Bringing Up Grades (BUG) Awards at POC School

Archived in the category: General Info, School News
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 26 Apr 12 - 0 Comments

Recoginzed for BUG Awards for the 5th sixth week are:

Front Row: Collin Branch, Elizabeth Carriles, Canion Epley, Sam Thumann

Middle Row: Daniel Ixtepan, Noah Guzman, Sierra Posey, Carlos Sanchez, Craig Lopez

Back Row: Donna Boyd of the Kiwanis Club, Adriana Carriles, Cierra Harper, Adien Munoz, Madison Posey, Marshall Arlitt

Not pictured: Thomas Hawes and Dillon Hobbs

Condolences – James W. Wilson

Archived in the category: General Info, Obituaries
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 26 Apr 12 - 0 Comments

James W. Wilson, 90, of Groesbeck, formerly of Seadrift, passed away on Friday, April 20, 2012. James was born in Angleton to the late Wesley William and Nancy E. Liggin Wilson on July 9, 1921. James served his country as a Corporal in the United States Army, 338th Engineers. He was a lifetime member of VFW Post 4403 and he retired from Union Carbide after twenty-nine and half years.

James is survived by his wife of 57 years Marie (Munson) Wilson of Groesbeck; sons, Daniel Lee Wilson and wife Frances of Silsbee; Ernest William Wilson and wife Norma of Waco; George Wesley Wilson and wife Dealva of Thornton; sister, Mary Neill; brothers, Floyd Wilson and Norvel Wilson; grandchild, Benjamin Ross Wilson and a host of nieces and nephews and extended family and friends that loved him.

In addition to his parents, James was preceded in death by sisters, Josephine Milam, Betty Caddell and Luthera Milam; brothers, Luther Gaines and Carl Wilson.

Funeral service was held Tuesday, April 24, at First Assembly of God in Seadrift with Reverend Tim Smith officiating. Burial, with full Military Honors under the auspices of the Calhoun County Combined Honor Guard, followed at Seadrift Cemetery.

Attention MUD Customers

Archived in the category: Announcements, General Info
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 26 Apr 12 - 0 Comments

A 30-cubic-yard roll-off bin will be located behind the fence on 16th and Harrison for MUD customers to bring bulky waste to be hauled off. The bin will be there for one day, on Friday, May 11, 2012. The bin may be used from 8:00 a.m. until 4:00 p.m. MUD customers only may deposit large items like carpet, furniture, mattresses, stoves, etc.

Auto batteries may be left outside the bin. MUD customers must sign in with their name and Port O’Connor physical address. No commercial waste will be accepted. This is for residential waste only. No paint, tires, gas cans or any unacceptable waste should be placed in the bin.

What’s Rockin’ at the Port O’Connor Library By Shirley & Sue

Archived in the category: General Info, Organizations
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 26 Apr 12 - 0 Comments

BOOKS BOOKS BOOKS — Wonderful books to read and always so many. Sometimes it’s difficult to choose. But, I did! And found two books by authors with the same last name, though from the content of their books and each man’s life style, I really doubt any relation.

The first is PRIVATE GAMES, by James Patterson with Mark Sullivan. This is the third book in Patterson’s new series concerning a very unusual private ‘eye’ firm that works internationally. And this firm is not the kind one finds in a walk-up building on a shady street. The plot is quite timely as it deals with protecting persons aligned with the Olympics set in London later this year. Characters are, of course, well defined which seems to be a talent of Patterson; I often think that when he writes a book with another writer, he just outlines the plot, but really fleshes out his characters. One aspect of this book troubled me to the point of attempting to do research of previous sites of the Games in the U.S.; an enormous amount of money is spent in buying land to construct the buildings and pools and other sites, but what happens to the buildings after the Games have ended? What happens to the rebuilding of an area; is it just left empty? Atlanta was somewhat lucky as part of the constructed area led to the resurgence of the Peachtree area, which was dying. But what will happen in London? Will be interesting to follow.

The second is THE RACE as written by Richard North Patterson. This author is one of my favorites, and I had been searching for this book as it is quite timely and I had read it earlier. The author stated that he had started this book in 2004 but put it aside to work on his books concerning Israel and the constant fight with those who declare a separate state should be designated for the “Palestinians”. He returned to writing it in 2007, which is when I read the book for the first time. This book tells the story of three candidates for the Republican nomination: one a semi-fundamentalist minister; one a strong and devout Senator; and the third, a young Senator from Ohio who walks his own way. Throw in a beautiful and intelligent actress who happens to be black from South Carolina, and an owner of mega media sources who wants to be the “King-Maker”; the result becomes a dirty and unbelievably ugly campaign. Hopefully, we will not see a media run campaign this year, but … !

A new author on our scene is Jodi Compton, whose first book is entitled THE 37TH HOUR, which is the time limit for successfully finding a missing person before the trail goes cold. The heroine is a police detective in Minneapolis, and the book starts with her, Sarah Pribek jumping into the freezing river to save a teenager jumper. And continues with a riveting plot that is difficult to stop reading. As a “Missing Persons Investigator”, Sarah suddenly finds herself searching for her husband, another cop, who unexplainably disappears. Interesting people; a fascinating plot, and I hope that somehow we are able to continue with books in this series.

Just a quickie: we have an unbelievable array of books for purchase at our Library, both hard cover and soft cover, of all types of fiction and even nonfiction. Come see us before you take your trip!

“When an old person dies, a Library burns down.”
Karin Gillespie

Calhoun County Recycling Centers Now Single Stream

Archived in the category: General Info
Posted by Joyce Rhyne on 26 Apr 12 - 0 Comments

Calhoun County Recycling Centers is now “single stream”, which means no more sorting. That is why they have removed the labels on the trailer located at the County yard next to the POC Library. They do ask that heavy corrugated cardboard be separated and placed in the appropriate labeled bins. The trailer will be at this location at all times and available during normal County operating times – no more rotation.

Single Stream Recycling Rules

1. Materials accepted together:
Plastics, #1-#7 – rinsed, lids removed
Paper – white, colored, magazines, catalogs, phone books, newspaper, junk mail, food/drink boxes
Tin/Aluminum Cans – rinsed

2. Material Accepted Sorted:
Corrugated Cardboard – Clean, dry, flattened/cut to fit

3. Materials not accepted:
Liquids, Garbage, Glass, Styrofoam, All Plastic Shopping/Trash Bags*, Plastic Lids, Toys, Light Bulbs, Motor Oil or Herbicide/Insecticide Containers, Food Contaminates, Other Metals, Books
Note: You do not have to sort items except corrugated cardboard. Please place all other acceptable materials loosely in any available bin.
* All clean plastic shopping bags can be taken to HEB or WalMart.

Calhoun County Recycling Centers main location is on Old Landfill Road in Port Lavaca. Other locations are: Port O’Connor, Seadrift, and Point Comfort.

For more information, call 361-552-7791.

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