The Texas Jewish Herald (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 16, 1930 Page: 4 of 8
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Ml UH
The
Texas Jewish Herald
Published Weekly By
The herald printing Co.
EDQAB dOLDBERO, BAltar and Publish*
Fan a la ftraat Ph“— C*«,i,°l 62M
INFERIORITY OF JEWS
MISERABLE SUPERSTITION.
SAYS REV. HAYES HOLMES
_______.... $1.00 par Year
Forein ...—___———---------
$2 50 per Year
All oommonfeations for publication should roach this offleo set later
c than 9* A. M Wsdntidera.
Entered as second class matter, at
under the act of
the Post Office at Houston, Texas,
March $, 1*7$
RABBI DAVID GOLDBERG
V- ....Editorial Contributor
RABBI SAMUEL- ROSINGKK ....
1'ditorial Contributor
The pseudonym “Mordecai” hides Mr. Guggenheim is Ambassador at
the name of an observer who for j Cuba not because of his Hebrew an-
many years has maintained intimate, cestry, but because of his personal
contact with Jewish affairs'of a qualifications, The Jews of the Dis-
political angle in Washington.
| trict of Columbia, which the National
i Jewish Ledger is to serve, will ac-
The approaching session of the t cord you, in my judgment, the live-
American Jewish Congress the latter-lier support i/\they ?ome to realize
! part of this month is a reminder of that you are emphasizing their
the growing popularity of Washing- ! Americanism, rather than their Ju-
; ton as a Jewish convention city. In- daism,” The Jews of Washington are
Iterestingly enough, though the Cap-: lifting their eyebrows in surprise at
New York. (JTA)—“The Inferior-
ity of the Jew it a miserable super-
stition, a damnable lie. There are ob-
jectionable Jews and objectionable
Gentiles; you cannot condemn a race.
I often think, which I run up against
this anti-Semitic attitude, that it ia
the Gentiles who are Inferior. ■
Ths Jewish Herald Invites correspondence on subjects ef interest to
the Jewish people, bot disclaims responsibility for er Indorsement ef
the dews expressed by the writers. ,
Subscriber* should notify ue of change of sddress, giving both old end
is* addreae that we may properly direct their pbper
end facilitate its delivery. ,
IHitMteilHtetiliiuiIIif i • H ilMUMMffniimiMIHIMMtlHtlHIlMMIUWiMHIIIMHtlllMIMMIIIMHliMIHIIMIMIIIMMMNItllll •
ital haa always been the mecra for
national conclaves in general, it has
only been a few years since Jewish
organizations -began to seek out
Washington. But during this period
they have apparently tried to make
up for lost time, Any number of
Jewish organizations have recently
held their conventions here, includ-
ing the Council of Jewish Women,
Zionist Organization of America,
Allied Jewish Campaign, Central
“In the part of the Gentiles you
have bitterness and hatred and a
despicable lack of intelligence. On
the part of the Jew you have often
a cringing inferiority, which ia pit-
iable and to be deplored; but in the
these observations, more especially ] Jew you haven’t the psychological at-
as Mr. Wile is now a member of the
American Jewish Committee. They
are puzzled that Mr. .Wile should find
it necessary to express himself along
these lines when Jewish leaders
everywhere, including Washington,
are bemoaning the lack of Judaism,
rather than its over-supply.
'Scanning the Jewish Horizon
| By David Schwartz
The extending of Jewish New
Year greetings by the President of
Conference of American Rabbis, and I the United States has now become a
S«inl Albert Kinitrin
Some of my best friends are rab-
bis Ami at times, .it seems to me,
the spirit of the Lord the rabbini-
cal spirit come even over me and I
would preach a sermoU). In any
events, the flows of the, past week,
it Sfem. to me, brought forth a chain
of event-', which would afford a
splendid basis for Loin do tic -discourse.
First, there was tire opening of
sary of the founding, by David Lu-
tiin of the International Institute of
Agriculture. Luhin was one of the
prophets of today, as il. G. Wells
in his- "World of William Ciissoldd”
has pointed-out. ■
Like losdiek, like Holmes, his
mind was primed on the Universal
— like Joisoft even, he had given up
much Of the dogma in Judaism—yet
Union of American Hebrew Congre-
gations. This is the second time the
American Jewish Congress has con-
vened in Washington. - During its
previous session here, its gtjest of
honor was the aggressive Zionist
well established custom, and has
been, pursued for quite a few admin-
istrations. The White House may not
be familiar with other Jewish holi-
days, but Rosh Jtashonah is Certain-
ly one Hebraic religious festival
leader of Polish Jewry, Deputy j which'- has - become fixed in its effic,
Isaac Gruenbaum. Now it is to be a I |a| memory. And Hebraists the world
“goy —harry Snell the Labor mem- j over may derive considerable satis-
ber of the Shaw Commission whose , faction from the fad that each Chief
report on the Palestine <#»order! executive of the United States is
created such k stir. (obliged to learn at least two Hebrew
—“ words: those meaning the First of
John U, 'Urn-kefoiler's church with
the image of Klii«t«’in curved on it,
ns one 'of the saints. To he suffc,
there were two other indigos of, Jews.
There was Moyes an<PD4Yli|, and if
we mqy include a .Jew, who later
joined another deiiuniinalion, there
was yet another to i-ur eredit.
Hut these last three might have
beep exported. You will find their
images curved on .thousands of
churt-lie* the world over. The placing
of Einstein among .them- -tin
ing of: his’ image, pti the facade of a
Baptist church-- is to me an epochal
and highly significant event. To be
sure, Ur. Fosdick's Baptist church,
is scarcely to be classed with' other
churches of that denomination. Dr.
Fosdiok is the Mean Inge of Ameri-
If Meyer Bloomfield, whose name : the year. 1'hcy cqn now uisp gleeful-
Ualike the last, although he associat-! has been prominently mentioned as djp flaunt President Hoover's message
ed with Kings and the elite of the (possible successor to James J. Davis issued on the eve of the year 5691,
world, he would not eat, pork—and j asSecretary of Labor,’ is actually in the faces of the Yiddi'sliiktst ,For
observed many of the' pthpi Jewishj appointed President Hoover to the President took.cure to t),»e the
tenets, and still did pot regard him- ( this post,. be will not , be the first Hebrew desigrpatio'n of the incoming
self-as a hypocrite. , Jewish member to hpld ft portfolio year. Thus we witness the irresist-
jin'the federal cabinet. There are able onward march of “Rak Ivrit”!
Adam and Gag* .1 many here who we.', recall Oscar
A render forwards to me a wail, Straus, as Secretary of Ultdr and
Commerce under President Roose-
titude of bitterness and hate, result-
ing from discrimination, that you
might reasonably expect. I think the
New York Jew on the whole bears
the burden of discrimination admir-
ably.”
These were some of the statements
made by the Rev. John Haynes
Holmes, pastor of the Community
Church and noted liberal preaeher,
in an interview with Evelyn Seeley
of the New York Telegram staff
with regard to the discrimination
which prevails against Jews in New
York City. The interview appeared
in today's Telegram.
“A good part of anti-Semitism is
the prejudice of defeat,” said Dr.
Holmes. ’’The Jew has gained lead-
ership in ownership of real estate,
ownership of newspapers, theatre
management and in many trades.
Very well, let him own our homes,
our theatres, our newspapers, lie
has won his success fairly,, the world
being what it is.
“The Jew is condemned as an
APPROVES JEWISH STATE
IN PALESTINE IN FUTURE
IF POPULATION WILLS
1;
Cincinnati. (JTA) — Admitting
that reform Judaism “has by no
means completely solved the prob-
lem of Judaism” and conceding that
Zionism, like Reform Judaism, is In-
dispensable to Judaiam, Dr. Julian
Mprgenstem, president of the He-
brew Union College, stated that
world Jewry must desert the path#
of unreasoning partisanship for thoaa
of true vision, in an address hero
recently. The occasion of the ad-
dress, the subject of which was ‘‘la
Reform Judaism a Failure?” waa the
opening exerciaea of the Hebrew
Union College, in the Chapel of the
College in Cincinnati.
The- conflict within Jewish rankl
is between Unlversaliam or Reforn^
Judaism on the one hand and Par-
ticularism, Nationalism or Zionism on
the other. Dr. Morgenstem said. This
struggle is but one example of the
other ., univemalistic - nationalistic
struggles such as have had national-
istic expression in the creation of
petty states such as Poland, Lithu-
ania And Latvia, he pointed out.
Emphasizing the fact that he is a
non-Zionist und not an anti-Zionist,
Dr. Morgenstern declared that he
does not oppose, for the Jews in Pal-
estine, a strong colonization move-
ment, a strong cultural movement
and even eventually a Jewish state
if the lntter expresses the actual will
of Palestine’s entire population. He
declared however that he does op-
pose three things in Zionist theory
and program, which are as follows:
First, Zionism’s “gratuitous as-
sumpthwi that vdithout a distinctive
Jewish life and Jewish cultural cen-
Cofryri/ht 1 9)1) by Jewnh t cUgierhtt. Agency, Inc
could he be out of his Ghetto ex-
perience, his struggle against cold
and hunger and cruelty? What else
are we Americans nil, but one hun-
dred and twenty million material-
ists?”
, that the story recently recounted in
these columns Rnent Tom Kippur j velt'a administration. The new de-
"is so old it ha* arterio sclerosis.” j J.nrtment of Labor, became an im
The reader is probably right, dependent wing of the executive
Harry Sehneiderman of, American j branch of the government lafef. Dur-
ra™' Jewish Committee once reminded j big his administration, Straus sup-
me that if Adam came hack to earth, j " vised immigration aft one of the
the only thing that he woiild he per- j bulrqaus of his department,
fectly familiar with the would be
gags. They never change.
HENRIETTA SZOLD ON WAY
TO AMERICA FOR PARLEY
No*
Jerusalem. (JTA)—Two hundred
reprcsentStives of various Jewish or-
ganizations turned out to bid fare-,— ---------—. _________ „
This w6|) ,£0 Miss Henrietta Szold, Zion-land experience, should be conducted
prejudice, believes Dr.
Anti-Jcwish discrimination in New
York, which is worse than in other
places because there are more Jews
here, should be denounced-at'every
opportunity and an educational cam-
paign, which would teach Gentiles
to understand the Jew’s background
♦
So New, Brother
The same reader, who makes the
ea. He hiys reinterpreted the old complaint about the Yom Kippur
Christian dogmas in a way that g*0|»y jjt>nd me in one of his own on
leaves little but the old names, thg .sj,mc subject.
Nevertheless, it is still f u n da men it concerns a Jew, who confessed* origin—he
tally a Baptist church and it her- t„ the. rabbi that tie had eaten on : Welsh lad.
aids a. living Jew as one of jts faints. Yom Kippur
A rare evidon'ee of liberalism! The rnhhi very naturally derl
luieau is now perhaps the most im- jst leader and educational and hoalth'to offset
rw-tant subdivision of the Depart- worker, who left recently for the! Holmes,
pent of Labor. It is an interesting United States to attend the annual j
coincidence that Straus, Davie and convention of the
I
coincidence tout Mraus. navis ami convention of the Iladassah, the rlVPC iirw pac-tq nw
Bloomfield were all immigrants. The American Womens Zionist Organiza- NAPOLEOfTS ROLE IN
JEWISH EMANCIPATION
attitude of Davis, however, toward tion. Miss Szqld is the founder of
immigration has been considered any- Hadassah.
thing hut friendly, despite his alien
came, over as
poor
JUDGE JULfXft MACK
OPTIMISTIC OVER WORK
Frederic William Wile, widely,
Dr. Holme* Jewish Congregation
The second phenomenon of the
Week to which I wish, t" point was
fhe st.'iP rm-nt of Dr. John Haynes
Holmes. Ur, Holmes i . the pastor of
the Community ; fhiiich.' And morg
thith'.hnlf of th- ineipl-prs i Pf ’ his
rhiirch.- he anilyHim i- . are Jews,. it.- “ W ■ Iiyes”; replied the rabbi,
must be remernhereij t hat the, *-hu re h the nian , is Sf-riourly ill,
of: 1 Holmes’ is tipt as 'otltpr ehuYi hi's.' nuj.v .He waived.,"
One (loesti’t have t , l.el.ieve’ in any “A lia,’’ said ■ the, Jew. “So
New York. (JTA)—New facts
about the role played by Napoleon
_____ ____________I in the emancipation of European
DONE IN PALESTINE j Jewry at the beginning of the nine-
- teenth century are revealed in an
Jerusalem. (JTA)—“Had last article in the current issue of The
year’s massacres and the ensiling | American Hebrew. The article is
setbacks discouraged me, I written by Prof. F. N. Kirchciscn,
The .rabbi very naturally
nouhees him hi hitter language. known Washington political journal-(
Listen, rabbi, said the dew. and radio broadcaster, has caused
Mimt one never eat on lom Kip- .quite a Stir in the local Jewish com- .
P!*!“ inanity with the’tenor of his remarks i®? l,w* - ■■■’• i •, ,. ■ - ------■
’■Never," said the rabbi. . • jn- oleFsrt(r(. of Meeting which he my Prfsont visit would have restored | who is regarded as the world’s lead-'
Well, rabbi; there are some ex- Sl,nj t(l )i;<, «>•,,*Lnal Jowisli r.,„i^,e» my .faith,” Judge Julian W. Mack of1 mg authority on Napoleon and his
the United States Circuit C'ouCt of j times.
. New York, told the Jewish Tele-,
rrun ulim A \n .1 — i l. t--L!« I*
message of greeting which
. . ! sent, to (He ‘‘National Jewisli Imdges”
ceptions. Ira man is ill, it is per-., un Angjo-Jewish '-weekly which re-
mi ibh1 for ihim to e.-jt. is it not? • pcntly,made its first appearance
The reason why Napoleon sudden-
tliis
•Itv.U’ommcnUng oYi Tie “(.edg- ■ ^’dPhie Agency in describing his j'ly dissolved the Great Sanhedrin
I Visits to^^the agricultural commune at.! soon after He had1: convened
the fasting or •> \yj]e write: “1 hope it wrill be
the
American, rather t^inn purely Jewish.
I have never been enamored to#-, the
. ,. . ...... ...-----„— it, is
Dilb nnd the Dead Sea work and in explained by Prof. Kirchpisen as fol-
summarizing his conversation with (tows:
Trinity, ljnWnmrlut. < Ttio | l L,„. only; trim hie .;i s'that you want mg to j i(1^' ()f high-spotting "mort^'.or event^! °{ “!} .°,a!!scs whom he encount-j, tbe Great Sanhcdrin ^-as
It I were very sick,. ju^ bjrfyauae they at'« of Jewish as- IrSt vlsl*’ to 1 convening in Puris, Napoleon hap-
.^Baptfsm or nnj'tlii.ng vise to join it; - be seriiiiisly ill, miv
('rigitiafing. 1 believe, a- a Univcr- it Would suit you, yes? That’s the | ri(,rt Imirr „r j,,ss< When the Presi-i t’n<’ sincc
aaligt church, it is now bereft of. kind of a man you are,” ! dent gives, high offise to a man of i ^udge Mack, who is one of
even the little modicum of dogma The story is not so had, hut j ouj. race. exarnple, as he has just t outstanding Zionist Jeaders of the
characteristic of that denomination. “Reader”, may lie interested 'n j done in the case of Eugene Meyer, j United States and honorary chair-
♦ I learning llwif we first saw it about Lppojnt<,a to the immt.nKely impor- man 'th« administration of the
| fifteen years ago in the Yiddish 1 tBnt poRt of Goyernor of the Federal | Zioni8t Organization of America,
Reserve Board, we should as Jews, eanie Palestfne after he had at-
I pened to be dining one day with one
the of his intimate friends. As they dined
Al Jolapn nnd Yom Kippur
Thirdly, a little thing happened at' Tugehlatt.
one of tlio theatres in New- York dur- j - > —
ing thq past week. Not in line,'with An Engliih Nifty
the first two incidents it yet has Minsky, correspondent of the Lon-
. something • in common with them. j drift Jewish Chronicle, tells me this
A couple of weeks ago, a well I one. It happened, said the London
known columnist recalled the fact scribe, in a small English village,
that Al Jolaon hnd recently appear- A Jew was involved in some legal
ed in a moving pieture in which in- proceedings before the English
cidentnily, he acted the part of. an ‘ squire.
observant Jew. The picture thus1 "You sre Jewish?" said the Eng-
ahowed him absenting himself from lish.
work on Yom Kippur. | “Yes,” said the Jew.
Recalling the picture, this column-j “Well, I suppose you will want to
ist wanted to'know, if All in real take an oath on the Old Testament."
life would absent himself from work ^ "Yes,” replied the Jew.
on Yom Kippur. Jolson be it remem- “Bailiff,” Raid the Judge, “get me
bered, is now playing an engagement
in New York City, for which he is
getting the phenomenal salary ol
$20,000 a week.
Well, last week came the answer
to that question. Jolson appeared at
the theatre on Yom Kippur, and
coming out of his role said:
“I spent much time debating with j ment,” replied the Judge,
myself the question last night, I “You honor, that is a very
whether I should appear today (Yom testament. That belonged to
Kippur) and I have decided it Is J grandmother.”
better to come here and-help make
people happy'than roam around the
streets as hypocrite.”
the Old Testament.” -
The bailiff returned in about five
minutes and handed the judge a vol-
ume.
Glancing at it, the Judge saw
Luke, Matthew, Corinthians, etc. '
“You have brought me the New
Testament. T said an Old Testa-
Lehia and Perk
The last of these four "stories
which have something In common”
came from Romo. The announce-
ment frftm that city that prepara-
tions wore being made for the cele-
bration of the.twenty-fifth anniver-
.Loolu Are Deceiving
resist the temptation, because, it has
littlp foundation as a rule, to sing
Hallelujahs‘Jn honor of the circum-
stance that one of oOrs -has been
signalled out for distinction. Mr.
Meyer gets the'Federal Reserve job
because he is a great financier, and
not because he happens to be a Jew.
so long ago, that France seethed with
that most inflammatory of anti-
Semitic spectacles, the Dreyfus case,
the change that has taken place is
striking. Perhaps, itlis to be explain-
ed, said Resnick, by a story 1 recent-
ly heard. An American Jew went to
France and was struck by the many
people walking about with Jewish
physiognomies. So mnny Jews here,
he mused to himself. He approached
one, saying something in Yiddish io
him. The man responded in incom-
prehensible French. He approached
another, and still another. All in
turn replied in French.
The American Jew returned and
visited the Yiddish newspapers amt
wailed. “Those Jews over there are
ashamed of themselves—ashamed to
Back from Europe, where he hied ipeak in the ’mime lashan.’ He pro-
himself to attend some eonventfbn or posed to organize a society which
other under the auspices of the
League of Nations, David Resnick,
New York and St. Louis scribe, com-
mented on the seemingly complete
disappearance of anti-Semitism In
France. ’ ---------:--------J—1
“When you recall that it wasn't
should have as its objective the in-
stilling of Jewish prida in the French
Jews.”
His mistake of course was due to
the resemblance of the French
physiognomy to the Jewish.
Cerilb 19)0 hr Jrwilh Tele/refine A/errey, I me
tended the Berlin meetings of the
Zionist Actions Committee and of
the Administrative 'Committee of the
Jewish Agency.
When he visited Dilb seven years
ago he entertained doubts as to the
feasibility of restoring a desolate
hillside and also of the success of
the communist system, Judge Mack
said, but now, he declared, he saw a
flourishing settlement that was sup-
plying Jerusalem with daify and
other products. One of the most en-
couraging things Judge Mack re-
Jibrted after his visit to Dilb was the
condition and excellent r collective
care of the thirty children born since
the commune was founded.
As regards the Dead Sea Works
Judge Mack declared himself great-
ly impressed with the Palestine Pot-
ash Ltd., the operating company, con-
cern fpr the’health of its workers
and the up-to-date provisions made
for their comforts. He found Arabs
working side by side with Jews and
learning to know one another. The
quantity of potash produced equals
the estimates expected for the end
of 1930, Judge Mack said. So far as
the spirit of the Jewish community
is concerned, he pointed out that if
the Jews outside of Palestine wou^d
even remotely approach the indomit-
able courage of Palestinian Jewry
no doubt need be_ entertained as to
the future of the' Jewish National
Home.
they were talking of various things,
even of religious matters, in the gay-
est and most jovial of manners. Sud-
denly Napoleon's uncle, Cardinal
Fesch, grew very serious, so that the
emperor, becoming inquisitive, asked
him what was wrong. ‘It is easy
enough to understand what is the
matter with me,’ said the cardinal.
‘However, it appears that you want
the end of the world to come about.’
‘How so and why do I ’ the emperor
asked him In amazement. ‘Well,
then,’ answered Fesch, .‘do you not
know that the Sacred Scripture pre-
dicts that the end of the world will
take place aa soon as the Jews are
recognized as s nation?’”
This, according to Prof. Kirscheis-
en, led Napoleon on the next day to
order the Sanhedrin dissolved. An-
other reason which he gives is as
follows:
“Since Prussia, after its defeats
in Thuringen, was absolutely willing
to make peace, Napoleon had to pro-
ceed to Poland with his army in or-
der to seek out the Russians who
were allied with Prussia and annihi-
late them. The lahd which he tra-
versed and which was inhabited by
Poles had amade the most unfavor-
able and disadvantageous impression
upon him, but still more so the num-
erous Jews who lived there in the
greatest degradation. This regret-
table circumstance determined the
emperor’s future attitude towards a
race of high rank which he wished
to liberate and which he desired to
BROOKLYN SQUARE NAMED
FOR LATE MARCUS LOEW
’ ML •’#
miWm
“f: f
■ —&
overdeveloped materialist. What else ter in Palbstine, Judaism the world
over is doomed to spiritual destruc-
tion, if not' to eventual complete dis-
appearance.” Judaism has already
existed for nearly twenty centuries
without such a center In Palestine,
Dr. Morgenstern said.
Second. Zionism’s dogma that Jews
not in Palestine are in exile. "I
loathe the very word ‘galuth’ and
the word ‘diaspora’ f is repugnant to
my innermost being,” Dr. Morgen-
stern said. “I see no sig’ns of a re-
turn to Palestine of the Jewish exiles
in America.”
Third, Zionism’s “tendency to set
the people of Israel in. the place of
God in Jewish thought and aspira-i
tion.”
Zionism’s claims are being modi-
fied, he said, as witness recent dec-
larations of Dr. Judah Leon Magnes,
chancellor of the Hebrew University
in Jerusalem, and of Dr. Chaim Weiz-
mann, president of the World Zion-
ist Organization, as well as the for-
mation of the B’rith Shalom party.
With regard to Conservative Ju-
daism Dr, Morgenstern stated that it
is’ “itself really Reform at about the
stage'where we stood ourselves a
generation or more ago, and it is
evolvihg more rapidly than did our
Reform Judaism, partly because of
our very example and influence.”
In answer to the charge that Re-
form Judaism advocates assimilation,
Dr. Morgenstern said:
“Granted that the early Reform-
ers of the nineteenth century over-
emphasized Universalism, in an age
freed from trammels of political op-
pressions and fired by the principles
of liberty, equality and fraternity,
still it cannot be said in fairness that
a single responsible lender of Re-
form Judaism ever advocated assimi-
lation.”
,A,.
y=
.f;
New York, (JTA)—In the Same
vicinity in which the late Marcus
Loew, founder of the Loew Theatre
Circuit and pioneer in the motion
picture exhibition business, began
his successful career as a showman,
a gathering of state and city offic-
ials as well as notables in the enter*
tainment field gathered for the ded-
ication of Loew Square in the Pitkin
Avenue district of Brooklyn. The
naming of the intersection of Pit-
kin £ venue and Barrett Street for
the late Mr. Loew was characterised
by the Board of Aldermen as “In
memory of a man who did much for
his native city.” ■«
The naming of this square after
Marcus Loew adds another name te
the list of streets in New York City ’
named for Jews. Among the Jewish
street names in New York are Schiff
Parkway, Herzl Street, and Strans *
Square.
KING BORIS DECORATES , J
TWO BULGARIAN JEWS
Sofia (JTA)—King Boris cosfa
red high honors upon Luke Me
wltsch, president-of the Aahk
make into an integral component Jewish community of Sofia, sad
part of the land in which it was'on Josef Hsimoff, prominent
dwelling.” | co merchant, here recently.
Uitfc
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Goldberg, Edgar. The Texas Jewish Herald (Houston, Tex.), Vol. 23, No. 27, Ed. 1 Thursday, October 16, 1930, newspaper, October 16, 1930; Houston, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1054663/m1/4/?q=Lamar+University: accessed June 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .