Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 73, No. 277, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 5, 1973 Page: 9 of 22
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Autos on sale minus price hike
Teacher power key to giant school store
and also by 10 major steel
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today.
at many
Brownwood Bulletin
Wednesday, September 5, 1973
Both sides appealing court
lassrooms where new mate-
9-
Allowable tops
BERRY'S WORLD
Aug. 15 figure
Dry
Connally GOPs’ star attraction
im
ator
97
■
• «,
I
Why not pizza instead of
traditional bacon and^d^ ?
roges-A
Twins’ right-
Dr Paul Salmon, executive
secretary of the American
ssociation of School Admin-
Body
on
cheese," she said.
She said it's not important what you eat, as
long as you get the right nutrients. She said
the body needs protein, but what's the dif-
ference if it comes in scrambled eggs, a
hamburger or peanut butter’
Mrs. Stevenson said breakfast is the most
skipped meal in the United States and one
reason is because of the stress on the bacon,
eggs, milk, cereal and orange juice meal.
She said an experiment where cooks at a
nearby scout camp served tomato soup,
hamburgers and french fries for breakfast
showed that people expect traditional break-
fasts, but could adapt to change.
"Some of the kids thought it was great," she
said. "But others were stunned because it
didn’t mean breakfast to them.”
winds of
drenched
Some people have reserva-
tions. however
There are at least four
wouldbe successors to Reagan,
who says he will not seek a third
term. Lt. Gov Ed Reinecke,
former Nixon Cabinet officer
Robert H Finch, Atty. Gen.
Evelle J. Younger and Con-
troller Houston I. Flournoy.
The field is wide open so far
for potential GOP candidates to
challenge Democratic Sen Alan
Cransto,, who will seek asem-
ond term next year.
Court Judge John J. Sirica was volving Watergate figures. Ap- Mississippi Valley and Gulf
scheduled to meet today with peals are expected to move to Coast
1964.
Reagan froze out opposition
as a favorite son candidate in
1968, and there was only token
opposition to Nixon last year
Due to a 1972 amendment to
the state constitution, Califor-
nia in 1971 will for the first time
have an open primary in which
the names of all recognized
candidates will appear on the
ballot unless a candidate for-
mally withdraws his name.
Other convention speakers
this weekend include Anne
Armstrong, also a Texan who
serves as counsellor to the
President with cabinet officer
rank, and Christopher S. Bond,
the young governor of Missouri.
Convention business will in-
clude start on a 1974 party plat-
her said that
d "I'm usually
“I think you oodld say he's
showcasing htmself," one party
official said of Connally, consid-
ered a potential candidate for
president in 1976.
California Gov. Ronald Rea-
gan, a possible Connally rival
for the presidential nomination,
also will address the estimated
2,000 convention delegates at
San Diego this weekend.
But Connally, in his first ma-
jor political Speech since his
brief stint at the White House,
gets top billing. He will address
the main convention dinner Sat-
form and proposals to broaden
the structure of the state party.
But the most intense activity
is expected to be the informal
politicking by prospective can-
didates for governor and sena-
tor next year
Mrs Stevenson said eggs are loaded with
protein and cholesterol, bacon has protein
and fat, but a pizza provides meat for protein,
cheese for a dairy product, plus bread and
vegetables.
MAYBE NOT ALL THE TEA IN CHINA, but bow about silk’ Silkworm cocoons by the
basket full are readied for shipment by river boat, the first leg of the journey to market
and, possibly eventually, western world wardrobes.
Council Director John T.
Dunlop has indicated a major
worry of the government is the
effect the proposed increases by
steel aad automakers would
have on the economy and the
success of the new Phase 4 anti-
inflation program.
Phase 4 provides for a 30 day
delay between the time major
companies notify the govern-
ment of price increases and the
date they can put them into ef-
fect. This gives the council time
to block the increases if it
chooses.
American Motors asked to put
its price increases into effect
before the 30-day waiting period
expired.
were reported.
Winds up to 109 miles per hour
slammed into Big Spring, Tex.,
Tuesday and strong winds
whipped Wichita Falla, Tex.,
and Clinton, Okla.
Heavy thunderstorms unre-
lated to Delia washed parts of
Southwest Missouri, leaving 2
inches at Monett in six hours.
Thundershower activity di-
minished before dawn over the
middle and southern Atlantic
lit I.
57
By TOM RAUM
Associated Press Writer
PACK
KES
increase proposals pending be
fore the council They are not
scheduled to go into effect be-
fore Sept. 13 if the council ap-
proves the price hikes
A spokesman for American
Motors in Detroit indicated the
company hoped for action by
the council at the last minute
But a council spokesman said
there was virtually no chance
the council would complete ac-
tion on the price increase pro-
posals that soon.
"We’re not going to have a
decision until we have made an
analysis of the issues and we 1
are doing that as rapidly as we '
can," he said.
The council held public hear-
ings last week on proposed price
increases by the automakers
For
iters
994
veoters,
is cleon
l wash.
By BILL MARTIN
Associated Press Writer
RENO, Nev. (AP) — Instead of pancakes or
eggs for your next breakfast, why not wake up
to a pizza or a taco?
And instead of bacon or toast, try a chicken
salad sandwich or a hot dog! Maybe even
bagels and creamed cheese'
According to a University of Nevada-Reno
nutritionist. Americans are over-rating the
value of a traditional bacon and eggs break-
fast.
"Everyone knows you should have break-
fast," said Marjorie Stevenson. "So why are
people missing it? Maybe they’re tired of a
stereotyped breakfast."
Mrs. Stevenson said in an interview
Tuesday that pizza, macaroni and cheese,
chili, tacos — even ice cream or custard pie—
make nutritious breakfasts.
"It's unnerving to see my daughter sitting
there with a tuna salad sandwich at 7:30 a.m.
But she’s getting her nutrients. And my son
sometimes likes bagels and creamed
AUSTIN (AP) - The Texas
Railroad Commission reported
Tuesday the average calendar
day oil allowable as of Sept 1
was 4,941,771 barrels a day, up
5,973 barrels a day over' the
Aug. 15 figure.
The commission reported 154
oil wells and 76 gas wells were
completed during the second
half of August. That raised the
total oil well completions for the
year to 2,549, compared with
2,872 a year ago, and gas well
completions to 1,036, compared
with 692 at this time in 1972.
The commission said 587
wells were plugged, including
148 dry holes
Nineteen wildcat gas wells
were drilled—10 in the San An-
tonio No. 2 district, three each
in the Houston and Corpus
Christi districts, two in the
Midland district and one in the
Wichita Falls district. Eight
wildcat oil wells were drilled—3
in the Abilene district, two in
the Corpus Christi district and
one each in the Houston. Mid-
land and Pampa districts.
urday night.
Reagan will speak Sunday
morning shortly before the
windup of the three-day meet-
ing.
Connally who switched par-
ties last May, is a three-term
former Texas governor who
served as a Cabinet officer in
both Democratic and Republi-
can administrations.
He also will be the star at-
traction of the major fund-rais-
ing event during the convention,
a $100-a-person cocktail party
before the Saturday night
dinner
California is Ikely to be a
key state in the Republican
presidential primary struggle
for the first time since the
Rockefeller-Goldwater battle of
We call the shots, she says.
If a manufacturer says. We
don t like what you're doing
with our product that's just
too bad "i
15
Scandal
hearing
delayed
DALLAS (AP) - U.S. Dis-
P A
ige
SACRAMENTO (AP)-Ca-
lifornia Republicans have given
John Connally a featured,
speaking spot at their state
convention this weekend
-e
zet a couple of
at really ha
i said
a f a A • coastal states and in the Ohio rials and techniques will be
order for Watergate tapes“ ed^
• I and from Kansas to the tower
WASHINGTON (AP) - In an lawyers for Watergate figures the Supreme Court no matter Southern California expected
unusual legal twist, both the Jeb Stuart Magruder and which side wins in the appellate another day of drizzle. The Los
White House and special Water- James W. McCord to determine division. Angeles high temperature sag-
sThalan
gate prosecutor Archibald Cox whether the two men may con- Nixon's deputy press secre- ged to a record tow Tuesday,
plan to appeal a court order for tinue lecture tours on Water- tary, Gerald L Warren, would hitting 67, two degrees below
presidential Watergate tapes. gate. Sirica may also meet with not discuss Tuesday what the the previous tow for that date.
The White House said it would Magruder personally, Magr- legal brief would argue Except for fog in coastal re-
file its papers Thursday in an uder's office has indicated. Sirica ordered Nixon last gions and near the Great Lakes, trict Court Judge William Tay-
attempt to block efforts to force Magruder, former deputy di- week to turn over the tapes for the northern third of the nation tor delayed on Tuesday until
President Nixon to turn over the rector of Nixon’s re-election, his private judicial exam- enjoyed fair weather. Cool air Oct 2 a bearing on whether
tapes campaign, cancelled a speech (nation, but postponed the order fanned out over the northern politics were involved in the
Cox’s appeal will seek "clari- set for today. to give the White House a and central Plains. Texas stock scandal because
fication or modification of the McCord, convicted of par- chance to appeal. New York City’s temperature U.S. Atty. Gen. Richard
standards and procedures to be ticipating in the June 17, 1972, . remained in the low 80s over- Kleindienst will be out of the
followed in determining what Watergate break-in, already xThurnsdaxhA Dsen stasuve night, but in most other areas country.
parts of the evidence will be has been tentatively ordered by deadline. Nixons, attornezs except the South and Southwest, The attorney general earlier
presented to the grand jury,” Sirica to stop his lecture tour Y0.”1*.*temperatures were in the 99s had been sought for a hearing
he prosecutor said Hedid not Cox has asked Sirica to pro- intend to makesuchanappeal and 70s. Sept. 18, along with four other
elaborate. hibit Magruder and McCord ,,,.*** Temperatures before dawn persons, by former Texas Atty.
Although neither side has yet from making the tours. tons between. Pixonsaand ranged from 43 at Laramie, Gen. Waggoner Carr and for-
med papers, Hugh Kline, clerk Special Watergate prosecutor aides,aandthe Presidentohas Wyo., to 99 at Phoenix, Ariz mer Texas State Insurance
of the Circuit Court of Appeal, Archibald Cox won the first saidhewonuternsasctthemn Some other reports Anchor- Commissioner John Osorio.
Tuesday set Sept. 11 as me date round in the court test on even for private inspection- age 51 cloudy. Atlanta-71 clear, Carr and Osorio face mail
for oral arguments, whether President Nixon may less ordered10 dosobythesu- Boston 67 cloudy, Byffalo 72 fraud charges, but claim testi-
Meanwhile, U.S. District withhold tape recordings in- preme Court clear. Chicago 79 clear. Cincin- mony by several present and
-----------------------nati 72 partly cloudy, Cleveland formerstateand federal
79 clear, Dallas 69 cloudy, Den- cials will show a political mo
ver 54 clear. Detroit 70 partly tive in the accusations.
cloudy Indianapolis 70 clear. Other witnesses Carr and
Kansas City 70 clear, Los Ange- Osorio want to bring to Dallas
les 64 cloudy, Louisville 73 are Will Wilson, former head of
cloudy, Miami 82 dear, Min- the Justice Department’s
neapolis-St. Paul 59 clear, criminal division; Charles Ruff
Nashville 74 cloudy. and Robert Watson, govern-
__ment lawyers._______________
EFC has set up model
classrooms where teachers can
see how pupils from Chicago’s
public and parochial schools
respond to new teaching
devices.
istrators. adds: The question school finance
is whether the manufacturers vieh.. -na . ...1
will have enough reason to Fischer responds to such
keep their materials there criticisms.by arguing, that
when the number of people there are enough school per-
who can came to look at it is sonnel sven in ihe Midwest.to
limited 1 was a school dis- make EFC financially worth-
trict superintendent in Califor- whilesfor manufacturers, that
nia and I doubt if I would schools now find it difficult to
have sent anyone all the wav arrange for individual demon:
to Chicago for something like strations of products and.that
this If you re interested in teac! hers,.w ho would.be
buying school furniture. for most likely tovisit the center
instance you can go around to in large numbers, (as tourists
schools in vour geographic in Chicago if nothing else
area and see what is available havenew: power in determin:
that way ■ ing how educational funds will
be spent
president of the Association of . in the old days, he. says.
American Publishers Inc , schools, .used to start in the
says: The idea is really too fall and thecprincipal would
new. too voung. too innovative saz. Here. Miss Jones,, this »
to determine what success it the math series you 11 teach
will have, especially at a time thissxear.. Its pretty hard.to
when interest in education get b with this today andit 1
seems in some respect to be be almost impossible to do it
lagging and it is unclear what tomortow
will happen in the area of
__
ew-m"qnha
“I think you're right. If you set a precedent by ra-
teasing YOUR tapes, everybody and his brother
would have to release THEIR tapes!"
A low-key, intellectualized auto show
#2) .% AMN John Field, vice president
=amEP,, for promotion of the Encyclo-
J : pedia Britannca Education
8 Corp says We re a little
MKV/3ANENJ cool on the idea. We have a
GEORGE D FISCHER pargdsplgestat’anataosr-
spearheads nation s first onstrations and workshops for
educational emporium our new products And I won-
.c ..... . der how certain it is that the
So EFC with banks and people who move through the
real estate interests handling center will be the ones who
the financing: is putting up a make decisions on buying for
34-story building on Michigan the schools
iue to house exhibits
By R. GREGORY NOUS
Assoclated Press Writer
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
first of the 1974 model autos
were scheduled to go on sale to-
day without the price increase
that automakers had hoped to
win ffom the government
The Coat of Living Council has
not yet decided whether to
approve an average increase of
Ml per car by American Motors
Corp., a cquncil spokesman said
Tuesday night
American Motors, first of the
automakers to introduce its 1974
models, had asked the council
for permission to put the in-
crease in effect today.
The three other auto com-
panies — Ford, General Motors
and Chrysler — also have price
innarp
all items.
i green Co
M
By Ralph Novak rooms where visiting educa-
CHICAGO - (NEA, - andsemnanarber for workshops
Dgsedcatnonuon esstaghsemeent Pending sompletionof that
seed a kind of classroom de building in 1975. EFChasbeen
partment store where teach- operating since March 1972 on
ers. principles and school six floors of a building down
board members can go to the street from its future
shop ? home
Yes. according to former I is a low-key intellectual-
National Education Assn ized counterpart of an auto
president George Fischer and show, what Fischer calls "a
the financial angels who are place where you can browse
pulling up more than 330 mil- at your leisure in a non-circus
bon tor we EducalionalFacil- atmosphere with no pressure
ities Center i EFC, here from a salesman or huckst-
er
Only maybe according to a _ . .
number of other school hands .So far the.center.has been
who are treading slowly as attracting about .2.000 visitors
they approach the new idea a month, only a fourth of what
' r „ Fischer would like to have
Fischer EFC board chair- He admits that EFC is losing
man says: For a long time money now and is likely to
we have needed a place for keep doing so for a while But
a _ people interested in education he still radiates optimism
U AmuI to come where they could see publicly at least
3TOIIIIV new deve'ipiuei.'s in the edu
W I V B ■ ■ B Y cation worid _ new materi- One reason for the opti.
* als. new hardware new teach mism is that the center has
. ing methods and techniques gamed acceptance in some
aauacasL.m all being used with live chil- influential areas
WW ri T gg F dren in a live environment Marguerite Bloch a former
According to the research elementary school principal
department of the National and EFC. » edusational direc-
Education Assn the nation s tor. has persuaded the Chica
-I. largest teacher group almost public school system and
S n reei fl G $90 billion was spent on educa- the Chicago archdiocese par-
•HI •VM3 lion in the 1972-73 school year ochial schools to send pupils
- ■ and nearly half of that went to the center s model envi-
for things other than salaries ronments, lor classrooms!
DePaul University is running
Fischer contends that the a class for children with
people who decide where all learning disabilities at the
that money is spent need a center And a number of edu-
place where the products of cational materials manufac-
all the manufacturers in the turers have established infor-
education market can be seen mation modules at EFC.
textbyokrdagannstomearedok. 'Mrs Bloch saysthat all
projector against projector, the new products used in the
desk against desk centers classes are screened
and that several manufactur-
igi Eei ers who wanted their materi-
—A d "‘nt als used have been rejected
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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/m1/9/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.