Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 262, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 17, 1969 Page: 3 of 24
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Wagon
By CHUCK THRE IT
Brown County Agricultural ren.
Saba
eted
Mrs
Rusbell Crosby tea-
school personnel are.
er
SPECIAL BUY
Riley, fifth and sixth grades.
MONDAY, AUGUST 18th
■
Dec
19. allowing students to
uis in
Lunchroom personnel
physical education
Thursday, May 21 with gradua-
l
Also. Miss Patricia- Burleson, lion May 22
is
&
7
E
■ ,
a
P
7//0e
Simplicity #7800
iff
DOUBLE KNIT
N
PIECE GOODS
~4
49
3
AND UP
\
I
m-E.2,
Registration Begins Monday
For School Ye ar at De Leon
Zephyr Year Will
Begin on Aug. 25
I love
line**
vith a
tiding
Sherman Wilburn, bus drivers.
Mrs. Velma Brown is the tax
Mrs Wood Parks, secretary to
the superintendent; Harold Bur-
keep the guerrillas out," said a
senior intelligence officer "Nor
Mrs Wynell Turney, third and
fourth grades; Mrs Ann 'Ho-1
hertz, first and second grapes
Teacher aides will be Mrs Jo i
Reyes and Mrs. Oleta Oafford I
mated the
I the Dem-
he Repub-
• Newest Textures end Colors
• Short Lengths
IN
I Ceut in
» Fiatures,
U Ram-
VISIT OUR FOUNTAIN
AND KNACK BAB
GIFTS and COsMETICS
FOK EVKRY OCCASION
PALACE DRUG CO.
WHERE FEIENDS MEEr
1419 Austin Ph. 646-9116
FAST-HUB DELIVERY
X
making:
brarian
chers aid
Other i
done from information prosided
by local Africans
Malaria strikes more often
than enemy bullets Soldiers ap-
parently forget to take antima-
laria tablets doled out to them
"It is impossible for us to stop
, the subversion with force and
we cannot seal the frontiers to
p m. this Wednesday
Registration for high school
will be Thursday.
The first semester will end
PRESCRIPTION
SERVICE
• Machin* Washable, Tumble Dry and
Never Need Ironing
• Hold* Their Shope, Sews Easily,
No Lining Needed'
> — Presen-
’lighted Old
i Saturday
Hurry!
Get your FREE Penneys
Fall-Winter
Catalog now!
Blackmon, genera! construction ' mas teachers meeting March 14
trades; Mrs Catharyn Switzerland Easter March 27-April 2
• Save time...Shop at home
Phone 646-1541
SPECIAL
PRE-FINISH
PANELING
iward went
nry Taylor
e each 86
ly Williams
took the
ome from
e.
en persons
lay event
e commun-
Pond Park.
> in charge
nald Sloan
an of the
' luncheon
TOW*
The Natzonal Union for the from several points, usually for
| Toal independence of Angola about 12 to 20 miles, and often
00
J
)
I
I
The second semester will aa “Jtribes m “U
Faculty will be Tom M How-
ard. superintendent and history
John N. King, principal and
DOCTORS
ELLIS & ELLIS
OrTOMETRIST>
Call far apdointmema
646-8778 er
la* Citmens Bant Bld*.
homemaking; Mrs Kay Dudley.'
commercial
P
IQnnugs
ALWAYS FIRST GUALI,N
। leson, custodian Mrs. Sherman
I Till. cafeteria supervisor and
100% DACRON POLYESTER
2
• excep, Satun
« to BROWN,
. pb 8e,
70. Sacone
"-04 leaaz
L IM
(TH_a n
wing cointies:
n Comnche,
me McCuliden,
5.80oerve.9
eng aza
iareo FaEss
is entitied ez.
cation el news
Dorthy Porch.
CHARGE IT at Penneys in Brownwood! Open 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
are Mrs Elsie Tongate and Mrs
Minnie Cornelius Taylor also
will be school custodian
also he decided w E Dickey sixth grade Mrs festival grounds A general fac- weapons, is to win the civilian
All junior and senior students J p Roch elementary mu ulty meeting will be held in population over to our side This
are to register from 8 am sic Mrs Don Aldderman, ele- the Homemaking Department way. by stopping the guerrillas
to noon Monday in the high mentary reading Gerald Van on Aug 22 at 9 a m getting support from local peo-
school library Students in the Zandt. seventh and eighth grade -------------------------------------------
grades one to six will register science
school principal.
His wife will teach third grade
in Comanche this year
He received his bachelor’s
degree from North Texas State i
I niversity and his master of
education degree from South-
prospects are less “They get it from both sides,
certain The Portuguese refuse from us and the guerillas and
even to consider that at some many of them just don t know
time in the future the blacas what it is all about. said a Por-
may not want to live and tuguese officer
1 attending
melser, M
norsasthe
in present
is, W, also
— ... -----„.B uc w Bus drivers are Mrs Doris
complete mid-term tests belore I Holomon. John King and H V.
the Christmas holidays, which Taylor
run through Jan 5
resume on Jan 5. the start of English and Spanish .
the second semester Also Darrel Lusty. agricul-
Baccalaureate will be next ture; Mrs Earl Parks, home- .
from 9a m to noon Monday And Mrs Fred Holdridge sev-
in the elementary building while enth grade history and language
seventh and eighth graders arts Mrs Bettv Duke, eighth
will register in the junior high grade history and language arts,
building Mrs Lex Shelby, seventh and
Tuesday freshman and soph-. eighth grade math and Spanish
on lore students will register at Also, Mrs Milton Smith high
the high school from 9 a.m. to school English and girls physi-
noon ' cal education Mrs. N L Box.
New teachers in the system commercial studies: Jerald Mc-
are Mrs Glenda Hays, Stephen- Canlies, social studies and
ville who will he the band di- roach Robert Menzel, math,
rector Sam Jones, former su- Larry Nabors, science and jun-
perintendent of the Desdemona ior high coach Ronnie Page
schools, will teach mathematics social studies and coach
in highschool; Mrs Kay Wis- And Garth Priddy, vocational
dom. first-year teacher, will agriculture. Mrs Al Strasner
teach Spanish and English in reading: Mrs D T Wier Eng
high school: Miss Gayle tamp- Jish and choir and librarian
bell, with 23 years experience. Miss Kay Wisdom English and
will teach first grade Spanish Mrs Mane Maughan.
School begins on Monday. Aug homemaking. Mrs Doyce Short
15. at 8 10 a m with an esti- library aide: RD Wright, coun-
mated 700 students enrolled ty cooperative counselor
Tlic school roster includes Lunchroom personnel are Mrs
Perkin*, superintendent Wayne Dons Clark, Mrs Tom Hall-
Chambers, elementary princi- I mark. Mrs Dale Brownlee.
ZEPHYR (BBC) — Zephyrs math and science; Mrs Connie
school erm will begin at 8 20j Forbes English. Mrs Eleanor
am Monday Aug 25 There " —
will be a teachers meeting at 2
rook Mrs Lester Barrett and
Mrs Jack Ford. cooks O. B
McGary mechanic and bus dri-
in the hope of locating guerrillas
nfiitrating from the Congo or
Zambia Detection usually is
-Holidays are Labor Day.
Grady K Thanksgiving Nov 27-28. Christ-
DE LEON (BBC) — James pal: Al Strasner. secondary prin- Maintenance workers are Jim
Perkins, superintendent of De cipal: Mrs Opal Clayton and Ledford and Juan Ramirez
Leon schools, has announced .Miss Campbell, first grade Mrs Bus drivers are Oscar Brush
registration dates for the 1969- Archie Crittenden and Mrs Roto < maintenance and repair 1, Clyde
70 fall term ert Howard, second grade Mrs Tilly, Johnny Gray, Seale Smith, have the guerrillas been
He asks all students in all R D Wright and Mrs Wayne George Ledford. Doris Clark, able to improve their position
grades to pre-register so trans- Chambers third grade, Mrs Gerald Van Zandt, and Bob Militarily, the situation is sta-
portation needs can be deter- Joe Morgan and Mrs. John Rip- Koonce ble: they ran t overthrow us
mined The number of addi- ley. fourth grade On Tuesday. Aug 19 at 7 30 and we cant get nd of them
tional faculty members needed Also. Mrs Art Fisher and p.m the Lions Club will have For us. the most important
due to consolidation of Desde- Mrs R T Menzel fifth grade; its annual supper for the fac- thing more important than kill-
mona school with De Leon must Mrs I eland Nabors and' Mrs ulty and board members at the ing the enemy and getting their
BOWIE
LUMBER co.
1800 Stewart Ph 646-7577
ver: Russell Crosby, George
Miller Charles Munsel, Mrs.
envelope for return, will
mailed by SWPGA Sept
A 1 \A/ r•u r 1 .Sunday, Aug 17,1969 BROWNWOOD BULLETIN 3A
", ,, ... - . Meetings to Open
f Against 3 Guerilla Factions Year at Richland
insect control, education and
promtion for production, mar-
keting, and use of peanut.'
Any person in- the state en- 4H boys ages 13-19 can nationalist, a son W the in
gaged in producing, or causing The camp located on the dependence fervor which has because of strict security meas-
to be produced peanut- for Colorado River in San Saba swept Africa in the last 15 ures by the Diamang diamond
commercial purposesis eligible County, will feature activities years. He wants to throw out company
to vote This includes farm own- such as horseshoes, swimming the Portuguese. who have been Most guerrilla activity is in
ers and their tenants or share- fishing, cooking and . .
croppers is such persons would out. washers, and a study of the
be required to pay the proposed native plant life of the area
assessment. Anyone wishing to a’tend
Rallots, with a self-addressed should contact the county
, troops are stationed in Angola. munist countries, particularly
a territory nearly twice the size China They range from gre-
of Texas lying below the equa- nades and mines to light ma- cnoperat. wizh whs.. . . .. „ , .
tor on the west coast of Africa chine guns and bazookas, and troper 61 es in mu ’ In the first half of 1969 ac-
it is a war for lower-ranking even a few 75-mm recoilless ri- concomlet .ti oha. . . . cording to Portuguese figures, west Texas State College He is
Fohuzueranozviceroccanaonan nepn rswT* “ ms orctorate
captains but usually lieutenants weaponry which the Portuguese
Th. CHUCK
I
3.33.
Texas peanut producers will all eligible voters Producers
decde in a Sept 24 referendum who have not received a ballot
election whether or not to e' prior to Sept, ’ may obtain one
taDish a self assessment pro- upon request from the county
&ram. agent s office.
Southwestern Peanut Growers of fine dust
Assn of Gorman has been cer- ALL BROWN County AH ward against
tified by the Texas commission- Clubs win be particinting. in packs slung o“ on their, back
er of agriculture to conduct the ther-annuaib4.Prali, dat nuen and trailed G3 automatic rifles
referendum vote which will in- da begnning at 5 » pm at Knives hung from their left The Popular Movement for
Hude al 117 counties having the municip swimmin %T shoulders, a sort ol status sym eMPLAi ignores tribal att.U,
penut allotments. The 4Herswil then rassem- bolng,.., • atipns sand operates oCommu-
The proposal would allow ble at 7 30 at RiV--ide Park for mAnything nst lines Its leaders are
peanut producers to assess a picnic nver followed or The welcoming colonel asked trained in Russa and its meth-
themselves a maximum of 81 snial entePainment " 0 the question tor the hundredth ods rely heavily on political in-
per net ton .farmers stock rStimn“perhipmnnandre or.the ,thousandth time doctri nation Operating from
basis of production and permit respoonsibie“for Prnpn"iunb The lieutenant shook his head bases in Zambia has
them to elect a nine-mar com- ePPihev cr to Ent in"h * ith an air 01 resignation Noth- driven UNITA west of the re-
modity producers board to ad Wv o a Nien5. eu, ing No contact with the enemy gion it tormally occupied
minister the proceeds A 5 P .. NuPPe . The guerrilla that the Portu-. ft casualt
Assessments would be collect- .All Brown County Hers and guese army hunts in Angolas guide
ed at the first point of pro their families are welcome to dense jungle, sprawling savan- war i
cessing or sale'and would be’ attend . " nah country and semhiarid de- easier
used for research disease and
LI SO. Angola (AP) Dirty (UNITA) has dwindled in pie we can win the war" and rotor is unimportant. They . RICHLAND SPRINGS RRC Mav 17 si. .6. —.a.—
and unshaven their faces lined strength through lack of back The battle for the civilians is cannot envisage Angolan Un - Football practice (acuity on Max 19 Grade 0gradu
with weariness patrol ing by an outside power It is * two-pronged effort of giving cans as a Whole Wanting to meeting and Pu“drivers X sionmnts are Mn nop-
trudgedtastheirhut from the more or ess confined to an area the often primitive Africans pro- change th!' ing wii kick off another mhobi to! kindergntns Mr. Nn
truck.whichodroppedthemin- We toLusoP ortuguese m" tection from coercion and m- Some diplamnatic observers year in Richland springs school Wood first-grade Mr. Ida
sidethecampgates on snort, tary headquarters for the, east- proving their standard of living think the appearance o a new Grid practice opens "Monday Bird wood sKecond grade Mr
Their boots kicked"cupespurts ern azone r,^1usthofthe It takes time to persuade Afri- educated brand of African ./Faculty"members‘wil meet at L M Green,‘third “Ernest o.
-- —= se: -s--am= -
Movement
erapsmformsettements Xm Th' Pontuguese blame SIPLA that day with • fun Schedum-pau Mrs Martha Scooggninre
or qeamen 05C0 10.0 j in particular, for coercion and The school calendar shous a medial reading and business
prammniljtarzgarrispns-Laterad-.say that in late May and early holiday on Labor Day sept 1 Wallace Fikes, social studies
1bamed&tarommpentpsraeacom - June it nangtd WUnba! chiefs Thanksgiving holiday will be and coach; H C Miller, science
to* ' touiformn. to rdenar of and headmen in a district south Nov 27 28 Classes will dismiss and high school principal. Mrs.
tosorfdqenta toyuagess Cassamba in an attempt to Dec 19 for Christmas b reak and J D Smith only new teacher >.
m* era! -mou-and people with terrorize local Africans against * - • - • —
sohools. water supplies infirma- supporting the Portuguese
n. riesand other facilities Indicatons are that the effi-
, i ngures.are a These units often ringed cient Portuguese intelligence
about 70 per <ent ot the with barbed wire Most have network uses th divide and
nowtbeig fought in the watchtowers and each has Afri- r(l"‘ coneept and -dylde, en- . .
nah country and serniarid de- eastern zone which stretches can rilitia to orotect it The a u (liver /V c c 11 rv>o c
sen is not easily or often found from the northern border to the militi"are“beingrthed Withhe courages, differeht nationalist —lver ASsvmes
THE BROWN County senior He strikes from ambush cuando River and covers about flesandsubmahineun" " groups to fightanong them- _
boys 4-H camp will be held qua kly and fades away to avoid one-third of Angola The dia- m0 pou 'elves The Portuguese put a b A.+;, n.;
Wednesday through Friday for a stand to fight Heoan.Afn- mond producing area in Ango nThe Portugueseare promot- of faith in ’hem policy of accept- GUstine Duties
4-H boys ages 13-19 can nationalist, a son of the in- las northeast is quiet probably ing aubelated prpsram to raise ing turncoats who fall 'with
The camp located on the dependence fervor which has because of strict security meas backward Tdeas Aniannsin themgycoillas roups, inrludung GI STINE - Roger L Oliver i
officiais arid officers admit pri- rehabilitation they are often took ol er duties thispasttweek i
vately the beginning of the ger- economically assisted to return a superintendent of Gustine |
sieeping inpngplansarly.snovnara the belt mmrdeately,n orthand progfam tmprovedhemhonlmgis PShtugundreasmyav FTe tormer tencher and head
raliway"shftasonKtgstargatmnd.anm.o the most -p-., ,£1 com-comasatrmusnae I*
the others are in . lozambique according to the 1 ortuguese has Short term prospects for the The worst vietims almost al man was he was elementary I assessor-collector and bookkeep-
and Portuguese Guinea—which been attacked or sabotaged porwme POPEE - Ie mne wcums almost al . . • P
, e T cause defense costs to eat up eight tunes this year Weapons Lorg — ppear aright ways are peaceful Africans,
he agent 5 office by 5 p m Tues- nearly half Lisbon s annual captured by the Portuguese -ongtterm
8 tot day. budget About 60,000 Portuguese with modern arms from Com-
/ A,74g2
2293/
04jeAe,
or sergeants lead the patrols say is supplied .by Arab coun-
which go out every day Many tries, particularly Tunisia, and
of the lieutenants and sergeants comes from Nazi supplies Rom-
are scarcely into their 20s mel left behind after Alamein.
The guerrillas are split into UNITA's guns, the Portuguese
sharply reduces their effective- say, are mostly captured from
three main factions, which other guerrilla groups or Portu-
ness According to Portuguese guese civilians or army,
intelligence, rival groups fight Many Africans in the Portu-
each other whenever they meet guese army, some of them ex-
Tlie Union of the Populations guerrillas who proved their loy-
of Angola i UPA i provided the alty to their new side operate in
leadership for a 1961 insurrec- much the same way as the guer
tion. opening blow in the war It nilas, on foot patrols sometimes
is based in Kishasa, capital of lasting six or seven days in dif-
ihe adjoining Congo, and draws ficult country
manpower from the Bakongo Cazombo. 200 miles east of
tribe which bestrides the bor- Luso, is a typical military
der This tribal support ham- base The base adjoins an air-
pers its attempts to penetrate field and protects the town of a
Make your own thing in Penn-Prest
Dacron double knits by-the-yard.
I They know no season!
Never wrinkle! Never need ironing!
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Fisher, Norman. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 262, Ed. 1 Sunday, August 17, 1969, newspaper, August 17, 1969; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1574300/m1/3/?q=music: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.