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Remembering Columbia

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A surprise chill in the air didn’t seem to be a damper for the excitement surrounding the annual ‘Remembering Columbia’ NASA Museum Benefit Golf Tournament on Saturday, April 20. 48 players hit the links at the beautiful Cypress Bend Resort along the shores of Toledo Bend Reservoir in Many, Louisiana. The two-person scramble supports the educational initiatives of the Patricia Huffman Smith NASA Museum ‘Remembering Columbia,’ located in Hemphill. After completing 18 holes of challenging golf on a championship course, cash and prizes were awarded to the day’s top finishers and winners of individual contests. First place went to Mike Nugent and Ryan Mayard, who shot a 65, while second place went to Derrick Laborde and Morgan Newton, with a score of 67. Third place was awarded to Darold Gleason and Clay Henry, who earned a 68. Andrew Rausch walked away as the winner in the closest to the pin competition, while Dale Wilkerson claimed the longest drive. While none of the players selected for the $50 thousand hole-in-one competition took home the top prize, the contest certainly added to the excitement of the day. This 5th edition of the tournament was presented by Friends of the Patricia Huffman Smith NASA Museum ‘Remembering Columbia’ and was generously sponsored by the following businesses and individuals: BOM Bank; Southside Bank; High Roller Group, LLC; Backwoods Customs; Circle T Tax; Colonial Mortuary; Don Smith Construction; Farm Bureau Insurance; Hancock Furniture; Hemphill Meat Market; Holly Park Marina; Linebarger Attorneys at Law; Lonesome Pine Mercantile; Mark & Tom in the Morning; Martins Corner Realty; McAdams Propane; McGraw Signs; MT Nails; NAPA Hemphill; Pineywoods Vineyards; Shelby Savings Bank; SIATX Insurance; The LaFleur Family; Toledo Bend Express Realty; White Excavation; Worsham DDS. Planning for next year’s tournament is already underway. More information will be released in early 2025. The Patricia Huffman Smith NASA Museum 'Remembering Columbia' serves as a memorial to the 2003 Space Shuttle Columbia tragedy and as an educational facility dedicated to creating science and technology-inspiring learning opportunities for children and adults. Learn more at www.NASAColumbiaMuseum.com.

TPW Commission Approves 2024-25 Statewide Hunting, Migratory Game Bird Regulations

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The Texas Parks and Wildlife Commission have approved hunting regulations for the 2024-25 season with the following modifications and clarifications to 2024-25 Statewide Hunting and Migratory Game Bird proclamations: Eliminate the Light Goose Conservation Order from both eastern and western zones due to continuous declines of wintering light geese in Texas.
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Las Vegas Star To Rock San Augustine

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Sting Ray Anthony will present “Jukebox Rocks” with special guests, “Shake Rattle & Roll” at 7 p.m. May 11 at the El Potosino Concert Hall San Augustine. For reservations, call Steve Fountain at 832-312-0074 or email stevemdxelvis@gmail.com. Do you remember saddle shoes and poodle skirts? How about jukeboxes and cars with fins? Sting Ray Anthony does–although in the 1950s, he wasn’t even a gleam in his father’s eye yet. But for Trinidad-born, Canadaraised Anthony, it was love at first listen. His mother, as it happens, was a bit more modern than his father who favored the standard-bearers of the previous era, such as Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin. She was into rock and roll.
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Briefs

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Hemphill Garden Club will meet on Thursday, April 18 at 9:30 am. “Meet and Greet” will be followed by program, “Medicinal Plants” presented by Pam Sykes. All members are encouraged to attend. Visitors are welcome.

PATSY, THE PATSY

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Jobs were hard to find in 1958, the year I was married. I was classified “1A” by the Selective Service System, which meant that I was facing being drafted into the army. No company wanted to hire me, only to have me leave within a year. After spending three months in the Golden Triangle area of Beaumont, Orange, and Port Arthur without finding work, my new bride and I decided to move back home and await the inevitable “Greetings” letter from Uncle Sam. Mr. Crowe, the managing engineer for the Texas Highway Department, took pity on me and gave me a job in their new office on Highway 96 north of town. I suppose that since I had three years of college under my belt, he felt that I might possibly learn drafting. So, he hired me at $325 per month and placed me under the tutelage of the senior draftsman, Terrance Price. The general secretary of the office was a young lady named Patsy. She was very efficient and reliable, and got along well with the all male crew. She took all the ribbing and jokes from the guys in stride, with a good humor. The head of the surveying crew, Jake, was one who loved practical jokes. No one was immune from him, and never knew when he might strike. Patsy fell into his sights one Friday afternoon in 1959. It seems that the survey crew found the skull and horns of a steer, perhaps a longhorn, out in the woods. They brought it back to the office prior to quitting time, but hid it from Patsy. This skull was quite large, perhaps eighteen inches long, and thirty-six inches from one horn tip to the other. Jake and an accomplice found some bailing wire and attached the skull to the back bumper of Patsy’s car. Everyone waited around to see her reaction when she left work and found this monstrosity on her car. Well, as we all know, the best laid plans of mice and men sometimes go awry. Patsy bounded out of the office and got into her car and sped away, never noticing the item wired to her back bumper. We all watched her car until she turned left at the circle and was out of sight. What a bummer – nothing happened, that is, until Monday morning. It seems that Patsy had driven all over town Saturday and noticed some stares and funny looks from people, but paid no attention. It was not until she was leaving for church Sunday morning that she found the skull and horns still attached to her bumper. Monday morning she arrived at work a little early. She retrieved the skull from her car trunk and took it over to Jake’s pickup and threw it inside the cab. When she came inside the office, everyone was very quiet, pretending to work, awaiting her reaction. She walked into her office, just like any other day, saying nothing. That is, until Jake walked into the office. He made a comment about finding a skull and horns in his vehicle, wondering where it came from. Then, Patsy, the patsy, struck. She ran out of her office holding an umbrella with which she proceeded to jab and strike Jake all over his head and shoulders. “Don’t you dare do anything like that to me again”, she yelled as she swung the umbrella like a baseball bat. Mr. Crowe, the manager, walked in about that time and put a stop to the assault. Then, everyone started laughing and things settled down. Jake apologized, Patsy apologized, and things were back to normal. I always felt that deep down within her soul, Patsy enjoyed the attention. So much for the steer skull caper. Other pranks were waiting to be played on people, and they were. However, I do not recall that Patsy was ever again the patsy. Apparently she made her point.
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Postscript

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My husband, Peter, and I spend the winters in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. The center of the town is a designated World Heritage Site, which means the facades of the buildings must remain as they were in the mid-1700s. The streets are made of round and sometimes slippery cobblestones. The doors are stout and covered with hundreds of coats of paint, and on the top of every building is a rooftop terrace where people can watch the fireworks that go off for no reason that anyone has ever been able to figure out. It is wonderful.