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Producer

The Seminole
50
Tuesday, August 19, 2014 Vol. 88 Number 121 Contents Copyright 2014 10 pages & Supplement
www.seminoleproducer.com
USPS 489-380
(See Drag on Page 10)
(See Lunches on Page 10)
birthdays
Those celebrating birthdays
today include Skylar Anderson,
Betty Barnes, Ennis Buxton,
Georgetta Cullinan, Stacy
Deatherage, Holly Dodgen,
Bobby Edgell, Sara Epley,
Travis Goodnight, Rickenda
Hall, Andrea Hoskison, Sandy
Marshall, Vince McNeill,
Elisa Mynhier, Misty Paschall,
Frankie Sanders, Diana Smith,
Direk Thomas, Tanner Tram-
mell, Bret Walker, Eugene
Ward & Mark Washington.
anniversaries
There were no anniversaries
listed for todays date.
slants
Gloria Crawford being
helpful Tommy Mackey
being missed by many on
Saturday nights drag Gavin
Megee finding out about col-
lege classmates
today
National Aviation Day
Justice Public School
Board meeting.
Seminole High School
hosts Seminole Nation meet-
ing with seniors, 2 p.m.
Seminole High School
volleyball at Harding Fine
Arts.
Seminole High School
softball at Tecumseh.
thursday
Seminole High School
booster club BBQ at 6 p.m.
Seminole High School
volleyball at Community
Christian.
Seminole High School
softball vs. Dale, 4 p.m.
friday
Seminole High School
football scrimmage vs. Sul-
phur at home, time TBA.
Seminole County Today
Friends, Family, Main Street Seminole Fun
Photos provided
Above, Keturah Ladd waves a big hello to Main Street visitors last Saturday evening from the car of her friend Fred
Combs while little Ava Rae Poff, daughter of Shawn Poff and Stephanie Daniel smiles at the sillines of the adults having
fun on Main Street during the annual Draggin Main Seminole Style event. As residents near and far, old and young,
past and present gathered for the annual event of family-friendly fun, classic car to modern hot rods filled the streets with
plenty of rubber left on the red bricks of memories that will be passed down to future generations. Below, the main enjoy-
ment of the evening was who could smoke the tires the most with plenty of takers on the challenge.
Bowlegs The students at
Bowlegs Public Schools will
experience a variety of fresh,
healthy meal options for the
2014-15 school year, thanks to
the newly announced partner-
ship between the school district
and Keystone Foodservice.
Keystone Foodservice
focuses on providing freshly
prepared breakfast and lunch
options for the students it
serves.
The company, which will
serve approximately 18,000
students daily during the 2014-
2015 school year, was recently
selected as the cafeteria vendor
for Bowlegs Public Schools.
Keystone Foodservice
brings a unique approach to
serving meals and we are
excited they will be providing
nutritious meals that students
will want, Tommy Eaton,
superintendent of Bowlegs
Public Schools, said.
Keystone prepares fresh
meals based on the tastes of
the students. Their burgers
and chicken are seasoned by
hand and cooked on a grill.
We expect our students are
going to really look forward to
eating the meals provided by
Keystone Foodservice.
Keystone will begin serv-
ing breakfast and lunch to the
students at Bowlegs Public
Schools when classes begin on
Aug. 14
th
.
Lunch includes a full salad
bar, stocked daily with fresh
fruits and vegetables.
Free and reduced prices
are available for students who
qualify.
Our goal is to provide
healthy meals that kids will
actually eat, said Brett Fee-
back, president of child nutri-
tion for Keystone Foodservice.
We do that by listening
to the kids and by continually
introducing new foods. When
it comes to a healthy diet,
kids and adults have this in
common: variety is key.
Keystones menu offerings
include homemade chicken
enchiladas, honey-baked ham
and chargrilled hamburgers
made from lean ground beef.
Main courses are accom-
panied by offerings including
freshly steamed vegetables and
hand-cut sweet potato fries.
Study after study has
One Dead, One Injured in Rollover
-Courtesy Photos by Strother Fire Dept.
Two 20-year old men in a Ford Focus were eastbound on EW 1120 just east of NS 3620 on
Friday night, Aug. 18. According to OHP, they left the roadway and rolled multiple times and
were ejected 90 feet before coming to a rest on its rooftop. Alcohol was a factor.
One Dead, One Critical After Rollover Accident
Lou Armour
City Editor
It was late Friday night
when Juan Antonio Alvizo and
Christian Gutierrez rolled over
their 2002 Ford Focus on EW
1120 Road.
At about 10:20 p.m. Cen-
tral Dispatch received the call
and summoned Oklahoma
Highway Patrol, Seminole
County Sheriffs Office and
the Strother Volunteer Fire
Department to EW 1220 Rd,
three tenths of a mile east of
County Road NS 3620, about
two miles north and five miles
west of Cromwell.
The Focus was eastbound
on EW 1120, lost control and
departed the roadway to the
left, rolling multiple times
coming to rest on its roof.
The maneuver ejected both
the driver and the passenger
approximately 90 feet.
The passenger Gutierrez,
22, was pronounced dead at
the scene.
Alvizo, the driver, was
critically injured with massive
injuries and Mediflighted to
OU Medical Center in Okla-
homa City.
Neither occupant was wear-
ing a seatbelt.
According to OHP Trooper
Nicholas Dees of Seminole
County Detachment of Troop
D, Alvizo was driving impaired
and the cause of the accident
was believed to be driving
under the influence of alcohol.
Strother Fire Chief Nick
Nadeau and nine of his fire-
fighters arrived on the scene to
find bottles and boxes of alco-
holic beverages strewn on the
roadway around the wreck.
Dees noted that the car was
was equipped with seatbelts
not in use, nor did the airbags
deployed.
The roadway was a two-
lane dirt county road and the
weather was judged to be clear
and dry.
Nadeau suspected the two
were driving at an excessive
speed leading to the accident.
A spokesperson for the OU
Medical Center confirmed at
3:45 p.m. Monday that Alvizo
was listed in fair condition.
Dees was assisted in his
investigation by Trooper Daniel
Martin of the Okfuskee County
Detachment of Trooper D.
Bowlegs Schools Opens
With New Meal Options
Welcome Back!
Drag Returns to Seminole Main St.
Shirlene Cofer
Junior Editor
It was an evening of fun,
family, friends, smell of burn-
ing rubber, and the taunts of
Chevy guys to Ford guys to
lite em up!
As people from across
the county, state and even
far off places of the country
returned to Seminole for the
fourth annual Draggin Main
Seminole Style event, talk
has already begun for next
years plans of adding a little
bit more.
The streets of Seminole
began to fill up with cars
already starting the drag
around 3 p.m. in the afternoon
as a car show filled the parking
lot of the First United Bank on
the corner of Broadway and
Milt Phillips.
Questions of why the drag
doesnt occur more often than
the one night a year came from
some with the answer usually
being its more fun this way. It
gives everyone something to
look forward to once a year,
like Christmas.
With plenty of police pres-
ence in the area, the fun kept to
the mild side of family-friendly
fun with only one small group
becoming too rowdy before
it too was brought back in
check.
On the south end of Main
Street just before the U-turn
shouts of lite em up rang out
over the revving of muscle car
engines and once the smoke
filled the air a return shout of
Awesome man, my moms
car can barely do that! came
in the form of a thanks for

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