The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 78, No. 149, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 30, 1980 Page: 2 of 12
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Local
Teachers Back To Work
-
At E
Waete-Dupoial Site
CARLSBAD, N.M. (AP)
The
Hogpital Administrator
Wine in Slander Suit
Forum
Youtht Won't Be
Certified At Aduitt
Ag Dept. Gets Boost In Funds
To Study Farmer Marketing
As summarized.
w hich
Gov. Clements
Relative. Relieved
o
Banquet
k
Surprise Luggage
from Page 1
Trial
people of Texas don’t want this, national
Teen
Dance
-from Page 1
Games
Saturd
Turner Named Treasurer
For Senatorial Campaign
Inflation
7
from Page 1
Grain
course I'm not going to twist married John W. Israil Sept. 27.
anybody's arm on it."
1950 in Clovis. N.M. She was a
' 2,
Happ
K
M2KEKNKI
R.E. TURNER
I
update
Wednesday
1977 ....
1978 ....
1963
1964
1965
1966
1967
1968
1969
1970
1971
1972
1973
1974
1975
1976
"But anybody ask me, and I tell
them go ahead and work. Of
Louise Packard. I
chairman called the ml
order with Kate BrI
Bippus leading the
exercise with a brail
"Who Are These First
LUBBOCK. Texas (AP) — A
Texas Tech professor noted
force —
unanimous
PA
»K
nA
A
•A
A
M
A
•
A
•A
A
•A
A
h
After Iran Etcape
Relatives of the Americans spirited out
of Iran by Canadian-U.S. efforts shed
tears of relief and broke their silent vigil
after learning their loved ones were safe.
"I'm going to be indebted to Canada
for the rest of my life." said Marge
Schatz of Post Falls. Idaho, mother of
Henry Lee Schatz, an agricultural attache
West Texas - Partial clearing from west
today east of mountains. Partly cloudy
and mild west of mountains today.
Warmer most sections. Cloudy tonight
and Thursday. Turning colder north
tonight and most sections Thursday.
Light rain south and freezing rain or snow
north Thursday. Highs 37 north to near70
Big Bend. Lows teens north to mid 40s
south. Highs Thursday 30s north to near
70 Big Bend.
aneurysm Santos claimed killed Barnett
Santo* denounced the secret autopsy
as illegal.
DOE Won’t Build
.....Dr. A.T. Mims
Mrs. Austin Rose Jr.
football game and patrol up and down the Easter road, in Castro
Counts about 10 miles south of Hereford, he said.
But he pulled his units out about 10:30 or 11 p.m. and never
sent them back again, he said, when an angry Castro County
Sheriff Granville Martin called and said he didn’t want Deaf
Smith County officers in his county.
Tommy Weaver, editor of the Hereford High School paper in
1977-78. said he went w ith other students to the Stones' house in
a pickup three or four days before the shooting "to see what all
of the talk was about."
Weaver, another boy and a girl were in the cab and four girls
SAN ANTONIO, Texas (AP) - Five
juveniles, accused of murder in the
controversial death last Oct. 22 of their
high school classmate. cannot be tried as
adults. a state judge has ruled.
State District Judge James Barlow,
who made the ruling Tuesday after more
than a week of testimony, said he
questions whether anybody actually
killed 15-year-old Billy Barnett.
Barnett. a member of the Holmes High
School Rodeo Club, died while allegedly
being beaten by six classmates from a
rival student faction.
Bexar County Medical Examiner Dr.
Ruben Santos ruled "death by natural
causes," saying Barnett died because a
congenitally weak artery burst in his
brain.
Santos said Barnett's body bore only
five supeficial bruises and abrasions.
Despite that ruling, prosecutors are
passing murder complaints against
18-year-old David Reyes and the five
juvhiles.
Barnett's body was exhumed without
Santos' knowledge and examined by a
team of three doctors. Those doctors
claim Barnett died from the beating,
adding that they found no evidence of the
Roy E. Turner, president of
R.E. Turner Masonry Inc. of
Amarillo, has been named
treasurer for the state senatorial
campaign of Bill Sarpalius.
Sarpalius. who lives in
Hereford, made the announce-
ment Tuesday.
Turner. 51. is a former Boys
Rancher, like Sarpalius. and
currently serves as Ranch
treasurer. He also is a member
of the executive committee and
board of directors at Boys
Ranch.
Sarpalius said he was glad
"to have people like Roy Turner
working in my campaign."
Sarpalius worked for two
years as assistant to Speaker of
the House Bill Clayton. He is
now in private business.
Sarpalius announced his
AdveritetngMgr. M
CireutattenMgr
Wayne Evans
...Dub Reeves
W.E. Dameron
... L.B. Barnett
3
1946 ...
1947 ....
1948 .
1949
1950 ..
1951
1952 ....
1953 ....
1954 ....
1955 ....
1956...
1957 ....
1958 ....
1959 ....
I960 ....
1961 ....
1962 ....
.. Mrs. Earl Springer
.......Clint Formby
. .Rev. Don Davidson
.........Ed Sky pala
John Douglas Pitman
........Ray Cowsert
.....Earnest Langley
.....Hugh Clearman
.. Russell A. Wingert
........Jewel Smith
......A.J. Schroeter
.... Raymond White
......Jimmie Allred
......Carl McCaslin
.........Lyle Blanton
........ Henry Sears
Father Raymond Gillis
.........S.O. Wilson
.........Earl Phillips
.........D.C. Kinsey
........Delta Stagner
........Argen Draper
.....Don Zimmerman
.....Wayne Lawrence
..........Faye Plank
. Jimmie Witherspoon
.... Dr. Lena Edwards
Ten clubs were re J
with eight clubs ha
percent attendance d
Deaf Smith Counts
Home maker's Council
monthly meeting Mom
noon in the Library
Room.
at Heretord, Tx. 79045. Second class
postag• paid at the post office in
Hereford Ts. POSTMASTER: tend
address Changed is The Hereford Brand.
P.O. Box 673, Hereford. Tx. rows
SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By carrter in
Hereford, UK month er 836.00 e year in
edvenee By med le Deel Smith and
on all points —
exist. it makes sense to build on
what we have here."
The Colorado sports festival
encompassed 26 sports and
2.20) athletes in 1978 and 31
sports and 2.500 athletes in
1979,
Kelly, however. said he
believes that a city the size of
Philadelphia would be needed
to handle the crowds at the
alternative games.
In Senate action Tuesday. the
Senate voted overwhelmingly to
urge all Americans, not iust
were in the bed of the pickup when they drove by the Stones’
four times, Weaver said. They were scared away when they saw
a spotlight from the driveway. Weaver said, and were chased
back to Hereford at speeds that reached 140 mph.
Laura Armstrong, 17, of Dimmitt testified she was a
sophomore at the time of the incident and left a Halloween
carnival at the Easter community, northwest of Dimmitt, with
nine other students in three cars to drive by the Stone house.
Kelly Nelson of Dimmitt said he went to the Stones the night
of the shooting with four others after they "heard the stories that
went around " -
candidacy for the lst Senatorial EzEasFaEpoDDnarann, •*’
District seat presently held by . Mondaya, Saturday ana Chrimas Day
Republican Bob Price of Pamoa. by The Heretord Brand, Ine., IKW 4th
Idea o
c D 1 allowing a dues checkoff is "a
'jrOtn I age I classic example of the camel
• • getting his nose under the
tent."
AUSTIN. Texas (AP) - The Texas
Supreme Court today left standing lower
coun judgments awarding 5700,000 to a
Houston hospital administrator in a
slander suit against two doctors at the
hospital.
John Hankins sued Drs. Erwin Winkel
ll. a urologist who was chief of the
medical staff at North Central General
Hospital, and Norma Harris, the resident
radiologist.
Hankins alleged they falsely accused
him of stealing 510.000 from the hospital
A jury found the doctors had stated to
others that Hankins had stolen the money
and the statements were false and made
with malice. The jury awarded Hankins
$950,000. but he voluntarily remitted
$250,000. and judgment was rendered for
$700,000.
Hankins, according to court records,
was hired to assist in the planning and
construction of the hospital. He became
the administrator when the hospital
opened in January 1974. He was
discharged in June.
Hankins alleged the doctors told others
at the hospital he had stolen the $10,000.
but Hankins said the money was given to
him by the hospital directors in December
1972 as an advance for work performed
on a professional building adjacent to the
hospital.
Department of Energy announcement
that it was cancedling. at least for now.
plans to build a nuclear waste disposal
site near here has brought reactions
ranging from dismay to delight from
those who have been close to the issue for
a decade.
Roxanne Kartchner, chairwoman of the
Carlsbad Nucler Waste Forum, the main
Carlsbad group opposing the project, told
the Carlsbad Current-Argus in an
interview that she was delighted.
"If it is done, it is because it's
President Carter's decision to look into
the safety of the program," she said. 'It
gives me a lot more confidence in the
government if it uses a sane approach
and looks for the best site."
Carlsbad Mayor Walter Gerrells.a
prime supporter of the Waste Isolation
Pilot Plant, said he hates "to see this
action taken after eight years of study.
The site here met all criteria as far as
environmental safeguards go.
"I understand President Carter wants
a site which would be NRC-licensed and
be available for spent fuel rods. I hear he
wants to look at sites in the state of
Washington, in Nevada and the site
here." Gerrells said.
The DOE's budget report included $22
million for fiscal 1981 for "site
protection" by lease acquisition "so as
not to preclude its future use." I The
project, which has been authorized under
defense waste management in the past,
would come under the commercial waste
management budget.
Weather
Comuenss)
NELLIE MAE ISRAIL
Services will be conducted
tomorrow morning at 10:30 a.m.
in Rose Chapel of Gililland-
Watson Funeral Home for Nellie
Mae Israil. 84.' of 111 East
Gracie Street. The Rev. B.L.
Davis of Amarillo will officiate,
assisted by the Rev. Doug
Manning, pastor of First Baptist
Church here. Graveside services
will be held at 2:30 p.m. that
afternoon at Vega Cemetery
under direction of Gililiand-
Watson Funeral Home.
Mrs. Israil died Monday
afternoon in Deaf Smith General
Hospital following a lengthy
illness.
Born Oct. 2.1895 in Iowa, she
came to Deaf Smith County in
1908 from Nebraska and
Upset With
AG’s Opinion
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) — Gov.
Bill Clements, upset by an
attorney general’s opinion that
says union dues can be
deducted from state paychecks,
has told his staff to go to work
on legislation “to put a stop to
this nonsense."
Clements said Tuesday that
“I haven’t let it bother me so
much, but it is disappointing to
go through college and become
a professional and then not get
paid for your work.” she said.
“The important thing is
educating the kids, but nobody
seems to care about that
A proposal to dist
County Women's For
tabled for further cons
during a covered dish H
held Monday at the Co
Center. I
Consideration of the ■
disbandment will be I
individual clubs which
the forum, A final dec
be made at the Foru
quarterly meeting in A
In other business ■
the new slate of offi
elected with the fl
chosen to serve: Mr
Garner. president. Ri
michael. vice preside™
Carter, second vice: I
Jacobsen, treasurer: N
Walser, secretary; ar
beth Wilson, parliamer
Hostess dubs ■
luncheon were Herefol
Club. La Afflatus Estu
and Hereford Garde
Other clubs represente
Forum meeting were
Blossom Garden Club]
Beautiful Club. Lone S]
Club, Hereford Mus]
Club. Pioneer Study d
Summerfield Study Clu
The two-part progil
introduced by Mr:
Burdett, president of I
Music Study Club!
provided songs perforr
sextet. Mary Thomas I
Walser provided furthe
tainment with a musi
I know they don’t want it and I
don't want it."
His comments were in
response to an audience
question. Another local resident
asked w hat the governor’s office
can do about the court-ordered
busing plan scheduled to go into
effect in August.
“I’m sorry to report that in
this particular case I know of
nothing I can do," he said.
the task
was not
—from Page 1
1980....then inflation clearly
would be worse," although
probably not much worse. he
said. "Some slack in the
economy is a good thing: you
can argue about how much."
higher prices, they said
< arter also said that while the
immediate focus of government
poilics must be to keep inflation
from getting worse than last
war's 13.3 percent rate, it also
will be essential to make
progress in reducing the in-
nation rate.
"Over the long term, we will
either bring inflation down or it
will assuredly get worse."
Carter said. "Another sharp
rise in oil prices or a world wide
crop shurtage could provide the
next turn of the ratchet."
Ne administration in recent
nenwiry has presented such a
grimontlook lor inflation.
(arter said the undetlsing
inffarion rate, meaning inflation
.dter discounting volatile in-
ereases in food, fuel and
twiusine costs, is now 8 to 9
athletes, to stay away from the
summmer Olympics if the
Soviets do not remove their
tnwopn from Afghanistan.
The resolution, approved 88-
4, supports the position of
President Carter and is similar
to a measure approved 386-12
by the House last week.
The four voles against the
resolution were cast by Sens.
Rudy Boschwitz, R-Minn.;
Mark Hatfield, R-Ore.; Ted
Stevens, R-Alaska. and Paul
1songas. D-Mass.
He also said the 1980 inflation
rate could be worse than 10.4
percent if the recession
predicted by the administration
fails to materialize.
"If the economy kept rising in
The sunlight str
through a window left ’
face of the sun only eig
utes earlier
HIMI
Local teenagers are i]
attend a disco dance |
evening from 8 ]
midnight at the Con]
Center. Disco music ]
brought by Pete Hl
Canyon. I
Admission will be
singles and $5 for coup!
Any parents wh
interested in servi
chaperones during the id
dances are asked to con
Community Center. 3641
I adjoining countie s, m a year; all uther ;
I ‘points, $30 a year. *3
I THE BRAND a member of The.
I Associsted Press, which to exclusively ;
' entitled • us for republication of an nem ‘
and dispatches in this newspaper and 4
atoo total news published iwato All ",
rights reserved for republication of 2•
THE BRAKDwTCatatshadma weakly' *"
in February, 1901, converted to a j,,
in 1948, to Rve times a week
*‘
Publisher 3,
Managing Editor
Attorney General Mark White
has said State Comptroller Bob
Bullock can allow the union
dues checkoff. Bullock has said
he would recognize any union
formed by employees in his
department.
Texas union leaders said they
were encouraged by Hhe
opinion.
Clements, speaking to the
Republican Forum of Austin
luncheon, made it clear he does
not think a state employees
union is needed.
“I am opposed to such a
ruling." he said of the attorney
general’s opinion, “lam for our
right-to-work laws totally."
The governor said, “The
) oi k to host the 1984 Games.
I os Angeles, which is
scheduled to host the 1984
Ganes, and Louisiana, which
has the .Superdome, also have
luvu discussed.
I as Angeles has 19 of the 21
nympic venues ready. while
the Superdome would be the
site of the arena events, with
the others being staged at two
regional sites.
( alorado Springs, because of
its support by the I SOC staff
and its holding the sports
recommended a series of ac-
tions. including:
—Incentives to encourage
states to increase truck load
limits to 80.000 pounds and
length limits to 65 feet on in-
terstate and other major high-
ways.
— Regulatory reforms to
festival the past two years,
appears to be the front runner
for the special games should the
Americans not participate in
Moscow.
"I’m not saying it’s im-
possible to look at other sites."
said Baaron Pittenger. USOC
special events director who was
in charge of staging the two
summer festivals. "But un-
derstand we're dealing with a
short time frame, six or seven
mwnths at most. I’m saying that
if we can solve problems that
Transportation and the
Agriculture Department should
monitor the effectiveness of the
task force’s recommendations
and make a report to Congress
each year.
On a perennial issue, the task
force noted it "has heard and
read many statements con-
cerning railcar shortages" and.
in particular, how shippers have
been faced by “inadequate
and directed it to come up with when he boarded a plane in
specific recommendatins. Dallas last week for his final leg
A dozen public hearings were on a return from a business trip
held last sumnfer at which many to Florida, that his garment bag
private citizens as well as felt heavier than before.
payment. Then when we did get
paid. I paid that late. Then we
didn't get paid in January and I
haven’t paid that bill yet and
they add a $5-a-month late
charge.
"I think anybody who works
depends on that two-week
check." Miss McDonald said.
"Savings are for emergencies
— a trip, a death in the family, a
sickness — but not for checks
that don’t come."
Mayor Jane Byrne has said
she hopes teachers can be paid
Friday for the other week on
their Jan. 18 check plus their
regular pay due this week. Miss
McDonald isn’t confident, and
the uncertainty has taken its
toll.
She has dipped into her
savings. She is making her car
payments late. She has sliced
her contributions to the grocery
and utility bills incurred by her
parents, w ith w horn she lives.
Mrs. LeDonne. who picked up
her one-week paycheck
Monday, said teachers in her
school seem to be holding up
well under the financial crunch.
"It is an economic hardship,
but our group, on the whole, has
borne up very well with a fine
sense of cooperation. They’ve
been patient," she said.
Miss McDonald. 2b. said she
normally throw s a party for each
pupil’s birthday, buying cakes
with her own money. She had to
skip three January birthdays,
she said.
and special-interest He put it in the small
permit railroads and shippers to supplies of covered hopper cars
enter into negotiated contracts used for shipping grains,
or. in the absence of negotiating fertilizers and other dry -bulk
acceptable terms, federally commodities."
regulated contracts that would Shortages also have been
specify terms. severe in the number of wide-
— Use of king-term loans to door, 50-foot boxcars used for
finance rail rehabilitation on cotton and other farm products,
lines sen ing ports. it said.
— Continuation of federal Thus, the task force
financial aid* for rehabilitation recommended that the nation’s
projects for railroad branch railroads “support and im-
lines, plement immediate acquisition
Further, the report said the of a demonstration fleet of 500
Interstate Commerce Com- covered hopper cars" and 500 of
mission, the Department of the w ide-door boxcars.
Tech Professor Gets
who was one of the six who fled by posing
as Canadians.
in Oceanport, N.J., Setsuko Amburn,
whose daughter Cora Lijek and her
husband. Mark, both 25. also
escaped, said she cried "like a baby"
upon hearing the news.
And in Crosssville Tenn.. Mary Frank
mother of Kathleen F. Stafford, who fled
with her husband, Joseph, said: "I'm still
walking on water."
There was no immediate word from
relatives of the sixth American. consular
official Robert G. Anders.
Schatz. 31, a graduate of the University
of Idaho, served in India before being
assigned to Iran.
"Throughout the three months, it has
been a time of uncertainty," his mother
said. "I haven't actually heard from him
since he was home last October. All I
know is that he is safe and coming
home," she told the Coeur d'Alene Idaho
Press on Tuesday.
The other freighter left, but member of the First Baptist
the Julia L. obtained govern- Church.
ment certification that its cargo Survivors include her hus-
was exempt from the U.S. band; a daughter. Mrs. Velma
sanctions. Mitchell of Plainview; two sons.
Meanwhile, in Florida. a Melvin Loyd of Houston and the
federal judge will hear Thur- Rev. Keith Loyd of Cabot, Ark.:
sday a complaint against dock- three step-sons and three
workers who refuse to load four step-daughters: 11 grandchil-
Soviet-bound ships with dren and 14 great-grandchil-
superphosphoric acid. dren.
professor the next day and
arranged with airline officials to
have the bag returned to Nash-
ville. Tenn.
"He just said he had some
important papers and stuff in
there and would lose his job if
he didn't get it back. I wanted
my bag back, too." said the
professor, unaware at the time
of the cocaine that was in the
bag.
A small quantity of cocaine
was left in the suit bag for its
return trip to Tennessee, and a •
fake substance w as left in place
of the other packets, officials
said.
A DEA agent was on the
plane with the bag and arrested
the two men who claimed the
bag at the airport over the
weekend.
The professor said he
changed planes four times last
Wednesday on his return to
Lubbock, but was unsure when
the sw itch occurred.
Drug Enforcement Ad-
ministration officials in Nash-
ville confirmed the accidental
bag exchange netted two
suspected cocaine traffickers in
the city, but declined further
comment because the in-
vestigation is continuing.
Sources told the Avalanche-
Journal other arrests in the
Nashville area are likely.
WASHINGTON (AP) -
President Carter's budget
proposal sent to Congress this
week includes a modest boost in
funds for the Agriculture
Department to take a closer look
at some of the problems af-
fecting the movement of farm
products to market.
Specifically, Congress is
being asked to approve about
$2.2 million for the depart-
ment's Office of Transportation
in the fiscal year that begins
next Oct. 1. That would be an
increase of about $506,000 from
this year.
Although the Office of
Transportation in USDA is a
fairly new agency and is small in
comparison with most others in
the department, it is taking on
larger importance as tran-
sportation problems increase
year after year.
For example, a special rural
transportation task force ap-
pointed by the secretaries of
agriculture and transportation
last year recently sent to
Congress its final report. It was
written after 10 months of study
and public hearings in which
many familiar complaints were
aired.
Congress asked for the study
in the Rural Transportation
Advisory Task Force Act of 1978
The following activ
planned this week (Janl
6) at Hereford Senior
Center: I
THURSDAY- Crafi
a.m.. noon meal fro
am.-12:30 p.m. devoti
p.m.. Health Club at 2
FRIDAY-Mall walk
a.m.. noon meal fro
a.m.-12:30 p.m.. brid
1-5. bowling at 1:30 p.
MONDAY-Mall wal
She also has had to skip other
things.
"I have cut down on
everything. You just get what
you need. That which you don't
need. you don't get." she said.
"I missed the December car
anymore.
Some school personnel do
care, of course, and Mrs.
LeDonne said she felt that
makeshift lessons given by
administrators to the 35 pupils
who showed up Tuesday were
worthwhile. The children were
divided into three groups,
according to grades, and the
administrators taught them
what they could.
But some students went to , a-
their schools Tuesday for
reasons other than learning. - -
One 17-year-old said she went
"because my mother made
me."
Andy Kalnmals said he went :
to Lane Technical High School ‘ :
because he thought attendance
would be taken, and it takes .
perfect attendance for a • •
semester to win free tickets to ‛ *
Chicago White Sox baseball
games.
Barbara Wolski said she went
to Lane because it was "the
easiest w ay to get together with
my friends."
By HOWARD ULMAN
Associated Press Writer
CHICAGO (AP) - One by
one they came, bundled against
the bitter cold, into the office of
principal Crescentia LeDonne.
Each was handed a check. Some
paused to talk in the corridor,
then they left.
It had been 25 days since the
teachers last received
paychecks, days when winter
heating bills had to be paid and
food had to be bought. On
Tuesday, at last, they received
some of their money.
The checks were for one
week's work, half the pay these
teachers at Louisa May Alcott
Elementary School are owed
from the missed Jan. 18
payroll. Two previous
paychecks also came late.
Chicago teachers have not
worked since Monday, vowing
to stay out until they are paid in
full.
“I would like to have
everything cleared up so that
the kids can come back to
school." said Verdi McDonald,
who teaches handicapped
children, aged 3 to5. at Alcott.
"In my classroom, I don't like
big lags because then it seems
you have to start all over with
them."
Still, she said, she needs her
money.
leaders handed out
mimcographed sheets about the
court ruling, but they stressed
that it applied only to the Julia
L.
Dock managers tapped less
experienced longshoremen
called "casuals" to fill out the
crew, since only four regulars
lined up.
"The steamship officials
think we're standing around
here telling these people not to
wort." said Norris Plaisance,
president of ILA local 1418.
groups outlined complaints and passenger closet, as he had
made specific recom- three times previously in the
niendattons. day. then "was disgusted"
"Many suggested that the when he unzipped the bag in
federal government needs to Lubbock and discovered the
review and streamline its clothes weren't even similar to
policies to develop a single, his. he said.
coherent policy." the task force But almost 100 packets of
report said. cocaine, worth $200,000 on the
"Often there was a call to street, were discovered in the
minimize federal involvement, bag after the professor, who
Others asked that their in- asked to remain anonymous,
dividual problems be solved left it with airline officials in
without regard to overall policy Lubbock.
and strategy," The Drug Administration
Those who testified Administration says the
"discussed regulation of rail professor's inadvertent switch
and truck services more of bags has led to a break in
frequently than any other what may be a major southern
issue" and many "feared that U.S. drug trafficking ring, the
sudden deregulation of cither" Lubbock Avalanche-Journal
would be a tremendous shock to said Tuesday in a copyright
both agriculture and the story.
transportation system. The frantic owner called the
on July 1978.
/ 0.6. Neman
4 Mite
Boe Nigh
ChartemeBremtom
(Sei
L Op
percent, up from 6 to 6.5
percent just two years ago.
Consumcr prices increased
13.3 percent last year, the
biggest increase in .13 years.
The administration is
forecasting an additional rise of
10.4 perrent this year and 8.1
percent in 1981.
Charles L. Schultze, the
chairman of the President's
Council of Economic Advisers,
said the forecasts anticipate an
overall increase in domestic
energy prices of 20 percent this
year and an increase in world oil
prices slightly above the U.S.
inflation rate, or more than 10
percent.
He said if the Organivation of
Petmleum Exporting Countries
increases its prices
"significantly more than this,
it w ill cause us some trouble."
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Sims, Paul. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 78, No. 149, Ed. 1 Wednesday, January 30, 1980, newspaper, January 30, 1980; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1422087/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.