The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 80, No. 252, Ed. 1 Sunday, June 27, 1982 Page: 3 of 44
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The Hereford Brand-Sunday. June Tt, 1982-Page M
Trip To Brazil Rewarding, Exciting To Local Resident
4
Preparations Set
For Chili Cook-Off
*
PHILLIPS
1
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t
I
I
:33
7
*. :
C.
The Hereford Medical
‘Divine Intervention’ Prevented
& Surgical Clinic
Deaths In Race Track Shootout
Cowan Jewelers
Announce the Association of
17 N. Main
Hereford
Tim J. Revell, MD
You’re Invited . .
V
For Family Practice
‘Appreciation Reception’
& Obstetrics
Starting July 1, 1982
It
KAWASAKI B-K
FREE
40
Prices starting at 5100
I
364-6388
220 Beach
Let the good times roll.
i
C
Engagement Sitting or 8 x 10
Bridal Portrait with one of
our reasonably priced
Wedding Packages.
SMOOTH COUNTED
BALANCED ENOINE
SELF CANCELING
TURN SIGNALS
ed com-
arrassing
sued three
Public is cordially invited.
Refreshments will be served.
SIX SPEED TRANSMISSION
FOR HIGH GAS MILEAGE
°
m behind
ling a bike
’Iains and
told police
nan came
n without
him. The
> after the
1 10
y's, it
it the
lawn
Cain's
id the
Iscap-
e mother
e child at
. Officers
is one of a
in the car
>sed until
EASY ELEC
START
nrrr
)u,3
I oftheln-
liday, the
Prevent
isidents to
handling
Planning Cook-off
Plans are being finalized for the Jubilee Chili
Cook-off scheduled Aug. 21 to benefit the Na-
tional Cowgirl Hall of Fame and Western
Heritage Center. Pictured from left are com-
mittee members Randy Jones, Shelley
Garner, Margaret Formby and Bryon Roark.
Anyone 18 years of age or older may enter the
event.
that the
fly splen-
'icult cir-
hief pilot
Airways,
, said in
Publtsher
anaging Fditot ,
nertising Mgr
ire ulatiun Mgr
Honoring Manning for nine
years of service to church
and community.
for the Governor's Council, a
publicly elected advisory
group
1403 t Park
Hereford, Texas
Phone: (60s) 364-2444
cook-off
Entry fee will be $15.
Cooks' meeting will begin at
1:30 p.m. and showmanship
starts at 2 p.m. There will be
10 chili trophies, three
showmanship trophies and
jubilee goody bags presented.
General admission is $2 for
adults and children under 12
years of age will be admitted
free of charge.
Entry forms may be picked
up at the Hereford State
Bank, First National Bank
and Cowgirl Hall of Fame.
Also, rules for the event may
be obtained at the CHOF.
iown one
ise it was
heturn-
where he
ency lan-
l that the
ted" the
unpering
BY LINDA CAUDLE
Family News Editor
One thing I knew, but kind
of proved to myself, is that
even when you can't talk to
people (in their language)
you can still communicate,
and the easiest way is with a
smile,” says Dallas Ann
Phillips, daughter of Mr and
Mrs Dallas Phillips
"It is something you can
give away for free. and you
always get something back,"
she adds.
Dallas Ann is speaking
about 15 minutes and then
quit."
"I'd like to go back to
Brazil, but then I'd like to go
somewhere else next lune
too," says Dallas Ann. "I
don't know just what's in
store for me." She hopes to go
on a church- sponsored mis-
sion trip to Houston this sum-
mer and would like to be in-
volved in other mission - type
projects in the future.
She has lived in Hereford
all of her life. Her father is
employed by Deaf Smith
Electric Cooperative, Inc.,
and her mother works at Don
C. Tardy Co Real Estate. She
has two older sisters who are
both married.
"My mother was involved
in a river ministry at one
time and I had heard several
different missionaries speak
about going to Brazil and
mber «4 The
l« exeusively
diratien af all
Mb mewspaper
Hished herein
epublirationol
for
Doug Manning
3-5 p.m. Sunday, June 27
Fellowship Hall of First Baptist Church
$179500
t
ableahrd an •
te fivr times a
EXPERT
Jewelry and Watch Repair.
All work guaranteed ti
about tier recent trip to Brazil
with members of several
Panhandle Southern Baptist
Associations. A junior at
Hereford High School, she
was the only person from
Hereford who participated in
the “Mission to Brazil” trip
almost two weeks ago with
289 others from this part of
Texas.
f
k \
* i
i
each cell now a separate little
shop. Other items are sold in
the streets.
All of the texts are orange
Volkswagens and the police
cars and most other vehicles
are either Volkswagens or
Volkswagen buses. They use
a gasohol mixture which is
mostly alcohol and it gives off
a kind of sweet smell which
we immediately noticed when
we arrived there.”
Dallas Ann noted that most
of the families are very large,
that most young couples had
a child by the time they had
been married a year, and that
women always told you how
many children they had given
birth to, even if only a few
were still living.
The big thing there is soc-
cer,” says Dallas ann. "The
what really gives you the in-
centive to go back and makes
you understand why you're
there.”
"I got to experience a lot of
firsts on the trip," says
Dallas Ann. "Recife is much
like any other large city,
maybe a few years behind the
states but quite modern.”
Several unique things that
she noticed were that all the
men carry little purses
because Brazilian currency is
all paper money. Also, nearly
everyone carries a gun
“From the hotel window one
day,” notes Dallas Ann, “we
saw a gunfight almost like in
the Old West.
"There is one real nice
shopping mall in Recife and
there is a shopping center set
up in a big, old prison with
)
i
2c 1
"It was a neat experience
and something I wouldn't
have missed," says Dallas
Ann. "I feel like I would have
been cheated out of a little bit
of life if I had not gone."
Dallas Ann says that going
out of the country was an eye-
opening experience and one
that made her appreciate
America. She had never
traveled outside of the states
before.
"It was something I never
thought I'd get to do,” smiled
Dallas Ann, "and I would like
The deep needs of babies vary just as greatly as those of
adults. One should expect to see no "normal" pattern.
other places," notes Dallas
Ann. "That's how I first got
interested in going.
"I knew basically what waa
expected of me because my
mother had gone on a similar
trip. Basic preparation in-
cluded obtaining a passport
and visa and writing up my
testimony I found out I would
be going in January or
February.”
"It was not a pleasure trip -
it was definitely a lot of
work," states Dallas Ann,
but well worth it. We realis-
ed how much 'country folk'
we were and experienced
things we never would have
been exposed to had we not
gone.
"It was good to gel back to
the United States, but I
wouldn't have missed it, and I
would go again if I had it to do
over.”
a
9O
m
DALLAS ANN
spokesman Tom Santry.
Traynor then fired, wounding
the gunman in the left leg,
Santry said.
The officer then kicked the
gun away from the wounded
man before pursuing the
other gunman to the parking
lot outside, Bucci said.
Detective Vincent Logan
counted 14 bullet holes in the
walls and pillars of the
clubhouse.
Thomas Rossi. 42, of East
Boston, was listed in fair con-
dition at Massachusetts
General Hospital No charges
were immediately filed
AND (USPS
y exrepi Mon-
Thanksgiving
Day by Thp
30 4th St
Serond elass
xost offire ia
TER Send ad-
refurd Brand,
rv 79945
ES: By <rarrier
onth nt 134 per
nth and adjoin-
if other arras
Jubilee Chili Cook-off.
which will benefit the Na-
tional Cowgirl Hall of Fame
and Western Heritage
Center. has been planned for
Aug. 21 at the baseball field at
Veterans Park.
People from other parts of
the country, as well as local
residents, will be par-
4 ticipating under the rules of
the Chili Appreciation Society
International.
Anyone 18 or older may
enter the event. All local
businesses, sorrorities, civic
clubs. etc. are encouraged to
challenge each other in the
INSURANCE
Never replaces
Valuable Momentos.
Safe Deposit Baes
as low as 7 per year
at HEREFORD
STATE BANK
Member FDIC
CARDINAL
HOUSE OF KAWASAKI
to do more things of this
nature if I can - maybe be in-
volved in summer missions.”
Dallas Ann went over with
a group from First Baptist
Church in Friona and after
the entire Panhandle group
arrived in Brazil, they were
split into 47 teams, each being
assigned to a church where
they led revivals at night and
visited door-to-door during
the day.
Dallas Ann was placed in a
group with four Friona
residents, including a
minister, the pastor of the
Mexican Mission in Friona.
"Since he was fluent in
Spanish, and that is close to
Portugese, which is spoken in
Brazil, he was able to com-
municate with the people
there fairly well,” she notes
“On the plane from Miami,
we all practiced simple
phrases and words so we'd be
able to communicate a little
bit," she added.
The group stayed in a hotel
in Recife, a city of approx-
imately two and a half million
people on the easternmost tip
of Brazil Dallas Ann’s group
worked with a church about
45 minutes from the hotel
which was located in a small
farming community.
"Most of the people there
were small farmers (much
smaller than the farms here)
or worked at a sugar factory
located in the town," says
Dallas Ann.
Some missionaries came
from a nearby town to help
with the interpreting and
several seminary students
from Recife helped with the
visitation. All of the par-
ticipants had written up their
testimonies before leaving
the states and they were
translated into a slot and tur-
ning manually
When groups went out to
visit in Brazil, they were able
to share their testimonies by
means of small cardboard
portable record players
operated by putting a pencil
into a slot and turning
manually.
Probably the smallest of our
presidents, James Madison,
at five feet four, never
weighed more than 100
pounds.
"The children, especially,
were fascinated by the
gadget," says Dallas Ann,
and the people were very
curious to see what
Americans looked like and
why we were there.”
Dallas Ann notes that the
people in Brazil are all colors
and hardly anyone looks
alike, "so there is no pre-
judice. I think that's one
reason why they are so loving
and accepting," she says
"We were very well
received."
“We shared with one
woman who was 101 years old
and had never heard of Jesus
Christ and she accepted Him
as her Savior. Another man
was 97 years old and he asked
why we had waited so long to
come and tell him. That's
BOSTON I API - A crowd-
ed lounge at a race track
turned into "the gunfight at
the OK Corral" when two
men exchanged at least a
dozen shots before one was
shot and wounded by a
policeman, authorities said.
"It's divine intervention
that prevented any
fatalities,” said Suffolk
Downs assistant manager
Daniel Bucci after Friday's
shooting.
Police said they knew of no
motive for the shootout, but
witnesses said the two men
KZ-440 no..
6 . SUPERLOW
•) 29 SEAT HEIGHT
whole city closes down when
there is a big soccer game
and everyone goes inside to
watch T.V. When their team
scores a point, firecrackers
go off all over the city
simultaneously. Everyone
has T.V. sets, and
refrigerators, even in the
poorest parts of town.”
"The countryside is really
pretty - rolling hills with palm
trees - kind of like a combina-
tion of Arkansas and
Florida," comments Dallas
Ann. "Everything is green
and there is a lol of water.
“It is very humid, but it
rained often and cooled
things off for a little while.
We never went anywhere
without an umbrella There
was hardly any thunder - it
would just rain slowly for
argued about money. Jack against him.
Finn, a trainer who was in the Also arrested was
lounge, said one man warned Salvatore Manganaro of East
the other, "Don't go for your Boston, charged with assault
gun." and battery with a dangerous
"It was like the gunfight at weapon, possession of
the OK Corral," said Jim firearms and attempted
Roberts, 27, of South Boston, murder, Santry said,
a patron in the lounge. "Two Police later arrested Mark
or three shots rang out, and Rossi, 17, identified as the son
people realized what was go- of the wounded man, and
ing on. People just hit the charged him with possession
floor.” of a firearm, said officer Paul
"They were running in all Baker. Police said the teen-
directions." said Bob Varey, ager was present at the track
a track spokesman. "They and was arrested at the
ran for the nearest opening." hospital where his father was
The lounge, where food and taken
drinks are available and peo- Santry said the men will be
pie can watch the races on TV arraigned Monday in Boston
monitors, held more than 100 Municipal Court.
people at the time of the The Boston Herald
shootings, witnesses said. American quoted witnesses
The two men began ex- as saying the elder Rossi and
changing shots at about 4:15 Manganaro argued about
p.m., just after the seventh money and shouted
race, police said. Patrolman obscenities. with one man
Thomas P Traynor, working spitting in the other's face
a paid detail at the track, before the firing started
ordered them to stop The newspaper said the
shooting, but one man "turn- elder Rossi had been an un-
ed and pointed his gun at the successful candidate in 1976
officer,” said police -
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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/m1/3/: accessed July 13, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.