The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 206, Ed. 1 Friday, April 18, 1980 Page: 2 of 10
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Page 2-The Hereford Brand-Friday. April 18, 1980
Houston Hears Reagan
Disaster Areas
1
Declared in Louisiana
Texas Briefs
Hatch Gets Death
Sentence in Oklahoma
at international relations.
Weather
Afghan Refugees
Tell of Gas Warfare
To be Included in
also
is
d
We were co
Eyes Security Firms
Home Buyers
Sche
Israeli Forces Raid
Seminar Conducted
Palestinian Guerillas
who he said had been
ally of every
Juvenile Arrested
Poor Relations Haunt
U.S. Officials in Mexico
For Beating Sister
N
Obituaries
Emmitt Mar
r
Hereford
Long I
of special dispatch-
0
bbh
Com
update
friday
I’.
Noi
Lance Lawyer Says
Client South's Finest
oa L Nieman
PmulSims
BebNigh
The routes will be studied
as a key part of the $6 million
study under way to deter-
mine what can be done to
overcome the effects- of
depletions in the Ogallala
Aquifer, a massive layer of
water under Urge portions ot
U.S.
Harry
Reagan’s Texas campaign
manager. Ernest Angelo of
Midland, earlier Thursday
had announced plans for
Iran,
an
resident. Rupert McDonell,
who died recently.
THE BRAND was established m a
weekly in February. 1901, converted
to a oemi-weekly in IMS. to Tive times
• weet an My 4,1976.
distributor unless he sells the
vacuum cleaner to someone
who resides in a particular
geographic area assigned to
the distributor.
of the Lebanese port of Tyre
and about 25 miles north of
the Israeli border.
Two Israeli soldiers were
wounded, the communique
said, and the raiders blew up
two buildings before pulling
out. Ras El-Sheikh, near the
town of Sarafand, reportedly
serves as a base for three
groups in the Palestine
Liberation Organization,
including PLO leader Yasser
Arafat's Al Fatah faction.
yard.
Victor Estrada of 219
Bradley told police that
someone entered his home
through the front door and
removed his HBO connection
from the television.
Police issued four traffic
citations Thursday.
Pubilleher
Managing EdMor
AdvertieingMgr.
HOUSTON (AP) — For too
long, the United States has
worried too much about what
people in other countries
think of as. Republican
presidential hopeful Ronald
Reagan says.
EL RENO. Okla. (AP) - A Utah
drifter who denied his involvement in
the murders of a minister and his wife
was handed a death sentence here
Thursday afternoon.
Canadian County District Judge
Floyd Martin recommended Steven
Keith Hatch, 26. die by lethal drug
injection for two first-degree murder
convictions in the slayings of the Rev.
Richard B. Douglass and his wife.
Marilyn.
Formal sentencing was set for April
25.
Hatch also received two 45-year
prison sentences for the attempted
murders of the two Douglass children.
Brooks. 16. and Leslie, 13 as they lay
bound and gagged on the floor of their
rural Okarche home Oct. 15, 1979.
Appeal of the death sentences is
automatic.
EDNA McDONELL
Mrs. Edna McDonell
died Thursday night in
Huron. S.D. following an
apparent heart attack. She
was 87.
Mrs. McDonell was the
THE HEREFORD BRAND (USES
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SUBSCRIPTION RATES By carrier
in Hanford. S3 36 month or $34 per
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THE BRAND is e member of The
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sively entitled to us tor republlcatien
of eU nears and dispatches in this
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published herein All rights r seemed
and White Rivers, and some
tributaries. and sending it in
channels or pipelines to areas
of Texas, New Mexico and
Oklahoma where shortages
are or threaten to disrupt the
economy.
*
I
ATLANTA (AP) - While a juror
wiped away tears. the lawyer for
former federal budget director Ben
Lance said a conviction on bank fraud
charges would ruin "the reputation,
the life and the character of one of the
South's finest men."
Defense attorney Nickolas Chilivis
finished his closing argument in the
14-week trial on Thursday with an
appeal for acquittal on all 12 counts
against Lance. President Carter's
longtime friend and first budget
officer.
Attorneys for three co-defendants
were presenting their final arguments
today before prosecution rebuttal.
U.S. District Judge Charles Moye Jr.
planned to charge the jurors, then
send them home for the weekend.
Deliberations are to begin Monday.
J.D. NEILL
Funeral services are to be
conducted at 4 p.m. today in
First Presbyterian Church for
James D. (Jim) Neill, 79. of
119 Aspen. Officiating will be
the Rev. George Belford,
pastor.
Interment will be in West
Park Cemetey under direc-
• inn of Gililland-Watson
Funeral Home.
Mr. Neill died Thursday
morning in Deaf Smith
General Hospital following a
brief illness
PATIENTS I
Fern Arp. i
tez. Mary C
Clay, Annie
Anna Head. A
Florence I
Hernandez.
Ismael Leal. A
io. Weldon Li
Lopez. Tomas
Jacinto Mar
McCutchen. S
Mae Coffey.
Leticia Mora
Morales. Sylvi
: girl Moreno. (
Highs were to be mostly in the 70s
and 80s except in Southwest Texas
where readings were expected to
reach the 90s.
A few low, patchy clouds were
reported along the gulf coast before
dawn, but the remainder of the state
had clear skies and cool temperatures.
Early morning temperatures were
mostly in the 40s and 50s. Extremes
ranged from 35 at Dalhart in the
Panhandle to 67 at McAllen in the
Lower Rio Grande Valley.
The company
■ Randel. Tarla
. Hernandez. In
• dez. Christie S
A Home Buyers-Home
Sellers Seminar was conduct-
ed here this week as a part of
the observance of Private
Property Week. with a small
but enthusiastic crowd at-
tending the session in the
Community Center.
The seminar was sponsor-
ed by the Hereford Board of
Realtors and was open to the
public. Moderator for the
session was James Self of
Family Homes Real Estate.
Panelists for the seminar
included Barry Josephson.
Hi-Plains Savings & Loan:
Dwight Turner. Security
Federal Savings & Loan:
Mary Johnson, Griffin Real
Estate & Investments: Joc
Emanuel. Lone Star Agency:
Laverne Kimball. A.O. Tho-
mpson Abstract: and Carolyn
Maupin. Deaf Smith County
Abstract.
The panel members dis-
cussed the buying and selling
process and answered a
variety of questions from
on Law Enforcement Officer
Standards and Education:
continuing the board, with
changes; or continuing the
board. with fewer duties.
The fastest
: air-expressed
return to the
. three days
"Now is the time to realize
we don't care if the world
likes us or not. We’ve got to
do what’s right for us.”
Reagan told a rally of 800
supporters Thursday night at
a downtown Houston hotel.
The former California
mother of
PESHAWAR, Pakistan (AP) -
Refugees from the war in Afghanistan
repon the Russians have used a
variety of gases that caused
continuous crying, nausea, temporary
paralysis or loss of consciousness for
as long as four hours.
But none of the accounts indicate
any of the gases arc lethal, as U.S.
Meeting in Omaha, the
council acted after making
a change to end the concern
of Nebraska officials who
said they feared the study
the GOP nomination.
Although Clements is not
actively seeking the vice
presidential bid, he privately
welcomes the possibility,
KDFW-TV said.
Reagan also is seriously
considering Tennessee Sen.
Howard Baker and Indiana
Sen. Richard Lugar, the
station said.
' Brother-Big Si
" with an artist. I
' gives his time I
the artist. I
explained I hl
statement of
expression of a
' created as a
PrenA
Hereford police arrested a
14-year-old juvenile yester-
day following an apparent
civil disturbance and later
turned her ovei to juvenile
authorities.
According to Capt. Ray
Morgan of the HPD, the
juvenile was taken into
custody for "beating up” her
sister.
The girl's sister sustained
facial lacerations and abra-
sions in the incident.
Construction personnel at
the Taco Villa site on West
Highway 60 informed police
that various items of
construction material includ-
ing cinder blocks, tar paper
and bags of cement have
been disappearing from that
location during the past
week.
Walter Spurlan of Amarillo
informed police that two tires
and chrome wheels valued in
excess of $140 were taken
from his vehicle while it was
parked at Hereford Frame &
Axle.
Helen Hill of 1007 Grand
filed a complaint with police
concerning the theft of her
10-speed bicycle from a
storage shed in her back
NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Gov. Dave
Treen has declared six southeast
Louisiana parishes disaster area and
says a slate of emergency exists on
four others because of widespread
damage from last weekend’s rains - 14
inches and more in some areas.
Meanwhile, the Slidell area was
getting soaked again by an
overflowing Pearl River.
The governor's proclamation Thurs-
day was a necessary step in getting
federal disaster assistance for the
flood-stricken areas.
Listed as disaster areas were
Assumption. Jefferson. Lafourche.
Orleans. St. Bernard and St. Charles
parishes. A state of emergency was
declared in those parishes as well as in
Ascension. Livingston. Terrebonne
and St. Martin.
Treet. said the six parishes delcared
disaster areas sustained a total of
about $50 million in property damage
from flooding. Studies are not
complete in the four where
emergencies exist.
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) -
Four routes will be studied in
a multibillion-dollar proposal
to divert surplus water in
High Plains states and funnel
it uphill hundreds of miles to
AfsF"Hi-pangStuay-
- Council Thursday Aked 'the -
Army Corps of Engineers to
study the feasibility of
transfering surplus supplies
in the Missouri. Arkansas
The first kr
; delivering wa
built by the f
Greeks copied
digging tunnel
■ to their ci
Romans dev
aqueducts 50
• that brought
- from more
" away
He said the alternatives
will be more expensive, but
the nation must move
aggressively toward
development of such
domestic alternatives as
nuclear power, massive coal
reserves, oil shale and solar
energy.
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) —
Attorney General Mark
White said Thursday Scott &
Fetzer Co., manufacturer of
Kirby vacuum cleaners, and
supervisor RJ. Sperry have
agreed to pay $125,000 in
civil penalties for allegedly
violating the state's antitrust
laws.
White said Sperry is
division supervisor for Texas.
Arkansas, New Mexico.
Kansas and Oklahoma.
Under a consent decree
entered by District Judge
Charles Mathews, said
White, Scott & Fetzer is
prohibited from requiring
Kirby distributors to pay a
*40 fee on each vacuum
cleaner they purchase. Under
the arrangement, the fee is
not returned to the
“We consider this a very
successful operation.” said
an Israeli officer.
3,9
president from
Bom April 17, 1901 in
Abilene. Mr. Neill came to
Hereford in 1947 from
Higgins. The Corporation
Court judge worked as
dispatcher for the local police
department four years before
being appointed to his
position by Hereford City
Commission in 1964. He had
previously served as Justice
of the Peace for six years at
Van Horn.
Mr. Neill was also a retired
farmer/rancher.
On May 23. 1930 he
married Mozelle Hill in
Clovis. N.M.
He was a member of First
Presbyterian Church.
Mr. Neill is survived by the
widow.
In lieu of flowers, the
family suggests memorial
donations to the Amarillo
Presbyterian Children's Ho-
me.
AMARILLO, Texas (AP)
— A Fort Worth woman has
won $300 for her recipe on
"beef and broccoli dinner
bells.” judged the best entry
in a beef cookoff sponsored
by the Texas CowBelles
Thursday on the final day of
the Texas Beef Conference.
In addition to the prize
money. Beverly Sebastian
won a trip to Scottsdale.
Ariz.. Sept. 3-5 to compete in
the national cookoff.
Second place winner was
Mrs. Herschel E. Thompson
of Tulia, who won $200 with a
recipe called "oriental beef
ring.”
Other finalists, selected
from more than 250 entrants,
were Alice Landru Edwards
of Houston, Susan K. Falter
of Valentine and Rhonda
Fowler of Woodville.
By JOAN
3 I have an art
has continual
Big Brothers-t
.Hereford. not
but also with t
works.
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) —
Complaints against security
guards might be reduced by
prohibiting them from
carrying handguns when off-
duty, says the staff of the
Sunset Advisory Com-
mission.
A staff report Thursday
noted the Texas Board of
Private Investigators and
Private Security Agencies
received 1,246 complaints
last year and added:
"Analysis of complaint
files revealed that a
significant number of the
complaints against com-
missioned security officers
involved abuse of com-
mission privileges which
allow handguns to be worn to
and from work.
"One method of ad-
dressing this problem is to
further restrict authority to
carry handguns in transit to
employment. This can be
accomplished by requiring
that handguns be inac-
cessible when a security
officer is traveling to and
from work, and that han-
dguns may be worn only
while the security officer is
actually on duty."
The report presented three
possibilities — abolishing the
board, reducing the scope of
regulation and transferring
its functions to the Texas
Department of Public Safety
and the Texas Commission
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) —
Attorney General Mark
White said Thursday he will
be the host for the 34th
annual Southern Region
Attorneys' General Con-
ference in San Antonio, May
1-4. Attorney General Rufus
Edmisten of North Carolina
win be chairman of the
conference.
Palo Duro l
Hospital Dril
Texas is offe
classes each Ml
in May, begin
' from 7-9 p.m. il
These classe
prenatal care,
labor and deliy
of mother an
delivery. Exe
' will be taught 1
’ therapist aftcri
classes. I
Husband am
invited to atte
be no charg
classes, which
1 everyone.
those attending the session.
Mack Tubb, attorney with
Tubb & Easterwood, answer-
ing questions of a legal
nature.
Melvin Jayroe. Lone Star
Agency, gave a brief report
on Realtor involvement in the
' state of Texas and the nation.
He is currently serving as
vice president in Region I of
the Texas Association of
Realtors.
In closing the seminar, self
encouraged those in atten-
dance to "turn off the
T.V. and get personally
involved in what's going on
in America." Theme for the
special week was "Private
Property Rights - Protect
Them."
The command claimed the
base was used as a supply
center and staging base for
terrorist raids against Israel.
After the attack on Misgav
Am. Israel sent some 300
troops into southeast
Lebanon and said their
mission was to block in-
filtration routes used by the
Palestinians. But the
government announced their
withdrawal several days
later.
The retaliatory raid ap-
parently was delayed until
Prime Minister Menachem
Begin completed three days
of talks with President Carter
on the deadlocked Egyptian-
Israeli negotiations to work
out an autonomy plan for the
1.2 million Palestinian Arabs
living on the West Bank of
the Jordan River and the
Gaza Strip, occupied by
Israel in the 1967 Arab-
Israeli War.
Begin came home today.
He. Carter and President
Anwar Sadat of Egypt agreed
to step up the frequency of
the negotiations, but there
was little or no expectation
that they would reach
agreement by May 26. the
target date set by the Camp
David accords.
Begin returned to a
domestic political crisis
caused by Defense Minister
Ezer Weizman’s call during
his absence for early elec-
tions "to reach a new public
and ideological framework
and to pull the country out of
a certain quagmire into
which it has sunk."
Weizman’s challenge to
Begin’s leadership brought
demands from several other
Cabinet members far his
resignation. The defense
minister on Wednesday
hinted he would accept a post
in any government formed by
the Labor Party, which
Begin's Likud coalition
defeated in 1976. The Likud
has been losing ground
recently.
prohibited from controlling
the price at which
distributors in Texas may
advertise the vacuum
cleaners for sale, White said.
Truman to Jimmy Carter.
Reagan said Washington
was warned seven months
before the embassy takeover
of the tense situation and the
embassy could have been
closed or the Marine guard
“built up."
The president's latest
sanctions against Iran and
the threat of a military
blockade to free American
hostages would have bee
more effective five months
ago, Reagan said.
officials in Washington have suggest-
ed.
Mohammed Sharif and other
Afghan rebels interviewed here in
northwest Pakistan 45 miles from the
Afghan border said they knew of no
one who suffered permanent physical
injury from a Soviet gas attack.
A 28-year-old farmer turned
guerrilla. Sharif said Soviet helicopter
gunships dropped red, yellow and
green gases in late March on Sukhrod.
a town in eastern Afghanistan.
"It tasted like pepper - bitter." he
said, speaking in his native Pushtu
through an interpreter. “I could not
get air into my lungs and I gagged for
what seemed like 10 minutes. Then I
passed out and when I woke two hours
later I found my leg injured by a shell
fragment."
would begin before
Nebraskans are informed of
the implications. benefits
and detriments
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) —
President Peter Flawn of the
University of Texas at Austin
and two Mexican officials
have agreed to a faculty-
student exchange to promote
development of joint
scientific and technological
research.
Texas A&M is expected to
join the program Friday with
the signature of President
Jarvis Miller.
Dr. Joe Neal, director of
UT’s International Office,
said the three-year
agreement will involve
Mexicans from 48 regional
technical institutes. Fifteen
Mexican faculty members
also will be selected for the
program, which begins in
September.
Chertene Brownlow Cirzulation Mgr
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W.T
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West Texas St
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will be award!
their organizati
More than 2
Iva S
By N
Members of
Tord Extension
Club honored
with a going
.Tuesday afte
,home of Peg
Saltzman is pla
to California
Roy.
u The club pn
Saltzman with
farewell gift,
j Cake and J
.served with tea
Be a Fr
_ — — The Mexican officials who
Water Import Routes StS
I minister of technological
Ae m education and research, and
6ual-4- __ H - Manueal Madrazo
)E. ER fl fl V/ Garamendi, director general
Nebraska. Kansas. Colorado. Sunset Commission
Reagan and Clements to hold
a joint news conference in
Austin next Thursday before
going into a “private working
lunch." j
Reagan is scheduled to
visit Clements in Austin after
appearing Wednesday night
on a nationally televised
forum with other Republican
candidates in Houston.
At stake in the May 3
Texas primary are 80
delegate votes, which four
years ago went solidly to
Reagan in his battle against
Gerald Ford.
Reagan is hoping to whip
his chief rival for the GOP
nomination. George Bush, in
Texas, where Bush has lived
for many years.
The former California
governor was welcomed at
the Houston rally with a cry
that was heard throughout
the 1976 Republican con-
vention from the Texas
delegation: “Viva Ole."
Reagan criticized
President Carter at every
turn Thursday. He blasted
Carter's domestic policies,
especially the rate of in-
flation. and his foreign
policy, especially in
"yielding to other nations."
Many of those attending
Reagan's Houston rally wore
mink coats and tuxedos. But
members of a motorcycle
club, wearing black leather
jackets, also were on hand.
Reagan drew cheers from
his Houston audience when
he called on the United
States to get out of the
energy business and give oil
companies a chance to look
for more oil and natural gas.
“There is more oil and
natural gas to be found in the
United States than we have
ever used in the past,”
Reagan said.
Reagan was introduced at
the rally by former Texas
Gov. John Connally, who
withdrew from the
Republican presidential race
several weeks ago.
Connally, now a Houston
resident, called Reagan "the
best qualified man in this
country, now, to be
president. We have to
rebuild our economic
strength and our moral
commitments. The only way
to do it is change the
leadership in the White
House."
Reagan told the airport
rally at Nederland that the
Unite States triggered the
hostage situation in Iran by
not standing by the shah of
governor spoke earlier
Thursday to an airport rally
in Nederland, Texas. before
flying to Houston. He was to
continue to San Antonio after
further campaign ap-
pearances in Houston today.
A Dallas television station,
KDFW-TV, said in a
copyright report Thursday
night that Texas Gov. Bill
Clements is one of three
persons at the top of
Reagan's list of candidates
for his vice presidential
running mate, should he get
Oklahoma, Texas and New
Mexico.
So much water has been
pumped out of the aquifer in
some areas that farmers are
being forced to end center
pivot irrigation and resume
less productive drylind
operations.
The council has looked at
six possible places to divert
water and store it en route to
areas where it would be
used. These four were
chosen:
— Tapping the Missouri at
Fort Randall Dam in South
Dakota, and funneling water
southwest through Nebraska
to eastern Colorado, then
south to the southern High
Plains states, supplying
areas along the way. Major
storage terminals would be
on the south fork of the
Republican River near Bonny
Reservoir in Kansas, the
Arkansas River near Dodge
City, Kan., the Canadian
River near Canadian,
Texas, and Bull Lake near
Littlefield, Texas.
—Drawing surplus from
the White River at Clarendon
Ark., and sending it west-
ward through the Arkansas
at Pine Bluff, Ark., Quachita
River at Camden, Ark.. Red
River at Fulton Ark.. Sulphur
River at Darden, Texas, and
Sabine River at Tatum.
Texas. Major storage would
be at Bull Lake.
— Taking water from the
White River at Clarendon,
and moving it westward
through the Arkansas River
at Van Buren. Ark., Quachite
River at Camden and Red
River at Fulton. Major
storage terminals would be
on the Canadian River near
Canadian, Texas, Arkansas
River near Dodge City and
Bull Lake.
— Diverting Missouri
River surplus at St. Joseph,
and sending it south-
westward through Kansas,
linking with some routes in
other alternatives. Major
storage terminals would be
on the Arkansas at Dodge
City, Canadian near
Canadian, and Bull Lake.
Gov. John Carlin of
Kansas, council chairman,
stressed in the meeting at the
Airport Ramada Inn that only
surplus water would be
diverted — if the plan gains
approval and money from
Congress.
At the Nebraska
representative Randy
Moody, sitting in for Gov.
Charles Thone, the council
agreed that the corps will not
begin work on the route
affecting Nebraska without
conferring with Thone and
other residents of the state.
TEL AVIV, Israel (AP) —
Seaborne Israeli forces
raided a guerrilla base on
Lebanon's southern coast
early today and killed six
Palestinians. the military
, command announced.
The attack, first of its kind
! in eight months, was in
’ retaliation for the Palestinian
, raid April 7 on the Misgav
Am border kibbutz in which
I the five raiders and three
; Israelis were killed
The Israelis moved at dark.
) apparently surprising the
‘ Palestinians at Ras El-
Sheikh, a base 12 miles north
SAN ANGELO. Texas (AP)
— A history of poor relations
continues to haunt U.S.
officials trying to forge a new
! understanding with Mexico.
F says U.S. Ambassador at
! Large Bob Krueger.
The ambassador told the
West Texas Chamber of
Commerce convention in San
Angelo Tursday that the
United States is its own worst
enemy in efforts to improve
relations with Mexico.
“America looks forward,
focuses on the future while
Mexico looks to the past,
remembers it very vividly,"
i said Krueger.
[ r lexican officials. he said,
remain unconvinced that
poor relations are a thing of
the past.
Krueger cited two recent
Mexican newspaper articles
that quoted high-level
Mexican officials warning the
United States might takeover
Mexican oil fields by force
“I know that is absurd, but
the Mexican officials ob
viously were not convinced. "
said Kroeger.
Kroeger told the gathering
that West Texaps have a
tremendous opportunity
to build relations with
Mexico and develop it as a
foriegn market.
Kenneth T. Derr,
president of Chevron U.S.A.,
also spoke at the convention,
lashing out at government
policies that have fostered
dependence on foriegn oil.
"Seven years after the
Arab oil embargo our
nation's dependence on
foriegn oil has increased
from 35 percent to more than
40 percent,” Derr said.
“And that level will approach
50 percent before the decade
ends regardless of our best
conservation efforts and good
words about alternative
energy sources."
The oil company executive
called for positive new
policies to reverse the trend
towards more foriegn oil and.
for a new national energy mix
leading to a true multi-
energy economy by 1990.
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Sims, Paul. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 206, Ed. 1 Friday, April 18, 1980, newspaper, April 18, 1980; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1422143/m1/2/: accessed July 4, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.