18/The Battalion/Thursday, September 6, 1984 DEI.TAirPSII.Oir 150 Years of Tradition Non-hazing!Non secret Rush Parties: Thurs. Sept. 6 Sat. Sept. 8 8p.m. At Whiterock Hall, Across From The Main Gate of TAMU. Call Donnie 260-3681 Richard 693-1477for info Ghost town hopes to prosper again Silver still lies in Texas mine MSC INTERNATIONAL PROGRAMS COMMITTEE 1st General Committee Meeting Thursday, Sept. 6 at 6:00 p.m. in Rudder 407 Persons interested in increasing International Awareness at A&M please attend. Officer applications available in MSC Student Programs office. United Press International SHATTER — Silver prices fell and miners got discouraged, but the 30 remaining residents of an old Big Bend mining town are hoping inves tors will take another look at the pre cious metal under Cibolo Creek. “I’ve never seen a ghost around here,” said Guadalupe Munoz, who has been postmaster at Shafter for more than 40 years. “Sure, we look like a ghost town, but there’s still a few families living here and we like the quiet.” Unlike most West Texas creeks — which are dry — Cibolo Creek is a clear water stream that flows by a wooded area nestled between a pass in the mountains on the highway be tween Marfa and Presidio in a re mote area of West Texas. A faded, decaying church, the paint from its steeple peeling in the sun, is still used occasionally when a visiting priest from Presidio, 20 miles away, arrives to celebrate Mass, Munoz said. At its peak, Shafter had a popula tion of more than 3,000, she recalls, but when the price of silver went down, miners got discouraged and left. Like many West Texas towns suf fering from economic problems, the settlers moved on to other areas, leaving their homes to deteriorate in the harsh West Texas climate. A few families still cling to their homesteads in Shafter, Munoz said. Others have moved on to places as far away as California. “We get a number of visitors in the winter months, when the rest of Texas is cold,” she said. “They hook up their trailers in Shafter and spend the winter in the area. One re tired gentleman comes all the way from Wisconsin and spends the win ter in his house here.” A Texas historical marker erected in the 1930s commemorates the ef forts of Rancher Milton Favor as be ing the founder of Shafter, suppos edly named after a U.S. Army general. Favor was the first Anglo-Ameri can rancher in the Big Bend area, the monument reads, and was in strumental in developing a series of towns to ward off warring Apaches. Oldtimers in the Big Bend coun try say the best defense against the Apaches were the haciendas built by the ranchers who owned the land when it was part of Mexico. Many of the old haciendas are now West Texas towns, historians said. While Shafter may have been founded in the 1800s, historians said, the silver mining boom lx‘gan in the ’20s. Estimates of the original population vary from 3,000 to 30,000, but ruins of old homes in the area would favor the smaller num ber, Munoz said. Cibolo Cheek overflowed 1930s, tilling up the mine the mine was closed, ’’ dents said. Several recent have been made to reopen _ but the declining price of slit made the operation unprofftl) There’s always a possibilr. the mine will open again bet the invention of new equj Munoz said. Then Shafiet look like a ghost town anymott A federal government tej who asked not to be (juot(d,it prospect of reopening the mine depends entirely on lit of silver. “If silver pric es go up, Shafir business again,” he said. Ti plenty of silver under CiboloL. It's hard-rock mining andiu lot of money to get it out, bui tors are keeping their • — Shatter and on the silver marl; Vol Geter says he feels sorry for prosecutor HILLEL JEWISH STUDENT CENTER 800 JERSEY, COLLEGE STATION 696-7313 LIST OF COMING EVENTS Friday night service is at 8 p.m. every Friday Sept. 8 First Torah Sept. 15 New Year’s Eve Party 8 p.m. Sept. 16 Pizza & Lectnre(model service) at 6 p.m. Sept. 25 Rosh Hashana lecture 6 pm. Sept. 26 Rosh. Hashana 8 p.m. Sept. 27 Rosh Hashana 10 am. Sept. 28 Rosh Hashana 10 am. Oct. 5 Kol Nidre 8 pm. service Oct. 6 Break the fast here Oct. 10 SAMI Sukkot Picnic - time pending Oct. 13 Match dance 8 p.m. Oct. 18 Simchat Torah Happening 8 pm. United Press International DALLAS — Lenell Geter, the black engineer convicted and freed for a crime he said he never com mitted, said Wednesday he felt sorry for the man who prosecuted him — now that the wheelchair-bound man faces solicitation of prostitution charges. “I just feel sorry for him (Kenneth Dean Carden) in that he was the as sistant district attorney and held such a high esteemed office,” Geter said. In addition, Norman Kinne, who is Carden’s superior in the district at torney’s office, said Carden’s claims he was investigating the slaying of a pimp at the time of the arrest had “credence.” Carden was part of the team that successfully prosecuted Geter, an E- Systems engineer, and got him sen tenced to life in prison on an armed robbery charge. Later disclosures about alibis and witness testimony won Geter a new trial but the DA’s office dropped the charges before that trial began. Kinne said an internal investiga tion has been ordered to see if (har den can be reinstated. Police report edly were planning to give a polygraph examination. “T here is no polygraph scheduled for Carden presently." said police spokesman Bob Shaw. “Thai doesn’t mean we won’t give him one later on.” Carden, who was released Satur day after posting bond in the Friday arrest, could not be reached for comment Wednesday. “The case is being investigated." said District Attorney Henry Wade. “He may -be reinstated pending the outcome of the case.” Carden earlier said he resigned to avoid embarrassing the DA’s office. “I discovered there were possibly some people I wanted to talk to who were whores," he said. "I i_ overstepped my Ixuindsoni gating this case. “If I had to do it oven said. *T would have wait next night” and alerted he was wot king undercover. | The misdemeanor pro licitation charge against I ties a maximum t>cnahyi in jail and a $1,090 fine oc^ lion. Police said they alsoi ing a weapons charge den. A 45-c«tliber pistol; vice were found in Lardeai officers said Vietnam veteran: Salvadorans are refugees United Press International CORPUS CHRISTI — The de fense argued Tuesday that Vietnam veteran Jack Elder had no intention of violating immigration laws when he drove two Salvadorans to a bus station last spring. Elder, 40, director of a Roman Catholic-sponsored refugee center near the Texas Mexico border, could be sentenced up to 15 years in prison if convicted of conspiracy and two counts of transporting illegal aliens. Attorney Steven Cooper of St. Paul, Minn., opened arguments be fore U.S. District Judge Hayden Head Jr. on 25 motions he has filed to dismiss the three felony charges against Elder. Elder is a staunch sup porter of the “Sanctuary Movement” network of churches offering refuge to Central Americans in defiance of Immigration and Naturalization Service policies. He is the third Sanctuary Movement supporter arrested on immigration charges and the second to be tried. Stacey Lyin Merkt, 29, a religious layworker at the same refu gee center, was sentenced to three years probation after his jury convic tion in Brownsville last June. Cooper maintained that the Salva dorans were fleeing “a war /.one” and are entitled to refugee status un der both the Geneva Convention Accord and 1980 U.S. Refugee Act. “The defense believes if the per sons are illegally here, there can be no crime because he (Elder) had no intent (to violr.te the law),” Cooper argued. Under the Geneva Accords, a country has no right to send bona- fide refugees back to “a war zone.” Assistant U.S. Attorney Robert Berg — who must show Elder "will fully and intentionally” violated the law — countered Tuesday that there was no wav for Elder to have known wheih count i Her before their Kld< by reli becaus fleeing grattot tn mos El Salv be kill< rr tr le d o HERB'S ARCADE xjVStf The Magical Um KNq 313 College Main - Two Blocks Behind Loupot's 8 FREE Tokens Worth $1 00 With This Coupon -Come In Soon- Come In And Play The Best For Less! Poetry O The Black Light Theater of Prague MSC OPAS September 18 Tickets: MSC Box Office 845-1234 The Mongolian House "The Restaurant Everyone's Talking About" Zv ALL YOU CAN EAT! Featuring Mongolian Bar-B-Q and Chinese Buffet DAILY LUNCH >♦♦($4.95 SUNDAY CHAMPAGNE LUNCH DINNER $6.95 £♦♦■ 693-1736 $6.95 ''■vwv: of College Station isos s. t*. 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