Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 86, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 22, 1980 Page: 3 of 12
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The wheat farmer who found Pluto
ral
as
it
n
N
t
8
n
shift to locals
When the level of violence
ies
said.
\ '
st
neet at 2
Kreuger,
orbit of Neptune
per-
POST CHRISTMAS DILEMMA
KINGS
1
6 Month Yields UpTo
12.56%
INSTANT HEADACHE
$139
$189
BOLOGNA $119
Decker...AMeut,..Lh. I
U.
Government
AM ....1202.
~PG
19
Agency Bonds ;
N
’1"
plicity judging, judging for the
fellow contestants.
51309.30
State and Local IncomeTax Free
New Braunfels, judges' in-
scholarships.
Issued by Federal Farm Credit Banks
3
3
and Sandra Wied, Miss Wool &
Civic Center.
Other highlights of the week's Mohair of Texas, 1971-1972
Ik.
ENGINEERING & SURVEYING
it Lb,
Doz.
CONTACT CHARLES THOMAS 915/646 4581
915643 2544
A
k
$
/
US Postage
LaDaryl Price joins
Junior Miss events
Negotiations
in oil strike
996
994
izens and
arly Qty
Junior misses winning these Kraft Award; luncheons with
four contest will receive cash various civic organizations in
1 Service
for good
is well as
Tub will
day Hill.
tacted at
bedding
delayed
unders.
iemorial
To Maturity
To Maturity
To Maturity
To Maturity
To Maturity
To Maturity
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22) Check
and double check all of your
financial dealings today If you
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)
Agreements you work out today
are not likely to stand up unless
everything is spelled out in
detail. Take nothinq for oranted
UTILITY SYSTEMS
STREETS & DRAINAGE
LAND PLANNING
FREE ESTIMATES
201 W ADAMS ST
BROWNWOOD, TEXAS
76801
sat
JT79
LOADS OF LEATHER-Three volunteer
students from New Hortzons Ranch teamed
up with their counselor to lead more than
5,000 pounds of scrap leather donated by
Elmo Ledbetter last week The leather will be
used in the arts and crafts shop for projects
and saddle repair On top of the pile to
LADARYL PRICE
...to Junior Miss Pageant
in
nson
TITLE SURVEYS
FARM & RANCH
OIL WELL LOCATIONS
SUBDIVISIONS
turbations that Lowell decided
could only be caused by the
gravitational pull of an undis-
covered planet
Lowell started work at the
Flagstaff observatory in 1906 to
find his “Planet X” by photo-
graphing and comparing identi-
cal sky sections.
By the Editors
of Psychology Today
up hurting themselves. IP.S. About Paul's halitosis:
Someone should tell him.I
McClain said negotiations
started Sunday at area Gulf
Oil Co. plants, including the
company's largest refinery
at Port Arthur.
URS
NER
comen
of in
New Mexico State University
He spoke with reporters in Chi-
cago on Monday to mark the
golden anniversary of his dis-
covery.
Even now, little has been
learned about tiny Pluto Lo-
cated some 2.7 billion miles
from the sun, it meanders the
frigid frontier of the solar sys-
tem, taking 247 Earth years to
complete one orbit of the sun . It
is the ninth and outermost
planet But its lopsided orbit has
temporarily swung it closer to
the sun than Neptune.
In 1978, discovery of a moon of
Pluto helped astronomers
r
7 J
is it
-vio-
xation at
a report
ith Eddie
paving of
Circle
omputer
edfora
es to the
. and a
DEAR HURT: Keep quiet. Your disappointment is
understandable, but it's her money and she has the right to
do whatever she wishes with it.
9)3Hhday
DEAR ABBY: Our very pretty and bright 18 year old
daughter d’ll call her Nancy* graduated from high school last
May. She decided to stay home and work for a year before
going to college Nancy met a 29 year old professional man
about six months ago and they started dating. 11'11 call him
Paul.I They never actually went steady, but Paul gave her a
big rush.
Well, for Christmas. Paul surprised Nancy with a
beautiful one karat diamond ring. It came as a big shock to
Nancy because she wasn’t even considering marriage with
Paul. In fact, she told me she hated to kiss him because he
had a bad case of halitosis!
When Nancy saw the ring, she told Paul she didn't think
she should accept it, but he started to cry, so she kept it
because she didn’t want to hurt his feelings.
Nancy is sure she doesn't want to be engaged, but every
time she tries to return the ring, Paul cries, and talks her in
to keeping it.
Nancy is very tender hearted and Paul is very persuasive,
so do you think it would be alright if Nancy's father return
ed the ring to Paul?
CAPRICORN (Dm. 22-Jan. 19)
Appreciate what you have and all
the good things you have going
for you rather than be con-
cerned that another may have
more External appearances are
deceptive
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )
To Maturity
United States ee
P0•
XIAN
E SHAW
counseler Steve Harris. From left to right are
Elmo Ledbetter, Robert Montez, Chris
Hodges led Earl Lndsey. The ranch, lotated
about seven miles northwest of Goldthwaite,
to owned by Dale Barnett of Goldthwaite
(Bulletm Photo,
BROWNWOOD BUI If TIN
50 YEARS LATER
Tuesday, January 22 IBM
ASTRO-GRAPH
Bernice Bede Osol
A 1-Karat
Millstone
By Abigail Van Buren
1900NY Neas Synd ln<
SAUSAGE
WIENERS
GERMAN
SAUSAGE
Gocdes ItoM... Mg
GROUND
ROUND
tb................
BROWNWOOD, TEXAS 76801
MEMBERS SIPC
FOOD MARKETS
PIERRE OSBOURN
FIRST NATIONAL OFFICE BLDG. SUITE 204
P.O. BOX 219
Do you feel left out? There are secrets to developing the
art of making yourself popular. You're never too young or
too old to learn. Get Abby's booket: “How To Be Popular;
You're Never Too Young or Too Old." Send 11 with a long,
self addressed, stamped (28 cents) envelope to Abby, 132
Lasky Drive, Beverly Hills, Calif. 90212.
pDr
Kpper
l purebred
annually
be Amen
LIBRA (Sept 23-Oct. 22) Be
your own person today Shoulder
your own duties and responsibi-
nes Palming things off on others
could backfire
DEAR HEADACHE: The solution is obvious. Get your
art together on time and you'll have no problem. And if you
can't do that, tell "antsy-pants" to go ahead without you.
that you'll take a cab.
R
EK
10 __
NS
CONLT
2
2
iwood in-
to in total
semester
tend
beginning
n classes
SCORPIO (Oct 24-Mov. 22)
Unless you set a definite sched-
ule today tun activites may take
precedence over serious matters
which should be attended to
now
---6 MONTH YIELDS —
11.41%
12.02%
12.16%
12.31%
12.51%
12.56%
$5,000 minimum and multiples of $5,000
SAGITTARIUS (Nov 23-Dec. 21)
You must be careful not to stop
out of character today and play
up to persons who can do you
some good, while ignoring old
pals The role doesn’T suit vu.
CHEESE
Wisconsin
MRM.........
POTATOES
Russet #1 .......
EGGS
Grade A..........
4
P Dean Abby-
DEAR DILEMMA: Na! Nancy should return the ring to
Paul herself, and if he cries, he cries. It', time Paul learned
that be can't buy whatever he weal, with tear, and
diamond. And Nancy needs to learn that people who “give
Call Your Local ED. Jones Representative Today.
Edward D. Jones & Co.
Members New York Stock Exchange, inc.
calculate that the planet has a
mass of about one-fifth that of
Earth's moon and a density
comparable to water, leading
many astronomers to suggest
that Pluto may resemble a giant
methane snowball.
The search for Pluto was
started early in the 20th century
by Dr. Percival Lowell; an
American astronomer who had
calculated the path of the planet
Neptune But he found slight
irregularities in the predicted
in ice hockey goes up
because pathologically
DEAR ABBY: I have a 76 year old aunt to whom I have
been very close ever since I was a child. She has a heart con
ditio and is making preparations for her last will and testa
ment.
My problem is that I am not mentioned in her will. She has
a lot of property and assets. She came right out and told me
that she was leaving everything to her two sons and their
children! I know this for a fact because she has discussed it
with me.
Abby, since my aunt moved to Florida. I have taken her
out to dinner faithfully, once a week. iShe is a widow.11 have
also taken her shopping every weekend. I handle all her
paper work, pay her bills, cash her checks and even look
after her home. (I wallpapered her home.1.1 could not have
been more attentive to my own mother
I am very hurt to think that she is not leaving me a dime.
Should I tell her how I feel, or keep quiet? And, by the way.
Abby, whom do you think she asked to drive her to the
lawyer about her will? You're right - me!
HURT IN ORLANDO
$189
89*
59’
Alan
Alda
I
ime,
ar"
CRISCO
ilk Cm .............
SUGAR
5 lk.M..............
FOLGERS
wud"as,hae
VuE
N
lent players are provoking
fights'1 Because the deprived
BUY YOUR LUNCH MEATS
8 CHEESE BULK CUT.....
SAVE UPTO 40%
HAMBURGER 700
MitoM........1b. * 7
’ 5,000
’ 10,000
‘15,000
• 20,000
' 50,000
*100,000
are careless and make a
mistake. it could turn out to be a
big one
The stereotype that child
less women are neurotic is as
old as Freud and Ibsen's char-
acter Hedda Gabler But
these days, at least when they
are of childbearing age.
middle-class women who plan
not to have children seem to
be as well-adjusted as women
who plan to be mothers
Psychologist Judith
Teicholz at the Harvard Medi-
cal school studied over 75
married women in their 20s
and 30s. Half were already
planning a first child, the oth-
ers firmly intended to remain
childless in addition to inter-
views. Teicholz used various
standardized tests to measure
the women's emotional
adjustment and femininity
The women planning not to
have children turned out to be
just as well-adjusted and just
as feminine as the women
planning babies. Both groups
described their marriages as
happy and both seemed suc-
cessful in their careers.
Eighty percent of the wom-
en in both groups bad college
degrees and even more had
attained positions of responsi-
bility in professional fields or
in management The women
planning to be childless.
Teicholz speculates, may sim-
ply find their lives rich
enough without offspring
(c) 1979 Pyschology Today
(NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE assn i
What indirectly caused
fracases, Poupart concluded,
was the Ligue’s belief that
violence is the best draw for
paying crowds As the leagues
became more commercial-
ized. trainers and players felt
pressure to make violence a
drawing card
In addition, Poupart found
trainers and players well
aware of a system by which
the NHL pays Ligue teams a
fee if a player makes it to the
majors Again, the players
and trainers believed that
tough quarrelsome players
were more desirable to
scouts, so trainers made sure
that new players know how to
fight dirty
Poupart's study was under
way while a government com-
mission on hockey violence
was also holding hearings, and
since its critical report,
Poupart’s impression is that
hockey organizations have
passed the word to hold down
mayhem in the amateur
league
Still, he says, "the point is
that the overall level of hock-
ey violence does not come
from individual players but
from the social circumstances
in which the game is played
Now that the adverse publici-
ty has died down, if one team
starts to count on violence
again, it could start the cycle
all over.”
stomes6
•I Awx kites
•A c sn."wg Engmew
DEAR ABBY My husband shows a charming, well
mannered personality to others, but not to me.
When we have a social engagement, he always has to be
the first one there, so he gets ready early and starts nagging
me to hurry up.
If rm five minutes late, as soon as we get into the car he
turns the radio on as loud as he can, then he starts shouting
that I had all day to get ready. I'm never on time and he's
sick of always being late on account of me, etc. By the time
we get to the party, I'm in no mood to have a good time.
It's getting so I hate to go anywhere with him. Is there a
solution?
HOUSTON (AP) -
H.J. McClain, regional
director of the Oil, Chemical
and Atomic Workers Union,
says negotiations in a strike
by the union have been
shifted to local levels in
hopes of breaking a deadlock
in the two-week-old walkout.
Bargaining previously had
been conducted at the
union's headquarters in
Denver by a single set of
negotiators. The union's
national bargaining com-
mittee still must’‘approve all
contract offers. McClain
H
& INSULATION
M
Also have storm windows
l doors, turbines.
Call For Free Estimates
643 2591 or 646 6458
Days Nites
1303 Main
The OCAW strike, which
involves about 60,000
workers nationally, started
Jan 8 in a dispute over wage
and fringe benefits.
CORNBREAD
mix 6/H
COKES— $149
wms.so premew
w mere wd. Ciqarettes
mguruesunvuoroummraunnnes
voted Miss Congegniality by her activities will include: Sim-
economic backgrounds from
which many players come
somehow increase their toler-
ance for mayhem?
Those theories are periodi-
cally dusted off by fans and
social scientists alike — and
are of dubious value, accord-
ing to a study by Jean
Poupart. a hockey fan who is
a criminologist at Montreal
University Poupart has pro-
vided fresh proof that players
are encouraged to be violent
by the economic and recruit-
ing policies of the organiza-
tions that finance the teams
Poupart looked at players
while they were still young
amateurs in the association,
which is the main recruiting
ground for the National Hock-
ey League, the Ligue Junior
Majeure du Quebec The
Ligue meets its expenses and
hires professional coaches
through admission fees, and
during Poupart's investigation
in the mid-'70s, violence in the
Ligue had escalated dramati-
cally,
in lengthy interviews,
Poupart asked 39 players and
eight trainers to tell him
about their lives in hockey -
and without prompting almost
everyone brought up a dis-
taste for violence The players
had all been playing since
childhood and all said they
were less violent on the ice
before playing for the league
The young lady named Texas terviews and a scholarship
Junior Miss will compete for the banquet.
national title in a televised Judges for this year's naueant
program from Mobile Ala, this include Gail Singleton, a former
spring. Louisiana Junior Miss; Karen
Preliminary and final Weisman, 1970 America Junior
competitions in creative and Miss; J. Winston English, a 12-
performing arts, poise, per- year veteran of the Louisianna
sonal appearance and physical Junior Miss Pageant; Bill Cook,
fitness will be held Thursday- director of the Baylor
Saturday at the New Braunfels University Theater in Waco;
MILK $i«9
Grade A Limit........Gel. I
BREAD 39‘
EARLY - LaDayrl Price, I
daughter of Darrell and Lou I
Price, left Saturday for New I
Braunfels where she will I
complete with 42 other girls |
from across the Lne Star State I
for the coveted title of Texas I
Junior Miss.
During the week-long com- !
petition in the 22nd annual i
event, LaDaryl will be staying j
at the home of a New Braunfels
family as will all the other 4
contestants. I
The Early High senior will be I
competing in all the contests I
sponsored by the national I
pageant sponsors Kraft, I
planning a party; Kodak, I
photography; and Simplicity I
Patterns, sewing. I
A fourth sponsor, Coca-Cola,
will provide the “Spirit of
Junior Miss" Award for the
"The negotiations with
Gulf have been remanded to
the local levels for further
exploration of ideas,"
McClain said. “This method
should help us handle more
ideas."
Pork Steak $1
Ry SANDRA L RALMER The theory behind his ex- Tombaugh said he had no the task which made him
Associated Press Writer periment was simple A star idea when he took the job that famous
CHICAGO (AP) - Fifty appears relatively fixed in the he would end up exploring the ...
years ago, a 24-year-old former night sky But in comparison, a distant fringes of the solar svs. In F ebruary 1930, after exam-
wheat farmer peered far out planet - its very name means tem. ining some 400,000 stars at the
into the solar system and elec "wanderer" - rushes along its . constellations at Taurus and the Jenu"y 2 MOO
trifled the science world by dis- orbital path, shifting drastically . It didnt matter what they western portion of Gemini, ck, Comheg. ‘eendonis m
covering a new planet against the ftrozen backdrop of wanted me to do Just anything Tombaugh was examining concerned Bonds wi be estab-
the underworld from 1800 until his death in 1016, absolutely broke When I got on the. constellation He had com- AQUANUS (Jan 20-Feb. M)
It was a big break for me,” The search resumed in 1929, that train to go to Flastafr l Pleted about two-thirds of the low judgment in business or
he recalled. "At the time lhad this time using two new pieces <Mnt have enough money for photographic field. fnpnciadattsesomaynpnnheu
nocollege education, only high the return fare " Suddenly, there it was
school. 1 Ph Pe and a Mink The oripinal niton pallid for . " ' expert advice Find out more of
Tombaugh had studied the comparator - a devise that romeaud . mPlanaledalor A dun object was popping in »ha< sas ahead lor you the
stars since he was 12, growing rapidly interchanged the photo- thbaugh tomaksandndeeop and out of the background field yearsfoovpngyounbrhdazby
up in rural Tlinots and la^ eraphs.tobe compared, i a tronomerswniaxnernepeeform ofstars. GrapmRete!Ma3Pop‛eacn0
Kansarawhenatmes.got dough peevenlygbndyshademwovadap theitedious af comparing That's tt!" Tombaugh re- N 8030019 aRaore
lwn otJXXy in Flag- pear and’disappeaf’asthe ph- them using the comparator members exclaiming. "Every- Scemypedaya,00,
soon.Tambauehprovedtobe ""imKestserydtorydirectorheld
photographic plates of the sky Sitting for hours at a time on a such a capable astronomer that off telling thes world, until fur- extravagant.Dont. puzsome.
that confirmed Pluto's nii- mountaintop in a dark dome he was asked to compare the ther tests confirmed the dis- "ing ust because • "end does
fence peering into the sky was plates as well. "My heart sank covery. AMIEs (March 21-Apri W)
It was the discoven of a life- tedious, painstaking work, too to my knees," Tombaugh said Then on March 13, 1930, the Complications could reun « you
time for Tombaugh and laun- boring for someone with a doc- Since he had made the plates. 75th anniversary of Percival 1Va10 Play, polticsuwith Pas
ched him on a long and tor's degree in astronomy So. Tombaugh knew what a' starry I swell 's birth, the world finally podalorPonereryorurse yoi
productive career in astrono- directors of the observatory mess was pictured on them learned that Tombaugh had have to jump on someone’s
my, sought a highly skilled amateur Each image would have to be found the mystery planet that handwagon.nc
Tombaugh, 74, now is profes- to make the plates. They chose carefully examined. I wasn't a Lowell had predicted some 30 Maxkeno promises“or"comm0.
sor emeritus of astronomy at Tombaugh bit happy," Tombaugh said of years before ments today which later coula
..... — —--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- give you problems trying to fulfill
Don't offer what you can t deliv-
Cashing in on body checking SSSSSB
_ Lady Luck may not be available
• --------------------—-- when you need her
•----T---— h---- CANCER (June 21-July 22) Flat-
• • DvruII (M-V tery to a tool which you will not
• • TlUIVLUVI be able to use competently
• d •-m aww today Say nice things about
•D • ToAV others but be sincere
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Deason, Gene. Brownwood Bulletin (Brownwood, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 86, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 22, 1980, newspaper, January 22, 1980; Brownwood, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1573670/m1/3/: accessed June 29, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Brownwood Public Library.