The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 81, No. 46, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 3, 1980 Page: 2 of 10
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Page 2-The Hertford Brand-Wednesday. September 3, 1980
Texas Briefs
•X
Continue*
In Texat Foregta
MrCon n :Son
Two Charged
Should Pay if Guilty
With Murder
Weather
Ca
Ed
from Page 1
Crops
Clements Disfavors Planks
On ERA at GOP Convention
Theft Reported
X
Obituaries
Clements I.ashes
Carter on Energy
■from Page
Reag^-i
was
c
■hr
from Page I
hraeb
>
t
>
update
Wednesday
Kansas; a sister, Rosa Gar-
cia of Hereford; 25 grand-
Campaigning on Tuesday,
Carter accused Reagan of
slurring the whole South, of
divisively alleging that “the
Ku Klux Klan is represen-
By The Associated Press
Widely scattered showers and
thunderstorms were forecast for most
of Texas today.
Highs were to be mostly in the 90s,
ranging from the upper 80s along the
coast to near 102 in the Big Bend area
of Southwest Texas and North Central
Texas.
has not plowed back the need-
ed investments to modernize
industry and never has fully
appreciated the strength of
its agi (cultural production.
"We are transforming the
world everj day," Connally
said. "We haven’t learned
how to cope with it. And as a
result we have brought great
competitors to the forefront."
In a news conference after-
ward, Clements and Connally
stressed the importance of
winning the independent vote
in Texas.
money order was missing. "*
Big Daddy’s Restaurant
reported two men left the
In Cairo, Foreign Minister
Kamal Hassan Aly predicted
failure for Linowltz’s mission
unless Israel repealed the
Jerusalem law. He told the
semi-official newspaper Al
Ahram Israel must assure
might make me not want to move on.
Whether it was right or wrong, I don’t
know. I need to gather all the facts."
McConn said he would decide what
action to take after reading the police
report and hearing from the people in-
volved.
“If I think the boy did it, fine — we’ll
pay the fine,” he said.
LUBBOCK, Texas (AP) - A man
and a woman charged with murdering
18-year-old Eula Jean Lewis remain-
ed in county jail here today under
$100,000 bond, police said.
Charles Everett Reynolds, 38, and
Louise Ross, 23, both of Lubbock,
were arraigned before Justice of the
Peace L.J. Blalack Tuesday in con-
nection with the death of the Lubbock
woman.
A Department of Public Safety
trooper found her body wrapped in a
blanket in the back of the pair’s car
after they were spotted trying to avoid
a routine drivers license check just
east of Lubbock, said DPS Capt. Billy
Melton.
Melton said the victim was wearing
only red jogging shorts and had ap-
parently been dead for about six
hours.
Blalack said an autopsy has been
performed, but the final results will
not be known “for two or three days.”
He said there were no marks on the
victim’s body other than a scratch on
the neck which may have resulted
when her body was apparently moved
from the trunk to the back seat.
on the West Bank of the Jor-
dan River and the Gaza Strip,
which Israel captured in the
1967 war along with East
Jerusalem. But Israel rejects
the Arab contention that East
Jerusalem is part of the West
LUIS GRIEGO
Funeral services for Luis
Griego, 67, of 205 Ross are
week on July 4. 1976.
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AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -
The Texas Human Resources
Board has decided it needs a
10-member search commit-
tee to help it look for a new
commissioner of the state
welfare agency.
Chairman Hilmar Moore
said the board would name a
chairman.
He said the search commit-
tee will screen applications
through Sept. 30 for the job.
Final selection will rest
with the board.
Marlin Johnston is acting
conunissioner following the
retirement of Jerry Chap-
man.
4
I IHIUI
He explained that even limited ir-
rigation will cause a response from
sugar beets, but heavier irrigations
usually yield higher tonnages of the
root crop.
Dr. Patrick again offered com-
ments on pest problems at the
Schlabs farm, touching on the topic of
armyworms, a sore subject for many
beet producers in the area this year.
“Armyworms seem to hit in dry
years and they are tough to kill. They
should be sprayed when they are from
Mi to % inches in size, because after
that they are hard to control. About
the best protection is to examine your
fields for them frequently, at least
once a week, and maybe twice,”
stated Patrick.
He explained that Mother Nature
has taken a hand in controlling the
pest, which was reaching seriously
damaging numbers in the sugarbeet
crop here.
"A virus is hitting them now and
we’re getting 100 percent control of
the armyworms in some areas thanks
to the virus,” commented Patrick.
Schlabs also commented on irriga-
tion trials in corn at his farm, explain-
ing that 10 day irrigation intervals in
evolution — which is, after
all, irrelevant to a presiden-
tial campaign.
They had seen him eclipse
his own defense policy speech
by writing into it a defense of
the nobility of America’s
cause in South Vietnam, a
sharply debated observation
about a war long ended.
But that was nothing to
compare with the way they
"We know there are strong
feelings held on both sides of
some of the issues. He
(Clements! would hope this
would not be in the platform,
particularly if it is counter to
the national platform. Gover-
AUSTIN, Texas (AP)
The Texas Railroad Commis-
sion asked the Federal
Railroad Administration for
titular head of the state par-
ty.
Earlier Sanchez won ap-
proval of a resolution to open
the Tuesday meeting,
originally planned as an ex-
ecutive session, and all other
business of the committee to
the news media when one
reporter showed up.
his corn resulted in seven waterings
for the crop this year while three
week intervals meant three irriga-
tions.
John Fuston of the Deaf Smith
County ASCS office projected a yield
of 9,400 pounds per acre for the corn
irrigated at 10-day intervals while the
com watered at three week intervals
was projected at 6.200 pounds per
acre.
“It’s been a tough year and a lot of
our corn really won't make that
much," stated Fuston.
At the Phillip Carnahan farm south
of Hereford tour members viewed
sunflower varieties produced under
limited irrigation, witnessing good
growth of the crop based on only one
application of water.
Producers were reminded that
sunflowers represent a low input
cropping option.
At the Clark Andrews farm near the
Frio Draw south of Hereford, tour
members viewed 22 varieties of cot-
ton which received a pre-plant irriga-
tion plus one between-the-rows ap-
plication of water this summer.
Paul Gross, district Extension
agent offered commentary on the
crop which has thrived under the hot
weather and irrigation of this region
of the High Plains this summer.
“Breeders are doing a good job of
developing cotton for this area,"
stated Gross, adding, "producers
need more determinant varieties here
in order to get their crop made before
early frost.”
According to Gross, determinant
varieties load up early and then
finish.
“Cotton only keeps about 25 or 30
percent of the fruit it sets. That’s
natural, and why you can give some
of the crop to worms and still get by if
you don't let them take too much. An
average of a boll per inch in this type
of cotton will give you a bale to the
acre,” stated Gross.
According to Gross, very early
maturing cotton varieties continue to
be improved for the High Plains pro-
duction area and offer increased
potential for use of the crop here.
Connally said he sees
Democrats taking a “transi-
tative of the South or
Alabama or Tuscumbia."
SAN ANTONIO, Texas
(AP) — A man who as recent-
ly discharged from the Coast
Guard was jailed in lieu of
$50,000 bond Tuesday on a
charge he shot his father to
death.
GW
nor Reagan is corning to the
state Sept 16 and it would be
very embarrassing to the
governor to have to explain
we in Texas did away with or
voiced opposition to things
that are in the national plat-
form. That would be very dif-
ficult and very embarrass-
ing."
.Richard Sanchez, a San An-
tonio member of the
20-mtmlrer committee, pinn-
ed Kaster down to exactly
which issues Clements felt
would be divisive by objec-
ting that he did not want the
committee to become a "rub-
ber stamp" f<,r a Clements
platform.
That put the non-issue back
in Reagan's court, and he
wound up saying he had been
misinterpreted. He also call-
ed on Carter "to apologize to
the people of Alabama for us-
ing this issue in a way which
may be detrimental to
them.”
Born April 29, 1913 in also reported to police.
Garita, New Mexico, Mr.
was a
Kaster told the nine
members of the committee
present Tuesday that
Clements wanted approval of
resolutions supporting in-
itiative and referendum, elec-
tronic surveillance, budget
execution power for the
governor and a method
whereby governors can
remove appointees on a two
thirds vote of the state
senate.
In the informal session
Tuesday, the temporary com-
mittee decided on Barnhart's
rountlri. t.14 per year: other areal
mall. 140 per year.
THE BRAND Is a member o(
Assoelated Press, which Is exclusively
entitled to us for republication of, all
news and dispatches In this newspaper
and also local news published herein
All rights reserved for republication of
special dispatches.
THE BRAND was established as a
weekly In February. 1001. converted to
a seml-werklv In 1940. to live Uwids a
PubU^er
Managing Er$tor
Advertising Mgr.
(IreulatlonMr
The governor sent Jim
Kaster, Clements’ legislative
liaison, to the opening
meeting of the party’s Tem-
porary Platform and Resolu-
tions Committee Tuesday to
make it clear Clements does
not want the convention Fri-
day and Saturday to consider
any planks on the Equal
Rights Amendment or the so-
called pro-life issue.
The committee today
began hearing testimony with
a noon Thursday deadline for
formulating the platform.
"He (Clements) is concern-
ed that we don’t get divisive
things in the state platform.
He (Clements) feels that we
have the national platform
and that that addressed the
meaningful issues," Kaster
said as the committee began
three days of meetings to put
a $2.3 million grant to
rehabilitate a 14-mile seg-
ment of the Missouri-Kansas-
Texas rail system between
Dallas and Carrollton.
‘Failure to rehabilitate this
line will ultimately result in
abandonment,” said Michael
Calhoun, head of the commis-
sion's rail planning section.
The M-K-T would provide
25 percent or $716,784 of the
total cost and will agree to
operate the line for at least 10
years if the project is approv-
ed.
The witness said Yanez
refused to respond to the in-
sults, but that the truck later
returned and two youths got
out -- one carrying a knife
and the other a piece of chain.
Yanez was stabbed once and
fell to the pavement and his
attacker repeatedly stabbed
him as he lay on the ground,
the witness said.
Police later arrested a
16-year old boy traveling in a
pickup truck that fit the
description given by the
witness.
HOUSTON (AP) - Houston Mayor
Jim McConn says his son Terry, ar-
rested last month at the scene of an
accident, should be "charged and pay
the fine" if he is guilty of loitering.
Terry McConn, 22, was arrested
Aug. 3 for allegedly failing to move
from the scene of an automobile acci-
dent. The young man said he and
about 100 other people were watching
a life Flight helicopter remove a vic-
tim when a police officer asked him to
leave.
After being taken to the police sta-
tion, young McConn was released and
driven home in a police car at the re-
quest of Police Chief B.K. Johnson.
The police chief said he made the
request as a “professional courtesy.”
However, the incident was not
reported until Aug. 24, after the
mayor had left on a 12-day trip to
Israel.
McConn acknowleged Tuesday
“there is professional courtesy in the
field of medicine, in the legal profes-
sion, in the media. It doesn’t over-
whelmingly shock me to find it in the
Police Department.”
He added, “I don’t find this a par-
ticularly criminal offense. If I had
been watching unfamiliar drama of a
Life Flight operation, my curiosity
Gross rated prospects for the coun-
ty’s cotton crop in 1980 as "good" due
largely to the torrid summer and
timely irrigations.
COLLEGE STATION,
Texas (AP) - Texas Gov.
Bill Clements lashed out at
President Carter’s energy
1 policies Tuesday as he and
former Gov. John Connally
launched a 27-community,
two-week trip to campaign
for Republican presidential
contender Ronald Reagan.
Clements maintained the
administration's lack of an
energy policy discriminates
against Texans. He said the
windfall profits tax will take
an amount of money out of
Texas that is higher than the
state's annual budget.
He said Americans are
“fed up” with inflation, an in-
ept foreign policy and
deteriorating national securi-
ty-
“This is not right for Texas
and we can't stand any more
, Activitie
week (Sep:
Hereford
Renter in<
ing:
THURSI
t 11:30 a.m.
ing from 3
FRIDAY
a m., CPR
a.m., noo
A-m., exei
pun., bow
governing
and duplic
MONDA
9:15 a.m.,
a.m., brid
hand bell
nutrition e
1 p.m., an
at 7 p.m.
■ TUESD.
11:30 a.m
p,m., pion
hearing a
p.m. an<
check froi
WEDNE
at 9:15 a. r
10:15 a.n
10:30 a.m.
According to Underwood, most
sprinkler irrigation systems
operating in the High Plains have an
efficiency rating of about 50 percent.
“A 60 percent efficiency rating for a
sprinkler system is good and if you
can get a 70 percent efficiency rating
in the daytime you’ve got an awfully
good pivot,” stated Underwood.
At the John A. Smith farm, tour
participants viewed grain sorghum
varieties that were grown under a
system aimed at economizing on ir-
rigation while maximizing yields.
Smith reported that the sorghum
field received no pre-plant irrigation,
due largely, to a modified minimum
tillage system that allowed him to
carry over a good quantity of winter
moisture into spring planting.
Only three additional irrigations
were applied, at boot, bloom and
grain fill, with the sorghum varieties
at the demonstration site receiving an
estimated yield rating of about 6,500
pounds per acre.
Dr. Carl Patrick, Extension en-
tomologist, touched on a problem that
faces a resurgence of grain sorghum
production here in the form of a revis-
ed model of a familiar old nemesis-
the greenbug.
“A new strain of greenbugs.
Biotype E, negates the greenug
tolerant sorghum varieties that have
been developed,” stated Dr. Patrick.
According to Patrick, tolerant
sorghum varieties were developed to
counter Biotype C greenbugs, but
“won’t hold up under E.”
The entomologist quickly added
that all is not lost in the sorghum pro-
ducer’s fight against greenbugs,
however.
“We don’t know why the Biotype E
developed, just yet, but they appear
to be easier to control with the con-
ventional chemicals that have been
used in fighting greenbugs. Tradi-
tionally, pesticides haven’t perform-
ed all that well against greenbugs in
sorghum but Biotype E greenbugs ap-
pear easier to kill," stated Patrick.
The entomologist also explained
that research is already underway on
sorghum varieties that will be
tolerant of Biotype E greenbugs.
“Right now, the economic
threshhold for Type E greenbugs re-
mains the same as for other types.
Producers are advised not to depend
Egypt that the future of East
Jerusalem can be negotiated
within the framework of the
Camp David accords.
The goal of the negotiations
Is a plan for self-rule for the
1.2 million Palestinians living
as much sense as a 300 per-
cent property tax increase so
we could all write it off our
taxes. While it would cost the
federal government some.’
money, it would hurt Texans
even more, ” he said.
Clements said last week
state officials were looking
into figures that indicate a 15
percent severance oil tax'
would be bom about 60 per-
cent by money that would go
to the federal government
under the windballs profits
tax, while 40 percent would
hit producers.
Sharp said it would be i
mistake to “further penalize
royalty owners and pro-
ducers in Tsxas.”
____ :K
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) —
Assistant Attorney General
Douglas M. Becker is the neW
chief of the appellate sectioii
of the enforcement divisions;
Attorney General Mark
White said Tuesday.
Becker will coordinate all
cases on appeal.
He formerly was a briefing
attorney on the Texas Court
of Criminal Appeals.
!:• I
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) —
The Texas Railroad Commit
sion agreed Tuesday to ask
for temporary federally*-
directed temporary rail seT«
vice in parts of NorthT exas to
stockpiles of wheat and inilo.
The directed service would
begin over the now defunct I
Rock Island line north of
Amarillo no later than Oct.*I I
and continue for 90 days.
The commissioners were ■
told that numerous Panhailr
die grain elevators along th<j
defunct system have been
without rail service since last i
March. ...
> /
SAN ANTONIO, Texas
(AP) - The Texas
Republican platform should
not contain any planks that
would be divisive or embar-
rass presidential candidate
Ronald Reagan, Gov. Bill
Clements has advised.
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) -
Rep. John Sharp, D-Victoria,
said Gov. Bill Clements’ sug- .
gestion that Texas oil evade a bottleneck caused
severance tax might be in- ““ "" m "
creased from 4.6 to 15 percent
would hurt Texans more than
it would hurt Washington.
■ The proposal makes about
LUFKIN, Texas (AP) - East
Texas could join north central Texas
in an extreme fire alert if no rain falls
by the end of the week, a Texas Forest
Service spokesman says.
.“The fire danger is high — at the
very least — and may go to extreme
Thursday or Friday,” said Lou Sloat.
As long as the weather forecast re-
mains "hot and dry, and no change,"
a ban on outdoor burning will remain
in effect, he added.
He said 23 fires scorched 154 acres
in 52 counties over the Labor Day
weekend — an “extremely low"
number. Sloat attributed the decrease
to the 75 anticipated campers who did
not appear during the three-day holi-
day.
Ughtning started seven fires Mon-
day in Trinity County, he said, and 25
percent to 30 percent of the weekend
fires were caused by lightning. Sloat
said lightning normally starts from 15
percent to 20 percent of the fires.
The worst fire of the weekend was in
Wichita County, where a blaze believ-
ed started by arsonists blackened
8,000 acres before it was contained.
SAN ANTONIO, Texas several youths passed and the
(AP) — Homicide detectives boys began yelling insults.
Tuesday were questioning a
couple arrested at a motel
where the co-owner was
found beaten to death.
Mrs. Young Choi, 40, was
found lying in a pool of blood
inside the office of the Casa
Linda Motel by police officers
investigating a burglary
report early Tuesday. The
man and woman were ar-
rested at the motel while
allegedly trying to wash
blood stains from their
clothing, according to police
Sgt. George Wilson.
Police said the victim ap-
peared to have been beaten
behind the counter with a
hammer and wrench and her
body was then draggged into
the inner office.
Investigators said the male
suspect taken into custody
had been an employee of the
motel until he moved to Cor-
jumped on Reagan’s com-
ment about Carter in Klan
country.
Lunsford. 52, was
________ fatally wounded with a large
pus Christi about three weeks caliber pistol about 3:30 p.m.
ago.
Betty Powell, 426 Ave. C
reported a theft of a mone'y
order to Hereford Police this
week.
According to police, MS.
suggestion to confine the plat- Powell reported placing the
form to state-oriented issues money order in her mail bok
on which Texas candidates but did not put the mail flag
would seek office. up. When she returned to the
In an interview, Upham box to place the flag up Mr
said Republicans hope to dou- mail pickup she noticed the
ble the number of state
representatives and senators
and pick up three congres-
sional seats on the November restaurant without paying
general election. their bill Tuesday night. As
the two men left a Hereford
police officer arrived at the
restaurant. Ms. Valdez, sin
employee of the restaurartt,
told the officer about the inci-
dent. As the officer walked
outside to talk to the two meh,
one left the scene. The first
man talked to the officer
while a third man offered to
pending with Rix Funeral help pay the bill. The secorid
Home of Hereford. man was later picked up By
Mr. Griego was pronounced police and released with the
dead on arrival at Deaf Smith agreement he would pay tile
General Hospital this morn- bill today.
ing. Harassing phone calls wefe
Twelve traffic citations
were issued.
on Monday, and Carter de-
nounced the organization in
his speech there. “As a
Southerner, it makes me
angry to see them with a Con-
federate battle flag,” he said.
"Actually what the gover-
nor has told you to tell us is
don’t do anything don’t
think anything counter to
what is already in the na-
tional platform,’ right?" San-
chez objected. “I just wanted
to be sure because if I’m just
going to sit here and rubber
stamp everything the gover-
nor wants done. I’m on a
parking meter and I can just
go ahead and leave and save
together a state platform for myself a few dollars."
the next four years. C------.... -
SAN ANTONIO, Texas
(AP) — A juvenile was being
held by police Tuesday in the
stabbing death of a man who
was attacked as he waited for
a bus.
Carlos Flores Yanez, 22,
was fatally stabbed about 7
p.m. I^tbor Day at a bus stop
at San Jacinto and West Com-
merce Streets.
As witness told in-
vestigators he and Yanez
were sitting on a bench
waiting for the bus when a
pickup truck containing
students
Connally, a former
Republican presidential can-
didate said the United States Griego was a retired
employee of Hereford Wreck-
ing Co.
He married the former
Jesusita Garcia in Garita,
N.M. 47 years ago.
Mr. Griego was a member
of the San Jose Catholic
Church.
Rosary services will be
held at 7 p.m. today at Rix
chapel, and rosary services
will also be held at 7 p.m.
Thursday.
In addition to his wife, sur-
vivors include two sons, Ber-
nardo of Albuquerque and
Luis Jr. of Clovis; three
daughters, Priscilla Lucero,
Cirilia Dennett and Mrs. Able
tional step" into the indepen- Garza, all of Hereford; two
dent ranks and that he thinks brothers, Ernesto Griego of
many young independents Hereford and Jose Garcia of
will become dissatisfied with
local political involvement
and later will join the children and 13 great grand-
Republicans. children.
Monday, police reported.
Ronald C. Lunsford, 27, was
arraigned on a murder
charge before Night
Magistrate Quon lew.
The victim's body was
found about 6:30 p.m Mon-
day when his wife returned
home from work. He had
been shot in the chest and
wrist with a pistol believed to
be .44- or 45-caliber
0)
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) j-r
The Texas Railroad Commis-
sion approved Tuesaday the
application of Texas Utilities
Gen rating Co. to add about
400 acres to the firm’s Mon-
ticello lignite operation in
Titus and Hopkins counties.. n
The acreage is two miles
southest of Winfield. .j,
The application said tfje
acreage would be used f^T
dragline walkway and
haulroad construction with up
new mining areas proposed,.
Money Order
Actually, the Klan
founded in Pulaski, Tenn.
One Klan faction does have a
new headquarters in Tuscum-
bia. Reagan said he saw that
on television.
About 70 Klansmen
demonstrated in Tuscumbia
on the tolerant mechanisms,” said
Patrick.
Patrick also commented on another
hard-to-control pest in sorghum, the
headworm.
“Headworms are a problem from
the period of head exertion to hard
dough and producers need to find the
worm early in order to obtain control.
Two per head is all you can stand and
you need to get them while they’re
small with Lorsban or some similar
product. If you wait until you have
two large worms per head you might
just as well back off because you’ll be
wasting your insecticide," said
Patrick.
Earlier segments of the tour touch-
ed on sugar beet, com, sunflower and
cotton production.
Sugar beets and com were examin-
ed at the Charles Schlabs farm just
south of Hereford.
Schlabs commented on various
cultural practices revolving around
the use of systemic pesticides and
various irrigation intervals for beets,
citing data from several years of tests
at his farm.
Committee chairman Ray
Barnhart of Pasadena and
State GOP < ©-chairman Chet
Upham of Mineral Wells
assured Sanchez that
Clements had no intention of
imposing his will on the com-
mittee and was only making
recommendations as the
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SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By carri> In
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by mail in Deaf Smith and adjoil ng
by
Bank, saying that its annexa-
tion reunited Israel's ancient _________________
capital and it is going to stay of it j am absolutely commit-
thatway. ted to changing the ad-
ministration in Washington,"
"Neceisity doei the work of Clements told the crowd of
courage.” George Eliot Texas A&M University
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Steiert, Jim. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 81, No. 46, Ed. 1 Wednesday, September 3, 1980, newspaper, September 3, 1980; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1348198/m1/2/: accessed June 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.