Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 78, No. 240, Ed. 1 Friday, July 21, 1978 Page: 5 of 16
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Brownwood Bulletin and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Brownwood Public Library.
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Page— A
Page5-A
Friday. July 1978
A
4
6
1
1
school financing systems, local from the U.S. Office of sition 13 brought warnings of
(Bulletin Photo)
Hardships of war
NO RAINCHECKS
LIMITED QUANTITY
■
ENTIRE STOCK
CRAFTS
T_
FINAL
FINAL
FINAL
Reg. Price
STEALS ON WHEE
6
Dressy or Casual
By Poll Parrot—Jumping Jack
OS
Ratteriesextra
SAVE $15
A
iday
$499
Reg. *19.99
leather - sizes 612 to 13.
air, tilt, power.
(•
In Progress
V,E
716
rdially in-
1686
nation
ALL MERCHANDISE
696
Compare.
25% OFF
J
5
301 MAIN
310 CENTER
FAMILY SHOE STORE
BROWNWOOD iTOKh
1
A
4
WILLIAMS RANCH RD.
646-6459
L
V
4
MONTGOMER
*,,1
M
■
MONTGOME Ry
Meb
shoeS
Men's patent or smooth
la
ire.
Keep That Great
GM Feeling with
Genuine GM Parts
Save
*51
rate your
discover
13 for your
Save’2"
Our Va-inch-slat
vinyl porch roll-up.
1 be held in
ed building
le. Several
id a host of
ake part in
ANDERSON
NELSN
2nd ANNIVERSARY
IS NOW UNDERWAY
NOW THRU TUES.
ICH
»St.
ndy Lang’s
'inishing in
w to Save
g," send 35
STAMPED,
nvelope to
x 477, Hunt-
Questions of
ill be an-
in, but indi-
nce cannot
spread on the
rod and then
ne grade of
Thile it prob-
ou can prob-
result with
and oil. If
the talcum
it on a piece
voters is very small,” said
James Melton of the Kentucky
School Boards Association.
While local funds are drying
up, smaller enrollments are re-
ducing state and federal aid
subsidies which are tied to the
number of pupils. An Associ-
ated Press spot check showed,
Word
tronics
ual
11:30 a.m.
it lunch at
tion com-
barbecue,
eshments.
ed to bring
ns and so
02
,TX.
Gdo6
>0538
SNkp
i have it. I
nany of us
i locked up
ot become
[ht dare to
ecome un-
tions are
E
g2
A MMMrT
the oecasion are Mrs. Dolores Richardsom,
Bea Berryhill, area manager of SAH, and
MyrI Furry, representing JRB Super
»« O A
MarKev8.
I have heard
ure, I can’t
it.
5
)
r
ol
students across the country and
one of four in Texas to win a
scholarship this year.
U
This 2-player games
Plays Tennis- Catch
Hoop - Baseball A
Handball
Dress, Casual & Canvas
In Progress
I
12 Price
12 Price
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN
TODAY'S TOPIC
12 Price
y
_____E,......—
5 iiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiti ll Illi ll II mmimmsmmmmmim (
k 1978 CAPRICE Demo Stock #1019 Two door loaded all the way.
k 1978 CAPRICE Demo Stock #1103 This four door is heavily equipped.
k 1978 IMPALA Driver's Ed Stock #1138 Automatic, power, air, AM-FM
Cruise. x
* 1978 MALIBU CLASSIC Demo Stock #1020 Four door sedan sharply
equipped with automatic, power, air, tilt, cruise, AM-FM
★ 1978 IMPALA Driver's Ed Stock #1109 Automatic, power, air, 305 V-8,
AM-FM, Cruise.
k 1978 NOVA Driver’s Ed Stock #1012, 305 V-8 with many extras, automatic.
SAT.
SPECIAL
Q
=e
20% OH
gneny uuusuc or rennsyva- naus say uney nave no way to costs ana suauc revenues, was amaw. as pvs-: muu ;
nia, youngsters returning to balance next year's budget, let the way school district spokes- Bill McMurray, executive di- .
school this fall will find class- done make up a 320 million man William Jones summed up rector of the Classroom Teach- ।
rooms more crowded. deficit left from last year. the problem. ers Association of San Fran- i
Rug Yarn ■ Stitchery Kits - Macrame
Latch Hook Kits
HOLLEY CHEVROLET
300 E. COMMERCE
646-9511
«
°o
o,9
' 0.
>ut insulation
I expect to
base fill in-
here — there
- and place
i between the
3 lust be laid
y have to be
SUPER
OT
e
g2
$299
• 36x6
" Regularly '5.99
Width trimmed with
scissors. Wipes clean.
Limited
Quantity
E
F-Ir
S
Real bargain busters1
Come in and check our prices now.
DEM0& they're the lowest in town.
DRIVER’S ED CAR SALE C/
HURRY! THESE I
LOW MILEAGE BEAUTIES \ '
WON’T LAST LONG! \
|formed strong bond
By JEANNE DEVLIN Strong bonds formed among Foundation, charitable arm of
Stillwater News-Press the men who shared the bard- the Sperry and Hutchinson
STILLWATER, Okla (AP) — ships of war. Long after the war Company in New York.
Ted Lehman still remembers ended, her father, Leo Kuysten, The scholarship program is
the clutch of panic he felt as his continued to write to each of the open to children whose parents
fighter plane plummeted into 32 Allies his family hid. are employed by retailers
enemy territory 34 years ago. His daughter has read all giving SAH Green Stamps.
He remembers how a Dutch those letters, boxes of them, and Dana is the daughter of Dolores
property taxes are still a key Education show enrollment in mass layoffs in California. The
2
however, that the severity of the a
problem varies from state to
state and even from district to
district.
In Hawaii, officials say no
layoffs are planned; Michigan
educators say the ratio of stu-
dents to teachers has dropped
from 24.«to 1 in 1971-72 to 23.8 to
Our 40-channel CB keeps you in touch.
Variable squelch and push-
button ANL clarify recep- $r088
tion. SRF meter and more. " • Q
Reg •109.95
codies
she
Little Girl Sandals -
police officer befriended him in what started as a teen-age Richardson, employed by J.R.
the evening and pretended to hobby became a pilgrimage. Beadel and Company in
search for him during the day. Her quest has carried her to Brownwood, and Louis
He can still describe the the United States, to Lehman’s Richardson of Rising Star.
cramped hide-a-bed where he home here in Stillwater, to the Miss Richardson was a
was to hide if the Nazis should home of another comrade in member of the band, drama
ever walk through the door. California and to many phone club, debate club, Girl Scouts
But most of all, Lehman re- books and city directories. and Who’s Who among
members the brave young "I want to talk with all 32 American High School students.
Dutch couple who hid him in men,” Miss Kuysten said. "But She plans to major in pre-law at
their home for three weeks, people move, and die. It isn’t McMurry College at Abilene.
Their courage and generosity easy. But I will keep on trying.” a. ... .
at hin. KT.man cid h» She says she is "beginning to More than 750 students have
arewthinge Hehmansatdrhe understand that special bond been awarded SAH Foundation
"in everguutteaunderstand" which formsSbetweena man Merchant Scholarships since
tions, he recalled. "Yet they fed who is hunted and the men who theprosramas estabished in
me and another man. They had protect him.”_________________1»4. Richardson wm one o(45
young children in diapers, yet
they risked all of it for a person
whom they did not even know.
SAiE
THE
LOG
CABIN
“My predicament was
bad...all I remember was my
gut fear. Their situation was
worse...yet they never seemed
afraid.
“If the Nazis had discovered
they were hiding me, I would
have been arrested and sent to a
prisoner-of-war camp.”
He paused and looked at the
slender young woman beside
him before whispering, “And
they would have been exe-
cuted.”
A barely noticed flinch was
the reaction from the silent
woman, the daughter of the
Dutch couple. She has heard it
all before.
Now 21, Eli Kuysten of
Sprang-Capelle, The Nether-
lands, was born years after the
Nazi occupation. But of all of
her parents’ children, she has
taken their heritage moat to
heart.
After her father’s death eight
years ago, Mias Kuysten spent
hours reading his collection of
diaries, journals and records.
Then she began delving Into
the personal lives of the men
who had been instrumental In
her parents' underground activ-
ities. Her job was made easier
because of her father’s feelings
about the American men who
had helped free his homeland.
Squeeze is on in school districts
By LOUISE COOK 1 last year; Nevada authorities Budget troubles are en- ‘Statewide, I doubt if there ing contingency plans in the
Associted Press Writer say enrollment and teacher trenched in some Mates. Four will be a lot of teachers laid event voters approve a Novem-
Tight-fisted taxpayers and employment are actually in- districts in Oregon, for ex- off,” said Vic Biondi, alde to ber ballot measure limiting
declining enrollments are creasing. ample, rioted temporarily dur- Wilson Riles, state school an- property taxes to 1J percent of
forcing school districts in many Ohio educators, in contrast, ing the 1176-77 school year be- perintendent. ~ market value in Satan, prop-
parts of the country to fire report that enrollment dropped cause voters rejected proposed The budgets deadline has erty taxes for the year
teachers and trim the about 4% percent from 1975-76 budgets. Things could get even been extended from Aug. 10 to ended Jim 30 totaled 131 nor
curriculum. to 1177-70; the number of full- worse this year if voters ap- Sept. 10. There already have $1,000 of valuation or 11 per
“Experienced teachers are time teachers decreased 4 per- prove “Measure 4," an in- been some cuts, however — There fiwi iVAw
having a rough time finding a cent. Roger Lulow of the Ohio itiative patterned after Callfor- mainly in supplementary serv-
place to work,” said one Ohio Deportment of Education, said nia’s Proposition 13, limiting ices like adult education and Anderson estimated that pas-
official “The fri courses will staff reductions - past, present property taxes summer school and in the num- sage of the tax-cutting Initiative
probably go,” added an educa- and future — were due mainly Other areas are just begin- ber of non-teaching employees would mean a 312 million over-
tor in Colorado. to the "increased total coat of ning to face the financial - and authorities express con- aninacanalnwa.s-anm.
In some places, like Mich- education anchor the failure of squeeze. Philadelphia laid off corn about what will happen disti dan19X0" Hon“. “
m igan, the drop in the number of voters to approve local school 1,800 teachers in May, the Brat next year, when there may be ’ a , J
■ teachers is befog offset by a levies.” Voters in Cleveland time that city teachers had been no surplus to draw on. um . oud
■ drop in the number of students; have rejected two school tax fired solely to balance the “Our first concern is to keep 1 p IO a “
in other areas, like the West Al- proposals this year alone; off- budget. “Increased operating cuts as far away from the ----.--.TA
legheny district of Pennsylva- dais say they have no way to costs and static revenues,” was classroom as possible," said BERe/DsoUMTPTIE i
■ 0% | ON N AME BRAND ■
2221 FASHIONS I
_______ । “ • LYN'S
Despite recent changes In On a nationwide basis, figures The June 6 passage of Propo- cisco. | i
‘ i - -* — Officials in Oregon are mak- iDOWNTOWMANGL 7824043 j
t need to be
ve a particu-
oving the old
Uy left there
ed on top of
at, check to
is a vapor
loose fill. If
vithout a va-
lid you go
original idea
ie loose fill,
ith a vapor
e the vapor
wn; that is,
ig below.
source of revenue for education public elementary and secon- warnings have not come true so
Scholarship qoes in most of the country. And dary schools dropped 7 percent far, mainly because of a nearly
r 9 these levies are the target of the from 1971-72to 1977-78, while the »5 billion state surplus that is
to C-Plains Orad spending and tax-cut drives number of teachers rose I being used to make up for reve-
_ _ "" which spread from California to percent. No one knows what this nues lost in the 57 percent prop-
Dana. K.Eichardson, v over a dozen other states. fall’s figures will show. erty tax cut.
graduate of Cross PlainsHigh "Given the climate and the
School, has won ■ $1,200 mood of the taxpayers today, A
scholarship from the SAH the chances of getting (new local |
‘ school) taxes passed by the =
j WomeN
s shoeS
r, pastor of
tail.. Com-
n be seen
sally syndi- i
"Hour of |
SUSE ASSN )
The
Log
Cabin
Take Wards 40-channel mobile CB.
PLL-synthesized. With A ARR
volume/squelch controls, 4. ) O 0
Automatic Noise Limiter. ■ 4
Rag. *69.95
SCHOLARSHIP AND GIFT - Daaa
Richardson, second from left, has received a
scholarship from the SAH Foundation,
charitable arm of the Sperry and Hutchinson
Co. la New York. Joining in the enthusiasm of
11
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Deason, Gene. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 78, No. 240, Ed. 1 Friday, July 21, 1978, newspaper, July 21, 1978; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1573436/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.