The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 211, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 28, 1983 Page: 2 of 12
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Page -The Hrrelurd Brand Thurzdxy. April 7». 1983
N
Paul Harvey News
Sunny side up
J
Twin litter serves at
Judge plead* guilty
Scantily clad nudutt
3
Mus
Weather
serv
Pastor kills intruder.
2
congregation shaken
from page 1
Policy
Sen
soci
Heights
Houston
from page 1
People
letter to
the Editor
Ini
Haney
recognized
for service
Reply
SOI
i
B
IH
el
maintenance and for motor States," he said.
20
J
Lundtlide killt
16 in Ecuador
update
thursday
From
secret
presic
Feder
mire
munit
Distri
ventic
West Texas - Mostly fair with little
day to day temperature changes
Highs near 80 Panhandle to near 90
southeast to upper 90s Big Bend
valleys Lows upper 40s Panhandle to
low 60s southeast and extreme south.
tation. Haney was recognized
recently for 25 years of service
with the highway department as a
motor grader operator. Haney
also received a pin in recognition
of his service. (SDHPT PHOTO)
Now
offen
of bo
We'll cross that water
path when we get to it.” said
Berlanga.
Berlanga added that with
only a little over a month left
in the session. We're not just
running to win the race, we're
running against the clock.”
Hu other attorney. Billy Kavkind,
said the judge agreed to the plea
bargain Monday, hours before he was
scheduled for trial before Buchmeyer.
The charges stemmed from allega-
tions that Fugitt had ordered Danny
Watson to pay him $6,250 in in-
stallments or face the maximum
prison sentence on a driving while in-
toxicated charge.
We have had to survive a
degree of public paranoia to
harness each new science. In
bio-genetics also the obstruc-
tionists will not prevail That
will produce a whole new
harvest of things the names
of which aren’t even in the
dictionary yet.
In a sense more significant,
the United States Supreme
Distric
Federatit
which i
Music St
Music C
other :
presente
Service J
nying in
recent 1
tion in H
The du
tf distri
Texas. v
for one
neighborhood for about 10
years, declined to talk about
the shooting.
John I
and his t
at the
tonight
dance fo
Senior C
supper b
The re
begins a
held at
( enter a
for the
and dan
p.m.
Ui
(
Berlanga said he did not
know if reduction of the water
percentage would affect
Montford’s support for the
measure
If the bill is amended in the
House, it would have to go
back to the Senate for ap-
proval f the changes.
Dear Editor
We the employees of the
Deaf Smith County Sheriff's
Department would like to
thank the citizens of Deaf
Smith County who were con-
cerned enough in their public
servants to write to you on
our behalf
We work for ever) citizen
of this county and it is nice to
know that they feel we are do-
ing a good job and are worth
more than we are being paid.
We would like to express
special thanks to those who
not only signed the letter but
also wrote the letter and
secured the signatures.
Our Sincere Thanks.
The Employees of the Deaf
All rights reserved for rep
speclal dispatehes
p.m. Sunday, after the City Council
refused to let the group stand vigil at
the Alamo, a Texas shrine where
radical demonstrators raised red
flags in May Day incidents in 1980 and
1981.
Kirk said his group, dad in the
skimpiest clothing allowed, will
march along a downtown route ending
at the John H. Wood Federal Cour-
thouse before returning along the
same route
The walk will begin at 10 a.m. and is
expected to last until noon. Kirk said
The parade permit was approved by
Deputy Police Chief Edward
Foresman, police said
Authorities do not plan to provide
special protection for the march, Kirk
said.
have the responsibility, as
well, to guard ourselves
against the temptations to
self-righteousness.'’
"We cannot, after all, insist
that other governments
fashion themselves ... as car-
bon copies of the United
Police also issued a permit to a
Christian music group that plans a
street concert aimed at diverting peo-
ple from the Klan march.
human life span by one-third
in one generation - have add-
ed to your life another 16
weeks in just the past year!
Uppers and downers are a
fading fad; drug misuse is
measurably less.
On the "home front," mar-
riage is back in style. The
number of divorces last year
declined for the first year in
20
And the number of mar-
riages increases for the
seventh year in a row.
Agribusiness: It is now
possible to breed milk cows
as big as elephants, produc-
ing more milk, more calves.
Genetic engineering can
improve humans also, though
scientists fear you are not
quite ready to hear about
that
Uni
A nen
insur
is as
need
tion c
cash
Tailor
times
Lot u
Univ
right
Honored For Service
Alfred L. Haney (left) of
Hereford, accepts a certificate
from James N. Moss of Amarillo,
Amarillo District Maintenance
Engineer for the State Depart-
ment of Highways and Transpor-
Did you see the recent car-
toon where a youngster was
about to show his daddy his
report card and he was say-
ing. "Now daddy, before you
look at this remember they
just print the bad news."
Page one, preoccupied with
things gone wrong, necessari-
ly focuses our attention on the
debit side of the ledger
Let's audit the credits and
see how 1983 looks sunny side
up.
Olympic Donation
Charlotte Tyler, right, a representative of
Toujours Ami Study Club, presents Gene
Brock, Satellite Center treasurer, with a
check for $100. The funds will be used to defray
costs of sending Satellite clients to the Texas
Special Olympics in Austin May 25-27.
In the
had c
tradit
prote
tiona
high
insur
*
6
GUAYAQUIL. Ecuador 1AP1 - A
landslide smashed into the Pan
.American Highway near the central
Ecuador mountain town of Chunchi,
killing at least 16 people and leaving
scores missing, the newspaper El
Telegrafo reported today
The confirmed dead were pulled
from the rubble by searchers after
Wednesday's slide, the newspaper
said. The searchers expected to find
many more victims buried under the
rocks and mud, it said
it added that President Osvaldo
Hurtado was planning to fly to the
scene of the disaster, about 250 miles
south of the Ecuadorean capital of
Quito.
Patti Roberts says in-laws’
ministry decayed marriage
CLEAR
#
3
2
The Kev Charles D Jessup
III fatally shot the intruder
early Wednesday after being
awakened by noises from an
intercom he set up between
the First Church of Divine
Science and his mobile home,
police said
The dead man was iden-
tified as Joe Louis Marquez,
who appeared to be about 35
or 40. police said
Marquez, who was unarm-
ed. made a sudden move”
and Jessup fired a single shot
from a 9mm pistol, striking
the suspect in the chest, said
Detective D.G. Lott
The pastor yelled for the
man to stop, but he made a
sudden move so the pastor
shot the man one time,” Lott
said.
Jessup, who has pastored
at the small church in the
turrogate mother
NIMES. France i AP) - A French
woman has given birth io a child con-
ceived with artificially implanted
sperm from the husband of her infer-
tile twin sister.
"You have to love each other as we
do to consider it," said Christine Cozel
after giving birth to a boy on Wednes-
day "I wouldn't have done it for my
other sisters."
Doctors in this southern French
town 60 miles northwest of Marseilles
say that because Magali Christol and
Christine Cozel are identical twins,
the baby Stephane Frederic Alexan-
dre is genetically the same as a child
that Magali might have borne were
she fertile.
Stephane weighed 7.26 pounds at
birth and was described by doctors as
very healthy.
After agreeing to carry a child for
her sister. Christine - the mother of
two - was artificially inseminated
with sperm from Magali's husband.
Denis.
Denis made a formal statement last
October that he would recognize the
paternity of any child born to
Christine. Denis and Magali plan to
adopt Stephane.
would jeopardize the viabili-
ty of the i horse race) in-
dustry" in Texas
Even at 16 'percent' it
would be the most heavily
taxed" horse-race industry in
the country, he said
The water funding provi-
sion approved by the Senate
was sponsored by Sen John
Montford, D-Lubbock A
switch by Montford was the
key to Senate passage when
he voted to bring the bill up
for debate, giving Senate
sponsor O.H Ike" Harris.
R-Dallas, the necessary two-
thirds, or 21 votes.
the source of revolution in
Central America was not
Cuba or the Soviet Union, as
the president has argued, but
poverty and injustice
The painful truth is that
many of our highest officials
seem to know as little about
< entral America in 1983 as we
knew about Indochina in
1963," Dodd said. We cannot
afford to found so important a
policy on ignorance."
Sen Edward M Kennedy.
Andy Messing, executive
director of the Conservative
Caucus, said that now. if Con-
gress withholds the aid
Reagan has requested, "it's
Congress' fault if El Salvador
goes communist."
Reagan's proposal to boost
military aid to El Salvador by
$110 million has run into trou-
ble in both the House and
Senate. So far, only $30
million of the aid to the em-
battled Salvadoran army has
been approved.
In his speech, Reagan said
the United States has a vital
interest, a moral duty and a
solemn responsibility" to
block communist expansion
in the region, but again
declared that he has no plans
to send in U.S combat troops
"If we cannot defend
ourselves there, we cannot
expect to prevail elsewhere."
he said. "Our credibility
would collapse, our alliances
would crumble, and the safe-
ty of our homeland would be
in jeopardy."
Fundamentally I agree with
the basic precepts set forth in
the speech."
HOUSTON API - Prayer
services were called off at a
small church after the pastor,
beaten by a burglar two years
ago, shot and killed an in-
truder
"We are all scared," a
church member, who did not
want to be identified, said
from behind locked doors
Wright added that "there
have been occasions in which
we ourselves have not been
paragons of political purity.”
As examples, he cited
Abraham Lincoln’s suspen-
- .
Comm
f.)
g ‘
A /
Noting congressional
demands that the Salvadoran
government improve its
record on human rights,
Unemployment, 10.4 per-
cent and improving.
Employment, 90.1 percent
near record high
Inflation is in reverse; the
cost of living is actually going
down; everybody gets a
raise!
Most everywhere that
pollution is measured, both
air and water, it is
measurably less.
Medication, sanitation and
nutrition have increased the
Court is ever-so-gradually
taking a right turn." That
long era of deference to the
rights of wrongdoers is about
to phase out.
Amenca's dependency on
foreign oil is less - and well
into production are a whole
spectrum of alternative
energies - sun. wind, tides,
geothermal steam, alcohol
from waste Around the world
45 other nations are engaged
in some kind of war For now.
at least, not ours.
We can hope that war is go-
ing out of style.
On campuses the new
preoccupation is with voca-
tional education.
History will not find many,
if any. of our 200 years when
we have enjoyed less social
ferment, less labor strife, less
disease and more take-home
prosperity.
Don't let anyone convince
you that you are more depen-
dent than you are or that our
nation is less virile than it is
By all means. don't let the
headline writers rain on your
parade As Mark Twain is
said to have said of Richard
Wagner's music, "It's not
nearly so bad as it sounds'"
"I hope the effort that the wife; a daughter. Katie
president made tonight to Valdez of Post; two brothers
reach out for a bipartisan Esidro of Tipton, Okla , and
consensus can continue.” Mariano of San Antonio; two
said Barnes, who has been an sisters. Cecilia Posoes of San
outspoken critic of the ad- Antonio and Trine Martinez
ministration's policy in Cen- of Poteet; and five grand-
tral America children
grader operators.
Haney and his wife, Vera,
were married on May 18,1962
in Lubbock. The Haneys have
a son, Christopher, of
Hereford
Sen. Charles H. Percy, R-Ill.,
chairman of the Senate
Foreign Relations Commit-
tee.
Sen. Barry Goldwater.
R-Ariz., chairman of the
Senate Intelligence Commit-
tee. said he thought the presi-
dent "definitely changed
some minds because the
American people have been
believing the lies they read in
the newspaper and now they
have the truth."
rm; NNAND •• estabushed m •
weekly Hl vebrury. iwi comverted te
a wemmeekly * IM la Iive times a
week on July 4, 1976.
O.G Nieman Publisher
Beb Nigh Managing Editer
Mauri Mentgomery Advertising Mgr
Charlene Brownlow Cireulation Mgr
their lives together "as pro- said. After several years I
fessional newlyweds." join- stopped asking"
mg her father-in-law’s new She said she stopped see-
television show as singers mg the Oral Roberts Associa-
two months after their mar- tion as a primarily spiritual
riage. endeavor and began seeing it
We were forced to present as a corporate one
a very unreal image to the She said her husband was
world." she said. "Thousands being sacrificed for Oral's
of dollars and a carefully dream and that he ' Richard i
designed public image rested was intoxicated by the power
on our being happily and wealth that were
married.” showered on us."
Richard Roberts since has Oral Roberts was capable
remarried. Patti Roberts of manipulating the couple,
lives in Tennessee with two Mrs Roberts said She cited
children from the marriage as an example a conversation
She says in the book's involving the three as the two
preface that she realized newlyweds prepared to catch
some may see this book as a plane for their honeymoon
an attack on the Oral Roberts Addressing Richard, he
ministry." announced that he had had a
"It has never been my in- dream about him (Richard i
tention to attack anyone, and me the night before." she
(but) because this is my said. "If either of us ever
story, about how my mar- were to leave Oral's ministry
riage went wrong, it does con- or turn our backs on God.
tain much material about our we'd be killed in a plane
lives." crash.
She said she wrote the book "That was his total
to help others "grappling message except to say he lov-
TULSA. Okla. (AP) -
Evangelist Oral Roberts'
former daughter-in-law
describes her failed marriage
to Richard Roberts as "a cor-
porate marriage Christian
style."
In a book scheduled for
release in July, Patti Roberts
says the presence of Oral
Roberts and his ministry was
a major reason for the failure
of her 10-year marriage that
ended in 1979
Neither Oral nor Richard
Roberts could be reached for
comment Roberts is the
founder of Oral Roberts
University in Tulsa.
In the book, "Ashes to
Gold." Mrs. Roberts writes of
the tragedy of Christian
divorce and describes her life
inside the Roberts family.
Galley proofs were releas-
ed by the publisher to The
Tulsa Tribune.
"It may very well be God’s
highest will for Richard to
work with Oral and to become
his successor," she said. _ _ _
But she said, "I’ll always with the same dragons” in ed us both and that we should
wonder what would have hap- unhappy marraiges have a wonderful honey-
pened in our marriage if Mrs Roberts said she and moon," Mrs Roberts said
Richard had been able to her husband experienced a
make the parent-break" "drastically” changing ~ .
Quoting from a diary entry lifestyle as they worked on / ln itf tQ TID Q
made during her divorce pro- the television program U U ! LUU t I GO
reedings. Mrs Roberts said "We went from living in a Anner CERVANTEZ
the marriage has been dead duplex and driving one old MANUE CEEVANEn.
so long all we had was a polite American car to owning an cPVstez 489 Smith County Sheriff’s
relationship designed not to expensive home and driving Eerantrasdkzp.m.tday Dean Butcher. Chief Depu-
upset the flow of dollars into foreign luxury cars.” be celebratedat Pm:"t
theprized ministry." "At first I was a little atHelyeporossu.athali Deaf Smith County
Mrs Roberts, who met her uneasy about the huge Church of Post wttn tne Ke sheriff Dent
husband while a student at amounts of money that were George. Roney,, pastor, o _______________Sheriff Dogt-
ORU, said the couple began made available to us, she ficiating Euritlr" In Post ™K MEREFORD BRAND «Usps
Terrace Cemetery in rosi dailv "ee Mo
__ Avsm . 1 under direction of Hudman y, Salrdays, m,
front ptlge 1 Funeral Home Day. Chrtstmas Day and New Year •
Mr. Cervantez died at 7 Day. by the Merelord Brand, tne. >u
sion of habeas corpus during p.m. Tuesday in Lubbock *7
the Civil War and the World General Hospital after a Rertra r PSTMsTEN M aa
War II internment of lengthy illness. He was the drew ehanges u the Merelora Nrana
Japanese-Americans. father of Manuel Cervantez " o an 62, Merelord, n. mes.
Rep Michael D Barnes, Jr of Hereford SuESCEATES:carterin
D-Md., chairman of the The Atascosa County ,7'
House Foreign Affairs native had been a Post real- £ counitei, w pe oher
Western Hemisphere sub- dent for 24 years, working as by mail, m per year
committee, said: "I was very a farm laborer He married manh u • mm w T
pleased by the general thrust Ema Casias in 1942 in Ralls *7777 " **7^*777^
and tone of President He was a Catholic „„ .n
Reagan's address" Other survivors include his .n ale ineai mu pubie Mrein
Wright contended that "we
D-Mass., said he was "deeply
concerned that the
presigent’s overall policy is a
prescription for a wider
war "
However. Republicans said
they felt the president's
speech had helped him build
support in Congress and
around the nation
"There was a noticeable
lack of support for those who
would just turn their back
and cut and get out," said
AMARILLO - Alfred L.
Haney of Hereford, a
maintenance technician with
the Texas State Department
of Highways and Public
Transportion. recently was
recognized for having com-
pleted 25 years service with
the stale agency.
Haney started to work for
the department in April 1953
in Bovina, where he worked
until August 1959 He return-
ed to work for the DHT in
March 1964 in Hereford.
From August 1959 to March
1964 he worked as a carpenter
in Lubbock.
With the department,
Haney has received
numerous safe driving
awards. He has attended
department schools on heavy
equipment preventive
to protett KKK march
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) - A
nudist group will parade downtown
Sunday wearing the least we can get
away with" to counter the robes and
regalia of a Ku Klux Klan march plan-
ned for the same day, a group
spokesman says.
We would be nude if it were legal."
Omar Kirk said Wednesday after
police approved his group's parade
permit Basically, it is a protest
against the Ku Klux Klan's
uniforms."
Kirk said the Klan's robes and other
regalia are obscene and symbolize
racism, murder and lynchings
The Klan only wants to "create a
scene" with its May Day parade, so
the nudist group wants to call atten-
tion to a better moral issue. Kirk
said.
If not for nudity, none of us would
be here," he said
The Klan scheduled a three-block
march to City Hall, beginning at 2
water projects Another 5
percent would go to welfare
payments to dependent
children.
Kep Hugo Berlanga.
D-Corpus Christi, one of the
sponsors of the House bill,
said he would ask the com-
inUtv to reduce the wter
project share to 1 percent.
Under the House bill, 5 per-
cent of the betting proceeds
goto the purses 5 percent to
the state, and 5 percent to the
track. The remainder would
pay winning bets
Berlanga said the addi-
tional 3 percent for water
to 3 mitdemeanort
DALLAS (AP) - Hunt County
Court-at-Law Judge Phil Fugitt plead-
ed guilty today to three misdemeanor
counts of violating a defendant’s civil
rights.
In exchange for the guilty pleas,
prosecutors agreed to drop a felony
extortion charge against the judge.
U.S. District Judge Jerry
Buchmeyer set Fugitt's sentencing
for June 2. He faces a maximum
sentence of three years in prison and a
$3,000 fine
Between now and June the second.
Fugitt will, of course, resign the
bench,” defense attorney George
Milner said today Fugitt was
suspended without pay late last year
by the Texas Commission on Judicial
Conduct.
Fugitt originally was charged with
extortion and one count of violating a
defendant’s civil rights. The other two
misdemeanor civil rights violation
counts were added today in an infor-
mation filed with the court.
Fugitt, a judge for 12 years in the
Northeast Texas city of Greenville,
would have faced up to 20 years in
prison if he had been convicted of ex-
tortion. ________
A 1
2
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Nigh, Bob. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 211, Ed. 1 Thursday, April 28, 1983, newspaper, April 28, 1983; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430241/m1/2/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.