Archives for February 2016
Undefeated
Tumbleweed
Chamber honors Skelton
Frances Skelton was honored by the Clarendon Chamber of Commerce with the 2015 Saints’ Roost Award for her lifetime of service and commitment to the community during the annual Chamber Awards Banquet last Thursday, February 11.
Man of the Year honors went to Bob Weiss, and Katherine Monroe was named the Woman of the Year. The Sandell Drive-In was named the Business of the Year.
The Saints’ Roost Award is the highest honor given annually by the Chamber to recognize a lifetime of volunteering and community service, and Mrs. Skelton was honored for doing just that. She has been a loyal member and volunteer at the First United Methodist Church, where she and her late husband helped organize the Fellowship Sunday School Class, which now bears their name. She was a charter member of the Clarendon Country Club and is a three-time past president of the Ladies Golf Association.
She is also an avid bridge and poker player. For many years following World War II, she was an election clerk in Donley County. And today, in her ninth decade, she continues to serve others by volunteering with the senior citizens center and delivering Meals on Wheels.
The Man of the Year for 2015 is Bob Weiss, who is involved in many activities and is always willing to lend a helping hand to a good cause. He’s a hard working member of the Saints’ Roost Museum board and a former member of the Chamber board. In 2015, he helped organize and revamp the Saints Roost Celebration parade. He also has been an integral member of the committee that plans the annual Mulkey Block Party and he was part of the team that has helped light the historic Donley County Courthouse for Christmas.
Nominations for Weiss summed it up best: “He’s always available to help Clarendon,” and “He is always ready to volunteer.”
Katherine Monroe is the Woman of the Year for 2015. She has a big heart for people who are hurting and wants to help them meet their needs. In the past she’s headed up school supply and coat drives for needy children and she’s also served has a local Girl Scout leader.
Monroe was specially nominated this year for her work with the Bread of Life food pantry. Along with a team of volunteers, she works tirelessly to make sure the needs of hungry families in the community are met. What started as an effort that served about 30 families has grown to the point that the Bread of Life serves more than 160 families each month, and Monroe is there, with her team, to make sure the truck from the High Plains food bank is unloaded, that things are sorted and organized, and that the people get what they need.
The Chamber of Commerce also started a new tradition this year of honoring a business that makes a significant contribution to the fabric of our community and named the Sandell Drive-In as its first Business of the Year.
The Sandell got its start 60 years ago when Gary and Nell Barnhill combined their daughters’ names and opened the drive-in. The Barnhills helped Donley County residents make lasting memories for 24 years before changing times and lifestyles darkened the Sandell’s movie screen, seemingly forever in 1984.
But in 2002, one local man had a vision of bringing the Sandell back to life. Now, thanks to John Morrow and his family, our families have something to do on summer weekends and Clarendon has a place to brag about. John, Vicki, Evie, Dillon, Katy, and other friends and family members don’t do it for the money. They operate the Sandell because of their love for this community.
The Chamber also recognized outstanding youth from Clarendon and Hedley.
The Young Woman of Year from Clarendon is Kendra Davis. She has been in Student Council for four years, was president her junior year and acting president for her senior year. She is a member of the National Honor Society and has been on the A Honor Roll every six weeks during her high school career. She participates in UIL Academics where she has qualified for regional journalism contests. She also serves as a trainer for the Bronco athletic teams.
The Young Woman of the Year from Hedley is Kelsey Wells. She has participated in cheerleading and served as a class officer for four years. She has been in one act play for three years and has participated in UIL and National Honor Society, and is an NHS officer this year. She’s also received several academic recognitions for her performance in the classroom. She has helped with the annual Hedley chicken barbecue for four years and the NHS canned food and toy drives for three years.
The Young Man of the Year from Clarendon is Chesson Sims, who has a knack for science. He’s medaled in the last seven UIL science meets he’s entered since the spring of 2014 and won first place overall science and in Chemistry for the last four invitational meets, was the 2015 overall science district champion and the 2015 district Chemistry champion, and placed second in the regional Chemistry contest in 2015. He has already qualified for induction into the CHS Science Hall of Fame and has received Honor Cs in Chemistry, and Research & Design, Physics, will likely receive one for Problems & Solutions this spring. He’s been nominated for the US Achievement Academy in Science for 2014, 2015, and 2016. He’s involved in theatre and One Act Play, Fellowship of Christian Athletes, and the Assembly of God youth group. He was also a member of the Bronco football and basketball teams, and was named to the district first football team.
The Young Man of the Year from Hedley is Heath McCleskey, who has had a busy career at Hedley High School. He’s played football for three years and received all-district honors this year, and he’s played basketball for four years and has been a team captain his senior year. He’s been active in the NHS and is currently an officer of that body, he’s been active in the SWAT church youth group, and he’s active in FFA and participates in livestock judging competitions. He enjoys showing animals in stock shows, and he’s been an active participant in the annual Saints Roost Celebration rodeos.
This year’s Chamber banquet followed a Mardi Gras theme, and caterer Great Western Dining reports that it served 186 people at the event, which was held in the Bairfield Activity Center.
Texas humorist Tumbleweed Smith was the speaker for the evening and entertained the crowd with funny tales and hilarious quotes from interesting characters across the state before he closed with an inspiring passage about the people of the Texas Panhandle.
Tables were sponsored by Clarendon College, The Clarendon Enterprise, Herring Bank, the Donley County Senior Citizens Center, Floyd’s Automotive Supply, Donley County Farm Bureau – Virginia Patten, Jason Ward, and the Skelton family. Tumbleweed selected the Skelton table as having the best table decoration reflecting the banquet theme and the business. Diane Skelton received the ceremonial Mardi Gras necklace for her award.
This year’s corporate sponsors were Best Western Red River Inn, The Clarendon Enterprise, Greenbelt Electric Coop., GreenLight Gas, Lowe’s Family Center, and Pioneer General Contracting.
City sales tax figure continues to slide
Clarendon’s sales tax revenues continued to slip this month, but Hedley and Howardwick saw increases in their numbers when Texas Comptroller Glenn Hegar made February allocations last week.
These allocations are based on sales made in December by businesses that report tax monthly; October, November and December sales by quarterly filers; and 2015 sales by businesses that report tax annually.
Clarendon’s figure this month was $39,061.65, down 6.44 percent compared to the same period last year. That brings the city’s calendar year-to-date total to $65,700.22, a decrease of 7.97 percent.
Hedley was up 26.14 percent this month to $1,256.46 and a year-to-date figure of $1,761.73, which is up 42.76 percent.
Howardwick’s revenue for the month was up 39.23 percent at $1,464.47, bringing that city’s year-to-date figure to $2,526.84, up 33.92 percent.
Other communities in the southeast Panhandle were mostly seeing postitive news in the comptroller’s February allocations.
Claude was up 6.87 percent, Memphis was up 15.84 percent, Wellington gained 5.97 percent, Childress climbed six percent higher, and Panhandle rose 4.25 percent.
Silverton and Shamrock, however, dropped, 7.57 percent and 16.87 percent respectively.
Across the state, Hegar sent local governments $867.1 million in sales tax allocations for February, 0.7 percent less than in February 2015.
“Energy-centric cities such as Odessa, Midland, Corpus Christi and Houston continued to see decreases in sales tax allocation,” Hegar said. “Other areas of the state helped to somewhat offset those losses as cities such as San Antonio, Austin, Fort Worth and Dallas saw moderate increases in allocations.”
State revenues are also hurting. Hegar said state sales tax revenue in January totaled $2.47 billion, down 4 percent compared to January 2015.
“As expected, reduced spending in oil and gas-related sectors resulted in a fall in total sales tax revenue,” Hegar said. “Collections from industries mainly driven by consumer spending, including retail trade, restaurants and services, continued to grow, as did receipts from the construction sector.
“I would also note the sales tax collections in January 2015 were a record high and represented a double-digit percentage increase over January 2014, meaning this month’s collections are being compared to unusually high collections from a year ago.”
Total sales tax revenue for the three months ending in January 2016 is down 2.8 percent compared to the same period a year ago. Sales tax revenue is the largest source of funding for the state budget, accounting for 56 percent of all tax collections.
Candidates continue to line up ahead of deadline
Most local governments still had positions available for candidates early this week as the filing deadline looms this Friday, February 19.
Elections are scheduled to be held Saturday, May 7, 2016.
The cities of Clarendon, Hedley, and Howardwick; the Clarendon and Hedley school districts; the Clarendon College District; and the Donley County Hospital District all have board positions available this year.
The City of Clarendon was the reporting that it had candidates for every position available this year. Incumbent Aldermen Beverly Burrow, Larry Jeffers, and John Lockhart have all filed for re-election.
Clarendon College also has a full slate of candidates with Regents Ruth Robinson, Susie Shields, and Lon Adams all seeking re-election to their full terms. Darlene Spier has also filed to run for the remainder of the partial term she was appointed to.
Three positions in Hedley are expiring this year – the positions of mayor and two aldermen. Alderman Lonnie Roby has filed to run for mayor, and one citizen has turned in paperwork to run for office but has not decided whether to run for mayor or alderman.
Howardwick City Hall could not be reached Tuesday, but last week, city officials reported incumbent Alderman Mac Miller is seeking re-election. Eric Riddle had previously signed up to run for one of the three open positions but has withdrawn. Incumbents Robert Brewster and Sam Grider have not filed.
Clarendon ISD has three Trustee positions up this year, and incumbents Robin Ellis and Chuck Robertson are seeking re-election. Incumbent Jim Shelton had not filed as of Tuesday.
Hedley ISD has two incumbents that intend to seek re-election – Michael Metcalf and Billy Hall. Two other terms are also up, those of Aaron Harper and Lana Ritchie. There are two full terms and two partial terms available on the Hedley Board of Trustees this year.
The Donley County Hospital District has four two-year terms up this year. Those are currently held by Jan Farris – Place 4, Jennie Owens – Place 5, Lori Howard – Place 6, and Mark C. White – Place 7. As of Tuesday, only Owens had filed for re-election.
All local boards are elected at-large, but hospital board candidates must file for a specific place on the ballot.
City positions and hospital board members serve two year terms, school board members serve three-year terms, and college regents’ terms are six years.
Editorial: Obama can make his nomination
Another Republican debate, another “Sweet Lord, save us” two hours of life wasted.
Six would-be presidents took the stage Saturday night in South Carolina for another round of interruptions, lies, and insults in an auditorium ironically called the “Peace Center.”
South Carolina voters will get to speak soon. Their decision will no doubt continue the weirdness of the 2016 campaign. The Donald won last week in New Hampshire, and Ohio Gov. John Kasich (who your editor likes but dismissed in our last issue as being unlikely) came in second. Polls show Trump leading in the Palmetto state, but anything can happen.
Saturday’s debate came just hours after Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia passed away in his sleep, and as could be expected, replacing the conservative stalwart on the High Court became the center of attention. Unfortunately, that part of the debate showed what’s wrong with the Republican Party… its candidates are crazy.
Some of the candidates actually called for President Obama not to nominate someone to fill Scalia’s seat. He should just wait and let the next president make that decision.
Seriously? So if Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg had dropped dead in the final days of the Bush administration, would Republican senators have asked him to wait and let Barack Obama name her replacement? Of course not.
The Constitution is quite clear on this… the president gets to make his nomination, and it doesn’t matter if there are four days or four years left in his administration. That’s his job.
Now can he get that nomination through the Senate? That’s another discussion, but this idea that Obama should just step aside and go play golf when there is a vacancy on the Supreme Court is ludicrous.
It is somewhat typical of the Republicans to wrap themselves in the Constitution and just love it to death. That is, of course, until it doesn’t fit their wants or desires. Then they ignore it just like Democrats often do.
Scalia’s legacy is that of a man who loved the Constitution and interpreted as it was written. Republicans who want Obama not to carry out his executive duty on this matter are dishonoring Scalia by not listening to what the Constitution has to say on this matter.
It is understandable that Republicans want to see Scalia replaced with a conservative justice, but frankly the GOP doesn’t have a real good track record lately of appointing conservative justices. Just look at the traitor Chief Justice John Roberts, who really ought to be removed for incompetence for his Obamacare decisions. At least if Obama nominates a liberal, they stay a liberal and everyone knows it.
Meanwhile…
What a great night it was for Clarendon and Donley County during the annual Chamber Awards Banquet last Thursday!
Your humble editor may be biased on this account since he’s also serving as your Chamber president this year, but there were certainly some outstanding citizens nominated and recognized this year. Saints’ Roost Award winner Frances Skelton is as loyal to Clarendon as anyone you’ll ever meet, and the Man and Woman of the Year – Bob Weiss and Katherine Monroe – are examples of people who give more of themselves than most people ever will.
The young people recognized last week also give hope that the volunteer attitudes exhibited by the adult honorees will continue for generations to come, and the Chamber also started an exciting new tradition with the Business of the Year award given to the Sandell Drive-In.
There are many businesses that make Clarendon and Donley County a great place to live, work, and raise a family, but the Sandell stands out as a landmark that Clarendon is known for and as a family-friendly form of entertainment during the hot summer months.
The members of the Morrow family are to be commended for the work they put in to keep the Sandell going, and the memory of Gary and Nell Barnhill should also be remembered for their roles in starting the drive-in sixty years ago.
Congratulations to all the award winners. You make us all proud, and we thank you for all you do to enrich our community.
Broncos continue with strong play
By Sandy Anderberg
The Clarendon Broncos posted two big wins last week and will be participating in post-season play beginning next week.
Last Tuesday, the Broncos used a great defensive game to defeat the Wellington Rockets, 44-24. The Broncos really dominated on both ends of the court and stopped everything the Rockets tried. They were able to limit the Rockets’ scoring as their high scorer only posted five points.
After a fairly even first quarter, the Broncos came alive offensively in the next eight minutes to take a slight advantage into the break. They were able to explode after the break and put enough distance between them and the Rockets to secure their win. Senior Junior Ceniceros hit two three-pointers in the game, and Chance Lockhart and Keandre Cortez each hit one.
The Broncos shot 57 percent from the bonus line with Chance Lockhart going two for two and Bryce Grahn nailing three out of four. Ceniceros racked up 11 points in the win, and Lockhart and Cortez each posted nine.
Bryce Grahn put in seven points and grabbed 12 rebounds; five assists and had two steals. Colt Wood put in four, and Marshal Johnson and Chesson Sims each helped with two points. Johnson also had five rebounds in the game with three of them coming on the defensive boards.
Out of Grahn’s 12 rebounds, nine of them came from defensive grabs, which allowed the Broncos to control Wellington keeping them away from the ball.
“We played good defense and were able to hold them to 24 points,” coach Brandt Lockhart said. “We shot the ball well in the second half. It was a big win for us and I was very proud of the way the kids came out and played.”
On Friday, the Broncos traveled to Quanah and had little opposition in their 69-25 win.
The Broncos hit the floor running and racked up a 23-point lead at the break. The Indians were really helpless to stop anything the Broncos threw at them.
Several Broncos were on their game in the contest, and Wood led the pack with 20 points. He also posted eight assists; four steals, and hit four out of six three-pointers. The Broncos were deadly from the three-point line as well as Wood hit four and Lockhart and Cortez each hit one.
Ceniceros finished with 17 points and four assists, and Lockhart and Cortez helped with nine points each. Grahn had seven points with five rebounds and three steals. Sims had four points and five rebounds, and Johnson put in three points in the win. The 21-7 Broncos were able to shoot 64 percent from the bonus line against the Indians.
“This makes back to back games that we have held our opponent to 25 points or less,” Lockhart said. “We shot 6 for 13 from behind the arch.”
The Broncos will have finished regular season play by press time and are looking to post season play.
Lady Broncos finish their basketball season
By Sandy Anderberg
The Lady Broncos ended regular season play in Wellington last Tuesday night with a loss to Wellington at 9-61. The ladies struggled against the Lady Rockets and could never establish their offensive attack on them. Wellington jumped out to the early lead and the Lady Broncos could never recover. Hannah Hommel was the top scorer with four.
“The girl’s season came to an end at Wellington,” coach Kalen Grahn said. “We ran into a top 15 team in state, and they showed that their ranking is well deserved.”
The Lady Broncos have faced adversity throughout the season and the loss of a few key players was crucial.
“We lost several players down the stretch with injuries which allowed other girls to gain some more valuable playing time,” Grahn said.
However, the Lady Broncos will have the chance to regroup this summer as they look to the next basketball season.
“I am looking forward to a strong off season and summer to develop our team,” Grahn said. “We will be returning everyone from this year and will be gaining some incoming freshmen. The girls know and are prepared to keep working to turn this program back into the winning tradition that Clarendon is used to.”
Claude Edgar DeBord
Claude Edgar DeBord ,77, died Monday, February 15, 2016.
Services were held at 2:00 p.m. Wednesday, February 17, 2016, in the Community Fellowship Church in Clarendon with Rev. Larry Capranica and Ray DeBord, officiating.
Burial will follow at Citizens Cemetery in Clarendon.
Arrangements are under the direction of Robertson Funeral Directors of Clarendon.
Claude was born August 22, 1938, in Clarendon to Burk and Mary Belle Lilly DeBord. He had been a graduate of Clarendon High School and later graduated with a Bachelor’s Degree in Animal Science in 1969 from West Texas State University. He also attended North Texas University. He was a US Marines veteran. He had worked at Walco, feedlots, farmed at his family’s home place in Ashtola, and built Centek buildings. He was a talented artist and craftsman. He had an infectious laugh, loved people, and was a wonderful giving man. He loved his Church and was a charter member of the Community Fellowship Church. He married JoAnn Wood on January 13, 2001, in Clarendon.
He was proceeded in death by his parents.
He is survived by his wife, JoAnn of Clarendon; a son, Scott DeBord of Amarillo; 2 daughters, Dawn Dowdell of Maryland and Terri Jennings of Tyler; a stepson, Todd Bailey of Amarillo; a sister, Linda Jewett of Panhandle; 5 grandchildren; and 2 great grandchildren.
The family request memorials be sent to the Community Fellowship Church in Clarendon.
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