AGGIELI0EWS THE BATTALiHhE BATTALION 5A Thursday, January 30, 2003 BlitjBidders vie for piece audkiuM historic Texas ranch Kiowa Natl. | Grassland, N.M. By Betsy Blaney I THE ASSOCIATED PRESS I DALHART, Texas — As a Joung girl, Susan Shamburger Bagwell rode on horseback Brass the vast land that her fam- By owned, land that once was Ipart of a legendary West Texas ■inch. I The XIT Ranch once spanned 3 million acres of the Bexas Panhandle and spilled Bver into Oklahoma and New Blexico. It helped finance the stale Capitol in Austin. I On Wednesday, Bagwell and Bther family members watched Bs dozens of buyers placed bids Bn all or portions of one of the Brgest remaining parcels of the Bid XIT, the B7,000-acre C.D. Bhamburger ftanch. “It will ilways be part of ny life,” said fcagwell, 56, who low lives in the ealthy Dallas Inclave of ighland Park, love this land. Ibis property, the fistory, the ildlife. It’s just ioul nourishing. That’s all you can say about it.” Some Texas history buffs were melancholy about the prospect of one of the last large pieces of the XIT being chopped up. “It’s a very sad chapter in the history of the XIT Ranch because that division is just going to disappear,” said William Green, curator of histo ry at the Panhandle-Plains Historical Museum in Canyon. ‘Tfs.kiad of the end of an era.” sm said he couldn’t even is to be on the sh bear to go the auction; it was too •adan occasion. Bidding on the Shamburger and began Wednesday morning nd continued into late after- oon. Bids were accepted on ndividual tracts or the whole anch, with the land to be sold he manner resulting in the high- st sales price. By late afternoon, the top )ids totaled nearly $8 million, or ibout $210 an acre. More than a century ago, the and sold for 50 cents an acre in xchange for a new state Capitol n Austin. In 1879, the patriarchs of History for sale At least 37,000 acres of land in three states are on the auction block Wednesday in Daihart, Texas. The parcels were once part of the famed XIT Ranch. OKLA. Tracts 13-43 Clayton 5; \| Tract 12 SOURCES: Associate Press; ESRI MANCE • THE BAVy'-' om outside Texas lifferent back- n see a program isting directors.I i that of “The Rei thinks the next d take place in a pick a dorm and ' he said. I Longmire Dr. iollege Station Texas wanted a new Capitol but didn’t have money to build it. The Legislature set aside 3 mil lion acres of land in the Panhandle to finance a new building. The need became more urgent in 1881, when the old Capitol burned to the ground. The next year, an Illinois contractor agreed to build a new home for the Legislature in exchange for the land. The con tractor later sold his interest to a group that eventually became known as the Capitol Syndicate, which financed most of the cost of the new Capitol and estab lished the XIT Ranch. The syndicate owners fenced the entire range with 6,000 miles of barbed wire — an audacious move in the days of the open range — and brought in up to 150,000 head of cattle. About 100 cowboys tended the range and livestock for $30 a month and all they could eat. Legend has it that the XIT name stood for “10 in Texas,” because the 220-mile-long spread the size of Connecticut covered 10 Texas counties. Others say it was chosen because the XIT brand was harder for cattle rustlers to cover. The syndicate began selling off the land around 1901 for $6 an acre. The last XIT cattle were sold in 1912 and the ranch went out of business. C.D. Shamburger, a Wichita Falls lumber yard owner, began buying Panhandle land in the 1930s. He completed his 120,000-acre ranch with the 1943 purchase of a parcel from the Capitol Freehold Land Trust, which had taken control over the old XIT land. Over the years, the Shamburger Ranch shrunk to the 37,000 that were auctioned Wednesday by his heirs. Bagwell, Shamburger’s grand daughter, said family members decided to sell because they have less connection to the land and other ideas about investing their money. Rita Blanca Natl. Grassland Tracts 1-11 TEXAS • Daihart AP ate on 3 NEWS IN BRIEF ! Perry fights to close state tax loophole AUSTIN (AP) — A loophole that allows some businesses to avoid paying state franchise taxes is unfair and should be done away with, Gov. Rick Perry said Wednesday. Perry, after speaking to the Texas Association of Business, said that the so-called “Delaware Sub” loophole should be closed. Under the practice, companies incorporate on paper in Delaware or in other states where taxes are lower. Then they legally organize into a virtually tax-free partnerships here. Dell Computer Corp., SBC Communications and some large Texas newspapers are organized this way and avoid state taxes. on Policy 750ml uila 80° 750 ml Continued from page 1 the parents are informed of that decision, Cannon said. Student athletes are tested randomly throughout the year, including the summer. With any reasonable suspicion, the department can request an ath lete to give a sample for a drug test, he said. If a drug test is positive, and it is a student’s first offense, the student is suspended from the next competition period, a time period not to exceed 10 percent of the total sport con test, Cannon said. Students must participate in a mandatory counseling session and pass a follow-up drug test which can occur at any time the following year. Parents are also informed of the offense, Cannon said. A second offense results in immediate suspension of the athlete from the program, artd reinstatement is determined by a substance abuse committee, Cannon said. Similar to the first offense, students will be tested at any time and parents are again notified, Cannon said. A third offense will immedi ately suspend the student from the athletic program for one year, and the student will lose eligibili ty for grants and financial aid, Cannon said. Steroids are a performance enhancing drug that the Athletic Department does not tolerate. Watkins gave no new updates on Slocum’s suspension this week, nor did he say how long Slocum’s suspension might last or whether Slocum would return before the basketball season ends. The office of the U.S. Drug Control and Policy’s Web site says steroid use can result in health risks such as liver cancer, heart attacks and elevated choles terol levels. Also, withdrawal symptoms such as increased irri tability and aggression can occur. Margaret Griffith, health edu cation coordinator for the A.P. Beutel Health Center, warns stu dents against needles used for steroids. “Because needles for steroid use are only available with a pre scription, people tend to share them and HIV is transmitted this way,” Griffith said. The hair... you always dreamed of. STRAIGHTENS most any hair type COMPLETELY! PERMANENTLY! You won’t believe the look and feel. It’s the revolutionary permanent hair straightening service now available exclusively at HAIR DESIGN 118 Walton Dr. at Eastgate of A&M • 694-9755 You matter to God. FIRST BAPTIST BRYAN www.AggieMinistries.org