Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 102, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 6, 1956 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Johnson County and Cleburne Area Newspapers and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Johnson County Historical Collective.
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5c DAILY
10c SUNDAY
ESTABLISHED 1904
Full Leased Teletypesetter Wire Report of the United Press, — World's Greatest News Agency
6 PAGES
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CLEBURNE, TEXAS, TUESDAY, MARCH 6, 1956
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51ST. YEAR, NO. 102
Farmer Income
A
i
Takes Big Dip
Santa Fe Names
Dallas Banker To
Gulf Lines Board
9
8:3
L3
Ike Challenges Soviet
On Nuclear Weapon Ban
/
WASHINGTON - UP— President
/
Juvenile Officer
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Weather
sc
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TEMPERATURES
r
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Maximum temperature 88
worth of the railroad’s securities,tions.
Call Strategy Meeting To
Block War In Middle East
PUBLISHED AFTERNOON
DAILY AND SUNDAY
MORNING-PHONE 5-2441
A Rare Opportunity At Hand
Another Spiritual Emphasis Week day, He lives and walks with each
8 p.m.
10 p.m.
12 p.m.
a
re-
6 a.m.
8 a.m. .
10 a.m. .
12 Noon
die, for it cannot live without learn-
ing the knowledge by its citizens.
In Cleburne, the week is being
observed at each school with an
open house and program sponsored
by the P-TA of the school. All open
houses are scheduled for tonight
at 7:30 p. m. with the exception
of Irving School, which held its
open house last night.
(UP) United Press Telephoto Pictures
(CP) Central Press Features
(KF) King Features
one who will allow Him to do so.
Let’s avail ourselves of the spec-
ial services, attend each one pos-
sible, and in doing so draw nearer
to the Christ, the Son of the Living
God. He who was here upon earth
in the past, He whom we look for-
ward to in the future, and Him who
is with us in the present. Partici-
pate in Spiritual Emphasis Week!
Jack C. Pischel, pastor, Church of
the Nazarene. g
Membe—Tezss Press Asseeistom
Tezes Daily Press League
Bouthera Newspaper Publishesg
2
LS5
.... 70
.... 70
.... 74
.... 80
de-
ord.
Cash receipts in 1955 were
Tuesday
2 a.m........... 71
4 a.m...........69
low 1954 in 30 states, above in 18.
Most of the changes were relative-
ly small, with only six st des show-
ing more than 10 per cent in ei-
ther direction. The largest declines
were 11 per cent in South Dakota,
Kansas, and New Mexico.
Cool Front May
Bring Rain To
Cleburne Area
By UNITED PRESS
(512)
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y. — UP
—Israel said it would bring the
(See MEETING page 6)
9
Jo(s
By PROC
79
77
74
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& w 9
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—9,
-
will soon be upon us. Let us not on-
ly have the week designated as
such in our city, but let’s also make
it so in our own lives and hearts.
Let’s not think of Jesus in the
past tense, “the Christ who was”
or even in the future tense, “the
Christ who will be”; but in the
present tense, “the Christ who is.”.
He not only lived upon earth, and
in the future will live in eternity
with His saints, but in this very
A new cold front brought
promise of at least temporary
lief from unusually warm weather
F
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3
Clears Up Thefts
Juvenile Officer Noel Wofford
cleared up several cases of theft
in Keene after juvenile boys ad-
mitted the thefts Monday.
Wofford said two boys, 15, and
one, 14, admitted taking flashlights,
flashlight batteries, candy, potato
chips and other similar articles
from a store at Keene at different
times.
Another 15-year-old Keene boy
had admitted taking several elec-
tric motors from the SWJC College
Mill building, keys from, a college
office, candy and a gun. He also
admitted taking a box of shells,
a telescope and a pocket knife from
a store on the highway at Keene.
The 15-year-old was aided by a
14-year-old in removing the motors
from the building. The boy had
destroyed one of the motors, but
led Wofford to where he had hid-
den two others. Officials at the
college had found four of the mo-
tors hidden in various places on
the campus.
Two Are Charged
With Drunkenness
Claude Tarver, 57, was in city
jail this morning charged with be-
ing drunk after his arrest Monday
night. -
Police found Tarver in his car
parked in the street with the lights
on.
Cotton Lee, 45, was also in jail
this morning on the same charge
He was found on North Main street
in his car.
LAFF - A - DAY
a===
A
om nuruass mwcn. - waw morr ew
“We offer several fringe bene-
fits—two weeks vacation, paid-
up insurance, a pension plan
and two unmarried vice-presi-
dents”
Test Tube Baby
May Be Figure
Of Court Trial
LOS ANGELES —UP—A 38-year-
old physician’s secretary said Mon-
day she held two wedding recep-
tions with the man she accused of
fathering her 18-month-old child but
never married him.
Miss Edith Mitchell testified at
her suit for temporary support of
her infant daughter Connie Sue that
she went through the two nuptial
fetes with salesman Vernon Simp-
son, 32, but said there were no
wedding ceremonies.
She said she and Simpson went
to her family home in Lebanon,
Mo., where a wedding reception
was held on their purported “hon-
eymoon.” Later, they r'eturned here
and held another reception, but still
were not married.
Simpson, who charges in a coun-
ter - suit the child was conceived
by artificial insemination, declar-
ed: “If anyone is the father, it is
Dr. Manuel de J. Castillo, or a
donor of his choice.” Miss Mitchell
was employed by the doctor at the
time of her alleged romance with
Simpson.
The salesman contends the doctor
and his secretary conspired to
name him as the child’s father. He
admitted intimacies with Miss Mit-
chell, but claimed they stopped see-
ing each other before the child was
born and that it was a “test tube”
baby born through artificial insem-
ination.
WASHINGTON — UP—The real-
ized net income of farmers in 1955
dropped $1 billion, or 9 per cent,
from 1954, the Agriculture Depart-
ment reported Tuesday.
The sharp drop was due to low-
er average prices received for
farm products and a slight increase
in farm expenses, the department
said in its publication, “The Farm
Income Situation.”
Department economists forecast
J.
in Texas Tuesday and calmed
strong southerly winds that kicked
up dust in the west.
The front was expected to drop
temperatures about 25 degrees
over much of the state by Wednes-
day.
Forecasters said temperatures
would climb to around 90 degrees
Tuesday ahead of the front over
much of the state, but would reach
no higher than the mid-60s in the
same area Wednesday.
The front was expected to have
covered the Panhandle by noon
Tuesday and push on across the
state Tuesday night.
Showers were forecast for Cen-
tral Texas Tuesday night, and
were expected to move into East
Texas by Wednesday.
The temperature made at least
one new record in the state Mon-
day. Wichita Falls had a high of
91 degrees, the highest ever re-
corded there this early in the sea-
son. Laredo’s 93 Monday was the
highest in the state, as well as
in the nation.
Southerly winds of 25 to 30 miles
per hour whipped up some local
dust storms in West Texas Mon-
day. Dalhart reported two miles
visibility.
Low temperatures early Tues-
day ranged from 40 at Dalhart to
73 at Corpus Christi. Other lows
mostly were in the low 50s over
West Texas and upper 60s in East
Texas and along the coast.
I
e,
Staff Photo by Jim West
DAUGHTER REGISTERS MOTHER . . . Elain Chris-
tian, 8, a student at Irving school, supervises her mo-
ther’s registration during an open house at the school
last night in observance of Texas Education Week.
Mrs. Charlie Christian, mother of third grader, Elain,
was one of several hundred visitors who signed the reg-
ister and inspected the school.
Cleburne Schools Hold
Open House. Observance
Monday
2 p.m........... 84
4 p.m........... 88
6 p.m........... 84
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Pinball Ruling Appeal
FORT WORTH —UP— Fort
Worth city officials planned Tues-
day to appeal a court ruling hold-
ing pinball machines legal be-
cause the legislature taxes them
and in effect licenses them.
The ruling was by District Court
Judge Harris Brewster, who held
that a city ordinance banning the
machines was illegal because it
conflicted with state law.
However, Brewster said police
still could seize machines that vio-
lated the gambling laws.
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CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
ers retained as net income only
32.5 per cent of their realized gross Eisenhower Tuesday proposed to
farm income. Except for 1932, this soviet Premier Nikolai Bulganin a
is the smallest percentage on ren- ban on future production of nuclear
weapons.
be. The President said in a new let-
Staff Photo by Jim West
WARM WEATHER and how, has caressed the Cleburne
area during the last few days, making this type of
dress very comfy indeed. The athletic miss is Carolyn
Heffley, 16, a Cleburne High School Junior. She is serv-
ing ’em up in an outdoor volley ball game, a part of the
school’s physical education program.
BEN H. WOOTEN. Dallas, one of the foremost busi-
ness, civic and religious leaders in the Southwest, re-
ceives plated railroad spike as souvenir of the Santa
Fe’s new Dallas line of, the eve of election as a mem-
ber of the Board of Directors of the Gulf, Colorado and
Santa Fe Railway. Wooten, president of the First Na-
tional Bank in Dallas, is shown examining the spike
. with Kelley M. Fogg, left, executive representative,
Santa Fe System Lines, and L. M. Olson, right, vice
president and general manager, GC&SF Railway.
CLEBURNE AND VICINITY —
Partly cloudy and warm Tuesday,
widely scattered thunderstorms
southeast portion late Tuesday aft-
ernoon or night.
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last November a further drop of
$400 million in farm income dur-
ing this year. But the forecast did
not take into consideration any in-
creased income farmers might re-
ceive from operation of the soil
bank—if adopted—and other legis-
lation.
Farm Population Up
The net per' capita income of
farmers dropped to $860, 6 per cent
below the $913 per capital income ;
in 1954. Part of this per capita drop |
was caused by an increase of 1 per
cent in the farm population to 22.2
million persons. Per capita income
of the non-farm population increas-
ed almost 5 per cent in 1955.
If the value of changes in crop
and livestock inventories is includ-
ed, the net decline in farm income
from 1954 to 1955 was $1.3 billion,
or 11 per cent. Farmers as a whole
built up their inventories in both
years, but the increase was small-
er in 1955 than in 1954. The inven-
tory included stocks of crops and
livestock farmers had not market-
ed by year’s end.
Net income after the adjustment
for inventory change was $11 bil-
lion in 1955. Addition of farm
wages of $2 billion and $6 billion
of income from non-farm sources
gives $19 billion as the total net in-
come of the farm population. This
was 5 per cent below 1954.
Production Costs Up
The realized net income of farm
operator's is obtained by subtract-
ing total farm production expenses
from realized gross farm, income.
Realized gross income was down
2.5 per cent to $33.2 billion in 1955,
while production expenses increas-
1 per cent to $22.4 billion. This re-
sulted in the 9 per cent decline in
realized net income.
Smaller cash receipts from, meat
animals, especially hogs, and
wheat accounted for most of the
$800 million decline in the total.
The volume of farm marketings in
1955 was up 2 per cent from 1954,
but the average of prices received
by farmers was down 5 per cent.
Because of a slight increase in
farm production costs, coupled
with declining gross income, farm-
s,a
GALVESTON, (Spl) — Ben H.
Wooten, president of the First Na-
tional Bank in Dallas and one of
the foremost business and civic
leaders in the Southwest, was el-
ected a director of the Gulf, Colo-
rado and Santa Fe Railway Com-
pany at a regular Board meeting
here today.
He was named to the position
vacated through the retirement of
A. A. “Buck” Hor'ne, who is pre-
sident of the First National Bank
of Cleburne, and had been a direc-
tor of the GC&SF since Jan. 12,
1940. Horne resides at Boerne.
The election of Wooten adds to
the Santa Fe Gulf Board a leader
who has earned many regional and
national honors for business, civic
and religious endeavor.
Many Honors
He has been named Dallas’ “Top
Salesman” by the Dlallas Sales
Executives; “Headliner' of the
Year” by the Dallas Press Club;
received the Linz Award for out-
standing community service, and
was most recently cited by the Na-
tional Conference of Christians and
Jews for the promotion of under-
standing among people of all faiths.
The son of Samuel and Eula May
Wooten, he was born at Timpson,
Tex., in 1894. He* graduated from
the North Texas State College at
Denton in 1917. Today he is chair-
man of the Board of Regents of
that institution. He is a trustee of
Baylor University and takes an ac-
tive interest in other educational
organizations and institutions. He
has an honorary Doctor of Laws
degree from the University of Ark-
ansas.
Wooten entered service as a pri-
vate in World War I. Later com-
missioned Second Lieutenant with
a machine gun battalion, he par-
ticipated in intense action at the
battles of St. Mihiel and Meuse Ar-
gonne. Later he was with the Army
of Occupation in Germany.
He entered the banking business
at Alba, Texas, in 1919, and later
was with the Farmers and Mer-
chants National Bank at Farmers-
ville. He became a state bank ex-
aminer in 1926 and Departmental
Bank Examiner in 1927. He was
appointed Chief Examiner of the
Federal Home Loan Banking Sys-
tem. He became president of the
Federal Home Loan Bank of Little
Rock in 1932 and then Chairman of
the Board. He became Vice Presi-
dent and member of the Executive
Committee of the Republic Bank
of Dallas, resigning from that po-
sition Feb. 6, 1950, to become pre-
sident of the First National Bank
in Dallas.
C of C President
During the years 1952-53, he ser-
served as president of the Dal-
las Chamber of Commerce. With
others interested in the progress
and growth of Dallas, he urged and
supported the Santa Fe plan to
build a new line into that city and
saw its successful completion last
December.
Presently he is Dir'ector of the
Dallas Federal Savings and Loan
Association; the Association of Re-
serve City Bankers; Dallas Citizens
Council; State Fair of Texas; Cot-
ton Bowl Athletic Association; Bap-
tist Foundation of Texas; Relief
and Annuity Board of South-
ern Baptist Convention; Texas Re-
search League; Dallas Country
Club; Young Men’s Christian Asso-
ciation; Dallas Heart Association
and other organizations.
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SLAIN—Mary Alice Brod-
erick, above, a Buffalo,
N. Y., dentist’s assistant,
was found by her mother
shortly after she. had been
shot in the back of the
head as she wrot a letter
Sunday. Police say a re-
jected suitor has confess-
ed the slaying. (NEA
Telephoto)
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HE PICKED THE
FRUITFUL FIELD
ST. LOUIS — UP — Years of
skimping pennies finally paid off
Tuesday for Sam Bronstein, a
shr'ewd money lender who turned
a $3,600 investment into a $970,000
fortune.
Bronstein made a modest income
over the years, hanging around St.
Louis newspaper offices and loan-
ing money to broke newsmen for
a return of $6 for $5.
The elderly money lender mean-
while invested $3,600 in the Mis-
souri Pacific Railroad in 1938,
when the r'ailroad’s common stock
was selling at 75 cents on $1,000
par value. When the MOPAC re-
cently reported itself out of re-
ceivership, it was announced that
Bronstein was holding $970,000
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Neat, accomplished CELLADORE
TULIE POINSETTIA HOUSTON
CROCKETT, Clebur'ne housewife-
book reviewer, goes to the post
tonight on the $64,000 Question tel-
evision program...Lots of luck from
this corner...The water well on the
H. P. PRATER farm west of town
which has been “acting up” here
of late, blew the leathers off the
well pump yesterday and scatter-
ed oily residue high wide and hand
some in the well house...Lest you
forget...There will possibly be some
action er'e long on the three big
dams proposed on the BRAZOS
River at BEE MOUNTAIN, De
CORDOVA BEND and INSPIRA-
TION POINT.
There’s a TURKEY in HALL
County and a TOOL in HENDER-
LESON County...GEORGE SLIGAR
the realtor, is abed at MCKINNEY
HOSPITAL for a few days, during
which he will undergo two minor
operations...JASPER FLANAKIN,
the former BAYLOR grid star,now
coach at KILGORE JUNIOR COL
LEGE, is interested in having
FULFER as a football student a-
long with his academic connec-
Texas Public School Week in
Texas is being observed in Cle-
burne this week.
Objective of the week is to ac-
quaint citizens with programs and
accomplishments of the public ed-
ucation system,.
Slogan of the observance is “Tex-
as Public School—Democracy in
Action.”
The Constitution of the Repub-
lic of Texas, adopted March 2,
1836, declared, “It shall be the duty
of Congress, as soon as circum-
stances will permit to provide by
law, a general system of educa-
tion.”
In 1854 the School Law provided
for the first State Public School
system in Texas. The State Con-
stitution declares, “A general dif-
fusion of knowledge being essen-
tial to the preservation of the li-
berties and rights of the people; it
shall be the duty of the Legisla-
ture of the State to establish and
make suitable provisions for' the
support and maintenance of an ef-
ficient system^ of public free pub-
lic schools.”
From this grew the public school
system of Texas. Historians say:
“Education of the masses through
these schools which are public
schools has been the bulwark of
the liberties of the people and the
national freedom of the country.”
We must protect and nurture the
public school system, without
which Democracy will wither' and
g8
grees in past 24 hours.
Minimum temperature 69 e-
grees in past 24 hours.
. ter to Bulganin that the United
. St; es is prepared, under certain
. conditions, to work out safeguards
. “so that future production of fis-
; sionable materials anywhere in the
world would no longer be used to
increase the stockpiles of explosive
weapons.”
Mr. Eisenhower said that this
step, combined with his atoms-for-
peace program, “would reverse the
pr'esent trend toward a constant in-
crease in nuclear weapons ovet-
hanging the world.”
Asks Disarmament Step
"My ultimate hope is that all pro-
duction of fissionable materials any-
where in the world will be devoted
exclusively to peaceful purposes,”
Mr. Eisenhower said.
This was the main feature of Mr.
Eisenhower’s letter inviting Bulga-
nin to consider' new East-West dis-
armament steps stressing control
of the “nuclear threat” to the
world.
Mr. Eisenhower also:
1. Again rejected Bulganin’s
previous offer of a 20-year Ameri-
can-Soviet friendship treaty. Mr. Ei-
senhower' did not refer to the pro-
posal directly. But he said his pre-
vious view remains “generally” as
expressed in January. He said, how-
ever, that he will continue to study
the problem to see if any “useful
new steps” can be taken.
Backs 'Open Skies' Plan
2. Insisted that adoption of his
“open skies” aerial inspection pro
posal, combined with ground in-
spection teams, would “lead to a
reduction of armaments, the lessen-
ing of tensions, and the brighten-
ing of the prospects of a durable
peace.” Bulganin on Sept. 19 had
proposed use of ground inspection
teams at key points. The President
said Oct. 11 that he would be pre-
pared to accept this.
None Injured In
3 Auto Crashes
There were no injuries and only
minor damages in three traffic ac-
cidents investigated by police Mon-
day.
The first accident occurred Mon-
day morning on Shaffer Street just
off of South Main Street. The sec-
ond occurred at 5 p. m. on Wil-
lingham Street and the third was
at Main and Boone streets about
5:30 p. m.
•1 •
Conflict is
Breaking Out
JERUSALEM —UP— Is-
rael accused Egypt Tuesday
of three new acts of ag-
gression and demanded an
emergency meeting of the
Mixed Armistice Commis-
sion to discuss the charges.
An Israeli foreign ministry
spokesman made the charges as
me heaas of state of Egypt, Saudi
Arabia and Syria met in Cairo in
a meeting that could determine the
future of peace in the Middle East.
The spokesman listed the three
“acts of aggression” as follows:
1. The incursion of Israeli terri-
tory by Egyptian armed patrols
at Hatzerim, west of Beersheba.
2. The killing of an Israel soldier
at Nir Itzhak near the Gaza Strip
when his car' hit an Egyptian land-
mine.
3. The Egyptian shelling of three
Israeli positions at Kissufim.
Tension Increases
These and a series of clashes
Monday between Israelis and Sy-
rians and between Israelis and
Egyptians already had heightened
the Mid-East crisis that again
threatened to explode into open
warfare.
King Saud of Saudi Arabia flew
to Cairo Tuesday from his desert
kingdom for the series of talks
called originally for next week as
a “council of war.”
King Saud joined Egyptian Pre-
mier Gamal Abdel Nasser and Syr-
ian President Shukry El Kuwatly
in conferences aimed at wooing
Jordan away from, the last traces
of British influence and to consoli-
date Arab strength in event of war.
Have Defense Pact
The thr'ee states have signed a
pact pledging to go to war against
Israel if Israel commits “aggres-
sion” against any one.
Cairo reports said the three Arab
states hoped to exploit the British
reversal in Jordan and to work
rapidly to see that Jordan does not
join the pro-western Baghdad pact.
One report said the three nations
were ready to pay the $22 million
Britain has been giving the Arab
Legion of Jordan each year.
Britain already has called on the
United States and France to join
it in a crisis program to salvage
the anti-Communist Baghdad pact
—key to the Middle East defense
and strongly opposed by the Arabs
who see it as a threat to Arab
unity.
Glubb is Knighted
Britain, still shocked by Jordan’s -
action in firing Lt. Gen. John Glubb
as head of the Arab Legion, an-
nounced that Glubb had been
knighted by Queen Elizabeth II for
his many years of service and said
15 key British officers would be
withdrawn from the Legion.
Ther'e were unconfirmed reports
Britain might withdraw the $22
million it annually pays the desert
legion.
In Monday’s clashes, Syrian and
Egyptian guns batteries fired on
Israeli planes, forcing one aircraft
down in the second day of major
frontier incidents. Israel said Syri-
an anti-air'craft batteries fired
across the border, damaging the
plane and injuring the pilot.
Syria said the Israeli plane had
flown over Sytian territory / and
that the plane was hit and “forced
to land inside Israel.”
Egyptian guns also fired on two
Israeli planes near the disputed
Gaza Strip and Israeli and Egyp-
tian guns and ground patrols fought
a sharp engagement in the Kissu-
fim border area.
। 3. Proposed that arms limitations
be sought primarily, though not ex-
clusively, in terms of controls on
“armaments rather than on men.”
The President said initial action
toward agreements could be taken
at the forthcoming five-power' dis-
armament meeting in London. But
he said these steps toward disar-
mament would take a long time to
work out with other nations as well.
In the meantime, the President
said, the United States and Russia
would have very extensive military
strength, including stocks of nu-
clear weapons.
Man Charged With
Beating His Wife,
Already in Jail
Charges of aggravated assault
were filed this mor'ning with Coun-
ty Atty. Glendon Hague against
Eugene Allen, 28, 819 North Robin-
son street.
The complaint was signed by Al-
ien’s wife, Dorothy, mother of four
children. In the complaint, Mrs. Al-
len alleged her husband came home
Monday night and beat her up.
Police had no trouble finding Al-
len after the complaint was filed
this morning. They didn’t have to
go looking for him. He was in city
jail. He was arrested last night
and was being held for' highway
patrolmen who have a warrant a-
gainst him for not having an in-
spection sticker on his auto and
another warrant for failing°to ap-
pear on the first charge. Both war-
rants total $37.
Teen-Age Boys
Break Out Light
Four teen-age Junior High School
boys wer'e picked up by police
Monday night after they broke out
the street light at Lone Star and
Buffalo Streets.
The boys admitted breaking out
the light and were released. The
case has been turned over to the
juvenile officer.
Sheriff Attends
Fort Worth School
Sheriff Earl King attended an
FBI school in Fort Worth Monday
afternoon.
The school was sponsored by the
Fort Werth police department. Lec-
tures on civil rights and segrega-
tion were given during the after-
noon.
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Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 102, Ed. 1 Tuesday, March 6, 1956, newspaper, March 6, 1956; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1505515/m1/1/?q=Lamar+University: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.