The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 111, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 16, 1978 Page: 12 of 18
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Radio/haek
Tfie Nationwide Supermttk^t of Sound £
771fears of Leadership-A Name You Can Trust!
4idypo^estercprd
firestone Deluxe Champion
FLOOR/SHELF
3-WAY, 4-DRIVER
SPEAKER
A>< ti'Kn piu> In and old im
Steel belted radial
^V'l whitewalls
Steel Belted
Radial 72I
by Firestone
W 'WWltwIl'n T
8B7813*
CR7013’! 10 M i t»
WfWHSj 82.88; ill!
8000 151
CR/BI4*; 81.00 lit
0R7I14* 8000 ?H
FR7II4V 00 00 . 240
m/014*’ 06.08 25$
GH/8-14 | 0100: 111
HR 78 14 73.00 J 710
hr 7013 (v, $:> ::o r r t
Whilewull .iikKIM tile
OPTIMUS-5B
Reg. 11995 Ea.
807118 [ 7000 ?U
HR78 I5 ; 7800', 111
,■ JR78-15 70.00 : 3.11
IR7B-I8 81 00 1 U
SAVE 550
ilMl#" IX#>'
Ail puces pips la* and bid dm
DOUBLE BELTED
fire$tonepfl;i(; i
V%> —* DELUXE CHAMPION hi S .'■TSt
Super component audio and savings! Mas-
sive 12" woofer,, dual midrange speakers,
one h f tweeter, 4 drivers in all. Genuine
walnut veneer enclosure.
CHARGE IT
(MOST STORES)
firestone
SAVE 357. ON A REALISTIC HI-FI RECEIVER!
nttmii met mi
•i 070-13 $41.00 $2 33
\ 070-14 41.00 2.29
am u»i«.i.„i, it *t rat.
WHITEWALLS 40DI4
to«8 C»l ill Im I'114 IS
■ m U :•> 8ii,a«.,ii-.
F7.0-I4 4200 2 57
670-14 43 00 2 71
F70-15 43 00 2 67"
G70-I5 45 00 2 82
H/Otb 4800 296
Rumania j I,i 14 ;vDU,I t.:s 1V»J1MM«:
30 35 41
1580rl> 48 i
H6Q-K 531
ififr 15 :8#
Stocti iwMM w
■gr oSo Wc\
«*•mmi/urn nuHiiinmnt
American White Spoke
v WAGON WHEELS
FOR COMPACTS, IMPORTS!
Steel Belted I
.RADIALCAVALUNO
SAVE *70
f STA-52
" 31-2072
Reg. 19995
IHOICE i
W 6 sets
12 waits per channel;-minimum RMS at 8
ohms from 20-20,000 ffit, with no more than
0.9% thd Affordably priced! -
” utwMtiiiwiWinuM
14*7 or 13*7 lw»toBofl4n AvoMoblf
' »* -' , ;m>\
:***
mwii
m*u »*■
firestone
ALL TERRAIN
ABOVE RECEIVER IN A SYSTEM
-in-mw ■» brown C»m
DELUXE CHAMPION 7* ANO PLC-lOO
lutlw !»»
With Raised 1
Waurtettm .
S</E 10 ix
I $».«»!»
taPrtc.
SAVE 10980
u nun Httay wi)4 w Mtl lew hew tax
irestone TRANSPORT
50
i CIA DIRECTOR STANS-1
j FIELD TURNER laughs off 1
| (he title of "intelliggnce
i czar." But a recent adminis-
trative reorganization has ,
given Admiral Turner un-
precedented budgetary eon- j
tn»l over Ike nine separate j
agencies comprising the
U.S, intelligence communi- i
• STA S2 AM-FM
Stereo Receiver
• LA8-52'A.vro/
Manual Changer with
Diamond Stylus
• Two MC-SOO Booh
Shell-Site Walnut
Veneer Speakers
All wheel
truck tire
■
r P'* 4ii>m
TUlflfSS
FRONT END
o ooo. o r) o r> f) o
ML CHANGE
. • nra...
MtCISlOK
4UIMKMT
s. saiuio
8-TRACK RECORDING TAPE, REA
2 for 1 SALE g
40-MINUTE 80-MINUTE §1
mu U;W
♦*5.1.
f LOS ANGELES (API - No
offensive lineman ever forgets j
scoring a touchdown, not even ;
a star in the pro game.
Tom Mack, the crack Los An-:
geies- Ram guard.
firestone
W MAtNTfMANCf **»«!
FOREVER BATTERY
Tireoron*
EXTRA UN 34
lATTfNY
-**« o<
*OW>x*'
P.rls *»lr* d iihOM
NO AOOHlONAi CHARGE to.
I.CIO'V •" Of IOMKH10*1 eat*
andvom
Itutk* .
TR-882 L|
14-944
Reg, 9955 SAVE 530 '
Great stereo hidi system add-oni
geies' Ram guard, still, savors:
the eight points he phi on the
scoreboard while plating forj
Cleveland Heights Ugh; in a
game against EucM Mack!
was an eod in those days. j
Somebody halted a punt."
Tom recalled, “amt t fell on itl
for a touchdown That was sit
points ami then f added two;
HSW.tjVDB
(vmmmvmctommtm you sh mt
nr ah ihml at arm Ntovira
Reg. 1** Ea. Rag.
• Extended Response'
H4S. ALEXANDER OR.
4110 DECKER DRIVE
WEST TOWI SHGPMNCBfTBl
fpiiiiRiiiNri
WVNH Ml MI.4MI 71,
, mwm Mum
THINK Qf THINK OP REALISTIC. THINK OF RADIO SHA€Kt
aisb available ai-
Radio Shack
Dealers
Look for mis
l sy<i your
, -^ighbomood
SS’SSfSS
mtwm
JOf UNMMTIWE un:
4112 DECKER DR.
WEST TOWN SHOffMt CEU9 -
0P» 184 WON DU —10-6 SIT
/haek
more by catching a pass on
^AjDlVtStO^
!S=6—■ THt *"
Washington Today
And To Where Does Congress Run? Courts
Bv HARRY F ROSENTHAL etpully powerful branch of the mm was returned V presidential candidate that the gressmen are the first to accuse
Associated Press Writer government Rep Mickey Edwards of Supreme Court lacked "restraint1 the courts of stepping across that1
WASHINGTON IAPi ' .J ^oe recent examples | Oklahoma and 88 tkiuie with respect to acts of (um constitutional frontier call-!
(Yinjoessme/i are always com ~¥t0 (*na *" colleagues axked a federal judge Congresi, and Sen Howard mi separation of powers
oliiimn* that the courts ^ planned to return u> deebre that the Howe. UkeiMeUentaum of Ohio argued inf Yet, by filing these suits, coo*
treading on their turf Hut when ,lu W» (r«wn of St Stephen (he .Senate, be^altosved to vote on .vmrt that they were bang : gressmen are not only mvitirfg
•they cant art their wav ,n'Wnw,Ul ,alW 10 I*1 a ron the Panama Canal treaties deposed of their vote in a Navy intervention, they seem to be!
(ontfresi where do thev ruii1 To *re‘*km4| wwMioo a«ainvt It Their case, also based oo the purchase of airpbnes A hearing demanding it g® ■■
the courts • Sen Carl Curtis of Nebraska property disposal argument is scheduled for Thursday Congress needs no help (romi
and 18 congressional colbagues await* a ruling A simitar suH by The irony is that ever store:the other branches Why then*
Time and again, lawmakers hied suit in Washington claiming *v«al anti-treaty senators was there s been a Congress, .the rush to. sue’
tfy to work their will through a only Congress can dispose of (refused • hearing by the (members have piped about Most of those who do art to
♦ingle federal Judge after«they tIS property Sen Hob Dole supreme Court :courts "making" taw When the minority," says one con-
(ail to convince a majority oCwmt to Kansas City, Kin , and Sen Barry (Jokjwater of judges set racial balance quotas gressional staffer, a tasryer
their inllcaguei tn thetr own, filed a simitar »uit They lost and Ariwma, who complained as a forschoois-or order busing con
8b*
dim
WkM.
HI
878 13
122 96
824.96
1T7T~
C 78 14
2395
2695
! 9,' t
D/8 14
24;M
27 95
2 01
E 78 14
24 96
2895
176
f / 8 14
2896
3095
G/8 14
29 95
31 95
7 -1?
H/8 14
31 95
3395
260
G78 15
30 95
3295
2 46
H/8 15
32 95
3495
7 65
L/8 1b
34 96
37 95
2 93
They do it flit publinty.reason*
~ or political effect After all,
" Coftgress can pass a resolution
saying this is terrible or it can
■ dinhisxjr we'll cut out
money. "Aftd that (BtrSlljl settler'
(the matter"
As an institution, Congress,
seldom goes to court When it
does, it relies on the Justice
Department - a creature of the
executive branch - for
represention
| The department has acted" for
members, officers and com-
J mittees of Congress in at least 56
I cases during the last five yean.
|| Memben who bring lawsuits
I have to prove standing" - a
! complicated legal i concept
I around a simple proposition:
’ tHat only one-who is hurt by
government action can challenge
it in court
,PCK KET VETO
j The landmark case is a 1974
I Supreme Court decision involv-l
tog Sen. I'klward M. Kennedy, I>
Mass., and a,pocket veto by
; President Nixon, The court ‘mi-
lled Kennedy had standing to sue
[ because Nixon’s conduct
I amounted to illegal nullification
[ of a senator’s vote.
j In a 1976 case brought agaiast
(the secretary of tlie treasury by.
II Rep Larry Pressler of Sbuth
[Dakota, the court said a con-
[Jgressman could sue "so long as
[there is no attempt being made!
to interfere with internal
workings of Congress itself.”
J In law, standing is called "a!
I threshold issue." Without it,
[there's no lawsuit. Standing,
I therefore, was the first thing j
largucd in the Panama Canal
!jsuif.
There are now two bills in the j
| House to create an office of con- j
J gressional legal counsel. The!
|J Senate already has approved
such a measure. The counsel j
[would handle legal matters for),
[Congress, its committees.!
members and employees. j ;
j In offering one of the bills,!;
I [Rep John Breckinridge, D-Ky.,1!
isaid: "Unlike the executive
[branch of government, Congress H
[does not 'generally attempt to j
effectuate its will and perform s
J its duties by initiating lawsuits in ji
[the courts,
"With a few notable excep-
[tions, I firmly belive that
I Congress should rely-primanlv
Jon its legislative, oversight and
[[impeachment powers rather
ithan the initiation of lawsuits to
fulfil] its congressional respon-
sibilities.'’
But for those exceptions, he
said, "Congress needsa lawyer."
by Craig Leggett
IOONIIS
<-.AUD86
oom a
1VY OUT
tWENtW
VACUUM
V mom!
b^cam-
lT%6<rf A
POtftRfUL
SUCflOlO,
JUHIORV
SUREST 10
i THINK
SHtlS fOIM’
POINT IT
mm*
STPAIWT
tx^-k
i.!
C " ,
Rt^|S MAY VARY AT INOtVtQUAl STORFS
—
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.
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.
Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 111, Ed. 1 Thursday, February 16, 1978, newspaper, February 16, 1978; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1074696/m1/12/?rotate=270: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.