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The     Record TheRecordLive.com

Vol. 58 No. 23

Distributed FREE To The Citizens of Bridge City and Orangefield

Week of Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Anglers chase ‘kicker fish’ in tourney Dave Rogers

For The Record

“Four chunks and a kicker.” That will be the goal of 250 or so two-man teams of fishermen competing in this weekend’s $200,000 Skeeter Bass Champs Team Championship fishing tournament based at the Orange Boat Ramp. Action begins at first light Saturday and Sunday, with the first fishermen due to weigh in their catch each day at 3 p.m. The tournament awards ceremony is set for 4:30 p.m. Sunday. Only the best of the anglers from the 20-odd tournaments put on or sanctioned by Texas-based Skeeter Bass Champs are eligible for this weekend’s event. The winning team will go

home with a $75,000 Skeeter bass boat. Second prize is a $50,000 boat. The next 38 highest finishing teams will get checks ranging from $1,000 to $6,000. “There’s not a bass tournament in the state of Texas that’s run better,” said Little Cypress resident Jonathan Simon, owner of Simon Outfitters, 2313 MacArthur Drive in Orange. “They’ll pay out about 100 percent (of entry fees) at every tournament. They have awesome sponsors.” Simon should know. He and partner Cade Durio of Lake Charles have been fishing this tour for three years. This year they rank No. 5 in points for the East Region, one of four regions for the tour. And Simon likes the fish

he’s finding near his hometown this year. “Our river has been fishing awesome this year,” he said. “We’ve seen fish like we’ve never seen.” Heavy rain in the north Texas area has kept the salinity low in the river and its outfalls, Simon said. “That hurts the trout guys but helps the bass guys,” he

said. A two-man team is allowed to weigh a total of five fish. “I’d say you’re going to see a lot of eight- to 11-pound sacks,” the fisherman predicted. “Who gets that 14 or 15 pounds, that’ll be the key.” Teams in the tournament can run their boats as far as they can go and return in an eight-hour day, as long as they

stay out of the Gulf of Mexico. Simon said some teams might venture as far north as Toledo Bend, as far east as Calcasieu Lake in Louisiana, or as far west as Galveston. “These boats go 75 to 80 mph now, so you’ve got a good range,” Simon said. “If you’re fishing a long way away, you just have to catch ‘em fast and

run back.” A change this year is Texas’ new 12-inch keeper limit. It used to be 14 inches. “We’ll have a lot more (fivefish) limits come in, but if you’re catching 12-inch limits, you’re not going to win.” The really big bass, 4 to 5 pounds and up, are referred to by tournament fishers as “kicker fish.” The 2- to

50th reunion rekindles Cardinal magic Dave Rogers

Clown face from the Stephen King movie “It.”

Clowns’ net threats target local schools Dave Rogers

For The Record

The first week in October seems like Orange County’s turn in the barrel as a nationwide rash of creepy clown sightings and internet threats hit home. “I’m gon kill everybody in the fruit for fun!” was among the opening salvos Sunday night from a Twitter account with the handle The Fruit City Clown and a scary redheaded Stephen King movie clown mask as an avatar. “I’ll be at West Orange tomorrow,” proclaimed another

“Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.” Romans 12:21

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Tweet by The Fruit City Clown and that was followed by a Tweet with a schedule: “Wos Monday “LCM Tuesday “Memorial Wednesday “OZEN & CENTRAL on Thursday “West Brook FRIDAY” And then came the warning, “I got clowns out in Bmt to Port Arthur Every where” At least one Tweet had the sender’s location tagged as Orange, Texas. “This is something that seems to be growing across the nation at this time and everybody’s just taking their turn,” Little Cypress-Mauriceville superintendent Pauline Hargrove told trustees and patrons at Monday night’s monthly school board meeting. “It was at Houston last week. The authorities did determine it to be a hoax. However, we are listed in the one (threat) we were made aware of early this morning, so we are taking it seriously, following our own protocol.” Another Twitter account “BridgeCityClown” invited folks to the Walmart parking lot Monday night “for a little surprise,” but later noted, “no one showed up.” The threatening Tweets by the Fruit City Clown were deleted by late Sunday night. By Monday, the Twitter account of The Fruit City Clown was issuing apologies. “I never intended to go to schools or harm anyone. This was all just a joke please accept this apology,” said one Tweet. Another went farther in CLOWN Page 3A

For The Record

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n Texas – and possibly the world -- there is absolutely nothing better at bringing a community together than a state championship football team. If you’ve ever been around one, you’d know. Ask West Orange-Stark fans. “It was sort of a magical time,” Troy Woodall said. And in so doing, he was transported. Bridge City is making the trip back in time 50 years this weekend to honor its 1966 Class 3A state championship football team in a handful of activities centered around the Cardinal homecoming football game against Cleveland. “They were a close-knit group,” Woodall said of the Cardinal players. Of the 38 on the team, 25 were seniors. And most of those 25 had played together since they were in the eighth grade. “They played together eighth grade, ninth grade and sophomore year,” Woodall said. “Their junior and senior years they really

did well. A lot of them still get together now and then for lunch.” Woodall, 75, an assistant coach for Bridge City in 1966 just as he was in 2004, when he retired, will be among the state champion contingent honored in ceremonies that begin at 3 p.m. Friday, with a pep rally inside Larry Ward Stadium. Ward was one of the four assistant coaches that worked for H.W. “Chief” Wilson during a run of excellence that included an 112-1 state runnerup campaign in 1965 and the final 13-1 title season. Now Woodall and trainer Mo Litton are the only “grownups” from the 1966 team still here. Wilson, a former Bum Phillips assistant, never coached again after his Bridge City tenure ended in 1973. He died in 2013. “Chief went to high school in Orangefield and coached at Nederland, Jacksonville and Amarillo. He came to Bridge City from Amarillo,” Woodall recalled. “He and Bum were a lot the same. He was first and foremost a defensive coach. We were going to have a good defense.

Head coach H.W. “Chief” Wilson, Joe Langston, Dan Dearing and Steve Worster hold the 1966 Class 3A State Championship Trophy following a banquet in the team’s honor held at Bridge City High School in January 1967.

“And he was a heck of a disciplinarian. He expected kids to do everything right, and the kids accepted that.” Woodall remembers a lot of four-hour practices. “We’d start at 4 or 4:30 in the afternoon, and being out there still at 8 o’clock was

not uncommon,” he said. “There were no rules then about practice time. “Many times we would practice until dark, then turn on the lights and go out on the game field. CHAMPIONSHIP Page 3A

Police seeking person of interest in two cases Debby Schamber For The Record

Police searching for persons of interests in two cases Investigators with the Orange Police Department are searching for person of interest in the homicide case of 20-year-old Jeremiah Aaron Klinkhamer. Officers responded to a call of a disturbance at about 8 p.m. on Sept. 28 to 111 Pine. When officers arrived they discovered Klinkhamer with

a gunshot wound to his chest. Justice of the Peace, Pct. 1, David Peck, responded to the scene and has ordered an autopsy. However, according to Capt. Robert Enmon, no arrests have been made at this time although the investigation is ongoing. They are continuing to talk to people to gather information. In other police business, detectives are wanting information in the robbery of the Orange Cinema II on Bowling

Lane. According to reports, about 30 minutes after the opened Saturday afternoon the theater was robbed at gunpoint. At about 1 p.m. a man armed with a gun along with a woman walked into the theater. They took an undisclosed amount of money and fled the scene. There are no reports of injuries. The suspects are believed to be in their late teens or early 20s. The man is described as a black male and about six

feet tall. He was wearing a hat with a marijuana leaf on the front of it and the words “kush” on the back. He was also wearing a Christmas style sweater with bears on it. The couple were both wearing combat style boots. Anyone with any information on either of these cases, no matter how small or trivial they think the information many be, is asked to call the Orange Police Department at 409-883-1026.


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