Grandview Tribune (Grandview, Tex.), Vol. 88, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, January 6, 1984 Page: 3 of 8
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Grandview Tribune and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Grandview Public Library.
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Page 3
Grandview Tribune, Friday, January 6, 1984
STATE CAPITAL
4
Happ
4
HIGHLIGHTS
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♦
MA
20 yeand.
An EMT is a person who is called out of
**************************
Hot' 84 Game
13,000 Expected!!
Baptists To Meet
A
pastor of First
theme
"Christ Lifted 1 p
(
n, Ross,
Curtis Laird has quality carpet*
out
SAS-2323
The Celling Fan Experts
r 4
r
• t
C
All Brands Cigarettes
866-2425
HILLTOP
carton $8.20
p kg. 85<
।
866-4426
■ "*
Bob’s Drive In Grocery
■ 3 '
ll
1.5 miles S. Rio Vista
INSURANCE FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS
854-2424
FARMERS INS. GROUP
Beer & Wins To Go
Full Service Convenience
Phone 14866- 2395
ecbeecceeceeeceeeeceeeceeeeeeeeeeenpereenenensemmmmeseneede
>
FREE DELIVERY within 40 miles radius of Cleburne.
7
Ml 7321 r
ED WILSON
d
L
*
* YLL AMERK .
*
iJP
Park
Irving.
Moore,
Church,
Winfred
and
came
An EMT is a person who continues to walk
toward the scene when all they want to do
is to turn around and run in the other
direction.
of
the
Baptist
and
An EMT is a person who has seen more
suffering and death than any person should
ever have to experience.
An EMT is a person who gets kicked in the
face while trying to help a drunk or an
overdose victim.
of Southern
greatest
i
!
An EMT is a person who runs into a storm
door in the dark ozf night and wonders
what the "hell" happened.
/I'
TIRES
BATTERIES
Jexaa
★ A
COUNTRY
STORE
Location Phots
Family Reunione
Hours:
Tuenday Friday 9 am. to 6 p.m.
I Satuzday 9 a.m. to 1 p.K.
*
)
An EMT is a person who goes into a pit of
raw sewage to help' a trapped victim.
An EMT is a neighbor who is called to your -
house when your child has overdosed and
the other neighbors never hear of your
child's problem.
Modern Monument Works
"FINE CRAFTSMANSHIP IN GRANITE FOR FOUR GENERATIONS'*
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Senate Rediatrictg
The . tong, drawn-out
struggle to redraw aad ap-
prove new voting bound-
aries for Texas senatorial
districts came to a close
last week when a three-
judge federal panel ap-
proved the plan passed by
the Legislature last spring.
The plan is final until
lawmakers must redistrict
again in 1990.
Republicans and Mexi-
can-American groups had
opposed the plan, but in-
stead have decided to con-
centfate efforts on the
still-pending Texas House
and Congressional plans.
Anniueau
• Qa/iy!
By Lyndell Williams
TEXAS PRESS ASSOCIATION
PERSONALIZED AND CLASSIC DESIGNS
Monuments Manufactured in our own shop.
losing side in this 84
game with their wives.
ture, 901 N. Washington
| St., Alexandria, VA 22314.
i A nswers to quaetioni pro-
‘ vided by Vincent P. Adamo,
I Pretidant, SAF—The Cantar
| for Commercial Floriculture,
the national trade aeeocia-
) tion for the flower and
: plant industry, Alexandria,
Virginia
4-0
23
Snidel Pie
B. 644
Cietima
An EMT is the man or woman who lives next
door and is the one called when you have a
medical problem.
An EMT is a woman that puts her family's
dinner on hold when she is called to help
a person in need.
2
An EMT is a person who ges home and gives
- their own child a little extra.loving
after seeing a child die. J
inside things got hot
when "
CLEBURNE TIRE & BATTERY CENTER
Sill N. Main
Cleburne, Texas 76031.
An EMT is a person who remains calm and
renders life saving aid when all they can
see are broken and torn bodies.
(Across from Field St. Baptist Church)
707 W. Henderson .
641-6822
Hours: Tues.-Sot.
0 am-6 pm 9
An EMT is a person who cares.
I
Senate Sacs
Two candidates for the
4
4
«
An EMT is a person who cannot get the
smell of a horribly burned victim out of
their nose, hair, and clothes.
An EMT is a person who risks their own
life in the middle of the street during a
driving rainstorm trying to save a life.
An EMT is a person that stands waist deep
in a drainage ditch full of water trying
to stabilize a broken body.
An EMT is a person who gets mad at a
suicide victim because they‘were not given
a chance to help.
their-home in the middle of the night and
cannot go back to sleep because of the
trauma they have seen, knowing that they
will have to go work or take care of their
own family the next day with little or no
sleep and there being no guarantee that
the same thing will not happen again the
next night.
An EMT is a person who carries stomach
sedatives and mouth wash so they can
settle their stomach and get the foul
taste out of their mouth after giving CPR
to a person who has thrown up in a full •
beard.
An EMT is a person who knows that they
will probably oe injured enroute or on a
scene at some point in their career. .
4
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4
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4
♦
4
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4
♦ .
41
4i
An EMT is a person who risks? their life
driving in rush hour traffic to find out
that it was pnly a prank call. *
Byroi
Tinker
Lafays Alterations
All Types of Professional Alterations & Fittings
Location: 805 South Fifth Street
AT MY HOME
ONETA GOODMAN -
JOHNNY R CHAPMAN
Texas Farm Bureau-Insurance Co.
Johnson County
An EMT is a person who carries all sorts
of medical equipment, in the August heat,
for a quarter of a mile or more to help'
someone and knowing, all the while, that
they will have to carry both the patient
and the equipment back to the ambulahce.
An EMT is a person who frantically tries
to wash the blood off of their hands and
face while enroute to another emergency so
that they will not frighten the patient or
the patient's family when they arrive to
render aid.
1
t
Httt
//II
: 7hankd on autting
IH2223
An EMT is a person who cries when they
are unable to save a patient.
An EMT is a person who laughs with joy
when they deliver a baby and goes to the
hospital on a day off to see "their" baby.
So, when you are awakened in the middle’of
the night by the sound of thunder, the
flash of lightning and the pounding of
rain on your roof and hear a siren scream
in the night you know that EMTs will be
risking their lives trying to help soke
unknown stranger. Will you, then, take a
moment to offer a prayer and silently give
them a "thank you" before turning over in
your warm bed and falling back to sleep?"
The temperature out-
side was cold, but
ad for a DWI-related of.
c fense.
—Forfeiture of vehi-
cle: a county may seize
and mH the vehicle upon
conviction of a fourth
DWI offence.
An EMT is a person who leaves their dinner
or party guests to render aid.
-mnum um} •
An ENT is a person who leaves the comfort
of their home at any time day or night, in
all kinds of weather to help others.-
HtHtH //III x
33 3^
“4
(
FAST FRIEWDLY SERVICE
702 S. Parkway, Alvarado, Texas
OU Highway 81
(next to Alvarado Feed & Seed)
Ph: 1-783-3741
YOURFIOWEQG4
AND PLANTS
Helpful Hints From SAF —
The Center For
Commercial Floriculture
Q A friend of mine re-
cently purchased a beauti-
ful poinsettia plant for the
holidays. I reminded her to
keep the plant away from
her young daughter because
it was pqisonous. My friend
thinks I'm nuts—what's the
truth?
Senter
on the
An EMT is a person who pulls a fever
thermometer out of their own mouth when a
call comes in and runs out into a cold
rain to help someone. When they return
home with a chill and pick up their fever
thermometer they see 101° on it.
i--cuNhA,u-dmn,atker
Glen Russell
. For A free leaflet about eedbe
I the long-lasting poinsettia
r and its care, send a self-
' addressed, stamped enve-
EMMETT GODFREY
Butane Co.
on Hwy. 174(on the county 1100;
OPEN
‘Mon.-Thur s: ’ 9a-. m.= 10p.m.
Fri. & Sat. 7a.m.-12p.m.
Sunday 12a.m.-10p.m.
Groceries-Gas-Beer-Wine
Mobil Settlement
State officials were striv-
ing last week to recon-
struct the $500 million
settlement of their lawsuit
against Mobil Oil which
was killed by the last min-
ute intervention of the
Exxon Corp.
The state seeks to find
a third party to buy min-
eral rights on the disputed
oil lease land. An anony-
mous third party had
agreed to do that in the
original settlement, but al-
legedly backed out when
Exxon's delay destroyed
the end-of-the-year tax
advantages.
third offense can be filed
as a felony, with a maxi-
mum jail sentence of five
years, and a fine from
$500 to $5,000.
—Increased penalties:
fines of first offenders
will range from $100 to
$2,000, compared to the
old range of $50 to $500.
E.M.T.
WHAT IS AM OgROBICT MEDICAL TEOpiCIAN?
By Wayne Jones, Cypress treek tMS Assoc.
hear some
Baptists'
preachers
Under a
A. Good news—the poin-
settia plant’is not poisonous.
Some strange stories have
been circulating for decades
about the poinsettia. As a
result of a number of these
unsubstantiated allegations
the SAF—Center for Com-
mercial Floriculture, collab-
I oratedavith Ohio State Uni-
versity in 1971 on a poinset-
tia research project. The re-
sult? They found that the
plant poses no threat to hu-
man or animal health.
Even though research has
cleared the poinsettia of
such unfair charges, I want
to stress that most plants
are not food products. Par-
ents and adults should teach
children respect for house-
hold items. Your friend, and
her daughter, should admire
their holiday plants—but
- munch on something else
when they get hungry.
Free Leaflet
Evangelist Vance' Havner
of Greensboro, N C.; A E
Campbell Jr, pastor of
Temple Baptist Church,
Cleveland, Ohio, B O.
Baker, pastor of Plymoth
‘9p
vs
•-•Uu gvs
shocks! $ pm
,47
The annual Texas
Baptist Evangelism
Conference in Fort Worth
Jan 9-11 is expected
to draw more than 13,000
pastors and other leaders
from across the state to
Modeling Composit 2 lope to: SAF—The Center
' S for Commercial Floricul-
(3.15 -9-9, ••
• 4 9.
Ra A6e 3966
Baptist Church, Amarillo,
and president of the
Baptist General
• Convention of Texas
,,,. Zig Ziglar, nationally-
known motivational
speaker and member of
First Baptist Church,
Dallas. will speak on
“Positive Pastoring," and
Bob Lilly. former Dallas
Cowboy all pro tackle,
will give his testimony.
Lilly, former beer
distributor, sold his
distributorship after
becoming a Christian
three years ago and now
speaks in many churches
AUSTIN—On January
1, the bills approved dur-
ing the legislative session
last spring became law,
and for most Texans, the
dramatic change is in the
DWI laws.
The crackdown or
drunk driven was among
the most emotional of leg-
islative issues, and propo-
nents of DWI reform got
almost everything they
wanted out of the Legis-
lature.
Although lawmakers
resisted passing the “Open
Containers Bill,” which
would make it illegal for
anyone in the vehicle to
have an open beer can or
such, the following changes
were approved, effective
Jan. 1, 1984:
—Mandatory jail time
for repeat offenders: first
offenders may still get
probation, but a second
offense within 10 years re-
quires a minimum of 72
hours in jail, and a third
offense carries a 10-day
jail minimum.
—All convictions are
final: all convictions will
become part of the de-
fendant's record, and not
erased after probation is
completed, as in the past.
—Felony conviction: A
Town & Country General Store
Groceries,Jc» & Drinks
4 4
. \
me ,o
U.S. Senate seat being
vacated by John Tower
nailed another plank on
their campaign platforms
last week.
Democrat Bob Krueger,
a former congressman
and ambassador to Mex-
ico, called for full parity
for farmers and ranchers.
He also called for farm-
ers to be paid money for
set-aside lands, and not
paid for stored grain, as
they are now.
He also urged the U.S.
to buy and stockpile Mexi-
can oil to bolster the bor-
der economy.
Republican Congress-
man Ron Paul of Hous-
ton, a medical doctor,
advocated a return to the
free-market system, in-
cluding doing away with
food stamps and welfare
programs for the poor ae
well as eliminating the
subsidies for giant corpo-
rations and banks.
He also said he wants
to limit foreign aid to
communist bloc nations.
P
Rate Hike Request
One week after being
granted $650 million emer-
gency rate hike, AT&T
Communicattons asked
the Public Utility Com-
mission for s 27.8 percent
increase in long distance
rates.
If allowed, 'the increase
would generate over $300
million in revenues for
AT&T.
The company says it
must pay most of the
emergency money to Bell
Telephone for use of
equipment.
Videotaping Suspects
—Videotaping DWI
suspects: counties with st
least 25,000 population
are required to buy video-
taping equipment to re-
cord the actions of DWI
suspects, as they are
booked into jail, for use
in court.
—Refusing breath tests:
any suspect who refuses
to take a breath test faces
a 90-day automatic license
suspension, even if later
acquitted.
—Mandatory specimen-
taking: officers are re-
quired to take a specimen
of the DWI suspect's
blood, breath or urine in
alcohol-related traffic ac-
cidents where a person
has died or likely will die.
—Penalty for lending
car: any person who
knowingly lends a motor
vehicle to a person whose
license has been suspend-
FM ROAD 67 1 MILE VEST 67 COVINGTON
PNOTOGRAPNS BY
3 RICWARD
j "Wedding Spacialats”
F Route 4 74
2 Grandview, Texps 70050 817-866-3622
comnsesoeemseemsemton
Open 7 days a week, 7a.m.-9p.m.
TOM LANGFORD 841-8517 Nick Vasquez 641-2450
416 E. Rambos Mon. - Ri. - All Day Office 645-4961
*NMNSNeMessssewNSfeseMsseewasMMMNNeNSNeNss«NiaNNiUM
conference w ill focus on
Prayer for Spiritual.....
2 Awakening and a -goal to
baptize 85,000 people in
• Texas in 1984, said Baptist
General Convention of
Texas Evangelism
Director Carlos McLeod
A 42 hour prayer vigiled
by Texas Baptist
associational directors ol
missions will be held
throughout the con
ference
Some of the speakers at
the annual meeting, in
Tarrant County
Convention Center include
Richard Jackson. pastor
of North Phoenix Baptist
Church. Phoenix, Ariz .
//Il -’W
mill
HzuasudAF
and to many Christian
organizations.
A 1,500-voice Tarrant
Baptist Association mass
choir directed by James
Woodward, dean of the
school of music at
Oklahoma Baptist
, University, will perform
Monday evening, and a
1,500- voice choir from
Dallas Baptist Association
will sing Tuesday evening.
Soloists will include
Dean Wilder of Wiliam
Jewell College, Liberty,
Mo , Jennifer Till of First
Baptist Church, Dallas;
and John McKay of Fort
Worth
The evangelism
conference will begin at
6:45 p.m. on Jan. 9 at
Tarrant County Con-
vention Center and will
conclude with the morning
session Jan. 11.
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Magness, Jack, Jr. Grandview Tribune (Grandview, Tex.), Vol. 88, No. 21, Ed. 1 Friday, January 6, 1984, newspaper, January 6, 1984; Grandview, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1537240/m1/3/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grandview Public Library.