Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 306, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 18, 1972 Page: 1 of 20
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brownwood Bulletin and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Brownwood Public Library.
- Highlighting
- Highlighting On/Off
- Color:
- Adjust Image
- Rotate Left
- Rotate Right
- Brightness, Contrast, etc. (Experimental)
- Cropping Tool
- Download Sizes
- Preview all sizes/dimensions or...
- Download Thumbnail
- Download Small
- Download Medium
- Download Large
- High Resolution Files
- IIIF Image JSON
- IIIF Image URL
- Accessibility
- View Extracted Text
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Brownwood Bulletin ma#
COOLER
Wednesday October 11,1172
Browmwood, Texas
Vel. 72 Me. 306
Ten Cents Doily
Twenty Conti Sunday
Lawmakers
rebuff Nixon
i
on 2 fronts
Smith aide rules
27
out extra session
w
7
<
\
2’
Home Administration.
Brookesmith are now very
ms-
l
attended there Tuesday.
southwest Brown County and
1.
"en
$
J
Kissinger in Saigon
for Indochina review
LEAPIN LIZARDS—With summer weather extending into
October, children in Mid-Texas take tull advantage and get in
extra playtime before winter arrives. Taking acrobatic plunges
over a hedge during an afternoon play session are Derrick Hood,
casional rain tonight and
Thursday. Cooler Thursday.
Low tonight in middle to
lower 60s, high Thursday in
to a helicopter waiting to take him to Camp
David, presidential retreat in Maryland.
Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker, Gen.
CreightonW. Abrams. Army chief at
staff who arrived earlier in the day, and
8
9
here Tuesday 97, overnight
low 67 Sunset today 7:01,
sunrise Thursday 7:42.
HOLD THAT HELICOPTER! Making like a
commuter about to miss his train, President
Nixon sprints across the White House grounds
The President served notice in his veto message that he
would draw the spending issue in the closing weeks of the
national political campaign.
"If this veto is not sustained ... let the issue be clearly
ceiling which Nixon had asked for the current fiscal year
The Senate last week had voted for the ceiling but balked
at giving Nixon authority to make cuts in virtually any
area he wished.
That legislation was sent back to conference with the
House
The water pollution and spending-limit bills are the fi-
nal obstacles to be cleared before the 92nd Congress could
finally quit leaders said they were hopeful today would
be the day
drawn As with the spending ceiling, so with this bill, a
vote to sustain the veto is a vote against a tax increase.
"A vote to override the veto is a vote to increase the
likelihood of higher taxes. "
Sen Edmund S Muskie, DMaine, floor manager for the
antipollution bill, said the President was just plain
wrong" in his "budget-wrecking" charge.
"The only budget we have before us is his fiscal 1973
budget and the spending this bill providestar 1973 is $250
million," Muskie declared "That will hardly bust the
budget. ~
"Over the long run, this total amount of money is
needed to do the job.”
The Senate vote to kill the $250-billion spending ceiling
may have been the death blow for that Nixon proposal.
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate has rebuffed
President Nixon on two fronts, denying him unlimited
authority to cut federal spending and then overriding his
eleventh-hour veto of a water-pollution-control bill.
At 1 o'clock this morning, two hours after Nixon had
slapped down the $24.6-billion antipollution authorization
measure as staggering, budget-wrecking, the Senate
voted 52 to 12 to override him.
Soon after the House meets at noon today. Democratic
leaders planned to try to win the necessary two-thirds
margin to override and thus enact the measure over
Nixon's objections.
Earlier Tuesday evening, the Senate voted to eliminate
from a debt-limit-increase bill the $250-billion spending
Brown County
, United Fund
drive underway
left son of Howard Payne College track coach Don Hood, and
Jim Slayton, son of HP< football coach Dean Slayton.
i Bulletin Photo i
' I
He claimed Barnes recog- I
nized Fort Worth Sen. Don Ken- I
nard, who intended to filibuster r
the competitive rate bill, *
Tuesday night after promising
during a recess he would not do
so.
Legislators said Smith told
them at an informal breakfast
be would not call a new session. *
Gen Frederick C. Weyand, com-
mander of U.S. forces in Vietnam
On the Vietnamese side, he was
greeted by his counterpart, Nguyen
Phu Duc, special adviser on foreign
affairs to President Nguyen Van Thieu.
and Ambassador Tran Kim Phuong,
who was recalled from Washington for
consultations here
Kissinger declined to make any
statement to waiting newsmen. He was
driven in a limousine to Bunker'':
downtown villa
Abrams arrived for a weeklong
military assessment that could in- .
fluence the allied bargaining stance in
Paris
Both Kissinger and Abrams were
scheduled to meet with President
Nguyen Van Thieu, but officials said
they did not know just when
met by U.S.
SAIGON i A) — Presidential ad-
viser Henry A. Kissinger arrived in
Saigon today to join U.S. and South
Vietnamese officials in a major review
of the military and political situation in
Vietnam and his peace negotiations in
Paris
Kissinger came from Paris where he
held another secret meeting Tuesday
with the North Vietnamese. It was his
20th trip to Paris for secret ne-
gotiations.
With Kissinger were William
Sullivan, deputy assistant secretary of
state for Far Eastern and Pacific af-
fairs. along with several other aides
from the National Security Council
staff
Kissinger was
AUsTNAP)-Lary .The fourth called session of opportunity to vote on a bill," chairman of the three-man
Teaver, a top governor s aide, the 62nd Legislature expired at said Teaver the man who state InSiranc. Rard
said, day, not iov. Preston midni ht a Kill ywi Ifi । * igina ged Smith to c a Teaver contended LL Gov.
amir: tmoemanaztnnppccetzca
-tmnin- X'-X-.'S:
Smithnplanned ° issue a against us. It is very obvious the said Teaver. whom the Senate kind of maneuvering."
statement later Senate is not going to get an refused to confirm July 7 as The presiding officer of the
Senate—there's never a bill
passed or killed or an appoint-'
ment confirmed or busted that
he does not have complete con-
trol," Teaver said at Barnes.
mid-80s.
Maximum temperature
Signals reported in
search for Boggs
JUNEAU, Alaska (AP) - "There was no indication it sell Brown, 37. an aide to the 40-
Signals from an aircraft emer- came from the missing air- year-old Begich. and non "
gency locator beacon have been craft,” Breed said of the signal. Jonz, 38, the ilt E
picked up by aircraft combing "Andit is notuncommon for one Boggs’ wife I Snd. and mom
heavily timbered, mountainous to get tripped accidentally." bersfhefmiildyranamem.
areas of Southeast Alaska for a There was also a report that ton eary’todnyrrefnsrhing-
missing plane carrying House an amateur radio operator in Aides saidthey wanted to he 8
Democratic Leader Hale Boggs California had talked with the
and three others someone in the Boggs plane ,
The Coast Guard said the pi- Monday night, and that he had Jonz filed a flight plan by ra-
lots of two jet-powered helicop- been told the aircraft had land- dio 12 minutes after leaving An-
ters heard the signals twice ed on a beach near Juneau. chorage, and that was the last
some 10 miles west of this The Cessna 310 in which word heard from the aircraft as
Alaska capital city on Tuesday. Boggs and his companions left 11. headed southeast, through
but there were notes of caution. Anchorage Monday on a 32- rainswept skies.
"We have experienced false hour, 560-mile flight to Juneau The Coast Guard said one of
alarms in the past,” said a was equipped with an emergen- the emergency signals nicked
spokesman for the Federal cy beacon, which activates on a up by its pilots was IoF
Aviation Administration. crash. strong and Dasted rssomey
Cmdr. Paul Breed of Coast With the 58-year-old Louisia- minutes. The mcopter piiotsa 40
Guard headquarters inJuneau nan were Rep Nick Begich, reported hearings radio signl
also cautioned against undue Alaska's only member of the which lasted for only AlSia
optimism. House of Representatives; Rus- seconds only 30
“I don’t want you to use my H2>
name because it may have been 53217.*%.
Brown-Mills County FHA low" in depth and residents
supervisor Harold Kennedy told have been hauling their own
The Bulletin today that ap- drinking water during the past
proval of this loan and grant three months from Brownwood,
was announced by FHA officials But Kennedy explained that
in the state office at Temple the project, which includes 303
during a meeting which he subscribers from Winchell in
B'smith water
funds approved
An emergency grant of over $900,000," he said "We feel
$361,000 was approved Tuesday we did very well when the
for the Brookesmith Water Brookesmith system itself
Supply Corp along with a loan received a third of the total.”
of 9520,000 for its proposed The Clear Creek and private
pipeline system by Farmers well systems which supply
Kennedy said FHA also ap- Trickham in southeast Coleman
proved a $377,800 loan for the County to the Grosvenor area in
City of Bangs to update its northwest Brown County, will
water system with a 10-inch have to be done in two phases,
main from Brownwood to Bangs The project’s consulting
in compliance with recent or- engineers, eatts & Decker of
ders issued by the Texas Water Abilene, estimated the total
Quality Board. project would cost $1,607,000
""The emergency grant total
for the entire state is now a little See FUNDS On Page 2-A
said in confidence," said a
House member, "but he sure
told us that.”
Another House member, who
also did not want his name used,
said Smith told them he would
make a statement later today
"castigating the Senate, but he
aa Sweltering Mid-Texans eye Mhe
had worked harder than he • BROWNWOOD AREAL
had ever seen them work before cummA.L:.. AAI Cua Mostly cloudy with oc-
approaching cool front
see any use of calling another Chances for at least a little morning could spawn oc- will be responsible for both the
session. relief from an unseasonably casional showers tonight and showers and the cooler tem-
eL21. _ _ n 1 Texas senators and represen- warm mid-October were Thursday, and that cooler air peratures if they make it this
Idrdw CnilAOnC drregrer tatives. were left wondering dangled in front of heat-weary could edge into Mid-Texas far south.
■ • • Y * ■ ■ ■ l tom ■ I • V I I " 9 I •V what the next step would be Mid-Texans today by the sometime Thursday. Forecasts look for lows in the
_ ‘ when the fourth called session Nat. anal Weather Service. A cool front which was middle in upper 60s in this area
• Santiago police enforce curfew • ended at midnight without any Forecasters said clouds lowering temperatures in the tonight while Thursday highs
By LUIS MARTINEZ ’ M, . 50 . .. ... wordon another possible ses- which spread over the area this Texas Panhandle this morning should linger in the 80s if the
AZsNciatoa pres Writer The midnight-to-6 a.m. cur- of civil war. His opponents said sion from Smith. front _ in expected
ANrcAtd Chile rip few was the first major action his administration is "stran- Half an hour before the end of Extended forecasts for the Absentee votina
taken by the government since gling private activities and lib- the -day session, which smith ,jIE II .. areacaUtoM^^
Petestsianndmotorsistserly itdeclaredastateofemergency erties I But 7 far the govern- had called mainly on the subject COUntyS UF COlleCtlOnS and continued cool wether for underway today
AdendaeftrdBedidengstlyyadr las Thursday l Widespread threatoto take over businesses insurancerates, smith wemtd lagqing behind 77 pace rain and a warming trend over A total of 11 persons voted
few in Santiago because of a unrest sparked by a and shops closed by the strikes, bed without saying’what he ‘"SS" S ‘ F-- the weekend absentee for the first hour and a
week of strikes street Protests truckers'strike which touched The government announced would do. His aides would only "We have only reached 27 per today Mix-Texas sweltered in half this morning in the Brown
""65 off a crippling wave of walkouts today that it had averted strikes say they expected him to say cent of our goal with only one Furry reminded Brown summerike Stmperatures County Clerk's office.
Many of those arrested were by snallhusinessmen, doctors, bysthe bus and taxi owners something today. more week to go, Myri Furry, County residents that this again Tuesday with Brownwood Absentee voting for the
allowed to go home after identi- -myersestudentsand industrial unions. House-Senate negotiators re- president of the Brown County year’s goal is $67,000 which is 20 recording an official high of 97- general election began this
tying themselves or convincing and commercial workers. All Ash traysand glasses were ported 30 minutes before the United Lund, said this morning per cent over that of last year's one of the warmest October morning. According to Mrs.
authorities they had not heard oppose the Marxist president’s thrown Tuesday night in the mandatory midnight adjourn- The total amount collected in goal. days on record here The am. Reecie Bell, Brown County
of the curfew It was not imme- plans, to convert Chile to Chamber.of Deputies as it de- ment that they had failed to the Brown County United Fund H we do not meet our goal time October mark for heat clerk, only those who expect to
diately known how many others sopialism. .. batedla Communist party mo- work out a compromise be- drive to date is $18,319.56. This this year, funds allocated to here is 102 degrees recorded in be out of town on Nov. 7 should
spent the night in neighborhond President Allende warned tion to censure officers of the tween their chambers’differing is $16,324.33 below last year's each agency will have to be 1951, however vote absentee
K * Tuesday that the situation was chamber, who are all members versions of competitive rate collection at the same time. The low here this moening Absentee voting will end at 5
1 leading the nation “to the brink of the opposition. legislation. United Fund officials said See UF On Page 2-A was 67. 8 p.m. Nov. 3.
Twenty Poges Today Two Sections
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View 18 places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Fisher, Norman. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 306, Ed. 1 Wednesday, October 18, 1972, newspaper, October 18, 1972; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1575081/m1/1/?q=Homecoming+queen+1966+North+Texas+State+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.