Saturday, September 29, 2012

AND THE RAINS CAME!


What a difference a few days make!! Someone must have been doing rain dances. (Ann Burton?)  NANCY THOMPSON BAKER called a short time ago to tell me how much rain they are getting. The last time she checked they had received 9 inches in the past couple of days. And it's still raining. There's lots of area flooding, but the good news is the lakes are filling up for the first time in years. NANCY said the torrential rains are coming down all over the Concho Valley. She stated that as many as 100 cars had to be "rescued" from flooded streets in Midland. (Nancy has been known to exaggerate. ;-) Maybe you Midland/Odessa residents can verify the conditions there.)

These photos are from the Ballinger online newspaper. Go to http://ballingernews.com/, click on Front Page, and you can read about the rain and view 42 photos taken in the area. The Indian Friend statue by Hugh Campbell looks a lot different than it did a week ago, doesn't it?

Elm Creek picnic area at City Park

Elm Creek at Ballinger City Park

So many parts of Texas have been suffering severe drought conditions that, even with the flooding, the rains are most welcome and the answer to many prayers. We here in the Hill Country have also suffered from the drought. We have been having steady, gentle rain off and on again since yesterday. I'm not sure how much has fallen so far, but the Highland Lakes are in desperate need of water. Our water supply for Burnet has been Buchanan Lake until recent months, when the City had to resort to well water (which is extremely hard water) due to the low lake level. This area has been prone to severe flooding in years past. I hope we aren't due for that to happen again soon! 

I feel like Goldilocks. I don't want the lack of rain, but then again I don't want the floods. I want the rainfall to be "just right"!

Replenishing critical water supplies is what I have to say is really good stuff happening!

Peace and love,
Marilyn

UPDATE AT 5:15PM
NANCY just reported that the Elm Creek Dam in City Park has burst. Authorities have ordered evacuation of the part of Ballinger called "the flats", south of the highway ..
SECOND UPDATE FROM NANCY AT 6:15PM
"Okay, dam did not break..evacuation cancelled as river crested, so people told to go home (from Community Center)."

Friday, September 28, 2012

Flood waters fill the streets of San Angelo as seen on Oakes Street from the Post Office during flood of 1936.

Thursday, September 27, 2012

Article on Glenn Smith, PhD


Those of you who live in Ballinger have probably seen this in this week's edition of the Ballinger Ledger. Those of you who haven't may be surprised to read that that shy Glenn Smith, lurking in the back row of the recent reunion class photo is a prolific author! Here is the article:

"Local man announces third novel to be released soon through Amazon.com. The title is Ultimate Thirst.  Authored by Glenn Smith, a Runnels County native who graduated from Ballinger High School in 1957, the book features a retired American Airlines pilot who travels the world if he must to help a friend in trouble.

The first novel in this series, titled Erotic Resolution, appeared in 2010. The second, called Texas Tango, came out in 2012. A third book featuring Flint Rock will be issued through the Kindle book store and also will be available in print format from Amazon’s Create Space division. They are easy to find on Amazon.com and are inexpensive. The Carnegie public library in Ballinger has the books as well.

Smith spent 40 years teaching at five universities, including Iowa State in Ames, the University of Oklahoma in Norman, and the University of Houston in Clear Lake City. He retired in 2003 from Northern Illinois University in DeKalb after having chaired for 10 years the largest of 46 departments in the university. Marquis’ Who’s Who in the World listed him in 2004.

What led Dr. Smith to start writing novels? When the Ledger asked, he said, “I had written nonfiction for St. Martin’s in New York and Allyn and Bacon in Boston. Living in Georgia after retiring, I had time to try something challenging. I wanted to draw on my west Texas roots. I had skipped lunch in high school to (secretly) take flying lessons and ended up owning four airplanes. And I’d travelled in 33 countries and lived in Latin America. I invented a character named Flint Rock—in honor of the Comanche arrow points I found on Elm Creek where I grew up north of Ballinger.”

“Flint was a rifle expert in the U. S. Marines, owns his own plane, and wears cowboy boots made by Mike Jass at a boot shop on Hutchins Avenue in Ballinger,” Smith said. “Flint Rock has attitudes with which I identify,” he added, “because Flint grew up in West Texas.”

The Ledger asked Smith what brought him back to Ballinger after an absence of 50 years. His reply: “I was living on Mansa Beach in Punta del Este, a resort town in Uruguay. Got an email reminder from Marilyn Moragne that the Class of ‘57 was having its 50th reunion. I flew back for that and decided to stay.

I’d seen a lot of nice places in Latin America and the south Pacific, but there’s no place like home. I bought a 63 year-old house on the bluff overlooking the park. In winter, with leaves gone from trees, I can see from my back deck Hugh Campbell’s beautiful statue celebrating Native Americans. In summer I hear kids splashing in the pool as Waylon Jennings sings from someone’s portable radio. Turns out I traveled a lot of miles and saw a bunch of great spots but none better to live in than Ballinger.”

The Ledger’s reporter asked Dr. Smith about another of his interests, namely hypnotism. He said he initially learned (in 1957) how to hypnotize people from Dr. J. Dexter Eoff, a Ballinger dentist who used it in lieu of anesthesia for patients who feared needles. We pushed for more information and learned that Smith graduated in 2003 from the National Guild of Hypnotists certification training and that he sees clients for individual or group appointments on a limited basis. He uses hypnosis only therapeutically, not for entertainment, and does not charge because insurance rarely covers it.

“I used hypnosis in the story told in Texas Tango, the second Flint Rock story,” he told us. “In that plot, a character, a psychiatrist, hypnotizes a woman to foil a diabolical plan and thereby saves a lot of lives.”

The Ledger reporter asked if a fourth novel is in the works to follow Ultimate Thirst.

“Yes,” he replied. “The fourth story is called Stolen Gold. A shipment of valuable bullion disappears in Ballinger, and Flint gets involved in sorting out rumors of a cave (or a network of caves) said to lie underneath the town with an entrance on the bluff above the park. After twists and surprises, including lies, ambushes, gunfire, and a Satanic plot, Flint and friends solve the mystery. In the end, Flint sells his house in San Marcos and moves to Ballinger. Because of the people there and because he likes to listen to the bells of St. Mary’s church as he walks down Crosson Avenue for a morning stroll in the park.”

When will Stolen Gold be available from Amazon?


'Some time before 2013,' Smith replied, then added, 'unless Flint Rock can’t find his way out of the cave under Ballinger.'"

Everyone can now go online to Amazon and purchase his books! This is really good stuff happening, just like the recent 55th Class Reunion!

Peace,
Marilyn

Monday, September 24, 2012

Class of '57 Reunion 2012

BHS Class of '57, Spouses & Friends - 55th Reunion 2012

Wow! What a nice turnout for the 55th Class Reunion. Classmates in attendance (with spouses) were James Hays, Rodney Flanagan, Jerry Eoff, Glenn Smith, Neil Broussard, Bob Burton, Don Simmons, Terry Cothran, Mack (and Ruth Ann Henniger) Wood, Don and Doris Stokes White, Patsy Berry Bomar, Virginia Harral Egan, Pati Cockrell Pritchard, Nancy Thompson Baker, Janette Amarine Bradshaw and Janice Amarine, Peggy Virden Sharp, Ann Keele Ellis.  (Not in that order.) Our late classmate Irene Piel Batts was represented by her husband David (front row right) and daughter Amy (back row second from left).
Indian Statue by Hugh Campbell in City Park

Class Brick on Pathway to Indian
The Indian statue "A Friend" pictured above is a reproduction of one that many of you who lived in Ballinger as children must remember. An effort by one of the elementary school classes to have it duplicated after it was removed resulted in this beautiful rendition by Hugh Campbell, Class of 1958. You may read about it on the Ballinger News website. The Class of '57 donated the brick located on the pathway shown above. Someone said they could not find it. The brick right above it says "Thorpe". That might help. As I wasn't there, I can give no more information on its location.

Nancy Baker informed me that the class held a short meeting and decided to meet again at the All-School Reunion in 2015. Anyone willing to help with that project please let Nancy or James Hays know. It's easy to let those with computers know the plans, but many in our class depend upon letters or telephone calls advising them of events being planned. That entails a lot of envelopes to be addressed, stamped and mailed. If any of you receiving this email need to update your addresses or phone numbers - or know of anyone who has moved or left this earth, please let me know, as I have the complete list as current as I have been informed.

Also, I heard what sounded like sad news involving Leland Ohlhausen. If anyone can verify the condition of his health, please let me know. Also, if anyone has a new address for Barbara Sharpes Brooks, I would love to have that as well. The last we heard, she was moving to Atlanta to live with her daughter after her beloved Tom died.

My thanks to Pati Cockrell Pritchard for the photos of the reunion she so graciously sent to me. She also sent the picture below of her and her husband Gene, which was taken in Colorado last year. Such a beautiful photo of not only the scenery, but of the two of them, that I wish to share it with you.

If anyone else has photos of some of the events of the reunion they wish to share, forward them to me via email.  Until next time. Let the "good stuff" happen.

Gene and Pati Cockrell Pritchard - 2011
Peace and love,
Marilyn