Little Elm Tide (Little Elm, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 6, 1976 Page: 4 of 8
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LITTLE ELM TIDE MAY 6, 1976
Two honored
LITTLE ELM
NORTH TEXAS
SAVINCS ‘LOAN
A^OO
C•
23.
Maximum Legal Rates Paid On Savings
w. HICKORY & OAK AT PINE
2
Rogers & Bacchus Pharmacy
Thank You
J&J LIQUOR
Thank you for the confidence and support
At The Bridge On
Highway 720
fem
in Little Elm
supported others
Phone 292-1857
Cold Beer
Ai Assortment Of Wine And Liquors
Check Our Weekend Specials
KENNETH GEORGE
Political Ad Paid For By Kenneth George Campaign Fund, Jack Gray, Chairman
5555555555
MORTGAGE
LOANS
Frisco 377-2731
Dallas 231-3153 & 350-4232
"THE CUSTOMER is the most impor-
tant person in this store, whether he
comes himself, writes or telephones...."
Dallas Line (214) 233-6197
HOME IMPROVEMENT
LOANS
INGENIOUS IDEAS
HOW AMERICA'S BEST MANAGERS DO IT
MICROFILM BREAKS INTO PUBLISHING
By OLIVIA MARION
Leonard Baker, 69, of Denton formerly of Little Elm, was
buried in the Little Elm Cemetary Monday, May 3. He is sur-
vived by his wife, Ola (Justus) Baker, a daughter Mrs. Ginger
Akers of Ponder and his mother, Mrs. Mimia Baker of Denton.
Don Mike Allen, 25, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles (Chick)
Allen of Denton, was buried Monday, May 3, in Roselawn
Memorial Cemetary in Denton. He si survived by his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Allen of Denton, formerly of Little Elm,
two sisters and a brother. He was a nephew of Mrs. Nellie
Strickland of Little Elm.
Those ill are Orval Chumbley in Lewisville, Henry McDaniel
Sr. in Pilot Point Nursing Home. Mrs Nellie Mercer is an out-
patient in a Fort Worth Hospital. Hazel Gibson of Frisco is
seriously ill in Baylor Hospital.
Mrs. Hoot Chandler of McKinney, formerly of Little Elm, is
ill in Collin Memorial Hospital.
A grandaughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Price of Dallas former-
ly of Little Elm, was run over by a school bus and is in criti-
cal condition in Parkland Hospital in Dallas.
The cemetary decoration was well attended Sunday. Attend-
ing from a distance were Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Cruse of Plain-
view, Mrs. Mary L. Testerman of Sudan, and Harold Shoulders
of Dumas, B. B. Gill and Lyle Gill Jr. of Wichita Falls. Tom
Gill of Houston, Mrs. Clova Hickey of Abilene and Mrs. Allene
Lawrence of Big Springs.
Gordon Hutson returned home after several days as a patient
in Westgate Hospital.
for saving life
Two Denton County
Electric Cooperative em-
ployes have received Life
Savings Awards at the an-
nual Texas Job Training
and Safety Conference in
Amarillo. Jerry Beck and
Larry Miller, both of
Lewisville, received the
award for saving the life
of a Lewisville man last
fall.
Beck and Miller are
credited with saving the
life of a Lewisville man
who had come in contact
with a high voltage line.
By applying mouth-to-
mouth resuscitation and
external heart massage,
the two cooperative em -
ployes kept the victim
alive until an ambulance
arrived.
Beck and Miller receiv-
ed plaques and watches
for their actions in a spe-
cial ceremony at the annual
conference sponsored by
Texas A&M University,
Texas Electric Cooperatives,
and the Texas Education
Agency.
W Wheel *one
Page 4
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largest libraries and comput-
ers, microfilm systems dras-
tically shrink the space re-
quired for storage, another
growing cost item, and
make files more easily acces-
sible.
When a large company
can place 3,200 pages of
data on one 4 by 6 inch
card, it results in reducing
mountains of information
to molehill size. Some
companies are now using
this type of microfilm sys-
tem for their parts catalogs.
race for sheriff
DANIEL
IMPLEMENT CO., INC.
Hiwy. 720 E. Frisco, Tx.
hg
6L*
sin cere hope that those of you who
will join hands with me
1105 FM 720 RD. Phone 377-2412 in Frisco
23363638633 63636363363636363636363636363636363636363363636:
33333
in the run-off.
you gave me on Saturday.
Together we can have a
It is my
of the good men in the
Employees can reference
the catalogs on a microfilm
reader instead of having to
page through stacks of parts
books. This means less time
wasted and lower labor
costs.
According to the National
Micrographics Association,
with this system an entire
1,245-page Bible can be
filmed on one card, two by
two inches square. With this
type of technology, an
entire library can be placed
in a desk drawer.
33%
$
Here’s The.Way We Feel
sheriff’s office of which the entire county
can be proud.
It is now possible to put
up to 3,200 conventional
size pages on one 4 by 6
inch card. Startling, but
true! The “card” is called an
ultrafiche, a form of micro-
graphics that can reduce an
original document up to
200 times.
Under the impetus of
this type of new develop-
ment, the microfilm indus-
try is beginning to break in-
to publishing in a way that
may change the libraries of
the future and transform
the distribution of books
and periodicals. Basically,
what has propelled this
growth is economics. While
conventional printing and
its material costs have risen
an average of 20 percent
over a five-year period,
microfilm costs have re-
mained steady, and in some
cases have even declined.
Copy can be produced fast-
er than by conventional
printing and at a saving of
anywhere from 15 to more
than 50 percent per page.
Further large savings are
made in distribution costs,
particularly mailing. This is
not surprising, for roughly
10 pounds of printed matter
can be reduced in micro-
forms to an ounce or less.
Another important advan-
tage of miniaturization in
publishing is that at a time
when an ever increasing
volume of information is be-
ginning to clog even the
DENTON. TEXAS 76201 Phone 383-9676
Raml
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Blalock, Jack. Little Elm Tide (Little Elm, Tex.), Vol. 9, No. 36, Ed. 1 Thursday, May 6, 1976, newspaper, May 6, 1976; Little Elm, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1520550/m1/4/: accessed June 28, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting The Colony Public Library.