Stephenville Empire-Tribune (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 110, No. 132, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 16, 1979 Page: 4 of 12
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I
Strphenville Empirp-GIribunp
Tuesday January 16,1979
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turned back early attempts of he announced last Spring. He
a
Friteher)
told The Associated Press in a ing rigs. He bought out Larue in
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BILL CLEMENTS
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Foreigners bought third of '77 U .S. form crops
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11
Legislature at glance
2
GOOD NEWS
FOR THE
for me with jelly beans My all “My maid makes some red
DAIRYMAN!
j i
mi
His appointment ran into op- - -Joe Bishop to the Univer-
(
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LOWEST MONTHLY PAYMENTS AVAILABLE!
Qualily Holstein Leasing, Inc
V
We have no quota as to the amount of cattle or equipment one person
may lease. Please call our office for further details between 8 a.m. and 5
p.m. at 214-928-2218.
This year we have probably leased more cattle than any other company in
the country and we are looking forward to your business; if we can be of
help to you.
year required the output from
40 million acres of food grains,
FRED RAY
968-8829
CISC
are
fort
- the
Yai
tun
bat
Drop in for a visit... Our SOLD702
coffee pot is never empty e"23
D
k
neg
the
Bor
B
ba sl
pics
the
Uni
poir
Mo
plal
plai
JACK MATHEWS
968-7161
He served that post until
January 1977.
Clements says his idea of
running for Texas governor
started just a few weeks before
JANE MATHEWS
968-7161
and his wife, Rita, 47, an at-
tractive brunette and former
national Republican com-
mitteewoman, decided to make
the race.
He has called her his “secret
weapon” in the race. She was
always at his side.
Clements first swamped Ray
Hutchison, Dallas, former
State GOP chairman, in the
primary. After spending about
$7 million for both campaigns, ■
he defeated Democrat John
Hill by 16,909 votes in the
general election.
And already, the new gover-
nor is thinking ahead
4all
Gri
talk
Mor
0
had
the
prel
ran
iar
Boy Scouts of America.
He became a director of First
International Bancshares, Dal-
las, and Electronic Data Sys-
tems Corp.
After heading Richard Nix-
on’s 1972 campaign, Clements
was named U.S. deputy secre-
tary of defense in January 1973.
wil
lie
da
dia
my
tha
co
E
Al
N
Can
Mej
stac
des)
prol
ball
like
tael
thei
beans for dinner and we wait a
little while and they get bigger
and bigger and get redder and
redder and we eat 'em "
agr
didi
cisc
Jen
Si
offe
did
Ma
Lur
House:
Voted 136-0 to reject an elec-
tion contest by Kae Thomas
Patrick against the seating of
Rep. Don Cartwright, D-San
Antonio.
Adjourned until 10:45 a.m.
Tuesday.;
B
se
Cl
daddy gets deers. He goes out
in the woods and we cook
them."
The perfect compliment for
8
and if it doesn't you put it back
in for 10 more hours."
Of course, it if one can’t wait
20 hours while the cake is'bak-
ing, here is one child's idea of
how moms prepares roast:
“She puts it on the oven and
puts peanuts on it, leaves it for
a while then she goes upstairs
and deans then she comes
down and takes it out then she
makes some roasted peanuts
recent interview. "I represent
all of t people of the state...! in-
tend for us to have a legislative
program that is responsive to
this state.”
— William Perry Clements Jr.
was born and raised in Dallas,
attending Highland Park High
School where he was an All-
state football lineman
But he turned down athletic
scholarships to work in South
Texas oil fields when his father,
a real estate man and farmer,
k ’’AW
. N
F
re
fol
at
Sp
M
Gi
M
re
cu
found the Depression tough
going ]“ • t..
After eight years as an oil *
roughneck and driller, he grad-
uated from Southern Methodist
University in 1939. i
In 1947, he and I.P. Larue
launched SEDCO Inc. with bor-
rowed funds and two old dril-
pet
iji
car
to I
-S
sai<
ade
con
to <
Hoi
situ
por
neg
l
B races but worked actively in
E the party.
S He also was active in civic
I and professional posts, in-
L eluding membership on the
board of governors of SMU and
( the national executive board of
-
The export analysis showed
that about 342 million acres of
crops were harvested in 1977
Of those, the production from
former White House press sec-
retary.
ap
be
rei
as
re
sal
l
Ine
be
de
slu
tra
ca
ret
Ine
any peanut roast is, of course,
spaghetti but, perhaps, not pre-
pared this way
“Sauce and you know little
strings a you know what First,
she cooks the little strings and
then she gets the sauce from th
grocery store and then she gets
hot sauce and then she chops it
then ...”
Oh well Perhaps this child’s
recipe for red beans is wisest of
-
I
•0
172
'll
.2 t
and James M Johnson of Aus-
tin to the Texas Aeronautics
Commission for terms expiring .
Dec. 31, 1964 Flournoy is a
reappointment. Johnson re-
places David Witu of Dallas,
whose term expired
-Jeff Austin Jr of Jackson
ville, H.J MeKenze of Tyler
and C. Quentin Abernathy of
Gladewater as members at the
Texas Eastern University
Board at directors AIT were
reappointments
—Mrs Ben Carpenter of Irv.
ing. LaVonne Unsell at Denton
and Mrs C.T. Matthews of
Yoakum to the Texas Woman’s
University board of regents.-
Mrs. Carpenter is a reappoint-
ment.
1955 for 11.2 million.
SEDCO now operates in 22
countries, has 11,000 employes
and $750 million in assets. One
of its subsidiaries is SDIRAN
Drilling Co. of Iran with hal of
the stock owned by Ebce And
the rest by Iranian interests
During his campaign, Cle-
ments said he would give up all
company positions which cur-
rently pay him 3150,000 annual-
ly, and place his stock in ablind
trust
ERA REAL ESTATE
PREFERRED PROPERTIES
965-3341'
All you need to know in Real Estate
(<h hollar independently owned and operated.
C
H
I
y
TEACHER FOR JANUARY - Miss Patsy George, center, English teacher at Stephenville High
schoel, was chosen teacher of the month for January by the Future Teachers Association at h.he
is shown with FTA members Juanita Phillips, left, and Regina Rogan. (E-T Staff Photo by (.ary
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Out-
going Gov. Dolph Briscoe has
appointed former State Rep
Ruben Torres of Port Isabel to
the state Board at Pardon and
Paroles, a post Briscoe had
earlier tried to fill with a mem-
ber of his staff.
Torres, former superinten-
dent of the Port Isabel Inde
pendent School District, wiD
replace Clyde Whiteside, whose
term expired
Earlier, Briscoe had nomi-
nated Jay Floyd to the position-
but formally withdrew the
nomination on Monday. Floyd
had been the member of
Briscoe’s staff who reviewed
parole recommendations from
the board.
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Tues
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sity System of South Texas
board of regents.- replacing
George Red Rhodes of Port la-
vaca whose term expired
—D. Sartwelle Sr. of Sealy to
the Texas Animal Health Com-
mission for a term expiring •
Sept. 6 1979, replacing Norman
Moser of DeKalb, who resign-
ed
-Barney Davis of Some-
rville, George Christian of Aus-
tin, Woodrow Glasscock Jr. si
Hondo, Henry Vin De WalleSr,
of San Antonio, Virginia Long
of Kilgore and Dan Willis of
Fort Worth to the Texas Histor-
ical Conuniaion. Christian is a
1
Texas Republicans to recruit
him for statewide political
J
rmred
Ehine—
TEACHER FOR DECEMBER- Mike € Copeland, coach and world biston and government teacher al
Stephenville High School, was chosen teacher of the month for December by the FTA at SHS He is
shown with FTA members Patricia Phillips, left and Gent Crow. (E-T Staff Photo by Gary Friteher i
c
MAHOS
I
• 2K
We have just hired several new employees in the last month so that we
can take care of your needs more promptly.
ce ..rig 2 g., . ' di • 9rot •
V
+ 4 iik
Dallas elementary school class
offers variety of yummy recipes
position from Sen. Loyd Dog-
gett, D-Austin.
In early 1978 Briscoe had se-
lected Torres to run his em-
battled Governor’s Office of
Migrant Affairs. Torres
declined the appointment after
newspaper stories in the Lower
Rio Grande Valley linked him
with a person who had been
mentioned in connection with
an investigation of a job
program funded by GOMA.
Briscoe also appointed Otto
Kunze, a member of the Texas
A4M Agriculture Engineering
Department, to the Texas Air
Control Board for a term ex-
piring Sept. 1,1983 He replaces
Jerome Sorenson Jr. of College
Palestine, Texas 75801
Blunt Clements shows no sign of changing
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Bill found the Depression tough -A recent SEDCO proxy state- shares. He has another 45,480
ment said.Clments pwas, 630,- held for him in various com-
191 shares outright, about six pany stock plans.
percent of the outstanding Clements is reported worth
more than 330 million. He
W-
n
Station who resigned
Other appointments an- -Lucian Morrison of San An-
nounced Monday by Briscoe, tonio io the Texas Library and
who left office at noon today, Historical Commission, replac.
included ing Don Scarbrough of George-
—Lucien Flournoy of Alice town, who resigned
*1e
]©
an estimated 107 million acres tons against 108 million in 1976-
— 31.3 percent - was exported 78 and the previous high of ill
in the 1977-78 fiscal year that million metric tons in 1975-76.
ended Sept. 30. Looking at crop production,
Thomas A. Warden of the de-' the report said exports last
61-year-old multimillionaire
26 million acres of feed grains, - Briscoe’s request to return Jay
32 million acres of oilseeds and Floyd’s nomination to the state
5 million acres of cotton. Board of Pardon and Paroles.
“By commodity, rice and suh- Adjourned until 10 45 a.m.
flower seed led the list with 68 Tuesday.
from this crop of tow-heads at and then you stir it up and then
Armstrong Elementary put chocolate syrup and then A -
School you put it in in the oven for 10 r • __ I
Bologna and cheese sand- hours and then you take a Er SC OP COrrete6
wich: "Take baloney, put it in toothpick and put it in and if it "" 5.
the oven, then after it dings, does not come out as it should a . .
you put cheese on it and let it and it should have stuff on it his appointments
percent of their production in grain sorghum, 27; dried the report said.
1977 going into export channels, beans, 27; hope, 25; lemonsand .. - .
Other leading items and their limes, 24; peanuts, 19; and Other majoritems in terms
percentage going to foreign edible of fab (also called of value incdudedi Corn :85.34
countries included: “variety” meats), 15. billionor 19.6 percent of!the to-
Wheat, 61 percent: soybeans, in terms of the 827J billion in tali and wheat, 34 14 billionor—
56; cattle hides. 55; almonds, _ value of farm exports last fis- 1‘ percent
43; cotton, 42; inedible tallow, cal year, soybeans were the big The analysis’sald that the
41; dried prunes. 37; unmanu- leader, accounting for $641 bil- major foreign destinations for
factured tobacco, 35; com, 30; lion or 23.5 percent of the total, U.S. rice last year were In-
donesia. Iran, Saudi Arabia
and Nigeria.
DALIAS (AP) — Most of us cook. So you sorts take it out —
— caught up in the dizzy world I eat juice with it and toast."
of post-Christmas bills, work, Pancakes: “I'd get some
family problems, responsi- powder, put it in this things, put
bilities and the hassle of just a little milk in it, then you mix
being an adult — likely have it up Put it on the oven and
forgotten how simple and won- then you turn them over. Put
derful life really is when you're them on a plate. I put peanut
only three feet tall, and your butter on them and make them
pajamas have “feet" in them. into a sandwich. Then I eat it"
Take, for example, the an- if one has survived the sand-
cient art of feeding onen’s self. wih and pancakes, then, of
Big people in most cases have course, it is time for dessert
no problem But if you depend- And here is the most sane of
ed on Pat Parker’s elementary several chocolate cake re-
* school class to "whip up a little cipies:
something,” well, read on. “You roll up the cake up — I
Here are some sample recipes mean you get some cake mu
“msnda
75k
BEAUTIFUL CUSTOM DRAPES accent this con
temporary 3 bedroom, 2bath home. Complete with atrium
and skylite Each room tastefully done with accent
wallpaper Owner -Agent ONI. Y $54,009
DECORATE this new home to suit yourself located in
one of Stephenville’s fastest growing developments.
Hurry, it won t last long at $53,000
BARGAIN BUY IN DUBLIN. 2 bedrooms, P ■ bath at
ONLY 823,000
LOOKIG -FOR THE PERFECT INVESTMENT? See
this bedroom rent property. Sound construction, good
location CALI. FOR DEI A11S
A BEAUTIFUL TREE FILLED IAT surrounds this 3
bedroom, 2 bath brick home 1 caf garage and 2 vehicle
car port, plus a workshop andmny extras Only $43,000
ACREAGE
100 ACRES NEAR HICO- On pavement with barns,
corrals, stock tank. Good hunting with deer, turkey, quail.
Owner-Agent $650 acre.
58 ACRES ON PAVEMENT SE of Steph Stock tank and
good t'mber Great hunting. Owner-Agent 3650 acre.
55 ACSal"N HICO- Barn, corral, good timber, tank,
good zdle xod older house has cen. heat.
Owner-Agent >u1n8
( OMMER TAI. PROPERTY
COMMERCIAL BUILDINL ON 377 Two-thirds acre land
approx. 5300 sq ft. metal bujlding. call us fer details
E PSNUN e
Kaleidoscope I
By The Associated Press
Senate:
Granted , Gov. Dolph
2 8 _ 8 * ) - •
If you arq one of the fortunate ones who is already in the dairy business
and can see the price of milk going up you probably feel as we do; that
now is the time to make money in the dairy business.
F crei
With tight money at banks and other loan institutions, now may be the
time for you to consider how a lease-purchase with less than 6% down
and very low monthly payments is the way to go when adding more cows
and equipment while the times are good to "really make the big bucks”
in milking cows.
! )
1
Clements has been klunt and
tough-talking all his life and
shows no signs of changing as
Texas’ first elected Republican
governor in 105 years,'
"This is where the whole
process comes together,” the
Hf Me.
e"9mme
as .Ansd
■ euidqort
partment’s Economics, Statis-
tics and Cooperatives Service
• said Monday that the 31.3per-
cent export share is the largest
on record, up from the previous
high of about 30 percent in 1974
through 1976.
WASHINGTON (AP) —Hr The analysis was included in
eign customers bought me ff^p the current issue of "Foreign
production at almost one outpf Agricultural Trade of the
every three acres farmers bar- United States,” published
vested in 1977, according to a monthly by the agency.
I Hi- new analysis /by the Farm exports last fiscal year
4 Agriculture Department also seta value record at $27.3
billion, up 14 percent from 324
billion in 1976-77. They also
were a record in terms of vol-
ume, some 127 million metric
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Downs, Bob. Stephenville Empire-Tribune (Stephenville, Tex.), Vol. 110, No. 132, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 16, 1979, newspaper, January 16, 1979; Stephenville, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1501610/m1/4/: accessed July 8, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Dublin Public Library.