Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 303, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 29, 1957 Page: 1 of 16
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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CLEBURNE TIMES-REVIEW
5c DAILY
Full Leased Teletypesetter Wire Report of the United Press, — World's Greatest News Agency
52ND. YEAR, NO. 303
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A
CLEBURNE, TEXAS, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1957
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20 PAGES IN 3 SECTIONS
A
Faubus May Try To Make Private Institution Of Central High
☆
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A
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☆
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Wants Negro
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Preident Eisenhower,
UP
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8SMessosga
Daylight Savings Time
88
'Should' Be Ended Now
AFTER MARAUDING PLANE APPEARS
(•
U. S. 6th FLEET COMMANDER
GIVES SHOOT-TO-KILL ORDERS
to
(D-Ga.),
Duerfeldt, Brown
6
Red Cross to Teach
Kiwanians Who
Home Nursing Class
4
Pennsylvania and Ohio.
h
STAID BALLROOM DANCING REGAINING POPULARITY
BE-BOP GONE...CALYPSO, PRESLEY INFLUENCES
FADE WITH CLEBURNE’S SMART TEEN-AGE SET
)
V
A
Sheriff Eorl King said Saturday
1
as
a
LAPP-A.DAY
u,
3.
t
W
■
Weather
Sunsets Sept. 29—6; 17
Ge
Ike Charges Arkansas Abetted
Mob Violence At Little Rock
10c SUNDAY
ESTABLISHED 1904
telegram
Russell
was
Sen.
Columbia,
Hampshire,
New Jersey,
i the
man-
150
New
New
warned:
“Possible
-
Nowlin left with the money and
the check.
A short time later Nowlin cash-
Member— Texas Press Assoofatiea
Texas Daily Press Leazue
Southern Newspaper Publishers
■ thm for the younger dancers
well as teen-agers.
j When asked if it was always
(UP) United Press Telephoto Piotures
(CP) Central Press Festures
(KF) Kin* Features
f
ami
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Backed Up
By FBI
NEWPORT, R. L, Sept. 28
1
-J'/owdy 3(
By PROC
Gets Cash on Check
Twice, Lands in Jail
William H. Nowlin, 30, 677 Chase
avenue, was charged with theft
over $50 Saturday after he cashed
the same check twice Friday night.
Officers said Nowlin went to a
North Main street service station
where he bought $2.66 worth of ga-
m
2,8 l 1
L ?
a “mother’s march,”
Jerry Allen Brown, 26, of Dal-
las, was arrested at Dallas and
is in jail there.
King said an electric razor was
taken from the Ingle home.
fact, 90 percent of the pupils in
" the local instructor’s classes are
j under 12 years of age.
One-half of the pupils are under
' six years old and the largest class
7
■ ■ 38
3
a
Mrs. Jerrine Hughes, executive
secretary, Johnson County chapter,
American Red Cross, announces a
class in the care of sick and in-
jured will be taught at Johnson
County Electric Co-op association
building, beginning Tuesday mor-
ning at 9 o’clock with Mrs. Bill
McLean as instructor.
This is a 14-hour course, two-
hour sessions and classes will be
conducted each day from 9 a. m.
to 11 a. m., Oct. 15 through Oct.
18, of the first week and Oct. 22,
23 and 24 of the second week.
The course includes caring for
the chronically ill, as well as pre-
paring for a possible emergency
or epidemic. By being qualified in
home care of the sick and injured
a person can help the family and
community to better health and
prepare for civil defense.
Those desiring to enroll are ask-
ed to call the Red Cross office,
5-4181, between 8:30 a. m. and 12
noon. Only 17 can be accepted for
one class.
to do so.”
The President’s statement
5 3
< 3 -
office of an authority on the sub-
ject, says the high school crowd
is definitely getting back to the
Sidewinder air-to-air missiles to
knock down the intruding plane if
it threatened their carriers. In an
uncoded message flashed to Rear
fer the easier American dances
that can be learned with a mini-
mum of effort.
—T- T- .
b A27 a‘
Island, Vermont,
used to buy kiddy records, now
have a definite like for whatever
big brother is interested in.
Hampshire,
York, Rhode
and parts of
goat,” he said.
Faubus met newsmen on
lawn of the gubernatorial i
V %
W ’ Nk
1.
he would file charges Monday a-
gainst a Dallas man for the Sept.
21 burglary of the Andy Ingle
home at Grandview.
ed the check at another North
Main street service station where
he bought a tire.
Nowlin was arrested within an
hour after the first transaction.
g. ' ;• __ ■ 11 "
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a year ago, Anderson recalls, only
| one store in Fort Worth sold Hi-
i Fi sets. Now there are possibly 15
■ or 20.
The only solution in knowing
what records to stock is to know
your customers and try to guess
ha eu
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refused to get in step, but he ap-
peared to be fighting a losing
battle.
In the East, states electing to
stay on daylight time until Oct.
27 included Maine, most of Mary-
land, Delaware, the District of
largest task force of American
ships massed in the Mediter-
ranean since the war.
Almost 100 ships and 50,000
men are packed into the narrow
waters around Saros Bay and the
Gallipoli peninsula, participating
in large-scale NATO maneuvers.
tion,” he said. “Such action, with
serious intent, would be in direct
contravention of the stated ob-
jects of Kiwanis International.”
One of these objectives, Arnold
said, asks members “to co-oper-
ate in creating and maintaining
that sound public opinion and
high idealism which make possi-
ble the increase of righteousness,
justice, patriotism and good will.”
Paul J. Files, Paris, Tex., gov-
ernor of the Kiwanis Texas-Okla-
homa district, said the Marshall
action was “a hasty and spur of-
the-moment thing.”
He said he had learned that
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seeing about
is comprised of three and four
U year olds. Music must have rhy-
sion after
women in
deferred the pledge for that one
meeting” in protest against the
use of federal troops in Little
Rock.
Adm. C. R.
gg
Massachusetts, New
By Flora Mae Vincent complicated, being very close to aged entertainment, but Hi-Fi is three years, since it has widened
(Times-Review staff writer) the MAMBO and to be accomplish- running a close second. The ad- the range of frequencies. More im-
The local “Be-Bop” crowd may ed at it takes the patience of much vance in high fidelity has helped provements have been made in
soon live out the title that has practice as well as instruction. the record business quite a lot. mechanics than in records, thus
prompted many a parent to ques- It is believed that television is In fact it is estimated the record more stores handling Hi-Fi equip-
tion, “is it normal for him (or her) still ahead of recordings in teen- business has doubled in the past ment have come to the fore. About
to act this way?” in reference to
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By UNITED PRESS
Daylight Savings Time ends in
most of the nation at 2 a.m. local
time Sunday, but it may be an-
other month before the country’s
clock watchers can really get to-
gether.
In at least one state, Indiana,
“what time is it?” was the hottest
political question going. Gov. Har-
old Handley pleaded with his fel-
low Hoosiers to set their clocks
back an hour, but his own state
capitol of Indianapolis joined
rebel cities which insist on wait-
ing until Oct. 27.
In so doing, they followed the
example of the nation’s two big-
gest cities, New York and Chicago,
in delaying the time switch until
late October.
5c . -
-- what they will buy. This requires
a. good knowledge of the Lusic
ih - trend around the nation as well
Sha as locally. The same is true in
25 playing dance music. An orchestra
must feel the mood of his dancers
K and provide accordingly. It is not
Ag - uncommon for youngsters to spend
Hr an entire allowance on “the fav-
f6g ; orite disc of the day.”
It seems that musical reactions E--aR,rg, Gemgg
25 are not limited to the local teen- 53 5-63 y 33663
agers entirely, but the kindergar-! । a b b • P sj
K ten set as well and the grammar #6 RR €61
2 . graders come in for their share
288 > of rythmic reactions as well. In
hostile aircraft ap-
Most Northeast states and some
in the Midlands followed the Chi-
cago - New York example. Others
adopted a crazy-quilt compromise,
such as the 385 Illinois communi-
ties making the switchover Sun-
day while 365 others refused to
budge.
To add to the confusion, some
states, such as North Dakota,
made the switch earlier this
month. And about half the states
never changed to daylight time in
the first place.
The time snarl reached its peak :
in Indiana, where a new state law
requires all of Hoosierdom to quit
daylight time on Sunday.
Indianapolis and cities in the
northwest part of the state blithely
defied the Legislature. The Indi-
anapolis city council announced
daylight time would stick around
until Oct. 27, and the northwest
communities said they wouldn’t
change until the switch took place
in Chicago.
Handley threatened to cut off
state funds to Hoosier cities which
,,8
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BROUGHT HOME—Mr. and Mrs. Ed Crary,
left, are reunited with their 8-year-old son
Lee, who had been missing from his Ed-
monds, Wash., home since last Monday. The
boy v as picked up waking along a road
near Lake Stevens 20 miles from his home.
said:
“Failure to act in such a case
would be tantamount to acquies-
ence in anarchy and the dissolu-
tion of the Union.” -__,
•he Marshall members “simply
ENJOYS VIEW— resident Eisenhower seems to enjoy the view
sen through the periscope of the atomic-oowred submarine
USS Seawolf during a brief underwater cruise off the New
Fnalano coast near Newport, R. I. He is the first United
States President to make an underwater trip aboard a nuclear-
powered submarine. (NEA Telephoto)
proaching your area. Low alti-
tude. If it menaces your forma-
tion, use Sidewinders to prevent
photography.”
"the Navy refused to confirm
that the plane was Russian. But
the pilots who chased it said they
had no doubt it was a Soviet air-
craft.
They said it seemed to be a
flashlight fighter-bomber with
twin jet engines and swept-back
wings. It was painted white.
Brown’s order was reliably said
to be the first shoot-to-kill order
he has issued since taking com-
mand of the U.S. Sixth Fleet in
the Mediterranean.
The incident occurred while
Brown was commanding the
Students Out
LITTLE ROCK, Sept. 22
UP—Gov. Orval E. Faubus
disclosed today that he may
call the Arkansas legisla-
ture into special session to
consider taking the inte-
grated Central High School
out of federal control.
Although Faubus did/ not say
so directly, he implied that the
idea would be to see what could
be done, under state law, about
putting nine Negro students out.
Eisenhower’s orders, escorted the
Negroes into the school last
Wednesday.
Faubus said one "possibility"
might be to withdraw all state
tax support of Central High and
reopen it as a private institution.
Look For Scapegoat
In answer to a charge by Pres-
ident Eisenhower that the gover-
nor’s state administration en-
couraged violence at Central,
Faubus said, “anyone who gets
into difficulty wants a scape-
made in a
Richard B.
“Don’t look now, but I think
somebody is trying to get
stuck with our check."
question of mothers just wanting
#_ their smaller children to dance,
Anderson replied, “There are many
.ni reasons for taking dancing lessons.
-1. In some cases it may come as a
" doctor’s recommendation to help
a child in coordination, to gain con-
. fidence, overcome shyness or oth-
‘ er difficulties that might prove a
..i hinderance to the child later on.”
- In the record department, the
faverites of the small-fry tend to
run along the same lines as the
older boys and girls probably be-
cause of their natural tendencies
to imitate older folk. The tots who
—
em 'M
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5’* A —
who asked him to close Central
High. He said that he did not
commit himself to the women,
four of whom were carrying
babies.
He said he “understood” that
a majority of the legislature
favors a special session and it
would take only 24 hours to get
legislators into Little Rock.
“I would favor closing Central
High School if that would result
in its return to state and local
authorities,” he said.
“I do not want to do anything
that jeopardizes the progress that
Arkansas has made. And that in-
cludes the benefits to our Negro
citizens.”
All Is Quiet
Central was closed for the
weekend. It was quiet; there
were no crowds around, and a
few troopers guarded it under a
warm sun.
“There never would have been
mob violence in Little Rock had
it not been deliberately stirred
up; the governor’s actions were
primarily responsible for the
trouble we’ve had here,” Mayor
Woodrow Wilson Mann said.
Mann last Monday telegraphed
Attorney General Herbert Brow-
nell that James T. Karam, a
close friend of Faubus, was a
“principal instigator” of violence
at Central High the day before
the troops were flown in.
He said it would be a serious
mistake to close Central now. be-
cause tension in Little Rock is
“subsiding gradually but notice-
ably.”
“It’s very significant that at-
tendance at Central High Friday
was about 75 per cent of
normal,” Mann said. “More than
1,400 students are attending
classes. If their parents were vio-
lently opposed to what’s going on
at Central High, these children
would not be there. These are the
people most directly affected and
their actions speak for them.”
Charges Tossed About
Karam, now under investiga-
tion by the FBI, charged today
that Mann is “not only our city’s
biggest and most vicious liar, but
also out city’s ‘gutless wonder.”’
Karam said he resents spend-
ing the taxpayers money on “two
to four” policemen to constantly
guard Mann, who goes out of of-
fice Jan. 1.
“I would like to take this op-
portunity to ask this character:
Who will protect you when you
are .Little Rock’s ex-mayor?
Karam said in a statement.
Faubus said he had no idea
(See FAUBUS page 8)
citizen, as a senator of the United
States and as chairman of the
Senate Committee on Armed Ser-
vices.”
“I must vigorously protest the
high-handed and illegal methods
being employed by the armed
forces of the United States under
your command who are carrying
out your orders to mix the races
in the public schools of Little
Rock, Arkansas.”
Eisenhower, in his reply, was
believed to be setting the tone
for his stand when he meets in
Washington Tuesday afternoon,
with a committee of five southern
governors to discuss the Little
Rock situation and the whole
problem of school integration.
“Few times in my life have I
felt as saddened as when the ob-
ligations of my office required
me to order the use of a force
within a state to carry out the
decisions of a federal court,” he
cold Russell.
Eisenhower said that if integra-
tion of Central High had been
permitted to take place without
intervention by the guard, “there
is little doubt that the process
would have gone along quite as
smoothly and quietly as it has in
other Arkansas communities.”
Of his own move in sending in
the paratroopers, Eisenhower
George Edward Collins, Jr., right, shown in
the county jail at Everett, Wash., has been
booked on suspicion of kidnapping Lee.
Snohomish County Sheriff Bob Twitchell said
Collins signed a statement admitting the
crime. (NEA Telephoto)
Cleburne teen-agers were no ex- ---89
ception as the craze for Elvis Pres- .c.
ley music descended on the nation Lg-ss, . , "
and the local store recalls it was ----------- t
no effort to sell 25 or more of his A,, Up, , . . , Stal P 10° b •.M,",sn
hits in no time. Today Anderson LIGHT FANTASTIC trippers, Morris Derting and Betsy Wade,
I had ordered about 25 discs of Pres- trip through a ballroom dance step while instructor, Harvey
ley’s and only five have made Anderson looks on critically. 'Tis reported Cleburne teen-agers
p , sales. A are going in for the more dignified type of terpsichorean art
CLEBURNE & VICINITY — It is believed the current CALY- -:.2 JL . ■ > ,D. E. I ,L
Clear to partly cloudy and mild. PSO won’t hold the limelight very now giving a good-bye to be-bop, boogie-woogie and other
long since this routine is rather outlandish dance movements.
backed by secret FBI re-
ports, sharply accused the
Arkansas state administra-
tion today of encouraging
mob violence in Little Rock
by using National Guards-
men to keep Negroes out of
Central High School.
Eisenhower, in a rare display
of anger in a public statement,
implied strongly the strife never
would have broken out if the
guardsmen had received different
instructions from Gov. Orval E.
Faubus.
"... Had the police powers of the
state of Arkansas been utilized,,
not to frustrate the orders of the
court, but to support them, the
ensuing violence and open disre-
spect for the law and for the
federal judiciary never would
have occurred,” the President
said.
Faubus, asked about Eisenhow-
er’s charges, replied in Little
Rock that “anyone who gets into
difficulty wants a scapegoat.”
Doesn't Pin Blame
Eisenhower did not mention
Faubus by name in pinning the
blame for the crisis on orders to
the guardsmen to prevent inte-
gration of Central High, but he
said:
“The Arkansas National Guard
could have handled the situation
with ease had it been instructed
WITH U.S. 6th FLEET OFF
WESTERN TURKEY, Sept. 28
(UP)—U.S. Sixth Fleet command-
er Vice Adm. Charles R. Brown
ordered his airmen to shoot to
kill when a mystery plane, be-
lieved to be Russian, streaked
low over his maneuvering forces
Thursday, it was disclosed today.
American aircraft gave chase
when the plane — a fighter-bomb-
er — headed straight for three
Sixth Fleet carriers 150 miles
away. But the plane escaped the
pursuers by swerving to the
west before it reached the car-
riers, then disappeared into Bul-
garia above the Greek Island of
Thasos.
Brown flashed the shoot order
when the plane roared over the
NATO landing exercise beach in
Turkey’s Saros Bay area at tree-
top level at noon Thursday, then
headed out to sea toward the
fleet carriers.
Brown told his fliers to use
man continued. “They try dif-
ferent systems. A scientist
thinks, ‘well, maybe this system
would be better,’ and it happens
that you might get a real bonus.”
The pre-dawn shot brilliantly
lighted up Las Vegas, about 90
miles to the south, silhouetting
the 11,910-foot- desert mountain
peak for which the device was
named.
'Charleston'
Blast Heard
in Wide Area
ATOMIC TEST SITE, Nev.,
Sept. 28 (UP)— The atomic test
blast “Charleston” went off with
a rumble heard 150 miles away
today, but with less force than
scientists figured it might have
had.
However, Atomic Energy Com-
mission spokesman explained ;
that there was “no miscalcula-
tion” involved in the 6 a.m. (pdt)
shot, detonated from a balloon
1,500 feet above the desert floor,
which sent a bright orange fire-
ball 32,000 feet into the air and
lighted up La Vegas ‘like Day.”
In an official statement issued
Sept. 21, the AEC said that while
“Charleston” was an experimental
device with a “wide range” of
possible yield) ‘the laboratory
determined that most probably
the yield will be above nominal.”
‘Nominal” is figured as a force
equal to that of 20,000 tons of
TNT, or about the strength of the
atom bombs dropped over Japan
in World War II.
Following the test today, how-
ever, the AEC announced the
power of the blast had been “be-
low nominal.” The scientists add-
ed they were not suprised be-
cause the device bad been de-
signed — by the University of
California’s Livermore labora-
tory — with a “wide range” of
yield possible.
“As in most of these experi-
mental tests here,” a spokesman 1
said, “they were trying out some-
thing to see what would happen.
If it happened this way, it would ,
be a certain size and if it hap-
pened that way it might be much
bigger.
“They know what they have '
and they are trying to make
these things smaller all the time
and more powerful,” the spokes- ,
Denied Pledge,
Asked to Speak
CHICAGO (UP)— The Kiwanis
International has asked the
Marshall, Texas Kiwanis chapter
for a statement declaring its “loy-
alty and fidelity to the nation.”
A Marshall club spokesman
said earlier the chapter had “by-
passed” its usual pledge of alleg-
iance to the U. S. flag at its reg-
ular weekly meeting Wednesday.
He said the action was in protest
against the use of federal troops
in the Little Rock integration dis-
pute.
Kiwanis President H. Park Ar-
nold, in asking for the statement
Friday, said he believed the inci-
dent was a “momentary manifes-
tation” of integration feeling in
Marshall.
“It was not intended as an
action of disrespect to our na-
does, but there has been a big fall- t
ing away, he says. Two years ago pan
one could look across the dance .
floor and see very young person
“jumping,” but the same crowd is E
now in the process of making a •25
change-over in their music and esem
dance preferences. . ;
--- Not too many local youngsters H™1!
soline. Nowlin gave the attendant: know the more popular of the La- eeh
a check for $54.38 and was endor- tin dances; the SAMBA, CHA-CHA- emu
sing it when the attendant waited CHA and the very newest one call- pan
on another customer. Officers said ed the MERENGUE. The instruc- g15
ter believes our young people pre-
On Legislotion
SAN ANTONIO, Sept. 28 (UP)
—Sen. Henry B. Gonzalez said to-
day he will urge legislative con-
sideration at the coming special
session of a voter registration
law and a fair employment prac-
tices act.
Gov. Price Daniel has called
the special session for Oct. 14 to
enact a lobby registration law,
approve a statewide plan of
water conservation, required reg-
istration of state employes who
practice before state agencies,
and map a statewide study of
crime prevention.
JOHN HENRY SIMONS, the
merchant, chatting with a friend
..That new highway between CO-
MANCHE and BROWNWOOD, one
of Texas’ federal road projects,
will be a great facility when it is
finished...NINA ARNOLD, travel-
ing companion of beauteous JO
DODSON, when the local redhead
was winning beauty contests left
and right, feted her favorite gal
Saturday with a luncheon at LIB-
ERTY HOTEL...Miss DODSON will
be wed to PAT CAUDLE of WHIT-
NEY, next Sunday...She will aid
this correspondent Monday night
in judging a mammoth beauty con-
test at PALESTINE, a brilliant
feature of the ANDERSON COUN-
TY FAIR.
The TOM DAVISES returning
from HOT SPRINGS and the fun-
eral of his brother, who died in
SAN ANTONIO...Veteran TIMES-
REVIEW advertising solicitor,
JOHNNIE OWNBEY, shed a
bucketful of tears Saturday
when she bid goodbye to her col-
leagues...She is taking a position
with a law firm in FORT WORTH
...KENNETH (MOONLIGHT) CON-a
NER says he will be on the hongg
roll when the first report is ma
at ARLINGTON STATE C E
LEGE, where he is a freshmE
8888“
☆ ☆
☆ ☆
☆ ☆
chairman of the Senate Armed
obviously was nettled by a tele-
graphic complaint from Russell
Friday objecting to the presence
of “Hitler’s storm troopers” in
Little Rock.
“I must say that I completely
fail to comprehend your compar-
ison of our troops to Hitler’s
storm troopers,” the President
said. “In one case military power
was used to further the ambitions
and purposes of a ruthless dic-
tator; in the other to preserve
the institutions of a free govern-
ment.”
Complains of Wrong-Doing
Russell also had complained
about wrong-doing in Little Rock
by the paratroopers sent there by
the President to enforce integra-
tion of Central High.
The President assured the sen-
ator that his charges were being
investigated and that Army Sec-
retary Wilbar Brucker would
make a direct report to Russell
on the findings.
He seldom displays his anger
in public, but today he blasted
back at Russell and indirectly at
the Arkansas Democratic admin-
istration.
“When a state, by seeking to
frustrate the orders of a federal
court, encourages mobs of ex-
tremists to flout the orders of a
federal court, and when a state
refuses to utilize its police powers
to protect against mobs persons
who are peaceably exercising
their right under the Constitution
as defined in such court orders,
the oath of office of the Presi-
dent requires that he take action
to give that protection,” the Pres-
ident said.
Russell who had sent a telegram
to the President in angry resent-
ment at what he called “strong-
methods being employed at Little
Rock.” He said he spoke as “a
☆ ☆
Senator Has Plans j present teen-age reactions to music
and dances.
To keep pace with the ever-chan-
ging moods of the younger gener-
ation, Harvey Anderson, musician,
dance director and owner of the
local Music Staff, has announced
opening soon of classes in ball-
room dancing for teen-agers.
The new classes will cater to the g,
desires of both parents, who want g
their youngsters to learn to dance, —
and the junior high group who
“want to be prepared” for high .
school activities in the coming -
year. Anderson, whose work with
dance bands promotes him to the
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smoother dances of the day. It is-
n’t that the crowd dislike “bop” -
music. On the contrary, it still -
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Proctor, Jack. Cleburne Times-Review (Cleburne, Tex.), Vol. 52, No. 303, Ed. 1 Sunday, September 29, 1957, newspaper, September 29, 1957; Cleburne, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1567645/m1/1/?q=music: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Johnson County Historical Collective.