The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 24, 1970 Page: 4 of 8
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THE PADUCAH POST
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SHERRI NOAH
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FRIGIDAIRE
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ELECTRIC
SELF-CLEANING
Must.
OVEN
DUMONT BAPTIST CHURCH
First National Bank
Hall-Scruggs & Co.
Mulkey Insurance Age"1'
Paducah Cash Grocery
Burruss Grocery
for
Carpenter & Liedtke
Diersing 66 Rural Service
Jones & Renfi'0'*
Town House Motel
The Paducah Post
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Time to move up to a
modern range with
Kinney Equipment Co.
Hamrick Thriftway Grocery
MISSIONARY BAPTIST CHURCH
REV. EDWARD D. HART, Pastor
Laura, a junior, is the daugh-
ter of Mr. and Mrs. B.L.Smith
Jr. of Swearingen community.
committee
Suzanne
Susan
for
and
fed and si
let and si
ES Stops,
change
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VALLEY VIEW BAPTIST CHURCH
ALVA RAY MORLEY, Pastor
CEE VEE METHODIST CHURCH
REV. PHILIP WIDMER, Pastor
PRIMITIVE BAPTIST CHURCH
______LUTHER PORTER, Pastor
FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH
ROBERT GLENN. Pastor
FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH
PHILIP WIDMER, Pastor____________________
Washington D. C. was select-
ed as the national capitol in
1792.
lb
WEST TEXAS jjh UTILITIES
AN INVESTOR OWNED IWfcMS ELECTRIC COMPANY
Equal Opportunity Employer
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— L Wh
Oil,
11 IL
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tion, then went to Oklahoma
Christian College in Oklahoma
City where she completed re-
quirements for her BSE degree
in just three years, as might
be expected of a National Honor
Society member.
Since the young teacher who
participated in club intramurals
from
game
victory, and promise them full
ly following high school gradua- support in all competition.
Miss Noah lives at
Richards, Apartment 6.
is a member of the
of Christ.
1217
She
Church
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71 For
S|de, it’s
With this Frigidaire advance you can say
goodbye to scouring powder, water, soap,
rags, bristle brushes and back breaking
drudgery. These are relics of a bygone d< /.
The Frigidaire self-cleaning oven cleans
sparkling clean all by itself. Takes only a
moment of the homemaker's time. Once the
controls are set no other attention is needed.
See it now!
Piwd. I
ms
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11
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A small ugly black cricket
certainly did a fine job in
disturbing Mrs. Roy Jones’first
period English IV class Wed-
nesday and Thursday mornings.
The class was in the process
of reading some tales of
Chaucer when all of a sudden
there was a terrible noise. It
was finally discovered that it
was only a cricket.
Danny James has tried many
times to capture the moisy little
creature but has not succeeded
as yet. It is hoped by the entire
class that he eventually will.
a^e a qu
gives y
fiWTBMSBElpJ
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CLEANS ITSELF }
AUTOMATICALLY
ELECTRICALLY 1
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FREE WIRING
Normal 220 volt wiring to WTU residential
customers who buy an electric range from
a local dealer or WTU.
iF’TH
ST. ELIZABETH’S CATHOLIC CHURCH
REV. DERMOT O’BRIEN
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
REV. ROBERT BECK, Pastor
ASAMBLEA DE DIOS
REV. C. C. LUNA, Pastor^ »
DUMONT METHODIST CH^ -■
PHILIP WIDMER, Pastor^ . - " ’
CHURCH OF CHRIST
F. R. YEAKLEY, Minister
FIRST ASSEMBLY OF
___________ROBERT LOCKWOOD, PaSt^
GUTHRIE FIRST BAPTIST CR
REV. CHRISTOPHER STEWART,
GROW BAPTIST CHURCH
___________CARLTON WINTON, PastO^J
ANTIOCH BAPTIST CHR
REV. ELI COOPER, Pastor^
CEE VEE CHURCH OF CH$S1
MIKE BRADY, Ministerial
Paducah Motor Co. lnC
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Other candidates were Jana
Jones, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Bryce Marshall, and Jane
Piper, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Gerald Piper.
Laura will represent FFA in
the district contest in Welling-
ton in November.
Il J
were recipients of
scholarships.
Mark Oct. 4
As Church Day
Do you have Oct. 4 marked
on your calendar as a day to
attend Sunday School and
church?
This date has been set
All Churches Roundup
student committees have been
at work reminding everybody.
Posters have urged students
to attend the church of their
choice on that day.
Working on the
at school have been
Brooks, chairman,
Nelson and Ronnie Liedtke.
“We will be pleased if
students interested in helping
make posters will contact any
one of the committee,”Suzanne
sa’d.
much interest in the class, all
of whom participated as prin-
cipals, jury >r witnesses.
Kyle Richards and Reid
Monson were defense lawyers
p
IENT
AcalS
H
Not guilty was the verdict
returned Thursday, Sept. 17,
in the civics class mock trial
in which Bill Jeter had been
charged with murdering
wife.
The jury deliberated
are different for Miss Sherri
Noah, high school science
teacher.
For the past six summers
Miss Noah has worked as a
long distance telephone opera-
tor while she prepared herself
to teach school. And now well
into her first six weeks of
has evidenced her willingness 9 ^ ,-lSs^
to help students who usually find f
chemistry and biology frighten- ■ ■■z.z
ing subjects.
Free periods and before
classes assemble Miss Noah
is usually seen in her room
preparing for her classes or
supervising students who have
come in to study.
A native of Amarillo, Miss
Noah attended Amarillo Junior
College the summer immediate
J. W. SamPs°
CEE VEE BAPTIST CHURC’:
JERRY G. McFATHER,
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their future college are in-
vited to attend Preview Day
on that campus Nov. 21.
Dick Helms, speech major
and English minor in Wayland,
was in Paducah High School
last week meeting students
to interest them in his alma
mater.
He advised them of scholar-
ships available and of the ap-
proximate cost per year to
attend.
Two 1970 seniors, Jimmy
Taylor and Terry Sexton are
now enrolled at Wayland. Both
music
11'1 J
■'IS
I III
V ■> 1
'X F< •
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The Threat
By RONDA MATNEY
“First we will take Eastern Europe; then the masses
of Asia. Then we will encircle the United States of A-
merica which will be the last bastion of Capitalism. We
will not have to attack it; it will fall like an overripe fruit
into our hands.” This is part of the plan of Communist
leaders. Internal subversion will mean the overthrowing
of our government.
Are they not in our midst now? Have we not gone
through enough episodes to awaken ourselves to the menace?
Communism is all around us and as some fall into their
their trap of phsycological warfare they rarely re-
cognize it.
We cannot allow ourselves to have a state of mental
stagnation, inaction. Patriotism, loyalty and the tradi-
tional dream of “freedom for all men” are unmention-
ables. But a refugee from a Russian slave labor camp
wrote: “There must be a noose of ignorance around the
necks of the West. Don’t they know we would eventually
overthrow the Communist leaders if the West would just
stop feeding, fondling and coddling them?” Are we para-
lyzed by strange thinking? We are thinking just as the
Communists want us to. Our fore fathers would throw us
out for such things as co-existing. We are being soften-
ed for our final takeover. A takeover that some Ameri-
cans are working for and aren’t even aware of it.
Some current goals to the Communist are: U. S.
acceptance of co-existance as the only alternative to atomic
war, provide American aid to all nations regardless of
the courts to weaken basic American institutions by
claiming their activities violate civil rights, infiltrate the
press, gain control of key positions in radio, TV and
motion pictures and one that strikes at the heart is--
eliminate prayer or any phase of religious expression
in schools on the ground that it violates the principle of
“separation of church and state.” You will have to ad-
mit, these things happen. Anatole Lunarcharsky, for-
mer Russian Commissar of Education, declared, “Ch-t
ristian love is an obstacle to the development of the
Revolution. Down with love of our neighbor! What we
want is hate...only then can we conquer the universe.”
In this statement Revolution can be replaced quite well
by Communism. For Communism is what Revolution
leads to.
John Edgar Hoover with two-fisted blows said, “As
common criminals seek the cover of darkness, Com-
munists, behind the protection of false fronts, carry on
their sinister and vicious program intent on swindling
and robbing Americans of their heritage of freedom.”
Share the feeling of liberty, freedom and happiness
With others---SPREAD AMERICANISM!
Wayland College Syrup Traps,
Invites Prospects Ether Stills
Students interested in making It is not every time a woman
Wayland College in Plainview frightened by a mouse she can
put that mouse to sleep with
ether until she is safe.
When homemaking teacher,
Miss Lanette Green, came down
to the old gym Tuesday morn-
ing, Sept. 15, to clean up after
Monday night’s Future Home-
makers of America initiation
she was startled by a mouse.
After her first fright, how-
ever, she discovered this mouse
was safely stuck in some of the
syrup used in initiation rites.
A call for help resulted in
ether from the science room
being adm inistered to the equal-
ly frightened mouse which was
then properly disposed of by
the custodian.
And One Can’t
Send A Cricket
To Office
z' ’ -S
“ A "‘"1
CIVICS TRIAL--Defendant Bill Jeter sftg
with defense council David Sandlin as
torney Ben Blount summarizes to the
attorney Kyle Richards sits at table at ri F 1
fpnrhPT’ PT R .Tn-f-fovinc’ non hn 4^ i _ oOt
ir^i,
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FIRST GAME-FIRST WIN-The
scoreboard after the Paducah-
Matador game tells the whole
tale: Visitors, 16 Paducah, 26.
Ju
Laura Smith has been
chosen Future Farmers of
America sweetheart this week
for the 1970-71 school term
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LARUA SMITH
Laura Smith FFA Sweetheart
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aware that Coach Neely was
celebrating his 27th birthday
until the Dragon Band, with a
minute on the scoreboard, led
the Paducah fans in singing
“Happy Birthday” in tribute to
the surprised, but happy coach.
i
FUTURE HOMEMAKERS—Fifteen girls were initiated in
Future Homemakers of America in rites Monday night,
Sept. 14, which carried over into Tuesday. Above initiates
are dipping their fingers in red waaer paint (FFA colors)
and wearing tin cans around their necks for the coca-sugar
“snuff” each kept in her mouth. Long dresses, French heels,
braided hair and strong perfume were parts of their groom-
inf for initiation. Initiates were Lynne Tippen, Shuana Town-
ley, Jeanneane Russell, Denise Finley, Becky Bates, Teresa
Condron, Debbie Sossaman, Dianne White, Carla Maxey,
Brenda Tobias, Donna Polasek, Joanna Jordan, Debbie Jones
and Juanita Ison.
Annual Is Prize
In Art Contest
Drawings are now being sub-
mitted in the Zephyr Staff art
contest to find an amateur draw-
ing of a Dragon to be used on
the title page of the 1971 Zephyr.
A free annual will be awarded
to the winner.
1 Anyone of any age may sub-
5 mit a drawing which should be
= handed to the annual staff or
~ Mrs. Don Clark, advisor.
Drawings have already been
submitted by Richard Garza,
s Terry Sexton, Kathie Truelock,
and Laura Lynn Stephens.
? “Everyone in or out of school
is invited to enter,”
Blount, editor, stated.
Happy Was The Word For Birthday
It really was a most happy
birthday for Coach Jerry Neely
when the Angry Orange won the
first game of the season over
Matador Friday night.
Few people, nowever, were
waw.;-' 'XT-^
Hi.-.
attend the church ;
OTF YOUR CHOICE
----- . .
V -Wes’» Y z
■
as a student is an avid sports The jury deliberated 10
spectator, no matter what the minutes before Billy Ray Tra-
sport, she got a thrill from tree, foreman, revealed the
the Angry Orange first game verdict. Judge Danny James
then dismissed the charge and
released the jury.
The trial which teacher H.R.
Jefferies has used in an effort
to make more real to students ________r
the judicial system has created cadmium batteries^
...........aarte
volt^_ design”^
. - -* serious
shocks.
Pr°sects
jury,
teacher H. R. Jefferies can be seen in lowe]
Not Guilty Verdict Is
Rendered By Jury
I
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bi
Whtile Bl0Unb
cutmg attorney ”
During the
state’s witnesses ’
was charged^!
Jefferies staJ
the students hadu
deal from tins J
class is now mau
try a civil suit.
SeveraFsh^
A Ch«rge$
A new lightweU.
powered by rechaJ
to 900 linear feed
out ]—1— • 1
28 ounces, the unit
possibility of
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Help Keyword For New Teacher
The words fit, though the jobs
are different fnr n/rioo
lyt!
high
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The Paducah Post (Paducah, Tex.), Vol. 64, No. 28, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 24, 1970, newspaper, September 24, 1970; Paducah, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1281545/m1/4/: accessed July 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Bicentennial City County Library.