The Alvin Sun (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1966 Page: 4 of 16
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Editorials And Features
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"L«t« go back while we're ahead."
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Soctety Editor.
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CROSSWORD PUZZLE
WBQ1________
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Sensing The News
By Thurman Sensing
■ .1 EXECUTIVE VICE PRESIDENT
See Solution
Here
Next Week
the Past *1
I
please come in some time and look
what you need, we'll try to get It.
The Alvin City Library Staff
houi
foil
forbid
le cards
ing
ing s«d
HST
for
. an<
s r<
SUGAR
AND SPICE
by Bill Smiley
"I
address,
is 1
WICKS WEEK
By BEN WICKS
J p m. Mondai
■ted within 2
aggression
that Commui
; ac.
; morale
a AY
..... s-
kW//
opposing tl
must all
America
•vent the sprei
ing McCarihyil
Poge 4, Sec, l-The Alvin Sun-Thursday, January 6, 1966
MUM jfWW’Hnni " sr’**- —3 tt■»eKWWt3N>TNMMIMMHIMIMMIMKvBNNUBBBIMHIH
Ei*oa
1
A%\’
r To insure
hours after
lugr.tph inr rtprn&BCHon
While ever)
libllity for d.
^4
THIS WEEK
AND NEXT
by Aaron Einfrank
3a Fiaat of
ibiDt
<0 w pa out
■•2 Po ntaa at
target
>3 Supercilious
can't remember my
u<cas, but my Zip code
17897 . .
" Jjffi3
1^ ■
”1—I
29 130
- &
L*1
marches, draft-card burn-
ings, and other forms of agi-
tation now current.
Several years ago. when
civil disobedience first began
to be a fashion among left-
wing extremists, the majority
of Americans could not bring
themselves to believe that the
radicals would engage in di-
rect attacks on the United
States. Suddenly, the public
has awakened to the dangerous
reality that the radicals rep-
resent. Starting from the Ber-
keley campus of the Univer-
sity of California -- a nest of
leftist subversion on the West
Coast -- several thousand
radicals marched on the U. S.
Army Military Terminal at
Oakland. The significance of
this march should be clearly
understood. It was as much an
attack on the United States as
a regular Viet Cong ‘"hard
core” unit attack on the U. S.
Marine Corps base at Da Nang.
South Viet Nam.
Marine Private Billy E.
Yarbrough, son of Mr and
Mrs. J. B. Yarbrough of Route
1. Arcadia, has completed in-
dividual combat training with
the Second Infantry Training
Regiment at the MarlneCorps
Base. Camp Pendleton. Calif.
The course included in-
struction under-simulated
conditions, small unit tactics
in both conventional andguar-
rilla warfare, day and night
combat, reconnaissance and
combat patrolling, and the ef-
In the past, the United States
has known crackpot protests.
The American peoplearegen-
uinely tolerant of oddball ele-
ments in their midst, assum-
ing that in a country 'this big
there are bound to be some
unstable types who need hu-
moring. 3ut the militant radi-
cals who attempted a '‘train-
in’’ -- the halting of troop
trains -- are not the usual
lunatic fringe. As members of
Airman Apprentice Kenneth
M. Platzer, USN. son of Mr.
and Mrs. W. B. Platzer of
Route 1. Alta Loma, fiasgrad-
uated from the Aviation Fa-
miliarization course at the
Naval Air Technical Train-
ing Center. Memphis. Tenn.
The two-week course in-
cluded the history of naval
aviation, theory of flight, air-
craft carriers and operations,
cleaning and inspecting air-
craft; survival evasion tac-
tics. parachutes and jump
techniques
1” ESP i f I r" 1
I kst I «
43
____i^aiiiB:
the United States.
But a much more vigorous
program of prosecution is in
order. The government should
move against all those who
have urged Americans not to
register for the draft. Such
urging is a violation of the
Selective Service Law. In ad-
dition, espionage acts enacted
into law in 1917 provide pen-
alties against those who at-
tempt to strike a blow against
the United States from within.
What America is witness-
ing is a form of communist
guerrilla war. And the public
should realize that a guerrilla
war doesn’t always take place
in faraway places with
strange-sounding names. It
can take place in decent com-
munities populated by respec-
table people. This is the case
with the anti-Viet Nam pro-
tests. A comparative handful
of political Incendiaries can
do damage to a country that
is completely disproportion-
ate to their numbers. And
make no mistake -- blocking
place their home.
Mr and Mrs. Koch left for
Saint Louis, where they will
make their future home.
Mr and Mrs. R. F. Camp-
bell left Tuesday for an ex-
tended visit with relatives in
lennessee.
A large crowd from Choco-
late Bayou attended the dance
at the U. D. C. Hall Thurs-
day night.
The Alvin Heights Sunday
School was well attended last
Sunday, although our good
.
Save If For Uncle
But that’s only part of the picture. Once
upon a time agriculture, manufacturing, min-
ing and railroading were rhe important activ-
ities in this country. They still are. but now
they are being overshadowed by other endeav-
ors: highway construction, education, space
projects, public building projects, etc.. In all
of these mammoth projects, federal, state and
local governments are Uivulved, tu the tune of
billions of dollars.
Some of these are necessary expenditures,
of course, but many others are not. or they
are so fantastically wasteful of funds to be
idiotic. It's easy to blame the politicians, but
much of the fault lies with people who keep
demanding things from "the government” --
preferably the federal government -- with the
naive notion that someone else will pay for rhe
extravagant things they want.
This kind of thinking mav get a community
a high school with a parking lot big enough
for a major shopping center, a stadium worthy
of a college, and an auditorium that would
permit the staging of a Broadway musical. But
don’t think the guy in Keokuk, or New York
City, or Tulsa is paying for it. In the long run.
unless you’re on relief, you pay for it. Wait
until April 15 and see
amst Callin'!
lid ufJk
ur trJClif' rd "Leroy” Dietr
",1 irtuna- >r (EC) f r Brazer
•adio >erators wh woi.lt
His call letters an
Rad’’' Emergency
/■t«niergency communic
• ou of commissior r
Fred Manaker is taking his
second year at Rice.
Friends here have received
cards announcing the mar-
riage of Ralph Edwin Zerwekh
and Miss Bessie Hedwig Ney-
naber in Galveston on Oct. 12.
Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Hood
visited relatives and took in
the sights of the Ringling Bros,
circus in Galveston Monday.
Mr and Mrs. E. J. Sheffield
and family also attended the
circus.
Commissioners E. L Long
”and J. A. Booth were business
visitors tn Angleton Monday.
Mr and Mrs. A. E. Bates
and Mr and Mrs. O. G. Well-
born motored to Houston to the
circus.
G. E. Badge of Brazoria
spent Sunday here as the guest
of the A. E. Bates family.
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Well-
born returned Tuesday after
a few days visit tothelr daugh-
ter. Mrs. H. H. Ford, at Gal-
veston.
G. W. Holt and family
1
tn that thriving little town
were ripe enough for a news-
paper. and the new advertise-
ments in the first Issue show
that his thinker was inperfect
working order.
While coming upfromAlgoa
last evening. Mr. A. W. Mc-
Clendon's mule became
frightened and ran away,
throwing him to the ground
and breaking id* nusc anu left
arm above the wrist.
Mr. and Mr* Will Arnold
are the happy parents of a fine
baby boy who arrived to glad-
den their home Friday morn-
ing.
W. E. Davis 4 Co. have
moved into the corner store
building they purchased from
Mr. Callihan. The building has
been newly painted inside and
out.
Born to Mr and Mrs. Judd
Mortimer Lewis, a 10 and one
half pound baby girl.
Dad. we should be glad, you
and I Glad that we got a mate
when we did. 20 or 30 years ago
We'd never measure up to what
the girls demand today
1 discovered this the other
day, during
in one of mj
Topic was '
Participan
attractive
Well, the]
exes In it
the se who
The
mer t
will come to The facts
matt er how you look at it.
Th r year’s administrative budget - -and this
Is o nsiderably smaller than the sum total of the
Trea sury's total expenditures -■ was announc-
ed at under $100 billion by President Johnson.
However, the best estimates as of now are
that by the end of the fiscal year, on July 1. 1966.
the Administration will have gone at least
$10 hil lion over what was budgeted. This will
give the Treasury one of the biggest peace-
time de ficits in history
Only oart of this can be dumped in the Great
Society’s lap. After all. close to $50 billion
will go for defense alone -- and there are
such expenditures as foreign aid. a solid $3.3
44- Q<r I’t Mmi
six;-
M. Maw's
nicknim*
»3 Pm*, flow*
troop trains and burning draft
cards are crimes. They con-
stitute aiding an enemy of the
United States.
Aside from a badly needed
prosecution of law-breakers,
there should be a congres-
sional investigation. All the
groups that urge taking pres-
sure off the Viet Cong should
be scrutinized. None should
be exempt. For example, Con-
gress should look into the
matter of the National Council
of Churches' World Order
Study Conference recommen-
dation of October 23 that the
U. S. halt bombing of North
Viet Nam for an Indefinite
period. The timing of the rec-
ommendation, in the midst of
an ‘nternational campaign to
break U. S. resistance, is
cause for concern among all
good churchmen and citizens.
The country needs to (jet at
the root of who is behind th*
drive to injure our defense
efforts against communism tn
Asia.
Reviewing
I Interesting item* taken from the files of The Alvin Sun
* _ ter' ;hirty- forty. Hfty. and sixty year ago
<* mgc. na nieiiioers oi »a/ » r-\
Congress have rightly stated. O H t YOU R P S O V P
the marchers came close to 1 .
treason. It should be borne in
mind that the U. S. Constitu-
tion defines the crime of trea-
son as adhering to the cause
of an enemy of the country.
Great numbers of the demon-
strators are not simply a-
gainst a particular U. S. pol-
icy in the Far East; they are
advocates of the Communist
Viet Cong, and say they hope
the V. C. will triumph over
the American forces fa -ing
them in the jungles and rice
paddies of Southeast Asia.
U. S. Atty. Gen. Katzenbach
has said that communists are
involved in the demonstra-
tions. and indicated that pros-
ecutions soon may take place.
Certainly, citizens canbeglad
of Mr. Katzenbach's belated
discovery of Red involvement
and his even more belated re-
mark concerning prosecution.
It is. of course, very good
that the FBI has arrested those
law-breakers who have burn-
ed their draft-cards, which act
..... ts a visible demonstration of
lov disloyalty to and contempt of
50 Years Ago
Miss Pearle Baugh left Sun-
day for Liverpool to take
charge of the school duties.
J. G. Rairigh and family
attended church in Manvel
Sunday.
Mr and Mrs. Ernest Whit-
son are now occupying the
Smith house.
Mrs. J. M. Harlngton of
Sheldon spent several days
with her parents. Mr and
Mrs. J. S. Winston.
r H*61
6 Indefinite
article
Yankees
outfielder
9 Near!,
'0- Actual
'• 1 ■ Lamprey*
'6- Actual
irSKr;.
Il
15.
29 Organ of
nearing
JOMan'e
nickname
giant
3? • Perform
alone
a panel discussion
iy Grade 12 classes ing
“Early Marriages'* livli
ints were four bright, set
! girls of 17 or 18
they really opened my
fact. I was shocked and
dismayed by the hard boiled,
materialistic attitude of these
voung ladies Generally, they
had the right idea — that teen
tge marriages are a mistake --
Out for all the wrong reasons
I used to think that marriage
was based on mutual respect,
physical attraction, shared In-
terests. love That shows you
how old fashioned I am.
It seems that these days a
successful marriage is a combi
nation of economic essentials
and psychological clap trap
First of all. you have t have
This rules out early
ages It means the couple
have enough money for ••
down payments on t.,s
iphances It grown up in South Atnerici
must finish west Indies. Holland and
«ve [oundland I have u nieci
law who has lived in Em
plumb France and Germany
Kids didn't slow their
down.
One of the girls said boys of
19 or 20 are not ready to assume
the responsibilities of marriage.
Some aren't. But some men of
30 aren’t and never do. I've seen
boss of 19 or 20 in charge of a
million dollars worth of aircraft,
and a hundred lives.
I could scarcely refrain from
telling these complacent pre ma
Irons that their grandmothers
were married at 16 or 17, their
grandfathers at 20. coping with
a life they couldn't even ima-
gine.
Not that I'm in favor of teen
age marriages Heaven
Our society has all tht
stacke! against the your
ers But there's somethii
about their attitude
WMSIy FMturM lyMIcala
The Young Spinsters
they can't manage a budget. Ap-
parently the answer to this is
for the girl to complete her edu-
cation and work4or a few years.
This prepares her for marriage.
Thus, if she has studied typ-
ing or philosophy or hairdress-
“7 or embalming, and made a
i”g for a year or two, she’s all
for cooking, child bearing
and budget balancing I don't
follow the logic, but I always
was a little dense about femi-
nine thinking.
Girls, I can show you women
of 30, career girls, who cant
cook a TV dinner, don't know
one end of a baby from the oth
er unless it's crying, and
couldn’t handle the budget of a
Sunday School class without
putting it on the rocks
Another serious suggestion
was that marriage should be de
layed until both parties have
had a chance to travel and see
the world The implication was
that after you're married and
had kids, you never do more
than take a Sunday drive.
Hell. I hav? a nephew of 17
r at who was born in Yellowknife,
’tie North West Territories, and has
grown up in South America, the
West Indies. Holland and New
(oundland I have > niece, 19
who has lived in England,
Those
parents
TheAlvin Sun
3*ww Clast MAM^s paw •< AhHn. rasas
A.« GAME BOWEN rn.rrt.
MSI ANNA KIVTLCIS .................... inr
T— . -. . .j— g ....................................... MA
' "■ w'LMSWl ........................ OllVi A
MBS BENYON Mown ..................l...v»»fla
Dear People of Alvin:
It is time for making resolutions for the new year . .
most of them will pr ,-bablv be t- oetthe h-.se painted for
this year, to keep the bills paid up, to try hard to be nice tc
everybody, and for the younger people, to study hard and bring
the grades up. a
We here at the Alvin City Library have a suggestion for all
of our customers -- promise yourself to bring all library
books in on time. Here is our schedule once more in case you
have forgotten It. Oi Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays, and
Fridays, from 1 to 5 p.m.; on Tuesdays, from 1 to 8 p.m.; and
on Saturdays, from 8 a.m. to 12 noon. If you're busv at all of
these times, just drop the books in the night depository out-
side the door.
If you run across a book already overdue, bring it in anyway.
U’ntil Jan. 10 we won't even charge you a fine. During the rest
of the year, the fine is twocentsa dav up t.- a r,->tal of • certs
And if you are broke, at least bring us the book, as that is our■
prime concern. ■
.tho,e °.f you wh0 have not been ln t0 see our library,]
around. If we don’t have I
If you were among the lucky people who took
home a Christmas bonus cneck or some other
holiday windfall, you probably know just how
you’re going to spend it. We don’t like to be
a kill-joy, but we think you should delay your
plans and stash it away until April 15. The
chances are you’re going to need it to settle
ip with the Infernal Revenue Service.
p. e are going to be' unpleasantly surprised
this year when they figure out that rf.-y have
to pay Uncle even more than they did last
year The reason is, you now have to pay for
such things as higher benefits for the old
foil s at home, liberally voted by the politi-
cians just before last election. So, lay it aside
broiher, or arrange to see that friendly man
at ’ le personal loan department of your bank.
Of course increases tn social security and
medicare are only two of the reasons why
more and more of your salary is sliced off
for federal, state and local’taxes Today
government is our biggest industry, by far,
with 12 7 million Americans, one tn six, on a
government payroll. Obviously they don’t work
for nothing and in thecourseof their activities
they a e spending almost twice the 97.2 billion
that w as ypent by the government a decade
•go.
Great Society No Bargain
billion, and other programs begun by previous
Administrations.
Great Society programs, for which the A-
merican taxpayer will be paying in the next
five years, add up to some $111 billion in new
authorizations Of that $1 billion will go to the
Appalachia relief project. $7 billion for a Fed-
eral ald-to-education step-up, and a conser-
vatively estimated $5 billion for the poverty
war A $20 billion measure, for various Fed-
eral subsidies, sits on President Johnson’s
desk, awaiting his signature The Internation-
al Monetary Fund is scheduled to get $1 bil-
lion. and Social Security will cost the Trea-
sury $33 billion more than it did before this
year.
This is one reason why the Administration
is talking of increasing taxes. The Great So-
ciety may be great - but it's expensive, and
roads were so tempting of the
young people were late Start
out on that buggy ride Just a
little bit earlier, boys.
Miss Ruby Harvey of Mus-
tang is visiting with relatives
in Ohio.
A construction train, con-
sisting of engine and a num-
G. w. Holt and family mov- ber °’ boardlng ®nd flat cars
ed from Sandy Point this al A1*oa SandaY
week and will again make this '”ondav morning began laying
• the track from that place
Bay City. Mr. Dohert. gen-
eral passenger agent of the
Gulf Coast Lines, say« he ex-
pects the road to be com-
pleted into Galveston some-
time in January.
60 Years Ago
The first issue of The Bra-
xoria Star has reached this
office. The Star was mov«i
from Angleton to Brazoria
two weeks ago. Editor J. J.
Mooding, believing that things
Truman, had no illusions
consequently HST
prime target for peacenik
tacks while Truman was
j mitting this country to fig,U
Communism in Europe
With the help of gullible
I Communists like Henry a
.ace . whu ran against Jr.
in 1948), the peaceniks h. ~ 1
i field day, but they faded ir. 1
otaging our determinatin’ W
halt the spread of Stalinisir |
The next peacenik offet I
same during the Korean I
and In many respects that I
cenik effort resembles whi dg
going on right now
Forgotten entirely by the JK
cenika was the fact that the 3”
rean war was caused hy r 3
munist aggression It
teworthy "
peacenik propaganda di
mine the morale of our
in Korea many of whom
time felt that the war was
less
In retrospect, however, v
that our defense of South K<
was a great victory over C
munism Not only was the
tide checked, but the Sou 801111 ■ and availability
reans — who had a reputaMte. The AREC is al
for being as corrupt as Mfertance f the organ
South Vietnamese — were int? , . ,f .1
a chance to set their housed. ’
order
Today South Korea appear!
have turned the corner in 1
bid for economic and politil
stability
Like the Korean war. J
fight in Vietnam at times see]
hopeless and futile. Rut the i
portant thing to remember]
that even if we throw in fl
towel in Vietnam, we would $]
have to wage the same type]
fight in other places in Asia, I
eluding Laos. Thailand Kurd
Malaysia, and India. The alt]
native to fighting is to turn ]
of Asia over to the Red tggr]
sors in Peking.
In Europe we turned back tl
Communist challenge, and tfl
was also the case in Korea Tl
situation in Vietnam is evfl
tougher and we must not alia
our peaceniks, whether they I
Communists or Communi
pawns, to undermine our deti
mination to fight
Naturally, in
peacenik menace we
preserve tradtional
liberties and pre,
of an unreasonir
movement
However, wnen the Viet CoJi
flag ts brandished in our natioi B
al capital and when the widow ■
of dead GIs are harassed it E
time that the American peup E
got together in putting the p»> /
ceniks in their place V
WMkiy FMturtt SrMio't V
il
The Peacenik Syndrome
As the Johnson Administra
Uon has so often reiterated, the
great danger of the demonstra
tions against American partici
pation in the war in Vietnam is
that Peking and Hanoi will un
derestimate our will to fight
North Vietnamese and Red
Chinese leader* have already
gone on record in saying they
expect a popular revolt within
the U S to undermine our Viet-
nam war effort And on the sur-
face, they have some cause for
optimism as shown by the pea
cenik harassment of the families
of American soliders fighting >n
Vietnam, and the disgraceful
flaunting of the Viet Cong flag
during the November peacenik
March on Washington
Bu. the current anti war cam
palgn is really old hat because
the Communists and their dupes
are past masters of this subtle
form of subversion.
During the Roosevelt Admin-
istration, the peacenik types
were instrumental at first in
try ing to keep the U S out of
World War II at a time wh -n
Hitler and Stalin were buddies
When the two gangsters in .Mos
cow and Berlin finally fell out,
the peaceniks and their Commie
masters violently reversed
themselves and began clamoring
for a Second Front and ' uncon-
ditional surrender"
Unfortunately, Roosevelt was
prone to Communist pressures
because he thought he could
make a deal with good old Joe
Stalin.
But FDR's successor. Harry
fective use of Infantry wea-
pons.
He is undergoing basic spe-
cialist training in his military
occupational field. These oc-
cupational fields include ar-
tillery. infantry, motor trans-
port and supply. Marines as-
signed duties with infantry
units will be taught Infantry
sub-specialties, such as the
machine gun, grenade launch-
er, rifle or mortar.
Marines assigned to highly
technical specialtieshave
been sent to a military tech-
nical school for their special-
ist training.
The Leathernecks bound for
the Pacific will receive addi-
tional training at the Staging
Battalion at Camp Pendleton.
Calif. This training will em-
phasize jungle warfare, pa-
trolling and civic action, based
on experiences gained in Viet
Nam.
security
marriap-
must ha
least down payments
use furniture. ap| ’
Hows that the girl...............
(wol and Uke 4 job and save
The boy must get through la-
school or medicine (no p’—’
ers for these kids) Again, it
follows that he's about 30. she's
at least 25 before they can
think of marriage
I could have reminded them,
but didn t that most of them
would never have been born if
their parents had waited for se-
curity before marrying
Second they said, teen age-s
are not "emotionally mature”
enough for marriage 1 don't
quite know what that means
Eight out of 10 of the married
adults I know have tantrums or
drink tOO much, flare with jeal
ousy, fight over trifles, fall in
love, hate bitterly In short they
are normal human beings But
they're not emotionally mature
Another point the kids
brought up was that teenage
girls are not prepared «o face up
to the complexities of married
life, they can't cook, thev know
nothing about raiiiag children,
5 Minntf
8 - F«mai«
horse
’2-Oe o»
Ceieoet
1 J-Unit
14 Towerfl the
• heiterea
» at
19 Diltmctive
tone
32- Stenflerfl
19 vapia
20- Musical
instrument*
2t Beiovea
23- G>ri'*
24- aremr"”
befors
28-Anon
28-Afternoon
81 Faroe
leiano*
whlrlw<nd
52 Aiconohc
beverege
33- Hebrew
month
34• wooflen p<n
39-Travei*
38- E*i*t
39 Want
•’-Float ,n air
43-Tally
45 K ,n<* «r
-
90 Fruit
9’ Native metai
. <B'-)
92-Poem
54 Paraa ie
95- Foundation
M Article of
furniture
92- luphemism
DOWN
1-Houeene<fl
? 9-aie Item
3- Perfumed
ointment
••Kind -♦ fur
8-Barr**
For those who like it, rhe Great Society
may be worth every penny it is costing. For
•u- -- who oppose it. any price is too high.
’rouble is that both sides of the argu-
usually have no idea just what the tab
come to, The facts are interesting, no
.............*U»Ll3MCa
.■■•••••••••.■••••...a.......... SOCIETY (DiTOa
......................... AOVIBTISING
..................... AOVCBTISINC
ADCLAIDE JACOB
' 3*»f« Corraeeondent
mate tur<W In pu, w ia.00 Hon
; 7 "Ul >« »>«»■ AMn to c.„„« „!ume
colufTn*l'Urtl ’ °°* r° for weddirf pklure* i* two
Society end other news muet be reported prior to 5 p.m. Monde*
emple space for e new* story, it should be reported within 24 I
it occurs.
All Soriary wwe should be reported to Mrs Anna Rattler
OL 8-4TT3
Tn discuss business manors call OL 8-33B3
— H W Rr Vw ■■ Bow m MWM
Southern States Industrial Council
Bl ▼■flbh The War From Within
Beginning October 15, the
friends of the Communist Viet
Cong launched a major attack
inside the United States for
the purpose of crippling
American resistance to com-
munism in South Viet Nam.
This propaganda attack seems
likely to continue well into the
winter unless the U. S.govern-
ment takes long overdue mea-
sures to expose the communi st
conspiracy and infiltration
which lies behind the protest
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Bowen, A. E. The Alvin Sun (Alvin, Tex.), Vol. 76, No. 23, Ed. 1 Thursday, January 6, 1966, newspaper, January 6, 1966; Alvin, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1245053/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Alvin Community College.