SPORTS
ORANGE COUNTY
Commentary
FISHING
Kaz’s Korner
Capt. Dickie Colburn Page 5 Section B
Joe Kazmar Page 1 Section B
Outdoors
RELIGION & LOCAL CHURCH GUIDE
HUNTING & FISHING Capt. Chuck Uzzle Page 5 Section B
Page 6B
The Record TheRecordLive.com
Vol. 58 No. 79
Distributed FREE To The Citizens of Bridge City and Orangefield
Week of Wednesday, November 15, 2017
Former BC coach Litton named Parade Marshal 1966 state championship football team. In 1964, Litton became the first certified National Athletic Trainer at the high school level in Southeast
Texas. Training became his passion, and after retiring from BCHS in 1987, he went to work for Lake Charles Memorial Hospital as a sports medicine consultant until
2008, and continued taking care of young athletes in this area, as far away as Hemphill and Anahuac. In 1999, Litton was inducted into the Southeast Texas Coaches Associa-
tion Hall of Fame. The announcement that Litton will be serving as Parade Marshal was made at LITTON Page 3A
Bridge City Chamber awards local students
Pictured are Mickey Litton Gisclar, Lucy Fields, Moe Litton, and Joy Litton.
Staff Report
For The Record
Moe Litton, athletic trainer and teacher at Bridge City High School from 1965-1988, will be Parade Marshal for Bridge City’s 9th Annual Christmas Light Parade. The Parade is Saturday, Dec. 2, themed “An Old Fashioned Christmas,” and begins at 6 p.m. The parade route will be on West Roundbunch Road, starting at the First Baptist Church and ending at Bridge
City Elementary School. After serving four years in the Navy during World War II, Litton attended Stephen F. Austin State University, earning his bachelor’s degree in 1953 and his masters in 1956. He played football and was a letterman for SFA’s Lumberjacks. His first coaching job was for in Hemphill. From there, his coaching career included Jacksonville, Vidor, Orangefield, and finally Bridge City. He was part of the coaching staff for Bridge City’s
90 just a number for newlyweds Dave Rogers
For The Record
At 93, Tom Brooks is too busy “running the roads” to slow down. And for the last 20-odd days, the person riding shotgun on those trips is his newlywed wife, Media, 88. Since they road-tripped to see a judge in Jasper last month, they’ve been traveling as man and wife. “We started going places together and we liked it,” Tom said. “We’ve been running the roads for three years, going everywhere, doing everything. So we got married. “There’s no use in going through life miserable.” Both Tom and Media were married to their first spouses for more than 60 years. Media’s husband, Marvin Sanders, died in 2013, just after the couple’s 65th anniversary. Together, they raised four children, three sons and a daughter. Tom’s wife, Betty, died in 2014. The couple, married 64 years, raised two boys and a
girl. But Tom and Media have known each other – and their families – “50 or 60 years,” Tom says. They were all members of the Second Baptist Church in Bridge City. “I knew his wife, too,” Media said. “We were friends.” Tom was in a high school graduating class of 11 at Evans, Louisiana, shortly before he was drafted into World War II in 1943. He was in the headquarters and supply company for the 82nd Airborne Division and was hospitalized with pneumonia after suffering the freezing cold of the Battle of the Bulge for 57 days. But Brooks got back to his troops in time to witness the fall of the German army. “The day it was over, on a road like [FM] 1136, they were coming through all day to surrender, because they didn’t want to get taken prisoner by the Russians,” he said. “They passed through for NEWLYWEDS Page 3A
The Bridge City Chamber of Commerce has named senior Moyleang Taing as the November “Student of the Month” for Bridge City High School. Taing was awarded during the November Networking Coffee hosted at Bridge City Bank. Pictured are BC Chamber Ambassador Brandy Slaughter, BCHS Principal Elisha Bell, Moyleang Taing, Huyteang Kuoy, School counselor Nikki Harris, and BCISD superintendent Todd Lintzen
Kinley Gipson has been named the Orangefield High School “Student of the Month” by the Bridge City Chamber of Commerce. Gipson was awarded during the November Networking Coffee hosted at Bridge City Bank. Pictured are Orangefield Principal Zach Quinn, school counselor Candi Patterson, Christy Khoury, Kinley Gipson, Kera Gipson, and Deon Gipson. PHOTOS BY BC Chamber
Ten Republicans file for county offices Dave Rogers
For The Record
Newlyweds Media and Tom Brooks have known each other for than more than half their lives but married only three weeks ago, roughly four years after each’s first spouse passed away. RECORD PHOTO: Dave Rogers
Seven incumbents were among the first double handful of candidates to file for the November 6, 2018 Orange County elections – all of them Republicans. No Democrats had filed for office as of Tuesday night. Among those who signed up with the Republicans at a Monday gathering in Bridge City was County Treasurer Christy Khoury. A county employee since 2002, she was first elected Treasurer in 2010 and again in 2014, both times as a Democrat. Other incumbents who
filed for re-election this week with new County Republican Party Chairman David Covey include County Judge Stephen Brint Carlton; County Commissioner, Precinct 2, Barry Burton; County Clerk Brandy Robertson; and three of the four Justices of the Peace. Hershel Stagner, Jr., of Precinct 1; Joy Dubose-Simonton of Precinct 3; and Rodney Price of Precinct 4 are seeking to keep their spots on the bench. Chad Jenkins, Ag Science teacher at Orangefield, filed for the Precinct 2 bench being vacated by a retiring Derry Dunn. Two others filed to oppose an incumbent office-holder
in the March 6, 2018 GOP party primary. They are Theresa Beauchamp for Precinct 2 County Commissioner and Robert Viator for Precinct 4 County Commissioner. Viator, the Vidor mayor, is taking on two-term Precinct 4 Commissioner Jody Crump. Beauchamp, the daughter of Orange’s first female county commissioner, Marcelle Adams, is one of two announced candidates gunning for the Precinct 2 seat held by Burton. The other is county Democratic Party chairman Deborah Mitchell, who, like Beauchamp, is a former Orange city council member.
CMYK
Mitchell said Tuesday night she hasn’t resigned her party chairmanship yet, but will before she officially files to run next week. She said several people plan to file as Democratic candidates next week. The official filing period runs from Nov. 11 through Dec. 11. The paperwork and filing fees first go through the party’s county chairs and then on to the Texas Secretary of State. Most office-seekers had already announced their intent to run months ago when they filed paperwork with the county elections office to designate a campaign treasurer, a must for fundraising.
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