The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 85, No. 197, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 10, 1986 Page: 9 of 12
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Research
152
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55
110 Star Street • 364-2610
Call us for
Guns and Hunting supplies by special order
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Big Daddy’s
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Do You need a Change in Life?
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With this coupon
drew Rubin
Buy One at regular
Registration Form
price Get One of
TUTOR WORKSHOP
0,
Equal Value for
79045.
HELP SOMEONE LEARN TO READ!
Good Thru
(Name)
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(Address)
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For information Call 364-1206
(State)
(Zip)
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ormer Texan gains
ame helping Hispanics
Come try our new
Mexican Dinners
If you are interested in being a tutor
for an Adult Literacy Class, Please fill
in this form and mail to: Deaf Smith
son, nmp
on (ISM
Public
Education
• when the
mt. Heather
illy, Nudity.
TutFemlllt
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West Hwy. 60
364-5971
PAH BOOK
April 10, 1986
0888 88 883888
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8889858 8 0000020
The greatest distance between two
points in the United States is the 5,850
miles from Elliot Key, Fla., to Ha-
waii’s Kure Island.
ing, Dee Ann Matthews, Martha
Rickman, Lee Sherman, Belinda
Godwin and Blackwell.
The next meeting will be in May.
The Hereford Brand-Thursday, April 10, 1980-Page •
Gulley directs PTA
an, Lonnn
oolo
April 18, 1986 - ■ 6:30 - 9:30 p.m. and
April 19, 1986 - - 8:30 - 4:00 p.m.
Deaf Smith County Library Heritage Room
211 E. 4th Hereford, Tx 79045
Priniieg li lunded by the Tetas Pashande Lbrary System wih a erani frem the Texas State LArary threngh dhe
Texas Urary Systems Art IN B. Ml and Ike Ltrary Serviees snd Ceetrecthn Art IPX BW).
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New Arrivals
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We have changed our location and are
ready to fill your photography needs,
just as we have for the past 25 years.
BILL BRADLY
PHOTOGRAPHY
ETC.
idercover:
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Mr. and Mrs. Ricky Gonzales are
the parents of a son, Aaron, born
March 26. He weighed 8 lbs. 12% oz.
Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Martinez are
the parents of a son, Sash, born
March 27. He weighed 6 lbs. 5 oz.
Mr. and Mrs. Terry Wilcox are the
parents of a daughter, V’Lesha
Leigh, bom March 27. She weighed 7
lbs. 13% oz.
Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Johnson are
the parents of a son, Justin Allen,
born March 31. He weighed 7 lbs. 10%
oz.
Mr. and Mrs. Eleazar Abrego are
the parents of a daughter, Erica
Nicole, born April 1. She weighed 7
lbs. 13 oz.
Mr. and Mrs. Antonio Cuellar Jr. .
are the parents of a son, Anthony,
born March 27. He weighed 8 lbs. 7
oz.
Mr. and Mrs. Sylvester Yzaguirre
are the parents of a son, Jeremiah,
born April 2. He weighed 8 lbs. 2% oz.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Terry are the
parents of a son, Spencer Jorale,
bom April 2. He weighed 6 lbs. 6 oz.
Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Hicks are the
parents of a daughter, Carrisa Shell,
born April 4. She weighed 9 lbs. 1%
oz.
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Zuniga are
the parents of a son, Mark Anthony,
born April 3. He weighed 7 lbs. 12 oz.
HOW YOUR
AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY
DOLLARS FOUGHT CANCER
IN TEXAS 1985
I
£
7
7
Dr. Milton
Adams
Optometrist
335 Miles
Phone 364-2255
Office Hours:
Monday - Friday
8:30-12:00 1:00-5:00
$1.00 = $1.11
to ACS in Texas
This 111% expenditure reflects
increased research allocations to
Texas by our National Society.
TODAY’S MOON: Day after (2
new moon (April 9). “
TODAY’S TRIVIA: In what state was Ar-
bor Day first observed? (a) Nebraska
(b) California (c) New Hampshire
TODAY’S HISTORY: On this day in
1872, the first Arbor Day was
observed.
TODAY’S BIRTHDAYS: Joseph Pulit-
zer (1847); Clare Boothe Luce (1903);
Omar Sharif (1932)
TODAY’S QUOTE: "Censorship, like
charity, should begin at home; but un-
like charity, it should end there." —
Clare Boothe Luce.
T
E
E
T
E
S
S
“ YOU CAN MAKE THE DIFFERENCE! iCounty Library, 211 E. 4th, Hereford TX
Ih
t 1 y
obtained funding to start several
social and business groups for
Hispanics. Gutierrez will directly
supervise a newly formed Youth
Leadership Institute and a regional
non-partisan voter registration
organization.
“We’re fortunate to have him,"
said York Haines, vice president of
communications for United Way.
“This has been a very positive ex-
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April 24,1886,.
1423
104
concerning "Going To Texas."
Following the program, the
business session was held. The
meeting was called to order by Presi-
dent Sherrie Blackwell. Martha
Rickman, secretary, read the
minutes from the previous meeting
and it was reported that the PTA had
hosted Valentine parties for the
children. The organization made
Valentine cookies and furnished
drinks.
It was voted that the PTA will hold
the book fair April 22-25 at Shirley.
The group will also sponsor a Shirley
T-shirt sale before the May 8 track
meet.
A motion was made and seconded
that officers remain the same
through next year. They included
president, Blackwell; vice-
president, Gayle Carter; and
reporter, Vicky Ortiz.
The largest natural cave "room” in
the world is in New Mexico’s Carlsbad
Caverns: a chamber 1,500 feet long,
300 feet wide and 300 feet high.
madly recognized outside their reglons. became a county commissi%ner.
After leaving Brooklyn, the exhlbi- Gutierrez resigned his county post
E&SSIS andrpngnoptcfsgcmoprezaemh
hibition sites are the New Orleans Con* • c,1,s, ren. A-,,, 41, 4rL1
temporary Art Center; the J.B. Speed of Colegio Cesa Chaveze thestroubk
Museum, Louisville; Colorado Springs ed Mount Angel college that closed in
Fine Art Center; San Antonio, Texas. 1983.
Museum of Art; Yellowstone Art Gutierrez did not get that job,
Center, Billings, Mont.; Palm Springs, however, and as a teacher he soon
Calif., Peserf Museum, ’ found that the college had more pro-
Calif Museum of Art. blems than a newcomer could solve.
But he was not deterred from pursu-
The. Bath white butterfly was ing his own mission.
namedin Englane“Opportunities come or you make
resemhsdtaP f broidery cre- them,” Gutierrez said. "What I
thought I could do was save it (the
Saturn’s rings cannot be seen except college) and make it a viable institu-
through a telescope with at least a tion, but that didn’t happen for me or
three-inch aperture. the college."
h David
•Coming,
ig ***%
rine crew
Island near
varty goes
> Marie Saint
Heat Scott
I PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - After
only a few years in Oregon, Jose
Angel Gutierrez, 41, is gaining
■recognition for creating successful
social service programs for
Hispanics.
I During the past two years, Gutier-
Irez has been director of both the
■Oregon Commission on Hispanic Af-
fairs and the Oregon Council for
Hispanic Advancement. He took con-
trol of the state commission in early
1984, after it became a legislative
agency rather than a governor’s
commission.
In May 1964, the United Way of
Columbia-Willamette hired him to
supervise the creation of the Oregon
Council for Hispanic Advancement.
The group was launched after a
March 1985 conference on Hispanic
strategy from 1985 to 1990. United
Way then hired him as a full-time
director of special projects for the
council.
“He’s kind of a catalyst, he keeps
things ignited," said Raquel
Aquillon, administrative assistant
for the Hispanic commission. “A lot
of things that are happening with
OCHA and the commission wouldn’t
be happening if it weren’t for him.
“He inspires people to get involved
and to give 100 percent. If he were to
leave the state, I can’t think of
anyone who has the strength to keep
the commission alive.”
Gutierrez doesn’t mince words
about his mission to assist Hispanics.
He said he’s “paid by the United
Way, but I work for OCHA."
Gutierrez believes that for some,
the American dream has been
replaced by "an ugly American
nightmare.”
"The black and Hispanic youth are
en route — as the Indian youth is
already there — to becoming a
subclass, where they could remain in
unemployment and poverty,” he
said. “It’s going to take people like
them to understand that this is hap-
pening and people like me in partner-
ship to help get them out of that.
“I firmly believe that you can
make things happen, for yourself
anyway,” he said.
In his council work, Gutierrez has
tie
L
l
l
Brown accepted as member
Today is Salvation
Army Founder's
Day. It is the 100th
day of 1986 and the
22nd day of spring.
perience and, I think, a win situation
for the United Way and the Hispanic
community."
The Hispanic services project was
intended as a pilot for future pro-
grams, Haines said. But it’s been
more.
"It broadened the concept and
gave the Hispanic community a vehi-
cle to become self-sufficient,”
Haines said.
The United Way expected the pro-
ject to take three to five years, but
Gutierrez made the independent
Hispanic council possible in just a
year and a half, Haines added.
“He’s not just someone with a
cause, he’s results-orlented," Haines
said. “He knows where to go and
what he has to do.”
"He wants to let Oregon know of
the Hispanic presence and that
they’re in other professions besides
agriculture,” said Efrain Diaz-
Homa, a former chairman of the
. state Hispanic commission.
Gutierrez “doesn’t alienate, he’s
diplomatic and positive,” Diaz said.
"Some Hispanics have a lot of bit-
terness about how they’ve been
treated by the system,” Diaz said.
bitterness, he reaches beyond that, into Hospital Auxililary
Diaz added. ‘
“You don’t see anger; he has a Phyllis Brown was voted to full “Wellness Is Ageless,” may be ob-
desire to work for better things,” membership when members of the tained for a program to interested
said Diaz, a native of Peru who has Deaf Smith General Hospital Aux- groups or individuals.
lived in Oregon since 1966. iliary Board met Monday in the A nominating committee was
Gutierrez was born in Crystal City, hospital conference room. elected. They included Theda
a south Texas town of 10,000. By the The auxiliary prayer was led by Seivers, Culpepper and Mary
time he was 30, he had earned Nell Culpepper. Williamson.
bachelor’s and master’s degrees in During the business session, Grace Those present were Etoile Mann-
political science and a Ph.D. in Covington reported 250 hours of ser- ing, Baxter London, Helen Brown
government at the University of vice in March and it was announced Peg Hoff, Covington, Culpepper’
Texas in Austin. that the recent bake sale had netted Bonnie Sublett, Lupe Cerda? Jane
He was organizing Mexican- $115. White, Bertha p Dettmann, Karen
Americans in the 1960s, and in 1967 it was also reported that the chairs Barela, Gwen London, Williamson
he was one of five college students the auxiliary had purchased for the olga Harris, Brown and Mary Lou
WESTERN ART who founded the Mexican-American hospital had arrived and that the Spinhime.
AIct., „EXHIBrTION. ... Youth Organization in Texas. Hospital Auxiliary Convention will
wNEW.YORK.CAl P.z.The. Third In 1970, he led another group in be held June 2-4 in San Antonio,
a wmhiy nf i^nr^hv founding La Raza Unida, which Carolyn Andrews, chairman of the
rently working in the Western United became a nationwide political party. Hereford Chapter of the American
States, will be shown June 6 through The group pioneered the popular use Cancer Society, announced that the
Aug. 5 at the Brooklyn Museum. of the term "Chicano” as a positive annual cancer drive is planned April
This is the.third show in.a series description of Mexican-Americans. 20-27. Members are asked to walk
whosesoalistoshowcaseawidecross Gutierrez served on the school their blocks. Packets will be stuffed
porryart,enatrn681nntsonantana board in Crystal City and eventually Friday morning. She also reported
international attention artists not nor- became board president. He later that a new film on cancer, entitled
PARENTSamdVTH
come +o pane discussion
*w do, ••• „
FRIDAY,ARRIL 11* .
730P.M. /,6A
CoM M UM TY ENTER
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"Pusjn, ,
•Refkeshme
Service/ —A J
Rehabilitation _ J .
Professional
Education
musical program
Shirley Intermediate PTA Members present were Marge
members and parents met recently Bell, Jackie Fangman, Kim
for their regular meeting and a Blackwell, Jo Ann Noyes, Kathy
musical program at the school. Christie, Linda Baird, Olivia Brown,
Jane Gulley directed the Shirley Leaton Noyes, Carmen Rickman,
choir that presented songs and skits Carter, Sharon Cummings, Terri La-
• portraits • aerials • parties
• commercials • weddings
♦ A
Management
& General
Crusade _ g- r
,ptAl*
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Curtis, Jeri. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 85, No. 197, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 10, 1986, newspaper, April 10, 1986; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1478024/m1/9/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.