Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 277, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 5, 1973 Page: 4 of 22
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Bean cracks space mark
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HELPING MN
SERVICE
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rights.
Jack R. Lousma, earlier set the single-mission endurance
record, treating Sty tab i’s mark of more than 28 days.
The schedule for the record setting day was filled with
medical, solar astronomy and earth resources experiments.
On Tuesday, the astronauts relayed live television pictures
of Delia to mission control as that tropical storm blew ashore
on the Texas Gulf Coast and lashed the space center with
heavy rain and high winds
Wind gusts of more than 60 miles per hour were recorded at
the center, but there was no damage to facilities or to the
nearby homes of the three astronauts.
Describing Delia, Lousma said, “She’s a breezy lady. She’s
pulled herself together after having a hard time making up her
mind where to go. You cm see it’s taken on a nice circular
pattern.”
The Skylab photos of Delia should provide weather re-
searchers with a record of the storm's growth. As Lousma
noted: “We've followed her since her birth off the Yucatan
peninsula"
CHICAG
study into!
of children
the state w
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distributor
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candies, c
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three sons,
Todd, 9. Tl
Seventh St
Forbess
Brownwoc
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Mrs. Harn
Kitchen & Laundry
1. Defrost refrigerator regularly and replace worn
door gaskets.
2. Don't overload refrigerator.
3. When cooking on range, use flat-bottomed
utensils which fit surface units. Cover utensils
when possible.
4. Allow frozen meats to thaw before cooking. When
using oven, cook vegetables with meats or in
separate utensils.
5. Operate dish washer, clothes washer and dryer
only when fully loaded.
6. Conserve hot water by washing clothes in cold
water with cold-water detergents
fun and relexotion a nn Wurhfnr
piano will bring to four homo.' Should you de-
cide to buy, oil money paid for rental may b
appiiad to the purchaw price.
Air Conditioning
1. Set thermostat at 76 degrees or higher.
2. Replace or clean filters frequently.
3. Keep draperies and blinds closed on sunny side
of house.
4. Keep furniture and draperies clear of air outlets
and returns
5. Keep fireplace damper closed.
6. Open outside doors as little as possible.
7. Turn air conditioner off when you leave on
vacation, or when you’ll be out of the house for any
extended period
Other
1. Turn off any inside or outside lighting not actually
needed.
2. Turn off television, radio, iron, etc. when you
leave them.
Texas Power & Light's Helping, Too
When you pass a TP&L office. warehouse,
generating plant or other facility, you’ll see that we’ve
turned off all non-essential lighting.
Natural gas, coal and oil. These are the nation’s basic sources
of energy and Texas Power & Light Company uses them to
produce the electricity you use.
Conserve electricity and you help conserve the fuels
necessary to produce it. Conserve fuels and you help assure
that there will be enough to produce electricity for
essential needs.
TP&L has the generating plants, the transmission and
distribution lines and the other facilities required to supply all
the electric power its customers need. And, just as we
have done for more than 60 years, we re building additional
facilities to meet anticipated future needs.
But, we must have fuels to produce electric power.
Here are 15 ways you can conserve electricity in your
home... help conserve fuels... help ease the energy crisis...
and, at the same time, reduce your electric bill:
By HOWARD BENEDICT
AP Aerospace Writer
SPACE CENTER, Houston (AP) — Skylab 2 commander
Alan L Bean today became the world champion of apace
flight, logging more time away from planet Earth than any
other man.
At 6:09 a.m. EDT, Bean surpassed the mark of 49 days, 3
hours, 37 minutes set by a longtime friend, astronaut Charles
Conrad Jr.
The new mark was set while Bean was in a scheduled sleep
period as the space lab soared over Japan.
Bean, a 41-year-old Navy captain, has flown two missions.
He walked on the moon with Conrad on Apollo 12 and is in the
40th day aboard the Skytab station, with 19 more to go.
Bean's record, which eventually will exceed 69 days, could
stand unchallenged for several years. After the eight week
Skylab 3 mission later this year, the United States plans no
more long duration space trips until the 1980s.
Bean and his Skytab 2 crewmates, Dr. Owen K. Garriott and
TEXAS POWER & LIGHT COMPANY
A tax-paying, investor-owned electric utility
Wm M. Streckert District Manager
Broadly, the EPA wants will follow in Denver and San
regulations that will clean up Francisco. The Dallas hearing
the air in urban areas and keep will bring witnesses from the
it clean in rural ones. Under the five-state region of Texas, Ok-
Clean Air Act of 1970 that task is taboma, Arkansas, New Mexico
supposed to be achieved by 1975. and Louisiana.
Industrialists and ecologists Some of the sharpest opposi-
were expected to present con- bon is expected to come from
dieting views. the Sierra Club, which has al-
The government agency has ready rejected all four EPA
already presented four propos- proposals on the ground they
als. are not strict enough.
Szecia •
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SOUTHW
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longest reig
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nationwide
64-year-old <
tact with the
concern fo
showed that
for royalty
country."
"By her a
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pomp, but (
nificance,"
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the queen
heavy task a
who have w.
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has given he
this task."
E3UEg
YOU CAN HELP
EASE THE ENERGY CRISIS
Wednesday. September J 1973
Federate moving to
curb cargo hijacks
WASHINGTON (AP) - in an per truck.
effort to curb cargo hijackings. One system already has been
federal officials are working on demonstrated at the depart-
a plan to send out radio signals ment’s Transportation System
asking trucks where they are Center in Cambridge Mass
And the truck will tell them Another less-sophisticated sys
The system, still in the devel- tem also is being considered.
opmental stage, someday could Here's the way the system
help police quickly recover sto- works:
len or hijacked trucks. A sending unit mounted in
Hijackings currently account helicopters..or light airplanes
for about 19 per cent of all truck beams out the call letters of the
cargo losses-around 950 nverdue truck as the aircraft
million annually, according to 'esover the truck’s planned
figures from the American route. . ,
Trucking Association and the This signal activates a radio
Department of Transportation receiver-transmitter inside the
The hardest hit area is New hunted truck, which responds
York City-Northern New Jer- with its identity The sending
sey. unit then calculates the direc-
tionofthe signal and the dis-
No price teg has been put on tance between the truck and the
the Transportation Depart- helicopter.
ment's so-called “electronic li- The sending unit activates
cense plates" as yet, but a only the receiver-transmitter
spokesman said the department being hunted, the department
was aiming for a cost below 950 said.
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN Pag. AA
* xatesstosunu aSsa ma ExxSS =-=s
* reive soon a major hemispheric fused to permit the first of the has ordered a 77 per cent tration has issued auto stand- billion in additional taxes technique, in the to mhvw to.
♦ puemin.aaizmnm aamagpama StSaWS.’S
* States.ends the diplomatic price But automakers who on what he called government their federel highway funds conclude that the incorrect re- -----
2 APlomate emharsooCuba. have requested price hikes are puffery. Weinberger Mid The new standards apply to turns reflect growing dishonesty WASHINGTON (AP) - The
* The United statesstrongly fa- expected later to receive Per- HEW* public affairs operations brakes, steering, suspension, among taxpayers. Federal Power Commission has
vors continuing the nine-year- mission to raise prices A cost $175 million a year despite tires and wheels, and are in- ------ ruled If does h ve the su
" old embargo, but m unofficial spokesman for American Mo- the fact only two newsmen cov- tended to be implemented WASHINGTON (AP)-Tbe ruled it does not have the au-
* 11 tors indicated the firm, offering er the department full time. The through periodic state vehicle government has set final regu- thority to proposed production
countries opposed to the U.S. its new models for sale today, secretary also ordered eli- inspection programs lations requiring land devel- gas made from coal unless it is
* position. Virtually all countries had expected to be given pe-’ minationofnspubucationa. ----- operstodsclosvituailyev. mixedwithnaturalgnsdrl
. supporting the United States mission to raise prices an ever- ----- WASHINGTON (AP) — The erything about the property in interstate commerce The
***********++, . are military dictatorships or age of Ml per car. WASHINGTON (AP) - In an Internal Revenue Service says they offer for sale across state synthetic gas is being proposed
WXW WWW under heavy military influence. ----- effort to force states to adopt nearly three out ok every four lines. The disclosure regu- T. suppiement tonturagas.
Clean air hearings
underway in Dallas
By GODFREY ANDERSON The first sets a national limit
Associated Press Writer on the allowable increase in
DALLAS (AP) — Texans get concentrations of sulphur diox-
a chance to say whether they ide and particulate matter, or
want cleaner air or more air dust, in the air.
conditioning when federal offi- The second sets limits on
cials begin today two days of emissions of sulphur dioxide
public hearings on proposed air and particulates from smoke-
pollution restrictions stacks.
The Environmental Protec- The third lets each state de-
tion Agency, ordered by Con- cide for itself on a case-by-case
gress and the courts to ban My basis what constitutes "signifi-
significant new pollution, seeks cant deterioration" of its air
public help in solving a knotty standards.
problem—just how clean to The fourth would limit pollu-
clean’ tion concentrations in the air on
The answer can decide a regional rather than a nation-
whether new industries move in al basis. Ultra-clean areas
and where they locate and would have tighter restrictions,
whether communities them- but states could allow some ex-
selves may be permitted to go reptions.
on growing without limit. So far Public hearings have already
the state of Texas has made no taken place in Washington,
EyHALBOYLF, prose of Lafcadio Hearn, the pen’ What is the story behind Ed
NEW YORK (AP) — Things lyrics of Francis Thompson it’ •
that make life worth living: The ebbing of pain from a „ , P"
Standing under waterfalls — tornoff knee scab. Going to 11 a.m. Sunday ’
and staying oat of pitfall* o___. ,__. . . church services and knowing i
Walking a dog and making Scoringsthe.winninggtouch- the pastor will cut short hu ,
friends with a pretty girl who is downinasa ndot, emuhfootbal usual long sermon against sin,
out walking a dog, too - and game under sthe admiring, gaze because he has a golfing date
hoping to meet a nice guy just of the only red-haired girl in the with you at the country ub for .
like you. 12:15 p.m. sharp. N
Successfully lassoing at age Turning down an invitation to Wrapping up a Christmas
12 a neighbor's cat after 29 un- join a class in karate for over- present which you are sure to BE
successful tries, and then hav- weight men over 40.. exactly what the person you are L
ing to climb up a ladder to re- A trip to a far and picturesque sending it to really wants most •
trieve both the cat and the lasso country so far behind the times of all. .
from a tree that a dollar bill there is a thing . GEORGE HABASH, leader
fomnsateet...... - . . of value The sound of an old-fashioned of the Marxist Popular Fron
Eating a breakfast of bacon steam locomotive hooting for the Liberation of Pales-
and eggs over a mountain Cleaning a freshly caught fish through the hills like an tine, says the guerrilla or-
campfire. and finding in it someone's lost obedient dregnn on a miwinn nf ganization will not reaew
The music of Mozart, the wedding ring. How did it bap- good will. srner hijacking in the tore-
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Fisher, Norman. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 277, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 5, 1973, newspaper, September 5, 1973; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1575353/m1/4/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.