The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 120, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 23, 1961 Page: 4 of 12
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THE OR^VGB
tuudatfefTjj,*«Ai
EDITORIAL>ACE
Help Yourself, Plenty The
for Both of Us" Moment of Meditation
Tax Umbrellas Can Be Costly to Schools
of building
t is just as lesa!
Chien latter to our neighbor in Port to be organized for th
Neches * - .v industrial facilities; the;
In all humility, and all sincerity, we for-such a corporation to ^organized far
suggest that you take a lone look d tfym the purpose Of buytng exist ihgindustnal
the street to your fine schools before ac- P^nts. , .. N. , JT
: ticg the "nonprofit" industrial scheme - ^hii's
in which Vour City Council has become ja. ypheld by-t£a courts. What
Involved some group pom; organizing • a nonproi
• tm . . Y «t. -k _-j „,mféa corpíiratio which would buy up aH the
If this thing goes industrial plants in the Port Neches-
to be legal you may -very w.^ wake up ^ ^ ScWl District then léase them
one morning .to find the street lull m w
chug hojes and the schwl not only in a
. «tát'e ot disrepair but aUo closed-for a
pa-rt of the regular term.
Not at all: Most'of
back to the present operators'^
Farfetched as it may sepv, that's en-
tirely possible. And if ij .should occur,
WPBWi HRHHHL these properties \yould be taken off "your
Absurd, you say . Not at al. Most of tax roij,_ Tbei^ where would your
the money that keeps your streets in good g^ools anci your City government get
repair, and a major part- óf-^hé rev- ^uou^jj money for 1th«ir services?_
Thev couldIn'nly get it from businesses
and home« vrfuch is not going 10 happen
_s£hooIs open and
K-
well maintained- corne.v from industry ^ ^ ^ _
And the property tax umbrella which because neither the business people nor
your city' fathers are proposing to help the home owners can afford to pay taxes
raise--over, o.nf parí of .industry js available that fyigh '■ y
W'ái! industry—if it's legal. * Therefore, the end result of this- thing,
MOst industries, being good citizens, l^^he people of Port Neches allow/iff to
prefer to pay a fair share ofthe local taxes .happen and the courts hold it* to. be legal,
for thé support of schools and other pub4- will be much less than enough \jxk money
Ik- services But in order to stay in btísi- for the schools and other publit services.
s)i industries have to remain/com- We agree.that more jobeare needed in
■ this . area. But we do^not consider it
So ¡t naturally follows that if the prac- necessary to sell a birthright of our chil-
tice of tax drying through the device dren in order to ge^them.
r ropos* 'i. in/the pjah approved by the Vet that's exactly what the Port Nech-
Port f City Council "becomes wide- es City Council is proposing to do, and
be compelled, perhaps .will/do. unless the people
o against this.
ft is legal for a nonprofit corporation thing slop it right where it_ is.
/
V,
He that being often reproved hardened Us Back,
-hPn suddenly be destroyed, audi (lull: without niidy.
" :1
v
: OFFBEAT NEWSBEAT . . .
The Whole World
In State of Shock
By HAL BOYLE
NEW YORK (AP>—"The whole top of his head, he scribbles ©ut
world is in a state of - shock," 2.ÓC0 words of proac almost daily
- • - "XtUlt * kail *uúa* U. T ■
re
with a bail pouit pen in a series
of old fashioned ledgers.
"I \isetí to write1.000 words a
fat a sute of shock." \ - +*u* * **> « >««•
At' * Strábwk, -rated The ledgers ia which h* writes
the best of the United, StatesL be . gold mines to future
literary scholars — if Steinbeck
said author John Steinbeck,
is why people don't think.
"You canTThink wheri you'
living writers, has turned out
books. His latest novel,, ■'*
Winter of Our Discontent.'" will
be published .next month.
But for 30 years Steinbeck also
has made an intensive study of
the Middle Ages, and feels man-
kind is again entering that kind
of historical period.
But he says he throws
"Again we're seeing the break
important^ me,
rapid-fire,
which he
"I heard once
a fortune.
seem awfully dama
he said in the
mumble with
nng
tip of old forms of authority—
religious, governmental,—even pa-
rental—before. new one* are
established." he said, puffing
cheerfully on a pipe in thj study; when
of his East Side home ■■
"That's why people are so /ese-
less and worried. They
know what to tie to.
"There's even a new trend in
, cocktail parties here. Instead of
showing up with their husbands
or wives or mistresses or lovers,
people bring their psychiatrists.
"Good Lord, the way .we live "
But. Steinbeck, who saw life in
the raw th half á .dozen jobs
ranging from brick laying to War
reporting, retains a wonderful
gusto ..for living^ Rumpling his
lying hair and beard, swiveling
spent. a.
Shelley's
hairs
Mentally III Children Being Neglected
MTSIt
EDSONI
Political News Notebook
ley's í
had lived when Shelley"
probably wouldn't
line of hia
Í Morgan
" three
If he
. _ vhs
have read a
poetry." " %
Hailed as. a social reformer
Grapes of Wrath" ap-
red in 1940, Steinbeck feels he
grown both more intense and
don't añore mature with the years.
'•'Everything in life ia colored
by.yoir personality," h observed
"but
«raying hair and beard, swiveling its wnen you're not aotof any-
his glasses from. hir nose 'to the thing that yóú don't haya
as you -mature you: become
more aware Of... oiiUide things,
less concerned about yourself.
"There's nothing that cleans op
tike dying. If you stick around
too long, they get tired of you.
Sometimes I think I've stuck
around too long.
"I may fan out of gas, but not
out of ideas as ideas have pups.
It's when you're not doin^^any
Neglect of our mentally ill childfeft
1? fast becoming a national disgrace.
An article in the June issue of Coronet
magazine discloses that therfe are in the
United States ah estimated half-million
emotionally disturbed child can be kept
apart froin spsychotic adults, with a third,
of our states offering neither public nor
private facilities.
In this richest, most enlightened land
Our Farm Problem's Unique
By PETER EDSON
'*4* tf*
j . IP ,
youngsters eonaidered to be psychotic. It seems Incredible indeed, says Coronet.
schizophrenic or borderline cases. Of these, that we can"continue to neglect a half-
less than one per cent afe receiving any million stricken children; And unless there
k;r,d of treatment Whatever. — r—is action at all levels of governmont we
Twentv-six states, «ays the article, have will continue to stand ginltv of. sanctioning
no publicly supported fÉcilities Ahcre an a wanton waste of youthful lives..
ACROSS THE EDITOR'S DESK . .. '
Priceless Ingredient of SRW Products
By J. CULLEN BROWNING
T don't know the exact wording of the quotation,
but tn esitne'e it says that the priceless Ingredient
in any product i« the m^grity of its maker.
And these words came to mind sfveral times
\b ' Siturdiy a* I toured the Du Pon! Sab'ne River
Wv?k< in company With a number of other mem-
bers">^t?!i pre
T-.'VJx^.jrri'd lo me because, like most every-
one ■ 1 Ixtd alway thought of the maker of
iue array o; chemical products pouring out of-SRW
as being an ínánimate,business organiution-
Now I am aware that thla ia not the ease at
all. The maker of these useful materials Is 2,#4S
people, of both sexee, with a wMe variety ef
skin* and interests, twt with one thlag la eoH^
mnn— all are people of great Integrity
' -1! sot realiied — and I'm sure the same
t- je of many of us here «* : that over, a pertt
-'.tiffltJi! Indtistrial trade mark which long had been
nó .m^rohin-arrSíSÍ with aome letters inside has
b?co!Ti^ something, more tangible; something that
can ix- measured in terms of friends and neighbors.'
For mev this transition began in 1944 when f
rrfr my Brit Ou Ponter, a fellow named Harry
S-t'on Since that time; a- tot of people I knew be-
fi>e*I met Harry have Joined the ranks of Du.
Ponders. '
Julia Brown, who worked with me at
■t"'. V j.iiaísJated -Steel Corp. shipyard during the
early part of the war . . .
Tee nay Marks, who was a «mall hoy pawing
my house on his tray to school (g the first several
month* of my residence in Orange . . .
Chubby Brpckv whtMw'iiUughter shared with my
- f dren thre delists of the; sand pile which lay
between our apartments ¡n a war housing project
. Ms'ñy more whom I cbuId narne and relate to
' T" memorable event or sequence of events from
Hie days before Dii Pont came to Orange County.
Throughout tiie past 1# years/as SRW.has grdwn,
my circle oí fnends who work there has wideneif ,
and today includes a big, majority of' the people
whó make th«-| oducu which go gushing through
i'-r <\ ?o;-s*rve other people throughout the. world.
p'y
Mother Nylon both inside the fence surrounding
her and outside Of It. has Mfcome one of the seven .has
wonders of the industrial world
Reader's Digest magazine, in Its June IsWe
describes this compita and the oil refineries and
other chemical plants in the area aa "a
. landscape of towering science-fiction
But, the men and wimen'who shate^thu land
scape are not creatures out of sc^fflfe fiction. They
are plain, everyday people, endued in makmis bet-
ter tljings for better livic*">rough chem «¡try.
And the fact thjsHlie folks.at SRW are eminent-
ly tuccessf«il^i«^this enterprise is due more than
for an.vjrtfter rca«on to the • integrity - which they,
asihemakers of a btllion pounds, of pblyethyJese,
huge quantities of olh'r useful maletMl* arc
putting into their products. * •
WASHINGTON (NEA>—There's only one farm
problem that Secretary of Agriculture. Orville L.
freeman doeso't hav*. Th s is how to get the
American farm economy to produce food and fiber
to meet this country's needs " "
Khrushchev is having plenty of trouble trying
tn P -.tin «nrifPMf ! prtvtiyttnn wh)fh
is way behind thst of the United States. India's
-j. and the heads of . most of the developing
countries' governments tan t ^et enouph produc-
tion to feed their own p pie Rid China's Mao-,
Tse-.taag ha* fsmtiie on h.s hands But Freeman's
problem is the opposite extreme.
MERICA PRODUCES SO MI CH MORE than it
con^iftj.-H "that the real dtf'tr 'ty^T-to find ways
to .ocr-ase «'myjmp; ->n arj^cu- product .on so
tba' supply w->y more ciptfTy balance demand.
The Freeman
omnibus farm bill which he
VilhMmrdl! -fon?res* 1 a.Mlut ion would set
«p a newJ^Kirn of cofrimittees of farmers. Their
;<:h wyf h "ftv-.rfra't new' pr-igrrms 'to control
a on oí v> tysfjj' !ft..comM^¡y in ovexsup-
These committees woafi ppo:nted by the
secretary, of agriculture, i ^.ould have veto
'Soapy' /s Ridiculed
A jood.deai Of ridicule has been heaped1 on.G."
Mennén '(Soapy) Williams, our assistant secretary
of Kate for African affairs; for things he has said
and dona as he traipsed around Africa
The complaints have been heard from African-
themselves, from the Brtt^h and other colon v
powers, from people here- at home.
But it really is a little early to Judge the net
effect of- Soapy's energetic personal attack iipoh
the continent of Africa. Who can easily measure
the value of h'is wading in the mud with the
Africans, or being photographed - in bright tnbaj
robe«v"
This much we know; Soapy has. campaigHtid
«1* times in Michigan and once In Africa * And on
this las?" one, the returns just aren't Jn,yet
power over'Tbeir proposals so
c-'i-onmated to prevent commodity, a"
TIIE FINAL PROGR \MS" would jro to Cs(i¡íress
fok 60 days coirs ¿eraron If Congress approved
thciirv they *ould thrn be submitted to farmers 1
a reftvndum. If two-thirds or mor* of the pro
ducera approved a plan, u would 20 into effect
on the next'crop. If. Congress of' more than one-
•third of th- f.-i'-— disapproved a plan, existing-
law and regulations oyer product tn, marketing
quotas and. price supporta would remain. / •
V The Fre> man Plan faces a hard fight. An Con-
gress. Fret-man th;hks Congress will finally approve
It >m-?'corgrossitmil leaders thin^-lt hasn't a
chance. Farm organizatior^i are dmded,
AMERICAN- FARM BtRFAC CRITICS of the
— ..A-
Freeman Plan say that it would involve over 250
separate commodity programs, that g huge bu-
reaucracy would be needed to administer them and
that die cost might be 120 bitHón a year instead
of the present 15 billion.,But this, is'guessing, be-
cause the programs haven't "been drafted or ap-,
proved yet. and^nobody knows what they'd cost.
Freeman .adinits that his plan, if adopted, would
mean .süp^íy adjustments for every commodity
coyeefá. This would mean that costs might be
iifted from, say. cotton export subsidies to com-
pensatory payments for cotton growers
But Freeman maintains that the total farm leg-
islation cost will be reduced the first year his
plan is in operation. And over-the low haul, price
support payments, now $1.5 billion a year., and
storage costs, now $1 billion a year, couid'be greatly
1 educed
The Freeman Plan obviously means stricter
controls, including quantity limitations to replace
acreage limitations, to reduce production and bring
it more into line with consumption. But the secre-*
tary's ultimatum to agriculture and the rest of the
country is, "Take controls or face ruin."
TOTAL U.S. FARM INCOME dropped from SIS
ians could he. billion in 1952 to ftl billion in 1960. Income per
BUSINESS MIRROR ...
The Russian Bear
Can Be Bruising
Br SÁM DAWSON
By SAM DAWSON I960 of I193Í4 million;
AP Business New* Analyst move could increase
NEW YORK TAP)—American fuñfierT"
Oilmen are well aware that
29
tut
Still
farm has dropped proportionately. Lower farm
prices, have spurred production This has crested
still bigger surpluses that have further depressed
prices, "increased price support payments and
costs.
ttinyation of present farm policies and pro-
Jtritms HNgized up as accentuating present .imbal-
ances of sufrijy and demand.and of farm income
to nonfarmjncot
The Freeman Plajj. whatever Its defects, is a
new approach to the problem, or a new gimmick
on old approaches. As such, it might bi .worth
a -try. \. . • . "
If it works, fine. If it doesn't.^scrap it and get
a new.secretary of agriculture.
when
the Russian Bear goes on a raid
he can be bruising. And today
other American businessmen are
studying the latest Soviet eco-
nomic switch in tactics to see
what's, in it for them.
For aom? the announced policy
of putting more emphasis on
Soviet consumer goods may mean
a chance lor a new market.
If Soviet Premier Khrushchev
means what he says, about mak-
ing more things than Just heavy
industry items, he may want to.
buy consumer goods machinery,'
such as those that make textiles,
shoes and appliances, or buy
more raw materials and semi-
finished materials ^that go into
consumer goods.
U.S exports to the Soviet Union
and its European satellites al-
ready had hit a. 13-year high in
* EDITORIAL BY BIOSSAT *
Q—Are lizards edible?
A-Yes.
■v Q—'What was the former name
of Duke University?
A—From 1838 to. 1924 it was call-
ed UnionTnstijuté. James B. Duke
gave the school a large endow-
ment and the univ e r s i t y was
mem
named in his honor
For other American con trow
industries it could mm in (he
long run a new competitor ia the
already crowded scramble tor
world markets, The Soviet bona
market might abaorb aU the aew
production for a while, bat you
canlt count on it. Yon never know
when Khrushchev may <|ecide to
withhold some consumer. goods
from his own people la Order to
raid an outaide market.
And when the Soviet. Union
enters a world market for any
reason—often political—it ptayi
rough. Americans often find it
hard to compete when all custom
ary rules are scrapped.
, Ask the oilmen.'
Soviet Oil has suddenly ap-
peared at cot-rate prices in mar-
kets which American and Western
European oil companies luva
been serving.
Russia can set any price ft'
wants to: Firit, It doesn't nave
to fit prices to costs if politics!
purposes outweigh nny loss. Sec-
ond, it can forefo a profit with-
.out disturbing its stockholders
(the Soviet ^government Is the
only one). Third, it t^n barter
its cut-rate oft for local goods,
which it can either use itself or
dump elsewhere (Ainerican
vate firms have much lesa
way to do that).
Soviet oil is still but a trickl*
In the entire world flow. But it
is its direction to certein markets,
to capture them or to disrupt
U.S. trade that hurts.
£
Law for All Nations NeededI
Science has raced far ahead: .of law," says
Charles S. Rbyné, an. earnest leader of the Ameri-
can bar who l* devoting himself tirelessly to .try-
ing ttvftios# tth* gap-^n the interest* of world peace
-W.hcn y u look about-'-at-ithe harsh friction?, of
its
an opportun.ty to- say hello to a good
those friends in the Course of helping
them - .> Mother "Nylon's 15th anniversary
a* a projfKsjflg industrial unit.
A g«w"d many of them were not working at their
r. cular jobs, hubiere 'serving «s our boMs and
ho tesses for the opiin hou.se. Yet. whatever they
were doihg, the pride jnHbélr plant and it* prod-
nets waTrvHem- aftwng aU el them.
★ THE DOCTOR ANSWERS
Don't Blame All Ills on
By DR. HAROLD THOMAS HYMAN,' MJDk 1
Although mo«t well-informed physicians j and
writers continue to emphasize -¡he normality of the
mradpsuse. and decry- overemphasis ■ on the
hange." a> a cause for distress or disease, almost
Just as ohv;ous was the masjive integrity whjáh"'wwry-:-taaíl.^ bnngs letters attributing almost every
- Jioes into every pound or gallon of the materials kno>rn complaint pr düturbanee^^ ta this s^ificant,
which result from the m ¿ic performed wi^n the «vent In the life of every woman .
.ipipe^, tanki, reactors and. other, gadgetr'at SRW. . Perhaps it'is in oversimplification lojltfwe the,
—— yf - «nenppavi.se as satire's metiwd of aonOuncing tiMt
- Motr.er Nylon has been tn camtipdOus production period ol a woman's fertility His cóme'"'ÉH|
-except for routine shutdowns for 15 consecutive • —■ ' '
■^ Á.L..-Ib>XÍ^0hlHh\r\í Of 'rwnrrf. i*
The chemical complex that has grown up sround
By BRUCE BIOSSAT
the cold war, the COpwíííttee on World Peace
Through Law. wijiph Rhyne heads in this country,
sounds likp ptetty idealistic stuff. B«it. under the
Americanjsar Association's wdlpg; he plunges on.
triune, there'll be a continental conference on
¡i issue at San Jose. Cóstt Rica. Others will take
place later in Tokyo. Africa and Europe, The June
meeting writ feature 23 nations of the Western
Hemisphere
What Rhyne and the co-operating lawyers of
many countries want to see; is a great modern-
ization and extension of iaw in the internalwnit
field. In many realms of human endeavor, no ede-
«juate rules seem to exist at all. In others,
are clmidy end conflicting.
in a shrunken world, the contacts of bnsi'ness-
male sex hormóne is the hot flash. Th.e num.—men arn" "* 'i** ylnh «r «teadily increasing. Yet
crous ,oth?r.,4iymptoms such as palpitation, insta- bo common body of law exists to'regulate their
Ni-:-., jflo'mma. fatíjué and emo*;onal instability dealings.
> ' Q—What error in the Presiden-
tial, Seal -was corrected by Presi
dent Truman? .. '-V
A—Contrary to^rules of heraldrv.
the eajrle on the s^aj faced its own
left. In' 1945 President Tru m an de-
creed that the eagle faoájtls oyt-n
ri¿ht. • •
BARBS
monot-
day and
. A married man's idea
ony: giving dictation aj
getting it all evening.
There's little chaáce of raising
your spirits when yOu look down on
people.
• SO THEY SAY
There is n growing belief in Mis-
sissippi that 'Vitch-hunting" an d
"book-burning" procedures should
be tolerated But 'witch-huntins *
is just as wicked in Mississippi ai
hi Russia —Oliver Emmerich, «$-
tor of State Times; Jackson, Miss.
W I don't feél particularly sa(f
crossing Fifth Avenue at 57th
Street in New York or on the Los
Angeles Freeway . . I feel saf$<
ehough in the air to fly oonstan
myself and Rave my wife andean
dren flv.—Nájeeb E. Hiilaby 'Aead
of the Federal Aviaton Agency-
onlv svmpt'>m Of the ménooause due to deficiency
of ' * ■ " ' -* ■ *—
end Just
mere
**"' "ft "1ST not'
to an
seem'clearly to be manifestations of the anxiety
-tód'depression that occur rather frequently in
midlife but which are r^ated to the menopause only
t- r-3orá"v " ■ .
And Dr R .. ers attr bj'th.-e psychotoste-al
of midlife orimarily
Wt'ri told constantly that investment by the
developed nations in projects to aid the under-
developed lands is essentisl to the tatter's progress
without communism. But. investors feel shaky
when they look is vain for legal safeguards for
HH coARjcts- of 'midlife primarily to "a change in a their ventures ' '
d at and, with aonré"eJcceptions, no-hing ^ wp^iah'^'position in'the family circle. The children The goal then is a body of world lew covering
-j /" '' i- ' , . d vo :r! "^rest* outs¡d? the horfte and"" create in every relation between men and nations, on the
fa api"of itself. responiioleTor ^ th*fnt f*"'—^ !" act of'principles would
■jamir t o- fry .
,J. Cvi'm Sf «r«!'i^f
J— ?*'■>!*, ... _
B«b M
' Bab *< «-,
C TV«l!l
Man Saion
THE ORANGE LEADER
E 9 t w •
conditions and-complaints th*t may octfur pn or
about th, -*áme time Specifically Prefer to arth-
ritivhypertension, emotkmal instability and tfie
¡••ing«r nvH-iled " Aj .'
the efect 'Of the
M«m(iAa ra
Ceey ^ w
-tilt E«W
Mew Ed **r
K.' '.Ji'tiaw;
Wommf:
Wo^ai' -- F« tef
v rctmiT'O®
- "™-"a SWtfC-'S,SSVTKE-
o'etf erw if urtiHM nettntf¥i to t*<« ,n*
— --- ^
. - w ..■■i.p. H'MÍ
«ntwjo ion y im 9 tMaOM r«0i
«los mott#r #ei f Caftgrm Marc>i J, iar*
kt? to. misconceptions about
mcaooause on her personal so-
pcarance. sl}e may^tninlt "she will be a less at-
trac'ive person to her husband "
From these views. "1t logically fellows that
the most important and effective, portion ef the
management ef the m nopause is exptenstion,
rearsMÍr^nee ant simp'e psychotherapy. And. in
ttr* majorits of patient*, such an approach pro-
vl«*es notable reBef of'aniSeiyT' j"- ; - •*-
An authorised report, prepaid lor the Council Th s does Rif mean to say that the occasional
on Drugs, .has jüven support to-the views, of those wüjman mav' not need gland treaiments to help
of us who stress the normality of the mcnoMote. telieve. disturbing hot flashes. But glandular
Writing in the Journal. 0{ the American Medical -therapy tnust be onty a iingle-factor ia an Over-air
Aaaoctation, Dr. Jofeph Rogers of Tufts Unjveri'ty procami thai ;nc!ud,- s'eiplanatio#-nrrd-renssw
_ 'Wwhemf-wrc-tT--tha*- orify l - -|) i 1; nwst b* * «wt«pwd mm week -■ —>- ■
cent of women present themselves for .advice con- or so and d scpntinued as soon as tlse hot Hashes
cern.ng menopausal symp'oms ' at)---f to cOntnlled. socjer if i: causes a return
"WjUi tome notable exceptions, ■ be Matea, "Uw oí bíttdinf. - " . ^
" If these conditions accompany the meno-
pause the* are coincidental. They do not bear a
casual relationship and.hence will not be respon-
sive la, the- administration of sex hormones
whether gn-eo by mouth or injection' et rubbet
Into the akbi In expensive cosmetic preparations.
t.y
h ■
-'-Í
•• 'UíAh VU'
•- /■
'ivvtfl-
yk
afford the
of nagging conflicu.
Proponents of the cause here and abroad want
to see this enlarged legal structure lead to a1 reg-
ional court lystem. capped by the World dourt al
The Hague.
A European regional court has handled 20Q Cases
in four years. The World Court. boweveK is an
admitted disappointment. With only 3S of United
NrttTns membe s affihnted. H hns-
cases since its. founding in IMC. pfve of the -3$, in-
cluding the United Sutes, put severe Hmits on the
Court's Jurisdiction. "
Still, the eager advocates of world peace through
their subject with un-
great conflicts Will be settled "in the courthouses
insfa'd of on the battlefields "
What man will tall them they should cease trying,
Qkm'steifs True Life Adventures
WEEPy
WINNER
" " VOUK<& BACHEU3K
IVES OUT A
M-J0
asssrjgssr.ái
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Browning, J. Cullen. The Orange Leader (Orange, Tex.), Vol. 58, No. 120, Ed. 1 Tuesday, May 23, 1961, newspaper, May 23, 1961; Orange, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth143042/m1/4/: accessed May 20, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Lamar State College – Orange.