The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 78, No. 10, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 13, 1970 Page: 4 of 6
six pages : ill. ; page 23 x 18 in. Scanned from physical pages.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
4—THE ENNIS DAILY NEWS—Tuesday, January 13, 1970
St. John Junior High Winners
Over Palmer Cagers by 24-14
The St. John Junior Crusader- with a 13-10 lead. The turn-
ettes played their first game in about came because of several
over a month and the lay-off was driving layups by Vickie Grier
apparent as they dropped behind with assists by Janis Odlozil and
7-3 after the first quarter. How- the tremendous rebounding of
ever the team picked up the pace Anna Wilcher. The defense con-
in the second quarter and sisting of Cindy Kubala, Patty
went into the intermission Zmolik and Theresa Kelton also
Bowling
News
MOUSE & SPOUSE
COUPLES GOWLING
LEAGUE
The Drags ...
See Saws ...
„ 37
.. 34
Snoopy Troopers .... 32
19
22
24
- tightened up to control the Pal-
mer forwards.
In the second half the St. John
team continued to increase its
lead as they outscored Palmer
for a 23-12 third quarter lead.
In the fourth quarter the balance
of the team consisting of Cathy
Maliska, Patricia Banks, Claudia
Moucka, Theresa Patek, Diane
Boucka and Cindy Prachyl saw
action and did a good job. Vickie
Grier tallied 1-9 points, Anna
1
ti
by NEA, Inc., TM. Reg. U.S. Pat. off.
1-10
"I came in to see the paintings my mother wouldn’t
let me see yesterday!"
Lions and Indians This Evening
Meet at Waxa; Important Tilt
By BILL COX Underneth the basket-
the
The Ennis Lions take their Indians have Joe Wakeland — a
new found' fame and lay it on 6-4 junior and Sonny Wilson—a
the line tonight in Waxahachie 6-2senior in addition to a couple
as the Lions take on the league- of fine sulbs in 6-1 Danny Huff-
leading Waxahachie Indians in stetler and the well known T.
an important 8-AAA encounter. J. Hutchinson.
Waxahachie currently tied for
the league with Kennedy at 3-1 The Lions are expected to
is an old hand at winning Dis- start the game with the usual
trict 8-AAA basketball titles but starting lineup of- Rick Wil-
the Lions of Coach Al Lange liams at the point—Ronnie Tal-
are in the thick of the fight lant and Clayton Budai at the
for the first time in several flanks with Ronnie Murfif at
years and are currently the the post and Ricky Lewis at
surprise team of the N o rt h the base.
Zone. The Lions also have a fine
The Lions have won 2 and bench as does Waxahachie on
lost 1 in the North Zone chase which they can rely with the
todate—-and are currently tied likes of Dean Borland, Bill Fos-
for 3rd place with Terrell while ter, Chuck Bohall, Jerry Hol-
the Indians of Coach Rick Bly- lingsworth, Joe Muirhead ready
the are 3-1 in the North Zone to step in and help take up
Chase, with only a 79-71 loss to the slack at any time.
Athens to mar their slate. The Waxa - Ennis junior var-
Oddly enough, one of the sity clash is stated for 6 p.m.
Lions wins came over Athens while the two varsity clubs are
in Ennis by a 60-58 last Tues slated for a 7:30 tipoff.
day night.
The Lions also boast the
league leading defensive club
with a total of 1611 points being
allowed in three contest for an
average of 53.6 per outing.
Waxahachie this year is led
by Phil Turner—a 5-11 senior
playmaker who can really
shoot from outside in addition
to Guards Gary Stephonson— 6-
1 junior—and Pat McElroy—a 6-
2 senior.
CUSTOM MADE
RUBBER STAMPS
U. CO PRINT SHOP
The Litter Cheer Sy...
OBSERVE
HIGHWAY SIGNS
FOR
YOUR SAFETY
TEXAS HIGHWAY DEPARTMENT
Ups and Dowins
Twisters ...........
... 3012 2512 Wilcher scored 2 points and
--------, 3012 2512 Cathy Maliska scored one point.
Scatter Shots ...........30 26 St. John’s second high scorer,
... 28 28 Becky Prachyl, left the game
... 2612 2912 early with an injury after scor-
... 26
Wa-lhoo’s .......
4 Hippies ........
Astrocats .........
Mod Squad...
It’ll Do’s ..........
.........25
.........20
30
31
36
ing 2 points. The victory brought
the team record to 7-4 as they
entertain Rice next Monday at
Space Makers ........1612 3912 6:00.
High Team Series ______
See Saws—21/13.
Twisters—1997.
Ups and Downs—1991.
High Team Game
See Saws—735.
Ups and Downs—699.
Tiwi sters—687.
High Ind. Series 1
(Ladies)—
Janice Davis—548.
Elsie Welch—522.
Patsy Woodall—522.
Helen Bishop—513 .
Jan Rasco—505.
Delores Whittington—502 .
Marge Isbell—499.
Naomi Miller—482.
Dana Rutherford—480.
Virginia Branton—477.
Evelyn Clark—476.
(Men)—
Jet Jetton—614.
Freddie Bruner—561.
Pete Bishop—555.
John Rutherford—536.
Gene Whittington—530.
Jerry McGinley—528.
Al Welch-525.
Leonard Graham—521.
Bill Davis—518.
Alvin Annis—4517.
Dean Haught—514.
Red Clark-506.
Tom Branton—506.
Billy Roberts—496.
Ernest O’Daniel—490.
Glenn Rasco—487.
Harold Rogers—485.
High Individual Game
(Ladies)—
Patsy Woodall—211.
Low-Rent Housing
Project Receives
Government O-K
The U. S. Department of Hous-
ing and Urban Development has
approved a Ferris Housing Au-
thority application for $630,872
to finance a 36-unit low-rent-
housing project, according to
Regional Administrator W. W.
Collins.
The project, which will be
built on two sites, will include
10 units for the elderly.
Collins said his agency had
also set aside $522,540 for a 30-
Janice Davis—201.
Beverly Bruner—193.
Jan Rasco—191.
Elsie Welch—191.
Delores Whittington—186.
Evelyn Clark—186
Dana Ruthenford—181.
Helen Bishop—179.
Marsha Johnston—178.
Virginia Branton—178.
Marge Isbell—178.
Naomi Miller—177.
(Men)—
Jet Jetton—218-217.
Bill Davis—210.
Jerry McGinley—207.
Gene Whittington—206.
Freddie Bruner—203.
Pete Bishop—197.
Harold Rogers—195.
Al Welch—193.
' NEA
RENAISSANCE OF JERUSALEM is bringing new vitality to Israel’s capital city. Famed walls of the Old City are
getting a face-lifting and landscaped gardens are planned, for extensive adjacent area.__L-________
Lnt § m RM Cnlol The Lion eigHth grade club play.
CC1C I iOilS 4 ASTS turned in another fine contest The Ennis ninth grade took
. UI1 in defeating the Indians 31-15. a 6-5 first period lead and made
Auox Wnyn trmmoE PncRTOHOKC 0+1 T- the one point lead stand up for
UVer H dXd JuMOT DOSKCTHICTS High raan for the Lions was a 31-30 final.
.James Lockhart with 14 points. , 2
By BILL COX High man for Ennis was Scotty PA I 7 Steve Nash’s 14 points were
The Ennis eighth and ninth Hughes with 14 while Paul Lamb whe Butcircatioun added 1 good for high point honors while
grade basketball clubs took S hit 7. Greg Paltar was cited for ning effort louis Bullins was Gary Renfro and Steve Budai
night in the EHS gym, while the outstanding defensive play, cited for outstanding defensive were outstanding defensively.
Lions seventh grade lost a 1
squeaker to the visitors. |
The Ennis seventh dropped a ]
3.0-29 decision in the opener as j
an inability to hit from the free |
throw line proved fatal. -
The Lions hit only 7 of 24 .
shots from the cnarity line for
29 per cent while the Indians
were hitting 8 of 19 for 44 per
cent.
Alvin A nnis—192.
Dean Haught—191.
John Rutherford—191.
Billy Roberts—190.
Leonard Graham-—190.
Ernest O’Daniel—189.
William Sims—188.
Red Clark-—187.
Tom Branton—182.
RAY CROMLEY
Psychiatrists Put Finger
On Pulse of Radical Young
By RAY CROMLEY
NEA Washington Correspondent
BOSTON (NEA)
This reporter recently sat in on sessions at which psy-
thiatrists from various parts of the United States got to-
gether to argue over why it is that many young people are
in turmoil. , .
Like the rest of us, it turned out, they, too, did not have
an all-embracing answer. But they did have some theories
based on their own work:
• Activists lashing violently, arrogantly against society
frequently seem to be young people with deep inner con-
flicts. The valid problems they protest—war, racial in-
equity, poverty or pollution—are in many cases excuses or
diversions—cover-ups for personal problems from which
they are running away. They frequently back off when
faced with opportunities to do something personally about
these problems.
, • In homes and communities where parents have deep
beliefs in their own way of life—even when they are mi-
norities—(a strong belief in religion, for example, and a
strong belief in the family and traditional family relation-
ships), there are far fewer “activists” and fewer young-
sters with psychiatric problems.
• Many of these young men and women have had no
way, such as work or responsibility, to test themselves and
learn their own identity and worth. All they have done is
go to school.
A boy on a farm or even a youth in a factory, knew he
was needed. A boy who worked with his father in the fam-
ily shop, or a boy with a paper route could meet real chal-
lenges, test himself, learn “what he was” and build up real
relationships. He was part of the real world—as school is
not.
• Some youngsters seem confused about the difference
between what society and their parents say is right and life
as it actually is. Again, this is because these youngsters
lack experience in real life.
• Many way-out youths may be following the beliefs of
frustrated parents. The parents themselves may have been
activists. Or the parents may be “strait-laced” with their
inner dissatisfaction submerged because of fears (of what
people would think, of losing work, of persecution).
If this is true, these parents are then subconsciously
“using” their youngsters to accomplish their own aims
(these psychiatrists think)—in the sense that some men
with unachieved ambitions at law want their sons to be
attorneys or that some women with longings for a stage
career will fight tooth and claw to make their daughters
into actresses. :
According to this theory, these young people, whether
encouraged by their parents to be “free,” or whether
openly fighting their parents’ “way of life,” are, in fact,
tied to the apron strings of their parents’ inner wishes.
• There is nothing confused or amiss with that majority,
of normal young people who, like their counterparts in,
every generation, are maturely seeking needed improve-
ments in the society about them.
"Dependable
Carrier
Right Now!
TRADE IN YOUR OLD CON-
DENSING UNIT, COOLING
TOWER, ROOM AIR CON-
DITIONER OR FURNACE.
Call us today. Let us make a pro-
fessional air conditioning survey of
your home and start enjoying de-
pendable Carrier comfort. Your old
air conditioner is worth big money to
you during this limited time sale.
Special $75 Trade-in Offer
Ends March 31,1970.
Condensing Unit Model 38GF004
(36,000 B.T.U.)
Suggested Retail................$585.00
Less Trade-In.....................$ 75.00
Your Net Cost.....................$510.00*
(Plus Installation)*
Upon completion of your installation,
Carrier-Bock Company will send
you a check for $75.00
Save Now! Call us today
THE ROUNDER
Carrier’s exclusive new condensing unit sets new
standards in appearance and quiet operation. Avail-
able in seven sizes of 18,000 to 60,000 B.T.U.
If you already have central air conditioning, regardless
of the brand, you'll probably just need a new condens-
ing unit. If you have central heating, you’ll need the con-
densing unit, a thermostat control and an inside ex-
pansion coil, which, of course, will raise the total cost.
If you don’t have central heating, you’ll need the above
units plus a furnace and ductwork at additional cost.
C. A. WILSON CO.
116 N. College St.
Waxahachie, Texas
==================
CHECK LIST
CUSTOM MADE RUBBER STAMPS
LINDY PENS - BIC PENS - FISHER PEN
All Colors—Both Fine and Medium Points
PARKER JOTTER PENS
Refills for all makes — Pens and Pencils
-0-
Marks-A-Lot
Scotch Tape
Masking Tape
—0- -0- —0-
Stapiers
Staples
Paper Clips
Brown Tape For Mailing Pencil Sharpeners
Telemate Sets Tape Dispensers
Drawing-A-Lot Ink Sets
Check Holders
O
0-
0-
O-
SCOTCH TAPE HOME DISPENSERS
pastel shades, makes nice gifts
—0- —0—
Index Card Files
Index Cards
O
—O—
—0- —0
Typewriter & Adding .
For All Makes
Pencils
Ledger Leaves
Ring Books
File Folders
UPCO Print Shop
“Distinctive Printing”
213 NORTH DALLAS STREET
PHONE 875-3801
=======
Sew
app
875-
. Per:
Red
Bes
ter
Will
875-
WA
hon
SOR
gal.
uph
shar
6 WA i
Pile
reta
clea
• elec
..com
WRY
ERA--
"Nee
5. 8
B.
dat
2, i:
thej
wothe
son
p.m
Reg
“SE
Nee
yup?
ant
able
-'ice.
ture
:arg
Bre
*43
FOR
ling
ELF
TCE
tion
666-
RUC
Fre
er (
875
FR/
For
Stre
Mai
Flo
HoU
lect
Tex
Pou
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Casebolt, Floyd W. The Ennis Daily News (Ennis, Tex.), Vol. 78, No. 10, Ed. 1 Tuesday, January 13, 1970, newspaper, January 13, 1970; Ennis, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1677929/m1/4/: accessed July 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Ennis Public Library.