The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 189, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 29, 1983 Page: 2 of 28
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Brand (Hereford, TX) and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Deaf Smith County Library.
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Page -The Hereford Brand-Tuesday, Marek 29, 1M
Paul Harvey News
Headlines can scare you to death
Insanity would be
tougher to prove
Hightower taxi foreign
Letter to the Editor
purchases significant
Dear Editor:
sion two weeks ago, and
4-H F
WI
Weather
Forced to sign confessions
Alpl
Couple spends 148 days in Cuban prison
COU)
An
Wynne breaks down
during testimony
$
He tried to confirm the
from page 1
change at a busy downtown suspicion Oct. 14. told his
County
-Went into closed session to Mathis, got into his truck and Hospital in Amarillo after a
All righta reserved for
of
I
t
1
update
tuesday.
Committee approves
Hollowell plan
O.Q. Mi—■
BobNigh
Hostess
were Ton
Bodner.
Susan Sha
The do
plant. was
Holly Bixl
The next day. he followed
her to a hospital parking lot
where he said she met
।
A Nig
was the I
party hek
members
Costumes
gambling
and vario
eluding b
blackjack
The da
America
change s
from Ila
Wednesd
visiting i
J.J Dur
Paola
rently ai
with AFS
the dau
Felicia
Amarillo intersection.
Wynne, who testified he
- from page 1
West Texas — Fair to partly cloudy
through Wednesday. Highs 58
Panhandle to 73 south and 85 Big Bend
valleys Lows 32 Panhandle and
mountains to 39 southeast and 45 Big
Bend valleys Highs Wednesday 68
Panhandle to 75 south and 88 Big Bend
valleys.
Dear Editor.
The Dawn Lion's Club
would like to congratulate the
By P1
County
So mai
recognize
the peopl
lead our •
a salute t
What
Some'
sternness
comrade:
mysterio
4-H leade
These
gas line.
-Agreed to pay the law
firm of Gibson, Ochsner, and
Adkins 83.063 73 for legal ser-
vices rendered by that firm.
-Pursued the 1982 Audit
Report as submitted bythe in-
dependent firm of Brown.
Graham. & Co.
-Received the annual fire
report from the Hereford
Volunteer Fire Dept., which
showed 174 city fires and 145
Other features of the com-
promise bill would:
Weather forecasters err on
the side of pessimism, pur-
posely.
They'd rather you be
pleasantly surprised by
tomorrow's sunshine than
that you fly off or drive off in-
to danger weather.
Fund for legal
services for the poor
AUSTIN ' AP i — A final Senate vote
was needed today on a bill that would
set up a trust fund to provide legal ser-
vices to the poor
f
I,
when we feel our county of-
ficials have acted wisely
Please accept our "Thanks "
for the action you took last
week
county fires from Feb. 1,1982
to Jan. 31. 1983 The county's
annual cost for that service
was 850,734 out of the 8112,743
total
AAvertutngMgr.
Cireudaten Mur
AMARILLO, Texas, APi -
A former police captain
broke down and cried several
times on the witness stand as
he described shooting an
oilman he witnessed having
sexual intercourse with his
wife.
L.R Wynne testified Mon-
day that he was out of
mind" after witnessing his
wife, Margie, and shooting
victim Erle Winston Mathis.
63. making love in Mathis'
truck along a country road.
Mathis was gunned down in
his pickup truck Oct. 15 as he
waited for a traffic light to
"If all these foreign investors show-
ad up here at the state Capitol at once,
we’d almost have a quorum of the
United Nations, with flags being car-
ried by countries ranging fromm Abu
Dhabi to the Republic of China." he
said.
In 1982, Swiss interests bought
20.120 acres in Culberson County,
24,996 acres in Reeves County, 9,666
acres in Val Verde County and about
4.000 acres elsewhere, according to
Hightower.
The commissioner praised bills fil-
ed by Reps Billy Clemons, D-Pollok,
Tip Hall, D-Denton, and Pete Patter-
son. D-Brookston, who all are looking
for limits on foreign ownership of
Texas land.
- Make it tougher for
utilities to include in current
rates the interest costs on un-
completed construction work
— Require that a hearing
be held first on need for a new
power plant before the PUC
approves plant locations
- Give PUC authority to
order audits of utility
management
— Require PUC to prepare
a statewide plan for future
electncty needs
Dait;
THE HEREFORD BRAND (USPS
242-200) is published daily except Mow
days, Saturdays, July 4. Thanksgiving
Day, Christmas Day and New Year’s
Day, by the Hereford Brand, Inc. 313
Lee, Hereford, Tb 79045. Second class
postage pald at the post office in
Hereford Tx. POSTMASTER Send ad-
dress changes to Ibe Herelord Brand,
P.O. Box tn. Hereford, Tb. 79045
SUBSCRIPTION RATES: By carrier to
Herelord, $3.35 per month or 134 per
year; by mail to Deal Smith wad adjoin-
toe counties, $34 per year; other areas
by Ml. MI par year.
THE BRAND to • member of The
Associated Press, which to exelusively
m" wad dtprtehn: to thio mwngnzer
Sincerely,
Glenn Barbee, Sec
Dawn Lion's Club
Obituaries-
of Avenue Baptist Church.
Survivors include his wife,
three sons, Ray. Lonnie, and
Donnie, all of Hereford; two
sisters. Ruth Emberlin of
Venron and Jannie Turpin of
Dallas; two brothers. L.G.
Woodward. Okla, and D.B. of
Healdton. Okla.; and four
grandchildren
JOE SKELTON
Services for Joe A Skelton.
71, will be at 2 p.m. Wednes-
day in Avenue Baptist Church
with the Rev. Buster Grigg,
pastor, officiating. Burial will
be in West Park Cemetery
under the direction of Rix
Funeral Directors.
Mr Skelton died at 1:36
p.m. Sunday at St. Anthony's
possibly think there would not
be some kind of accident in a
period of 250,000 years The
DOE tried a waste dump in
Lyons, Kan., and this could
not even keep it from leaking
while it was being built.
This is an appropriate year
for a "snow job" but this is
ridiculous, besides being an
insult to every Texan's in-
telligence. It is time for every
citizen of Deaf Smith County
to stand up and be counted I
have always thought of our
county as a leader, not a lag-
behind follower
Get behind this cause and
stop the dump for your
children and their children's
children Let's leave them a
green, productive land with
pure water, not some barren,
radioactive wasteland with
contaminated water and land
that will not support life for
thousands of years
Sincerely years.
Bill Fowler
Sen. Craig Washington's proposed
Texas Equal Access to Justice Act
was tentatively approved on Monday
22-9.
"If there is no legal representation,
people are fruetrated. If they are
frustrated, there is no justice, and if
there is no justice, there is violence,"
said Washington, D-Houston.
Washington's bill would funnel cer-
tain client funds held by lawyers into
an interest-bearing account, set up by
a non-profit corporation which would
receive and disburse interest earned
on the funds for legal service in civil
matters.
The corporation would be formed
under rules adopted by the Texas
Supreme Court.
Washington said although the bill
would only affect funds "nominal in
amount," the fund in time could
generate as much as 870 million for
legal aid for indigents.
shot Mathis after confirming
suspicions that his wife was
having an affair with the
oilman, is pleading innocent
by reason of insanity.
Mrs. Wynne testifed Mon-
day that she and Mathis had
been having an affair inter-
mittently since 1969, and said
they were unaware that her
husband had seen them.
Wynne said he had seen
Mathis following his wife on
several occasions and
suspected they were having
an affair.
Maybe that makes sense
but it also dilutes and even-
tually can destroy the
credibility of weather
forecasting.
Al
AUSTIN i AP) — State Agriculture
Commissioner Jim Hightower says
the 1 percent of Texas farmland own-
ed by foreigners adds up to a spread
that's * bigger than all of Dallas."
Hightower, testifying Monday to the
House Committee on Stale Affairs,
said the foreign ownership is a distur-
bing trend.
These are absentee investors —
foreign corporations and cash-rich
speculators with no common interest
to share with a Texas farm family,''
he said, adding that the land buyers
are not simple immigrants come to
Texas to try to make a living
farming."
He said the 1 percent figure men-
tioned by people unconcerned about
foreign land purchases is accurate,
but deceptive.
That’s about as useful as being
told there are more than 10 acres for
every car in Texas while you're stuck
in a Houston traffic jam." he said.
Much of the foreign ownership is in
■our richest, most productive soil'
areas, including the Blackiand
prairies and the bottom lands along
the Red, Trinity and Brazos rivers, he
said.
selection of a disposal site
here If this is not a contradic-
tion. I never heard one
I urge everyone to look at
the information; this thing is
forever, not just some danger
that will pass. Any sane-
thinking person cannot
family he was going to
Houston for a convention,
drove to the Amarillo airport,
rented a car and unsuc-
cessfully tried to follow his
wife after work, he said.
Lady of Guadalupe Catholic
Church of Clovis with the
Rev. Jerry Mueller of-
ficiating
Burial was in Lawn Haven
Cemetery under direction of
Steed-Todd Funeral Home of
Clovis.
Mr Soliz died Thursday in
Marina del Rey, Calif A
native of Yancy, Texas, he
had lived in Clovis for 20
years after moving from
Hereford He was a retired
vegetable contractor and a
member of Our Lady of
Guadalupe Catholic Church
Survivors include his wife.
They were put into a
hospital immediately before
their release, they said.
Hofstadter said he was suf-
fering from vitamin deficien-
cies and and Miss Strickland
said she was given an
medicine intravenously for
headaches."
cd to be It is a place to be
with the family "
Witnesess from Tom
Thumb-Page and Skaggs
Alpha Bela stores — which
now open on Sundays said
employees like to work Sun-
days because they are paid
time and a half
Ceverha said less than 4
percent of the state's work
force sells items covered by
the law
But Jeannette DuPont, a
San Antonio jewelry store
manager, said the Blue Law
helps her keep her family
HOUSTON APi
PUC------
pointed commission, but re-
quire that two members be
subject to voters confirma-
lion every two years failed
4-7.
Another amendment by
Caperton tor inverted block
rates, where residential users
would pay a basic flat rate
and others increased
amounts according to usage,
failed 6-7.
An amendment by Sen. Bill
Sarpalius, D-Hereford, to re-
quire regional public hear-
ings on major utility rate re-
quests failed 5-7.
MYRTLE JOINER
TULIA - Services for Myr-
tle Joiner, 79, of McAllen and
formerly of Tulia, were at
10:30 am Monday at the
Wayside Community Church
with the Rev Roland Moore,
a Methodist minister, of-
ficiating. Burial was in
Wayside Cemetery under
direction of Wallace Funeral
Home of Tulia.
Mrs. Joiner died at 10:30
a.m. Thursday in McAllen
after an illness. She was the
sister of J.K. Fore of
Hereford.
She was bom May 1, 1903,
in Tennessee and had lived in
Wayside and the Hereford
area. She moved to McAllen
from Tulia a few weeks ago
She married John B. Joiner
Nov 17. 1923. in Hollis, Okla.
He preceded her in death on
Nov 9, 1970.
Other survivors include
five daughters, Mrs. Lee
Ramsey and Mrs. L.C. Pope,
both of Amarillo, Mrs Jonie
Price of Wellington, Mrs. I.A.
B ynum of McAllen, and Mrs.
Ray Clark of El Paso; a son,
J.B. Joiner Jr. of Amarillo; a
sister, Mrs. William Haney of
Modesto, Calif.; a brother,
W.R. Fore of Tulare. Calif ;
■line grandchildren; and
seven great-grandchildren.
discuss personnel with head drove with him to a road on
custodian Jack Nunley land he owned outside the ci-
ty. Wynne said he followed
All four commissioners, them in the rented car, park-
along with County Judge Glen ed near the entrance of the
Nelson, were present at the land, and walked to within 25
meeting feet of Mathis' truck.
AUSTIN i API — A criminal defen-
dant would have to prove he was
severely" mentally ill and did not
know his actions were wrong before a
jury could acquit him on insanity
under a bill approved by the Senate on
Monday
Currently, a defendant can try to
prove either that he did not know his
actions were wrong or that he was in-
capable of conforming his behavior to
the law in question', a difference that
led defense lawyers to oppose Sen
Kay Farabee’s proposal
Farabee, D-Wichita Falls,
acknowledged that John Hinckley's
attempted assassination of President
Reagan "certainly heightened" in-
terest in an insanity bill.
Hinckley was found not guilty by
reason of insanity in the shooting of
the president
"Your bill would make it more dif-
ficult to prove insanity," said Sen.
Tati Santiesteban, D-El Paso
That's right," replied Farabee
The Senate adopted an amendment
with Farabee’s approval that would
prohibit telling a juror what the conse-
quences would be if a verdict of "not
guilty by reason of insanity" was
returned.
The Senate sent Farabee’s bill to
the House on voice vote in apparent
preference over another measure that
would have abolished the insanity
plea in criminal cases
Farabee’s bill also would allow
judges to keep up with defendants
found not guilty because of insanity.
authorities
Hofstadter said they were
interrogated, presented the
confessions and then left in
solitary confinement Later,
they were put into a prison
with other Americans
Asked what they did in
prison. Miss Strickland said:
I prayed a lot and cried a lot
and took a lot of pills. They
gave us tranquilizers ''
Hofstadter, who looked fit.
said lie lost 15 pounds and
spent much of his tune in
prison exercising. because
there wasn't anything else
to do."
Talley and D.I. Harguess of- Susie; a daughter. Susie of
ficiating. Burial will be in Sierra Vista, Ariz.; four sons.
Friona Cemetery under Carlos of Laredo, Jose of
direction of Ellis-Blackwell Clovis, and Jesse and Tony,
Funeral Home both of Sierra Vista; four
Mrs. Anderson died Satur- siters, Francis Mays of
day morning at a Conroe Hereford, Antonia Fuentes
Hospital after a lengthy il- and Rosa Yeary, both of San
Iness. Antonio. and Elvida Martinez
She was born in Poplar of Lubbock; four brothers.
Bluff. Mo . and married Jack Narrivo of Thousand Oaks.
Anderson on July 14, 1922, in Calif.; Joe of Hereford, Pedro
Farwell He preceded her in of Vacaville. Caflif , and
death in 1968 She moved to Ralph of Morton; and seven
Friona from Hereford and grandchildren
had been a Friona resident
minutes.
"The only time we saw
each other was on her birth-
day, Dec. 7. and that was only
for 15 minutes," said
Hofstadter
Leland, who helped in the
1979 release of American
prisoners and again last year,
said the Cubans were "for-
thright and cooperative with
us" in arranging the release
of the couple.
The congressman said he
and his party were treated
with courtesy and dealt with
in a spirit of extreme
cooperation."
Leland said he met with
('astro for about two hours
and also discussed the
release of another Texan.
Neal Nichols, 29, of El Paso.
Nichols was a passenger in a
small plane that crashed in
Cuba 26 months ago and the
congressman said he has
been sentenced to six years in
prison. Leland said he is
"convinced" Castro will
release Nichols soon
The congressman said he
and his staff are "digging
down" to pay most of the
85,000 cost of fuel and pilots'
fees it look to affect the
release He said the use of the
airplane to return Miss
Stickland and Hofstadter was
donated.
Hofstadter said Cuban
authorities gave him and
Miss Strickland a choice of
confessing to one of two
crimes — one for drug traf-
ficking and one saying they
were working for the Central
Intelligence Agency The CIA
confession carried a sentence
of "20 to 30 years”, he said,
and the drug charge only
"four or five days.”
They signed the drug con-
fessions. but Hofstadter said
he noted beside his signature
that it was "under duress."
AUSTIN i AP) - Rep Bill Hollowell
says the Russians are "rattling their
sabers and missiles" and it's time the
Texas Legislature did something to
prepare for a nuclear attack.
Hollowell, D-Grand Saline. won
House committee approval Monday
for his bill lining up successors for
lawmakers killed in a foreign attack.
"If Houston was destroyed, you'd
lose 26 members of the House and five
state senators," Hollowell told the
House Committee on State Affairs.
Committee members voted 14-0 to
recommend approval of the Hollowell
plan, under which retired lawmakers
would be called on to replace
legislators killed in an attack
"We've heard the Russians rattling
their sabers and missies." Hollowell
said. " We have to deal with reality."
The East Texas lawmaker wants
each representative and senator to
prepare a list of ex-legislators. The
people on those lists would be looked
on to replace nuclear attack victims
carpenter He married Ruby Clovis, N.M., the brother of
Bowman Sept 7, 1937, in two local residents, were held
Oklahoma. He was a member at 10 a m. (MST) today in Our
ed in Cuba on Nov 12 during a
flight from Grand Cayman to
Miami They were forced to
sign confessions of drug traf-
ficking and spent 43 days in
solitary confinement, they
said.
Cuban officials repeatedly
promised their release, said
Hofstadter
If you've been in Cuba you
would understand that you
can't believe anything until
you see it happen. It's a land
of manana (tomorrow)," he
said. They always said
tomorrow, tomorrow, tomor-
row’ and we saw 148 tomor-
rows.''
Asked about the couple's
immediate plans, Hofstadter
said "Get married and raise
a family and live happily ever
after "
They couple, who plan to
wed next month, said they
would have been married last
December, but instead spent
most of that month in solitary
confinement in Cuba. The
sweethearts were separated
throughout their imprison-
ment for all but a few
— from page 1
together.
Sunday is still meant to be
a special day," she said, ad-
ding that the law allows her
family to have an "all-
American day " on Sundays
Auto dealer Howard Thorn-
ton of Frisco said Sunday
openings would mean higher
overehead and no additional
sales The Texas Automobile
Dealers Association has led
the keep the Blue Law fight
over the years
There’s only so many
automobiles that are going to
be sold," he said.
I believe the Chamber of resolutions followed from the
Commerce’s old excuse of not Canyon City Commission,
having enough information to Randall County Commission,
make a decision about the the Tierra Blanca Soil &
establishment of a nuclear Water Conservation District,
waste dump in Deaf Smith and others Why can't we get
County is about worn out. a response from the city
The information is as close leadership?
as the library, if the so-called I would like to thank Judge
leaders of the community Glen Nelson and the county
would take a half-hour to look commissioners for the resolu-
at the documents There is no tion opposing the dump. This
reason the Chamber of Com- is not a military waste but a
merce and Hereford City dump for eastern utilities
Commission cannot make a that sell electricity for profit,
decision on something that who want us and the U.S.
could affect Texas and Government to subsidize
several other states who get them. I am not against
water from the Ogallala nuclear weapons, but I am
Aquifer against the storing of so-
il has been estimated the meone e Ise's nuclear waste
waste will be radioactive for A few people have come
250.000 years. A leader is so- right out and stated the dump
meone that leads, not so- would be good for economic
meone who straddles the reasons. I would say that if
fence if they straddle the even one child was born with
fence long enough, they are a birth defect or contracted
apt to run into a barb or en- cancer from radiation ex-
coutner a post. posure. either from con-
The Deaf Smith County taminated water or from a
Commissioners made a deci- nuclear accident, it would be
too high a price to pay.
for 55 years.
Survivors include a
daughter, Mrs. Jo Costolow
of Conroe; a stepson. Lee
Gibson of Friona; three
sisters, Mrs Mary Paul of
Texico, N.M., Mrs. Edna
Woelfel of Bovnia, and Mrs
Edith Osborne of Groveland,
Calif.; a brother, Cecil Berry
of Canyon; two grand-
children; and two great-
grandchildren.
Pallbearers will be Eddie
White. Glenn Reeves Sr.,
John Hays, John Fred White.
Sterling Graham, and T.A.
Williams.
During the last week, I commissioners of Deaf Smith
heard one man and read of County for adopting the
another who allowed the DOE resolution resisting Deaf
to test on their property talk Smith County being used for
about the dump The first one one of the High Level Nuclear
said we should put up road Waste Repositories.
blocks to stop this thing, and We are quick to condem
the other urged the people of when things go wrong & too
our community to oppose the slow to show our appreciation
And for you to be constantly were seeping into the
over-warned needlessly sus- basements of houses near
tains anxiety and stress and Love Canal
these may be more We drove 700 families from
deleterious to more people their homes-needlessly
than tomorrow's weather. Now we learn that the EPA
whatever it is. report showing a
To often we tend to worry chromosome breakdown
you about the wrong things.’ among area ‘s residents
* *5 was completely false, com-
pletely bogus.
Love Canal: In 1980 the Now a panel of di<tingin<h-
news media emphasized, if it ed physicians headed by the
did exaggerate, EPA warn- chancellor of Sloan-Kettenng
ings that toxic chemicals reports "no evidence past or
airplane crash and 148 days
in Cuban prisons interrupted
their courtship and ruined
plans for a December wed-
ding, but Gina Strickland and
Herm Hofstadter were free
today and planning a wed-
ding
Miss Strickland, 22. and
Hofstadter. 29. both of
Brownsville, arrived by
private jet at a Houston air-
port Monday afternoon after
a four-hour flight from Cuba
They were released to U.S.
Rep Mickey I.eland.
D-Houston, after the Con-
pressman met with Cuban
Premier Fidel Castro over
the weekend
I love you, America!"
shouted Miss Strickland after
she and Hofstadter stepped
onto U.S. soil. They both fell
to the runway to kiss the con-
crete and were immediately
enveloped by more than a
dozen relatives.
This is the happiest day of
my life," shouted Hofstadter
The couple was arrested
after their small plane crash-
Blue ---------
Both adamantly denied
they were smuggling drugs
Hofstadter said he and Miss
Strickland had flown from
Brownsville to Jamaica on a
business and pleasure trip
He said they started back
from Jamaica, made a stop in
Grand Cayman and were try-
ing to reach Miami when
their rented airplane
developed engine problems
We landed late at night —
about 9:30 — in a sugar cane
field," said Hofstadter They
grabbed their luggage and
left the sc ene, he said, and hid
for four or five hours after
seeing people with weapons
Later, he said, they found a
road and tried to hitch a ride.
When they came to a sign, he
struck his lighter and realiz-
ed the sign was in Spanish
"It was only then that we
knew were in Cuba," said
Hofstadter. They turned
themselves over to
Tte wnenwood, Okla., CARLOS SOLIZ
native had lived in Hereford CI 0 VIS, N.M. - Services 73
since 1955 and was a retired for Carina R Soliz, 62, of we • July *. me
HATTIE ANDERSON
FRIONA - Services for
Hattie Anderson, 80, of
Friona will be at 2 p.m. today
at Sixth Street Church of
Christ in Friona with Leon
J
present of any public health
problem” at Love Canal.
But you can’t unring a bell.
It can be argued that your
safety must get the benefit of
any doubt and surely
bureaucratic heads would
roll if some real danger went
unmentioned.
But while the bureaucrats
are thus covering
themselves, mass media
focus may incite hysteria.
Three Mile Island was
mostly a media event, much
ado about almost nothing
Our Skylab watch altered
the world for weeks; false
alarm
With warnings about a
swine flue epidemic" we
tried to spoil your bicenten-
nial year. That turned out to
be three cases nationwide.
Now our EPA is finding and
our media are dramatizing a
potential health menace from
dioxin in Missouri
Residents have already fl-
ed one location and are flee-
ing others where tests reveal
dioxin contamination as
much as "one hundred times
the known safe level "
Again, evacuation may be a
proper precaution
But TV coverage of men in
moon-suits can inflame what
should be a rational concern
for environmentalism
Indeed, in a future day of
increased enlightenment we
might be embarrassed by our
present handling of the
"herpes" scare
I am beginning to see up-
dated studies of Herpes
Sunplex affirming that it is
not a venereal disease, not
necessarily transmitted sex-
ually Yet. meanwhile, our
government’s CDC and our
media mistreatment of the
subject are wrecking a lot of
marriages.
And that's not all
To the degree that we un-
necessarily create anxiety
and fear we decrease
resistance to. and increase
susceptibility to, a wide spec-
trum of diseases
We can scare people to
death
Indeed, after Gulf Coast
Hurricane Allen the only
fatality was a man who had
been scared to death by the
warnings "
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Nigh, Bob. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 189, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 29, 1983, newspaper, March 29, 1983; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430219/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.