The Levelland Daily Sun News (Levelland, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 111, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1961 Page: 2 of 8
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Tba UVBULAND DAILY SUN NKWS.
Iday, May 5, 1941
RESCUE DEMONSTRATION Is ptrt ee by the
CUcnc* Ctril Dele— Fire eM Keeeee Senrloe
for Robert S. RH« (Ml), new nitoais ChrU Defease
Ageeasy tratnkix sffloer, who lo pothering material
lor o new ctril lefenoe reoeno oeoreo. The dem-
nnstsstlnn eh ewe how o mu nought under o henry
object con be roe coed. With Rite lo Cherleo J.
Johnson, volunteer chief of the Fire and Reocac
Service, which lo on call M hours a day. The CD
workers frequently go Into action with the Chi-
cago Fire Department. Rite's salary is paid 50-54
by the Illinois and Federal governments under a
now program to strengthen State and local civt
defense for greater effectiveness. ipcDM Photo;
Peace Corps discussed
at Sundown meeting
Whiteface man
is graduate of
recruit training
Dwight A. Stone, apprentice pet-
ty officer second dan, USN, ion
of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar C. Stone
of Whiteface, was graduated April
SS, from nine weeks of Recruit
Training at the Naval Training
Canter, San Diego, Calif.
Apprentice petty officers are cho-
sen from tha ranks of the sea-
man recruits to assist company
commanders. The selection is bas-
ed on individual aptitude and
leadership qualities.
Fire, blast strands
subway* s thousands
NEW YORK 1AP)—A manhole
explosion and electrical fire in
Brooklyn stranded thousands of
rush-hour passengers on the BMT
subway line Thursday.
The trouble broke out about 4:45
p.m. as about 300,000 riders head-
ed for home.
Power was temporarily restored
15 minutes later, but in another
quarter of an hour it went off
again. Full service was not re-
sumed until around 6:30 p.m.
Some 22,000 passengers had to
be escorted from 11 trains strand-
ed in tunneis. Four passengers
suffered temporary shock, but re-
quired no hospital treatment.
At about the same time, a
•power failure on a branch of the
•□IT system in Brooklyn tempo-
rarily halted a number of train!.
Congratulations
itTs a . . .
BOY. Mr. and Mrs. Juan Prieto
are parents of a boy bom at 12:20
p.m. April 4 at Levelland Clinic
and Hospital weighing 7 pounds
and 9 ounces]
Dry ice was first manufactur-
ed commercially in Long Island
City. N.Y., in i»25.
CHANNEL 13
FRIDAY
7:45—Farm Fair Report
7:14—Newa
1:15—Captain Kan ga roe
4:00—December Bride
•: 14-Video Village
14:00—1 Love Lucy
14:14—Clear Horiion
11:04—Lot# Lift
11:14—Home Fair
13:00—News, Weather
13:90—Career Headlines
13:34—Aa the World Tumi
1:00—Face the Facts
1:34—Houseparty
3:04—The Millionaire
1:30—The Verdict is Yours
1:04—The Brighter Day
3:15—The Secret Storm
1:00—The Edge of Night
4:04—Roy Roger*
4:10—Cartoon Circus
5:04—Rin Tinn Tinn
5:14—News, Weather
5:45—Doug Edwards
6:00—Blue Angel
0:30—Rawhide
7:30—Route 60
8:30—Miami Uncovered
9:04—77 Sunset Strip
10:00—Newa. Weather
10:34—Adventures in Paradise
11:30—The Pioneers
SATURDAY
0:45—Farm Fair Report
1:54—News
0:00—Captain Kangaroo
0:30—Mighty Mouse
10:00—The Magic Land
10:30—Cartoons
11:00—Sky King
11:30—News
11:55—Baseball Game of the Week
. 3:30—Big Picture
8:00—Kentucky Derby Preview
3:45—Championship Bowling
4:45—Mr. Magoo
„ 5:00—Bugs Bunny
• 1:30—Frontiers of Science
• 0:00—First Run '"heatrs
8:30—Perry Mason
7:30—Checkmate
. 4:30—Have Gun Will Travel
* 0:00—Guntmoke
* •: 10—Two Faces West
10:04—Twilight Zone
*10:34—Asphalt Jungle
11:34—International Detective
Emotional upset
blamed for attempt
at suicide by wife
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Police
#ay friends blame an emotional
upset over James Craig’s current
marital troubles for an apparent
suicide attempt by the actor’s
first wife, Mary, 37.
Mrs. Craig, who divorced the
actor in 1959 after 20 years of
marriage, was rushed uncon-
scious to a hospital Thursday. Po-
lice said she had taken an over-
dose of sleeping pills.
Hospital attendants predicted
she would recover.
Craig, 49, married actress Jil
Jarmyn, 35, less than a month
after his divorce from his first
wife became final. But this mar-
riage wound up in the divorce
court Wednesday.
Craig, notified that his ex-wife
had swallowed 15 to 17 sedative
pills, called police and then
rushed to her home. He declined
to discuss the case with news-
men.
River rise makes
frown infro a city
NEWPORT, Ky. (AP) - Mel-
bourne, populgtjjn, _,3$9 is a city
again—because the Ohio River is
on the rise.
The Campbell Coupty commu-
nity became a city in 1912 but in
later yeara nobody ran for office.
The government found theie
were no city officials to deal with
when its agents sought to buy
parts of city streets which would
be flooded when the Markland
Dam on the Ohio River is com-
pleted.
County Judge A. J Jolly cor-
rected the situation Thursday. He
restored Melbourne’s sixth class
city status and appointed five
trustees.
A hairy-nosed wombat touched
off a mining boom in South Aus-
tralia a century ago when it un-
earthed fragments of flinting rock
while digging a burrow. Before
the deposit gave out in the 1920s
million tons of copper had been
mined.
CHANNEL 11
FRIDAY
0:34—Continental Clastroom -
Color
7:04—Today
0:04—Say When
0:30—Play Your Hunch - Color
10:04—Price Is Right
10:30—Concentration
11:00—It Could Be You Color
11:55—News
13:00—Burn* and Allen
13:30—Dr. Hudson’* Secret Journal
1:00—Jan Murray Show
1:30—Lorreta Young Show
2:00—Young Dr. Malone
2:30—From These Roots
2:00—Movie
4:45—Comedy Carrousel
0:00—News, Weather
6:15—Huntley - Brinkley Report
6:30—Happy
7:00—Five Star Jubilee
7; 30-Hall of Fame "The Joke
and the Valley
9:00—Michael Shayne
10:00—Groucho Marx
10:30—News, Weather, Sports
11:00-Be*t of Paar
SATURDAY
7;30—Cartoons
8:00—Tarzan
9:00—Shari Lewis - Color
9:30—King Leonardo • Color
10:00—Fury
10:30—Lone Ranger
11:00—True Story
11:30—Major League Baseball — 1
Team* TBA
2:30—Adventures of Tom Sawyer
4:00—Bowling Stare
4:30—Captain Gallant
5:00—Detectives Diary
5:80—Sgt. Preston of Yukon
6:00—News, Weather
6:15—Here's Howell
6:30—Bonanza • Color"
7:30—Tall Man'
8:00—Lawrence Welk
0:00—Fight of the Week
9:45—Make That Spare
10:00—Award Theater
10:30—)Newi, Weather, Sports
11:00—Movie
Big barbecue
is launching
Blakley effort
WACO, Tex. (AP)—Hundreds of
Democrats converge on this Cen-
tral Texas city today for a big
rally and barbecue launching the
run-off election campaign of in-
terim U S. Sen. William A Blak-
ley of Dallas.
Dr. H. Frank Connally Jr. of
Waco, chairma, said 40 tons of
free barbecue are being prepared.
He also promised “free balloons
for the children and lots of music
and entertainment.”
Blakley, who has promised to
have a lot to say about legislation
before Congress and some laws
already passed, will make a state-
wide televised speech from the
Heart-O-Texas Coliseum Fair
Grounds.
He opposes John G. Tower, a
Republican from Wichita Falls, in
the run-off election May 27 to fill
the remainder of the term Lyndon
B. Johnson resigned in January
to become vice president.
Texas Democratic Party lead-
ers and officials at state, county
and local level, are to take part
in the rally.
Among those expected to attend
are Democratic National Commit-
teeman Byron Skelton of Temple;
Mrs. Hilda Weinart of Seguin. the
Democratic national committee-
woman; J. Ed Connally of Abi-
lene, chairman of tt^e State Demo-
cratic Executive Committee; Mrs.
F T] Baldwin of Houston, vic^
chairman of the State Executive
Committee, and Clyde Johnson of
Austin, executive director of the
State Executive Committee.
Rep. Robert Poage of Waco and
several other members of Texas*
Democratic delegation in Congress
also are expected.
Special buses from Austin wifi
bring members of the Texas Sen-
ate and House and their wives.
McLennan County" Judge Ray
Mormino issued a special invita-
tion to Central Texas judges to
attend as special guests.
Among the entertainers are the
famous Mariachi Singers and
Dancers from Monterrey, Mexico.
And adding a special Western
touch to the festivities will be
presidents of Central Texas riding
clubs.
The Sundown Christian Women’s
Fellowship met at 8 p.m. May 3
at the church with Mrs. M. H.
Power, vice president, presiding.
Roll call was answered with a
scripture.
Mrs. Bobbie Sanders chose the
devotional theme, “We know that
we have passed from death unto
life, because we love the brethren,’
with scripture from John 3: 14-18.
The nominating committee’s re-
port was accepted and the new
offiers were unanimously elected.
The installation will be held May
31 at the church.
Mrs. Foy Winn presented a pa-
per, “Peace Corps and Mission-
ary Motives.” Mrs. Winn sajd. The
Peace corps is a group of young
men and women who will go to
undeveloped .‘ountries and give
their labors and skills just for the
sake of helping people. They must
have a desire fci hard, tedious
and unglamorous work. They
must also have patience, tact and
sympathy. This Corps makes en-
during contribution to human well-
being and international good wijl.”
Local woman's
great grandmother
dies in Wellington
Mrs. J. S. Aaron, 92, great grand
mother of Mrs. Sam Eudy died
at the hospital in Wellington
Thursday morning Funeral ser-
vices will be held at 2 p.m. Sat-
urday at the First Methodist
Church in Wellington and burial
will be in the Wellington ceme-
tery.
Sam Eudy will be among the
great grandsons and great grand-
sons-in-law who will serve as pall-
bearers.
Mrs. Aaron died after having a
serieg of strokes beginning Mon-
day morning.
Mrs. J. C. Duke led the Bible
study, completing the book of Ec-
clesiastes.
Mrs. M. H Power and Mrs. Thad
Henderson served strawberry
shortcake and coffee to Mmes.
Foy Winn, Duke and Bobbie San-
ders.
No agreement
(Continued from page one)
vanna Phouma, the self-styled
neutralist supported by the rebels,
had put emphasis on the quick
formation of a coalition govern-
ment in proposing the peace par-
lay.
No major fighting has been re-
ported since Wednesday, but Gen.
’Phoumi Nofcavan, strongman of
the Vientiane government, .said
Thursday there have been sporad-
ic attacks that raised doubts
about the Pathet Lao’s good faith.
More than a haif dozen wound-
ed have been brought into Vien-
tiane in the past two days.
The U S. and British govern-
ments have declared they will not
go to Geneva unless an armistice
is in force. Western military ex-
perts in Vientiane concede, how-
ever, that there axe bound to be
flareups in the touchy weeks
ahead as a result of ragged com-
munications and probable refusal
of some diehard rebel units to
obey the cease-fire order.
All-Negro 'blacks'
is dramatic oddity
Bv WILLIAM GLOVER
Associated Press Drama Writer
NEW YORK (AP)—The far-out
dramatic oddity of this theatrical
season is “The Blacks” by
France’s playwright of eccentric
effects, Jean Genet.
The production, with an all-
Nego cast, opened Thursday
night on the stage of the St.
Marks off-Broadway playhouse. It
is the first showing abroad of a
play that was a Paris sensation
two seasons ago.
A sort of double masquerade,
the work examines racial hos-
tility with travesty, raw language,
and symbolic scenes in nightmare
disarray.
The cast, directed by Gene
Frankel, handles the Bernard
Frechtman translation with ver-
satile authority.
“Let them ask the questions,"
flaunts one character in elliptical
challenge to spectators. No one
promises the answers. The effect
is baffling and absorbing.
Herald Sun Newa Want Ads Pay
WANT
A ROOFER?
Seethe
YELLOW PAGES
m
CD FORCES BOOSTED
Added help for hard-pressed State end local ChrU defense staffs
Is being provided under a new federally-aided program to build
up the nation’s non-military force#. The result. Civil and Defense
lit:::it«*t - •* • eiu. point# out, win be better
IT preparation for civilians to sur-
.................* * ------ ^ emj attack.
added: “I am asking the
governors and all other city ai d
every State
people
they have a spiritual obli-
gation to prepare for their sur-
survival of
Prince Souphanouvong, titular
leader of the pro - Communist
Pathet Lao, today gave full sup-
port to the political negotiations
proposed by Souvanna Phouma,
who is his half brother.
Like Souvanna Phouma he
called for formatio of a coali-
tion government and naming of
a delegation to the Geneva con-
ference, presently scheduled to
start May 12.
President Kennedy’s roving am-
bassador, Averpll Harriman ar-
rived today in New Delhi, where
a three-nation truce commission
is waiting to go to Laos to verify
that the fighting has ended and
to supervise the truce.
Good condition
(Continued from page one)
the ship at 9:53. But already the
helicopter was starting its historic
trip back with a historic man.
Some concern was voiced aboard
the ship as the capsule descending
by parachute waved from side to
side in the wind.
But when the word came that
Shepard was OK everyone breath-
ed easy on the vessel.
As the watchers waited. Old
Glory and the admiral’s blue en-
sign flag with its two stars
spanked briskly in the breeze.
The first words the astronaut
said after coming aboard the pick-
up helicopter: "It’s a beautiful
day,” one of the Marines who
picked him up said. His next
words, uttered «hortly before
reaching the recovery ship were
“Boy, what a ride.”
Space shot
Continued from page one
race with Russia.
Soviet sicentists copped the first
big prize 23 days ago when they
boosted the world’s first space
traveler, Yuri Gagarin, into a
188-mile high orbit and returned
him to earth 108 minutes later.
Today’s suborbital shot does nqt
match the Russian achievement
but is a major step toward orbit-
ing an American which the Na-
tional Space Agency plans to do
later this year.
The purpose of today’s flight
was to determine if man can per-
form useful chores in space.
Shepard proved conclusively it
could be done.
He reported constantly through-
out the flight that he was able to
do certain tasks, such as pushing
levers and buttons and operating
manual controls.
All the way through he told the
control center at Cape Canaveral
by radio that everything was
okay.
During the flight, Mercury offi-
cials said that Shepard was re-
porting facts and figures just like
a test pilot would.
The National Aeronautics and
Space Administration made this
official announcement: “Test No.
108 is terminated. This was the
pioneer U.S. man in space-flight
The Mercury spacecraft is on the
deck of the aircraft carrier Lake
Champlain and the helicopter is
about to land. Shepard is about to
come out of helicopter.”
Shepard’s reports on the “beau-
tiful view" came only three min-
utes following launch, after a peri-
scope in the capsule protruded to
give the space pilot a view of the
earth.
Shepard had mtered his space
cabin at 5:18 a m. (EST), after a
final medical examination and a
breakfast of filet mignon, scram-
bled eggs, sherbet and peaches.
He remained there 4 hours, 18
minutes, during a countdown that
had been daiayed several times
by technical trouble., and weather.
The Redstone throbbed to life
after a countdown directed by for-
mer German rocketeer Dr. Kurt
Debus.
Debus was assisted by Dr. Wer-
ner Von Braun, head of the Na-
tional Aeronautics and Space Ad-
ministration Ispace flight * labora-
tory.
The slender rocket, stretching
83 feet tall with the capsule and
lSli-font escape tower on tops.
Hew a true course as it knifed into
a clear sky under the anxious
eyes of thousands who crammed
into missileland to watch as Amer-
ica for the first time committed
a man into space.
Millions of Shepard's country:
men watched on live television.
As the missile accelerated, forc-
es six times the pull of gravity
pushed the astronaut against his
couch
At 141 seconds after launch, the
capsule separated and the escape
tower — designed to jerk the cap-
sule free and parachute it safely
to earth in case of trouble—was
jettisoned,
Automatic controls then flipped
the nine-foot tail capsule over 180
degrees so the blunt heat shield j
base led the way. with the pilot
riding backward.
About four minutes after launch,
Shepard tumbled, as if over a !
precipice, into a weird and weight-
less world—an exhilarating expe-
rience that lasted about five min-
utes.
viva anwny
mmmrn * -
to impress upon their
‘bat they have a apiriti
**tion to prepare I
MM “ “
iRMHi.....
would help qualify him to In-
A typical new employe under
the program la Lt. Col. Robert
S. Ritz, 42, who retired after 20
the Army and now
training officer for the
Civil Defense Agency in
He went to work Feb.
help qualify
struct civil defense radiological
defense course*.
Congress starting Jan. 1, 1961.
The program now enable*
State and Federal govern-
ments to spilt 50-M the east
of hiring additional staff
members, and their added
operating expenses sack os
travel, office space, com-
munications, and similar
itemi. Hitherto, State and
local governments received
no Federal financial aid to
help cover civil defenae ad-
ministrative or salary costs.
One of the orkicioel rsouirn-
KOBERT I. UR
Neu> career 4m civ41 defence..
men to under the program la that
States and localities must expand
their civil defense capabilities,
and not merely shift to the Fed-
eral Government some of the
costs of maintaining the statue
quo of local civil defense.
• • •
IN AUTHORIZING OCDM to
go ahead with the program. Con-
gress also stipulated that funds
be allocated only to those civil
defense organizations with merit
system personnel policies.'
■ Among improvements fore-
seen under the shared-cost pro-
gram are improved readiness of
State and local governments to
deal with enemy attack, and s
more coordinated and unified
civil defense under national
aiitrianc*
WOMEN’S GROUP Is skews the fundamentals of
civU defense during an Illustrated talk given by
Robert S. Rltz (at projector), a training officer
for the Illlnoia Civil Defenae Agency. Rita was
hired recently under a new Federal program to
split 50-M with State and local civil defens* agen-
cies the costa of enlarging their staffs to acceler-
ate nuclear-age survival measures. toCDU Photo)
New dorms
Continued from page One
Hoover language laboratory at a
cost of $7,050. half of which will
be paid by ‘he federal govern-
ment under the National Defense
Education act.
9. Approved a resolution extend-
ing the sympathy of the board to
College President Dr. Thomas M.
Spencer on the death of his father
in Denton Wednesday night.
10. Authorized awarding of an
honorary degree to chairman of
regents L. G. West at May 25
graduation exercises.
REGISTRAR NATHAN Tl BB
sat in for the president at the
meeting, rince he was in Denton
for J-ineral services.
PLAINTIFF WINS JUDGEMENT
District Judge M. C. Ledbetter
handed down a judgement for the
plaintiff in the suit styled J. R
Baccus vs. R. T. Ash et al and
H. B. Owens won a default judge-
ment over Joe Burch.
Judge Ledbetter also granted
divorces to Terry Randell Driver
and Glenda Margaret Driver, Jane
Taylor and Ronald Taylor, and
Leslie L. Martin ana Phyllis Elea-
nor Martin.
All actions of the board
unanimous. The meeting started
with only board members L. G.
West, Charlie Sanders, Hank Mat-
hews and John V. Morton on hand.
Vice president E. M. Barnes arriv-
ed about 8:30 after attending a
business dinner ir> Lubbock, while
L. C. Kearney of Sundown arrived
for the meeting, in time to sign
as secretary papers approved at
the meeting, about 9:30 p.m. The
other member of the board. Vern
Beebe of Whiteface. was in Austin
as a sponsor for Whiteface inter-
scholastic league competitors.
Liquor violation
brings $300 fine
James Majors pleaded guifty to
liquor law violations and was fined
$300 and costs and sentenced to
45 days in jail by Judge Louis
Owens in county court Thursday.
Pleas of guilty to check law
violations brought fines of $5 and
costs for Eldon Boulter and C. A.
Reynolds, Friday. ,
Action was taken on five of the
cases prior to the opening of the
May term w'hen Bertha Harris,
Hubert Rust and Dorothy Rust en-
tered plr»s of guilty to liquor law
-violations.
Judge Owens also dismissed for
lack of sufficient evidence a charge
of carrying a pistol against Men-
were j nan G. Hannaford.
The remaindei of the county
court docket will be carried over
with some cases pending for sev-
eral days and others passed until
next term due to the hospitaliza-
tion of County Attorney Weldon
Johnson.
Posibility of
(Continued from Page One)
The House Appropriations Com-
mittee Thursday moved Rep. De-
Witt Hale’s teacher pay raise bill
to the House floor on an unani-
mous vote. There was a minimum
of discussion on the bill which
drew some 590 persons to the
House gallery Monday night for
a public hearing.
The identical .Senate bill by Sen.
A M. Aikin was approved by the
Senate Education Committee two
months ago.
Final passage of one of the
brace of bills (HB9. SB11) hinges
on whether the lawmakers can
raise enough money — an esti-
mated $144 million for the next
two years—to pay for the increase
which would raise the minimum
FAA proposes limit
on speed of planes
NEW YORK (AP) — The Fed-
eral Aviation Agency soon will
propose a speed limit of 250 knots
(about 280 miles per hour) for
all planes approaching congested
airports, says FAA Administrator
Najeeb FI. Halaby.
Halahy, speaking Thursday
night at the 23rd anniversary din-
ner of the Aviation-Space Writers
Association, said the proposal for
a speed limit for all planes de-
scending below 14,500 feet soon
would be posted, and public hear-
ings held.
"In congested terminal areas,
it’s about time that w# required
very high speed planes to slow
down," Halaby said, adding:
“Unless we hear some very good
arguments against it (the pro-
posal), we will impose it.”
teacher pay from $3,204 to $4,014
Aikin said he did not want the
Senate to consider his bill until
the necessary t*x legislation was
passed.
Chesf drive
(Continued from page one)
The results of the drive, with
money raised listed first and goals
second, by community or division,
follow:
I Advance gifts, $12,318 of $13,350
I goal general business, $3,811 of
j $4,050 goal; employee, $1,383 of
$2,500 goal; Levelland schools, $1,-
16.66 of $1,500; Pettit, $96 13 of
$500 goal; Sundown, $1,143.95 of
$1,780; Whitharral, $886.52, over
goal of $500; Ropesville $943, over
$900 goal; Anton, $1,297.25 of $1,-
900: Carver, $182.35 of $200, Smy-
er $89 of $750 goal
SELECT YOUR DRUGOIST
Ai Ye* De Your Doctor
UPSHAW DRUG
DIAL 894-3189
Double Frontier Stump* uu i
dt
New telescopes tan detect celes-
tial objects two billion light years
away.
Over the Coffee
Continued from page on*
the board from lowest to high-
est. But the move suggested by *'
the committee ehould be mad*
whether it is to apply to *11 in-
come or only those in the lower
brackets.
There is only one possible ar-
gument against such a tax reduc-
tion. No reduction should be mad*
without corresponding reduction in
cost of government to maintain a
balanced budget,
CONGRESS SHOULD CONSID-
er reducing taxes for the mere
sake of reduction. Taxation of in-
dividual income begins at 20 per
cent for any thing over $600 and
goes as high as 92 per cent for the
top brackets.
These are unconscionable extor-
tions by anyone* measure. They
were imposed largely under the
hysteria of war when any protest
was considered unpatriotic. They
were levied with assurance that
at the end of war they wotdd be
reduced. Congrese has acted in
bad faith in refusing to hva up ts
these promises.
MAN WHO WILL BE 119 ON
May 10th attributes his long life
to the Lord’s will and sassafras
tea. Benjamin Trimble, who lives
in a nursing home in Seattle, once
shook the hand of Abraham Lin-
coln and saw his father sold at a
slave auction a year before the
start of the Civil War. On his 100th
birthday he chopped wood and ran
a footrace, and on his 108th birth-
day he took a golf lesson from
Edgar Eisenhower, the former
president s brother. Now confined
to b?d. he is still the only occu-
pant of the nursing home who
doesn’t need medication.
Herald Sna New* Want Add Pay
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Brewer, Orlin. The Levelland Daily Sun News (Levelland, Tex.), Vol. 19, No. 111, Ed. 1 Friday, May 5, 1961, newspaper, May 5, 1961; Levelland, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1136906/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting South Plains College.