Archer County News (Archer City, Tex.), No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 19, 1998 Page: 5 of 12
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Archer County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Archer Public Library.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
The Archer County News - Thursday, November 19,1998 - Page Five
gg p
H
* • , * *
V-PMiWfc i; •
I*#**
-*• n
** ««NMk»
il sill
< ■ | j
' /kg," ■ 1 1-M
«K ^ ;
■- *V%£
i ■* ■
Go
Trojanettes!
Congratulations
and
Good Luck
from
Dickey, McGann & Rowe
Insurance Agency
101 S. Center • Archer City, TX
940-574-4827
Windthorst Cross Country
Jenny Hoff placed 13th out of 169 runners, and Kyle
Schroeder came in 32nd out of 175 at the Regional
Cross Country meet in Arlington November 7th.
Also pictured, Coach/Principal Casey Rogers.
WINDTHORST
JUNIOR/SENIOR HIGH
SCHOOL
"A" HONOR ROLL
2nd Six Weeks
12th Grade: Blaine Schroeder, Erin
Wolf, Janet Wolf
11th Grade: Kelly Horn
10th Grade: Carrie Berend, Valerie
Conrady
9th Grade: Keith Schreiber, Terri
Schroeder, J. D. Steinberger, Jordan
Teichman, Amanda Veitenheimer,
Sharia Wolf
8th Grade: Brittany Schroeder, Adam
Wolf, Damian Wolf, Theresa Wolf.
7th Grade: Beau Beaty, Chad Green,
Aubrey Humpert, Matt Schenk, Am-
ber Wolf
H
K58
Blue Wall
Kelly Horn and Jana Vieth go up for
a block during the final match at the
Regional Tournament
Way to Go
BIG BLUE!
Roe we Exxon Dist.
423-6600 or 541-2300
Fax 423-6871
Congratuiatio
nsi
Ladies Auxiliary
members attend
District meeting
A called meeting of the V.F.W. La-
dies' Auxiliary for the district was
held recently in Wichita Falls. The
district includes twelve auxiliaries
which are Bowie, Burkbumett, Electra,
Graham, Henrietta, Nocona, Scotland,
Windthorst, Seymour, Vernon,
Wichita Falls (two auxiliaries) and
Quanah.
Alene Carlton, President of the Dis-
trict welcomed the State President,
Ann Ingram of Abilene, Texas, whose
special project is "Hospice".
The group toured the Hospice Cen-
ter in Wichita Falls, and Mrs. Carlton
presented the Director, Jan Danta, a
check for $ 1,000 from the Auxiliaries
in the District.
Vera Ann Schenk, President, and
Carol Hudak, Treasurer, of the Scot-
land-Windthorst Ladies' Auxiliary to
Post #2676 represented their Auxil-
iary at the District meeting.
-rrojanetteS Dairy Relief Inc*gets
Johnson Siding
Inc.
574-4715
Terry, Dorothy, Tyler & Heather
inn
mmmmm
NoewEsr
mmmmm
mmmmm*
To The Nth Degree'
Archer City
200 North Cer:er
Cell 574-450?
STEINBERGER
DRILLING
CO.
(940)541-2400
Windthorst, Texas
Win State in '98!
grant from DFA
a r~. : 4.: nnO in ’’capH mn
Congratulations
and
Good Luck
from
Community Telephone
& Comcell
P.O. Box 130 Hwy 25
Windthorst, TX
76389
(940) 423-6201
WE SUPPORT THE
TROJANETTES
Muenster Farm Mutual
Fire Insurance Association
For Excellent, Low Cost
PROPERTY INSURANCE
Lawrence (Butch) Schroeder
423-6765 Mike Humpert
423-6234
A non-profit organization, formed
in February to receive donations to
provide dairy products to alleviate
world hunger, has been presented a
grant of $50,000 by Dairy Farmers of
America (DFA). In addition to the
$50,000 grant, DFA has pledged to
match additional contributions from
other sources, dollar-for-dollar, up to
$250,000. Chartered as Dairy Relief,
Inc. (DRI), the new organization seeks
tax deductible contributions from dairy
farmers, dairy cooperatives and other
$5,000 in "seed money" to do the nec-
essary research and legal procedures
to set up the non-profit corporation,"
explains Townsend. "This $50,000
investment by Dairy Farmers of
America will allow us to make our first
purchase of products. It also sends a
strong message to others, inviting their
participation and demonstrating that
we are serious."
Carl Baumann, a dairy farmer from
Highland, Illinois, and member of
DRI's 6-member board of directors,
persons who want to help provide dairy says DRI will work with established
products in areas of scarce food re
sources.
DRI was founded in February of this
year by representatives of the National
Farmers Organization (NFO), Dairy
Farmers of America, the Alliance of
Western Milk Producers, Dairylea and
United Dairymen of Arizona. Ac-
cording to bylaws of the non-profit
organization, DRI seeks to assist the
U.S. Department of Agriculture and
the U.S. Agency for International De-
velopment in providing dairy products
to relieve hunger. DRI may also par-
ticipate in education and research ac-
tivities designed to help relieve world
hunger through the use of dairy prod-
ucts. Tom Townsend, a retired dairy
industry executive, serves as the
organization's vice president and chief
executive officer.
"Up to this point, we've had about
international relief organizations to
distribute dairy products in areas of
need. "We plan to keep our adminis-
trative costs to a bare minimum," says
Baumann. We expect contributions to
go into dairy product purchases, and
we will work with experienced orga-
nizations in the distribution process."
Townsend says he will be working
on two fronts in coming weeks. "We
will be assembling our first shipment
of dairy products and at the same time,
we will be actively seeking new dona-
tions. If we reach the goal set by DFA,
we will have $600,000 with which to
purchase and ship dairy products to
hungry and undernourished people
around the world. We hope that is only
the beginning."
For more information about DRI or
to make a tax-deductible contribution,
contact Dairy Relief, Inc., P.O. Box
1837 Springfield, MO 65801-1837.
Wolf selected MVP Troj ans fall in Bi-District
in District 10-A
The District 10-A Coaches selected
Windthorst Senior QB Josh Wolf the
Most Valuable Player of the 1998
football season. MVP is the highest
honor a player can receive. Wolf also
led the Trojans on defense with over
110 tackles and three interceptions
from his safety position.
Trojans selected to the first team
offense were junior offensive lineman
Todd Schreiber, junior tight end Jus-
tin Hoffman, and junior running back
Jason Veitenheimer (unanimous).
Senior Doyle Berend (guard), junior
Nathan Anderle (wide receiver)
achieved second team honors. Se-
niors Tracey Hoff (tackle) and Blaine
Schroeder (running back) received
honorable mention status.
Defensively, the Trojans placed two
players on the first team. Senior line-
backer Tracey Hoff, who was second
for the Big Blue in tackles, along with
defensive lineman Todd Schreiber
(unanimous). Schreiber was the only
two-way pick.
Placing on the second team was se-
nior defensive end Blaine Schroeder
senior linebacker Doyle Berend, and
junior corner back Eric Schlumpf.
Junior linebacker Justin Hoffman re-
ceived honorable mention.
"Newcomer of the Year" awarded to
a player who was playing varsity ball
for the first year, was shared by fresh-
man two-way lineman Jordan
Teichman and Perrin QB freshman
Cole Wright. Teichman also handled
the punting duties for the Trojans.
District 10-A consists of District
Champ A1 vord, runner-up Windthorst,
Bryson, Chico, Perrin-Whitt, and
Petrol i a
The Windthorst Trojans battled the
number three ranked Hornets from
Aspermont to a 6-7 halftime score,
and pulled within 9 points early in the
fourth quarter but could not hold back
the passing of Josh Hale and the run-
ning of Zack Hunter and fell 12-35.
The Hornets advance to the area
round playoffs against Water Valley.
"I thought defensively this was the
best game we played all year,' com-
mented Coach Bill Green. "The score
doesn't really indicate the closeness of
the game. The kids fought hard for 3
quarters, but began making mental
mistakes late that allowed the Hornets
to pile on some points."
It was indeed a close ball game for
the first hail, as Doth teams struggled
to make first downs. Aspermont held
an edge with 4 first-half first downs.
Each team, both predominantly run-
ning teams, could manage fewer than
50 yards rushing.
After a scoreless first quarter that
saw both teams exchange punts and
fumbles, Aspermont's Josh Hale
scored from 1 yard out. The short 23
yard drive was set up by an errant punt
snap over punter Jordan Teichman's
head. Hale scored briefly into the
second period. Windthorst just man-
aged a first down on the next series
and appeared to go for it on fourth and
six. With Wolf in the shotgun forma-
tion, Windthorst quick-kicked the ball
56 yards to the Trojan 5 yard line.
Defensive back Jodey Clark fielded
the ball, but fumbled as Tracey Hoff,
Justin Hoffman, and Doyle Berend,
mauled him. Berend recovered on
the 4. Two plays later. Wolf carried in
from the four. The extra point was
wide, but the momentum seemed to
have swung to the homeside.
Windthorst opened the second half
with a nifty 37 yard drive down to
Aspermont's 20 yard line. Butahold-
ing call backed the Trojans up to a
first and twenty, and on the next pluy>
a lost fumble, saw the momentum the
Big Blue Crew had gained, change to
the Hornets.
Hale and Hunter and crew re-
sponded with a 72 yard time-con-
suming drive that was capped by a
Hale to Brent Meador 10 yard touch-
down pass. The Hornets increased
their lead on a Hale to Hunter touch-
down pass of 42 yards.
Not to lay down, the Trojans came
roaring back to score on a 7 play 67
yard drive with Jason Veitenheimer
"bulling" in from the three. The drive
was highlighted by Wolfs option run
of 38 yards.
With the score cut to 21-12, the
Hornets had enough of the scrappy
Trojans and drove the ball the length
of the field to ice the victory.
Windthorst finished the season 5-
6, while the Hornets continue their
drive to State with an unblemished
record of 11 -0.
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.
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.
Archer County News (Archer City, Tex.), No. 47, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 19, 1998, newspaper, November 19, 1998; Archer City, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth806686/m1/5/: accessed May 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Archer Public Library.