The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 254, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 2, 1978 Page: 15 of 29
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The ‘Ins’ And ‘Outs’ Of
23-Channel CB Radios
By Ink Dipper
-No, you can’t sell or lease
your used 23-channel CB
unit. But, yes, you can con-
tinue to operate it.
Probably no ruling made
by the Federal Communica-
tions ^Compaission has cre-
ated as much confusion
among CBers as the order in
mjd-1976 that banned the
sale of 23-channel units in
favor of the new 40-channel
sets with more rigid techni-
cal specifications to reduce
television interference and
increase the outlets avail-
able to CB users. It went into
effect on Jan. 1, 1977.
CBCONVAC
Ink Dipper’
In a recent trip that cov-
ered IS states, many jam-
borees, and a lot of coffee
'get-togethers with CBers
from Florida to Nebraska,
these were the questions
that were asked most often
The ruling states clearly
that no citizens band radio
can be sold that has not
passed the FCC’s specifica-
tions. It is totally silent on
the matter of use and, there-
fore, makes continued oper-
ation of these units legal.
This column has touched
upon this subject several
times in the past, but we
didn’t realize that there was
as much confusion over it as
this trip indicates. We have
protested the way in which
the FCC decided to handle
CBers had been requesting
for many years prior to the
1976 ruling.
The FCC’s peculiar
delayed-action timing in-
creased the number of 23-
channel sets on the market
by millions. This meant that
the purchase of a 40-channel
radio because, in the FCC’s
ruling, that would take the
23-channel set out of the
sales stream
Can you sell an RV, a van,
a mobile home, a pickup
truck with a 23-channel unit
in it? Yes, if its permanently
installed in the vehicle..
Doyle Boster of Lincoln,
Neb., is a veteran CBer. It’s
a part of his working life as a
sales executive who travels
a lot of miles. He has won-
dered about many aspects of
the ruling. Are converters
okay? They’re okay if
they’ve passed the FCC
specification tests. And,
most of them haven't.
Are’ there any 23-channel
models that are approved
THE BAYTOWN SUN Wednesday, August 2, 1971 13-A
■Ready For Namiai
CLEARWATER, Fla. (AP) -
When the Children’s Television
Workshop produces its adapta-
tion of C. S. Lewis’ classic fan-
tasy, "The Chronicles of Nar-
nia,” for the CBS-TV network
next year, one young viewer
RELIGIOUS LOOT
SANTA BARBARA, Calif.
(AP) - While he was helping a
. ... , 7, . . stalled motorist, Brookes
here mil have a special inter- Davi Grace Lutheran
the increase in channels that under the new require-
DON T BE TRICKED
...Into thinking all insurance
agents are the same. They're not!
I he men from an INDEPENDENT
INSURANCE AGENCY’Tire
DIFFERENT! Instead of
representing just-one insurance
company, they represent many;
Instead of offering just one policy,
they choose from among many to
provide the 8EST PROTECTION
program to meet your particular
needs. Let us help choose the
right insurance company for your
needs. -
INSURANCE FROM
THE FIRST AGENCY. INC.
When You INSURE
427-6575
ments? Not to the writer’s
knowledge. The manufac-
turers are not building sets
with less than 40 channels,
so we don't know of any 23s
that have been approved.
What does a dealer do with
the sets he takes in as trade
the TVI incidence simply ff Partial payment of a 40-
wasmultiplied.lt also broke channel unit? He generally
many manufacturers who
were faced with taking back
23-channel sets then in the
distribution pipelines and
cannibalizes it because
“ham” operators are great
buyers of these parts. The
..... FCC says it must be a "bag
converting them to 40 chan- of parts" that is sold to.
nels. And the public was
subjected to a flood of infe-
rior 23-channel sets at prices
that made them very attrac-
tive, air to beat the Jan. 1,
1977, deadline.
There are, of course, a lot
of other questions that the
main one of sale generates
Can you give away a 23-
channel unit? Sure, if it is to
another member of the fami
ly, and was purchased .be-
fore the Jan. 1, 1977 dead-
line. Can it be given away as
a door prize for a church
bazaar? Probably the com-
mission would consider this
an incentive, but it would be'
okay
A dealer can take your 23-
channel unit in trade against the total sets outstanding
insure that the unit has been
permanently disabled
One area of the ruling that
seems to belie everything
concerns walkie-talkies
These are hand-held units
that consist of a built-in
microphone, an attached
antenna, internal battery
supply, and have the capa-
bility to transmit and
receive. Those on the mar-
ket now can be sold until
Aug. 1, 1978. Then, they, tod,
must be subject to FCC
specifications
about these questions: 23 is
in use, but out; 40 is in, but
represents a small part of
RELAX. THIS ISN’T a fierce tiger from the African jungle. It’s just a close-up view of
an ordinary cat from Idaho. This photo by 17-year-old Daryl Hunt Is included In the
National 4-H Photo Exhibit, sponsored by Kodak._______r
est in the show.
After her sixth-grade teacher
told the class about the up- jt
coming production T>f the
series’ first book, “The Lion,
the Witch and the Wardrobe,"
12-year-old Kathy Cummings
decided to be prepared for it.
She read the complete Narnia
novel, then created a 10-foot sic, a prayer book and a Bible,
scroll depicting Lewis’ imagina- Kathy's behalf to CTW presi-
ry world.
The scroll was presented on
Church's music director, had
his briefcase stolen. He had left
next to his car in the
church’s parking lot.
The police said they hoped
whoever had stolen it would
make constructive use of its||
contents - numerous religious
documents, religious sheet mu-
dent Joan Ganz Cooney at the
recent annual convention of the
National Education Association,
which named Mrs. Cooney win-
ner of the "Friend of Educa-
tion" award, the first woman
and first member of the com-
munications field to be so hon-
ored.
Aberrant Behavior Stories
May Be True After All
HHM
NEW YORK (AP) - All of ocean tides,” Morris says.
those stories you’ve heard
about aberrant behavior and
the full moon may be true.
Cops and bartenders would
agree with Dr. Ralph W. Mor-
Tolerance (or disease and
drugs also can change with the
phases of the moon, he says. A
study at the university’s Col-
lege of Pharmacy indicates
Tis, professor of pharmacology that, bleeding, ulcer crises peak
just before the full lunar phase.
And a study of 88 patients with
angina pectoris, chest pains re-
lated to heart disease, showed
that 64 percent of the attacks
at the University of Illinois
Medical Center, who says
'During periods of the full
moon, there seems to be an in-
crease in individual metabolism
rates as well as an increase in
tensions and anxieties.
“A person’s enzymes and
many of his hormones are
more active during the full
moon. The heart rate may be
at its peak. People are general-
ly in a more excitecfstate, ”
The university says some sti-
vers 2’have
vitational and electromagnetic
fields are responsible.. “The
nioon affects these fields as
use of alcohol and drugs are
unhappy, distressed, problem-
ridden, have a low opinion of
themselves and feel their par-
ents are unloving and hostile
toward them.
“In fact," says Dr. Robert
Pandina of the Rutgers Center
of Alcohol Studies, "this cluster
of emotional traits was found to
be so indicative oi
users of alcohol and drugs that
came between the full and last- it was possible to pick out
quarter phase. “Only about 36
percent occurred at new or
first-quarter moon,” Morris
says.
Best Time for Pain
Speaking of timing, the ear-
lier in the day you go to the
dentist the less it may hurt,
A study at the North Chicago
Veterans Administration Hospi-
tal, an affiliate of the Chicago
evidenced by the ebb And flow pain is more tolerable in the
" “1 morning than in the afternoon
Another Concern : In^iHty^n
To Get Inflation Reading
By JOHN CUNNIFF
AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK (AP) - Worri-
some as the continued high rate
of inflation is, a matter of even
graver concern to some econo-
mists is the seeming inability
of Washington to get an accu-
rate reading on it.
The administration repeat-
edly has been shocked or sur-
prised by the economic num-
unnerving to economists,
Among reactions provoked
administration behavior is one
ministration ......
by prised by the repeated flow of Rogers and Barry Villein re-
bad economic news. They and ported in the Journal of Clinical
that can only cause further their clients have foreseen it Psychiatry __ ^
damage: If Washington is
peatedly disappointed, then
must , not understand
causes. How,, then, can it treal
them?.
Helping very little if at all is
it the accompaniment to the ad
the ministration’s surprise: The'se-
lf leeting of one iota of good news
and emphasizing it, or the
TIRES OF EXCELLENCE
......
1
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unteers in. the morning and ear-
ly evening
The average amount of elec-
tricity which produced pain in
Many of . the more popularly the morning was 6.22 milliam-
followed private economists, in petes. In the evening, it only
bers, particularly the rate of in-
oressions of disaoDointment are fact, are surprised that the ad- '°°k 5.61 milliamperes, accord- and drug problems.
ration should be Sur-ing to the study by Dr, Eugene “ —
spite promises, President Nixon
Carter does not
have the same standby, authdr-
ity to freeze prices or to impose
gress. And, with all else failing,
it is conceivable he will do so.
FIRST DEPARTMENT
The first executive
department, the Department
of Foreign Affairs, was
created on July 25,1789.
v 444F.E.T. 1.96 li 3.70
Psr Tin Dipiiin h Tin Sin
Dales Bl« D" Shocks
4 *$49”
MUM—tumor Cin
FULLERS TIRE CO.
Medical School, indicates that actively involved with alcohol
and-or drugs or has a high po-
tential or risk for becoming in-
Paim in the form of mild
was applied
office workers,
many of them just from the
psychosocial profile, without
prior knowledge of their drink
ing and drug use habits.
“The implications of these
findings are very important for
prevention and intervention,”
Pandina says. "When we find a
youngster with this psy-
chosocial profile, the chances
are very good that he or she is
volved. Remedial measures can
then be undertaken
The findings emerged from a
staff, and medical student vol- study of 1,97$ students in
grades 9 through 12 in a junior
high school and two high
schools in Middlesex County,
N.J., and 250 girls and boys in
the same age range being
treated at centers for alcohol
OTTHEGOOT
Exclusive Group.
When you need transmission
service, I’ll give you a free
road test, a free Multi-Check
diagnosis and free towing. In
most cases, I’ll give you
one-day service. And
when you get your car
back, you’ll have had
pr- top quality work done
with top quality parts.
That’s the way we do
it in “The 600!’
UilkJ
TRANSMISSIONS
i
There are more than 600 aamco dealers
serving you coast to coast in the u.s. In Canada
and in your neighborhood.
AAMCO Transmissions-2500 It Mam St-427-7431
"We guarantee all parts and labor."
Thi Home ol the Real 19 Point Multi-Chech
Present This 4d Upon Payment of Final Bill
far 10% Discount
Working women are sub-
jected to more stress than
working men, but they handle
it better, says Dr. Irving H
Tracer, a psychiatrist at Mi-
chael ReeseHospitaiandMedi
cal Center in Chicago,
—fpronuse
come.
This has been the scenario
for months, and it was repeated Women are more open
a few days ago when the Bu-about feei‘n«s’ (Thracer
reau of Labor Statistics re- *W- PW can dlscuss things
apSSi ssassrcssr
est consumer products mflation
rate was 11.4 percent annually.
Since that was hard to swal- , er says,,worRng wo
low. the administration offered
a teasDoon of antacid with the ^ob’ Pnmary responsibility for
i is *
existed for a future slowdown Job d ^ "t threaten
»» *.«« bjmsks
A performance of this sort re- an<l “ praam .ton
minds economist? of the assur- 55^.
ances Herbert Stein delivered ^ 06 “P
SraUon that^wKriS stresses,” Tracer says. “To put
were rising, the worst was be- il» J?.are not afraid to
Lj_j cry at wont.
The womt was to come. De- “Nursing Bottle Mouth”
SAVt20!j!!i
buy2 bars
i
:~T
“Nursing bottle mouth” may
affect 1 in 20 children ranging
chil-
froze prices and then affixed
.-.W -
’ttsrws-a ,«*■*« *
cailv Brooklyn
President' vw ** M Usi"g a **filled **
juices, milk or other sweet liq-
uids can decay a. child’s, teeth,
say Drs. Nathan Trotter and
s«k m authority Iron, O*,
gin even before teeth cut
through the gums, as bacteria
penetrate the gums. The upper
incisors are most affected,
Trotter says.
Alcohol, Drugs and Teen-Agers
ven to heavy
ACTUAL
SIZE
Safeguard
• DEODORANT AND ANTIBACTERIAL SOAP
mm. is oi
liiii *
Now in a long-lasting 7-oz.
super-size bar, only Safeguard
gives you this combination of
unbeatable deodorant soap
protection plus richer,
smoother lather.
;'X,
S4 3 .V
V
What’s up in seafaring fare
When ocean liner travel began, ships carried their own
cows pn board to provide milk — for women.and children
passengers, only Today, however, cruise ships are
equipped with special refrigerated storerooms to keep
"erishables fresh throughout the voyage. '■ **-*>■'> : .
The Queen Elizabeth 2, for example'', loads up on 48,400
gallons-of. milk before setting off on its ,80-day vbyage
around the world. Meanwhile, the ship fills up with these
massive quantities of other„foods and beverages for the
around-the-world trip.
DUUCI
. 7 ■ ■ |nwuua
Yogurt
7,660 cartons
Cheese
7,945 pounds
Beef
121,580 pounds
Lamb -
36,000 pounds
Bacon
’ 12,700 pounds
Foie gras
670 pounds
Beer
26,000 bottles
Scotch
2,100 bottles
” Champagne
2,750 bottles
Caviar
11,000 pounds
Let s hope the ship’s crew remembered tp throw- ih
something for indigestion.'
CUT ALONG DOnED LINE
19676SA
lM
JMwnnaMf
ward
LIMIT ONC COUPON PIR PURCHAM
SIZE (7-o oz.)
OR EQUIVALENT AMOUNT
OFF 4 BATH (5.0 oz.)
OR 5 COMPLEXION (3.5 oz.)
toy Mkin# him lo ;•coupon* without making
M lor redemption of Ifttf coupon We will rermt>ur**.y
h fre# qooda ptu* St lot handling, provided lh«t
you'rooeemed tl Uu/ao*ni lAlft
coupon must be »edi
(eia'teetfingpnc#. 1
•clem *totko»ou;b
irsement tolwrhiCh ry
PROCTER & GAMER E
» redeem coupon*
coupon or. if coupon
. Witn 10# term* of our
ore* (he** term* than not
»l purenaseof the brand
‘ ” y not be reproduced.
H be *ho*rn upon re-
' ly redeemed
f
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Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 254, Ed. 1 Wednesday, August 2, 1978, newspaper, August 2, 1978; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1075019/m1/15/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.