The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 85, No. 80, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 24, 1985 Page: 2 of 14
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Page 2-The Hereford Brand, Thursday, October 24, 1985
Privacy exposed by technology
News Roundup
State
7th Houston driver slain
r
2
Mother reunited with children
i
i
Rate hike deemed unreasonable
Bonfire to
be held
Say entrepreneurs
Royal found guilty
REAGAN
hosted the Wednesday breakfast for silicon,” for use in electronics. The
National
Helmets not adequate in protection
rood berries from bad have been
areas.”
the firm says, but none are as
Film to be shown
UNVILLE
Obituaries
I
Escapee captured in Amarillo
grandchildren.
Football in the ratings.
F
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at 6:30 p.m. at the school. A costume
parade to select prize-winners will be held
at 7:30 p.m. Family fun will continue with
bingo games, a sucker pull, a cake walk,
dart games, grab bags and a photo booth.
private sector can work, because
government truly controls the en-
O.G.Nleman
Jer Curtis
Maurl Montgomery
Charlene Brownlow
I
members of the congressional
delegation and representatives of
private space ventures, many of
which are based in Texas.
Andrews said the House is set to
consider ways to back insurance for
companies operating in outer space
— space insurance is expensive and
hard to get — and tax incentives for
production of goods in outer space.
But he told the space businessmen
they should not expect to rely on Na-
tional Aeronautics and Space Ad-
ministration grants and joint ven-
tures because of inevitable budget
reductions.
“I think there’s no question that
people are willing to make the kind of
■ budget cuts that are necessary on the
NASA budget,” said Andrews. “The
real question is how visionary can we
be in some of the other incentives to
help commercialization. That will af-
Muleshoe. Mrs. Villa will be buried
in Muleshoe.
She was born Sept. 21,1922 in Gon-
zales, Tx. She was a Catholic and a
housewife. She married Hilario Villa
in Bryan, Tx. He preceded her in
death in 1968.
Survivors include four daughters,
crystals will not grow correctly on
Earth because of gravity.
ABILENE, Texas (AP) - Jurors deliberated about three hours
before convicting former Big Spring federal prison guard Eddie Joe
Roybal of accepting a gratuity from convicted drug kingpin Rex
Cauble.
Roybal, 33, also was found guilty Wednesday of two counts of ac-
cepting gratuities from other inmates, one countof smuggling a con-
trolled substance into the prison camp and one count of smuggling
contraband into the facility.
U.S. District Judge Halbert O. Woodward will sentence Roybal at
a later date. Meanwhile, Roybal, who now lives in Weatherford, re-
mains free ona personal recognizance bond.
On Tuesday, Roybal denied doing any favors for Cauble in ex-
change for a $11,550 loan from Cauble's sister, Thelda Cauble Harris
of Denton. The defendant also denied doing any special favors for in-
mate Gary Marcus Gunter in return for money.
FBI agents testified that Gunter was cooperating with prison of-
ficials and FBI agents when he arranged $1,000 in marked bills to be
mailed to Roybal.
-
—Computer usage monitoring, 6.
—Electronic mail monitoring, 6.
—Cellular radio interception, 5.
—Satellite interception. 4.
began.
Suddenly the filming was moved
up due to another actor getting hurt
and Linville surprised everyone by
already knowing his lines without
having time to practice.
He was amazed once on the set;
he'd never done television and was
shocked to see cue cards being held
up for him.
“Five weeks and I had film in
every studio in that town," exclaim-
ed Linville.
Linville then went on to play a role
in Room 222
WASHINGTON I AP) - Nearly a half-million soldiers and Marines
wearing a new combat helmet may be inadequately protected
because a manufacturer changed production specifications for the
synthetic-material headgear, the Pentagon says.
Officials are investigating whether the manufacturer of the new
helmet, which is designed to replace the familiar “steel pot,” ig-
nored government specifications to improve its profits, William
Caldwell, a Pentagon spokesman, said Wednesday.
More than 460,000 helmets, out of the 800,000 already in use by Ar-
my and Marine Corps units, are affected.
The helmets, produced over the last two years by Gentex Corp, of
Carbondale, Pa., are made of a special resin and synthetic fiber
material known as Kevlar.
Gentex no longer makes the helmets itself, but still supplies the
material for production by two other firms, Caldwell said.
Gentex denied any wrongdoing.
The film “The Silent Scream" will
be presented in a free public showing
Monday at 7 p.m. in the Community
Center.
A moving sonograph of an abortion
being performed is featured in the
film.
The Hereford High School
cheerleaders and Key Club members
will be sponsoring a bonfire and pep
rally at 8 p.m. today behind the
Nazarene Church, Ironwood and
LaPlata.
The rally will begin with a march
led by the HHS band from the
Whiteface Stadium parking lot to the
bonfire site.
Persons wishing to donate wood to
the blaze may call 364-0617.
Hereford clashes with Plainview at
8 p.m. Friday in Whiteface Stadium.
ENID, Okla. (AP) - The second of two men who escaped the
Alfalfa County Jail has been taken into custody, officials say.
Authorities said Carl Wade Smallwood, 33, was recaptured after
he was subdued by an Amarillo, Texas, man who discovered the
fugitive burglarizing his residence.
Smallwood waived extradition to Oklahoma, Sgt. Clay Duke, a
criminal investigator for the Potter County, Texas, sheriff’s office,
told the Enid Daily Eagle.
Smallwood and Art Eric Holtz, 21, escaped from the jail the night
of Oct. 17 when Smallwood overpowered the jailer and locker her in a
cell, authorities said. Holtz was arrested Sunday after he allegedly
robbed a Shattuck farmer and stole his pickup truck.
Duke said Smallwood broke into a rural house two miles northwest
of Amarillo and was collecting food in a pillowcase when the resident
returned.
Smallwood picked up a .22-caliber revolver in the house to hold off
the resident, Rick Crawford, and the man’s girlfriend, Lanell
Canida, Duke said
“The man kicked the gun out of his hand and subdued him on a
waterbed.” Duke said. “He held him at gunpoint until deputies ar-
rived.”
dhepatehes.
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DALLAS (AP) — Sherry Filimonuk says she has not "come out of
the clouds" since she being reunited with her two children, one of
whom recognized his picture on two missing children posters.
It wasn’t until Gregory Filimonuk saw his picture on a poster in a
Dallas restaurant and one displayed on a large truck that he realized
he was one of the millions of children listed as missing in the United
States.
The 8-year-old boy saw the posters on the same day last month
while he was with his father and his sister, Michele, 6. He persistent-
ly questioned his father, who eventually decided to return the
children to their mother.
"I haven't come out of the clouds yet," said Ms. Filimonuk, 28, of
Sacremento, Calif. "I’m just loving them a lot. Touching them,
smelling and keeping them near me... Before I found my children, it
seemed like every minute was an hour and now, an hour seems like a
minute.”
Her children were abudeted while they were visiting their father
for seven days during the 1980 Christmas holiday, authorities said.
THE HEREFORD BRAND I USES 22-00) ts
published daily except Mondays, Saturdays, July
4 Thanksgtvtng Day. Christmas Day and New
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HOUSTON (AP) - A widowed taxi driver with three children who
was robbed and fatally shot has become the seventh Houston driver
slain during the past 13 months, authorities said.
Cecilia N. LaTray, 39, died Wednesday morning, one week after
she received a city permit to drive a taxi for Yellow Cab Co.,
authorities said.
Yellow Cab Co. president Joe Chernow said Ms. LaTray was
almost “penniless” when she took the cab driving job and had three
children, the youngest of whom was 8 and the oldest a teen-ager.
Chernow said the cab company was offering a $5,000 reward for in-
formation leading to the killer's arrest
A witness, the Rev. Henry Idlebird, said he saw a cab drive by his
home about 9:45 a.m. with a passenger in the front seat next to the
driver. The minister said he then heard a gunshot and the sound of a
car speeding off.
Hereford died Wednesday at 8:15
p.m. in her home. —
singnernlesrsicpshrrpendngwith The Hereford Brand
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AUSTIN (AP) — The Public Utility Commission’s decision to seek
more information about AT&T Communications’ $114.5 million rate
hike request is “unreasonable,” says a company official.
"We provided as much information as any utility has ever provid-
ed," said AT&T Vice President Tom Jones.
But Commissioners Peggy Rosson and Dennis Thomas, who
disagreed on whether AT&T is entitled to any more money, agreed
that the company’s rate hike package left unanswered questions.
In a meeting Wednesday, Ms. Rosson said AT&T should get no
hike. Thomas favored a $50 million hike. Jones said the company will
lose about $30 million in Texas this year. He said the $50 million hike
"would not get us out of the red.”
The three-member commission is down to two because Gov. Mark
White has not appointed a replacement for Phil Ricketts, whose
term expired in August.
EREFPSa
f va —
TIMOTEA VILLA
Timotea Garcia Villa, 63, of
_ and civil liberties, said the study
I “shows how the law in this area has
I broken down; it is up to Congress to
I fix it. If we fail to act, the personal
and business communications of
1 Americans will not have the privacy
A protection they deserve.”
I Sen. Charles McC. Mathias.
I R-Md., said the report “documents
I how new and more intrusive forms of
I snooping have followed in the wake
I of the exciting advances in com-
I munications technology,” and
I agreed Congress must "bring
I federal privacy laws up to date '
I The congressional agency said it
I could not estimate the extent of elec-
l tronic surveillance in the private sec-
I tor, saying only “it is probable that
I many forms ... go undetected, and if
I detected, go unreported."
I But in its survey of the federal
I bureaucracy, OTA found 35 agen-
I cies. mostly in the Justice, Treasury
I and Defense departments, used or
I planned to use:
| —Closed circuit television, 29
I agencies.
1 —Night vision systems, 22.
I —Miniature transmitters, 21.
I —Electronic beepers and sensors,
1 15
1 —Telephone taps, recorders, and
, pen registers, 14
“We want you to know we’re there,
that we can support this space com- from small, rural governments
mercialization and we’re dedicated without the banks losing their ability
Party Puppets
Pie-faced pumpkin puppets were
prepared by Mrs. Bernice Blasingame’s
kindergarteners at Walcott School to gear
up for the Halloween Carnival set for Oct.
26. The festivities will begin with a meal
/
We don’t look for government More advanced methods for determ- be difficult to make progress in other
subsidies, we look for government tng&
creating the environment so the effective
AaA
34
WASHINGTON (AP) The explo- eluding modern devices not govern- base network that could track untold devices is easy, and "the law has not
sion in communications technology ed by a landmark 1968 law that cir- numbers of citizens without due kept pace,” the agency said
has so outpaced privacy laws that cumscribed the use of wiretaps and cause. But other devices, such as
.Americans have little or no protec- bugs - concealed microphones. The report, requested by House miniature television cameras and
tion against a plethora of new ways The agency said 36 agencies, not and Senate committees, noted that pen registers — which monitor the
for government or private adver- counting those in foreign in- many new and uncontrolled methods numbers called on a given telephone
saries to pry into their lives, a con- telligence, already use a total of 85 of surveillance are made possible by line — have enabled new ways to spy
gressional agency reported today. computerized record systems for in- the very technologies of which more on people even if their own com-
The non-partisan Office of vestigative or intelligence purposes, and more Americans are availing munications habits are more old-
Technology Assessment found that and maintain 288 million files on 114 themselves - electronic mad. com- fashioned, the agency noted
35 out of 142 domestic federal agen- million people. The report raised the puter conferencing, cellular and cor- Rep Robert W Kastenmeier
cies use or plan to use various elec- “technically feasible” specter of dless telephones, beepers and elec- D-Wis., chairman of the House
tronic surveillance methods, in- these being linked into a single data tronic pagers. Intercepting such Judiciary subcommittee on courts
Alan Alda was doing an invisible Nellie Salgado of Brownfield, JoAnn
baby sit-com at the time and he was Mondragon and Sylvia Benivadez,
called in for the show. both of Hereford, and Felipa Ybarra
"We had the script, we the actors, of Macdona, Tx.; four sons, Alex-
we had a magic,” said Linville. ander Garcia of Muleshoe, Camilo
“We took our time in the filming Villa of Hereford, Angel Villa of
and really got into the characters,” Amarillo and Jimmy Lee Villa of
said Linville. "The finest thing an ac- Brownfield; two stepsons, Tom Villa
tor can do is to look at a show and say of Friona and Cirilo Villa of
"I’ve done good'." Oklahoma City, Ok.; a stepdaughter,
The series M.A.S.H. went on to be Betty Rejino of Muleshoe; a brother
one of America's favorites and it is of Bryan; two sisters, one living in
the only show in the history of televi- Bryan and one residing in Sequin,
sion that has beaten Monday Night Tx.; 38 grandchildren; and 14 great-
A joint public-private push is "ab- to do it," said David Hannah of Space to deduct part of the interest paid to
solutely essential to get this industry Services of America, a private acquire those bonds. This exception
off the ground,” said Robert New, a launch enterprise based in Houston, was proposed by Rep. Ed Jenkins,
Texas Commerce Bank executive D-Ga. The committee had voted last
representing the Houston Economic week to deny any deduction for in-
Development Council. nenc terest paid to buy tax-exempt bonds.
Houston businessman Jack Rains, BERRIES
representing the city's Chamber of PLYMOUTH. Mass. (AP) - A
Commerce, said “reports of our cranberry processor here uses a IRS
(economic) death are greatly exag- century-old test to check the quality of -
gerated.” its fruit.
But, he said, the oil, gas and ..Ocean. Spray says it uses the Explaining beforehand the ap-
petrochemical industries do not pro- dropnngborrnbetes sWtiebt onto a parent shift in US summit priorities
mise new jobs. Space commer- wooden plank. The test works under the away from arms control, a senior ad-
cialization is one of the most promis- premise that a good cranberry ministration official said that unless
ing industries for the area, he said. bounces, while a bad one does not. Soviet expansion is checked, "it will
nation and Linville applied for and At that time, the book “M.A.S.H.”
performed in 120 productions of hit the stands and a producer, Otto
classical theatre. Preminger, took the book to Fox
In Los Angeles, Linville was hired Studios. They told him "get out -
for a part in ‘“Judge for the we’re making real movies here."
Defense,” a 1960’s television series. Producer Gene Reynolds, former-
Linville stated that his landing the ly of “Room 222,” was assigned to
role was sheer fate because in make a series of M.A.S.H.
Hollywood there was no way to get a There was much controversy over
part in film unless you had ex- whether the series would make it due
perience in front of a camera. to the anti-war feeling across the na-
After some heated conversations tion because of the Vietnam war.
between directors and producers, Casting began and Linville was
Linville was given the part and was called in to read the part. Linville did
deemed brilliant. Linville had four what the British had taught him and
days to study his lines before filming got the part.
Business should be space bound
WASHINGTON (AP) — Texas feet what some of these companies vironment in space commercializa-
needs to quit relying on the business are able to do much more than the tion,” Rains said.
of drilling beneath the earth and NASA budget for’86 or’87 or even till “Government policy will dictate
develop industry aimed at the the end of the decade.” the type of opportunities that these
heavens, a group of entrepreneurs Robert Pace of Microgravity fledgling companies will have. What
told Texas congressmen at a Capitol Research Associates of Houston said we want to do is make sure that en-
Hill meeting. his company wants to go into space vironment remains nourishing as op-
Rep. Mike Andrews, D-Houston. to grow special crystals, "sort of like posed to hostile.”
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Curtis, Jeri. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 85, No. 80, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 24, 1985, newspaper, October 24, 1985; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430324/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.