Armored Sentinel (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, May 22, 1959 Page: 1 of 12
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VOL. 17 NO. 11
Parent-Daughter Night
Girl Scouts Of
Eleven Troops
Attend Banquet
Girl Scouts from 11 troops at
tended the annual Parent-Daugh
ter banquet and court of awards
held Monday evening at the Fort
Hood NCO Club.
Mrs. Raymond E. McDonough
neighborhood chairman of Fort
Hood Girl Scouts opened the af
fair with a welcoming address.
lis was followed by a flag cer
emony performed by the scouts.
Among the principal guests
at the banquet were Col. Wil
liam R. Prince Deputy Post
Commander and Col. Donald
W. McRell Post finance and
accounting officer.
In a message to the scouts and
their parents Col. Prince con
gratulated the Girl Scouts on "a
remarkably fine year of scout
ing activities.
Col. McRell who is also chair
man of youth activities at Fort
Hood announced that the large
12 Pistolmen
To Benning
Twelve Fort Hood men who
have this year earned marksman
ship honors as members of Fort
Hood pistol teams have been se
lected to represent the Fourth
Army in the All-Army matches
at Fort Benning Ga. beginning
May 25.
The men who form almost
half the 25-man squad will
depart today from their pres
ent temporary duty station
at Fort Sam Houston Tex.
They are Capt. Calvin L. Col-
ley Capt. Vincent W. Lang Lt.
William Turner Jr. Lt. Cecil L.
ttellis M-Sgt. Lubin K. Hernan
dez SFC Robert W. Simon SFC
William G. Horton SFC Lennon
E. Trueblood Sgt. Thomas J.
Blake Sgt. Earl L. Priest M-
Sgt. Stanford T. Bozeman and
Sgt. James H. McNally.
All of these men earned their
places on the team by competi
tion at post and army levels dur
ing the regular season which cul
minated in the Fourth Army
matches at Fort Hood in April.
It was largely due to their ef
forts that Fort Hood won a de
cisive victory over all other in
stallations in the five-state Fourth
Army area during these matches.
Some of them took part in
the 1958 championships held
at Fort Hood also dominated
by Fort Hood marksmen.
It is expected that many of the
firers on the Fourth Army team
will be selected for further com
petition in the National Matches
at Camp Perry Ohio. The Camp
Perry matches are the most im
portant competitive events in
American marksmanship.
319th Men Top
NCO Graduates
Master sergeants of the 319th
Military Intelligence Bn. finish
ed first and second in the Armed
Forces Day graduating class at
/j^^the Fort Hood NCO Academy
V^^Knd a 2d Armored Division ser-
^JFgeant was third among the 36
graduates.
M-Sgt. Samuel H. Hadley
Jr. took top honors with a
96.72 average and received a
certificate of achievement
signed by Maj. Gen. Earle
G. Wheeler 3d Armored Di
vision and Fort Hood com
mander for his accomplish
ment.
M-Sgt. Joseph Thomson also
of the 319th was second in class
standings of Non-commsisioned
Officers Class 142.
Sgt. William E. Howell 78th
Artillery was third.
Forty-four Reserve and Nation
al Guard NCO's were graduated
at the same ceremony.
M-Sgt. Charles N. Stone and
M-Sgt. James C. Brantley both
of the 49th Armored Division
Texas National. Guard were first
and second. M-Sgt. Duane A.
Johnson 717th AAA Bn. New
Mexico National Guard was
third.
Col. Franklin W. Clarke Fort
Hood Judge Advocate was guest
speaker.
Lt. Col. Burns Returns
Lt. Col. E. J. Burns 2d Ar-
tmored Division Ordnance Officer
and commander of the 124th Ord
nance Battalion returned here
May 18 after attending the At
omic Weapons Guided Missile Or
ientation Course Air Defense
School at Fort Bliss Texas from
May 11-16.
turnout at the banquet was "in
deed heartenir. He went on
to say that he encouraged and
hoped for still greater participa
tion in youth activities at Fort
Hood.
The court of awards ceremon
ies followed. Here the young
ladies received their merit bad
ges for the year's activities.
Sixteen Girl Scouts were award
ed the Curved Bar rank. The
Curved Bar is roughly equal to
the rank of Eagle Scout in the
Boy Scouts.
Mrs. McDonough cited the
award as signifying "compe
tent completion of all scout
ing activities plus."
The new possessors of the Curv
ed Bar are:
Cladys Cabazos Cynthia Caso
Valery Cave Paulette Hack
Diane Henege Cathy Hull Bar
bara Nitsche Jackie Messmer
Jackie Price Diana Prins Vickye
Underwood Anne Walker
Sherry Weber Susanne Beigh-
ley Emily Manly and Tomi
Matheson.
Among other adults who have
worked with the scouts during
the year in either an advisory
or organizational capacity receiv
ing awards were Mrs. William
R. Prince Girl Scout publicity
chairman and Mrs. Paul C. Koer-
ner senior advisor. Each wom
an received a letter of appre
ciation.
In an air of levity but with
an underlying note of sincere
appreciation Lt. Walter D.
Forsythe (Chaplain) was
presented with a Girl Scout
pin for his aid to the scouts
throughout the year.
Towards the end of the pro
gram Mrs. McDonough was pre
sented a Girl Scout statuette- in
recognition of her exemplary serv
ice as neighborhood chairman of
the Girl Scouts. She and her hus
band Maj. Raymond E. Mc
Donough are to leave Fort Hood
shortly.
The organizations that partici
pated in this year's parent-daugh-
ter banquet are:
Troops 17 27 43 89 115 281
199 203 208 116 and 117.
Stewart Retires
M-Sgt. Forby J. Stewart 104th
Engineer Company retires from
military service this month after
more than 23 years of active
duty.
While at Fort Hood he has
been a construction supervisor.
Since completion of his basic
training in 1936 at Fort Mills
Corregidor he has served in
many parts of the world.
Sgt. Stewart and his wife Mag
dalene reside at 177-6 McNair
Village Fort Hood with their
two children Joann Marie and
James Edward.
V..
SCOUT AWARD—Mrs. William R. Prince wife of Col. Prince
Deputy Post Commander presents pretty Diana Prins with
the Girl Scout Curved Bar rank. The Curved Bar is roughly
equivalent to the Rank of Eagle Scout in Boy Scouts. The award
was presented at the annual
parent-daughter
quet at the NCO club Monday evening May 18. Diana is the
daughter of M-Sgt. and Mrs. Robert Jones 142d Signal Bn.
'Let Me Die
With Dignity'
(Editors' note: This article
is reprinted with the permis
sion of the publishers of
TRAFFIC SAFETY maga
zine. It appeared in. the May
1959 issue.)
By KATHRYN MORRIS
I'd as soon be killed and eaten
by cannibals as to die in an atuo-
mobile accident.
Like anyone else who never will
elect to become a suicide I shall
not be able to choose the time the
place or the means of my own
death. But like anyone else I
have preferences.
And I can think of no more
repugnantly undignified a way for
my life to end than to become
one of the thousands who die an
nually on our streets and high
ways.
What impresses itself indeli
bly upon my mind as I see
the aftermath of serious in
jury and death in traffic
crashes is the fact that an ac
cident victim is denied the
personal privacy and public
sympathy most -of us aspire to
when we consider our own
deaths.
With the exception of mishaps
which take place in remote or in
accessible spots any crash im
mediately draws a crowd of spec
tators some of them officially
concerned most of them morbid
ly curious.
Victims be they innocent ba
bies once-vibrant teen-agers well
CONGRATULATIONS. POP M-Sgt. Joseph Thomson second place honor graduate of the Fort
Hood noncommissioned officers' Academy at Fort Hood Tex. receives big kisses from two of
his daughters. They are left to right Mary 5 and Sandy 7. Other family members are stand
ing left to right Tommy 9 Patti 15 Mrs. Helen Thomson and Mike 12. M-Sgt. Thomson
first sergeant of 162d Military Intelligence Company (Linguist) 319th Military Intelligence Bat
talion was graduated from the NCO school last Saturday May 16.
behaved adults or sedate elderly
persons are subjected to the avid
scrutiny of those who will regale
listeners for days with lurid de
tails of what they saw.
Bleeding broken clothing pul
led indelicately awry limbs
grotesquely sprawled senses be
fuddled or faces miroinrg the
shocking finality of sudden death
the accident victim has lost in
the moment of "impact that in
tangible but precious commodity
known as human dignity.
It is my profound convic
tion that every individual is
entitled to look forward to
inevitable death with sere
nity with the assurance that
when his time comes to die
he can "wrap the draperies
of his couch about him and lie
down to pleasant dreams'
without an audience of gap
ing strangers surrounding
him.
Almost anyone whatever his
station in life whatever his edu
cation his religion or his per
sonal philosophy will concede a
certain attitude of respect to
ward the newly dead except
on the highway.
After a week all canons of
good taste good conduct and good
sense are relaxed and the mob in
stinct prevails.
Death on a public thoroughfare
provides much the same spec
tacle as a lynching. I want none
of it for myself or for any one I
love.
*"f "®tir
v
1
Girl Scout Ban
Published bv The Temnle Sales Circular Co a private firm. Opinions expressed by the publisher and writers herein are their own and are not to be considered an official expression by the Department of the Army. The appearance of advertisements in this publication does not constitute
au indorsement by the Department of the Army of the products or services advertised.
FORT HOOD TEXAS FRIDAY MAY 22 1959
MH-B College
Offers Off
Duty Classes
The Fort Hood Army Education
Center has announced a summer
session of off-duty classes for mi
litary personnel at Fort Hood. The
classes will be offered in conjunc
tion with the program of Mary
Hardin-Baylor College of Belton.
Six courses have been
scheduled for the summer
session.
On Monday and Wednesday eve
nings courses will be given in
current world affairs college al
gebra and the psychology of ado
lescence. The credit for the later
which is a professional education
course counts toward earning a
teacher's certificate.
Tuesday and Thursday evenings
the courses offered are: introduc
tion to business history of the
Far East in modern times and
plane trigonemetery.
A prerequisite of six hours in
college history is required for the
Far East course while the com
pletion of college algebra is a
preregquisite for the trigonometry
course.
Summer classes will begin
June 1 and end July 30. Each
class will meet for a two hour
session from 6:00 p.m. to
8:00 p.m.
Military registration for com
pletion for tuition assistance
forms may be obtained at the
Army Education Center begin
ning May 25. They may be picked
up during normal duty hours or
in the evenings from 6:00 to 8:00
p.m. Monday through Thursday.
For further information contact
the AfiHSy 'Education* Center Bldg.
212 or telephone 37201.
Col. Whitsitt
Leaves Hood
For Far East
Col. Menon W. Whitsitt com
manding officer of the 35 Engineer
Group since 1958 will leave Fort
Hood this month for a new as
signment with the U.S. Army En
gineer District Pacific Ocean Di
vision in the Far East.
A brief ceremony at 10 a.m.
today in front of his unit
headquarters will mark Ids
departure and install Lt. Col.
Joseph H. Lewis as command
er of the group. The perma
nent replacement of Colonel
Whitsitt Col. Oval H. Rob
inson will arrive at Fort
Hood June 29.
Col. Whitsitt a native of Jack
sonville Tex. graduated from
Reagan High School in Houston
and attended the University of
California in Berkeley and the
University of Omaha in Nebraska.
He was commissioned in the
Corps of Engineers in 1936 as a
member of the 36th Infantry Di
vision. He was called to active
duty with that division in 1940.
Since that time he has served
not only at various stations in
the continental United States but
in Alaska the Aleutians and Ice
land.
Before coming to Fort Hood he
was Assistant Army Construction
Military Construction Office of
the Chief of Engineers Washing
ton D. C.
Education Center
Schedules Class
In Typewriting
The Army Education Center
will organize two off-duty begin
ning typing classes for military
personnel to begin June 1 at 6
p.
m.
Each class will meet two even
ings weekly Monday and Wed
nesday or Tuesday and Thursday.
Classes will continue for nine or
10 weeks ending the last of July
or early in August depending on
progress.
There is no fee for enrollment
and courses follow USAFI text
material with USAFI final exam
inations and USAFI credit for
those who complete course suc
cessfully.
Registration for these typing
classes will be held at the Army
Education Center two days Thurj
sday and Friday May 28-29. Due
to limited number of typewriters
available only active duty mili
tary personnel can be enrolled.
v-j..
Sgt. Maj. Enrico
Enrico Becomes
'Super-Grader'
M-Sgt. Etlo R. Enrico May 19
received a warrant promoting
him to sergeant major (E-9) from
Maj. Gen. Earle G. Wheeler 2nd
Armored Division and Fort Hood
commander.
The new "super-grader" has
been at Fort Hood since Aug
ust 1958 and is sergeant ma
jor of the 720th Military Po
lice Battalion.
A graduate of Chisholm High
School Cir.sholm Minn. he has
completed two years of study at
the University of Wisconsin. He
entered the Army in January
1943.
After completion of basic train
ing at Fort Devans Mass. he
s'ef^Sr in England France Bel
gium and Germany during and
after World War n. He partici
pated in the Rhine] ~nd and Cen
tral European Campaigns.
His service medals include the
American Campaign Medal the
World War II Victory Medal and
the National Defense Service Med
al.
Before coming to Fort Hood
last year he was with the U.S.
Army Instructor Unit Loyola
University New Orleans La.
Sergeant Enrico resides with
is if ha an he
sons at 6260-1 Patton Spur Chaf
fee Village at Fort Hood.
Michigan Man
Is Top Trainee
A 19-year-old former University
of Michigan student was honored
as "Outstanding Trainee" of Com
pany during Retreat Ceremo
nies of 1st Armored Rifle Bat
talion 50th Invantry May 11.
Karl F. Sebastaian son of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles E. Se
bastian Alma Mich. will
soon attend Radio School at
Fort Knox Ky. for his ad
vanced basic training.
He was a graduate of Alma
Mich. High School in 1957 and at
tended the University of Michi
gan two years before entering the
Army March 3 1959.
Aslo honored at the ceremonies
was Sp-4 Robert A. Jackson of
Headquarters Company. Col Wil
liam W. Harvey commander of
Combat Command B presented
Specialist Jackson with a certif
icate of achievement for finishing
first in the Noncommissioned Of
ficers' Course with an 88.96 aver
age during the January class.
Specialist Jackson who heads
the company supply section is 22
years old and is married. He and
his wife Marlene live at Gold
Rocket Trailer Court in Eileen
Texas.
-Sent P-l l-18bb Education MR
Lt. William S. Kimura was
given a marksmanship medal for
placing second in the recent CCB
Officers' Pistol Elimination.-
New Yorker Is Named
West Point Chaplain
West Point N. Y. AFPS) A
prominent New York City clergy
man who lost his only son in
WWII has been appointed Chap
lain of the Military Academy's
Corps of Cadets.
He is Dr. Theodore Cuyler
Speers pastor of the Central
Presbyterian Church since 1936.
He' succeeds Chaplain George M.
Bean who has been here since
1954.
Dr. Speers served as an artil
lery corporal in WWI. His son
Theodore Speers Jr. was killed
in action in the Battle of the
Bulge in 1945.
Hood Hosts 4th Army
Track Meet Next Week
AF Day Tour
Impresses
Baylor Head
Among interested and im
pressed— guests at Fort Hood
during Armed Forces Day acti
vities was Dr. Monroe S. Car
roll Provost at Baylor Univer
sity in Waco.
In a letter to Maj. Gen.
Earle G. Wheeler 2d Armor
ed Division and Fort Hood
commander Dr. Carroll said:
"I left the post thinking of
Fort Hood as a great university
for defense. The classrooms dis
pensaries recreational and social
facilities the permanent bar
racks and homes for officers
and enlisted personnel I am sure
attracts and holds higher quality
personnel."
Dr. Carroll's letter expressed
his personal appreciation for the
opportunity to visit the post and
that of Dr. William R. White
president of the university and of
Baylor University itself.
He characterized his visit as
... a most delightful inform
ing and revealing occasion.' The
educator noted that "Every per
son contacted at Fort Hood was
very cordial and helpful."
Dr. Carroll said he was 'very
impressed" by the equipment dis
played by Fort Hood units. He
mentioned the communications
systems flight equipment water
purification field shower-
baths the armored vehicle laun
ched bridge and the hospital unit.
Gen. Wheeler has received
many similar letters in addition
to verbal expressions of appre
ciation from civilian guests and
retired military personnel who
visited Fort Hood during Armed
Forces Week.
Letters also have been receiv
ed from commanders of military
installations to which Fort Hood
sent equipment displays. The let
ters are uniform in their praise
of the displays and the conduct
and efficiency of the Fort Hood
officers and men handling the
displays.
Summer Production
The Fort Hood Little Theater
Group has decided on the play
"The Rainmaker" by N. Richard
Nash for its summer production.
Ira L. Sanders director of the
production has announced he will
cast for parts May 27-29 at 7:30
p.m. at the old Brigade Avenue
Service Club Bldg. 3413 at the
corner of Brigade Ave. and 162d
St.
Participation in the Little
Theater is open to all mili
tary personnel their depend
ents and civilians in the Fort
Hood area.
"The Rainmaker" will be
played July 8-11. Tentatively it is
to be done "theater-in-the-round."
There are seven parts six
male one female in "The
Rainmaker" a dramatic quasi-
comedy in three acts.
Cinema-addicts might recall the
film version which featured Burt
Lancaster and Katherine Hep
burn.
The story has to do with a
General Wheeler
Named To Armor
Governing Body
Three men well known at Fort
Hood were named officers of the
U. S. Armor Association in the
70th annual meeting at Fort
Knox Ky. May 7-8. Lt. Gen.
George W. Read Jr. 2nd U. S.
Army commander was reelected
president.
Maj. Gen. Earle G. Wheeler
Fort Hood and 2nd Armored Di
vision commander was named to
the executive council as was Col
Delk Oden formerly commander
of Combat Command A 1st Ar
mored Division and now at the
Army Aviation Center.
Maj. Gen. W. Paul Johnson
who commanded the 2nd Armor
ed Division at Fort Hood until
late last year and who now com
mands Fort Knox is one of thfe
three vice presidents.
Others are Maj. Gen. D. W.
McGowan Chief Army Division
National Guard Bureau: and Col.
Willard Webb commander of the
Division
4
The triathlon a military
event is used by the Army
to select possible military
pentathlon competitors. It in
cludes pistol shooting swim
ming and a two mile run.
The additional events in the
pentathlon are fencing and
horsemanship.
Action in the three-day event
begins Wednesday May 27 and
continues through Friday. Most
events will be in the evening
at Hood Statium to avoid the
hot afternoon hours and to al
low attendance by members of
Accidents
Mnjure 16
Sixteen were injured in acci
dents at Fort Hood last week
three in traffic accidents five in
training accidents and eight in
miscellaneous type accidents.
For the year 315 have been in
jured and 12 killed in accidents.
Traffic mishaps have accounted
for all but one of the fatalities
and 52 of the injuries.
Training accidents have injured
131 and killed one while other
type accidents have injured 132.
ACCIDENTS
Automobile Week 1959
Fatalities .... 0
Injuries 3 52
Accidents ...... 5 '83
Training
Fatalities 0 1
Injuries ...... S 131
Others
Injuries 8 132
All injury statistics reported
here are taken from hospital ad
mittance cards. Only accidents in
cluded here are those that are re
ported to the Fort Hood Military
Police.
Fort Hood Little Theater
To Present 'Rainmaker'
family in the west whose oth
erwise commodious existence
is thrown out of joint by a
desperate need for rain on
the part of the whole fam
ily and what is perhaps an
even more urgent need for
love on the part of its sole
female sibling.
Thereupon Starbuck a self-
professed rainmaker with some
thing of the con-man about him
arrives and threatens to relieve
both exigencies
In short the play has tremen
dous comic and dramatic poten
tial.
New Commander
For 67th Armor
Lt. Col. John H. Merriam as
sumed command of the 1st Med
ium Tank Battalion 67th Armor
2nd Armored Division on May 11.
He replaced Maj. Roy R. Plum-
ley who became executive offi
cer 2d Armored Division Trains.
Lt. Col. Merriam joins the 2d
Armored Division from Head
quarters Carribbean Command
C. Z. where he was assistant
plans officer J-3.
A native of Lu Verne
Idaho Col. Merriam entered
the Army in February 1941.
During World War II he par
ticipated in the Normandy
Rhineland Ardennes and
Northern France campaigns
with the 94th Field Artillery
Battalion 4th Armored Divi
sion.
A graduate of the command
and General Staff College at Fort
Leavenworthk Kan. Col. Merr
iam also instructed at that post
for several years.
Col. Merriam's decorations in
clude the Silver Star Bronze Star
Medal for Valor Purple Heart
with two Oak Leaf Clusters Dis
tinguished Unit Citation and
French Fourragere as well as
campaign medals and service
ribbons.
Col. Merriam his wife Bette
and their five children live at
5743 Bailey Street Wainwright
Heights.
—12 Pages
Triathlon Opens
Slate Wednesday
Top track and field men of
the five-state army area will be
at Fort Hood next week for the
1959 Fourth Army Track and
Field and Triathlon Meet.
the post and civilian friends of
the post who might not be able
to attend during the day.
As with all athletic activities
at Fort Hood members of the
community are cordially invited
invited to attend without charge.
Parking space is available at
Hood Stadium near the railhead
at the south edge of the conton-
ment.
The meet will open formally at
7 p. m. Wednesday with brief
ceremonies at Hood Stadium.
Track events of the evening will
include the six-mile run 440 hur
dles trials 880 trials and the
440 relay. Field events will in
clude high jump competition be
ginning at 7:30 p. m.
Earlier in the day triath
lon competitors will complete
the pistol and
swimming
phases of their event and the
weight men will have com
pleted the hammer throw.
Thursday will be a big day
for the runners. They will be
gin at 7:30 p. m. with the finals
of the 440 hurdles. Finals also
will be run in the 880 mile and
880 relay. Both trials and finals
are scheduled for the 100 and
120 high hurdles. The two-mile
triathlon event will be run and
trials will be held in the 440.
Thursdays field events begin
ning at 7 p. m. will include
trials and finals in broad jump
and shotput and javelin trials.
Friday's competition begin-
ning at the same time will see
the finals in the 440 trials and
finals in the '220' the three-mile
run the mile relay and the
grueling two-mile steeplechase.
Field events will be the pole-
vault discus hop-step-jump and
finals of the javelin.
The 150 athletes all cham
pions at their own posts are
expected to begin arriving at
Fort Hood Monday. A cen
ter has been established at
Bldg. 65 to greet the thin-
clads and assist them in get
ting settled.
Coaches officers in charge and
officials will be briefed at Bldg.
38 at 2 p. m. Tuesday.
The athletes and guests will at
tend a banquet in their honor
at the Fort Hood NCO Club Tues
day evening.
The competitors in the Fourth
Army meet will be shooting at
(See TRACK MEET page 6)
Sergeant Cruz
Gets Decoration
Sgt. Roman Cruz 25 Hq. Co.
51st Infantry overcame two diffi
culties the barrier of langu
age and unfamiliarity with the
mortar and parlayed these ob
stacles into a Commendation Rib
bon with metal pendant.
Notification of the award
made by the 4th Calvalry sta
tioned in Hawaii was released
today.
Sgt. Cruz a native of Lalo
Barrigada Guam won the medal
according to the citation for "his
diligence devotion to duty and
upcomprimising standards of ex
cellence ... reflecting great
credit on himself and1 the military
service."
The commendation goes on to
state that while serving as a
Scout Section Leader in Troop C
3d Recon Squadron 4th Cavalry
from 17 June 1957 to 12 January
1959 he "distinguished himself
by commendable and meritorious
performance of duty in a position
normally authorized a person of
considerably higher. rank and
greater experience."
"Despite" the citation reads
"a lack of previous experience
in mortar operations when the
need for a well trained cadre of
mortar personnel arose Sgt.
Cruz quickly mastered the intri
cacies of this weapon and imple
mented a dynamic intensive
training program which effective
ly met existing requirements."
The citation went on to read
"In this and other instances Sgt.
Cruz's initiative and capability for
independent effort have given him
an encyclopedic knowledge of
Armored Cavalry operations and
individual weapons performance."
Sgt. Cruz lives with his wife
Francis in Killeen while current
ly stationed at Fort Hood.
He has won the Purple Heart
and the Combat Infantryman's
badge in Korea.
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Armored Sentinel (Temple, Tex.), Vol. 17, No. 11, Ed. 1 Friday, May 22, 1959, newspaper, May 22, 1959; Temple, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth254584/m1/1/?rotate=270: accessed May 10, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Casey Memorial Library.