The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 252, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 27, 1982 Page: 1 of 44
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The Hereford
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80th Year, No. 252. Henford, Tx. Deaf Smith County
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Honor America Fete
Scheduled July 4th
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Public On Side
Downtown Draggers
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Clements Express
Will Tour State
Haig Resigns, Reagan
Appoints Shultz to Post
Shuttle Launch
Set for 11 A.M.
Sunday
June 27, 1982
Mali’s Men (1,465) and the Highways 385-60
team (1,470), while the downtown girls (985)
took the measure of the Sugarland Mall
Sweeties (975) for their title. (Brand Photos).
sensors
The
Traffic Stopper
Travel on Hwy 385 on the south
edge of the city was halted briefly
Friday afternoon when two
vehicles collided. Five persons
CAPE CANAVERAI., Fla
(AP) — Ken Mattingly and
Hank Hartsfield, military
pilots turned astronauts. left
an early wakeup call today to
squeeze in final training for
their seven-day flight aboard
America’s space shuttle.
Columbia's fourth and last
test mission is scheduled to
begin Sunday at 11 am. EPT.
It will inaugurate the nation's
manned military operations
in orbit by carrying a top
secret Pentagon payload of
foreign policy on which we
embarked together was shif-
ting from that careful course
which we had laid out.”
Some aides said that the
latest difference with Reagan
and particular)’ with Defense
Former major league baseball player Bob-
by Bragan, a shortstop and catcher with the
Phillies, will be the featured speaker at the
Deaf Smith County Kids, Inc. banquet at 7
p.m. Thursday in the Bull Barn.
League winners will be recognized at the
event, and All-Star squads will be announced.
The public is invited to attend the banquet,
which will feature an ice cream supper.
Another highlight of the banquet will be the
drawing for a 200-pound box of beef worth ap-
proximately 1200.
K
1
characterized as ’exceeding-
ly smooth” by NASA test
director Stan Gross, was to go
into a planned hold from 3:45
p.m. today to 12:25 a.m. Sun-
day. when preparations will
begin for loading the ship's
volatile fuels.
Today, the astronauts were
scheduled to get up with the
first morning light, eat
breakfast, then climb into
airplanes specially modified
to handle and feel like the
shuttle on its approach for
landings. After practice, the
astronauts planned a pilot's
pre-flight walkaround on the
launch pad.
During the night, pad crews
end at the country to the
other, from this time forever
more.”
And Abraham Lincoln,
speaking on July 4, 1858, said
"We hold this annual celebra-
tion to remind ourselves of all
the good done in the process
of time. of how it was done
and who did it. And we go
from these meetings in better
humor with ourselves - we
feel more attached the one to
the other and more firmly
bound to the country we in-
habit.”
An illegal alien who has
been residing in Hereford
was convicted of attempted
murder by a jury in 242nd
District Court in Dimmitt
Thursday, and his defense at-
torney is attempting to make
arrangements with the U.S.
Immigration and Naturaliza-
tion Service to keep his client
in the United States to fulfill
terms of the sentence handed
down.
Domingo Garcia, 21. was
found guilty Thursday in the
shooting of Rubin Herrera.
32, of Dimmittt dunng a Jan.
18 disturbance in east Dim-
mitt. The verdict came after
almost two hours of delibera-
tion following the three-day
trial in Judge Marvin Mar-
shall's court.
The jury of seven men and
tion’s independence did not
escape the founding fathers,
or those who followed in their
footsteps.
President John Adams,
speaking to his wife Abigail
on July 3, 1776, said, "...this
great anniversary festival
ought to be commemorated
as the day of deliverance, by
solemn acts of devotion to
God Almighty. It ought to be
solemnized with pomp and
parade, with shows, games,
sports, guns, bells, bonfires
and illuminations, from one
Bobby Bragan
Banquet Speaker
Drilling Reveals
3 Salt Layers
TULIA, - The U.S. Department of Energy 's exploration
in the Palo Duro Basin for underground sites for a poten-
tial high-level nuclear waste repository has confirmed
three major layers of bedded salt in Swisher and Deaf
Smith counties.
Drilling at the Zeeck No. 1 borehole is near a depth of
6,000 feet at a site northeast of Tulia in Swisher County.
Drilling encountered bedded salt at 1.115 feet below the
surface and found major salt beds at depths of 2.015. 2.500
and 2.735 feet.
The well is designed as a deep hydrologic test well drill-
ed to approximately 7,500 feet. Selective rock units, in-
cluding salt beds of particular interest, have been cored
and their physical and chemical properties will be analyz-
ed. Long-term hydrologic pump testing in deep brine
aquifers will begin once the drilling has reached total
depth.
Preliminary results were as follows at two boreholes
completed near Dawn in Deaf Smith County:
Friemel Well: 2,710 feet deep Depths to top of salt beds
and thicknessess - 1,742 feet, 138 feet thick: 2.231 feet, 106
feet thick; 2,435 feet, 153 feet deep
Detten Well: 2,840 feet deep. Depth to top of salt beds
and thicknessess - 1,866 feet, 110 feet thick; 2,374 feet, 115
feet deep; 2,575 feet, 170 feet deep
The Detten borel.ole will be re-entered this summer
DOE plans to deepen t by 3,000 to 4,000 feet, selectively
coring potential aquirer rocks in the Wolfcampian and
Granite Wash units. Long-term pump test and water
sampling will be performed to study the deep basin
hydrologic system.
The salt maintains the gross thickness and quality that
is believed necessary for the siting of a mined repository
Results of earlier test drilling and the previous correlation
of older exploration tests satisfactorily predicted the
thickness and qulaity of salt beds in the Palo Duro Basin
Sait cores will be analyzed by the Texas Bureau of
Economic Geology and by DOE.
Pump testing alse continues in a test zone at the Sawyer
No. 1 well near Clarendon in Donley County The Donley
County area is not under consideration as a possible
repository site. Information collected in the test is ex-
pected to be used in modeling hydrologic flow through the
Palo Duro Basin Groundwater flow is a concern in deter-
mining the potential for safe disposal of radioactive waste
(Sot RESULTS. Page 2A)
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3
installed the last of the scien-
tific gear to be earned aloft
by Columbia, then closed the
60-foot cargo bay doors.
Mattingly, commander of
the flight. is a Navy captain
who flew in space as com-
mand module pilot of Apollo
16 in 1972 He lias been an
astronaut since 1966 Hart-
sfield. an astronaut since
1969, retired from the Air
Force in 1977 after 22 years of
(Sot SHUTTLE. Page 2A)
Both the men’s and women’s teams represen-
ting the Downtown Variety Park won tug- of-
war championships Friday afternoon at
Dameron Park, The downtown men, weighing
a total of 1,495 pounds, defeated Sugarland
•egggr3
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-
don "Is has come as a plea-
sant surprise."
The Reagan-Shultz meeting
was to take place at Camp
David Md. where the presi-
dent was spending the
weekend.
Senior administraiton aides
said that Haig a 57-year-old
former four-star Army
general was leaving the
Cabinet as the result of a
series of disputes with
Reagan and other key aids.
Haig said that when he took
office as the 59th Secretary of
State he and Reagan "agreed
that consistency, clarity and
steadiness of purpose" were
essential to the success of the
nations's foreign policy.
In his resignation letter
delivered to Reagan Friday
after the secretary told the
president on Thursday that
he would quit Haig said:
"In recent months it has
become clear to me that the
"Honor America - A
Patriotic Evening," will be
held at Whiteface stadium
beginning at 8 p.m., Sunday
July 4 as the Women's Divi-
sion of the Deaf Smith County
Chamber of Commerce does
its part to help the area
celebrate the nation's birth-
day.
Patriotic speeches and
singing will highlight the
night's activities, including
addresses by Doug Manning
and Wayne Thomas. Muscial
celebration will be provided
by the Hereford Chamber
Singers, the Nazarene
Church singers, and Johnny-
Ray Watson, with Watson
leading the crowd in “God
Bless America" to end the
evening.
As part of this year's
Fourth of July celebration the
chamber is again taking
orders for U.S. flag kits. The
kits, which include a three-
by-five American flag, a
6-foot metal pole and moun-
ting hardware, and a flag eti-
quette brochure, are selling
for $8.95 each.
Orders for the flags may be
placed at the chamber office
on Main St.
The great importance of
the anniversary of this na-
received slight injuries in the ac-
cident. which happened in front of
Cashway Lumber. (Brand
Photo).
Of Grandmother
HOUSTON (AP) - An 82-year-old great-grandmother
accused of growing marijuana in her vegetable garden
says the public is for her even if the law has not been so
far.
"Boy, if the people had a vote on this. I’d be out." Laura
Clark said Friday as she left the Harris County Criminal
Courthouse, where a judge ordered her to stand trial on a
marijuana possession charge Aug. 23
"Everybody is for my side," said Mrs Clark. "They
think they've done me real wrong. "
District Judge Michael McSpadden denied a defense
motion to suppress evidence in the case — several mature
marijuana plants uprooted from the woman's garden
Mrs. Clark has said she did not know the seeds she
planted, sent to her from Mexico by a relative, were man-
juana. She said she thought they were herbs which she
said she intended to use to ease pain from arthritis.
Defense attorney Bill Portis had argued the evidence
should be thrown out because detectives who "raided" her
garden May 4 did not have a search warrant
Narcotics detectives Joe Dugger and J.T Bell conceded
they had no warrant, but they testified Mrs. Clark volun-
tarily allowed them to search her property after police
received an anonymous telephone tip from a woman who
told them of the illegal plants.
"At first she declined to let us come in," Bell testified.
But he said she changed her mind after the two officers
told her they could get a warrant and force her to let them
in.
Mrs Clark testified she told the officers after they ask
ed to come in and look around. "I'd rather you wouldn't."
She said one of the detectives "said we can come in
anyhow ' I said. Come ahead.”'
Assistant District Attorney Glenn Gotschall said detec-
tives are not required to inform residents at their right to
refuse to allow police officers without warrants to search
their homes
events in Granbury and
Stephenville and will deliver
patriotic remarks from the
observation deck of the train
in Dublin, Comanche and
Brownwood.
Arriving in Granbury at
10:15 a.m., the "Clements
Express" passengers will
participate in a brief pro-
gram at the restored train
station of the town before pro-
ceeding in parade fashion to
the Town Square Gazebo
where Abner V. McCall,
Chancellor of Baylor Univer-
sity. will be the featured
speaker for the ecumenical
"Festival of Faith" service
conducted by the Granbury
churches Granbury Mayor
Enor "Bud" Olson has
declared July 4th "Festival of
Faith Day" with the Chamer
of Commerce inviting
citizens of surrounding com-
(Sot EX PRESS. Page 2A)
ment of a 3,500-mile pipeline
to carry natural gas from
Siberia to Western Europe
The United States opposes
construction of the project
contending it could threaten
Western Europe's energy
security and provide hard
currency for the Soviet
military buildup
Reagan originally sought to
block the construction in pro-
test of the military
crackdown in Poland. last
week in a decision that
reportedly irritated Haig the
president expanded the sanc-
tions against the Soviet Union
on the pipeline Weinberger
had sought continuation of
the sanctions.
NBC-TV said Friday nigh’
that Haig tried to soften the
pipeline decision at a White
House meeting Thursday and
was told by National Security
Advisor William Clark "This
(Sot HAIG, Page 2A)
Secretary Caspar W
Weinberger pushed Haig into
leaving.
That involved Reagan’s
decision to block the use of
U.S. - produced or licensed
equipment in the develop-
-ZGL XX ‘SFIIVG
WASHINGTON AP - Presi-
dent Reagan summoned
George P. Shultz the man he
has chosen to replace Alex-
ander M.’Haig Jr. as
Secretary of State to meet
with him today as ad-
ministration officials stress-
ed the continuity of the presi-
dent's foreign policy.
Reagan announced Haig's
resignation on Friday and
nominated Shultz to be the
nation's top diplomat. Shultz
is a former Treasury
Secretary and president of
the Bechtel Group Inc. an in-
ternational construction com-
pany.
Shultz was returning to
Washington from London
where Reagan reached him
Friday and asked him to
replace Haig the first depar-
ture from the Reagan
Cabinet.
Asked about his nomination
Shultz told reporters in Lon-
five women then took 47
minutes to set Garcia's
punishment at a 10-year pro-
bated prison term. a $5,000
fine, and an undetermined
amount of restitution to the
Herrera family.
Garcia is being held in the
Castro County Jail pending
action by the immigration of-
ficials.
Attorney Javier Alvarez of
Lubbock said that Garcia is
willing to meet the high legal
costs. estimated at $50,000. to
remain in this country to
fulfill the terms of his proba-
tion.
Garcia testified during the
trial that he did not intend to
kill Herrera, but only intend-
ed to scare him with a
shotgun
AUSTIN - Gov. and Mrs.
Bill Clements will lead the
"Clements Express" in an
old fashioned whistle-stop
train trip to celebrate In-
dependence Day on Sunday,
July 4.
Beginning at 9 a.m. July 4
at the Santa Fe Railroad Sta-
tion in Fort Worth, the
itinerary for the 140-mile trip
will include stops in Gran-
bury. Stephenville, Dublin.
Comanche and Brownwood.
Gov. Clements will speak at
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Nigh, Bob. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 252, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 27, 1982, newspaper, June 27, 1982; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430071/m1/1/: accessed July 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.