Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 41, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 2, 1975 Page: 1 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 21 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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Brownwood Bulletin
GOOD AFTERNOON
Twelve Pogos Today
Brownwood, Texas
Tuesday, December 2, 1975
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MALIK VISITS
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Richardson Hall.
he added.
AT LEAST 75 DEAD
23
Israeli jets hit Lebanon
the year against Lebanon and in the midmorning raids on the Nabatiya was a Saiqa head-
Israeli lets attacked Palestinian 1973. Among buildings that wit- city of Tripoli and two areas
were killed by guerrillas from air attack began at 10 a.m.,
Israel said the raids were rocket hit, they reported.
~8
Hobby to speak
at Nabers dinner
DIPLOMATIC VSTT - Charles Malik, Lebanese diplomat and
a former president of the United Nations General Assembly,
met with a variety of groups while on a visit in Brownwood
reached farther north than any Nahar al-Barid and Baddawi
Israeli raid since February camps near the northern port
DAYS TO
CHRISTMAS
By EDWARD CODY
Associated Press Writer
BEIRUT, Lebanon (API -
Monday. In this photo he fields questions from sixth grade
students at Woodand Heights Elementary.
' 4
rl
pected to be here to honor
Nabers, now completing his
fourth term.
Married to the former Mary
Scott of Cross Plains and the
quarters.
An Israeli military source in
Tel Aviv said the raids also
Junior high events
for parents tonight
Parents of Brownwood Junior High School students are
invited to attend class tonight from 7 to 8:30 at BJHS to
familiarise themselves with their child's daily school
routine. The homeroom with the highest parent at-
tendance is to receive a prize.
Parents are to follow a mock schedule of their child for
the second quarter beginning with homeroom period and
then a- to each class, spending seven minutes in each of
the seven periods. ,
Teachers are to deliver brief descriptions at what the
dass is about during each period. At lunch periods,
parents are to be served refreshments in the cafeteria.
Student coundil members are to serve as guides for the
parents.
The Weather
Warm afternoons and cool
nights through Wednesday
..eoc
Principal speaker for
Thursday night’s dinner
honoring State Rep Lynn
Nabers here will be Lt. Gov
Bill Hobby See below
BEIRUT, Lebanon! AP) —
Squadrons of Israeli jets
blasted Palestinian refugee
camps in northern and
southern Lebanon .today, the
Lebanese government an-
nounced
-N"
F Cr
I
a
HONOLULU (AP) - The
American Medical/
Association, in what a
spokesman described as
groping for a position" on
doctors' strikes for economic
gain, votes today on the
issue.
Rev. Kenneth
The need for people to
stand up for their convictions
was expressed here Monday
by Lebanese diplomat
Charles Malik, a former
president of the United
Nations General Assembly
See below
Informant claims FBI had
advance notice of violence
By DAVID C. MARTIN that they took no action. hell,” Rowe said.
Associated Press Writer The ex-informant testified He said he recalled only one
WASHINGTON AP) — A for- one day after telling a reporter instance in which the FBI acted
mer FBI informant wearing a that during one Klan attack on a on one of his warnings and
white hood testified today the group of blacks and civil rights averted planned violence
agency instructed him to sleep workers the FBI simply stood
with as many wives of Ku Klux by taking pictures. Rowe at one point was
Klansmen as he could because Rowe said Mondav that he charged in connection with the
"that's the best way to gain in- repeatedly warnedthe m rf 1965 murder of white civil rights
formation." planned Klan violence during worker Viola Liuzzo near
Gary Thomas Rowe Jr., who his five years as an informant Selma, Ala.. Three Klansmen
now lives under an alias in Cal- but that agents seldom took ac- were .convicted of civil rights
ifornia, also told the Senate in- tion to stop it violations at a trial in which
telligence committee he was In an interview, he cited one Rowe appeared as thegovern-
aUowed to participate in Klan 1961 incident in which he noti- mentesista witness, Augrand
attacks against blacks and civil fied the FBI three weeks in art. jury failed to indict Rowe, and
rights workers in order to gain vance of a planned Klan attack charges against him were
access to the Klan's inner cir- on a group of freedom riders in doPPed
cles. . ..... Birmingham, Ala. He said that He said he decided to testify
Rowe, who wore the hood to despite his warnings, the FBI because the Justice Depart-
protect his new identity, said he stood by and took photographs ment failed to fulfill promises to
often warned the FBI in ad- during the violence him of money and a lifetime
vance about the attacks, but “People just got all beat to government job.
WASHINGTON (AP) -
The FBI often had advance
notice of planned Ku Klux
Klan violence but in one
instance simply stood by
taking pictures while
Klansmen attacked a group
of blacks and civil rights
workers, a former FBI infor-
mant says.
I Lt. Gov. Bill Hobby will
I deliver the main address at the
I appreciation dinner for Rep.
I Lynn Nabers Thursday.
I Announcment was made by
I Calvin Fryar, overall chairman
I of toe dinner.
I Tickets for the event, spon-
I sored by Nabers' friends of the
1 55th district — comprised of
2 Brown, Coleman, Comanche,
■ Callahan, McCulloch and
I Runnels counties — are on sale
■ at most of the banks in the area
I and will be on sale at the
I Brownwood Coliseum — site of
• the 7 p.m. dinner.
• Other program personalities
f will include Paul Wallace,
h Church of Christ minister,
I Winters; Fred Rudolph,
r businessman, Coleman; Rep.
' Jim Nugent, one of the senior
members of the House of
w Representatives, Kerrville;
—um
-t a
BROWNWOOD AREA -
Fair with warm days and
cool nights through Wed-
nesday. Low tonight in the
30s,high Wednesday near 70.
Maximum temperature
here Monday 63, overnight
low 30. Sunset today 5:30 ,
sunrise Wednesday 7:22.
"2 Ta *
hug-Be
n - ... - m Fred Perry, president of the
eumuu Brownwood Chamber of
‘ ag"ad Commerce;
FORD MEETS MAO
Talks 'significant'
By JOHN RODERICK The chairman also met Betty posed for a photograph, then light of the first two days at the
Associated Press Writer Ford, her 18-year-old daughter left . Presidents five-day visit to
PEKING (AP) - President Susan, Secretary of State Henry The phraseology of the com- China
Ford met today with Chinese A. Kissinger. George Bush, munique issued by the Chinese
Chairman Mao Tse-tung for one chief of the U.S. liaison office in government suggested that the The Chinese took the unusual
hour and 50 minutes for what Peking. Brent Scowcroft, the discussions were more than step of permitting the White
were officially described as President 's national security usually cordial No details were House to announce that the
"earnest and significant dis- adviser; Joseph J Sisco, under- given either by the White House meeting was taking place,
cussions ... on wide-ranging is- scretary of state; Philip Habib, or by the Chinese. anorote an
sues in a friendly atmosphere " assistant secretary of state for First Vice Premier Teng en, „sepratkstd
The meeting with the 81-year- East Asian and Pacific Affairs; Hsiao-ping, Vice premier L nouncements,.they.pernited
old founder of the People’s Re- Winston Lord, director of the Hsien-nien, Foreign Minister disclosure of its length
public of China took place in his State Department policy staff; Chiao Kuan-hua, Huang Chen, lowing the president's attend-
official residence in Chung- and Richard Solomon, senior- chief of the Chinese liaison of- ance at a ballet performance,
nanhai Park, close to the For- staff member of the National fice in Washington, Wang Hai- issued the full communique.
bidden City. It was nearly twice Security Council jung, vice foreign minister, and
as long as the one he held with The talk was held in the pres- two deputy department direc- As is customary, only the
President Richard M. Nixon in ence of Ford, Kissinger, Bush, tors, Tang Wen-sheng and written communique was issued
1972 and one of the longest Mao Scowcroft and Lord. Chang Han-chih, represented
has held with a foreign chief of Mrs. Ford and the others the Chinese side, and the White House refused to
state shook bands with Mao and The audience was the high- answer questions on it.
World leadership
said greatest need J
"What the world needs today And of the lack of world 2
is the unterrorized man — in leadership, he asked, “Who of ;
truth the unterrorizable man," those living today will be ■
Charles Malik, Lebanese remembered 1,000 years from “
diplomat and former president now,” as are such ancient
of the United Nations General leaders as Plato, Aristotle,
Assembly, said here Monday Socrates and others'1 B
Malik spoke at a luncheon "Pray that God send great ?1
honoring Howard Payne leaders,” he urged. I
Unjversity trustees and If the current move toward ■
directors of the Academy of detente, he warned not to let ■
Freedom. He also was honored such agreements be an end but ■
at a reception Monday af- a means. "A nation that is open 3
ternoon and earlier in the day and free cannot indefinitely a
visited with students at remain open and free it does not 3
Woodland Heights Elementary seriously promote openness and E
School. freedom in others,” he said.
ce.uf
. .. i y . i •
mmsa- . .
against "terrorist bases." A government announcement Syria. The Israeli command lasted 20 minutes and all planes
The attack was the biggest of said 30 Israeli planes took part said one of the targets near returned safely
"Lebanese army antiaircraft
- 1,11 I foe I guns in these regions forced the
Two killed as hiiackers enemyPagnsafntudes,“tndch
• prevented them from zeroing in
take train with 50abodrd - government radio re-
BEILEN, The Netherlands The hijackers were thought to front coach of the train with the But sources in the two north-
(AP) — Hijackers today seized be South Moluccan extremists, hostages. Police said they ern camps said offices of the
a local train with about 50 per- who are demanding independ- blocked off the windows with Popular Front for the Liber-
sons aboard, attached dynamite ence from Indonesia for the newspapers. ation of Palestine Al Fatah and
to the outside and demanded Molucca Islands in Southeast train was en route from the Palestine ‘ Liberation
thattheysbeflownatnanun Asia, police said. Groningen to ZwoUe, in central Organization were destroyed by
known destination, police said A police spokesman said they H * and the seizure cut the direct rocket hits.
Two. persons were reported ranlconnectionbetweenthetwo The two northern camps are
killed. ..... <.. eluding a flight out, and had set cties Police said the gunmen home to about 19,000 Palestin-
Police said the bodies of the an ultimatum, but he declined so at an oncoming train and ian refugees controlled by the
engineer and an unidentified to give details. The demands, forced it t stop. Nobody was Popular Front, a radical guer-
victim had been removed from written in Dutch, were brought roortet hit rila organization headed by Dr.
the train. out by one of two women re- Po George Habash.
The entire area around the leased with a child shortly after Some 40,000 South Molucca™ Nabatiya, about 40 miles
train was sealed off and a de- the gunmen took control of the reside in the Netherlands. Mill- south of Beirut, used to be the
tachment of commandos flown train. tants among these protest the largest of the 15 Palestinian
in by navy helicopters. A Jus- The train was halted at Bel- 1949 incorporation of their na- camps in Lebanon. Israeli
tice Ministry official said the len, 90 miles from Amsterdam, tive islands, north of Australia, bombers virtually flattened it in
/ gunmen were "shooting at any- and surrounded by police The into the Indonesian-Republic May 1974, and only a few elderly
thing that moves." gunmen were reported in the and demand their own nation, hangers-on still live there.
I 1 R,
- \ u .07
refugee camps in northern and nesaes reported destroyed were around the southern town of emphasized that Israel would
southern Lebanon with bombs a camp schoolnoase, headquar- Nabaitya. meet the Palestinian guerrillas
and rockets today, killing at ters of guerrilla organizations, The Israeli military com- “only on the battlefield” and not
least 75 persons and wounding a guerrilla missile armory and mand in Tel Aviv said the tar- politically. On Sunday night, the
120, Lebanese police officials a residential neighborhood gets were “a number of terror- United Nations Security Council
reported. Guerrillas from the Syrian- istbases" belonging to “various agreed to invite the Palestine
The Palestinian Command backed Saiqa group opened up terrorist organizations." Liberation Organization to
said nearly half the victims with heat-seeking’ SAM7 an- The raids apparently were in participate in a debate in
were women and children. In a tiaircraft missils on the first retaliation for recent Palestin- January on the Arablsraell
separate casualty count that wave of planes but hit none, ian commando strikes, in- situation, and on Monday the
they called incomplete, the Pal- Lebanese government sources eluding an attack Nov. 21 on the Israeli government announced
estinians reported 57 dead and said. The second wave blew up occupied Golan Heights in that it would boycott the debate.
110 wounded. the missile armory with a direct which three Israeli soldiers The Israeli command said the
Malik, who was U.N. General “I am for cultural and
Assembly president in 1958-59, economic exchanges," he said,
said the greatest single threat in “But if under cover of detente
the world today is that people do you lose in other respects, or if
not stand up for their con- you lulled, then it (detente) is a
victions. negative result,” he added.
“There are no great leaders But he said the danger of
in the world today," the nuclear war makes detente a
Lebanese diplomat said. “The necessity, and that nuclear war
commanding voice is missing." is unthinkable.
He noted that respect for the Malik was introduced by Dr.
high, the noble, the rare is gone Roger L. Brooks, president of
from today’s world. “This is HPU The luncheon meeting
simply an unrespecting age,” was in the Gold Room of Sid
PEKING (AP) -
Chairman Mao Tse-tung
received President Ford and
nine members of his party
-this afternoon, then sat down
for a talk with the President
and four of his aides
Parents of Brownwood
Junior High students will
have the opportunity to "go
to school" like their
youngsters tonight. See
below
uA
LT. GOV. BILL HOBBY
... speak here
• 2
urtusumnF
Vaughn, pastor of the First father of two sons, Nabers is an
Baptist Church, Comanche; and attorney, and participates in
Murray Jordan, district at- many civic, area and com-
tomey, Brady. munity projects.
Mrs. Charles Lockwood is in Perry will read a citation on
charge of decorations, and Greg behalf of the city of Brownwood,
Berry, director of the Howard while Rudolph will serve as
Payne University Band, is in master of ceremonies.
charge of entertainment. “The banquet,” Fryar said,
Other governmental officials "will afford all of us in the 55th.
from across the state are ex- See DINNER on Page 2—A
AMA voting on strike issue
By RON STATON support for a two-week strike "The medical societies in Eu- "We have already taken a po-
Assoclated Press Writer last month by residents and in- rope act as unions, but the AMA sition on that,” Parrott said.
HONOLULU (AP) - The terns at the Cook County Hospi- has never acted as a negotiating "We believe that determination
American Medical Association, tal in Chicago. body," Parrott said in an in- of death is a medical problem
in what a spokesman described m. mniwim save Cok terview. “But we may be at that and cannot be set down as a
as “groping for a position" on ciht. stoit w point where we will have to get legal problem."
doctors' spikes for economic Count striegwasptouimprove into collective bargaining in toe
gain, votes today on the issue, patientcaregbutParrottcalls future " Death must be determined by
"it is not in our tradition to thesatitn .. obvious econom- T .... , physicians on a case-by-case
support strikes," AMA presi- ic dispute. ..Toprepare for this eventual- basis with consultation of other
dent Dr. Max H. Parrott, of y. . , ity, Parrott said, the AMA is physicians and the patient’s
Portland Ore said Mondav Votes also were scheduled to- developing a department of ne- family, he said
"But we na nm inin Mi0 in the day malpractice and nation- gotiations to train medical per-
htut „ y al .1th insurance, and all sonnel for possible collective Parrott said the Morristown,
hree issues were expected to bargaining. N.J., case of Karen Anne Quin-
Doctors’ strikes have sur- generate lively debate. The right to die and the con- ton would be resolved by now
faced as a major issue at the Young doctors who support flict between legal and medical had the case not gone to court.
AMA's annual clinical con- job actions, a euphemism for definitions of death - questions "That case got too much pub-
vention here. A resolution sub- wildcat strikes, are opposed by that recently have attracted licity," Parrott said. “There
mitted to the association’s older doctors who reject strikes widespread public attention — was no way anyone would pull
House of Delegates seeks AMA as a violation of medical ethics. are not issues at the convention, the plug after that."
Volume 76 No. 41 Ton Cents Doily Sunday Twentyfive Cents
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Fisher, Norman. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 41, Ed. 1 Tuesday, December 2, 1975, newspaper, December 2, 1975; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1575738/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Brownwood Public Library.