Archives for March 2023
City seeks lifeguards, administrator
The City of Clarendon is looking for a few good people to fill several positions.
The Clarendon Aquatic Center is just a few weeks away from opening for the 2023 season, but City Administrator David Dockery says more employees are needed before the Memorial Day weekend opening.
Applications are being accepted at City Hall for the position of pool manager and for several lifeguard jobs.
“We need at least four or five more lifeguards,” Dockery said Tuesday.
Anyone ages 16 and older can apply for a lifeguard position, and they must take training to become certified.
City Hall also was informed Monday that its final candidate for the city administrator’s position had withdrawn his name from consideration.
Fred Ventresco, Town Administrator at Pine Tops, North Carolina, had told the city council he was applying in other locations during a virtual interview held on February 2. After the council released the other two final candidates from the search two weeks ago, Ventresco was scheduled to travel to Clarendon this week to tour the town and meet with officials in person.
Dockery said the city assumes Ventresco accepted a position elsewhere.
The council will meet this Thursday evening for its regular meeting and discuss the next steps in finding a successor for Dockery, who announced a year ago his intention to retire this April. Dockery will now stay on the job for a while longer.
Editorial: The Record of the area’s best newspaper
Thursday, March 2, 2023 – the day the light went out in Canadian.
There wasn’t a power failure or an eclipse or anything of the sort. No, it was a different kind of darkness that fell over the city. The light of truth and fairness and justice went out.
After 132 years, The Canadian Record published its last issue. Well, “suspended publication” is the phrase that was used – holding out hope that the paper might yet have a rebirth. Still, the fact remains, Canadian is without a newspaper.
The Canadian Record – for 75 years under the guidance of the Ezzell family – was the best weekly newspaper in the Panhandle. Period. Some might even say it was the best in Texas, and I wouldn’t argue with them. It was the gold standard of community journalism doing all the things that a weekly newspaper does best – be a cheerleader for its town, holding elected officials accountable, and zealously reporting the local news from City Hall to the elementary school.
Laurie Ezzell Brown, who has published and edited the paper since her father passed away some 30 years ago, was and is a close friend of mine. We are two sides of the same coin. She is an unapologetic liberal Democrat and I’m a libertarian Reagan Republican. But we have always been united on the things that mattered – open government, transparency, and the public’s right to know. I know a lot of small-town journalists, but Laurie Brown is the best. When I’ve had tough stories to cover, it was her who I would turn to for advice and counsel. And I could count on her to tell me what I needed to know, whether I was going to like it or not.
It was Laurie and her advertising manager Mary Smithee who I always looked forward to seeing at press conventions. Over the years, they became like extended family members. The newspaper family is like none other, bonding over getting the big scoop or swapping tales of crazy public meetings.
Just a couple of weeks ago, the Cub Reporter was in Canadian for a tennis match and the team went for a coffee. Brown Bag Roasters is run by Laurie’s son and is right next door to the newspaper in Canadian. The Record staff saw Ben walk by, snatched him from the coffee shop, and pulled him into the newspaper to say hello and catch up with him. I think he was both startled and happy to see them.
Through good times and bad, Laurie Brown, like her father before her, bravely recorded the happenings in Canadian fairly and accurately. It was right there in black and white; and you didn’t have to like it, but it was the truth. Some people can’t handle the truth, and that can bring unwanted repercussions. Any good newspaper has had to deal with that, and the Record is certainly no different.
When Laurie wanted to share her personal thoughts, you could find those clearly labeled on page two of the Record in her “Field Notes” column. She wasn’t afraid to let you know what she thought on the opinion page; but when you turned past page two, it was unbiased reporting, and the readers were given as much information as possible to make up their own minds.
Laurie has been trying to sell her paper for several years, but she did not want to sell to just anyone or to some group that would strip the Record of its soul for profit. The job of a community editor can wear on you, and it’s worn on her to the point she can no longer do it. With no buyer, she reluctantly closed the doors.
The Record lives on for now as a social media and web presence, but it’s not the same. It’s not the same as having the paper – in either a physical or digital format – to record kids’ latest school project, to celebrate the state championships, to uncover what’s happening at City Hall, to hold commissioners’ feet to the fire, or to rally the community around a worthwhile project.
Businesses in Canadian that have depended on the Record to help get their message to their customers will feel the newspaper’s absence, and taxpayers, too, will be losers without a paper help them keep tabs on local governments.
What will become of the public notices that once were published in the Record? I suppose the city and the county and the school there will put those up on their websites when it’s time to raise taxes or call for a bond election. The people of Canadian will just have to trust that their officials are telling them the truth, because there won’t be a third party to verify anything. It will be the fox guarding the henhouse. What could go wrong?
At the Enterprise, our hearts are broken both for the people of Canadian, for the Record staff, and for Laurie personally. We can only imagine what it must feel like to sign “30” to the newspaper itself and lay down the pen after decades of service. We will miss their influence and the constant push they gave us all to do better and be better. We are eternally grateful for the friendship, the example, and the high standards they shared with us. Thank you, our friends, for everything.
The Cub Reporter: Band scores high in concert contest
This Tuesday, I went to contest for Concert and Sightreading with the band.
For the last couple of months, we have been working on perfecting our concert music and strengthening our sightreading abilities.
I really enjoy sightreading and for those of you who don’t know, sightreading is when they give you a piece of music and you have to learn the entire piece in seven minutes, then play it for judges.
The judges score you on a scale of five to one with five being the worst and one being the best, that is also how they judge our concert music.
This is our first concert competition with our new band director, and we were very hopeful that we would do good.
We started out with concert band and scored a 1, 1, and a 2 which average out to a one. Then we went and did sightreading which we scored a 2, 2, and a 1 which averaged out to a 2.
We didn’t make sweepstakes this year, but we did get a plaque for our 1 in sight reading, and hopefully we can dominate next year in both marching and concert band.
Sam Shelley
Sam Shelley, 72, of Clarendon died Sunday, March 5, 2023, in Clarendon.
Rosary was said on Tuesday, March 7, 2023, in Robertson Funeral Directors Saints’ Roost Chapel in Clarendon. Mass was celebrated on Wednesday, March 8, 2023, in St. Mary’s Catholic Church in Clarendon with Rev. Arokia Raj Samala, as the celebrant. Burial will follow in St. Mary’s Cemetery in Clarendon.
Arrangements are by Robertson Funeral Directors of Clarendon.
Sam was born November 22, 1950, in Amarillo to Francis and Samuel Shelley. He married Leitha Martin on August 20, 1977, in Tucumcari, New Mexico. He worked as an airplane mechanic for many years prior to his retirement. Sam loved cooking, fishing, swimming, taking trips with his family, and the outdoors. He also loved helping people. He had been a resident of Clarendon since 1992 and was a member of St. Mary’s Catholic Church.
He is preceded in death by his parents; his wife in 2016; and a sister, Cindy Malone.
He is survived by his sons, Sam Shelley, III and wife Roxy of Lubbock and Jeremy Shelley and wife Jamie of Clarendon; his daughters, Luichi Shelley of Amarillo, Samara Shelley and Nicky Shelley both of Clarendon; a sister, Cathy Penn of Amarillo; 13 grandchildren; and 5 great grandchildren.
Sign the online guestbook at www.robertsonfuneral.com
Charles Paul Brown
Charles Paul Brown, 86, of Dumas died Saturday, March 4, 2023, in Dumas.
Services will be held at 2:00 p.m. Thursday, March 9, 2023, in Robertson Saints’ Roost Chapel in Clarendon. Burial will follow in Citizens Cemetery in Clarendon.
Viewing will be Wednesday at the funeral home with family receiving friends for visitation from 4:00-6:00 p.m.
Arrangements are under the direction of Robertson Funeral Directors of Clarendon.
Charles was born January 20, 1937, in Wellington to Ross and Ellen Gossett Brown. He married Barbara Gail Hewett on June 27, 1958, in Clarendon. Charles served our country in the US Navy. He had been a longtime resident of Amarillo before moving to Dumas four years ago. He had worked for City Machine and Welding as Vice President for 18 years prior to his retirement. He enjoyed working in the yard and outside, wood working, and remodeling his daughter’s house. He also loved his pets and hunting. Charles was a member of the Masonic Lodge.
He was preceded in death by his parents; his wife, Barbara in 2009; three brothers, Leroy Brown, Ray Brown, and Troy Brown; and a sister, Margaret Leffew.
He is survived by his daughter, Angela Blackshear and husband Brandon of Dumas; his brothers, Tommy Brown and wife Elma of Fort Worth and Mack Brown of Borger; his sister, Jo Ward and husband Dal of Flower Mound; two grandsons, Tyler Borron and Chad Borron both of Dumas; a step grandson, Ryan Blackshear and wife Brittney of Dumas; his step great grandchildren, Chloe and Braun; and several nieces and nephews.
The family request memorials be sent to Dumas Memorial Hospice.
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