Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 25, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 12, 1978 Page: 40 of 46
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MARKETS
What’s up in religion?
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Graham’s
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past large cities and a chang- 8
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Turn stress into strength
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HOME 646-0701
OFFICE 643-1549
646-8223
Commerce Square
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SOUTHWEST
APPLIANCE
America," the mighty rivers
which are important lifelines of
NOW
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"Darn Betty Ford! Now EVERYBODY wants a
face lift. ”
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13 Hawa
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14 City .
15 Epoc
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17 Amer
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11 Eagle
20 Flh
birds
22 Dim
23 Tenn
25 Romg
27 Blaci
21 Varie
agate
31 offer
32 Repe
34 Boho
38 Marg
40 AM (
42 Beldi
43 Beve
45 In de
47 Engli
town
50 Smal
51 Pron
52 City
Arno
• AM/FM/FM Stereo MPX radio with sliderule tun-
ing and built-in AFC.
• Auto/manual 8-track Recorder/Player featuring
single button ALC (Automatic Level Control)
recording with auto-stop.
• Full size deluxe automatic BSR record changer
with diamond stylus, cue/pause and stylus pres-
sure adjustment.
• Built-in sleepswitch for automatic shut-off after
last record is played.
• Twin "Bass Reflex" full range speaker systems
in matching walnut vinyl - veneer foam front
cabinets
• Hinged dust cover, FM dipole antenna, twin
recording microphones. 45 RPM adapter and 8-
track storage compartment.
WertmuUor: Two films on top
15.
Page 5-
ACR
SOUTHWEST
APPLIANCE
A TV
Who are the nation’s
most influential religious
figures’ U S News and
25558
penhagen. raphy with representation from
"Photography of the World" many countries. The British
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better thoughts and actions.
They can make you or break
you. Under the grip of their
power, you will grow up or
blow up. They can be heavy
weights or gossamer wings.
They can shake you — or
they can take you - out of a
rut. Stop deriding and start
riding them
BROWNWOOD BULLETIN
the country. From original 139
sources to ocean outlets, they :
flow through rugged mountains, 98
sprawling onto the sandy
beach. The surfers have
learned not to fight the
waves but to ride them.
You can do the same thing
with the points of stress and
tension in your life. Many
people try to fight against
the stress and tension they
are feeling, and usually they
lose the battle and blow their
temper, quit their job or
develop an ulcer.
The secret to winning this
battle is to turn tension into
tools and stress into
strength. Just as the power-
ful wave can either send you
sprawling or carry you for-
ward in smooth, beautiful
flight, so, in some cases, can
tensions send you crashing
down or motivate you to
slap of the next wave which
will come crashing over
them. Often they are sent
stumbling and sputtering
against the gritty, shell-la-
den bottom.
falling gently with the undu-
lating waves. They turn
their boards toward the ris-
ing, oncoming waves, stand
up and as a mountainous
wave swells to a whi-
tecapped crest, they ride
serenely and confidently
shoreward, pushed by the
power of the same wave that
will send other people
wdB
/. _.
Eddie Perkins
Km
A Planned and Controlled Sub-Division
Adjacent to Brownwood Jr. High.
Affordable Homes — Gracious Living
by INDIAN CREEK DEVELOPMENT
4 WAYS TO PURCHASE
E Attendance was good at the
• Brownwood Cattle Auction
— Wednesday on a very active
market with numbers of cattle
being down due to the recent
rains. AD cattle were fully
. steady with Stocker steer and
B heifer calves being as much as
A ($15 higher in some instances.
X Stocker cows and pairs were $10
■ to $25 higher with packer cows
| "and bulls being fully steady.
44 Prices were as follows:
।% Stocker Steer Calves wts 250-
I } 425 70-84; Stocker Heifer Calve*
★ What’s Up ★
A capsule view of tastes, Interests and attitudes
Zales holds the line on
diamond value: Each pair is only
$60
Genuine diamond ear stud pairs in 14 karat yellow gold.
Off in the distance you’ll
see others, young golden-
skinned boys and girls as-
tride surfboards, rising and
By Robert Schuller
Have you ever watched a
bird with its wings extended,
seemingly floating in space?
The tiny creature appears to
be suspended in the air.
What it is doing is leaning
against the wind, using the
tension or movements of the
air to support itself. As the
wind blows towards the bird
it .simple rests instead of
wrestling against it.
When you are at the
seashore, watch as the
rough waves roll in and
break against the jetties,
creating noisy, bouncing,
rough surf. In the shallow
places you'll see people
standing, tense and
apprehensive, bracing
themselves for the fierce
SHOW HOME FURNISHED AND OPEN DAILY
1802 SIERRA
Purchase Early and Choose Colors, Carpet, Brick, Etc.
World Report recently
posed that question to 1,200
opinion makers. Their top
choice* were:
The Rev. Billy Graham
evangelist.
The Rev. Theodore M.
Hesburgh, president of
Notre Dame University.
Cardinal Terence J.
Cooke, Roman Catholic
archbishop of New York
Joseph L. Bernardin,
Roman Catholic archbishop
of Cincinnati
William P. Thompson.
president of the National
Council of Churches.
Cooke, Bernardin and
Thompson tied for third
place in the survey.
I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE
ASSN. I
YOUR
FOR$I
DI§Al
INK!.
NOW I
INK Y
RUBS
BRA
I
What’s up in lighting?
Days are getting shorter. That means the electric lights
in our homes are getting more use.
Here are some tips for cutting lighting costs from
General Electric:
1. Switch from incandescent to fluorescent lighting. A
double 20-watt fluorescent kitchen ceiling fixture will
provide about as much light,as one 150-watt, two 75-watt
or three 60-watt incandescents at half the cost.
2. Use 50-watt reflector bulbs instead of 100-watt bulbs
in pole lamps or wall units with bell-shaped holders. With
standard 100-watt bulbs, most light is trapped In the
holder. The small reflector flood is designed to direct the
light where it's needed. (The same applies to downlights
over sinks and in other parts of the home.)
3. Use three-way bulbs, instead of regular bulbs, in
table lamps. The lamps can be turned on high for reading
end lowered for conversation.
4. Switch from 7-watt night light bulbs to the new 4-
watt night lights. The 4-watters have a clear finish, which
makes them appear almost as bright as the 7-watt coated
bulbs.
S. Try fluorescent stick lights under wall cabinets in
the kitchen. The 33-watt units may provide enough work
light to enable you to turn off ceiling fixtures.
6. Use standard-life bulbs rather than the "long life"
models.
7. Convert outdoor gas lanterns to incandescent post
light bulbs, if possible. Otherwise, have the gas lanterns
shut off. Use safety-security floodlighting to illuminate
the area.
B. Put outdoor safety-security lighting on a timer or
photocell unit. That will turn the lights off automatically,
eliminating all-day electricity waste if someone forgets to
flick the switch. Use 75-watt flood lights instead of 150-
waiters.
9. Use light shades of paint or wallpaper inside your
home. Light-colored surfaces reflect more light, permit-
ting use of lower wattage bulbs.
IB. Keep ceiling fixture* dean to maximize light
output.
I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
pated as smaller and more ver- trates them as inalienable
settle cameras emerged, break- righto which are among the
ing loose from dogmatic art basic needs of mankind, giving
rules and obsolete techniques existence a meaning From 17.-
Pictures too proceeded toward 000 entries from 51 countries, a
asssfcrjs "sxs:
just an end in themselves as show that work sometimes
photoprints. looks like leisure and leisure
Erich Salomon nioneer of can sometimes look like work,
photojournalism, was honored Special prizes were awarded
with a rediscovered exhibition: this year for photographs from
49 panels of his classic photo- the annual World Press Photo
graphs. They were the first Competition in Holland which
candid views of European showed the humane nature of
statesmen in private
Tqc.EsA,"
© 1978Inc.
- \
form* opened new
""GGEHE-
Zales and Friends make wishes come true!
ZALES
The Diamond Store •
_________________646-4584
935
=e
"Your Stereo Dealer”
TANGLEWOOD
PHOTOKINA EXHIBIT, Valentin Sobolev of Moscow tri2ng425s4580s8i gSteer
was a special prize winner with this photo of children yearlings 52-60; Plain Feeder
crossing a street in Angola. It illustrates humane Steers 5358; Plain Feeder
photography in a world of tension and conflict Heifer* 50-55; Cows & Calves-
pr. Good $450-$600; Plain $385-
$450 , Stocker Cows 38-48
Slaughter Cattle Fat calves
53-56; Fat cows 36-43; Utility &
cutter cows 35-42; Canners 32-
. . . . ._______ 34; Shells 25-31; Stocker bulls
played a visual phenomenon, 4252: buils 42551
the "Photo Novel," monthly pe “2i lpughterbuls42e5l; g.
nodical* with a circulation of REPRESENTATIVESALES
16 million copies of 90 novels. Leon Woods, Brownwood,
"Photo Novels" are stories Blk Hfr. 350 lbs. at 68.50; West
$16995
ing countryside of wide diver- The men who run Conrail
sity. In addition, a group of 16 apparently are grown-up lit-
American photographers were tie boys who liked to wreck
presented in "New Color Vi- their toy train systems.
sions." Among those represent-
ed: William Eggleston, Ralph My variable factors are
Gibson, Stephen Shore and Neal your error, in computation.
Slavin.
All of the photographic dis-
plays in exhibit form were sup-
plepronted by moving pictures
in funs and multi-vision shows
in sound. The subject matter,
from retrospective to contem-
porary and experimental, also
ranged from the work of noted
film makers to that of talented
amateurs.
A highlight of the film pro-
gram was the honoring of 88-
year-old H.C. Hans Vogt, for
his part in perfecting optical
sound film. That took place
with two partners between 1919
and 1925 and culminated in a
gala sound-film premiere in a
cinema theatre in Berlin in
1922. Unfortunately its potentia-
lities were not pursued or ex-
ploited in Germany. The patent
righto found their way to Swit-
zerland and eventually, to the
United States.
What’s up in roller coasters?
More than ever people need a place to screem,’' says
author Gary Kyriazi in explaining the popularity of rotter
coasters Kyriazi, who has probably ridden on more roller
coasters than anyone else in the world, ranks these
coasters as his favorites:
1. Shock Wave Six Flags Over Texas; Arlington, Tex.
("It s got a double vertical loop and an overall ride that
seems to hit the limits of human endurance on G
force ”)
2. Mindbender Six Flags Over Georgia, Atlanta, Ga
("Another 1978 double looper ... they added a 45-degree
tilted spiral at the end of the ride ")
3. The Revolution Magic Mountain; Valencia, Calif.
("The first of the great steel coasters when it appeared
just two years ago... it has a single vertical loop, the first
since Coney Island faded with the Loop-the-Loop back in
1900.")
4. uperdooperlooper: Hersheypark; Hershey, Pa.
("Basically the same as the Revolution, albeit shorter.")
5. The Loch Ness Monster Busch Gardens; Willi-
amsburg, Va. ("This new ride has two non-consecutive
but interlocking vertical loops and features a pitch-dark
triple spiral through a mountain.")
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN I
&TV
106 N. Center
European showed the humane nature of
meetings people in a world of tension and
The exhibit was produced by conflict The top winner, were
Salomon in London in 1936 and Andrew Hosie of Scotland; Ed-
had been shown only once pre- die Adams, Associated Press
viously. photographer of New York; and
"Thirty Years Ago” color Valentin Sobolev of Photochro-
came of age and was made nika Tass, Moscow,
wallthreshheagngrapybti JssasssErss!
two photographers who started The World of Photography
then and are still active today: came from six countries.
Ferenc Berko of Aspen, Colo., The contribution from France
and K. Helmer-Petersen of Co- was devoted to fashion photog-
(l)CASH
(2) H.U.D.—F.H.A.
(3) V.A.
(4) CONVENTIONAL
•All Brick •Dishwasher
•2 Car Garage •Vinyl Paper
•2 Baths •Garbage Disposal
•Wood Burning Fireplace ’Panelled Cabinet Doors
•Carpet •Sheet Vinyl In Kitchen & Baths
•Range Hood & Vent ’Central Heat
•Cathedral Ceilings ’Refrigerated Air
e 2"
t.%
4
N
M
What’s up in foreign films
Foreign films once drew 11. Seven Beauties"
their U S audiences only (Lina Wertmuller).
from among the intellectual 12. “One Sings, the
elite But more and more Other Doesn't” (Agnes
Americans are now learning Varda) '
they can read the subtitles
of foreign films without
missing out on the action.
According to "'Variety."
these were the top foreign-
language films of 1977 in
terms of U.S. box office
appeal
1. “Cousin Cousine"
(Jean-Charles Tacchella).
2. “Black and White in
Color” (Jean-Jacques
Annaud)
3. “In the Realm of the
Senses" (Nagisa Oshima).
4. “Small Change" (Fran-
cois Truffaut).
5. "Pardon Mon Affaire"
(Yves Robert).
6. “La Grande Bour-
geoise"(Mauro Bolognini).
7. “Mohammad. Messen-
ger of God" (Moustapha
Akkad)
9. “Madam Kitty"
(Giovanni Tinto Brass).
9 Allegro Non Troppo"
(Bruno Bozzetti)
10. “Man on the Roof"
(Bo Widerberg).
A* exhibition director Fritz
Gruber summed it up it was
photography in all its great di- included the results of a world- presentation dealt with the ap-
versity. wide competition to mark the plication of photography in in-
’ “Fifty Years Ago" showed 30th anniversary of the United structional courses at the BBC
how photographic and cinema- Nations' Declaration of Human Open University Italy dis-
r 5 Righto. Entitled, Work and ‘
Leisure," the exhibition illus-
13. "That Obscure Object
of Desire" (Luis Bunuel).
14. “Swept Away" (Lina
Wertmuller).
15. “The Lacemaker"
(Claude Goretta).
Current box office leader
among 1978 films is the
Academy Award-winning
Madame Rosa."
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE
ASSN. I
3
7, 989
Pgdm6
By IRVING DESFOR
AP Newsfeatures
There* another side to
Photokina, the world’s largest
photo fair, which recently drew
122,988 visitors from 118 coun-
tries to Cologne, Germany, to
set a parade of new cameras
and accessories.
The hardware of equip-
ment filled 12 giant hall* of the
Messe, the Fairground* on the
Rhine River in viewfinder-sight
of the city* famous twin-spired
cathedral. The "software” of
exhibitions and films went on
display separately in the Kun-
sthalle, the Art Gallery in the
city's center, and remained 10
days longer it was a 17-day
show of photo displays and non-
stop films
scripted for photographic pre- Texas Rehabilitation, Abilene,
sentation in a sequence accom- Blk. WF Str. 605 lbs. at 65.50;
panied by accompanying text also, Blk. WF Str. 575 lbs. at
or direct speech written as bal- 70.00; D R Seward, Brown-
loons on. the photos, in comic wood, Blk. Str. 235 lbs. at 84.00;
hook peoples Plez McNurlen, Brownwood,
thoughteindicatedoTheottaltan WF Str. 700 Ibs. at 62.50; Samc
JheL'S market Lee, Brownwood, Bra. Bull 1600
"Japanese Polarities” illus- ”• at 50.75; Nell Lancaster,
trated the work of nine Japa- May, WF Str. 380 Ibs. at 78.00;
nese photographers They Vin Jeffreys, Brady, Blk. cow
ranged from the meditative na- 905 lbs. at 48.00; Jerry Hinds,
ture of landscapes and flowers Blanket, Blk. Str. 675 lbs. at
to aggressive illustrations of 62.00; Walter Fry, Brownwood,
Tokyo, its people and archi- WF Str. 455 lbs. at 75.00; S. T.
tecture. . . Cutbirth, Brownwood, Bra cow
Germany presented an audio- 1175 Ibs. at 44.75, also, Bra. cow
vision show with vertical pro- 1975 , " ,, en
jection entitled "Man Discovers 12751bs.at45_______________
the Earth from Above." It fo- ----------------------------
cuses on a new perception of Barbs
our globe with the advent of ----------------------------
satellite photography and its By PHIL PASTORET
ability to observe, to chart, to
spy and to explore. Before you step on
The American contribution anyone's toes, be sure you
was a display by National Geo- can do it forcefully enough
graphic of "Waterways of so they can’t kick you back.
Sunday. November 12, 1978
11(0710
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Deason, Gene. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 79, No. 25, Ed. 1 Sunday, November 12, 1978, newspaper, November 12, 1978; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1573533/m1/40/?rotate=270: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.