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Hints
from Heloise Dear Heloise: My shredder once broke in the middle of a job. But, a tip came from a friend, and now I use it all the time. I fill a large household bucket with warm water, about half-full to accommodate the batch of papers. Try to have most of the paper covered. Sometimes I add a spritz of dishwashing detergent. Set it aside to soak well.
PET PAL
Dear Heloise: My pet is 20 months old. She’s smart and cute as can be. Daisy thinks everyone loves her. Our neighbor gives her treats and makes her sit or give out her paw. Daisy is a Maltese/Shih Tzu, and she doesn’t shed. -- Jane and Robert, Florida Readers, to see Daisy and our other Pet Pals, go to Heloise. com and click on “Pet of the Week.” Do you have a furry friend to share with our readers? Send a photo and a brief description to Heloise@Heloise. com. -- Heloise
‘Orchid Lady’ blossoms on silent screen
On Sep. 30, 1918, every seat was full in Dallas’ Crystal Theater for every showing of “The Girl of Today” because Corinne Griffith was there in person to promote her latest silent picture. Just three years earlier in November 1915, The Morning News informed readers: “Texarkana has given to the world who it is claimed will be a real star of the movies in the person of Miss Corinne Griffin (stage name Griffith).” Born in 1895, the daughter of a Methodist minister lived in the town that straddles the Texas-Arkansas border until she was ten. Her mother then took her to a finishing school in New Orleans, where in her teens she dazzled everybody, including the judges of a Mardis Gras beauty contest, with her grace and stunning good looks. There are two versions of how Corinne got her big break. In the first, a Vitagraph director spied her at a high-society function in the Crescent City and offered her a movie contract on the spot. In the second, Texas-born director King Vidor opened the door to her silent- screen debut at age 20.
Speaker opposes drive to end tenure
House Speaker Dade Phelan, R-Beaumont, said Friday he opposes a push by Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick to end tenure for new professors at the state’s public universities and to revoke it for faculty who teach critical race theory, the Austin American-Statesman reported.