Page2A I December 18, News Summary The World STILL HOPES FOil PEACE Pope Paul VI said Sunday he regrets the world will not receive the gift of a Vietnam peace for Christmas. "We had been awaiting peace in the Far East as a human gift worthy of the feast of Christmas," the Pope said. "Instead, it has been announced to the world that peace still is not ripe. It is sad. Bitterness invades our heart as a result this delay.
But must not lose the strength of spirit to go on hoping, to hope always." The Nation 'WORST LOOKING SIGHT' The wail of the four- month-old boy led farmer David Olen Lee to an old dormitory for migrant farm workers Sunday in Benson, N.C. When he looked inside the building "it was the worst looking sight I've ever seen," Lee said. "A dead mother and a baby lying beside it." Mrs. Bonnie Neighbors, 33, bound hand and foot, gagged and blindfolded, had been shot twice. SEARCH CONTINUES The Coast Guard continued a search Monday for the Sammie Lee, a 75-foot tuna boat which reported it-was taking on water south of its home port of Freeport.
The Coast Guard said it spotted a life ring Sunday in the search area, about 80 miles south of Freeport, but was unable to determine if it was from the vessel. HERRIGAN TO RESUME FIGHT Barring a change in ideas and determination, the Rev. Phillip Berrigan will resume his social activism and fight against war after, his parole from a federal prison Wednesday. Under parole terms, Berrigan will be specifically assigned to research the needs of blacks after he is released from the prison at Danbury, Conn. McCRARYS EXTRADITED Two members of an itinerant Texas family have been extradited to Colorado on kidnap and murder charges and are being held in the county jail.
Carl Robert Taylor, 34, and, Sherman, McCrary, his father-in-law, 47, were flown from California to Colorado Friday night. They-are charged witli the 1971 slaying of Leora Rose Looney, 20, of Thornton, a Denver suburb. FIRES SWELL TOLL Fires which claimed at least seven lives helped to swell the violent death toll in Texas during the last weekend before Christmas. Altogether The Associated Press tabulated reports of 31 fatalities, including 19 in traffic accidents, between p.m. Friday and midnight Sunday.
In one of the worst tragedies, a single home fire claimed five victims in Lufkin. GUNMAN KILLS ONE A man angered becauie he was being thrown out of a tavern drew a pistol and opened fire Sunday.night, shooting and killing the bar owner wounding two women. The gunmen fled. Police said the bar owner tried to eject two couples who were fighting when the man drew the gun- The Weather Attacks Believed Retaliation Ky COLIN BAKER BELFAST Gunmen shot and wounded a woman Sunday in northern Belfast, the eighth person struck during the weekend by assailants cruising the city's streets in cars. She was the only woman among the casualties.
The other casualties, all shot Saturday, included three Roman Catholics and four Protestants. Other weekend violence in the province left two men dead, one a 26-year-old' butcher found hanging from one of his own meat hooks, and the other a liquor store owner shot by thieves. The'two deaths raised to GGU Ihc'number of victims of political and religious strife -iri Northern Ireland in nearly years; The eight shootings by cruising gunmen, police said, apparently came in retaliation for killings earlier in the week which officials blamed on hatred 1 between fanatics among the majority Protestant and i i a Catholic communities. One of the.eight was Andrew Agnew, the 13-year-old brother of a leader of the Ulster Vanguard Movement, a militant Protestant political a i a i composed chiefly of workers. In one of the weekend murders, army spokesmen said, a 26-year-old butcher was found hanging from a meat hook in the refrigerator of his shop Saturday in the town of Derrylin, 100 miles southwest of Belfast.
In the other murder, a spokesman said two gunmen shot and killed liquor store owner Joseph Bianey Saturday i in a Belfast-suburb. The army linked Blaney's death with the general decline of law and order in the province but not with the wave of religious killings that has swept the province. troops arrested, two suspected officers of the Irish Republican Army's extremist provisional wing during the weekend. The army said it believed one of the Sean Keerian, 22, was the former secbnd-incommancl of the Provisional wing. in Londonderry.
One Man Is Injured In Accident Stock Markets UPlTelephon, CHURCH ISOMBICD Soldiers inspect damaged St. Brigid's Roman Catholic Church entrance in Belfast, blown apart by a bomb for the second time late Saturday, this time only 20 minutes after parishioners left confession. British troops also reported the capture, of another high-ranking IRA member Sunday. I A i 1 Crewmen's Area Deaths I Work Still THE FORECAST-- During Monday night, showers will be noted in the northern and mid-Pacific coast, while snow and sleet will fall over the northern and central Rockies. Clear to partly cloudy skies elsewhere.
I I TEMPERATURES Atlanta 34, Boston 26, Chicago 23, Cleveland 23, Denton 37, Denver 27, Duluth 12, Jacksonville 42, Kansas City 30, Little Rock 35, Los Angeles 45, Miami 58, Minneapolis 13, New Orleans 47, New York Phoenix 38, San Francisco 45, Seattle 45, St. Louis 35, Washington 27. NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE Selected tabulation of stock prices as of 10:30 a.m. New York time today as quoted by Paine, Webber, Jackson and Curtis. Figures include last sale and change from previous day's close.
AlcoriLabs dn VB Amerace Esna 25Vj dn Vb American Motors 8Vi dn Vb Aztec Oil Gas unch Amer. Tel Tel 5Wi Braniff Brown Sharpe 13V? CoHTns Radio Dr Pepper Ennis Bus. Forms General Mills General Motors Genera I Tel. Gulf Oil Jnt'IHarv. Josten's Keebter Kroger LTV Lone Star Gas j.C.
Penney Pepsi Safeway Sears Texaco Texas Industries Texas Instruments Texas Utilities Union Oil of Calif 8CPA 39 32 87 29 37 dn dn unch dn Va dn dn 3fe dn dn 1V 2 dn dn Va dn unch unch dn Vz dn dn 3 dn 1 dn dn dn 1 fn dn Vz dn 2 3 dn dn OTHER STOCKS Castle Castle Warrants Lifetime Security LSLCorp. Florence Miller F. Miller Warrents Zales Jewelry OVER-THE- COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the National Association of Securities Dealers are representative interdealer prices as of 10:30 a.m. New York time. Interdealer market change throughout retai( markup, markdown and commissions.
First Nat'l Bank 86Vz Merc. Nat'l Bank 32'A Moore Corp. Ltd. SS'A Morrison Inc. N.
Western Nat'l Life 2 Pacific Lumber Republic Nat'i Bank Republic Nat'l Life Southland Paper 17Vz Southwest Bar-shares 31 Southwestern Life 42Vfr Steak and Ale uv? Tex. Bank and Trust 34Vj Dow Jones Average 10:30 a.m. New York time 30 Industries 1010.31 dn 16.93 20Transportation228.9S dn 3.75 Herschel Neal Skiles of 1721 Bolivar was listed in good condition at Flow Memorial Hospital Monday morning after sustaining injuries in a three-car Sunday accident. The accident occurred at 1:40 p.m. in the 600 block of Fort Worth Drive: According to -police reports, Skiles' 1946 model jeep was involved in a collision with a 1971 Ford driven by Nelson Thomas Pockrus of Justin and a parked vehicle.
The vehicle Pockrus was driving, reports indicated, is a' Denton County Sheriffs Department car. Pockrus is a deputy. Two Dentonites were treated and released from Flow following a Saturday morning traffic mishap. Sustaining apparent minor injuries in the accident was Loys Jay Beaty of 705 Juno Lane and Lynne A. Lovell of 3309 Cactus Circle.
The accident, which occurred at 11:55 a.m. Saturday.in the 700 block of Sherman Drive, incolved a 1968 Chevrolet driven by Beaty and a 1971 Pontiac driven by William F. Lovell of 3309 Cactus Circle. D. F.
Roberts LEWISVILLE Funeral services for D. F. Roberts, 84, of Lcwisville are pending at the Lucas-Halden Funeral Home. Mr. Roberts died Monday morning.
Earl Compton LEWISVILLE Funeral services for Earl Compton, 64, of Athens, are pending at the Lucas-Halden Funeral Home. Mr. Compton died Sunday evening in Tyler. Ruth La very BATON ROUGE, La. -Funeral services for Ruth True Lavery, 47, of Haton Rouge, are" pending at the Welch's Funeral Home.
Mrs. Lavery, a former resident of Denton, died Saturday. She is survived by her husband, John F. Laverv of Baton Rouge, and one "daughter, Mrs. Lfnda Elder of El Paso.
James Caraway DECATUR Funeral services James Monroe Caraway, 63, of "Decatur, were held at 2 p.m.-Sunday at the Christian Funeral Home Chapel with the Rev. Ray Hawkins officiating. Burial was at the Sweetwater Cemetery. Mr. Caraway died Friday evening in Decatur.
Born Oct. -11, 1909. near Decatur, he was a lifelong resident of Decatur and a stock farmer. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Callie Caraway of Decatur; one daughter Mrs.
Shirley Foster of Tucumcari, N.M.; two Kenneth Caraway and Burt Caraway, bolh of Decatur; and six grandchildren. Pallbearers were Junior Janecka, Lonnie Sherman, C. 0. Shaw, Shorty Fox, Herbert White "and T. Sherman.
McCasland of Terrell, Don McCasland of Dallas, Berl McCasland and Jerl McCasland, both of San Angelo; four sisters, Mrs. Frankie Herman of Sulphur Springs, Mrs. Mary Barbara of Fort Worth, Mrs. Addine Garrett of Bridgeport and "Mrs. Joyce Roebuck of Oklahoma City, two brothers, Pete Riggs and Buck Riggs both of Fort Worth; and 11 grandchildren.
Christian Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Charles R. Brewer Rosary for Charles Roscoe Brewer, 73, of Shreveport, was held at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the SchmiU- Floyd-Hamlett Funeral Home Chapel." Funeral services were to be held al 10:30 a.m. Monday at the I a a Conception Catholic Church with the Rev.
Joseph A. Schumacher officiating. Burial was to be at Roselawn Memorial Park. He is survived by three Mrs. Billie Rodden of." Dallas.
Mrs. Barbara" Gibbs of Little Rock, and Mrs. David M. Rimmer of Shreveport, one son, R. Brewer of Temple; one sister, Mrs.
Jewel Nowlin of Denton; one brother, Lewter Brewer of Durango, 19 grandchildren and seven great- grandchildren. Schmitz-Floyd-Hamlett. Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Gut Out ABOARD USS TICONDEROGA (AP) Seventeen is the last Apollo, but its three crewmen's work won't end when they board this recovery ship on splashdown Tuesday. They'll immediately begin tests to aid America's "next space venture Skylab.
Instead of going straight to the Ticonderoga's hospital when "a helicopter brings them aboard, Eugene A. Cernan, Harrison II. Schmitt and Ronald E. Evans will enter a new facility called a Skylab Mobile Laboratory or SML. Splashdown is scheduled at 2:24 p.m.
Tuesday in the South Pacific, 350 miles southeast of American Samoa. SML includes six box-like structures each 19 feet long, 14 feet wide arid 9 feet tali and occupies the rear part of the adjoining where the returned Apollo "17 spacecraft will be housed. Each little building has'a tag identifying its function: i i endocrinology a a jf laboratory, cardiovascular laboratory and microbiology laboratory. Mel Richmond, Apollo 17 1 deputy recovery team leader, said the SML has everything the doctors and technicians will need to i examine astronauts for the effects of the moon flight. lj The Apollo 17 crew also will ff BIRTHS Flow Memorial, Friday: Boy to 1 Mr.
and Mrs. Kendell E. White, Box 230, Highland Oaks Tr. Flow Memorial, Saturday: Girl to Mr, and Rusty E. Griffith, Rf.
1, Box 2H, 1 Flow Memorial, Sunday: Girl to Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Reynolds. Rt. Haven Hills Est.
No. 29, Lewisville. DISMISSALS Flow Memorial, Friday: Neilan E. Cook, Box 338, Sanger; Albert Wells, lit. 1, Box 169M, Frisco; Herminia Gloria, 21QM.
'Smith, 1442 Dogwood Roy White, 3603 Ruth Fort Worth; Sonora White, Box 196, Aubrey; George Elkins 820 Cook; Jadie Anne Mulvihill, 2016 W. Oak; Blanche Atkins, 620 Bolivar; Paula E. Stone, 1010 Bolivar; ValeraB. Clark, 210 S. Carroll; Nancy Griffin and infant, Rt.
5, Box 85, Silverdome Tr. Florence Sue Prescher and infant, Rl. 1, Valley View; Nola Mae Hicks, 1245 N. Cowan, Lewisville; James H. Collins, P.
0. Box 392, Dallas; Velma L. Smith, Rt. 2, Box 613; Lilly J. Cross and i a Dallas Roanoke; Janey M.
Maloney, 1346 Clyde T. McWilliams, RL 173, Frisco; John R. McCuistaion, Rt. 1, Box 423, Sanger; Jack Stanley, 706 Gober; Sharon U.Harp,_RL 1, Aubrey; Walter Albers, Rt. 1, Aubrey; Robert L.
Marshall, 423 Bolivar; Arthur H. Trail, 2302 Denison Dr. Flow Memorial, Saturday: Walter N. Myers, 1711 Mercedes; Patsy A. Pol etc, P.
0. Box 125, Era; Winnie M. Box 16, Flower Mound; Marvai B. Aroyx, 4 1 6 rvi lopics Sanger; Rita Ann Price, Rt. 1, Tioga; Deborah A Pence, 2420 Dennison Ruth M.
Durham, 1712. Crescent; Pearl S. 710 Malorie; -Charles McCreless 3920 Oklahoma City, I Anita J. Anderson, 402 Cardinal, Apt. Arden Charles Curtis, 717 Mullins, 'Lewisville; Juanita Irick, 0.
Box 93, Aubrey; Harry G. LaGrone, P. 0. Box 1300 Ridgecrest; Charlene Myrtle; Sondra L. Compton and infant, Rt.
3, Box 85, Lewisville; Maple D. Shinn, 317 S. Charles, Lewisville; Maretta S. Hire, 9378 Pinyon Tree Lane No. 116, Dallas; Gail K.Graham, 2108 Crestwood; fommye Lee Vosburg, 231 Ridgeway Lewisville; Walter Lee Greer, 313 S.
Wood; Timothy Reed Leach, 633 S. Denton Gainesville. DISMISSALS Flow Memorial, Sunday: Sally Deussen and infant," Box 224, Ponder; John Powell, 800 W. Hickory; Cecil L. Baugus and infant, 513 Neptune Carol Ford, 1121 N.
Locust; Jennifer A. Widder, 521 Pershing; Linda I. Mallouf, 2503 Rockwood Lane; Nancy L. Whitfield, Box i School Board To Discuss Curriculum jThe Denton school board will meet 7 a.m. Tuesday 'to study what curriculum changes will be necessary, when the public schools switch to'the quarter system next fall.
By law all public schools must have switched by September, 1973, to a'system which divides the existing 180 days required attendance for students into three parts an optional fourth quarter available in the summer." Cong Calls Halt I During Holidays Union Officials Hold Company Responsible H. McCasland DECATUR Funeral services for Ben Hardin McCasland, 59, of San Angelo, were to be held at 10 a.m. Monday at the Fundamental Baptist Church with the Rev. Max Smiley and Ed Reed officiating. Burial was to be at the Greenwood Cemetery.
Mr. McCasland died Saturday in San Angelo. Born April 18, 1913, in Tennessee, he was a heavy equipment operator. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Johnnie McCasland of San Angelo; two daughters, Mrs.
Betty Brock and Mrs. Gail Stewart both of Decatur; five sons, Bill McCasland of Chico Royce MULLENS, W.Va. (UPI) The lives of 24 men killed in two weekend explosions could have been spared if only safety regulations were enforced, United Mine Workers of America (UM- WA) President-elect Arnold Miller charged Sunday. Five miners were killed and three injured critically when sparks from an underground trolley set off a meihanegas explosion at the Itmann No. 3 mine Saturday.
Thnt tragedy came 30 hours after four gas explosions killed 19 men and injured 10 others at a new co*ke plant at Weir ton. The plant was built by Koppers Co. for the Weirton Steel Co. i "disgust" with mine safety enforcement after touring the Ilmann pit and said strict enforcement of present laws would avert such disasters. Mine safety experts blamed inadequate or faulty underground ventilation for the buildup of methane gas in the mine, which employed 270 men.
"It's obvious to me that wliat has been done in the pasthas not been sufficient. I think the Mine Workers Union now has a leadership to work' with the membership to provide safety. We're hoping that the operators will cooperate. For those who won't we'll find other dealing with safety," Miller said. TOKYO (AP) North Vietnam said today that the Viet Cong would observe its usual Christmas-New Year cease-fire this year although it rejects President Nguyen Van Thieu's proposal for release of prisoners of war during the truce period.
Nhan Dan, the North Vietnamese Communist party newspaper, said American prisoners of war would be freed only after the U.S.-Hanoi peace agreement is signed and "seriously carried out." I Nhan Dan said the Viet Cong would suspend attacks on Christmas, New Year's and other traidtional festivals as they have in the past. But it said there will be no cease- Is fire in the "U.S.-puppet manner." The paper did not say when the cease-fire periods I would begin nor how long they would last. MOTOROLA Quazar I TV AND A I A 187 2018 Edqlt Dnve KIRBY VACUUM CLEANERS '507 N. Locust 38 7-4 395 McNATT RENT-A-CAR SOS N. Elm Doily Weekly Monthly Oldj OMEGA FOR UNHUCHnttii II 38T-S40L 11 RAMEY KING SALUTES Sarn Gentry For his 36 years as a Denton peace officer.
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