The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.)., Vol. 56, No. 55, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 5, 1959 Page: 1 of 18
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21 Boys Die in Fire
At Penal Barracks
LITTLE ROCK. Ark.*1 (AP)—Fire
roared through a locked dormitory
at the State Training School for
Delinquent Negro Boys at neaity
Wrightsville early today.
At least 21 youths died, and fire
Officials said they feared others
Slight have perished.
' The blaze broke out before dawn
and destroyed the brick and frame
■tructure which housed 88 in-
mates.
Survivors escaped by kicking
out windows which were covered
with heavy-gauge, double screens
i designed to prevent escapes.
About 12 bodies were' found
piled up in one spot. Apparently
they died trying to get out.
Trie 21 bodies which were re-
covered ware burned' beyond rec-
ognition.
' Gov. Orval E. Faubds, who went
to the scene as soon as he heard
of the fire, said the doors should
not have been barred and there
should have teen an adult in the
building. .
Faubus said an investigation
would made.
Origin of the blaze feat de-
strpyed the dormitory within an
hour could not be determined im-
mediately. Faubus said he had
been told there was an electrical
storm at the time.
The dazed survivors, ringing in
age from 14 to 17,
as firemen, sheriffs officers, and
prisoners from a nearby penal
farm tried to quench the smoul-
dering ruins of the dormitory.
Fire Capt Bill Deaton said he
saw eight bodies in a pile and nine
ether bodies had been taken from
the chaired remains of the 20-
year-old building.
A vocational teacher who nor-
mally slept in the building was in
the hospital at the time the fire
broke out.
George Williamson, 16. a sur-
vivor, said: "I heard screaming
and hollering. There was amo**
all over. I couldn't see anything.
I found a window and got out:
1 Faubus appeared grim as he
surveyed the glowing rubble.
inspected this school a year
ago and found it safe," the go
(See FIRE, Page
24 Persons Hospitalized
JN Pa. (AP)—Scream-
er.. guests shinnied down
or climbed or were borne
dcrwis flra ladders early "today as
flames raged up an elevator shaft
of the five-story Gary Hotel.
Fire authorities reported at least
<* dead, 2 critically Injured and
24 others taken to hospitals for
C.J.
In Council Race
Claude J. Broussard. 32-year-dd
refinehy employe, became the sixth
and final candidate to enter West
Orange City Council races yester-
day by filing two hours before the
midnight deadline.
i Broussard Is a graduate of
Lutcher Stark High School and a
lifelong resident of West Orange.
He is employed as a tinsmith at
the Gulf refinery at Port Arthur.
The council candidate is married,
has two children and lives at 409
Albgny SL-.
His filing marked the entrance
of six candidates seeking election
1 to three pepding vacancies on the
council. There are also two candi-
dates in contention for the mayor's
post
Wi! t Orange residents will go to
the polls on April 4 at the grade
school there to cast ballots. Voting
will be from 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. Mrs.
Joyce Pevey has been appointed
(See BROUSSARD, Page 3)
treatment of burns, cuts, smoke
inhalation and shock. Two of the
dead were brought out soon ajter
the fire broke out. Two other vic-
tims were discovered later during
a search of the ruins.
The register of the 100-room, 75-
year-old hotel in Hazleton's busi
ness district showed a listing of 61
persons. > . .
The entire front wall of the hotel
collapsed iato heaps of rubble. It
was thought the two missing per-
sons might be dead in this wreck-
victims fled from the iteming
building, their night clothes
ablaze. Others stood md sat dazed
jn the street as 100 firemen from
four companies fought fee raging
fire for more than two hours.
Efforts to control the blaze were
hampered by icy streets and, ice
coated hoses resulting from the
biting 23 degree weather.
Flames shot from fee windows
and burst through fee roof of the
brick building as firemen arrived.
Residents stood at windows on fee
upper floors screaming for help,
Two of these were George Klem,
22. and his wife. Beverly, 18.
The Klems waited 20 minutes
for help at the window of their
fourth floor, rear apartment. Fin-
ally, in desperation, Mrs. Klem
grabbed a television cable and
slid tOs a pole from where she
was able to swing to the roof of
an adjoining 1VS story building.
Her husband followadby the same
route. Both suffered lacerations
of the hands. :
The scantily clad Mrs. Klem,
HOTEL, t*. )
NEWTON (Spl) — Directors of
the Newton County Industrial De-
velopment Committee are very op
timistic over the reception being
given an industrial development
survey now being conducted in the
county.
Directors say feat everyone con-
tacted by the survey committees
has been more than willing to do
everything possible to make the
wrvey a success.
Louis Didrikson, chairman of fee
Newton IDS, said the groups are
assembling information from every
section of the county.
The purpose is to determine fee
needs as well as things fee-county
has to offer to industry. Survey
chairman is E. N. Langley.
Didrickson has asked fee finance
committee and the membership
committee to work very closely
with the constitution and bylaws
group during fee next few weeks
in order that this group will be
in position to report the recom
Bogus Money
Ring Broken
CHICAGO (AP) — Recovery ot
more than one million dollars in
$100 bogus bills and the seizure of
25 members of a nationwide coun-
terfeiting ring were announced to-
day by fee U.S. Secret Service.
Paul J. Patemi, head of the Chi-
cago Secret Service office, said
the counterfeit notes were recov-
ered to 22 states.
He said that 25 persons have
been arrested since November as
agents worked quietly to stamp
out fee counterfeiting network.
ikata frna U.S. W«*th r liriu
OUTLOOK - Clear t® partly cloudy.
WttiOy and rather cold today with hl#h-
•tt MmixraUr* about H dacraca. Clear-
ing and colder Umtght with lowest
taaiperature tt to 4S, fair and eodl to-
morrow with ht*he t temper*tore 87 to
SO dure" Small craft warn In *f arc
dltplnyed for north aed northweet wl«d«
N to M m.p h. dimtoithtnc ilowty to-
•wj&ssrs*.p,„ «.
t:!4 p.m.
3. t:Tt .* .; aeta. S IS p.*.
Tempt rat urea, hlfh, 7.
>, U. Rain, 41.
mended constitution and bylaws
to the entire group at the next
meeting.
Directors will hold a meeting
Tuesday night, March 17 at the
Newton High School Library far
ing
sarte place on Tuesday night,
March 24. " r
The IDC urges every citizen of
Newton County to lend hi$ full
support to this program and to
ask citizens to attend fee general
meeting on March 24 at 7:30 p.m
9
m
m*
1
■
Khrushchev
Hints New
* ■
It ' V
Approach
LEIPZIG, East Germany (AP)
— Soviet Premier • Nikita Khru-
shchev said'today he is prepared
[ to postpone Che'i May 27 deadline
on Berlin—provided fruitful East-
West negotiations are under way
then.
Khrushchev said the May 27
date might be postponed until
June 27 "or may be July 27. We
.LONDON (AP) - The Soviet search party. Lt. Donald Steely ofd
Union today sharply orotested the; Falls Church Va., said later thai, .,N " l„r ?;i
tJ.S. naval boarding of a Soviet;the fishing boat "probably quite autumn " chl£kens-until
trawler suspected of cutting a !ikely>had something to do with Th" cn..!o^ u .
transatlantic cable off Newfound- the break in the cables but he rp ™ 7 u
'and-; . . .. didn't know" whethef accidentally oi^P^mpIu speech
Mosoow radio said a note hand-or intentionally. !!j a luncheon given by the mayor
ed to U.S. Ambassador Llewellyn! "The note.*1 said the Moscow T/ ''l'"'';;. „ '■ .
Thompson in Moscow described!broadcast, "points out that the in- ' «,9 ' . was brought up by
reports that the trawler Novoros- cld.-nt. involving detention of the 'ul. f' rm j ^
sisk' had damaged the cables' asiSoviet trawler was undertaken a,
"a complete invention.".. j with provocative aims in mind. | chairman of (he Britisn • Labor.
The .boarding took place off j "The Soviet government expects ,A ..... ... , .
Newfoundland iFeb: 26. The offi-lthe U.S. government to take all u Mikaido asked Khrijshehpv- what
eer who headed the American|necessary measures to prevent the;^ "|fant t0 do aoout the May 27
r T, " recurrence of such unwarranted , . , ,, t '
f" I actions toward SovieF--tTshinf;L ^'1'us^lcbev noted that The West
CSC Endorses m,mm in ,
* | The note said the trawler "didj . j 15 *rue' Khrushchev
not cause any damage to under-1 t , ,
water telegraph or telephon'' ^'1Pn csrne his remarks about a
v postponement.
In Group Vote
transatlantic cables."
\l "Reports in the U.S. press on
Nj- '
OWARIO, Calif. (AP)-A kid-
naped infant was found safe
Wednesday night in the arms of
a chunky, 37-year-old woman who
admitted taking him from his crib
while .she was babysitting five
days ago. 1
Betty Jean Yocom retreated to
the bathroom of her darkened
home 10 miles from Ontario when
School
Following is a list of activities
scheduled- in city and county
schools for today and tomorrow in
observance of Texas Public; Schools
Week.
Opep house and a program by
the schdQl band is set for today
at 7 p.m. in Carr Junior High
School. Wallace Junior-Senior High
School will' hold open house at 7
p.m. in Hunter Beaty^auditoiium.
Cove School and Colburn School
observe open house today at 6:30
open for inspec-
p.m. Cove School will serve a gum
bo supper today at 7 p.m. in fee
school cafeteria.
, In Vidor, fee junior and senior
School bartd will give a concert at
7:30 p.m. All junior and senior
classrooms will be
tion.
Classroom visitation is set today
in Salk, Tijley and Wallace Schools
in Orange. Anderson and Benja-
min Franklin schools as well as
Stark High School holds visitations
today and tomorrow.
Friday at 9 a.m. Anderson
School will present an assembly
program and Wallace School will
hold an assembly at the same
time. ' '
she heard FBI agents kicking in
the door. Hugged to her bosom
was 9-w«ek-old Eric Leon Flores.
In a bedroom the agents found
a brand new bassinet and bottle
sterilizer and other Indications
that Mrs. Yocom had lavished a
frustrated maternal love on an-
other woman's child.
The baby, ill with a cold when
he was taken from beside his
sleeping twin brother last Friday,
appeared to hav^ been well cared
for, fee FBI said.,
The baby was reunited with his
motlieii jgitb £iores, 35, widowed
mother of sbc, at the Ontario po-
lice station. -
Mrs. Flores and the friendly
woman she had allowed to sit with
her children, faced each other
tearfully.
They "had first met last Feb. 17
when Mrs. Yocom, calling herself
Ann Williams and identifying her-
self as a social worker from a
loeal church, called on Mrs.
Flores to offer any help that
might be needed. Mrs. Flores'
husband, Joseph, was killed in a
gas explosion last summer and
the community of Ontario has con-
tributed food. clothing and needed
services to the family ever since.
Mrs. Yocom, who is 5 feet "2
inches, tall and weighs about 180
pounds, offered to take care of
the Flores Children. She tele-
phoned the next day and repeated
the offer. Last Friday she called
at the house again and this time
Mrs. Flores agreed to go out with
a friend for a few hours, leaving
Mrs. Yocom with the chilaNn,
who range in age from 8 to the
infant twins.
When Mrs. Flores feturned, one
of the twins was gone.
A widespread searoh was car-
ried out for the baby and his kid-
(See KIDNAPING, Page I)
^ r —Lf«a«r pnoto bv mint junp otew
BANK GIVES PARCHMENT COPIES OF BILL OF RIGHTS TO ORANGE PUBLIC SCHOOLS
''Tnornall (left) Presents Docunient to Dr. Hubert (right)
Bank Donates
'Bill' Copies
To Schools
-Thirty parchment copies of the
American Bill of Rights were pre-
sented to the Orange public scnool
system yesterday by the First Na-
tional Bank.
W. G. Thornell, president of the
bank, made the presentation to Dr.
Frank Hubert, school superintend-
ent.
In accepting the replicas of the
historic document, Dr.-Hubert
commented, "We are pleased to
have, this new teaching aid in our
classrooms where the American
Constitution and the Bill of Rights
are teMght." •" •
• H# expressed his appreciation to
the bank for having made the
copies available, saying "students
will enjoy them since the copies
are on parchment and in the origi-
nal print."'
Dr. ^Hubert said the copies will
be distributed to all sixth grade
classes, eighth grade United States
history classes. 11th grade Ameri-
can history classes and 12th grade
civics classes. x
"The documents, by their dis-
play in the classrooms, offer an
opportunity to students for a great-
er awareness of the role of the Bill
of Rights jin the historfcal develop-
ment 6f the country," Thomel!
sad.
Other copies of the document
will be presented by the bank to
rthis question were a complete in-
vention," jt declared.
The U.S. Stats Department had
notified Moscow immediately^\vith
Members of. the Orange Com-|an explanation ^that the Mardinp
munity Service Council voted dur-jwas carried mit' linden terms of
ing their monthly luncheon 8" 1884 treaty. This 4reaty-orig-|
meeting yesterday to endorse the-H.nally signed by the czarist re-
recentlv formed partnership for C'me but later' subscribed to bv
provision of the Golden Age Home.!the Soviet Communist gov?rnment
*7They also agrsed that each ofpermits, inspection of documents
the civic, service and religious or-r0^ ships suspected of damaging
canizations with representatives on:nceMic cables wilfully or through
raoTEyn, .) _
letters written hv individual or Radio Keeps Scattering
ganizations are to be brought hack
Hejtfarned again that the Sovief"
Union will sign a separate peace
treaty .with Communist East Ger-
many if the West' Refuses to sign a
peace treaty with all of Germany.
Khrushehev also warned the
West against using force on the
Communist world. ,«•
"Whoever bumps us with his el-
bow will break it," , he said.
He said the Soviet demand for a
peace treaty was nhde urgent by
the fact that nearly 14 years have"
elapsed since the end of World
War II.
to next month's meeting of the
council, Which will prepare a cover
letter containing its own endorse-
ment:
All th* letters then .will be sent
to the Orange Housing Authoritv,
which has joined with the nonprofit
corporation organized to provide
the home in the partnership ar-
rangement. v
The council's endorsement of the toward a sweeping orbit around
new Golden Age Home program! the sun today, busily send ng
rame following an exolanation of back r^dio signals about radia-
Finds No Excessive Radiation
WASHINGTON (AP) — Pioneer It passed at 5:24 p.m. Wednesday
IV swung along far past the moon j at a speed of 4,525 miles an hour.
Sc'entists expect to continue re-
the arrangement by Floyd V. Au-
bih, executive director of the hous-
tjon—or lack of it—out in space
Even before the little gold-
ihg authority, and J Cullen Brown-j crusted space probe reappeared
inc. editor of The Leader on the United States horizon. Brit-
Browning o u tl i n e d the back gain's big rado telescope at Jodrell
around for th° Golden Age HomejBank located it early today more
movement and steps taken up to than 280,000 miles from the earth,
thejirpe it was discovered that the11ts signal,- the station reported,
Housing Authority can .provide!was coming in with great
housing for elderjv oersons and!strength.
building space in which fee cor-j That distance put the 13-pound
poration can operate a service [cone far beyond the-moon, which
0?nter.
Technical aspects of the pro-
gram were explained bv. Aubin.
He also told members of the coun-
cil that letters from organizations
would be belpful to the housing
authority in d e t e r m i n i n g the1
amOUnt of spaoe needed for the
service center and getting federal
approval of an increase in the with the deadline already pass-
present limit on such space. fjV< candidates are in the race I hides.
Litfle Cypress, Orangefield, West
Orange and Bridge City Schools,
the bank official said. ' ,.
Orange Child
Rites
11-Man Field
In Contests
ceiving Pioneer's .signal through-
out today and much of Friday un-
til it is more than 400,000 miles
awav," Its battery was designed
to remain strong until Saturday,
but by that time it mav be too
far away for its radio to bej heard.
Officials were confident that
ever thereafter Pioneer would sail
on slentlv about the sun, travel-
ing about 3,400 miles, an hour
faster than the' earth.
Mostly its orbit will be between
that of the Earth and the next
outer planet, Mars. Rut some-
times , be a little way—a
million miles or so — inside the
Earth's orbit, temporarily an "in-
ner planet" like Venus and Mer-
cury.
Already the little space voyager
has reported finding no major ra-
diation belt above those discov-
ered by the Explorer satellite ve-
.... This was encouraging
The council meetinE was presld-! for Mauriceville School Board, four | news for men soon to be trained
ed over by the t president, • Mrs. Jare seeking Cove offices and'two for space flight.
E.^ MIHs. She announced recent have filed for Bancroft. I Presumably trailing close be-
activities of member organiza- -j-wo ^,,(1, are t0 he filled atjhind Pioneer IV In space is the
tions. |MAiir.reviile three at Cove anrflhull of the final staeie rocket—a
These include the American a, Bancroft j hollow metal tube V/2 feet long.
Cancer SocietVxehaoter's training '■ ,' ^ "l* inches in diameter. But
program for volunteers who will! peeking re-election 'n^a"r'CP: I the rocket shell has no radio voice
man th- information center to be vil e ^re K'nr^hot®aA , and no means of beinR tracked.
owned in„ the Orange Community! D candidates ^ Natjona, Aeronautics and
"enter, r oening of the s«binP|*rp 'r: (^uMy) Prake, Harris lSpare'Adm nisfration held a news
Junior Rifle Club's new ran^e In E. Willey and Willis Jedry. | conference Wednesday as Pioneer
fee Communitv Center, continued) Talmadge' M, Pike Jr. seeks to j Ty sped past the moon a bit more
success of the Orange Service unseat one of the tnree inruft-j th„n 41 hours after its launching
league with the Junior Museum bents who are seeking re-election, jPar|v Tuesdaiv. It missed the
It opened last month, and a stvle The incumbents are Montgomery i moon hv 37 000 miles instead of
chow sponsored bv the Ft, Chi Sigler, Carl Lee Harris and Valray th(, 20,000 or less originaliy hoped
Chapter of Beta Sipma Phi with Franklin. •.* , if0r
a part, of th® oroceed* poino to! At Bancroft, Board President j
the Gonzales Warm Springs Foun-'I.eon Bingham is opposed by J. V. j
dation fPete) Armstrong.
The small, limp body of a 3-
year-old Cove Addition toddler was
recovered from Adams Bayou yes-
terday afternoon to end a 41-
minute hunt.
He was identified as Tim Slaugh-, ,, -
ter, son of Mr. and Mrs.. J. E. fj/ynipl / jnpen t Want It
Slaughter of 906 Arkansas St His LSUCSII I fY Ulll II
body was recovered through drag-
ging operations in 9 feet of water,
about 11 feet from the bayou bank.
Investigating officers reported
the child went to plav in a boat
tied along the bayou bank near his
home and apparently fell unnoticed
Homer J. Stewart. NASA plan-
(See PIONEER. Page S)
Liquor Bill Rider
into the water. The search started ^ave bourbon w.th their beefsteak said,
around 3:15 proband the body was 'he state's pbeketbook would bene-
recovered at 3:46 p.m: A neighbor, s®ys "ftp. Peter J Lavalle^
Edgar LeBliMi set off the alarm ! Gov. Dan eljdisagr^ed.
Th«!
By JOE BENHAM hope it will ^hot be adopted bv |c*use snuff-dippers usually were
AUSTIN (AP)—If Texans could;the Legislature," the governor elderly people with low incomes.
| "Was snuff left oilt because of
hut u . ,'Jerry Sadler?" Ellis was asked.
wJni m J Lf.c amp"dmpnt!"No sir." Ellis said. "It was left
rnn nut because of J.' T. Ellis."' Rep.
The search was conducted by Lavallei of Texas' fcityf propoied tax bills by Rep. Frates Seel,g#on iJfiV nro^saU^ denouncinR
members of fee Orange fire de-!yesterday allowing liquor to be of San Antonio. snun tax proposals.
partmeqt, Sheriff Chester Holts,;sold in restaurants. The liquor\ ravalie mi j j,( i, Aus,in Attorney Johnrtie B Rog-
deputies and ambulance crews would be packaged in two-ounce amendment was hk nwn idea' <■!<h *'T*'^ rcl2[.e*enti"'; ,lie '-'tensed Bev-
from fee Claybar Funeral Home, containers which' the state would 0 ,h, Kn wiih! i nttt PrT distributors of Texas Inc.,
Funeral services were to be con- tax at five cents each. knoWledse He saTd C nSn hid Sa'd °'h?r i,atM had f°Und that
ducted today at 2,p.m. at Claybar: The plan. Lavalle said. ,s worked.n other stSesP
Funeral Home. Burial will be in simple, sound and intelligent wayjA|ahama
Evergreen Cemetery. i to raise money." ! x.^ -! ....
Other survivors include five sis-j He tacked the liquor-by-thej., Daniel-backed portion of
ters, Sandra. ,Molly^Ppg'gy, Jean drink amendment onto the liquor, j]®"3e^Mre,.would ,^aise an esti"
and Laura Slaughter; two broth- auto and tobacco tax bill which J™ ™ million dollars per year
ers, Johnnie: and Ronnie Slaugh- he introduced for Daniel. Lavalle j 7/ 5. e state. liquor tax
notably
ing fee recreation period. This is one of the
many activities that visitors to the school during
ter; and grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs, , A^ruse._aII of Orange.
Six Seeking
Board Posts
LITTLE CYPRESS (Spl)-Only
one incumbent is in the race for
re-election in the Little Cypress
School Diitfrict.
Board President John L. Wil-
kinson Jr. filed for re-elec^on
along with five other candidates
for the three posts to be filled on
April 4.
Dr. W. B. Hightower, Charles
(Bob) F02AI, Leroy Witterttaeter,
Charles Alborn and Rex Harris ate
the other candidates. '
Dr.. Hightower and' Fogal were
—teador Photo by Bitu* Jun* Rtcwurt j write-in candidates lasf year in a
brief three-day campaign and fell
onKr a few votes short of winning.
True
said Daniel did not know of the!'0.*2-50 per gallon, up the automo-
amendment. j^,le frfm U to, L P«r cent
Daniel speedily said he was not. . *" • a.^ v ,axs ort
aware of the amendment and felt c'Kars sod smoking, chewing and
it did pbt belong in the bill. "I P1^' tobacco.
receipts wj>nt down when tax rates
were raised.
"Excessive taxation is a form
of prohibition and excessive taxa-
tion encourages moonshining and
bootlegging wh ch pick the public
pocketbook," Rogers said. r •
ORANGE JUICE
■if iwuiy iiiifj. nuiKiu. "inis, wuny Ann vniui,
Dean Ewmg and Bob Stalnaker. Another dancer.
Sammy Roikm is not visible in this photograph.
rustees Arthur Simpson and
Leon Glidden did hot seek re-
election. X
SUBMISSIVE - Is word for a
Seelieson's measures •namele8S' 0ran8e resident deter-
lcovered the same items, with the:mi.ned ^mply with the munici-
addition of snuff. Seeligson pro-;''?, garbage oidinance. After re-
posed increasing the liquor tax Min*na rt^ warn'n8 o" "sin8
ti in «i tn .aiirt a 50-gallon drum, he went out and
nT.he tuto fJx ,oP { ^ ^ .required size can. A
new ?ars nnlv and taxinc rou,ine check flowed days later,
a! Iftu/r vTilc' (S tobacco There was the drum in front with
I K^ n/n Li those suggest- a tifjht-fitting lid. Nestled inside
I - ,.. was that shiny, new can-H>rotected
Seehgson finished outlining his from marauding dogs.
j lengthy proposal which he safd ENTERPRISING — This 12-
jwould re-write the tax laws and [year-old Orange student can be
: raise 23 million dollars in the proc- j expected to go forward as a tycoon
eSs Yesterday's section dealt with [in tomorrow's business world. His
utility taxes, which Seeligson pro- sixth grade classmates are in that
poses to change from a varied rate stage where girls mean somethin
(system based on population of fee [more-•than tormentors. This la
area .served to a flat 1.5 per cent writes poetry of sorts. Less tal
'Paint one more mustache
d Jn look in the I.eSder Watht
Ads for another decorator!"
of gross receipts of the utility.
J. T. JEllis Jr., assistant to the
ented friends are hiring his, serv-
ices for "poetry on order"! to give
1.1
tV,
governor for water, and fiscal pdli-; to those girls. The charge—15
cifs, said snuff was left out of!cents for a four-line ode and 20
fee governor's tax program be-cents for anything above that.
r'.:
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.)., Vol. 56, No. 55, Ed. 1 Thursday, March 5, 1959, newspaper, March 5, 1959; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth330482/m1/1/: accessed April 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.