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Throwing in the towel
Texins Retiree Club president Lucy
Salas has been making and giving away kitchen towels for the past
15
years
By
Paula Felps
If it weren’t for a charity
craft sale, Lucy Salas might never have discovered the hobby for
which she’s become known. Proving that necessity is indeed the
mother of invention, Lucy began making hanging kitchen towels in
1986, when Does, the Elks women's auxiliary, organized a craft sale.
"They decided that
everything should be hand-made, but I didn’t know what I was
going to do," explains Lucy, who is President of the Texins
Retiree Club and also serves on the Activities Committee for the
TI Alumni Association. "I didn’t have a hobby. So I went
home and was wondering what I could do when I looked at one of the
towels I had hanging in the kitchen. I thought, ‘I can make one
of those,’ so I did."
Lucy doesn’t actually make
towels, she transforms them with her hand-crocheted hangers. Each
towel is cut in half and then rejoined by her crocheted bridge,
which makes it possible for users to hang her towels on the
refrigerator door, a kitchen cabinet or anything else with a
handle. The towels were a hit at the craft show, and Lucy has been
making them ever since. They even became something of a signature
item for her once she began handing them out.
"I had been going out to the
talk shows at Tony Roma’s after the [Cowboys football] games
since 1979," says Lucy, a devoted Cowboys fan. "I met a
lot of the players, and when I started making towels, I started
taking them out to the shows and giving them to the players. I put
a little poem inside each one, and they seemed to like it."
She is preferential to Cowboys,
but other celebrities qualify for the towel treatment as well;
radio and TV personalities whom she encounters while she’s out
and about also walk away with the kitchen addition.
Word of her towels has spread
through the years, and now getting a Lucy Salas kitchen towel is
something of a rite of passage for Cowboys football players. At
training camp in Wichita Falls last year, players and personnel
greeted her so enthusiastically that it caught the attention of
the local newspaper, which wrote an article about Lucy and her
towels. In January, she was featured on KDFW-TV Fox 4 News "Hometown
Heroes" segment with Clarice Tinsley.
"I was at my church helping
with elections in November, and Bud Gillette from Channel 4 was
there, so I gave him a towel," she explains. "He asked
me about it and I told him that I’d been doing that for several
years, and then two days later, Clarice Tinsley calls me and said
she wanted to do a story for Hometown Heroes."
The piece aired on Jan. 16,
giving Lucy some well-deserved recognition. She gives the towels
away, which can become a pricey practice, considering she’ll do
as many as 90 towels a month. To pay for the towels, she often
goes to KVIL-FM radio contests that feature the Cash Cube:
Contestants draw a number and, when their number is called, they
have a certain amount of time to grab all the money they can. With
whatever cash she grabs, she buys kitchen towels, buttons and
yarn.
"It’s just something I
like to do," says Lucy, who retired from TI in 1991. "I
have a whole big scrapbook of pictures of me with Cowboys players
and their towels. It’s something that’s a lot of fun."
That’s evident from her
scrapbook, which includes photos of Lucy with the great Tom Landry
and a gallery of Who’s Who in Dallas Cowboys players. Of those,
she admits her favorite was Troy Aikman, but she doesn’t play
favorites when it comes to distributing her gifts.
"I’ve given out so many
over the years, but it always makes me feel good," she says.
"The players remember me. When I come back, they always say
hello."
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