The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 13, 1976 Page: 4 of 22
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PAGE FOUR
HD Woman Of Year
To Be Announced
The annual Commission-
ers' luncheon will be held
Friday. May 14. at the First
Unitec Methodist Church in
Tulia. Swisher County H.D.
Club women will host the
event according to Mrs. Judy
Carlisle. County Extension
Agent
The Triple E committee,
composed of Mrs. Loyd No-
bile. Mrs. Joe Bean and Mrs.
Hoyet Burnam. is in charge
of arrangements. Mrs. Bean
has researched the past hist-
ory of H.D. work in the
county and will give as
thumbnail sketch of this hist-
ory . All past Home Demon-
stration agents will be spec-
ial guests There have been
11 agents in the county and
all have been invited to the
luncheon.
Special recognition will be
given to Jr. and Sr. H.D. club
Women of the Year. They
will be named from the
follow ing list of candidates:
Mrs. Bovd Young. Alex-
ander; Mrs. 0. T. McElroy,
Childress; Mrs. E. F. Rain-
ey. Kress; Mrs. Alvin Stark,
Love; Mrs. Rov Dodson. Vigo
Park; Mrs. W. H. Rector.
Union-Salem; Mrs. Deryl
House. Town and Country;
and Mrs. Volney Sprawls.
Sr.. Elkins.
All Home Demonstration
club women, commissioners,
former agents, charter mem-
bers. club honorees and their
husbands are invited to the
luncheon.
KEITH WINTER
Rotary Slates
WTSU Speaker
Keith L. Winter will be
guest speaker of the Tulia
Rotary Club’s weekly lunch-
eon on Wednesday, May 19
at 12 noon. Winter, Director
of Development of West
Texas State University, will
present a program entitled
“Future Expansion of
WTSU".
Winter received a A.S.
degree from Tyler Junior
College in 1955 and his B.S.
degree from Baylor Universi-
ty in 1957. He received
certificates from Institutes of
Organizational Management
and Industrial Development
Presently, Winter serves
as president of West Texas
Swimming Assn., was past
Mark Wyatt Is Graduate
LEVI I LAND — Com-
mencement exercises were
held Friday at South Plains
College for 305 prospective
graduates, including Mark
Wyatt of J ulia. Associate in
Science Degree.
Commencement speaker
was Dr. Roy C. McClung.
president of W ay land Baptist
( ollege at Plainview.
L C. Kearney Jr., chair-
man of the SPC Board of
Regents, presented diplomas
and certificates to graduates
in Texan Dome.
Dr. Marvin Baker, SPC
president, presented the an-
nual Vera Sue Spencer A-
ward. Certification of gradu-
ates were made by Frank
Hunt, dean of the technical-
vocational-oecupational divi-
sion. and Nathan Tubb. aca-
demic dean.
Graduation music was pro-
vided by the SPC choir under
direction of Harley Bulls.
Accompanist was Beverly
Barton.
VL (ginitai
_n_n_BY H. M. BAGGARLY
(Continued From Page One)
asked to accept it solely on tne recommend-
ation of giant munitions manufacturers and a
few generals and admirals who will soon
retire and go to work as vice presidents for
these same munitions manufacturers!
All Congress knows about the real need
is what it is told by the M-l complex.
The M-I complex is now asking for
increases in militarv spending equal to
ONE HALF OF THE’ENTIRE CONGRESS-
CONTROLLABLE FEDERAL BUDGET,
while cutting back or eliminating funds for
nearly every other non-military program.
U'I COMPLEX WANTS 21% more to
buy additional naval warships and
forces. . to be paid for in part by eliminating
328.(MX) public jobs and denying food stamps
to 5.3 million needy people presently
eligible.
M l wants 22% more for research on a
new Arms tank, transport helicopters. F-18
combat jet and other weapons systems. . .to
be paid for in part by making elderly people
pav a higher share of their short-term
hospital stays.
M l wants 29% more to produce new
nuclear weapons systems.
HE ENTIRE SPECIAL milk program for
■ children, eliminated by the Ford
military budget, could be paid for by one B-l
bomber: cost. $40 million each.
The $38 billion total of military cost
ov erruns to date could have cleaned up all U.
S. rivers and lakes.
One Navy A-6-E fighter plane equals
the cost of keeping one full fire company
operative in New York City. As things now
stand, national defense spending will in-
crease by 20% while aid to U. S. cities and
states will decline 30%.
With the level of U. S. nuclear power
already admittedly capable of annihilating
the enemy several times over, much of the
macho Congress knows it will really be
voting for a higher defense budget in order
to sustain arms jobs and profits in plants like
Lockheed. Rockwell. Grumman and
Northrup.
fl^MORLOV KK. WHAT seldom enters into
this continuing "peace through
strength-' debate is the fact that so much of
the arms budget does not go for strenghten
ing America's own arsenals but for export
mg arms abroad, merely raising salaries of
militarv men. both active and retired,
enabling officers to live in even greater
luxurv. flying our planes on pleasure jaunts
to every spot on the globe at a cost in the
millions, experimenting with interesting
gadgets, and expediting military
promotions.
Statistics as to our military capability,
as used by Reagan and Ford, can be used to
prove anything on earth!
^^OT ONE OF US wants to be unprepared
for war Not one of us wants money
wasted on social programs
Hut the problem is. . we have no wav of
knowing the real state of our preparedness
so long as our onlv source of information is
Lockheed and the generals and admirals, the
M I complex.
And the stakes are too high to make a
mistake.
^^UKING A CAMPAIGN, candidates are
W9 expected to have an opinion on and a
program for every conceivable issue. It is
asking too much to expect a candidate for
President to outline a detailed plan for
dealing with every problem which will face
him the minute he steps inside the White-
House. I
No candidate is qualified to speak until
h< has all the facts which are not available
until he has crossed over the threshold He
ruav havi opinions, philosophies, but noth-
ing more lo speak out prematurely is to be
.. f i Mil I hat's why Eisenhower had to retract
so mans pre-election pronouncements He
a as going to cut the military budget,
m mi ruber-' Instead he raised it. not because
he was a liar, not because he didn't want to
cut it—but because he spoke out before he
knew what he was talking about
IIMMY CARTER, knowing that, is slow
t9 to speak about specific plans until he
has all the information.
We simply MUST accept a new Presi
dent by FAITH.
We can only trust he is honest, that he
has a desire to do the right thing, and that he
has the good judgment and courage to
surround himself with the right advisers.
A w ise candidate seeks to avoid subjects
on which he is only partly informed.
Meanwhile, the nutheads. the unin-
formed will demand specific answers to
specific questions and nuthcad candidates,
like Reagan, will tell them what they want to
hear!
AO MANY VOTERS will not permit a
^9 candidate to be candid, honest, and
straight forward. One-issue voters demand
that he concur w ith their one pet prejudice as
a price for their support. To win one vote, he
must necessarily lose another—and so it
becomes “good politics" to be less than
candid, less than straight-forward—and the
voter himself is to blame.
■ F JIMMY CARTER gets the Democratic
■ nomination as appears will happen at
this time, it would seem that he should prav
for a Reagan victory at the Republican
conv ention.
Reagan is to the I9~6 election what
Goldwaterwas to the 1964 contest History
seems to prove that a majority of the people-
seek the more moderate candidate.
A Reagan-C'arter contest would be seen
as a far right vs. moderate contest, whereas
a Ford-Carter contest would be viewed bv
many as a moderate vs. moderate. It isn't
that this is necessarily the case. Some-
candidates. such as Percy or Hatfield, might
make Ford appear a far righter himself. But
in comparison with Reagan, he definitely is
made to appear more moderate than he is.
With a Goldwater or a Reagan on the
Republican ticket, the Democrats can afford
to field a more conservative condidate in
order to attract the moderates—and the
liberals won't have anv other place to go.
Also, if Reagan is the GOP nominee, the
Republicans will lose the advantage of
incumbency, the feeling of many that a new
man deserves a second term, and the other
built in advantages now held by Ford.
Since it would be an insult to Ford not to
nominate him under the circumstances,
there probably would be a reaction among
the moderates in the Republican Party, a
tendency to vote against Reagan in
November.
VHE RF.PL'BLICANS are smart enough
M to know that the large Reagan
support in such places as Texas, Alabama
and Indiana is not primarily Republican
support hut support from John Birch type
Democrats, “conservative Democrats.” if
you please. And this is the type support
Republicans must alwavs have to win. being
a minority party.
Republicans have never in history won
an election by themselves, they have had to
have the support of so-called independents
and so-called Democrats.
So from a partisan standpoint, it would
suit us just tine tor renegade Democrats to
swing the Republican nomination to Ronald
Reagan.
Reagan may he the darling of the 13th
District of lexas, most of lexas. for that
matter, but that doesn't mean that he is the
darling of the majority of Americans
A PEAKING OF POPULAR chokes, many
^9 victories are more hollow than they
sound. We heard about a “Reagan sweep"
in the lexas primary. Yet Reagan received
only 1.3% of the potential vote in lexas!
Ford received 1.7% and even Jimmy ( arter
received only 8 9%.
Wc have government by minority- and
only the people are to blame!
THE TULIA (Swisher County) HERALD
STRIKETTE
BOWLING
•y FRAN BURTON
On Tuesday night. May 4
Bill's Market and City Drug
Store had the roll off for
second place team in the
league. Bill's Market won 3
to become the second place
team. Bill's Market is still in
3rd place in Class D in the
State Tournament after ano-
ther weekend of competition
in Longview.
League standings at end of
second half are: Western
Auto - 40'/: wins. 18‘/j lost.
61.923 pins: City Drug Store
-47Vj wins. 20'/2 lost. 56.514
pins; Big Tex Cattle and
Grain Inc. of Hereford - 41
wins. 27 lost. 44.934 pins;
Reeves Insurance of Tulia -
39'/2 wins. 29‘/j lost. 52,44’'
pins; First National Bank of
Tulia - 39 wins. 29 lost.
52,319 pins; Bill's Market -
38 wins. 30 lost. 57,741 pins;
Fhtel’s Hair Design of Plain-
view - 37 wins, 31 lost.
54.596 pins; Plantation. Inc. -
31'2 wins, 36' 2 lost. 57,268
pins; El Camino Dining
Room - 231 2 wins. 44' i lost.
46,180 pins; Jimmy Dean
Meat Company of Plainview -
22 w ms. 46 lost. 51.382 pins;
Royal Park Fashions - 21
wins. 4"1 lost. 42,6’’3 pins;
president of Amarillo Aqua-
tic Club. Baylor Panhandle-
Club and Lawrence Knife
and Fork Club He is a board
member of the West Texas
Alumni Assn.. Rotarv C'lub.
Scottish Rite- Mason, advisor
to West lexas Foundation.
Director of lexas Heritage-
Foundation and a member of
President ’ s Development
Council of West Texas.
Winter and his wife, Bet-
tve. have two sons. Kent. 13
and Jeffrey. 11
Dear Editor:
The Panama Canal is not
vital to the defense of this
Nation. It is too vulnerable to
sabotage to be dependable.
The Canal IS valuable to
our Pacific trade, hut we
have an alternative in the
Southern Pacific railroad—
one ot the few railroads
operating at a profit. AM
IRAK has just laid new.
heavv steel track and in-
stalled modern, microwave
dispatching. It is beautiful,
but it is onlv a beginning
Single diesel locomotive un-
its pull 150 cars up to ’’0
m.p.h.!! What will be need-
ed is DOl'Bl I trac k
Due to the POPULATION
EXPLOSION wc will witness
a terrifying social, political
and economic commotion in
all of Latin America in the
coming decades, and it will
be ANTI — United States'
Thus. anv rapport, trade,
understanding that can be
effected, will be very dcsir
able.
We did not BUY the
Panama Canal as Ronald
Reagan falsely reports—we
LEASED it under T. R.’s
“big stick" gun-boat di-
plomacy. and all of Latin
America knows this. To at-
tempt to FORCE the issue
militarily would involve this
Nation in the equivalent of
VIETNAM with a return of
the Draft and all of the social,
economic and political con-
sequences.
Here is another instance in
which so-called Right Wing
politicians do not think prob-
lems through to their ulti
mate conclusions.
Another example of this is
in California where Ronald
Reagan put "able bodied
people oil Welfare and to
work". According to Kepub
liean H.E.W statistics 5
percent of Welfare recipients
are FRAUDS. This figure
could be reduced to 3 percent
by DOUBLING the present
cost of administration, which
would be THREE times the
cost of the frauds! But get
this: More than 80% of
welfare recipients are too
young, too old or not mental
ly or phvNicallv able to work.
That does not leave much to
manipulate.
What Ronald Reagan did
in California was to take
mothers ol small children off
Welfare and put them to
work—as if care of small
children is not "work'' of the
most valuable quality to soci
ety. Mothers IN THE HOME
of small children is the most
critical preventive of
( RIME—witness Billy the
Kid.
Kind regards.
W E LOCKHART M l)
401 N Fourth St
Alpine. Ic-xas
and Inman's Welding Serv-
ice - 18'/i wins, 49l/j lost.
40.152 pins.
Top ten scratch team ser-
ies are Western Auto - 2034;
2022; Plantation. Inc. - 2008;
Western Auto - 2008; West-
ern Auto - 2000; Western
Auto - 1985; Bill's Market -
1968; Western Auto - 1962;
1960; and 1948.
Top ten handicap team
series are Plantation - 2467;
Bill’s Market - 2450; Jimmy
Dean Meat Co. - 2441;
Western Auto - 2438; Bill’s
Market - 2415; Western Auto
- 2406; 2400; Bill's Market -
2380; Western Auto - 2371
and 2369.
Top ten scratch team
games are Western Auto -
727; 724; 722; 706; 706;
Plantation - 703; Western
Auto - 696; Jimmy Dean
Meat Co. - 694; Western
Auto - 693 and Plantation
Inc. - 693.
Top ten handicap team
games are Western Auto -
880: Jimmy Dean Meat Co. -
866; Plantation Ine. - 856:
Ethel's Hair Design - 847;
Plantation Inc. - 845; West-
ern Auto - 845: Western Auto
- 84J; City Drug Store - 839;
Bill's Market - 836 and 834.
Top ten individual games
rolled were Jo Garrett of
Bill's Market - 238; Virginia
Word of Big Tex Cattle and
Grain - 233: Dolores Rossi of
Plantation Inc. 220; Jo
Garrett - 21 7; Louise Wood of
Western Auto - 217; Fran
Burton of Western Auto -
215; Jo Ann Rice of Reeves
Insurance - 21J: Connie O’-
Donald of Jimmy Dean Meat
Co. -212; 212: Jenny Tucker
of Plantation 211; Mvrle
Spann of Western Auto - 210:
Louise Wood of Western
Auto - 210; Mattie Voylcs of
Jimmv Dean Meat Co 200:
Mvrle Spann • 200. and
1 ouise Wood - 200
Top ten individual series
rolled w ere Jo Garret of Bill 's
Market - 59h; Connie O'-
Donald of Jimmy Dean Meat
Co. - .-'05; Louise Wood of
Western Auto - 580; Flore a
Jones of ( its Drug Store
567; Louise Wood 5»>4.
Florea Jones - 550; Mvrle
Spann of Western Auto ■>50;
Fran Burton of Western \uto
- 555; Louise Wood • 552; lo
Garrett - 550: and Myrle
Spann ■ 548
There were 34 each 2(Mi
and over games and H2 each
500 plus series rolled bv
league members during the
|0’’5-~6 season.
Top three individual hand-
icap games are Virginia
Word of Big lex ( .title and
(tram - 2”5; Jo Garrett ot
Bill s Market 273; aad
Dolores Knsst ol Plantation
Inc. - 256; Top three indivi
dual handicap series arc lo
Garrett - "’01; C onnie O'Don
Debbie Cox Is Honored
LUBBOCK —Phi Kappa
Phi. all university honor so-
ciety, initiated approximately
275 Texas Tech University
students and five faculty
members at its spring ban-
quet recently.
The- initiates included Deb-
bie Cox of Tulia.
Initiates are among the top
10 per cent of the senior and
graduate school classes and
the top 2 per cent of the
junior class. Texas Tech's
enrollment is more than 22.
500. Scholarship and c haract-
er arc- the basis for election to
aid - 69|; and Eula Brown of
City Drug Store - 675.
Top ten high averages at
end of season with two-thirds
or more of games bowled
during the season are Louise
Wood of Westeru Auto - 167;
Fran Burton of Western Auto
- 160; Mvrle Spann of West
ern Auto - 154; Ha/el Davis
of Plantation Ine. - 153; Jo
Garrett of Bill s Market -
152; Dolores Rossi of Planta-
tion Ine. 152; Margie North
eutt of C ity Drug Store - 148;
Jo Ann Rice of Reeves Insur
a nee - 146; Mattie Voyles of
Jimmy Dean Meat Co. - 146
and Wynona Bates of Bill s
Market - 146.
the society.
Rebecca Karr of Houston
was named student vice
president, the position going
to the junior with the highest
grade average with the high-
est number of hours taken at
Texas Tech University. She
w as one of nine juniors w ith a
4.0 grade average, the high-
est possible.
Faculty members initiated
were : Dr. Samuel E. Curl,
associate vice president for
academic affairs w ho recent-
ly was named president of
Phillips University; Dean
THURSDAY. MAY 13. 1976
Carl H. Stem of the college of
business administration;
Dean Robert IT. Anderson of
the college of education;
Chairman John L. Kice of the
department of chemistry,
and Dr. Keith V. Erickson of
the department of speech
and theatre arts.
How about checking your
LO? How many dangers
from smoking besided cancer
can you think of? Now, pick a
day for your LO- (1 Quit)
Cigarettes Day and pass your
test, says the American Can-
cer Society.
Clip Application and Mail J
Mail application to: Doug Chauveaux, J
1009 N. W. 10th, Tulia, Texas 79088 |
Basketball camp date for girls - |
June 28 July 2 §
A $10 deposit must accompany (
application. Balance due at enrollment i
or a total of $35 paid at enrollment. [
No refund after reservation is confirmedi
Please print:
Name Address City Grade Next Yeaj
Portraits Of Seniors
Taken In Their Cap & Gown
Or Casual Clothing.
At
Black ’s Studio
Open 9-.» Monday-1 riday
9- I 2 Sal. Krenings anil Saturdays Ity Appointment
Special Prices For (wnttlutilinf,' Seniors
OPEN 24
HOURS
DOI T MISS OUR
WEEKLY COOKED F000S
SPECIALS!
ALLSUPS
CONVENIENCE STORES
OPEN 24
HOURS
PRICES 1000 THURSOAY
THRU SURDAY.
MAY 13-11.1171
V g"
COOKED FOODS
SPECIAL OF THE WEEK
TOP QUALITY BUYS
^Bresh SANDWICH!
BBQ BEEF
BUTTER-
MILK
’ i 841.
era
79
c
REG.
85c..
ONLY
FRUIT DRINKS
Shurfine 1 lb.
MARGARINE
>•11
43'
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Bordens
ice Cream
79
$
V, SAL.
RO. CTR.
119
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•GERMAN SAUSAGE •mu BBQ BEEF
•BBQ BEEF SANDWICHES
805 N. W. 6th 517 s. W. 2nd
Tulia. Texas
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Baggarly, H. M. The Tulia Herald (Tulia, Tex.), Vol. 68, No. 20, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 13, 1976, newspaper, May 13, 1976; Tulia, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth507046/m1/4/: accessed June 12, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Swisher County Library.