The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 296, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 3, 1964 Page: 4 of 24
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rv
Editorials
V'
' • * i
Riots, Viet Nam
May Hurt LBJ
Twe events over which he’has no control are pil-
ing up on President Johnson and may hp$ him in
this campaign: Negro riots in northern cities and the
developing chaos in South Viet Nam.
As the docility of the recent Democratic conven-
tion demonstrated, Johnson is a master arranger who
pays fastidious attention to details to make events
turn out as he wants; *; ;
But the racial otubreaks here and the Buddhist-
Catholic-student riots in South Viet Nam are beyond
his reach. He can’t turn the water on or off iij either
■ case. . , ’1
Even the reasons for the Negro violence and loot-
ing in seven different towns and cities in the past few
weeks are not clear. They burst after minor epi-
sodes, like an argument over a bottle of whisky.
\ This hardly seemed an ,excuse for what followed.
Perhaps they were truly and purely spontaneous
reactions to the accumulated pressures from the
frightful living conditions of the Negro in some sec-
tions of American cities.
Perhaps the reasons, since no one yet can claim
to know the full truth of them, were more sinister.
There is the possibility the Negro disorders were in-
stigated bv individuals and forces not yet discovered.
Over the weekend Roy Wilkins, executive secre-
tary of the National Association for the Advance-
ment of Colored People, suggested the Negro riots
may have beerrpfanned. He asked for a federal 'in-
vestigation. ; ■ T ' ' '
If they were
•... ^
Wa$hingfon»Merry-Go-Round -
Powell Says Negro No
Better Off In North
till!)
DALLAS (A
ire H. L. Hi
ition into ‘
ine” radio
xtfisor Is ”b
r.
-■X’
By DREW PEARSON
WASHINGTON - I don’t like
to be In the position of apologiz-
ing to Rep. Adam Clayton Pow-
ell of Harlem or anyone else for
European Junket at the taxpay-
ers expense during most of the
Harlem race riots.
In fact, Powell was even on
this junket when the civil rights
in her purse and left town with
terviewing him about the prob-
lems of race riots In big cities,
A controversy has Bow grown ;
up over how much the key is
worth. One official told this col-
I discovered* (hat I had under-
estimated his traveling propeff-
ciltAo
lgi
ini
sities.
lem had informed me that he
had made no recent trips to
Puerto Rico and implied that he
had been working hard in Wash-
ington. I have now discovered
that actually he was on another
___■
■»
WJ-
more and similar outbreaks elsewhere in the North
before the November election.
It is not hard to imagine in such a case the cli-
max might be reached with a riot in the capital city
of Washington: not long before Election Day.
Johnson’s support of this year’s Civil Rights Act
already had alienated segregationists. Negro riot's
may cost him more votes among whites who are dis-
turbed by the violence for one reason or another.
In South Viet Nam Johnson inherited a problem
which puzzled Presidents Eisenhower and Kennedy
before him: How to esetablish stability in this
• southeast corner of Asia while working to defeat the
North Vietnamese Communists’ attempt to take it
over by force. - .....
After years of effort; billions of dollars in aid,
and loss of more than 300 American lives, the sit-
■ uation there is worse right now than it has ever been.
The country seems to be disintegrating. .»/
It has now had three govemments jn less than a
year.
If South Viet Nam falls apart much further,
Johnson’will have to decide whether to* pull Ameri-
can help and forces out; put American troops into di-
rect action against the Communists; or'seek some
kind of negotiated settlement. •
Not one of the three-moves is likely to help John-
sorf in the election although anyone in his place
would face the same problem.
If Americans pulled out, the Communists would
take over. That would put Viet Nam -'.under Red
China’s wing, with.all the rest of Southeast- Asia in
danger.
Direct fighting by American forces against the
North Vietnamese Reds would probably bring on war
with Red China. \ ,..s.
Any kind of negotiated settlement, which re-
quired withdrawal of American forces from Viet
Nam, almost certainly would end up in a Red take-
over sooner or later.
At this moment Johnson isn’t showing signs of
being worried. But it wouldn’t be good politics if
he did.
V
Questions
I From The News!
How thoroughly do you read
your newspaper? Here are 25
s. All current news.
questions.
Properly completed the an-
swers across spell out a head-
line between the two heavy
lines. •
ALWAYS SEEMS TO HEAL QUICKLY
1. Students raid radio studio
over grievances.
2. England’s ‘'jolly Wallers”
Magna Charter of Negro free-
dom, was passed on July 2. He
, was not in Washington to vote.
Powell’s official .excuse for go-
ing abroad was to ..attend the
International Labor Office meet-
ing in Geneva. He arrived in
Geneva in late June, registered
at the Hotel Rhone, apparently
didn’t like the accommodations,
and moved to another hotel. He
did not meet once with the staff
of the International Labor Of-
*»lt? and did not attend a single
meeting of the full conference.
He did attend one dinner.
With him on the trip, expenses
also paid by the taxpayers, was
his beautiful secretary,, Corrine
Huff, first Negro to win the
“Miss Ohio” contest.
While in Geneva, the dapper
Congressman from Harlem both-
ered State Department officials
with the problem of arranging
tennis togs and fishing gear. He
stopped in Madrid and Athens
while traveling to and from
Geneva, and was in Atheas when y
the civil rights bill was passed
by Congress. I:
- Mv apologies to . Mr. Powell
$2,500. Another said it is gold
plated and could be reproduced
for $35.
i free 8pee
lent.
Hunt i s s t
/ednesday a
1 that the
ervice was
ram’s tax-ex
-"The positi
ife Line sc<
ife Line will
•ine critics w
ife Line sho
. xempt status
Hunt is
"'oundatioh
uces the . co
With great pooh - poohing.
Mayor Wllarcl Fraser assured
this column thekey is worth on-
ly $10.95.
Whatever its market value,
the city fathers are reported
to have tried to repossess it.
One approach was made to Sen.
Lee Metcalf, D-Mont., who re-
portedly wired the mayor offere
"rogram, car
-90 stations.
The foundat
* f s an eduo
’ •as challenge
1 ’miner in 196
Life Line pi
iner’s recomn
educational <
yoked. An IR
Jng to pay for the key himself,
if the city was in financial dif-
ficulty, so Mrs. Johnson
keep ft.
Mayor Fraser now dismisses
the incident with a great chuckle.
“Mrs. Johnson is such a gray
clous lady.” he told this column,
“that she can have anything she
wants jn Billings, including the
mayor.”
He "wqpldn’t dream” of ask-
ing for the key back, he’said.
' r ' .* ’.
ONLY THOSE around President
Johnson knew about it, but Sen.
Humphrey almost didn’t get to
W
BUG
Kill-
On The Right-
Luce's Withdrawal Aids Keating
for underestimating his frequent
on U.S. four. ......-. ... yen for travel.
I3’ Life in Costa Rica ’disrupted UNAWARE OF the flapdoodle
__ she caused. Lady Bird Johnson
4. Reulher warn#—strike is left the city fathers of Billings,
ia*. . : Mont in a swivpt last month
deliver his acceptance sepech at
Atlantic City. He Was ~
■ was locked out-
near.
5, U.N. official backs Ken-
■ Crnntn unnn
By WILLIAM F. BUCKLEY JR.
.Clare Bqothe Luce has with-
drawn from the race for sena-
Blair Good 'Mann'
tor in New York,'greatly easing
the job of fhc. incumbent Sen.
Keating, who is running against
Bobby Kennedy, who very; much
desires to become senator from
"ew York and has the habit of
'getting what he wants. Mrs.’
Luce's Withdrawal is a notable
“ development, on grounds both
political and personal.
To take- the first first. It all
sbegan when’the New York Re-
publican Party, Which is the
faithful and indisputably unthink-
ing servant of Nelson Rockefel-
ler, decided to deny Sen. Ghld-
water the services of the Con-
servative Party, by prohibiting
the slate of electors named by
the Republicans from accepting
the designation of the Conserva-
tive Party. The ostensible rea-
son for, doing -this was la dis-
courage the fledgling Conserva-
tive Party, which is fielding no
less than 58 candidates in races
in which Republicans are involv-
ed.
In fact, the fight is rather
ideological than organizational.
Important leaders within t h e
Republican Party in New York
have known for years that it
was just a matter of time be-
fore the conservative communi-
ty in New York State got up on
its hind legs and demanded rec-
ognition. (The Democrats had
long since made their peace-
with the Liberal Party on their
pected would happen under the
circumstances.
The New York Republican
Party, didn’t, precisely because
It is unfriendly to Senator Gold-
water, retaliate by saying to
Senator Keating, All right, Ken-
neth, we wish you bon voyage
aboard your principles, but. you”
see, old shoe, the Republican
Party is on presidential y'ehrs,
a national organization, not a
United Nations General Assem-
bly of independent states:' and
if you decline toendorse Sen.
Goldwater, „we must, most re- *
gratfully, decline to endorse
you.
, Thus the New York GOP was
caught in a dilemma which
caught the eye of a lady whose
eye for irony . is very sharp.
Here was the GOP in New York
fielding as Its principal candi-
date a man who refused to en-
dorse. the OOP’s principal na-
tional candidate. Meanwhile the
little Conservative Party, whose
principles are identical’ with
those of the-GOP's national can-
didate, was being denied the
right to. put Goldwater on the
ballot. Clare Boothe Luce acted.
nedy for Senate race.
6. Rain firings relief to acute
water shprtage in —.
7. - Where is the Veterans of
Foreign Wars convention to be
held?
Mont., in a swivel last month
when she walked off with the
key to the city.
side -the convention hall on“tnr~~
fire'escape.
Just e x actly. how Hubert
locked himself outside is his se-
cret. Maybe at the last moment
he was reluctant to accept the
nomination. Perhaps in ponder-
ing this he stepped out on the fire
escape to get a breath of air,
Kill-Kc Quit
--sect laah.lt
8. Made keynote address at
the Democratic National Con-
vention. . ..
No one had bothered to tell and with this weighty matter on
this colum the key is worth on- his mind, did not know there was
ceremonial symbol and was sup- a lock bn the door. With a
posed to be returned to rile city clang, it shut behind him.
tor use at future welcoming when Leonard Day, the driv-
ceremonies. So quite innocently, -er of Mrs. Johnson’s car, discov-
the First Lady plopped the key :—ered Humphrey's predicament,
mosquito*!,
motto, Moos,
thing, crowlin
long-lasting
DDVP quick
poriiing pow
m
lAMMCno
9. Representatives
Powell’s first name.
Clayton
Bible Verse
he went to convention hall fire-
men and asked for a. key to the
10. TWee lost Americans res-
She would, she said; consider..
accepting the Conservative
-Party’s designation under the
circumstances.
cued in -
11. Gives OK to Robert Ken-
nedy. k
For whosoever shall call upon
the name of the Lord shall be
saved. Roman 10:13
fire door.
- "Which fire door?” asked one
of the firemen,,'
“"The door where you hear all
the hammering," was the rg-
piy.
Oh how the scorpions struck!
There is something about Mrs.
Luce that does things, mostly
unpleasant, to people. She is for
12. Kennedy leases house in—
— Long Island.
Drop Tests
Jolt Law
Of Gravity
13. Rejects loyalty oath at con-
vention.
14. Casey and Edna Stengel
nary^talen?;'andlhap ofcoursej * ^hrate how many yeare rof
is unforgivable. Thic is still a marriage, v
15. Name of one of the de-
Daily Crossword Puzzle
-KING FEATURE-
is unforgivable. This is still a
man’s world and public women
should be reclusive poets, like
say Emily Dickinson, or frilly
political effusions, like say India
Edwards. Then, too, Mrs. Henry
Luce is, as one might expect,
married to Mr. Henry Luce,
,,u :c_______x_ ______
POINT ARGUELLO, Calif. -
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration has check-
ed up on the law of gravity and
found it needs some revision.
Contrary to popular and scien-
tific belief a smooth spherical
Chief of Police Blair Mann will make Baytown a
* fine police head if he is given 100 per cent backing of
city officials and the public.
“BiairMannhasproved’himselfasagoodoffiter
while serving as a deputy constable in East Harris
County. His long service in the armed services gave
him much experience in handling and dealing with
all types, of people. .. - . . -
Blair Mann is a good-man, and believes the law
should be enforced and enforced fairly and justly.
The Baytown Sun compliments the City of Bay-
town ireturning: to one of its own most resDected citi-
zens upon whom to place this great responsibility.
■ A newspaper is in constant touch with all police
officers in any community. Blair Mann has already *
proved himself to The Sun and East Harris County.
Baytown is fortunate to have him available.
Try and Stop Me
——By BENNETT CERE-
left," whose job it has been to
oversee the ideological purity of
Democratic? Party candidates,
and step in with a Liberal can-
didate when disciplinary action
seemed in order.)
Along with the decision of the (
“- Rockefeller Repubiicans io seize :
the opportunity to hurt Goldwa-
ter by-denying him. a place on
the Conservative ballot (needless
to say, LBJ will appear in the
Liberal ballotl came Senator
Keating’s agonized, and agoniz-
ing, bout With his conscience:
he couldn’t, said he, back -Sena-
tor Goldwater. To do so would
be to violate his most deeply
seated principles. ' -
■ Now,: we afeall fBr principles,
and the more deep-seated the
better; and whenever a politician -
■ discovers principles, it is, or
should be, cause for natiefi.al.m
joicing — though to be sure
- there are those others who be-
lieve that any politician who is
belief a
object doesn't fall straight down,
but-rather in a corkscrew pat-
tern, the NSA experiments show-
ed.
' After dropping a plastic ball
in a tank of water and tracing
its fall, an Israeli geophysicist
-- ar the UmversiW of eafifornia
at Los Angeles, Dr; Uri Shafrir,
tested his findings by dropping
a1 sphere in still air and measur-
ing its fall. He has been work-
ing under grants from NASA
and the National Science Foun-
dation.
Which is an invitation to anyone
ever victimized by Mr. Luce’s
1 instruments of scarification
(Time, J^ife, etc.) to get at him
and his white-collar tortures,
by picking on her. And then on
top of it all came the looming
. nightmare.- "Do you realize,”,
one Republican; sail), to Mrs.’
Luce, his voice dropping to a
tragic basso: "if you enter the-
New York race, you will win
500,000 votes, and a resulting
certainty will be the election of
Bobby Kennedy? And if Bobby
becomes senator, ’ you - know-
what he’ll become in 1968 .
With that invitation to perpetual
sleeplessness, the gentleman
_hmsfijf^uccumhe.d^ . „ , „....._. - ...
As did MrS. Luce. The pres-
sures were unsupportable. And
anyway, she had-failed to re-
verse the stand of Rockefeller’s
signs to be used on new postage
stamps for .Christmas.
. 16. — lists 182 killed in action
In South Vietnam. “ ....
17. Wife of Sargetit Shriver
suffering from kidney trouble. .
IS. Still wants.no part of Bar-
ry. ......
19. Italian Communist leader
of Italy who died.
20. Former presidential advis-
er is 94.
21. India jails 500 in -7/allies.
22. Hurricane menaces Puerto
Rico'and Virgin Islands.
: 23. Wave of Killings in ?r- re-
ported. • i ■-*' •.*
24, Johnson-Goldwater — on
television ruled out.
25. Custody fight over 4 chil-
dren by —.
ACROSS
I . Laughs at
6. Pierces,
as with a
dagger
11. Metal tag
of a shoe
, lace
f 12. Piece of
i (urnitore
$3. A dried ’
: fruit
14. Bower
15. Observe
16. Humor
18. Female
sheep
DOWN
L Travelers’
aids
2. Monster
3. Hint
”4. Know;
* Scot .
6. One of a k
•Ship’s
personnel
." 6. Situation
7. Black,
viscous,
substance
8. Fr. priest
9. Severe
shock
IN THE NEWS
Republicans, or that of Keat-
ing; so that, -
The metal sphere was drop-
ped out o£ a helicopter 10,009
feet- over Point Argueilo. A sky
diver jumped out after it."
‘With a motion picture camera
built into his helmet, he man-
aged to stay within 20 to 40 feet
of the sphere during’ the fall. *
• A smoke g&nade inside the
shpere trailed^ but red smoke,
revealing- that the Abject fell in
in a way, fier-ae-
cCptance of the Conservatives’
designation could only be an act
of consummated punishment,
rather than a deterrent threat.
It is one thing to prosecute, an-
other actually to swing the axe. I.
The conservatives have now
nominated a man of surpassing
brdlance and attractiveness: and
Clare Luce has temporarily re-
tired, to wage the eo-chairinan-.
Ship of the Citizens for Goldwa-
gets over
But what happened m New York
is not what one might have ex-’
ter. Buf jhg did die right thing
■rto'the-' and for
that she really had the boys
screaming: and, for the most
pari, the boys whose screams
' are music to these ears..
IS. Contests at 10. Withered
Indianapolis 17. a pre
21* Withdraw servatiye
from 19. Skating
business
24. Useless ~
plant
28. Make
correct
29. Coronet
30. Miserable:
si.
81. Sounded,
......
pleased cat
32. A traffic
tangle
84. Vitality
.87. Tree
88.ExcIama-
tion
11. Permit
43. Rowed
45. Fibbers
46. Kind of
. linen
thread
47. Companion-
able: Brit,
cdloq.
48. Speaks
Imperfectly
20. To
whirl
21. Twilled
' fabric
22. Ostrioh-
like
bird
23. Number
25. Audi-
tory
organ
26. Before
27. Father;
affect. .
29. Disturb-
ance
31. Churn
33. Full of -
tidings:
colloq.
34, Inside of
pm
i ;
Yesterday's Answer
35. Pen-name
of Lamb
36. Map
38. Chests
39. Succor
40. Beverage*
42. Metallic
rock
i
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16
Know Your Bridge
-By B. JAY BECKER-
.....{■
of food mixed in for peo-
pie who haven’t time to
eat between tooth brush-
ings, and- 2. A tobacco
ynmpany’s new cigarette
package that Indudes
plastic ear plugs for buy*”
ers who are tired of hear-
ing why they should quit
-it:
KfiWWiWiie
inaeggg iip1
»'»
TODAY'S GRAB BAG
7H1 ANSWIR, QUICK! $#OT OF FAMI-GUESS THE NAME the site of the castle of the Holy
L Where
Islands?
are tha PrlbHoff 1
2. What Is a quire?
3. Where would you find the
Admiralty Islands? , j
4. What does the word "vul- J
Grail, called the -'-’stocei Watch-
hw tha Arelw
pine”, mean?
A What la a throstle?
I N ' *■ "• ? ’T At
i -
I’iWi flf
I.«..•••«
Fred Hartman
James H. Hale ........
Preston Pendergraes .
Beulah Mae Jackson ,
Robert K. Gilmore ...
Bill Hartman
Saytaum §utt
....................Editor and Publisher
..........General Manager
........................ Managing Editor
.......w................ Office Manager
.....................Circulation Director
,. .. .. . . ........ Promotion Manager
. «t hafpeneo tooaj •
On this day In ISSS.Tireat
Britain and France declared war
on Genaaay.
i ,
/ *4i's**L
man” by the Arabs.
Here Ignatius of Loyola, a
wounded soldier, knelt in pray-
er, and went away to found
the Society of Jesus.
While most of the present
fl buildings -are comparatively
new, the monastery dat&Ffrom >
976, and legend reports a nun- '“
nery that preceded It was
founded in 880. Yet, so faithful-
ly have the monks followed the
lines of the older parts of the
monastery in making additional -
even the newest buildings have
'
*»•»»**•**•...«««>•*» •>........ run
ADVERTISING DEPARTMENT
John .Wad ley «....... ,^t...................... Manager ‘i
Paul Putman ....
Oorrie LaughUn'Vi..:.............
I *
_ ............................ National Manager
Entered as second dess matter at the Baytown, Texas Post
Office under the Act of Congress of March A 1879.
Published afternoons, Monday through Friday,
and Sundays'by The Baytown Sun, Inc, ■ .»
at Pearce and AshbeJ in Baytown, Texas.
•uhecriptkM Rates: ,
81.48 per Month, $17.40 per year..
HJCKBCR OS THE ASaOClATED
IT’$ BEEN SAID
/ cea prove antfthing byjtta- an age-old air of permanence.'
Mies—except the truth.—Can-1 ^ tpot of fame is a medi-T From tirt uronasterj’ terrace,
e v a I Benedietihe monastery flhe sPa rkl‘nK blue waters of the
clinging to the face of a fan*
tastic atone peak rising from
[ the brovra'foothills of Cataluna. !
ning.
WATCH YOUR LANGUAGE ;
—BUTTE — (BEAUT)-nouh;
an isolated hill or mountain ris-
ing abruptly above surrounding
It is Spain’s holiest shrine, to stone’s throw away.
the sparkling blue waters of the
Mediterranean are surprisingly
near: and *the white peaks of
the Pyrenees seem but a good
North-South vulnerable.
, NORTH
IroS106
♦ 10983
" ♦ A62
WEST ’ i
EAST
♦ ms ♦«♦
ffe'iiW.
leadingaliewt.HU nlnthtrick
presumably wilt have to chine
from spades, but he has no Way
yet of ’knowing how the spades
ate divided or how to play the
suit so as to obtain a fourth
spade trick.
In an effort to learn more
about the hand, South plays a '
ANSWERS:
YOUH FUTURE .
Life resumes Its even tenor.
I Today’s child will be seatltive.
/I/'';
amtfuut Pnm It MUtM ndn«uuly to tut sm fur rtuubllctilon at
»? <*•!*«*«• cradttad to it or not otbarwtM ciwlttad la thto MP«r tM
luesi am at upsatanooui ortda pubtlstwd barotm. msktu of neobltesuoa at til
BORN TODAY
Soprano Dorothy Jiaynor, ac-
tor Alan Ladd.
which thousands of the faithful
make pilgrimage each year to
The Black Virgin, a wooden-
i.vstto, almost supernatur-
al mountain and monastery is
a place of pilgrimage. It is also
Name this spot of fame.
/(Nanis at bottom of cohiats)
r HOW’D YOU MAKE OUT?
1. In .the Bering Sea.
2. i RJOTof a ream.
S. ln the Pa?i6d 1 -
4. CunningTartful, fot-Ilke,
5. A’ song thrush,"
Addn|{ a
»l»q»a
ro*H ks
■ eegj •«
Pooj r*
qotuuH ’08
IU«I|Sox«r
SuitsaM '81
».»|una 'if.
uogutuoj Ttt
<l|OH SI
Auoj H
sutuqanr Tt
SAOfpuaio ’*! i ■
j*ua«M -a
oatKo •«
utspv ’6
♦ K 98 5 43
SOUTH ,
♦ A 7 4
♦ A J6
: 4X848__^_
The bidding:
East South West North
Pass 1NT 3 V 3 NT
Opening lead—king of hearts.
The declarer does not see the
opposing hands,, but he can
many times force the defend-
ers to reveal exactly what cards
they have,
ms W *
■pusHASt) -4
wfgox g
esrer Mint aortta ara ate ramrrat
■>w < fire PaOr Xiumur
i
-rnwig
qauaujuoK jo jtwjnraeK
uoma vaig y
ojnv '»
•v
omaqO A S
s»|l«oa «
uo8|«s ’t
HEADLINE 4 ALL EYES ON
ATLANTIC ITY
t
Take'a case like this one,
where South U in three no-
trump and West leads a heart
Declarer takas the ace, but is
ip no position at this point to
judge how he will eventually
fare.
'Let’s say he plays the queen
of clubs, and loses the finesse
z to the king. Back comes a club
which South takes with the
jack. West discarding a heart
South now, has seven sure
tricks—three spades, a heart, a
■diamond and two clubs—-and
can build up an eighth trick by trick.
(ft IMA Klag Platans Syidiest* laaj
takes the- eight with the jack
and returns a club to the ace,
West discarding another heart
Now declarer plays the ten of
hearts, East discarding, a club,
West takes It with the queen
and returns a heart to th* Jack,
East discarding-a diamond.
When declarer now cashes
the ace of diamonds and West'
show* out, South has all the In-
fortnation he needs’ to assure
the contract He learns from
this play that West started with -
four spades, which is all he
needs to know to guarantee
four spade tricks.
West obviously started with
seven hearts, since Ekat showed
put on the second heart lead.
West also started with one dia-
mond and one dub, having
shown out on the second lead of
each of these suits. He there-
fore must have started with ;
precisely -four spades. '- -
So South plays a spade to the"
queen and a spade back to the
ace, followed by another Spade. +
When West plays low, South
finesses the ten with 100% as-
surance' that It will win the
I ~
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Hartman, Fred. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 41, No. 296, Ed. 1 Thursday, September 3, 1964, newspaper, September 3, 1964; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1056883/m1/4/: accessed July 3, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.