The Seminole Sentinel (Seminole, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 12, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 11, 1988 Page: 9 of 12
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Seminole (Texas) Sentinel. December 11.1988. PAGE 9
Tribe loses road game at L.C.H.S.
The Seminole Indians lost their
second game of the year, Tuesday
night, falling to Lubbock
Christian High School 71-59 at
the LCHS basketball facility in
Lubbock.
Seminole, now 6-2, suffered a
cold night from both the two-
point and three-point shooting
areas. The locals made 13 two-
pointers in 44 tries for 30 per cent
and six of 24 treys for 25 per cent.
Seminole shot 28 per cent overall
from the field.
The winners made 25 two-
pointers in 42 tries for 60 per cent
and five of eight treys for 63 per
cent. The winners shot 61 per cent
overall.
Seminole stayed in the game
with free throws, making 15 of 24
for 63 per cent, compared to just
six freebies for the winners in 11
tries for 55 per cent.
Rick Briseno led the locals in
two-point buckets, with four and
Jerrold Hill, in five tries, and
Julian Alcala had three two-
pointers each. Juan Espino, Jay
Ray and Tri Danley had one two-
pointer each.
Espino led the locals with three
treys, in nine tries and Tri Danley
had a pair of treys. Jay Ray sank
his only attempt beyond the three-
point line.
Alcala was deadly at the line,
making eight of nine for 89 per
cent. Julian Gomez had three
freebies and Tri Danley made
both of his tries from the charily
stripe. Jay Ray and Briseno had
one freebie each.
Seminole had 11 assists, 16
steals and 35 rebounds and zero
blocks, compared to nine assists,
10 steals, 32 rebounds and four
blocks for the winners.
Alcala led the locals with five
assists and Jay Ray had three.
Gomez, Derek Ray and Briseno
had one each.
Briseno led the locals with six
steals and Jay Ray, Hill, Derek
Ray and Espino had two steals
each. Danley and Alcala had one
theft each.
Alcala led the locals with 13
rebounds, nine from the offensive
side, and Briseno had eight
boards, five from the offensive
glass.
Gomez and Danley had four
boards each and Hill had three.
Derek Ray had two boards and
Jay Ray had one.
The Indians, who participated
in the Denver City Tournament
this weekend, host Snyder at 7:30
p.m. Tuesday.
GENTLEMEN FARMERS--
-Bosque County might have been
a little bit of England today
except the British gentry didn’t
take too well to the plow.
In 1850, Jacob de Cordova, an
early Texas real estate developer,
sold a large parcel of land on the
Brazos River to an English
immigration company. The next
year, 30 British families arrived
Q
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idk
‘Talk of Texas'
lit Jack Mag it in
and established a settlement
which they named Kent.
To the English colonists, Texas
was the land of promise. They
wanted to escape the Church of
England, the heavy taxes and the
British class system. However,
most were from the upper class
and knew little about farming.
When their first crops failed,
so did the colony. Some returned
to England and others relocated in
Texas and became tradesmen.
Kent, once the home of 125
British, became a ghost town. No
trace of it remains today.
THE
INSURANCE
STORE
*HOME *AUTO
♦HEALTH
DIXIE SMITH,
AGENT
222 S. MAIN
758-2900
wnj*
Man With Shameful Urges
Despairs of Finding Help
By Abigail Van Buren
® 1988 by Universal Press Syndicate
DEAR ABBY: I need your help. I
have a loving, wonderful wife and
a small child. Life is treating me
well on the outside, but on the inside
a storm is raging. I was both
physically and sexually abused as a
child. Self-loathing, thoughts of
running away and even suicide
have pervaded my mind since I was
a teen. I thought that I had resolved
my problems through my strong
faith, but recently, to my despair
and shame, sexual urges toward my
own daughter have brought the self-
loathing back.
I telephoned a counselor and
explained my predicament without
disclosing my identity. I confessed
that while giving my daughter a
bath, I had become physically
aroused, but, of course, I did not act
on my feelings. This counselor told
me that if I identified myself, he
would then be put in a position to
have to call the welfare department
and have my daughter removed
from our home!
I am horrified! Thus far, nobody
in the family has been harmed. The
child had no idea that I was
aroused, but removing her from the
family while I am attempting to
resolve this problem would only
throw the family into turmoil. Our
family life would be ruined and the
child would be the victim.
Please help me, Abby. Where can
I go to work on this problem without
ripping my family apart? I want
healing, but I cannot chance this
being brought out into the open.
CURSED
DEAR CURSED: I don’t know
what kind of “counaelor” you
consulted anonymously on the
telephone, hut I urge you to see
on behalf of “Syke’s Regulars” to
express our gratitude for the won-
derful letters we received last June
through Operation Dear Abby-
DMZ.
We proudly stand on “Freedom’s
Frontier,” the demilitarized zone
that separates North and South
Korea, to help preserve peace on the
Korean peninsula.
Our mission is long and arduous,
and we remain virtually isolated
from the outside world. Therefore,
those letters were a real morale
booster for those who are stationed
there. Thank you, Abby, for your
thoughtful concern for our soldiers.
FREDERICK R. WILHELM JR.,
LT. COL., INFANTRY
DEAR COL. WILHELM: I
hope your men can handle more
mail, because Dear Abby read-
ers are the nicest people in the
world.
Readers: Address your holi-
day cards and letters to: “Sykes
Regulars,” Headquarters, 5th
Battalion 20th Infantry (Me-
chanized), 2nd Infantry Divi-
sion, APO San Francisco, Calif.
96224.
* * *
DEAR ABBY: With the holiday
season upon us, I wish people would
quit serving those “dips” — you
know, the kind you dip your celery
stick or carrot into, take a bite, then
stick the carrot or celery into the
bowl again. The eater’s saliva goes
right into the guacamole for every-
one else to share.
YICK IN BEL AIR
DEAR YICK: Thanks. I’ve
just enjoyed my las^dip.
a psychiatrist at once. You have
been grossly misinformed. A
therapist is not required to
report on the “urges” or feel-
ings of his/her patients, and
please do not believe that your
child will be removed from your
home if you reveal thoughts
that crossed your mind but were
not acted upon.
You are a courageous and
good person for having written
to me in search of a solution to
this problem. Now, please, see a
psychiatrist. If you don’t know
one, your family physician can
make some recommendations.
Do this today, my friend, and
write again to let me know how
you are. I care.
* * *
DEAR ABBY: I am writing to you
DEAR ABBY: When I was a
small boy, while eating corn on the
cob at my grandparents’ house, my
grandfather said he would give $100
to anyone who could show him an
ear of corn with an odd number of
rows. Well, nobody got the $100.
I never did find out why where is
always an even number of rows on
an ear of corn. Do you know, Abby?
A CORNY QUESTION
DEAR CORNY: I didn’t know
until I called the U.S. Depart-
ment of Agriculture and was
informed by Charles Van Lahr
that corn “programs” itself to
produce only an even number of
rows because two “flowers”
must be fertilized at once for
reproduction to occur.
' Insurance
And
Investment
Consultant
BOB CLARK ’
‘INSURANCE ‘MUTUAL FUNDS ‘STOCKS ‘BONDS
‘IRA’s ‘KEOGH’S ‘401 K PLANS
‘RETIREMENT PLANNING ‘FINANCIAL PLANNING
NEW ENGLAND FINANCIAL SERVICES |
A PARTNER OF THE NEW ENGLAND
915-758-2664 222 S. MAIN SEMINOLE, TX.
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When you shop at home, your local sales tax dollars stayi
home supporting local interests, such as your schools,
hospital, community buildings and many other commu-
nity functions.
When you shop at home, your helping your friends and When you shop at home, you save time as well as wear and
neighbors. People whose businesses keep our community tear on your car.
alive and growing. Think about it...You save MORE than money."
Join Us In Doing What's Right For Seminole and Caines County...be a
SMART SANTA SHOPPER!
Come by First National Bank anytime between now and Dec. 22, pick up a special
SANTA SHOPPER STICKER then take it by one of the businesses listed below. At-
tach the special sticker you get from us to the registration form at the business and
become eligible for DOUBLE SANTA BUCKS...Drawings will be held each Thursday
through Dec. 22 and over
S3.Q00 WILL BE CIUEN AWflYT
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300 S. MAIN
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MEMBER F.D.LC.
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The Seminole Sentinel (Seminole, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 12, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 11, 1988, newspaper, December 11, 1988; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth636491/m1/9/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Gaines County Library.