Grandview Tribune (Grandview, Tex.), Vol. 89, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, October 19, 1984 Page: 2 of 10
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Gran
Grandview Tribuna, Friday, October 19,1984
Page 2
MEMBER 1994
TA
TEXASPRESS ASSOCIATION
JACK MAGNESS, JR.
Editor and Publisher
DIANE MAGNESS, Business Manager
102 Second Street
817/866-3391
Grandview, Texas 76050
By Keith Peck
STATE CAPITAL
Clements named Gonzalez to the
Shop - 866-2169
Open - Mon. - Fri.
8:00 to 6:00
A
LAIRD AUTOMOTIVES
______________________________________________t_________________
Rt 4, Grandview
Custom Hauling
JACK L. BAKER
866-2186
All types Sand, Gravel, Washed Rock ft Pee Gravel
3
Culverts Installed
Driveways Built
-
THE GHOST & GOBLINS
qf"
L
Q
8.50 $2,500.00
REQUEST YOUR PRESENCE AT THEIR
90-DAY CERTIFICATE
10.20
1,000.00
11.00
1,000.00
26 WK MONEY MARKET CERTIFICATE
1,000.00
11.25
1 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT
1,000.00
11.75
2 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT
1,000.00
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3 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT
I
4 YEAR CERTIFICATE OF DEPOSIT
ABCABCABCABCABCABCABCA
ABC Preschool
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866*4411
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MEMBER OF FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION
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Metro 477-2031 For Man lotaUs
Phone: Grandview 866-3316
Cleburne 373-2535
MEMBER FDIC
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(253
ihTM
Ages 3 - 6 years
Hot Lunch & Snacks
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6
missioner" he said. When White
heard of Hobby's remarks the next
day, he “seconded the motion."
EACH DEPOSITOR WITH FIRST STATE BANK, GRANDVIEW,
IS INSURED UP TO $100,000.00
Mattox, Local Prosecutors
Texas Attorney General Jim Mat-
Melissa Carroll
Monday - Friday
7:45 a.m. - 4:00 p.m.
9
4
was decided by determining
who was the more adroit in
avoiding a direct answer to any
of the questions, I declare that
both debates were a draw.
The next debate may be
different, but don’t bet the
farm on it.
Inmates, Waste Dumps
In other actions last week, White:
—Accused the federal govern-
ment of playing too much politics
in selecting a nuclear waste dump
site for Texas and charged their
flawed selection process should be
Front End Loader
Tracto Work
O ...
MONEY MARKET CHECKING
Money Market Rate Changes Weekly
Federal Law and Regulations Prohibit Payment of a time deposit before maturity unless substantial interest is forfeited.
Banking Hours Are: Monday thro Friday, 9:00 am te 2:30 pa
Saturday 9:00 am le 12:pm Fer Limited Services .
GRANDVIEW
TRIBUNE
c88 STEWARTS
LUMBER & HARDWARE
Hwy. erw. Alvarado
High Court Hispanic
Meanwhile, Governor Mark White
FIRST STATE BANK, GRANDVIEW, OFFERS THE FOLLOWING
RATES EFFECTIVE OCTOBER 16TH THROUGH OCTOBER 22ND.
•O
HIGHLIGHTS
By Lyndell Williams
TEXAS PRESS ASSOCIATION
Education Chief
Outgoing Commissioner of Edu-
cation Raymun Bynum was branded
a saboteur of school reform by It
Gov. Bill Hobby. The incident was
noteworthy because Hobby made
his remarks to the' 15 new state
school board members only minutes
before Bynum welcomed them at
their swearing-in activities
Hobby told them the state educa-
ANOTHER
POINT OF VIEW
9
^Proceeds to go for Resident’s Christmas:
,koge«.9s 8.9 i
v sA—-@96*ege*
I --a min? nun CT A EART.TNS M3
I
AT
Grandview Wursing Hons
"Halloween Carnival”
to see which party could register / 1 3th Court of Appeals
more new voters ended last week,
but the winner can't be declared
until after Election Day. X
The biggest voter registration con-
test in Texas history will probably
result in 700.000 new registrants,
bringing the estimated statewide to-
tal to 7.5 million voters
Surveys of each part} indicated
that neither could count on a signifi-
cant advantage among new regis-
trants.
Phase Two of the election—the
Get-Out-The-Vote effort—is already
in full swing
in taking the voter pulse, analysts
concentrated on key strongholds, or
consistent precincts, for cither party.
The theory is that if 1.000 new
voters are registered in a precinct
that is traditionally strong for either
party, the odds favor that party
picking up support from the new
voters.
In urban areas. San Antonio re-
ported about 33,000 new regis-
trants: Houston, about 17,000: Rio
Grande Valiev, 26.000: El Paso,
21.000, and Fort Worth. 7,500
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 20th at 5:00 p.m. y
Games, Fun, FellQwship e
• Auction to begin at 7:00 p.m.
(All new items) l
AUSTIN—The battik between
Texas Democrats and Republicans
Gonzalez earned his law degree
from the University of Texas and
worked in the Houston city attor-
ney’s office before becoming, an as-
sistant U.S. attorney for South
Texas. He was a Brownsville state
C
CABCABCABCABCABC.ABCAB.
dh
11.90 1,000.00
Published every Thursday except the first
Thursday in July and the last Friday in
December. Second class postage paid in
Grandview, Texas 76050. Entered as Second
Class Mail Matter in Grandview, Texas Post
Office under act of Congress on March 3,1979.
Publication No. 226020.
Subscription Rate: $7.00 per year in Johnson
County; $8.00 per year outside Johnson County;
$9.00 outside of Texas. (Subscriptions must be
paid in advance.) *
Any erroneous statements reflecting upon the
character, standing or reputation or any person,
firm or corporation which may occur in the
columns of the newspaper will gladly be corrected
upon being brought to the attention of the staff
of this newspaner
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to
Grandview, Tribune, P.O. Drawer K, Grandview,
Texas 76050.
to get the authority to prosecute
some criminal cases. The Texas
Constitution gives him only the
power to prosecute civil - matters,
but he wants to go after Medicaid
fraud and organized criminals.
“Ten percent of every dollar
spent in the Medicaid program is
fraudulent,” Mattox said. “We in-
vestigate the cases, then we turn
them over to local prosecutors, and
if we don't continue to help them,
the cases don't get prosecuted.
County, District Attorneys
Mattox painted Medicaid fraud
as often involving prominent mem-
bers of a community, who local
prosecutors are reluctant to go after
for political and other reasons.
But at a recent meeting of the
Texas Association of County and
District Attorneys, the membership
voted unanimously to oppose Mat-
tox’s plan Spokesmen disagreed
with the Mattox statement that po-
litical considerations determine
which cases go to court.
Under the Texas Constitution,
prosecutors arc in the judicial
branch of government, and the at-
torney general is in the executive
branch.
Jelalu)"8E
HARDWARE STORS°-
I Now
THE I
rimE,/
scrapped for a new one./
Among items White listed inLa
letter to the U.S. Energy Aecretary
was the failure of the feds to share
information and consul with
the state.
—Announced that Texas is con-
sidering swapping troublesome
prison inmates with other states to
break up inmate gangs blamed for
rising prison violence
This past week the presi-
dential and vice-presidental
candidates had their much
publicized debates. I was very
disappointed. There has been
thousands of words written
already on who won and who
lost, so I won’t whip that dead
horse. The real loser was the
voters.
If the purpose of the debates
was to inform the electorate on
the respective positions of the
candidates, it was a miserable
failure. I thought the questions
were simple and explicit, but
the answers were evasive, and
steeped in ambiguity. In fact
most of the answers did not
come close to answering the
question. It seemed to me
that each participant had a list
of points they wanted to make,
and their answers were de-
signed to make those points
irrespective of the question.
The Reagan-Mondale debate
was pointless and dull. Neither
candidate displayed any en-
thusiasm. It has only been a
week and I can remember very
little that either one of them
said. History will probably
ignore the debate altogether.
In this column several weeks
ago I predicted that George
Bush couldn’t beat Ferraro in
a debate. I guess no one told
George he couldn’t win be-
cause he looked and acted the
most like a winner. He talked
like a winner and he did show
some enthusiasm. Ferrano
showed a spark or two, but
she wasn’t very impressive over-
all.
It is my view that these
debates were more commer-
cials for the two parties than
anything else. If the winner
district judge until 1981, when tox is meeting opposition from
White’s nemesis then-Gov. Bill Texas local prosecutors in his effort
MINIMUM
RATE DEPOSIT
\Aje 'll check
V V your car from
top to bottom, re-
pair or replace any
worn or damaged
parts Act now1
continued to break Texas historical tion establishment was trying to
barriers with his appointments by sabotage the school reforms ap-
naming the state's first Hispanic to proved by the Legislature this
the Texas Supreme Court. summer.
Corpus Christi appeals court Bynum, who has steadfastly held
judge Raul Gonzaiez was lapped to his opinions of the shortcomings
last week by White to fill the seat of those reforms, last month said
previously held by Justice Charles he would step down as early as
Barrow. Barrow resigned to become possible.
dean of Baylor University law "I think 1 have been painted as a
school. non-reformist, but I have done more
A former migrant-farmworker, (for reform) than any other com-
The road in Southview now homerites will soon be pre- these restricted homerites, call
has gravel on it. The land for pared. For information on 866-2336.
O FIRST STATE BANK
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Magness, Jack, Jr. Grandview Tribune (Grandview, Tex.), Vol. 89, No. 10, Ed. 1 Friday, October 19, 1984, newspaper, October 19, 1984; Grandview, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1537280/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grandview Public Library.