The Mineola Monitor (Mineola, Tex.), Vol. 105, No. 26, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 9, 1981 Page: 4 of 14
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Mineola, Texas, Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Mineola Memorial Library.
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by Barry McWllllami
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4
* FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9th
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BACKOSCHOOL
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Your name tag and tickets will'be waiting for you at the registration table.
14
CLASS OF
NAME(S)
Maiden Name
ADDRESS
Zip Code
State
City
Please reserve in my name the Tickets requested below:
, I
Total
Barbeque Tickets € $5.00 each
Football'Cama Tickets 8 $2.25 each
t
intial changes in the Texas
-de, I fnia t /H
CLASS OF
NAME(S)
She plans to apply her schol- refereeing games — regardless
State
Zp
City
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Forest Service
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season extended into April in
them this winter.
•A dual addrees to per
if you put ths deeired delivery looauon on the line
The ZIP Oode ehoula oorreepond to the delivery looauon.
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F.
gust 26, at the ■ UT Health
Center - Tyler (at Owentown).
proval.
-----Sore of the most
tion, emphasized that all those
interested in coaching teams or
Mr. John Jones
P.O.Box 1502
Toledo, OH 43603
Mr. John Jones
801 N. Brle Street
Toledo, OH 43604
of age or experience — are in-
vited to attend the meeting
Thursday night.
f
arship to attendance at Tyler
Junior College, where she wil
study conversational Spanish.
Mr. John Jones
801 N. Brie Street
P.O. Box 1802
Toledo, OH 43603
Mr. John Jones
P.O.Box 1502
601 N. Brle Street
Toledo, OH 43604
squares.
Tuesday: Hamburger on bun
••
mo
801 N. ERIE STREET
UT Health C’tr
cites Mineolan
A Mineola resident was one
of 33 employees of The Univer
P.B.
Please review the examples presented below.
at Alba-Golden
Alba-Golden school cafeteria
lunch menus, Sept. 14-18:
Monday: Corny dogs, baked
beans, French fries, milk, fruit
Tuesday: Meat loaf, cabbage,
corn, cornbread, milk, pudding.
Wednesday: Fried chicken
mashed potatoes, green beans
hot rolls, milk. Jello.
Thursday: Goulash, black-
eyed peas, corn, cornbread
milk, cobbler.
Friday: Pizza, pinto beans
tossed salad, milk, pear halves.
Effective October 1, 1980, all poet office boxholders
became subject to the one year forwarding provisions
applicable to all other postal customers.
Therefore, if you filed a forwarding order to your
poet office box on or before October 1, 1980, it will
expire September 30, 1981. If you filed after October
1, 1980, it will expire one year after the date of filing.
After your expiration date, mail addressed to you
will be delivered only to the location listed
immediately above the city, state and ZIP Code. -
If you expect to continue to receive mail addressed
to your street location after October 1, 1981, you
I
GAFRFOR’S
3(
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0 •
. i
must have a mall receptacle established at the street
location. We suggest you notify your correspondents
as to where you want your mail delivered--either to
your post office box or your physical location--and
ask them to address it accordingly.
Thank you for ydur cooperation in helping us to
assure prompt and proper delivery of your mall.
Sincerely,
Your Postmaster
■ t
bl
8
MINEOLA HIGH SCHOOL ALL-CLASS REUNION .
Friday and Saturday, October 9 1 10, 1981
I had great expectations of the 67th Legislature, and
a vast majority of those expectations have been real-
ized.
Of 44 basic legislative proposals I advanced to the
regular session early this year. 34 were approved.
We maintained• excellent communication with the
leadership of the House and Senate, and there was a
high degree of cooperation and coordination of efforts.
We addressed some sticky issues which have been on
the agenda for a long time and through the administra-
tions of several governors. Our regular session batting
average has been something like .770 per cent, and few
administrations can top that.
The programs I submitted in the areas of law en-
forcement, education, better management of State gov-
eminent a^d nthrr wfjor in wan ap-
l
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bi
GOODMORNING, MR.GOODMAN—
MOM SENDS HER CONDOLENCES...
I
P.S. Want.to join the MHS Ex-Students' Association? Annual Dues are only
$5.00,' and you can enroll by sending your dues with your registration for
the 1981 MHS All-Class Reunion.
public school system since passage of the Gilmer-Aikin
laws three decades ago were enacted without fanfare
by the 1981 regular session.
Among the important new laws was the curriculum
revision or back-to-basics act which deans up the pres-
ent, legislative-mandated course requirements and al-
lows the State Board of Education to provide greater
emphasis on basic subject matter. , .
A constitutional amendment which I have long advo-
cated to grant to a State finance management commit-
tee power to manage expenditure of certain appropri-
• ated funds and thus permit government to respond to
unanticipated critical funding needs when the Legisla-
ture is not in session will be submitted to voters this
November. This, together with several other measures
which I recommended, will improve fiscal management
of State government.
The special session completed action on congression-
al redistricting; Submitted a constitutional amendment
to create a State Water Trust Fund, dedicating a por-
tion of future surplus revenues to water development;
revised the property tax code to make it less burden-
some on Texas taxpayers and resolved lingering dif-
ferences over the medical practice act. - .
In addition, the special session offered a constitu-
tional amendment to issue another $250 million in
veterans land bonds and increase interest on the bonds
to make them saleable; exempted gasohol from high-
way taxes: required health insurance companies to of-
fer optional group coverage for alcoholism and drug
dependency; appropriated $1.5 million for control of .
the Mediterranean fruit fly and passed implementing
legislation for regulation and taxation of bingo games.
Failure of initiative and referendum was a major-
disappointment of the regular session. I regret that the
Senate, in the special session, refused to go along with
repeal of the 10 cent State ad valorem tax, as I had
strongly recomniended. The tax, if upheld by the courts,
could cost Texas property owners $430 million a year.
A three-cent rate, as advocated by the Senate, would
cost them SI35 million.
9
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1 1
on pine plantings
GILMER — Prospective to plant, and all our seedlings
timber growers need to contad were already allocated.”
the Texas Forest Service soon Tree planting season norm-
if they want Service crews to ally spans the period December
plant their pine seedlings for through mid-March. Last year’s
a
$00
©IB
Soccer
coaches,
refefees
will meet
A special meeting for persons
V interested in coaching or
refereeing for the fall soccer
season of the Mineola Youth
4 THE MINEOLA MONITOR. Mineola, Texas, Sept. 9. 1961
■ CRDoodes
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What’s cooking at the schools?
Lunch menus for the Mineola with lettuce, onions and pickles,
school cafeterias, Sept. 14-18: French fries and catsup, milk.
Monday: Hot dog with chili Jello.
baked beans, relish, milk. fruit Wednesday: Beef bean tacos
2 Hi
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PHONE _________
Area Code
Reunion Committee, MHS Ex-Studants’ Association
P. 0. Box 381
Mineola, Texas 75773
with cheese, buttered corn,
lettuce and tomato, milk,
banana pudding.
Thursday: Pizza, pinto beans,
combination salad, milk, choco-
late cake.
Friday: Beef and vegetable
stew, pimiento cheese or
peanut butter sandwich, crack-
ers, milk, peanut butter cookie.
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ADDRESS ‘ .
Straat or Box Numbers
The Texaa Forest Service, a northeast Texas, however, due
part of the Texas A&M to low soil moisture levels early
University System, provides in the planting season,
fire protection and forest Planting cost, including seed-
management assistance to East lings, will likely range from $45
Texaa tandowners. to $60 per acre for open land
Tree planting jobs need to be planting, the TFS forester said,
lined up well in advance of Cost will vary according to
ptanting season, said Ken conditions found at each
Conaway. TFS district forester planting site; arena which
ta Gilmer require site preparation will
“We need to know how many cost more to plant.
seedlings we’ll have to reserve Prospective tree growers in
for tandowners in this area," be this area can contact the Texas
stated. “Each year we have had Forest Service at P. O. Box 149,
to turn Eomelandowners Gilmer Texaa 75644, telephone
who waited too long to decide 214-843-5506.
• 4:00 P.M. Registration begins, Foyer, Yellow Jacket Complex, MHS
• 5:00 P.M.- Barbeque, $5.00 per person, Multi-Purpose Room, MHS
• 7:30 P.M. Homecoming Football Game, Yellow Jacket Stadium,
Mlnoola vs. West Rusk, Reserved Seats $2.25 per person
• After Game - Reception, Foyer, Yellow Jacket Complex, MHS
NOTE: Registration continuously from 4:00 P.M. through the Reception.
• Open House for the School Facilities will be available during the week-
end. Details will be available at Registration.
* Child Care Is available for Saturday night. Details at Registration.
PLEASE NOTE: Local overnight accommodations are limited; plenty available
In Tyler. Motor home hook-ups are available at Mineola
Civic Center. Phone (214)569-5095]
-.t
The Mineola Ex-Students’ Association Invites you to help make this year’s
All-Class Reunion the Biggest Event in MHS-hl story. To insure getting
In on all the events you,re Interested in, use this handy registration
form and mail it with your check or money order to:
® .‘3.
7A-2
sity of Texas Health Center at Foundation will be held Thurs
Tyler who received scholar day night, Sept. 10.
ships awarded by the Texaa The meeting is to be held in
Chest Foundation. the Mineola Junior High Schod
Frances Prior, LVN, of Min- building, beginning at 7 p-m.
eola received her award in cere- Mrs. Stephenie Shaver, on
monies held Wednesday, Au- behalf of the Youth Founda-
Ik
• Banquet Tickets € $10.00"hach , ahixaan _
Attached is check or money order for Grand Total Agount ____
\\\ _______ RETURN NO LATER THAN SEPTEMBER^* 1981 €--7
Time to contact ,
* SATURDAY, OCTOBER 10th
*10:00 A.M. Registration re-opens, Foyer, Yellow Jacket Complex, MHS
• Free Time - Morning and Afternoon, allowing time for individual
class get-togethers. \
° 7:00 P.M. Banquet, Live Oak Room, Meredith Hall, Mineola Civic Center,
$10.00 per person. Limited Seating. Reservation Requests
Filled until Hall’s Capacity Is beached. Only Ex-Students^
Their Spouses or Dates, and Teachers or Former Teachers at
Mh$ may attend.
• After Banquet - Reunion bance, Multi-Purpose Room, MHS. Free Admission.
MUSIC FROM BIG BAND ERA TILL TODAY!
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Peacock, Dan. The Mineola Monitor (Mineola, Tex.), Vol. 105, No. 26, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 9, 1981, newspaper, September 9, 1981; Mineola, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1547969/m1/4/?q=music: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Mineola Memorial Library.