Cedar Hill Chronicle (Cedar Hill, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 3, 1980 Page: 3 of 20
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CEDAR HILL CHRONICLE, Thurs., July 3, 1980-Page 3
Cedar Heights to present award- winning film
“No Longer Alone,”
winner of three film
awards, will be shown at
7 p.m., Sunday, July 6 at
Cedar Heights Baptist
Church, 201 E. Belt Line
Road. The showing is
open to the public and
free of charge.
A true story, the film
takes a close look at a
woman who is searching
desperately for love and
acceptance, but whose
cries went unheard by
those around her.
Originally released by
World Wide Pictures in
commercial theatres,
the film has been edited
to one hour in length and
will eventually be
presented as a television
special.
“No Longer Alone”
traces the life of English
actress, Joan Winmill
Brown, who skyrocketed
to fame on the British
stage. However, her life
was marked by a frantic
grasp for personal fulfill-
ment and love.
Tormented by the past
she was unable to forget,
she suffered a series of
nervous breakdowns and
once attempted suicide.
According to William
F. Brown, president of
World Wide Pictures,
“No Longer Alone” was
presented with the
Award of Excellence
from the Film Advisory
Board of Hollywood, as
well as the Angel award
from Religion in Media
in America, as the out-
standing religion film of
the year. It also received
the Silver Halo Award
from the Southern
California Motion
Picture Council.
“No Longer Alone”
was filmed in color on
location in London, and
stars Belinda Carroll,
Wilfrid Hyde White,
James Fox, Samantha
Gates and Gordon
DeVol. Simon Williams,
who has one of the
leading roles in the BBC
production, “Upstairs,
Downstairs,” also stars
in the film. The title song
was performed by the
popular recording artist,
B. J. Thomas.
Tully Shrout
S & J Stores, Inc.
(Carney’s)
Ladies Sportswear
30% - 70%
Off
Genuine Factory
Outlet
9 a,m,-4:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri.
9 a.m.-12 p.m. Saturday
to _ . {' You will like our styles...
Shrout invited to European tour you wlll love ourpr/ces.
Tully Shrout, 1979
graduate of Cedar Hill
High School and student
at Mountain View
College, will be
travelling to New York
and Europe as part of the
Large Jazz/Swing Choir
group Jazz Abroad pro-
gram.
There are over 90 stu-
dents from around the
U.S. participating in the
European tour of Jazz
Abroad, representing
the top music students in
the country.
Shrout, a tenor, was a
member of the Cedar
Hill High School concert
choir.
The group will be
arriving in New York for
practice sessions at
Columbia University on
July 5 and are scheduled
to leave for France July
8.
Farmers request ethanol
fuel tax exemption
The head of a Central
Texas farmers
cooperative which plans
to build an ethaol
producing plant told a
House Agricultural Sub-
committee, that the
State of Texas could best
help the fledgling
industry by granting a
fuel tax exemption on
gasohol.
Kenneth Johnson,
president of Central
Texas Grain Productios
Incorporated, said that
development of the
Cedar Heights
On The Road
Cedar Heights On The
Road is for youth ages 7
to 17. The event will be
held at 1130 Angela Drive
in Kingswood, Monday
through Friday, July
17-11 at 2 p.m. each day.
There will be songs,
puppets and Bible study.
industry in Texas would
serve dual purposes.
“What we are doing is
creating a new, stable
market for our grain
which will not depend on
the whim and fancy of
federal farm policy nor
on the vacillations of
global power politics,”
he said. “At the same
time, we will be making
a very real contribution
toward American
energy independence.”
Gasohol has already
been granted a four cent
federal tax exemption,
and the state exemption
would help to further
narrow the gap between
th price of gasohol and
regular unleaded
gasoline. The gasoline
ethanol mix is now avail-
able on a limited basis in
Texas.
Johnson said the
development of a new
industry would help
American farmers who
are being plagued by
decreasing crop yeilds,
skyrocketing interest
rates and rising energy-
related expenses. “In
producing alcohol from
grain, we feel that we
can have a market for
our grain at a fair price,
and contribute in a very
real way to America’s
energy independence,”
Johnson said.
911 Cedar St.
Cedar Hill
3M
Air Conditioning Repair
Condensors Replaced
3-tons
21/2-tons
$400. (installed)
$350. (installed)
window units repaired
Other types of air-conditioning
work also done
291-7647
Cedar Hill
Cedar
Hill’s
Ministers
Reflect...
Doug Phelps
Pastor of Music & Media
Trinity Assembly New Life Center
Having only been here in Cedar Hill for about nine
months, I am still learning things about this area. I
came here in October of last year after touring for six
months or so throughout the United States, mostly on
my own. Just prior to the touring time, I was in New
Orleans as a minister of music and youth. From this
-view, let’s look at the subject of music in our modern
day church service as a part of our worship and our
Jives.
Music in the past decade in Christian circles has
been exposed to a lot of criticism. Because of the fact
that music is more emotion than it is physical, and
more spiritual than it is tangible, it is subject to our
feelings when forming our attitudes, especially in
church music. Everyone has a favorite type of music
and anything outside of that type is, to them, of less
quality.
In New Orleans, music was a vital part, as here, in
the worship service of the church. Dallas is different,
however, in that there are many more churches per
person, and that this culture is practically saturated
with the message of Jesus Christ. It is for this reason
that we sense a particular value in music for worship,
either in song or instrumental. People may visit your
church and forget the message the pastor brings.
They may come for the first time and forget the decor
of your building, the programs or activities to come,
but we feel they long remember the atmosphere of a
church; and music is one of the greatest tools to create
an atmosphere. Therefore, we should strive, to the best
of our ability under God’s direction, to use this tool of
music to create an atmosphere in which God’s spirit
feels welcome. We recognize people hurt and have
needs. We also recognize we are only men and cannot
meet these needs, but God can. That is why it is so
important that He is present in every service. There
are so many other things involved in creating an
atmosphere for God’s presence. Music is just one \
factor, but it is my part in the body of Christ to develop
in people the desire and the ability to create this -
atmosphere through song.
K'- ■- V ; » ... .
1
-^---x----^
First Baptist
602 Belt Line
Glenn W. Hayden, Pastor
ChurclV of Christ
332 Cedar Street
Dean Kilmer, Minister-
Central Baptist
Highway 67
Rev. Malcolm Scoggins, Pastor
Cedar Heights Baptist
fast Balt Una Road
Rev. Don Childress, Pastor
Assembly o* God
Straus Road
Rev. Carroll Teeter, Pastor
Faith Tabernacle
324 Texas St.
Tt<ev.s Jerry L. Sanders, Pastor
V
First United Methodist
] Harrington & Roberts j.
Rev. Robert A. Greaves, Pastor
Faith Bible Church
1808 17 Camp Wisdom, Dallas
Fred C. Campbell, Pastor
Holy Spirit Catholic
Read Junior High, Duncanville
Father Robert Johnson, Pastflr*
New Life In Christ
Lutheran
Lions Club Community Housa
Duncanville
Dr. Axel V. Beckman. Pastor
Trinity Assembly Of God
1410 Pleasant Run Road
David Smith, Pastor
OPENINGS
NOW
!
6
) CHILD CARE
Age 18 Mo. & Up |
Morninq & Afternoon |
Snacks I
Hot Noon Meal I
dreative Play In
Christian Atmosphere?
CENTRAL
BAPTIST
— 1
291-4907
4th of July Sale
Thurs.-Sunday July 3-6
Country Basket—500 off
small drinks
French fries
750
290
Cedar Hill Dairy Queen
291-1028
David Clayton & Sons
Funeral Home
Duncanville
298-7222
Cowboy-Ford Mercury
Interstate 35-E. at U.S. 287
In Waxahachie
Local: 937-5310 Metro: 223-7580
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White Auto Store
Al & Rozelle Krueger, Owners
Tower Shopping Center
Cedar Hill 291-1389
Little Bethel
Memorial Park
A Perpetual Care Cemetery
We Sell Granite & Bronze Markers
1803 S. Cedar Hill Rd. 298-4550
Cedar Hill Paint & Body Cedar Hill Chronicle
L- .. ■ - __
501 StHwy. 67
291-4903
109 Main St.
291-4223
HRK Income Tax Service
Bookkeeping and all tax reports
Box 73, Cedar Hill
Howarc KHgore, 291-475C
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Hardin, Ken. Cedar Hill Chronicle (Cedar Hill, Tex.), Vol. 16, No. 44, Ed. 1 Thursday, July 3, 1980, newspaper, July 3, 1980; Cedar Hill, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth714541/m1/3/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Zula B. Wylie Memorial Library.