Lake Travis View (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 21, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 23, 1986 Page: 2 of 16
sixteen pages : ill. ; page 19 x 14 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
New entrance begun
Lake Travis View
honor roll
‘Marine
C
1
16,995
c
A
HR
345-3744
Meet Our
Assistant
ALSO SAVE ON SPECIAL
8.9% FINANCING
FOR A LIMITED TIME ONLY
U-SAV PHARMACY OF LAKEWAY
1202 LAKEWAY D*. • 26)6567
The election for the board of
directors of the HBVFD will be
held Saturday, Sept. 27, at the
central station.
—EMS/house: 33/146.
—Collision: 23/82.
—Dead on Scene: 0/7.
—Totals: 84/347.
SAVE
$3,553
number given is the June total,
the second is the year-to-date
total.
—Mutual aid: 3/4.
—Structure: 8/24.
—Auto: 6/20.
—Boat: 2/3.
—Grass: 5/47.
—Miscellaneous: 7/23.
MASTER CRAFT
SALE
Limited
Quantity
OPE
11:31
At
. ..IvlJ
j J
.ale
projJ
I r um
depd
(LTI
the J
main
scho
Bi<
28, o
schoi
ing ii
High
Bids 1
take
alreaJ
from
bui id J
PARTS/SERVICE 345 9761
MON-THUM. 0:30-0:00 FRIt Till 5:30 pm SAT: 7 til 4
SUN: 12 til 5
U&v
Lake Travis
water level
A new entrance to The Hills
of Lakeway at Lohman’s
Crossing and Wingreen Loop is
under construction. Scheduled
to be in operation by Sept. 1,
the entrance will have automat-
ic 14-foot arm gates. The se-
curity station will be manned
by Texas Protection Specialists
(TPS) during daylight hours.
Residents, property owners
“ and other authorized persons
will have the same type of ac-
cess to The Hills during mann-
ed hours as they currently do
through the main Hills gate at
The Hills Drive and Club Es-
tates Parkway. Hills residents
and property owners will have
access to the entrance during
unmanned hours with the use
Thanks to our new high tech assistant, we
can give you the most up-to-date health
b service available With the computer's
help, we maintain information on
thousands of drugs We can provide
you detailed statements lor
insurance and tax purposes And.
we fill prescriptions quickly and
more accurately, saving you lots
■ 1 of time when you come in
ML Come meet our newest assistant
the next time you need a
pharmacy and see how it
helps us provide the
1 best healthcare
SZA service
msL__available
If you thought you heard a
lot of sirens during the month
of lune, you probably did. The
Hudson Bend Volunteer Fire
Department responded to a
total of 84 calls during June, in
comparison to an average of
about 50 a month in the first
five months of the year.
Calls were up in every
category but two on the mon-
thly response report, with only
“Dead on Scene” and grass
fires having fewer calls than the
average from the previous
months. In fact, there were no
“Dead on Scene” calls in June,
compared to a total of seven in
the months before.
The biggest increase came in
collisions, with the June total
more than doubling the average
for January-May. The HBVFD
responded to 23 calls about col-
lisions, four of them on one
day.
That particular day, June 7,
was especially busy, due mainly
to the extremely bad weather
the area was experiencing at the
time. In addition to the colli-
sions, personnel responded to
one mutual aid call, three struc-
ture fires, two electrical lines
down and one Emergency
Medical Service (EMS) house
call.
EMS house calls, the
category with the most number
of calls in June, came in second
in terms of increase. The total
of 33 calls compared to an
July 12..678.62
July 13.. 678.48
July 14.678.33
July 15..678.20
July 16. .678.00
July 17.677.84
July 18 .677.67
July 19..677.50
July 20 . 677.42
Readings are taken at 8
a.m. daily at Mansfield
Dam They are provided
by the Lower Colorado
River Authority. The con-
servation and power pool
level is 681.1 feet above
mean sea level.
of an automatic opener, which
may be purchased from TPS
for $25 each; up to one trans-
mitter per vehicle per property
will be sold.
“1 will personally maintain
an inventory of these openers
to assure that no unauthorized
persons gain access to The
Hills,” said Tom Graham,
chief of security for TPS.
The new entrance is being de-
veloped in response to a de-
mand for more convenient ac-
cess to The Hills for many resi-
dents, and to relieve some of
the overload on the main gate.
The main entrance to The
Hills will continue to have a
manned security station 24
hours a day.
Eighth grader Paul Schulze’s name should have been in-
cluded on the “A” honor roll at Lake Travis Middle School.
An inadvertent transposition of numbers from 98 to 89 was
made on his official record at the school, and his name was
listed on the “A/B” honor roil. That error has been cor-
rected, and the youth’s name has been moved up to the “A”
honor roil, according to school officials.
Al
The l^kr Travis View is published weekly by Sendero Publishing Lakeway Ine. The newspaper
is published 52 weeks annually
Annual subscription rate is 415.62 (ineluding tax) in Travis County and 425 outside the county.
Out of state subscriptions are tax exempt. The View is delivered to subscribers via second class
mail. A second class mailing permit has been applied for.
The Lake Traits View serves the communities on the south side of Lake Travis.
The Publisher shall not be liable for failure to publish or distribute all or any part of any issue
because of labor disputes, accidents, fires, acts of God, or any other circumstances beyond the
reasonable control of the Publisher. Further, the Publisher shall not be liable for damages if for
any reason he fails to publish any advertisement.
George Phenix. Publisher • John Koloen, General Manager • Diane Lee. Managing Editor •
Dottie LaFerney, Advertising Director
Office: 107 Ranch Road 620 So., Suite 103; mailing address: 107 Ranch Road 620 So., 5-F,
Austin TX 78734; telephone: (512) 266-3301
Deadlines
—News: noon Friday prior to publication.
— Advertising: 4 p.m. Friday prior to publication
average of about 22 a month in
the previous months.
Firefighters responded to
eight structure fires in June;
there had been a total of 16 in
the months before. Other fire
calls included six automobiles, ■
two boat and five grass fires.
Miscellaneous calls ranged
from a child locked in a car at a
local convenience store to an
acid spill. HBVFD personnel
also assisted the Travis County
Sheriff’s Department on a
breaking and entering call,
checked out a gas can that had
a rag hanging out of it, and
looked for a missing infant.
Listed below are the various
categories on the monthly
response report. The first
I’aize 2 LAKE TRAVIS VIEW/Wednesday, July 23. 1986
Most categories increase
Collisions more than double on roads
"The Choice of Champions"
10931 Research
Name left off "A”
f Contributors: Patti Batea, Sharon Coleman, Dolores Dorman, Danya
Echols, Nancy Fisher, Charlie Gouldie, Scott Jackson, Jane Kelsch, Sam
Kinch, Willy Maarleveld, John McAshan, Jan McKinley, Teri Nelms, Marion
Swafford, Melanie Watts, Bruce Weir, Alex Young
VKA
11 II
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Matching Search Results
View five places within this issue that match your search.Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Lee, Diane. Lake Travis View (Austin, Tex.), Vol. 1, No. 21, Ed. 1 Wednesday, July 23, 1986, newspaper, July 23, 1986; Austin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1297786/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting City of Lakeway.