The Ingleside Index (Ingleside, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 1, 1983 Page: 2 of 31
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Ingleside Index and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Ed & Hazel Richmond Public Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Thursdoy, September 1, 1983
THE INGLESIDE INDEX
wsaasu
r
Colleen Gandara
Opinion
i duB
MTU M>(.
1
1
Bill seeks to correct imbalance
THE INGLESIDE
7]
■
i
•M
States
I
=
Pogo Two
Letters
TEXAS PRESS
ASSOCIATION
Looking
Back
Embass'
stamped
*
I
Sincerely
Kenneth Saunders
P.O. Box 564
Aransas Pass, Texas 78336
Presi-
efforts
come
' ft President
not only has
workers, but
in heavy jot
Reagan’s Lebanese plan unravels;
Gemaysl looks to Israel for help
Representative Kika De La Garsa
House Office Building
Washington. D.C. 36618
1-2*2-824-3121
Governor Mark White
Capitol Station
POB IM18
Austin, Tx. 78711 I *** 888 ****
President Ronald Reagan
White House
Washington, D.C. 1-388-486-1414
ing the channel. Anyone would know that
water (rain) drain off won’t run uphill
over a spoil bank.
I know this has been said and pointed
out before a number of times but seems
like it keeps falling on deaf ears.
Now with all this controversy about
sighting of jaguarundi, ocelots and
alligators, I have never yet seen any of
these creatures out there in those sand
hills and salt flats.
After riding around to see for myself
an hour or two, I almost ran over this 10
point buck (see picture). I ran into
Baker’s agriculture parking lot and hid
behind a front end loader. 1 wonder when
they are going to put up those signs (deer
crossing).
Before 1 could recover from the near
experience, there stood a pink elephant
and a white rhinoceros. The rino stayed
in the road like he owned it. (The editor is
my witness, that’s a pink elephant in the
picture).
My only hope then was to see that little
short billed oyster chaser that is suppose
to be out there running around in that hot
sand trying to find a micro organism to
eat.
I do realize now if I had just one more
six pack of Miller Lite, I might have seen
a Kiwi, or a giant panda or a mug wump
Remember those?
In 1873
BRYN L. CALCOTE, president of First
as much as 820,000
an informant, and
h seem-
employ-
Btete Representative District 38
Bill Harrison Jr.
P.O. Box 2S1S
Austin. Tx 78788 I-818-883-8833
eee
Public Utility Comnitastoe
1-488-6188 7886 IBml Creek Blvd.
Suite 4**N
Anetta, Tx. 78711
England^
TA
TEXAS PRESS
ASSOCIATION
Also, the by-catch in the fisher-
man’s net could be utilised in a
expanded export market, where-
as It Is now generally thrown back to
the sea because of a lack of U.S.
consumer demand. I am a strong
supporter of this, and all other
issues affecting marine life.
A
KENNETH SAUNDERS spotted these elusive "creatures” and provided
these photographs to document his sightings. (See first lottor to the
odltor for an ox planation.)
A
bTe
space will be the keynote speaker of
the 10th Annual Regional Institue of
Alcohol Studies. He is Dr. Doug
Talbott, who now works in Smyra,
Georgia, with doctors and other
health professionals whose func-
tions are impaired by glcohol.
Previously, he was nyconsultant to
the National Space Agency, in
charge of crew selection of the first
seven astronauts for (Project Mer-
cury and responsible fdr crew safety
for Projects Gemini and Apollo.
The Institute will be held Thursday
and Friday, Sept. 8 and 9, from 8:30
a.m. to 5 p.m., at Holiday Inn, Air-
port, 5549 Leopard Street in Corpus
Christi.
Dr. Tablott's speciality is that of
addictionology. He Is the author of
five books and is on the faculty of
Letter to the Editor
I would like to say good-bye to all my
good friends of Ingleside. Each and
every one of you will always have a
special place in my heart.
Ingleside has grown a lot in the six
years our family has been here, but still
has a definite need for recreation and oc-
cupation for its young people. I need to
leave but still want to be part of you. I
devised a Youth Community Center that
I hope will please you, and am leaving it
with the members of the City Council to
take action on it. (Ask Mel Michaels, Al
Bergen or Bill Schmidt for further infor-
mation.)
So maybe I am leaving, but my con-
cern will always be with you people of In-
gleside.
If I didn't have the opportunity to say
good-bye individually to you, please don't
think I thought any less of you. You’re a
wonderful bunch of people and I love you
all.
ALTER HALE and J.D.
pictured with a new unite- /
■ ■
n VMC|l3.08 per year
J. G. Richards and Richard P. Richards
Owners and Publishers
Larry Wittnebert John Bowers
Editor Advertising Manager
Laura Simank
Tim Fischer
Associate Editors
AWARD WINN! R y
By Jack Anderson
and Joe Spear
WASHINGTON -
dent Reagan’s peace
in Lebanon nave
unraveled. Syria'
Hafez Assad no
refused to pull his troops out
of Lebanon, he has deployed
his forces for a confronta-
tion with the Israelis.
A dispatch from the U.S.
jy in Damascus,
id ‘‘secret,’’ says
will not provoke a
war with Israel but won’t
back down from one. Anoth-
er intelligence report says
be believes his new SA-5
missiles, manned by Soviet
crews, will keep the Israeli
air force off his back. He
thinks this will give his
tanks in Lebanon an edge nations
over the Israelis. jnSBaRbs.
According to one secret
analysis, there could M war
in Lebanon before Novem-
ber The Syrians already are
stirring up the Druzes,
Palestinians and Lebanese
leftists, who are waging an
underground war against the
Lebanese government.
Lebanon’s President Amin
Gemayel, meanwhile, has
lost confidence in the prom-
ises of the Reagan adminis-
tration and is looking
increasingly to Israel for
protection.
BAD LEGISLATION?:
The U.S. automobile indus-
try is up against fierce com-
petition from Japanese
imports, and American car
makers have incorporated
many Japanese innovations
My interest goes bock to the days
when I sat on the Committee on
Merchant Marine and Fisheries, and
although 1 had to give up that seat
when I assumed the chairman-
ship of the Committee on Agri-
culture, my keen interest In marine
affairs has not ebbed on inch.
San Patricio County
State Senator Cartes Truax
831* AgMS
Corpus Christi. Tx. 78486
C.C. -1-888-1*83
P.O. Bex 13868
Austin. Tx. 78711 Austin- 1-478-487*
••• ‘
State Representative Leroy Wlettag
lit Janfo Otte N.
Portland, Tx. 160*886
Austin 1-478-4383
•••
Aransas County
State Senator District 18 Jeka Sharp
P.O. Bex 13868
Anetta, Tx 78711 1-812-4734788
Secret Service, charging
favoritism, arbitrary hiring
practices and destruction of
documents.
Some other agents have
given me private verifica-
tion of Hagmeyer’s charges,
but his own alleged miscon-
duct has damaged his credi-
bility. Furthermore, he
didn’t speak out until after
he knew he was under inves-
tigation
After a 14-month probe,
the Merit Systems Protec-
tion Board Office of Special
Counsel recently ruled that
Hagmeyer’s charges have no
substance. But Hagmeyer
contends that the abuses
continue.
HEADLINES AND FOOT-
NOTES: The Federal Bureau
of Investigation has warned
defense contractors that
’ MSra.IS'ES
vital defense secrets. The
Russians, the bureau claims,
they often ap
taries and low
JACK ANDERSON AND JOE SPEAR
WEEKLY SPECIAL
Your officials
cal students to diagnose and treat
alcoholism and drug addiction.
ot Movernmerus . K.,^ ^ (| R for the ,‘am.
doctor who ha. been resp^L , docR,r |0 have necessary tal t>
for the safety of astrormufFm I an<J ot< fhem jn bofh spQce
gram and the challenge of alcohol
abuse. Both the exploration of space
and of the nature of human beings
are basic pioneering and test the im-
agination and intellect. Directions
we take in the future can be in-
fluenced by what is learned and
communicated in these fields today.
Dr. Talbott is one of 14 faculty
members for the Institute. The facul-
ty members come from educational
institutions and agencies which are
working within the rapidly expan-
ding body of knowledge about
causes, Intervention, and treatment
of alcohol abuse. Most of the sub-
jects are presented in workshops
where participants can question and
discuss.
Fees for the institute are being
held down so that attendance can be
possible for the many categories of
people who have an urgent need to
la 1*68
IHS twirlers were MARGARET KHILE,
THOMASYNE GREENFIELD,
DEBORAH LOCKHART, and drum ma
jor, SHARON CARTER. . THE COL-
LINS FAMILY REUNION met for the
weekend... BILL HIGHTOWER left for
Marine Boot Camp. ..
into their products. But leg-
islation now being consid-
ered by Congress will give
U.S. manufacturers an
advantage. It will require
that aU automobiles sold in
the United States contain 95
percent American-made
parts.
Sources close to President
Reagan’s trade representa-
tive, Bill Brock, expect that
some form of “domestic
content’’ legislation to be
passed this fall. But some
experts believe that such a
law would threaten jobs in
other sectors of the econo-
The legislation would
mean more jobs for auto
It could result
' losses in the
billton
If the
State* restricts
other, ^countries
expected to retaliate and
stop buying American goods.
One-fifth of all products
manufactured in the United
States are exported —
including a third of all farm
products and billions of dol-
lars worth of services.
Any retaliation against
protectionist legislation, in
short, would put thousands
of jobs in peril
NEW NUCLEAR
POWER: Talk of nuclear
conflict has always centered
on the Soviet Union and the
United States, but we have
learned about another mush-
rooming nuclear power —
the People’s Republic of
China.
By Kika De La Garza
15th District, Texas
Because 10 percent of this year's
U.S. trade deficit will Involve fish
and fish products, along with my col-
leagues on the Committee on Agri-
culture and the Committee on Mer-
chant Marino and Fisheries I have
introduced legislation to help re-
dress this imbalance.
Our area is rich in the bounty of
the ocean, and I want to see the U.S.
export of fishery products increase.
The sea provides an incredible
variety of protein-abundant food
supplies, but we need an updated
export plan to utilize the re-
sources which are at our finger-
tips.
We Americans are generous in
allowing foreign countries to fish
within our 200 mile conservation
zone, but wo end up importing our
own fishery products from those
countries I
My bill, HR 3255, would add
fish and fish products to the list
of items that qualify for USDA
export credit guarantee pro-
grams, export credit revolving
funds, and the Food for Peace
program. These export promotion
programs ore a proven way of In-
creasing the ability of foreign coun-
tries to buy American.
This bill would encourage
American fishing businesses to
expand their operations knowing
I nil < & lucrative export luBiKCt
was being plumbed through the
J Ct, ifiUG . • ,
H'xi)
State of the Region
•• l'
iqD.'eoq 'lb r.. »<
Alcohol abuse workshops
•fuller K. Wenger ca| SfU(jenfS to diagnose and treat understand alcohol addiction and
Coastal Bend Council alcoholism and drug addiction. , what techniques and treatments
of Governments ha9e now become available to do
, something about alcohol abuse. Pre-.,
registration, by Aug. 31, is $15, and
after that will be $20. Students cart
pre-register for $10, or later pay
$15. The fee for senior citizens is $5
at any time.
Five sets of workshops will be
held. Those attending will have their
choice of any one of three in each
time period. There will be sessions
of special interest to parents and
those concerned with other family
relationships, to members of church
congregations and organizations
who work within community to deal
with the problems created by
alcoholism, to professionals who
work directly with alcoholics or with
the community problems, and
teachers, employers and others who
contend with alcohol abuse in the
workplace.
Some of the subjects discussed
will be diverting the alcoholic from
the criminal justice system to treat-
ment; values clarification for pre-
vention of alcholism, skills training
for counselors, families in stress,
children of alcoholics; alcohol and
the media; family violence:
alcoholism as it relates to aging and
to ethnic groups, sexuality, and folk
medicine.
Applications for registration can
be mailed to the Coastal Bend Coun-
cil of Governments, P.O. Box 9909,
Corpus Christi, Tex., 78469.
— Last year. Congress <
allocated 828 million to vet-
erans of the Vietnam War.
The money was to be used
for small business loans and
other services. But despite
thousands of requests for
assistance and pressure
from veterans’ groups and
Congress, the Reagan
administration has so far
refused to distribute the
funds
0—SSnaUtaa
Emory School of Medicine's Depart-
ment of Psychiatry,, teaching modi-
Senator Jeka Tower
Senator Lloyd Benston
U J. Senate
Washington, D.C. *6816
1-368-824-3181 ask for senator desired
••• r
A top secret Department
of Defense report discloses
that the Chinese have more
than 140 missiles that can
strike either the heart of
Russia or the United States.
The Pentagon projects that
China’s missile arsenal will
grow significantly in the
next several years.
We have also seen a secret
NATO cable which discusses
a meeting with a Chinese
diplomat, who played down
his country’s nuclear
strength. The diplomat told
the NATO official that China
“did poos sox a few nuclear
devices” but they were not
modern and "played a psy-
chological rather than a mil-
itant role."
The Pentagon, however, is
export paying more attention to
UfitM sri&t tSeCfflbese are doing
i cin*irfc
BLOWER. In April 1*81,
Secret Service guard John
Hagmeyer received a com-
mendation for protecting
President Reagan. As the
president lay wounded in the
hospital, Hagmeyer
apprehended a potentially
dangerous man and prevent-
ed him from reaching
Reagan’s quarters.
Now Hagmeyer, a seven-
year veteran, has been fired
for conduct unbecoming an
officer. He doesn’t contest
the charges, but he says they
weren’t serious enough to
cost him his job. The real
reason he was fired, Hag-
meyer says, was because be
blew the whistle on the
Dear Editor:
A copy of this letter and pictures are
being sent to Colonel Laubacher Corps of
Engineers, Galveston, Texas.
In reference to Bakersport project, I
have fished and hunted across and along
side this land for the past 40 years; my
father before me and my grandfather be-
fore him. Fishing was good before the
channel was there h nd we could wade out
and catch fish in the pot holes
There was never any ponds or lakes
near where the channel is now, that mud
hole in those sand dunes I think is refered
to as wet lands, was never there until the
dredge material was put there by dredg
•j i, Published Weekly on Thursday
P.O. Box 554 — Ingleside, Texas 78362
or
P. O. Drawer EEE — Aransas Pass, Texas 78336
., . .. . '■ *
Phon* Aransas Pass 758-53*1 or
. , . Subscription Rates (1
-
Subscribe to the Indi
■■
■
i ’• ■i i ■ ■■ i' 1' c
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.
Matching Search Results
View four places within this issue that match your search.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.
Wittnebert, Larry. The Ingleside Index (Ingleside, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 29, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 1, 1983, newspaper, September 1, 1983; Ingleside, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1268359/m1/2/?q=music: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Ed & Hazel Richmond Public Library.