Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 207, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 14, 1970 Page: 5 of 28
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Sunday, June 14, 1970 BROWNWOOD BULLETIN S
I
skilled, semi-literate and educa-
said manpower
pro.
eager to explain it to others in
Keller is free on bail pending
The Supreme
been living together since Au-
a "human being and that mur-
ED!
In Hawaii, funeral biers are
grants went up there like they diets that within the next five
/
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SCRIBERS
ntitles you
hookup'
15. 16, 17
garden. a few friends. and we re
happy You never know how
Today's go-anywhere,
do-anything Hush Puppies.
members think it will work 'or gust, 1968
them. the average Da e in the —
I
with forcible abortion
Basis for the decision was the
common law rule that an un-
ers in other states undoubtedly
will be down this year, as it
was in 1969
Last year. he said, many mi-
Mexican-American
They pack up their families
and head for states as far
north as Michigan and Minne-
sota as soon as school is out-
had for y ears and suddenly the
demand was down The states
that used to use a lot of mi-
grant labor are saying they
don’t need so many r
Texas is one of the nation’s
largest suppliers of migrant
farm workers Most come from
deep South Texas and most are
made the journey.
Pre harvest work in the sugar
beet fields is a major source of
jobs for Texas migrants But a
sugar company official here pre-
home.
"We're tying to keep them
from just jumping in their cars
and taking off," a spokesman
for the local commission office
said
He said the demand for work-
tin official seed
Rigid federal housing regula-
tions, improved farming meth-
ods and unemployment in some
northern states were among oth-
er reasons listed for the ex-
pected work shortage
I
)
sometimes even earlier
An official of the Texas Good
Neighbor Commission in Austin
says the total number of Texas
migrants working both in Texas
and other states may drop to
as low as 130,000 this year
The going thing for today’s going ladies. Easy-care
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styles.
By RICHARD BEENE
Associated Press Writer
SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Texas
migrant farm workers, the sum-
mertime nomads who set out
each year to toil in fields far
from home, will find fewer jobs
this season employment officials
report.
One agency estimates as many
as 17,000 Texans will drop from
the migrant stream" this year
The Texas Employ ment Com-
mission is warning all migrants
Hush
lippies
t tonally starved people," he anik
■ "Although there are sun lots of
jobs around, the people we re
dealing with right now are un-
skilled ”
To meet these problems, he
tiled comfort. Wide selection of colors and :
{e \
grams have been established
through a variety of agencies, in-
cluding the departments of la-
bor. agriculture and health, ed-
ucation and welfare.
FaraPresse
to make certain they have firm ,
job commitments before leaving
EXECUTIVE MODEL
. . . fits Pop great, and Son, too, with mon-
A year ago. he said. an esti-
mated total of 147,000 Texans
Last Chance
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Special Prices*
Cleaned and Pressed
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Wheeler activity, he said, which
in turn leads to a glut of workers
-were dealing with an entty
that s been neglected for many
many years." Kemper said of
migrant workers
potterns. Sizes 32 to 48 including sixe 35
waist.
10.00 to 14.00
e
Reg. 4. to 5. 2/7.00
C.C. Kemper, coordinator of
migrant labor for the Texas
Good Neighbor Commission, as
the increase in so-called tree
wheelers" is another complicat-
ing factor They hit the migrant
trail, he said. "and maybe they
find a job and maybe they
won’t."
Also complicating the picture. I
he said, are the stricter federal
housing regulations.
A farmer who can't meet the
regulations is not allowed to hire
through state agencies and most
instead. contact the workers or
private recruiters himself. Kem-
per said Ths encourages "free
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FATHER S DAY IS JUNE 21
3
street tends to disagree | Kar Marx and Friedrich En- bom fetus cannot be considered
"I live with one wife and ourigels collaborated in issuing the " “
children in one house. I have a I Communist Manifesto of 1848.
playgrounds, kindergarten and
even a small zoo
A short distance away, in an-
other suburb, 30 or 40 families
are hoping to take an ever big
ger step into the unknown--a
' megahouse big enough for at
least 100 people Most of these
families met when their chil-
dren were attending the same
private school All the families
have now agreed on the design
for the house a miracle of
cooperation-and all will con
tribute equally to the cost of
building it.
Why do 100 people want to live
together’
"I’ve been living in my neigh-
borhood for 15 years and I still
hardly know my neighbors. We
are separated by roads and
fences and gardens " Else-Mar
le is 36 she and her husband
have three teen age children
"Its very hard to meet other
people to get a warm feeling to-
ward them ... a closeness,"
she explains
Peter an architect contin-
ues "We would all like swim-
ming pools. sauna baths and
other material things Private-
ly. only a few of us can afford
them: but together, we can all
have them We're looking for-
ward to sharing many things
books. records, perhaps
der can only involve a human
being
among major reasons for the
drop in available work for mi-
grants 1 "The biggest problem is that
"They've even got shakers for the labor pool consists of un-
the cherry trees now," an Aus- skilled, semi iterate and educa-
each family will have its own around will soon show them how Lingby, a residential area, tune disposition of charges of aggra-
house, but will share the gar- to behave," adds Eller, a 39- young Scandinavians— students, vated assault —
dens outdoor kitchens and year-old landscape gardener
workshops. swimming pool, I ‘ Although the megafamily
n AU crops,
row th and so
een light' A
< the peanut
howers ham-
ig of pcan
er but pros-
Ranges are
in fine shape;
naking good
i adequate
least Texas is
counties but
ire ram The
n and wheat
fair to good
good in some
itting of hay
counties AU
nd look good,
average and
counties. All
nd look good.
Todar. • mas is known hr
the width of his tie ■ . , and
Reall’s has all of the best in
the new wide look: Stripes,
patterns and solids to en-
ha nee any fashion, any time
nt the day, any seasen. See
them all at Beall's, first:
7-3-:6-
these togetherness expert The best magnets are made j
ments’ will turn out No. 1 think of hard steel, often decorated with leis sent
wars
1
I Q
Now is the time to stock up on easy-care perment press
dress shirts for your Father's Day giving! Smooth blend
of 65% Polyester—35% cotton features new spread
collar and two pockets. Choose from assorted medium
and fashion tones, 14-17.
49
1,e
sebefAKe 533mn
yean, only "a select few" will
be going north for tins kind of
work
The Texas Employment Com-
mission cites mechanization
The truek people from
eeneral Movoes
paars ane service
FRIENDLY
pontiac-auick-gme
Mi X cemuar •-121
teachers, photographers—have Court said he could be charged
Megafamily Living Getting lnKornkorder Migrant Workers
Tryout From Danish Groups eLE." Find Jobs Scarce
/ ■ child does not constitute mur
By ROXANNE GOLDSMITH , Denmark's few small collec- our old system is best Jorden der.
COPENHAGEN Denmark children says Else Mane, who Bang a well-known publisher, n The 2 decRooen Hari
(AP) — They say that two has three of them Sometimes tive* have had some trouble, not madr count who
heads are better than one Bui other adults do a better job " only with the neighbors * Keslendoctdmoadmurdertharges
are66 heads better than two? "Children don't warn such a nions.h ti tth uSp pinslhving th*1 stemmed from the stilibirth
They 11 soon find out in Den- ... . . . . together all tne time Pyenoto estranged wife
mark, with the advent of the tight family strucure these gists and architects agree that ogechuid,wbyhscusrd48 dina
' megafamily ” days Anyway, a lot of genera- one reason for this is the house Keeler was.accusen0nDeting
Two years ago a few families non problems are the fault of itself.’A house for one family andkicking. 2 9m
decided to build their houses on the parents , says Annette, a seldom, suitsratheeneedsieof a “fwas delivered dead
the same piece of land physiotherapist number of unrelated people by caesarean seetion, and med
Now. 33 families have joined "If one family has badly be- But those who have found a cal experts said the baby died of
in planning a community just haved children.' the example of system for collective living are a skull fracture
outside Copenhagen in which well-brought-up children all
pets."
"We’re tired of being isolated
in our own small world." com-
plains another
The parents are between 26
and 40 years old. middle class,
with steady jobs and several
children
The buildings themselves are .
designed to provide maximum
communication and privacy
where necessary Megafamily
One. which decided to build
their own houses grouped about
common recreational facilities,
wiy have the most privacy.
Their houses are ultramodern
Danish split levels, separating
the children downtairs and the
parents upstairs by an in-be-
tween level of family rooms
One end of the community has
the swimming pool, outdoor
kitchens and workshops. game
rooms and a sun terrace
A teen club lies in the middle,
complete with everything from
a discotheque to a greenhouse
At the fair end is the kinder-
garten. playground and, per-
haps. zoo
By common agreement, cars
will be parked at the edge of the
community
At 145 non per house including
land, construction and all com-
mon facilities, it can t be called
low-cost housing Nor is it exor-
bitant for a house near Copen-
hagen
The "megahouse" is less ex-
pensive and more radical in de-
sign its 2% stories will stretch
nearly the length of a football
field, covering two acres of
land.
Jan Gudman-Hoyer, the archi-
tect for both projects, describes
the interior as something like
a monastery The private sleep-
ing rooms for parents and chil-
dren are narrow—rather small
Each has its own ‘minikitehen '
hut the size of these rooms will
encourage families to share the
larger common rooms ”
Rooms for a family of four in
this house cost $16,000
At first, many asked to pay a
little more to live in larger
rooms, not shared with other
families in the house But grad:
• u)ty, as designs were discussed
at regular monthly meetings,
many of these "privatists" de-
cided to take the plunge and
join the "collectivists "
t.
3 Days Only S (88
at this low price mEm
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Fisher, Norman. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 70, No. 207, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 14, 1970, newspaper, June 14, 1970; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1572481/m1/5/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.