Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, August 31, 1984 Page: 1 of 12
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HERALD TO GO OUT
WELCOME TEACHERS
EARLY NEXT ISSUE
SENIORS '84 UPDATE
enthusiastic teacher, the students of the many classes Nana tea-
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Dell Valley -Nana Gay (Mrs. John Gay) started her first year of
teaching in Dell City last week. After interviewing this vibrant,
dies, the school and Dell City are lucky to have the Gays here.
To quote Nana: ’’This is the most fascinating place to live that
we’ve ever been!” Nana teaches ESL (English-Second Language) to
the 7th, 9th and 10th Grades, High School Boys Reading (7th and
8th); 7th Grade English; 7th Grade Health; 9th and 12th Personal
Business Management, Fine Arts and Health, 3rd Grade. The Gays
moved to Dell V«11av from Smithville, Texas, near Austin. John is
a free-Lance Photographer. Nana likes to write and help John with
his photography research.
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Dell Valley - Please have news
in very early for the next issue
of the Herald. We will be pub-
lishing on Monday. The Herald
will be completed on Monday
this next issue. Since the t ost
Office will be closed, news
and copy by mail has to be
received on or by Saturday, the
1st. Thank you!
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Dell Valley -Jerry Moseley is teaching his 2nd year in Dell City.
This year teaching5th Grade. Jerry andhis wife, Mary Lou, moved
to Dell City from Tierra Amarilla, New Mexico (County Seat of
Rio Arriba County). They are both excellent writers. Jerry likes
to read, cook, and is a Civil War buff. Mary Lou has the Brouz-
A-Bit shop at Trail West Park - both very happy and enthusiastic
people who like our community, school and valley, and now call
Dell Vall?y ”home”.
"Creativity is not the finding of a thing but the making
something out of it after it is found."
-James Russell Lowell
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Dell Valley -Of the 11 Seniors
•84, 10 will be pursuing a
career-oriented post high
school program - 91% of the
class! This is far above the
national average.
L Rpcio Martes left early
in the Summer for Albuquerque,
where she is working in a lo-
cal blood, bank. Her classes at
the Hollywood Beauty College
began Aug. 20.
2. Tquv Concha and James
Henderson left Aug. 20 for
Anchorage, Alaska, where
they plan to work and go to
school part-time. They arrived
in Anchorage on Aug. 26, af-
ter being slowed down driving
through snow.
3. Abel Bae?a left Aug. 26
for UTeP, where he will be
studying computer technology.
Abel received a full scholar-
ship from UTEP, which will
cover tuition, room, board
and books.
4. Rhonda Schaefer left
Aug. 28 for Las Cruces where
she will enroll at NMSU.
5. On Wednesday, Aug. 29,
lyma Vajles, Rebecca Lee,
and Vjcfor Martinez left for
San Angelo where they will
be Freshmen at ASU. Orienta-
tion was Thursday, and these
three will be busy registering
on Friday.
5. Kavla Richardson left
Wednesday, alsq for Sul Ross
State U. at Alpine
7. Also leaving on Wednes-
day was forge Aguilar who will
be enrolling in the School of
Architecture at Texas Tech U,
at Lubbock.
8. Marfin Tavarez is present-
ly working with Junie at the
school, with plans to leave
for California in the near fu-
ture to work.
"Experience is a dear
school but fools will learn
in no other."
-Benjamin Franklin
LEGISLATIVE HEARING - RADIOACTIVE WASTE
Dell Valley -Della Chj^m^beg^her Dell Valley^rom
Sa^Johm' New Mexico. She is an enthusiastic teacher, and her- love
of *saching the 18 students in the 3rd grade this year shows. en"
iovs photography and hopes to have her dark room set up in the near
future. SheXgrees that Dell Valley offers much to photographers.
Austin -The House County Affairs Sub-Committee Hearing .
was held in Austin August 22, 1984, to discuss and study the dis-
posal of radioactive waste with the Texas Low-Level R adioactive
Waste Disposal Authority, citizens and groups. The hearing was
held in response to preliminary studies by the State of Texas to
find a radioactive waste dump.
Chairman of the Sub-Committee is Dr. Gary Thompson (Dem.
and State Rep. from Abilene). Dr. Thompson expressed concern
about Texas becoming a national dumping ground because the
state of Texas is so far ahead of other states in trying to locate
a site, and Dr. Thompson was concerned that if the State of Tex-
as is the only state meeting a federal deadline for developing a
low-level nuclear waste dump site, it shows a very real possibility
that Texas may end up as a repository for many other states.
Rep. Thompson stated ’’that other states appear to be dragging
their feet on this. ”
Experts testifying before Texas’ Sub-Committee also urged
Texas to set a leisurely pace in developing a site, saying new
technology indicates that burying such low-level wastes may not
be the safest or least costly way to go.
In an argument that Texas called very attractive, Hugh Kaufman,
Associate Director to Toxic Wastes for the Environmental Protec-
tion Agency, advocated making disposal the responsibility of indus-
tries that generate the waste. Hugh Kaufman, same ERA official
who took part in the Dell City rally some 4 months ago. "I think
that if the industry is kept on the hook financially for managing
their own waste, they will use the best technology, ” Kaufman
stated.
Citizens groups and officials present at the hearing hoped for
a moratorium on the Authority purchasing land for sites in hopes
of finding a better method than landfill.
Bob King, Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources, testi-
fied. ,
State Rep. Larry Ebn Shaw did an outstanding job in his dis-
cussion on landfill and its problems. "I have serious concerns
that if we indeed come on line and do things under the spirit of
the law, and do things in a responsible and effective way, it will
come back to penalize us. " Shaw expressed concern about 1 exas
becoming a fourth national dumpsite.
’’The authority believes they can handle a shallow landfill, and
that they are experts, but I don’t believe that; and I don’t believe
that the majority of the people in this state believe that. If you
Cont’d. Page 11
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Hudspeth (oun
ehj(mL
and DELL VALLEY REVIEW
Publication #8001-4000
OFFICIAL PUBLICATION OF DELL IVALLEY & HUDSPETH COUNTY
VOLUME 28
NUMBER 2
254 PER COPY
12 PAGES
FRIDAY, AUGUST 31, 1984, DELL CITY, TEXAS 79837
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Lynch, Mary Louise. Hudspeth County Herald and Dell Valley Review (Dell City, Tex.), Vol. 28, No. 2, Ed. 1 Friday, August 31, 1984, newspaper, August 31, 1984; Dell City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1287367/m1/1/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .