The Silsbee Bee (Silsbee, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 18, 1970 Page: 7 of 16
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Many Items Left On Moon
fo Be Returned In Future
Washington — There’? an old [Pete Conrad and Alan Bean, of Qc?an of Storms in April 1967
saying, “What goes up must
come down.” But this dioes not
necessarily apply in the space
program. They’ve launched
items from Cape Kennedy that
are never coming down, and
that hardware left on the Moon
is not about to make its way
back to Mother Eurth unless
someone carries it back
And that’s exactly
NASA has in mind.
We’ve learned recently that
one of the truly exciting quests
for future Moon explorers will
be the search for artifacts left
by the earlier lunar explorers,
and perhaps bringing some of
them back to Earth.
These range from a minute
silicon disc microscopically
etched with goodwill messages
from 73 world leaders, which
future lunar explorers may
study but not remove, to the
wreckage of a 15-ton section of
a Saturn V rocket which can-
not be carried back but some of
its smaller fragments might be.
The tiny, coin-size disc was
left by pioneer Moonwalkers
Neil Armstrong and Buzz Al-
drin, of Apollo 11. Jim Lovell
and Fred Haise, of Apollo 13,
didn’t make it to the Moon, but
the third stage of their Saturn
V did.
Intentionally aimed to crash
into the Moon as a scientific
experiment, it hit with the
force of 11 Vi tons of TNT, 85
miles from a moonquake re-
crystalline rock to a depth
at least 12 to 25 miles.
There can’t be much left of
what the rocket itself.
Gonrad and Bean were the
first to retrieve man - made;
items from the Moon: a TV
camera, two pieces of tubing, a
length of cable, and a spil scoop
from robot spacecraft Surveyor
3, which soft-landed in the
corder left last November by of the Auxiliary.
Apollo 12.
The irhpact set the Moon to
vibrating for four hours, and
measurements
waves radioed to Earth gave
scientists new information on
the lunar structure. The outer
shock the harsh lunar climate.
shell seems
a rubble of tw0
Six Hen To Be
Honored For
Santa Fe Service
Six men will be honored
from 2-4 p. m. Sunday, June 21
at Prince Hall Villa for 30 years
of service with the Santa Fe
Railway Co. They are: Wade
Shelton, Irving Jones Jr., Fred
D. Woodberry, Elmo Rhymes.
Mack B. Brackens Jr., and
Woodrow Watkins.
A short program will precede
the social hour. The Ladies
Auxiliary to the United Trans-
portation Union will assist the
wives and members of the
family who are also members
IN SYMPATHY
TO THE FAMILY OF MRS. EUGENIA DENSON:
We send this belated message of our dear one
and are sure you know it was God’s will. We all
know she is resting “In peace in the valley.” Our
deepest sympathy to each and every one of you.
Your relatives,
Mrs. Vale Neriene Webb Leach and
husband Jess
Mr. and Mrs. Gale Rudolph Webb and
family
Praam Fishing Is
Reported To Be
Good At Toledo
These are now being examined
for the effects of exposure to
Still awaiting possible inspec-
tion or recovery by future ex
peditions are the remains of
spacecraft,
U. S. and Soviet, that have
soft-landed, crashed on the
Moon, or presumably been
drawn from lunar orbits by the
Moon’s magnetism.
Also, two U. S. flags and oth
er ceremonial items left by
Apollos II and 12 and more
than 100 pieces of discarded
equipment: seven film cameras
and a TV camera; scientific in-
struments; four pairs of lunar
boots; four spacesuit backpacks;
tools; lunar landing maps, to
name just a few.
As in orbiting the first Earth
satellite and putting the first
man in space, the Soviets were
5t to leave their mark on the
ion—the wreckage of Lunik
2, which impacted there Sept.
12, 1959.
The total weight left is about
61,000 pounds. Brought back:
18 pounds of Surveyor parts
ahd 123 pounds of lunar rocks
and dust.
Shower Honors
Miss Connie Martin
Miss Connie Martin of this
city, bride-elect of Bruce Stev
en Lewis of Fred, was honored
with a miscellaneous bridal
shower Friday in the home of
Mr?. Joe Jones.
Calling hours were from 2
rs. Leopard Nicholson,
H. Reed, Mrs. H. C.
Mrs
. .. Boas,
Mrs. Virgil Watts, Mrs. Elsie
Caraway, and Mrs Earl Fergu-
son.
A pink and white color
scheme and miniature brides
and bridegrooms were used in
decorati
rating.
The couple will he married
June 27 at 2 p. m. in Finecresi
Baptist Church.
Austin — Fishing for bream,
better known as sunfish, is just
getting wound up to a fast and
furious level on many East
Texas lakes.
Bob Sinclair, Region III in-
formation-education officer for
the Texas Parks and Wildlife
Department, said while bass
fishing has been just “so-so”
and the crappie fishing may be
cooling off, the pan - sized
bream are really hitting.
All the t r a d i t i o n a 1 ly hot
bream lakes in the eastern sec-
tion of the State—such as Lake
of the Pines, Caddo, Murva,ul
and Sam Rayburn—are ap-
proaching their peaks, wiith
two-year-old Toledo Bend lead-
ing the way. The new Lake
Livingston also is providing
bream action.
Black bass in most East Tex-
as lakes are leaving their shal-
low spawning areas and mov-
ing into deeper water, but the
bream are taking up the slack.
On the sprawling Toledo
Bend Lake, strings of 100-plus jor drawback. While they
bream are almost commonplace,
with many of the fish weighing
a pound or more.
Crickets seem to be the most
popular bait, followed closely
by worms. Small jigs trailed
behind clear bubble floats also
are effective.
If your bass or crappie fish-
ing luck has taken a nosedive
lately, try battling these tasty
panfish with light tackle for
fast angling thrills.
Scout Troop 282
Boy Scout Troop 282 met
Monday, June 15, at their regu
. t lar meeting place on North 7th
Until 4 p. m. ®nd hostesses were street with 13 boys and Scout-
ma?ter Bob
Scoutmaster ^ ■■
Curtis ana Doyle Swarthout.
Summer camp ya
and also the selling
as discussed
g of tickets
for the “spaghetti supper,1
which will be held Aug. 6 at
the new scout hall from 5:30
’till 8 p. m. The money collec-
ted will be used to help defray
troop expenses.
Vance Swarthout, scribe
i
if \
THE A i A
FAMILY^i
LAWYER Jk
BLOOD TESTS AND
PATERNITY
To hear the girl’s story, told
tearfully on the witness stand,
there could be no doubt that the
defendant was the father of her;
baby. But the results of the
blood tests shed a different Univeristy of Texas
light on the matter. The tests
showed the following results:
The girl had one type of
er type of blood; and the baby
had still another type of blood.
Since a baby’s blood must
match either his mother’s or his
father’s, some other man
someope with the baby’s blood w
type—must have been the real Foundation,
father. The upshot was that the
(rang 0. McDonald
To Attend Firth
Science InsflWe
Biology, earth science and
physical science are among
subjects being covered in a
summer institute for secondary
school science teachers
way through August i
Iren,e D. McDonald of Rt.
Silsbee, is among some 50 par-
ticipants from across the state
blood; the defendant had anoth- who are attending the institute.
A cooperative program of the
UT Austin Graduate School,
College of Arts and Sciences
and College of Education, the
institute is supported by a grant
from the National Science
girl’s charge was discredited eration is being given to new
and the defendant cleared of currieuli •
responsibility.
In this fashion, blood tests
have saved hundreds of men
from a false charge of patern-
ity. These tests, if properly
conducted, are now accepted
almost everywhere either as
positive proof or at least strong
evidence of non-paternity.
However, they have one ma
During the institute consid-
h w biei
curriculum studies,
mod1
ern concepts of fundamental
principles of biological sciences,
laboratory approach to earth
Moratory |i
science apd current
ipproach to
urrent ninth-
THE SILSBEE BEE
Thyyrs#y, Jgoe ii, l»7g
Silsbee, Texan
Annual Cook Family
Reunion To Be Sunday
The annual Cook family re-
union will be held Sunday ip
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Rob-
ert Harris Puntes Jr. on Cook’s
Road.
CARD OF THANKS
I would like to take op-
wra?.
telegrams and part** that was
given me in honor of my gradu-
ation.
CARD OF THANK8
1 wish to thank my many
friends for flowers, visits, cards
prayers and for your great con-
cern during my recent illness
and stay in the hospital.
Pat Trahan and family
physical science curricula.
Dr. Addison E. Lee, UT Aus
tin professor of science educe
tion and biology and director
of the Science Education Ceq-
•grede ter, serves as institute director.
versity in Houston-
Deborah K Johnson
useful in showing who is not
the father, they are seldom use
ful in showing who is the fath
er.
For example, suppose that jn
the case above, the baby apd
the defendant did have the
same blood type. That would
mean the defendant could ih-
deed be the father. But so could
any other man with that same
type of blood. Thus, mere simi-
larity of blood cannot ordinar-
ily be relied on to pin patern-
ity on a specific defendant.
This means that in a typical
paternity suit, the woman has
little to gain and much to lose
from blood tests. If she refuses
to agree to the tests, either for
herself or for the baby, may a
Assistant court order them anyhow?
Courts usually do have that
power, In one case, the woman
objected that the tests were not
impartial, because they could
only help the defendant’s side
of the case, not hers. Neverthe-
less, the court ordered her to
submit to the testing procedure.
‘A lawsuit is a search for
truth,” said the court, “and not
a sporting proposition or game
in which rules should afford
each side an equal chance of
winning.”
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Multicolor
Ellis Charles Gill
Gets MO Degree
Ellis Charles Gill, formerly'of
this city, was one of 107 gradu-
ates to receive a degree in
medicine from the University
of Texas Southwestern Medi-
cal School in Dallas in exercises
held June 1.
He will serve his internship
at Children’* Medical Center at
Parklawn Memorial Hospital in
Dallas.
Gill is married to the former
Miss Joyce Rhea Miller of this
city and is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. E. Gill of Temple, also
formerly of Silsbee.
Ciro-FATHERS
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Read, Tommy. The Silsbee Bee (Silsbee, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 17, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 18, 1970, newspaper, June 18, 1970; Silsbee, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth774897/m1/7/: accessed May 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Silsbee Public Library.