Archives for January 2013
New look
Janice J. McDonald Pair
Janice J. McDonald Pair, 81, of Lubbock formerly of Lorenzo passed away Saturday, January 26, 2013, in Lubbock. Services will be held 2:00 p.m. Wednesday, January 30, 2013, at the First United Methodist Church in Lorenzo with Rev. Cam Givans and Rev. Kerry Hurst officiating. Burial will follow in the Lorenzo Cemetery under the care of Adams Funeral Home of Lorenzo.
Janice was born November 15, 1931, in Clarendon, Texas to William and Hazel Jefferies McDonald. In 1942 they moved to Plainview where she graduated from Plainview High School in 1949 where she was active in band and drama. She started Texas Tech that fall as a home –economics major. She married Marvin L. Pair of Lorenzo on May 31, 1952 at the First Presbyterian Church in Lubbock. She and Marvin moved to the Pair family farm near Estacado where they farmed cotton and Charolais cattle for the next 59 years.
Janice was the proud mother of four children Eileen who preceded her in death in 1981, David, Rosemary, and Jeff. In 1972 she graduated from Texas Tech with a Bachelor’s Degree in Education, simultaneously with her daughter Eileen graduating from Lorenzo High School, and the birth of her youngest son, Jeff. She taught in Petersburg, and later was director/ preschool teacher at the First United Methodist at Lorenzo and Crosbyton. She was a member of the Lorenzo Study Club and the Lorenzo Chamber of Commerce.
She was preceded in death by her parents, one son, Charles Pair, her daughter and granddaughter, Eileen and Angela Settle, her three sisters; Myrne Altendorf, Ruth Kayler and Jeanne Barnes.
She is survived by her husband, Marvin of Lubbock, two sons; David Pair of Colorado, Jeff Pair and his wife Donna of Lorenzo, one daughter, Rosemary Randell and her husband David of Abilene, six grandchildren; Amy Hajek and husband Dustin, Joseph Randell and wife Ashley, Christopher Randell, Angela Randell, Talon Cacy and wife Marii, Kayne Cacy and wife Karli, three great grandchildren Hudson Hajek, Kayden Cacy, Tanelle Cacy.
Fire destroys Hedley home
An early morning fire totally consumed the home of the Vernon Patton family in Hedley this weekend, and officials are not sure what caused the blaze.
Clarendon Fire Chief Jeremy Powell said the 911 call came in at 4:29 a.m. on Sunday, January 27, and he believes the call was made by a traveler on US 287 who saw the home, which is located on the south side of the highway as it enters Hedley from the west.
The Patton family was out of town at the time of the fire and did not learn of the fire until hours later. No injuries were reported.
A Donley County deputy was the first on the scene at 4:43 and reported the home to be fully involved.
The Hedley Volunteer Fire Department arrived at 4:48 and Clarendon firemen were on the scene by 4:52.
When Clarendon arrived, the house was already determined to be a total loss and had essentially burned down, Powell said.
Firemen worked to keep the fire contained. Clarendon units left the scene at 6:30, and Hedley remained on the scene throughout the day.
Powell said the State Fire Marshall’s office investigated the scene Tuesday morning and was unable to determine a cause of the blaze.
The Patton family is staying in a travel trailer nearby, he said.
Candidates can apply for offices
Filing opened Wednesday for candidates wishing to seek a position on any of six local boards during this spring’s elections.
The City of Clarendon has three positions opening this year, the mayor and two aldermen, all of which serve for two-year terms. Those seats are currently held by Mayor Larry Hicks and Aldermen Tommy Hill and Debbie Roberts.
The City of Howardwick has five offices open this year, the mayor, two aldermen for full terms, and two aldermen for unexpired terms. The mayor’s seat has been vacant for over a year since Del Essary resigned.
An unexpired alderman’s seat is held by Mayor Pro-Tem Johnny Hubbard, who carried over last spring after his term expired last year, and the other unexpired term is vacant. The two full terms are held by Gene Rogers and Brenda Hampton. Full terms are for two years, and unexpired terms are for one year.
Hedley has three positions open on its Board of Aldermen this year. Two of the seats are currently held by David Wells and Tonya Metcalf, and the third seat is currently vacant following the November resignation of Karon Ely. Aldermen serve two-year terms.
Three positions on the Clarendon ISD Board of Trustees are up this year. Those seats are currently held by Robin Ellis, Jim Shelton, and Richard Gribble and are three-year terms.
Two full terms are up this year on the Hedley ISD Board of Trustees. The full terms of James Edward Potts and Bonnie Walsh are up and are three-year terms.
The Donley County Hospital District will select three two-year positions on its board, now held by Wayne Tubbs (Place 1), Bob Watson (Place 2), and Melinda McAnear (Place 3).
All local offices are elected at-large, but hospital board candidates must sign up for a specific place.
Sign up continues through March 1, 2013; and the elections will be held Saturday, May 11.
Well project continues as Greenbelt dwindles
Pumping groundwater from Clarendon to the Greenbelt Water Authority system is inching closer to reality as dry weather continues to take its toll on the local reservoir.
Greenbelt General Manager Bobbie Kidd said this week that all five wells in north Clarendon have been drilled, and electricians are working this week to wire the controls and pumps for the project.
“We have electric service to three of the five wells,” Kidd said, “and the other two will be the last tied to the system.”
The contractor that will build the pipeline from the city well field to the Greenbelt filter plant has not yet started its work but is expected to very soon. Pipe for the project has been on the ground for about two weeks, Kidd said.
“It shouldn’t take very long,” Kidd said. “They tell me they can cover about a quarter-mile per day.”
Communication equipment and antennas for the project is also expected to be installed very soon.
Meanwhile, the persistent dry weather has reduced Greenbelt Lake to 13 percent of its capacity, and local folks have reported seeing dead fish and fish skeletons from the water receding.
Kidd says the drop in the lake has actually stalled with the little bit of moisture that the area has seen and efforts to reduce the demand on the lake. The lake was estimated to have about 7,710 acre-feet of water this week or 2.5 billion gallons.
Fishing boats are still being allowed on the lake, but Kidd said Greenbelt won’t be selling any annual permits this year – only day permits. He also said the water authority won’t be spending any more money to extend or work on boat ramps.
The ramp at Old Marina Point is currently the only safe place to launch from.
CC receives $300k grant
By Ashlee Estlack, Clarendon College
Clarendon College was awarded $300,000 in grant funding recently from the Texas Higher Education Coordinating Board (THECB) to assist the college in expanding the scope and reach of its Developmental Education program.
The new grant funding will assist the college in improving the success of its developmental students by redesigning the developmental program and associated courses at the College. This includes restructuring assessment and placement, improving content and delivery using new technology and software, and transforming academic and career advising.
“We are very excited about this grant,” said Clarendon College Dean of Students and Institutional Research Tex Buckhaults. “Through the use of student advocates, a revised advising and placement process, supplemental tutorial labs, and meetings with advisors, we look forward to an increase in the overall success of our developmental students.”
“Developmental education has been greatly assisted through this program,” CC President Phil Shirley said. “It has long been felt that developmental education needs assistance from as many sources as possible in order to assure that fewer and fewer students are developmentally impaired. I am very grateful for the support that this grant provides and we will not fail to use its resources wisely.”
Established in 2012, the Developmental Education Scaling and Sustaining Success (S3) Grant is designed to inspire and enhance the efforts of institutions of higher education to significantly boost student success and college completion of underprepared students. Twelve two-year grants were awarded to institutions producing comprehensive plans to increase the number of students impacted by promising practices.
Opinion: Do you know all of CC’s benefits
Over the past couple of weeks, I’ve been highly engaged, using my sleuth-like (not sloth-like) capabilities to discover and evaluate interesting new opportunities for the lucky citizens of Donley County. I’m talking gem-like opportunities, as in the Pearl of the Panhandle, Clarendon College. In case you haven’t noticed, Clarendon College is currently the single largest driver of economic and cultural growth in Beautiful Downtown Donley County. I’ve discovered that there are additional benefits offered by CC that I was unaware of.
Consider, for example, the Clarendon College cafeteria. It is not solely for the use of the students and staff of CC, it is also available to us, the general public, provided of course that we have money. However, it does not require a large amount of money; say $4 for breakfast, and a little less than $7 for lunch and dinner. Breakfast and Sunday Brunch are buffet style, meaning you can go back for seconds as often as you wish, within reason – lest you inadvertently add too many dimples to your backside.
Two weeks ago, I entered the cafeteria stealth-like, to check out the food, which I had heard from multiple sources was very good. I can report that not only is it good, it is plentiful, and it is presented in a pleasing manner. Furthermore, the people – folks like Katrina, Mandy, Linda, Beth, and Cissy – serve it with style and grace – all decked out with fetching smiles.
This past Sunday, I went back to check out the Sunday Brunch, not as covertly – mainly because I knew many of the Sunday patrons. Yet again, the food was excellent, including a salad bar with fresh ingredients. As usual, seconds and more seconds were available, depending upon how many dimples you can tolerate.
While dining leisurely on the tasty fare, I took the liberty to chat, as I’m prone to do, with a few of the patrons, both students and local citizens. When asked why they choose to eat at the college, one of my friends replied that the food is good, the facility is clean with a nice ambience, and the price is right. Also important, she added, the company was excellent. It seems that our more experienced citizens enjoy being around the college students, watching the festivities as the students interact while eating.
The Sunday crowd was about 2/3 college students to 1/3 local citizens – a nice mix. The morning breakfast crowd was mostly college students and staff, with a few locals scattered about for flavor. The early morning dining was considerably less frisky than the lunch and dinner crowds.
After eating, as you exit the cafeteria if you proceed due west, you will come to a running track, which is also handy for walking off those pesky dimples. I field tested the track and it worked just fine, for a while anyway. After a few trips around the oval, it seemed like the grade of the track elevated with each lap thereafter and I soon felt like I was running uphill.
Located due north of the cafeteria is the CC library, also open to the public. If you have a local library card you may also use the college library, including the computer room. I had the opportunity to chat with two of the librarians, Pamela Reed and Annis Stavenhaven, as they guided me on a brief tour of the library, which is spacious, clean, and well maintained.
The library offers a veritable cornucopia of knowledge and wisdom, requiring only a modest investment of time and focus to reap an invaluable abundance of information. The library includes a great room, chock full of computers for online study and browsing.
Next door, on the other side of a nice plate glass wall, is the magazine reading room, filled with reading material for every taste, even including tea party types. The remainder of the floor space is used to display a fair assortment of books, covering pretty much every subject known to man. Then again, I guess if there was a subject unknown to man, there probably wouldn’t be many books written about it.
The library hours are fairly generous, closing each evening at 10 p.m., excepting Wednesdays, when it closes at 9 p.m. The main thing I’ve heard from the students I’ve talked with is that they wish there were more things to do locally. If the students don’t have adequate leisure time activities, perhaps they ought to at least be able to spend quality time in the library edifying their brains. Why not have the library open 12 hours a day, seven days a week, like they were when I was a university student?
Clarendon College not only adds to our economic bounty, it also provides us with unique opportunities to learn. The college offers us many opportunities to improve and enrich our lives; with good food, enhanced learning activities, exciting sports and rodeo events. I want to encourage everyone to spend a little time getting better acquainted with Clarendon College. Let’s all get to know our college students better by reaching out to them and participating in more activities. It’s great fun!
Letter: Reader urges selling spring water
In the January 17 edition of The Enterprise, your column was about home grown products. I would like to add water to that list.
I have addressed this issue in the past, and it was ignored. Donley County has an abundance of natural spring water gushing from the ground. We have the third largest natural spring in the state. All we have to do to claim this water, according to the State Water Board, is build a reservoir before the water gets to the Salt Fork of the Red River. When the water reaches that point, it belongs to Oklahoma. Why are we giving our water away?
A dam could be constructed somewhere past the point where Skillet Creek, White Fish Creek, and Rock Creek run together before reaching the Salt Fork. It wouldn’t have to be very big, just enough to put in a pump station and water bottling plant. This would create some jobs in the county and help Hedley grow.
Just an idea that we should take advantage of before another county or city takes it. The states owns the water when it comes out of the ground and could award it to any municipality that claims it. What a shame if some city down state trucked our water away.
Brad Dalton
Lady Broncos stay strong against Claude
By Sandy Anderberg
The Lady Broncos remain undefeated and are still in the hunt for a district championship with their latest win coming against Claude last Friday night. The ladies dominated the final three quarters of play and earned the 63-53 win.
The Claude Lady Mustangs opened the game with the early momentum and lead but were overcome by the strength of the Lady Broncos and succumbed to their lead at the break. Capitalizing on shooting 72 percent from the bonus line, the Lady Broncos took control of the game offensively.
They were also able to play aggressive defense to stifle the Lady Mustangs. Clarendon connected on eight three-point shots with four of those coming from senior Jentry Shadle. Lydia Howard put in two and Taylor Gaines and Ryann Starnes each earned one. Deborah Howard also accounted for 15 points in the game.
“I thought we played well and had some girls really step up,” coach Molly Weatherred said. “Claude really tried to key in on Jentry Shadle and McKayla Cartwright. We had other girls step in a make up for that. I think we are really hard to guard because we have a lot of girls who can do things offensively.”
Scoring: Shadle 16, D. Howard 15, Gaines 12, L. Howard 6, Starnes 5, Cartwright 3, and Camra Smith 1.
The ladies will travel to White Deer Friday, February 1 to take on the Does and play in their final home game of the season on Tuesday, February 5, at 6:30 p.m.
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