The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 113, Ed. 1 Monday, May 15, 1961 Page: 1 of 10
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VOL. LVIII—NUMBER 113
Ctmoiw* NEA Jinda
MomMr AlMCMM f(IH
TEXAS. MONDAY, MAY 15, 1961
10 Pages 5 Cents
FfNAL EDITION
—
Slrong for Talla
See Page 10
"•ST"
AUSTIN CAP)— A compromise on gas unci electric bills of do-
jax plan, including.a two per cent mystic and commercial-users, a
sales tax, has beert-suggested to boost, in drivers license fees and
>^Senate subcommittee and may ¡ extension of. the temporary in-
bereported to. the Senate- §tat:j crease in corporation franchise
Affairv^Committee today. -J. taxes.
Sen. Wardjow Lane,' chairmah/Lane said the bill would raise
of both the fcomnuttee and the spe- an e&timat?d J300-0J0 million eavh
rial subcommittee>^aid hi hopes; two yeata.
the subcommitee wilPagree to thej He said the compromise bill
plan, which will be presented, as v.ould meet at least one of Gov,
a complete rewrite of Rep- Price Daniel's o&jection^ to. H;p.
Charles Balkrran's "loophole bUn^iChartes Wilson's general tales
The subcommittee product utv^biJI in tjiat "th? first impact
would impose a two per cent gen- wouliKJje pretty rough on husi-
tral sales levy, 'exempting food, ncss.!' Ume said he did not know
and medicine, a "consumer tax" i how- the govenjor would view the
i bill.
"I'm not sure whiiHhc governor
will do about it," he sa
The Senate approved on^voic?
vote a bill authorizing the gov^r
ment to create a national sea*
. f.hore recreational area on Padre'
Island.
The bill now got* to the House,
which recently passed its own ver-
sion of Padre Island legislation.
. The senators beat down 16-14 a
proposed amendment by Sen. Hu-
bert Hudson of Brownsville which
■ V
«ra
¡■•'-v.
• "y, B. CORNELL .fence originated less with Kennedy
PALM BEACH. Fia. (AP) — than with a new tip from Khrush-
A Kennedy - Khrushchevtiottfer-jcbev to Llewellvn Thompson, U.S.
ence on corrosive cold-war prob-rarubassadur to Moscow, that he
I«tts has become a definite pos- wouldn't mind talking to the Amcr-
sibillty. The chances that one will ican President.
bo held and held aoon, are rated j. The Western allies already may
currently .at J to 2. • ¡have been sduuded out by Wash-
a Kennedy-Khrushchev meeting.
Kennedy Has met with Prime
Minister Harold - Macmillajr of
Britain and Chancellor KonrM
Adenaufer. of West Germany. He
flies to Paris at the end of this
month for six sessions in three
days with President 'Charles de-
But the grave issues of. Laostington on how they wou W regard' "(Si «'summit'' Page"
and a valid ban on nuclear rms \ Í *
would have required Congress to
of interior to.
direct the secretary
build a road running the length of
A special meeting has been call-
ead Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. by
'the Orange School Board to study
the recent resolution passed by the the island^ before Texas would re
Orange County School Bioard and " ":"u ' ~ : J
its implications on the Orange Dis-
trict.
- The meeting will be heid in the
;fcoard room of the school business
'Office.
- The resolution, passed May 2 by
■ • •- .-rr-*. nr
the Orange County School Boar^_
Tecommends establishment—of " a
icountywide. school system by a
"convérsion route" through which
independent school districts would
revert Mh common school status
for the purpose of attachment by
the county board.
At a May .3 meeting. Orange
.trustees discussed the proposal and
directed Supt. Marlin L. Brockette
ti> make a thorough investigation
as to the advantages and disad-
vantages of the plan and present
the report to the board for study.
This information has been com^
piled and will be presented to-tms-
tees Wednesday nj¿"'
«ration.*
linquish the island
, "If they are going to do nothing
to the aria, why not leave it in
its present state, which is a na-
tional primitive area?" Hudson
argued. Reagan said the govern-
ment has always provided the
necessary facilities for its nation-
al parks. A section of th? bill re-
quests the government to con-
struct the needed roads and
causeways to the park.
Congress has taken no action
on the bill by Sen. -Ralph Yar-
borough to establish the n?w park.
The aame bill: was introduced in
a previous Congress but dled when
Congress adjourned. encyclical soon giving the Roman
The./Senatebill passed today ^atholjc Church's position on
CONTESTANT FOR BBh^TY TITLE —
Suzanne Lea. daughter of Mr. aitikMrs. George
Lea of 2024 N. 30th SL Pinchur&t, vvitKlje among
contestants in the "Mis? Water
test -to be Saturday at the Jack Tar ormi^r
House in connection with the eighth annua
.Water Festival and boat show. Deadline for
registration is" noon Saturday at the hotel with
preliminaries set for 1:30 p.m. The •winner will
be rrewned at- the Shipwreck dance Saturday
8:30 p.m. jn thirhote!.
tests could turn out to be formida
be barriers. ^In^contrast, quick
progress toward solutions could
dc much to assure a coRfewijicp.
President" Kennedy may exteT
t visit to Europe,, which starts i
May 31, apd stay, on for lii.s first
meeting with' Soviet- Premier
Khrushchev if . things work out as
they now appear likely to do. IÜ-,
titer Stockholm or-Vienna is re-
garded by the United States as7 a
Mtitable site for the PresidefitThnd
Ptenriier ti meet face to face
across the conference table.
At the moment, it was/learned
—Ltodtr Photo by «oh m Huoh , meeting definitely is under con-
osition
Je'aves to- the state and private niocfern social problems.
land owners title to the island's
mineral resources.
VATICAN CUY" (AP)—"Pope lems) of the present moment."| h:in of glotonía? is "the^mjsery
John XXIII wltt issue- 'a matortVatican sources said" ha undoubt-1 and hungpr in which millions and
edly Will deal with the threat of ¡ milliopí?of human lives struggle."
pontiff said emergency aid
commumsi
-FmnpBHtiff told an assembly of
100,000 workers from Italy ar.d
«action.
(SeeLEGISLATURE, Page S)
Two Sabine Area craft unions | contract proposal. "We will .con-
rontinue on a negotiating status tinue to negotiate," he added.
with area contractor representa- ■ A bargaining session with Ferj
í some 60 oíher Í.at"ions"Sunday thai
a. his document will outline "a ma(;-
rderfd,.°V„e! nificenl program of Christian lile
r consid- 'and on the pencil-slim Gulf (oast an(j • apustolic social activity,"
and ,"A living in Christ.*'.
The new encyclical will mark
the 70th anniversary of Pope Leo
XIII's famous encyclical "Retu:
Novarum (of New Things)." TUat -I
papal letter of 18Í1 stajÉ^T the
Catholic position on lab«lv wealth
and social justice^/Along with
"Quadragesimo- /Anno (Forty
Years LatefO-Tt is still a basic
document^erf the church's teach-
ing inJm social field.
John said his encyclical
impoverisnea natii
problem oí agriculture," the PoiSéj"P«ot "the cause of the proolem
said. He declared , one the1 He said " collaboration ón a
sirlcration but no firm decision
has been reached./ That may
come within a week.
Prospects that the le'adei^of
the" world's, two greátest^^wwers
niaV consult produced both hearty
endorsements and wtírds-of, cau
tion from vajkíís leaders in
Washington.
llére hjXpalm Beach, Pierre
S. linger White House pi ess sec-
retary; bombarded by questions
out reports that efforts to ar
range a Kennedy - Khrushchev
tttjeetinft were under way, told re-
S ponéis he cculd say only, "There
■ nre no plans for any such meet-
ing at present." He refused to
read any Significance into tfae
phrase "at present." But it w*jj_
th ere K e nn'etly himseif, clo^inii f
a relaxing five Miays on
beaches and golf courses^ was
,(A?)":tbe ■ fi|st niglitr and is givert a 60-40 chanca
ction of Senate leaders to a of actually coming off.
passible Kennedy .- Khrushchev "The senators' summit - tempe/
varied from a guarded, "I can
summit meeting is genital ap-
proval. -
Such a ' -conference between
President Kennedy and Soviet
Premier Khrushchev is baing con-
sidered, it was learned Sunday
greatest needs of jus up*?'"is to
recompose the ecónjírme equilib-
rium between titc two si cois
(industrial tmd^agriculturali oLItal and intelligent,
human existence." tecluiiques at
_ if ,p M
Pope^<t(ihn said another prob- underdeveloped countries.
The President is known to bííL.
tremendously^eoncerncd that in
the four months ^ince he took
command of government, East-
West negotiations for an. agree-
lligent, .competent'; mtlit -forbidding nuclear weapons
the- disposition of .fi sts have deadlocked instead oi
• 'making any real - progress. These
world scale is needed instead, in
volving ' many, and disinterested
works designed to place lurge cap-
(ÍÉNEVA (AP)-Brltlan and
Russia announced tonight the 14-
nntiohconference on the future of
Laos.wllf open Tuesday after four
days' delay."
GENEVA (AP) — The United
tés reluctantly agreed today to
see no harm in such a msetini"
from Sen, Styles -Bridges, R-N.H.,
to summit meetings are part óf\
the dipomacy "and should not be
avoided." from Sen. Hubert H.
Humphrey, D-Minn.
Sen, J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark.,
chairman of the Foreign Rela-
tions Committee, suggested any.
conference be spft-pcdaled.
"I hope it is not built' up and
is as informal and with as little
fanfarf as possible," said Ful-
bright when asked his views.
"If there should be a meeting,"
he added. "I would, hope it would-
be as quiet as possible. "
"It is perfectly legitimate for
(hese people to get together, but
nr ñorTorwr
:or Total of $820,421.32
•ould supplement Pope Leo's and
would dear with "the new, grave ~
lives today following failure last eral Mediator Ray Majure
Orange County Commissioners
The project* are part of the
problem
Y ' - -
¡motion the firsL wheels for con- $820.421.32 was
embership vote Friday
the ironworkers
and ac
approve
rejected the-
Construétion
Mest Sabine Area
tmittee (SACC)
new contract pro- puh|¡Cation' of the encvcli al struction work on 15: county road cepted by the court Fiji
had been expeled t^ay tie Jn-I Pr°iect!i; ¡. FAG. company^rr^senta.lves'
niversary of "Rerum. Novarutn."
be affected
vii5ions.
Representatives of Millwrights
al 2484 also continue to bar-,
gain With SACC officials w.ith sés-
ions presided, over by Majure.
[deration of a union counter
ptopoSalbv contractor repfc; "na-
tives begtnstoday at 1:30 p.m.
In negotiatiohSswhich ended Fri-
day afternoon, the^union offered
SACC of-
is
al which would | {(,,, epoCh.
lTED PRESS
rstorms rumbled across j the counter proposal
in the midcontinent today ficials. Whether this pro-,.
a rash of tornadoes and' rejected and a new propositioiHiut
naging wind and rain storms 0„ the table remains to be seen:
a half dozen states. —
dam
■pm
The twisters erupted along a
severe thunderstorm belt which
stretched from eastern Minnesota,
through Wisconsin, Illinois. Mis-
souri and Arkansas to eastern
Louisiana.
No deaths were reported irr tr,o
storm zone, but nine persons
were injured in Uhifois and tine
in Wisconsin
Was extensile
The-iforms' followed an unsea-
There are some 114 members o/
the millwrights local which has
Jurisdiction throughout the Sabine
Area
But the Pope said it would be
delayed several weiks so ihc
Catholic hierarchv abroad could |
receive the original Latin text
simultaneously.
Pope.' John described brjeflythC
probhms to be treatetUffbis en-1 Ln8
Wr 'sipning today were, J
(deadlocked negotiations are under, f f , ««
. I way still in Geneva. So; are r' | frrpn^ L i^o, nfi"f prp<¡H°ni
The Soviet premier had sug-l But snags still remained and
gested previously that he would the Soviet and British cochairmen
like to meet Kennedy. He said of the 14-nation conference not^
so soon after Kennedy took, oí- f;ed the U.S. delegation there
(ice. And it was understood that ! would* be no opening meeting to-
iiu present- impetus for a.confer- day. Th?; conference ■ had been
i sch<-dulctf to begin last Friday.
! The'problem that ha* h'el'
i the high-level meeting has
(lecidiiitt—for
•TSm-ln negatiatiwis oh its polit-
ical future. Three "rival LaotMn
¡delegations are here. '
• The United States originally
took the position that the oa'y
Laotians who should be allowed
irmgftr norto-be built up asnr
solution to the world's ills."
Two other Democratic senators
plugged more strongly for a me-rt-v
ing between the two leaders.
Sen. Mike Mansfield of Montana
the Senate Democratic leader..
said such a meeting "should be
given most serious considera-
tion."
Mansfield noted that former
Republican Vice President Rich-
(Se* REACTION, Page 5)
Hnlnflll t*linJWrírt:r^U^^nc?nécrVl(ihd% e^Selliní'' • WASHINGTON (AP) — Senate/at the conf-rence table were tep-
neiprui %jpnman, launched. • today a resentatives of the pro-Wes.ern
• '• | , shettnn íñlH thf rnnri Cntintv iwO-proiiRed attack ngaln?t Pfesfi'governnwflt of Premier Boun
teases Loot ^Zl¡drrtt Kennedy's aid to education Oum.
i f' , a„ 1 "5 p|0#ram and his government re- ♦v #
k. (AP)—An ohlli?'! consuUingenaiaeers, C. .an¡^organization orders
increased his ipt-Oaiy Smith, 4hat the company sty)eg Bridges of -Ne.
i L!_ —i — i: ! nrAhíir if/cof nn raníf ntfi^tf .. . ' . * . .
v ■ • " ni • -i-i ~r- r, • ilprógram and his government rc
DALLAS, Tex. (AP)—An obli«- consulting engineers. C. P. and.L„Li.„;^ —
.w m W|- •* gunman increased his |pt;Gr.ry Smith, that the com.
cyclica¿*-"above^«H? and precise- Sunday by helping out his_ victim. Pr™|3bly set up a centra office' Hampshire, chairman of the. Sen.
ly. those concerning relations be I. Keeton, manager of a Dal-iWitWrt the next two weeks and Republican Policy C^mmiltee,
tweej^-pHvate enterprise and the las grocery, said the_|ioldup man'Send a superintendent in .on the Qyp senators will try ta es-
JnterventiOn of public. powers • in! whipped out a pistol and said job. • . ■ , itahlish general party lines Njn
Jh® economic field." ["sack it up~all the cash and sil- Contracts between the issues in a closed session
~Po"i¿~ said" his enrvcliealI wr but checks.'! ^ and the company were signe dn^^y
Pope said niS. encyclical, Kecton djd as ^ mf (o|d hut.-ubiec to r.cpipt of a performance
ue in bargaining With Pope Pius XII:
will fifevin' four sections that will ! ^eeion oia as nr was ioiu nui.fuwieci w r.-cpipi ■ a p.-ii« rinan«:r|. while Republicans are divided
(1) Reviciw^ the social work of ¡ Júst^as he hancled^the bag to tne bond Jor the amounf^if 'he total nn j^e education issue. Bridges
Pope Leo,
union has resolved strictly i cial problems that h2rve continu- d
around that of hourly rate in-: during the 70 years sinci^Rj'rjm
creases, reports indicate. Th.e Novarum": (3> Affirm
Piiis XÍ"'ancÍ!f:unman. 'a customer approached hid. A bond had beet! made out
Deal with ^i ">e .'counter with a, purchase. (for Farnswr.rth & Chambtrrs, fhc
Ihr Communists insisted that
the Communist-led Pathet 3.jo
rebels and their self'Styled, neu-
tralist allies under Prince Sou-
vanna Phouma — who is recog-
nized by the Reds as the M-;pal
premier of Laos—should be the
spokesmen for'Laos.
A compromise formula worked
~r iit by British Foreign Secretary
I ord Home and French For' ign
?aid he thinks a majority of thenrt: Minister Nla^rice Couve de Mur
.ray support' a tax-rebate' Nuhsr- ville appeared-.;,to h'av the ap-
t «• f ' _ . I -I I ! . í Vfel". ' itc.i ->1 <>f *11 r>nM/>ni>nOr1
normal craft pattern to date his
~>rtv damaae been * three-year contract-with an
.perty damage ;0y?ralI hourly hike of 32^ cents
grave and at times perilous
lems of this, our recent epoch;"
V/hen l^ eton explained he 'hadj^'t Fovle said that was a'mistaxe (or the administration's proval of all cohcerned.
no money with wjhich to makeiof a' Shreveport, 'L .> b o n ding iiiliion hill which comes up in thci The formula wopld allow all
change, the gunman let him nave'firfn. • - - ■ ■ -
tho bae back. ( |. The .court also authorized Foyle
eeton completed the transac- and the consulting engineers to is
(4) Reaffirm *?<mechiirch Te^ch-, tioii>^making -change from . the-sue a work order im'.r"diatclv. - -choúTconstrucfipn over the: next; i,hem. as representative? • ' tent ion'of recognizing the Peipinf
The ironworkers and the "mill- ings in the sociar field. ' i.bág. Tie, gunman then took-the Sheltón commented'that. "Wcjhree years. Sens. Francis "'Case,'Laos."
Senate Tuesday. . .. . .
Instead of'federal" grants'and¡ into the conference room as ob
loans for JÉachers' .salar ¡. s and servers but avoid
■wmble - wintry blast of heavy ....
snow in Colorado and Wyomine. í?AJ£6ot *te settlements
i wrights are the last
Snowfall measured 9 inches in
Cheyenne, Wyo., and 5 inches in
Laramie, Wyo., and Denver.
More than a dozen' tornadoes
hit along a 150-mile path from
the Missisippi River hear Han-
nibal, Mo., northeastward to near
Peoria, in north central Illinois.
The tornadic winds hammered
wide areas in west central and
Southern Illinois, damaging many
homes and farm buildings.
A series of tornadoes and-, tor-
. nadie winds- t* hed midsections. of
Wisconsin; wrecking some build-
ings and knocking down power
¡id communication lines.
cloud:
SACC following expiration of con-
tracts March 31.
'Freedom'
- Bus Burned
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (AP) — Á
bus was destroyed by a firebomb
and several members of a racial-
ly mixed group of "freedom rid-
ers" were brutally beaten as they
sought to bring their test of color
barriera in bus stations into Ala-
bama.
Members, however, vowed to-
day to continue their swing which
started in Washington 11 days
ago.
All told. 13 persons were taken
to hospitals Sunday—1Í for smoke
auffertd
two craftsl The third section, he said, will and
ts with the ¡ deal with "the most urgent (proo- ■ ■ 1 .
are interested in .letting wíork to r s'd.. and .Norris Cotton, R-N..H.J- Instead, it
(See CONTRACTS, Page 5)
Data Fren U.S. Weather Bureau
Outlook .... Cloudy, warm, scatt .ved
showers
High today ...../ 87
Low tonight —69
High tomorrow ' 17
Sunset today . : 7:<tt p.m.-
Sunrise tomorrow 5:22 a.m.
< Wl <ir-«« t ® mtttta# 1 to IS m .h.
■jitiD1 D~1 rf ittjpr if? w luwvi p>
" Tide —Sobfm t)Wu tM ;
^ _ i „ ■ ^ Ma,, ■ ■ ■ i M i — _.,
(■< R'fn 'Ta
«. Ko>n«oU. as MOW*.
one in a crowd of angry white
men threw a fire bomb into a
Stalled bus ouufde Annlston, and I
one for head cuts suffered at. the
hands of white men using pipes
for cluba at a Birmingham Sus
síation.
Two other persons required,
medical attention. None wasTi'irt
critically.
No árresja wery made In An
nlaton or fttrmfc .
Tha ""freedom riders ' — eight
white persons and eight Negroes
n members of the Congress
of
ta
inrmijcn me ¿Kjuin
segregation.
•ml Eauabty. - Thty
regularly scheduled
igh -tho South to tes
haye proposed the return of fed-
eral tax revenues to the sla.ies
fcr education purposes. "•
Case has offered a bill which^
would rebate to the jta*r<s. 1 p<*f
cent of each year's federal -in-
come tax collections. Bridges said,
(See ATTACK. Page 5)
three rival -.Laotian 'delegations
im -as ob- supp
desciHa^ngi 2. The United States has no ,'n-
titenti
tagime.
was reported by 3. -Th" Unrted S'ates \yill 'On
Aid Pledge
• TAIPEI, Formosa (AP) —Vice
President .'Lyndon B. Johnson to-
day gave "• Nationalist Chinese
President Chiang Kai^hek a new
pledge of UiS: support and eco-
nomic aid and assurance that the
Kennedy administration has no
intention of recognizing Red
China.
Johnson and his party flew on
to Hong Kong for a 24-hour'rest
stop "after the vice president, on
behalf of President Kennedy, as-
sured President Chiang's Nation-
álists that?, the United States
stands.by them, beside them and
behind them "today. v tomorrow
and every day to cOme^'i
Chiang, who almost never holds
a n?ws conference, joined John-
son for a conference for th? news-
men in the vice president's party
and told them he and Johnson
had agreed on a Joint statement
to be issued tonight, containing
five assurances from Kennedy:
~i. A pldge of continued US.
support for the Nationalists.
2. The
(See PARLEY. Page «)
(See JOHNSON. Page 5)
Gold Medal Is Pro,
For Comedian Bob Hope
U.N. Troops
Withdrawn
Bv BARRY SCHWEID World War If. tie was told ha
j. WASHINGTON (Ap) — "Mo- could serve better as an enter;-
irr.ents enriched by humor are mo-jtainef to build morale.
nients free- from- hate and con-, Hope took the advice, literally
,fl;ce. and thertrfptc valued by | an(| trtfveled moré than 'one million
mankind^' said a Senate resolu- miv©¿ to entertain servicemen all
I In " n<4nlf' ivtn tm mftl J m nrln I . . ' m w .1 1 i I. _
, _ .. „ tion today proposing a gold medal
/ ; Y, J v! f Cr0n?° for comedian Bob Hope.
(AP)—The United Najions an- fhe resolution, prepared for in-
nounced today its troops have troduction by Sen. Stuart Syming-
withdrawn from south Kasai ton u-Mo., on behalf of 97 sen-
Province in the face of a grave a(r,rs> cifM Hope's "countless
new threat of tribal warfare. ;m¡t?s travel around the globe"
U.N. civilian operations al*o to rnt.crtain American troops,
have been suspended, in thej This phase of the rapid, fire
fcw _ -a ♦ 1¡¿. 1.. I
the way from North Africa to the
islands of the Pacific.
His book on the wartime trav-
els, "I Never Left Home." sold
more than "1.6 million copies and
after the United States entered
(Sea MEDAL, Page 5)
are rid-
wises
test ranal
WATCH ON THE LAOS FRONT - Halmeted
chinegun position on the Laos front line at Hin
"Tribal fighting is not confined those who served overseas during r.icri!ecinv a+ W.
a. single place and keepsiworld War II and in Korea. 'L DISCUSSION — At: tne court-
erupting liíci!> bubbles .in boiling! "Another less known side of house about women driver
water," said a U.N, spokesman. ¡Hope's life." Symingtort .sai'd, is, brought out these comments: For
The decision to withdraw U.N. that "for many years, quietly, but a woman driver, one bad turn de-
Ghanian soldiers "based on the consistently, this American ha'si aervesi another. Any considerate
south Kasai capital of Bakwanga been engaged in a career of good motorist will give a woman ha.t
was taken in the light of (he ex-iworks." . )of the road: If. he knows -WWch
periencp at Port; Francqui, where Symington said Hope has ap- half she wants, ana Yfomen
mor than" 40" U.N." frOQps" Wfire peared in nearly every state on I drivers refuse to take the straight
'kinecT by soldiers under nominal brhalf of chárítable, civic andt ana^af^ wth.. —
control of the centrál govern-¡philanthropic aroups. *■' , ^ ví? TT Cv-P
mem ' , I ' All ver mr liM." Syminftin from C. O. (Doc) Charlton, who at- ■
- The tíhutsiaa bstuhon biiidjifcid, there are «opa fund-rtí -¡t#Bda4 a^natsona! wncl «e to Cfae...
oti Bikwsng'a will be tempirarily iig foundations for less fortunate cituMti, Ohto. o! the'National Rod
relocated nearer its bngaoe head- ptople." ¡Cros?. says,"It w s great
«. —- _ r . quarters tn L;;*'i hoi¡rg, In north-~*The British-bom eiitertaiwer, leaving — soon Washing
movements'. (AP Wirephoto via radio from Tokyo^ crn Kasai. tin two weeks, attempted to enlist, ton, D. C. • ; 'M
Heup during the cease-fire The men in the out-
■J v.
si:
..
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' • 1 . ..
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N:
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 113, Ed. 1 Monday, May 15, 1961, newspaper, May 15, 1961; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143035/m1/1/: accessed April 26, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.