The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 193, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 3, 1983 Page: 2 of 36
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Page LA-TW Herelord Bru 4 April 3, 1983
City leader facea
murder charge/
Six indicted
for bogua plan
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job training council
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Services held for quake victims
HRO rates
subscription rates will
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Cablevision
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reburial.
and a U.S. Air Force C-130
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Four arrested
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Contest Winners
(
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Z
Challenger launch crew ready
for Monday afternoon takeoff
update
sunday
220
7
O.G. Mw
Bob Nigh
in-
to
Sondra Blankenship, left, presi-
dent of the Sugarland Mall
Association, congratulates three
of the Easter coloring contest win-
ners. Taking home stuffed rabbits
Theological Seminary' at Fort
Worth and in addition to her
work in religion she was a
"We have the possibility
and the means to do this," he
added. "We have proved this
more than once. But this is
THE MANO b • member a Te
Asroetated Presa, wheh a exehustvely
crease.
Hereford
from left, Yvonne Padilla, 10;
Autumn Parks, 8; and Sondra
Blankenship, Sugarland Mall
Association president. Nearly 900
entries will be on display in the
mall through Monday.
dispensation so that Mass,
not celebrated on Good Fri-
day. could be said
Much of the cemetery was
heavily damaged by the
from
Baptist
to increase
For the first time in 4*4
years. Home Box Office
estimated 350 triple-headed
medium-range SS-20 nuclear
missiles targeted on Western
Europe
lant sales manager with his
territory covering most of the
United States. "After 12
years of traveling to almost
every state, I decided that I
was tired of being away from
my family and bought a
jewelry store in 1950 at
Borger." Powers said.
GEORGIA WHITEHEAD
Services for Georgia
Whitehead, 94, who died
Thursday, will be at 2 p.m.
Monday in Rose Chapel of
Gililland-Watson Funeral
Home The Rev. Phil Cook of
Amarillo and the Rev Mack
McCarter of First Christian
Church of Hereford will of-
ficiate Burial will be in West
Park Cemetery under direc-
tion of Gililland-Watson
Funeral Home.
foundations of the old
buildings
TRINIDAD SALAZAR
Services for Trinidad
Salazar, 73, were at 11 a.m.
today in Primera Iglesia
Buatista with Rev Henry
Amar officiating Burial will
be in West Park Cemetery
under direction of Gililland-
Watson Funeral Home
"I have that same good
feeling".
AUSTIN I API - Gov. Mark White
named a 34-member State Job Train-
ing Council Fnday to spend 3150
million in federal funds annually for
training and retraining Texas'
unemployed.
Ray Marshall. former U.S.
Secretary of Labor, will be chairman
and Travis County Commissioner
Richard Moya. Austin. vice chair-
man.
"I also began a real estate
and insurance business and
finally retired in 1965."
His wife received her
master of Religious Educa-
te Southeast Missouri where
he was reared and then to
Memphis. Tenn He served
with the Army in the Texas-
Oklahoma 90th division and
then returned to Memphis
before moving to Oklahoma
where he married Lena Scott
in August. 1923
Easter will be a workday,
too, for astronauts Weitz,
Karol J. Bobko. Story
Musgrave and Donald H.
Peterson They are scheduled
for a final fitting of their
space suits and will review
last-minute flight plan
changes.
Canyon; five daughters. Rosa
Ramoz, Modems Lemus and
Julia Salazar, all of Hereford.
Mary Guzman of Houston and
Benita Griego of Santa Rosa.
N.M.; three brothers, Fidel of
Laubbock, Juan of El Paso,
and Ignacio of Lockhart; two
sisters, Fela Castillo and
I omasa Martinez, both at
Austin; 30 grandchildren and
23 great-grandchildren
FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) - A
Grand Prairie couple and four men
have been indicted on charges of con-
sipiring to print more than 8600,000 in
counterfeit 310 bills, prosecutors said.
The alleged scheme collapsed when
two workers in a suburban Houston
ice-cream shop became suspicious
and jotted down the license number of
a pickup truck after its driver passed
a bogus bill, according to the Secret
Service.
The indictments were returned Fri-
day against Dwain Belve Shaw; his
wife, Mary Lynn Shaw; Edwin Ran-
dall Shumer; Jerry Lynn Beal: Ralph
Wayne Durke; and Ronald Davis.
A federal grand jury accused the
Shaws, Shumer and Davis of printing
3600,000 worth of counterfeit bills in
the Shaw's Grand Prairie home dur-
ing late February and early March
Beal and Durke went to the Houston
area March 11 to pass the bogus bills
and Mrs. Shaw mailed other
counterfeit bills to Florida, the indict-
ment charged
The grand jury also charged that
the Shaws sold 350.000 worth of bogus
bills to a Secret Service undercover
agent March 16.
Agents said their investigation
showed the defendants actually
possessed more than 3750,000 worth of
counterfeit bills, but only about 10 got
into circulation.
Purchasers of the counterfeit
money mailed to Florida became
frightened and destroyed the bills, the
Secret Service said.
Astronaut Paul J. Weitz
and his three-man crew were
scheduled to fly T-38 training
jets over the Cape Canaveral
area today to hone skills for
the 5-day trip set to begin
Monday at 1:30 p.m. EST.
They also are to practice in a
plane modified to handle like
the shuttle.
St.
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the
in
wh
m
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SU
the agency said in a state-
ment.
"While there is no easy way
to tell whether thin axle end
buttons are present. the
suspect condition can usually
be physically detected.
Owners may want to ask
dealers and knowledgeable
mechanics to check their
vehicle for axle play," it said.
Tranafer requeata
POPAYAN, Colombia i AP)
— Archbishop Silverio
Buitrago said a funeral Mass
at an altar erected on a pile of
bricks, and 5,000 mourners
laid their loved ones to rest in
a small comer of the local
cemetery untouched by the
earthquake that devastated
this Andean city.
An emergency committee
headed by provincial Gov.
Amalia de Salazar said 194
bodies had been identified by
Friday afternoon, 179 in
Popayan and 15 in surroun-
ding towns. Rescuers, still
searching for victims of
Thursday s quake in tons of
debris said there were at
least 40 more bodies that had
not been identified
Broadcasts appealed for
donations of painkilling
medicines and rat poison.
With 700 people reported in-
jured. the city's hospital and
two clinics were jammed and
medical supplies exhausted
Six helicopters were flying
Puisher
Maw
Si
(
I
'
and ribbons are, from left, Selena
Varner, 5; Shelly Chism, 7; and
Natalie Andrews, 7. Over 900 kids
entered artwork in age divisions
of 2-12.
Countdown for the mission
was moving without a hitch, a
relief to the space agency
which has been plagued by
engine leaks and a con-
taminated cargo. The count-
down schedule was altered
slightly to allow pad crews to
spend at least part of Easter
with their families.
"We've been looking for-
ward to this for quite some
time, longer perhaps than
any crew since STS-1 (the
first shuttle mission)," Weitz
said as the astronauts arrived
Friday on the Kennedy Space
Center runway from their
training base in Houston
"We're here to do a job and
we're ready to go do it."
The mission's primary task
is scheduled for the first half-
day of flight when Musgrave
and Peterson are to deploy a
Tracking and Data Relay
Satellite, the largest, most
complex communications
payload ever built for space
NASA will use the satellite.
White said the recently approved
federal Job Training Partnership Act
will provide about 3150 million a year
to Texas in federal funds for training
and retraining the unemployed and
economically disadvantaged.
"This program provides us’with an
unprecendented opportunity to train
Texans for productive employment,"
he said.
The council's first meeting is set for
April 11
One killed in
control, accidents, injuries. 1: . ■ .
death or property damage," liqUOr Violations
An rtenta reserved tor rn.SHr.UM «
THE MANO wm MMM • a
weekly In February, an, cumverted w
• semiweekly in 1948, to five times a
week on July in
tc
VI
Technical problems with
the suits forced cancellation
of a similar walk during the
fifth flight of the shuttle Col-
umbia in November Colum-
bia is in a Kennedy Space
Center hangar being refur-
bished.
I
eenmt
I
EASTLAND, Texas (API - The
former mayor pro tem al this West
Texas town has been indicted in the
shotgun slaying of his 27-year-old
wife.
Loyal Edward Lundstrom. 59. was
indicted Thursday by an Eastland
County grand jury.
Lundstrom disappeared for nearly
two weeks after the March 3 slaying of
Doris Eileen Lundstrom, but sur-
rendered to authorities at Dallas-Fort
Worth Regional Airport March 16.
Mrs. Lundstrom’s body was found
March 5 at the Cisco Motel, which the
couple owned and operated. An autop-
sy determined she was killed two days
earlier.
Lundstrom was charged with
murder and released from county jail
in Eastland March 21 after a 8200.000
property bond was posted for him.
More than a decade ago, Lundstrom
was convicted of killing his first wife
in Minnesota. The conviction was
overturned, however, and prosecutors
declined to try him again
Lundstrom has resigned from the
Cisco City Council, said Mayor Eris
Ritchie.
Gromyko's news con-
ference began at 9 a.m. (2
a m EST) and lasted two
hours. He opened with a
66-minute-long declaration
before taking written ques-
tions from Soviet and foreign
journalists
Author------
Mrs.
a m
McK
for t
Apri
Mon
howi
mad
love<
canc
thda
who
He purchased a dry clean-
ing plant and laundry at Ard-
more. Okla., and operated it
for 14 years. He then became
a salesman for Warren Refin-
ing and Chemical Co. and
within three years was pro-
moted to district sales
manager for the company
Powers later became assis-
1 F*
i
the worst scenario. That
would be forced upon us.''
Moscow has continually
asserted that there is an ap-
proximate balance of nuclear
power between the super-
powers both globally and in
Europe
Gromyko said that pro-
gress in limiting the arms
race required "first and
foremost" an improvement
in U.S.-Soviet relations.
— from page 1
n
Most of the dead were transport unloaded 25 tons of
elderly people, babies and emergency supplies in Cali.
-----Obituaries-----
Mauri Montgomery Advertising Mgr.
Charlene Browniow Cireulation Mgr.
Big Winners
Winners in the 8-12 year-old
divisons of the Sugarland Mall
Easter coloring contest smile with
ribbons and stuffed rabbits. The
artists are, front from left,
Monica Grotegut, 12; Edward Ti-
jerina, 9; Ann Weaver, 11; top
due May 1
Students from other
districts planning to attend
the Hereford Independent
School District during the
1963-64 school year are re-
quired to officially register
for transfers at the office of
the superintendent of schools
These transfers must be re-
quested before May 1.
The statewide deadline is
set up for students going from
one school district to another
Any questions concerning the
transfer students may be
directed' to the superinten-
dent's office
manager Loyd Ames.
The rate. now at $10 a
month from 38.95 a month,
was effective Friday
Ames said Hereford
Cablevision has absorbed two
other rates since that time,
but due to its new 24-hour air-
time. HBO, Inc., has passed
on its costs to local com-
panies Aines said the rate is
comparable to that in other
cities Hereford's size, noting
that since Hereford Cablevi-
sion is a small independent
operation the subscription
roll is not large enough for a
w
Ep2z
r 4 d
Baa
Hereford police arrested
four persons for liquor viola-
tions Friday night. The viola-
tions were for driving while
intoxicated, drunk in control
of a motor vehicle, underage
consumption and public in-
toxication. A fifth person was
arrested on suspicion of
public drunk, but was suffer-
ing from an injury which
made him appear drunk
Two shoplifters were taken
into custody at Jack and Jill.
Other reports filed were
- From a woman whose car
window was shattered by a
BB pellet as she drove down
U.S. 385
- Of a theft of a vehicle at
Bowling's Bowl where about
3200 In tools were taken from
a pickup bed.
- Of a 8120 10-speed bike
taken from 424 Fir.
- Another vehicle burglary
where 875 in tapes,
sunglasses and a knife were
taken from 418 Fir.
Thirteen tickets were
issued end one accident
report filed.
calligraphy using one of my
poems.
"It brought tears to my
eyes. She thought my book
was good. When a parent
Mian , i hears praise about her child.
! she feels a great sense of
Meema pride."
Radio and TV stations in the nearby towns of Cajimio,
Bogota appealed for dona- Piendamo and Mondomo
tions from the public and
and Peterson are to don space
suits and stop into
Challenger's open cargo bay
for a 3%-hour dual space
walk. They will test the suits
and techniques for retrieving
and repairing satellites on
future missions.
police car wreck
HOUSTON (AP) - One person was
killed and four others. Including two
police officers, were injured today
when a car slammed into the back of a
police patrol car and careened into a
building, police Mid.
The identities of the victims and the
extent of their injuries were not im-
mediately known
The patrol car, with two officers in-
side, was parked in front of a Sears
store on the city's southside about 2
a.m. as other officers checked for a
burglar, investigators said.
Another vehicle slammed into the
back of the patrol car, which was
pushed about 100 feet down the street
into a utility truck owned by Houston
Power & Lighting, according to
police.
The vehicle then ran into the side of
the department store and burst into
flames that engulfed it and the truck,
police said.
Officers at the scene rescued a
passenger from (he car. but were
unable to save the driver, according
to police.
Weather
West Texas — Mostly fair and
warmer through Sunday Highs 60
Panhandle to 74 south and 85 Big Bend
valleys. Lows 36 Panhandle to 46
south. Highs Sunday 68 Panhandle to
84 southeast and near 90 Big Bend.
_I
$ J
more severe cases to Cali. 66 teen-agers caught unaware
miles to the north An addi- when the quake struck Many
tional 1,300 people were were killed in Popayan s 17th
treated for minor injuries and century Roman Catholic
sent home cathedral, which collapsed
The U S Embassy in during early Mass
Bogota said it did not know if Broadcasts appealed for
any U.S. citizens were among medical supplies including
the victims, sodium pentothal and other
President Belisario Betan- pain killers. One broadcast
cur attended the burial asked for rat poison to use
ceremony, for which the ar- against an army of rodents
chbishop granted a special driven from their nests in the
Asked if Moscow would
retaliate if NATO goes ahead
with the planned missile
deployment, Gromyko
reiterated the Kremlin's
threat that The Soviet Union
will have to take steps to pro-
tect itself.”
CAPE CANAVERAL, Fla which has a 57-foot wingspan
(AP) - “We were ready in when its antennas are extend-
January and we’re ready ed, as a relay point for com-
now,” says the commander of mands and messages bet-
the new space shuttle ween Earth and as many as
Challenger, scheduled for 26 orbiting satellites, in-
launch Monday after a eluding space shuttles.
2 M-month series of On Thuraday, Musgrave
postponements Er2322auman
temblor, which exposed hun- opened assistance and
dreds of coffins and broke reconstruction funds in some
most open Sanitation teams of the principal banks
began collecting the remains. U.S. Ambassador Thomas
disinfecting them with Boyatt flew to Popayan to
quicklime and reburying view the damage and said the
them in a common grave But American government will
many families objected and do whatever is necessary ’ to
took their relatives' coffins to help the victims. U.S aid so
neighboring communities for far includes 1.000 field tents
SARAS
was a kid
you see ir
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Howeve
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father, w
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dual U.S •
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mother, t
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made en
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acknow le<
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Herald-Tr
The con
the mone
March 26
ride with i
•••••
school teacher for many
years.
Not one to sit idle, Powers
has recently become editor of
The Manorite,'' a monthly
publication for King’s Manor
and Westgate residents The
first publication was
distnbuted in February and
there have been three papers
sent to press to date.
Powers sums up his feel-
ings of his latest book One of
my wife's friends, who is an
art teacher at Pomona, Cal.,
read my latest volume of
poetry and made a
in Asia because of the
military potential of Japan
He noted that not one
single medium-range
missile” could reach the ter-
ritory of the United States
while each American
missile could reach the ter-
ritory of the Soviet Union.”
It would take an American
missile launched from
Western Europe one-sixth
or one-seventh" of the time a
Soviet missile would need to
reach the United States, he
said
Gromyko was apparent!}
referring to each of the 108
Pershing 2 and 464 cruise
missiles NATO plans to
deploy later this year in
Western Europe if there is no
agreement in the U.S.-Soviet
missile reduction negotia-
tions in Geneva
The Pershing 2 missiles are
slated to be stationed only in
West Germany and would
take an estimated six or
seven minutes to reach Soviet
territory, the Kremlin
asserts
The new-generation
American missiles are being
installed to counter what
NATO says is the threat of an
tion degree
Southwestern
I,
Six other countries also are
sendingaid.
A pall of fine dust hung over
Popayan’s ruins. About 3,000
buildings half of this
450-year-old city — were
destroyed, and officials said
2,400 more were so bad!}
damaged the} would have to
be leveled.
The quake, which hit at 8:15
a.m . measured 5.5 on the
Richter scale and lasted 18
seconds
Damage was also heavy in
Mr Salazar died Thursday discount from HBO.
at his home. ........<—
He was born June 5,1909. in ™Eu"EREMonD anaND.usPs
Lockhard and married a.,,
Josephina Zuniga in 1948 at Day. < hristmas Day ana New Year
Lamesa They moved to Day. by the Meretord Brand, Ine. »
Hereford in 1961 from Lov- Iana!Merelord. T. T. Secomd du
ington, N.M He was a hide Rerforar postMsTEA ww
processor at a packing plant dress change u the Mereferd Brama,
He was a Baptist • « Box m. Meretord, TV. mu.
Survivors include his wife; sunSeniTon. nafES: Pycorterts
four sons, Pablo at Sun- ^r.HynuuuiwLsoiiswarfwZ
nyside, Albert of Hereford, m m per year, ether arem
Tony of Midland, and Jesse of by ““d • per year.
■I *i
rg .
The longtime Hereford
resident died at Georgia
Manor Rest Home in
Amarillo after a long illness.
She was a homemaker and
a Baptist
She was bom Oct. 16. 1888,
in Birmingham, Ala., and
married C.L. Whitehead on
July 26, 1907 in McKinney
The couple moved to
Hereford in 1917. He died in
1946
Survivors Include two
daughters. Mrs. Verdon
Watts of Hereford and Mrs.
William C. Kelley Jr. of
Amarillo; four grandchildren
and eight great-
grandchildren
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Nigh, Bob. The Hereford Brand (Hereford, Tex.), Vol. 82, No. 193, Ed. 1 Sunday, April 3, 1983, newspaper, April 3, 1983; Hereford, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1430223/m1/2/: accessed June 5, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Deaf Smith County Library.