rotary, it is three of Section 21. Block 3, HT&B
miles northeast of Brookesmith. Survey.
Site is 3.300 feet from the north Frank W Burger of Abilene
and 620 feet from the east lines " -----
of D Wofford Survey 152.
e 43,'
X, 6 ' W>
Please reserve for me ... football ticket* at $1.50 each
-KS ones
"ges
SIZES 5 TO 20 - A FEW HALF SIZES
TWO LARGE RACKS
< SMART "
YOUNG
COATS
FOR SCHOOL!
ba-
YOUR CHOICE ‘498
1 V
11
Miss
and D
change
Oct. 2
Sixth !
Norn
the we
an alt
quets
palms
cented
White i
| ily pew
Bride
and Mi
Route
groom':
Mrs. R
lia St.
Claud
sang "
"Weddii
Weddin
Bride,
her fath
of white
turing ;
trimmec
fingertip
centered
She can
orchids
Bible.
H
Janice
maid of
were Ck
Gleaton.
street 1
linen Th
with shoi
mon pinl
English
bons.
Sammy
Groomsn
sons and
abeth G1
Parsons
were Ne
ter Pars'
IV
For he
Mrs Par
suit wit
black pa
corsage v
Meeti
For Cl
Brownw
Women v
Friday at
Shepherd
. The Re1
bring the
with the
munity Dr
Will speal
Resources
’ Women
piece good
Kits. "
16A---BROWNWOOD BULLETIN, Sunday, Oceber 30, 1966
3¥
I d\‘
lion — is necessary, because
' both sides still have the option
of high-altitude major blasts
। that could ignite cities and
; create lots of fires."
Dr. J.P Ruina, former di-
' rector of the Defense Depart-
ment's Advanced Research
Projects Agency, which has
been spending more than $100
million a year on ABM re-
search. said. “The question of
whether to deploy an ABM sys-
tem has been and continues to
be one of the most important
and biggest defense decisions
facing the country."
An indication of this lies in the
fact that over the last nine
years, 15,000 persons, principal-
ly those highly talented, have
been engaged in research and
development on this project, at
a cost of more than $2 billion. In
August, Congress approved $167
million more than the $447 mil-
lion asked by the administration
for the Nike X program.
I Most persons concerned, both
civil and military. agree on the
desirability of giving high prior-
ity and adequate funding to
Nike X research and develop-
ment. but on the matters of
ABM production and deploy-
ment. they are far apart.
The issues are these:
Secretary McNamara, with
White House support, is against
deployment of an ABM system
now because of the “nature and
consequences of the Soviet reac-
tion : the technical problems yet
to be solved, and the great
cost.”
Many members of Congress
disagree Rep E. Mendel Riv-
ers. D-S.C.. chairman of the
House Armed Services Commit-
tee. commented: “I don't know
why a nation that is approach-
ing a trillion dollars in the gross
national product can't afford a
gadget to protect its civiliza-
tion"
The Joint Chiefs of Staff unan-
imously have recommended
that the United States proceed
with ABM deployment and it
was in deference to their views
that Congress approved the ex-
tra $167 million for the project.
"5/
J e-,
ALL AT V2 PRICE
% \ \« STRIPES
•Re SOLIDS
A292° FLORALS
I
s1
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Fisher, Norman. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 67, No. 13, Ed. 1 Sunday, October 30, 1966, newspaper, October 30, 1966; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1493019/m1/16/?q=j+w+gardner: accessed June 30, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.