Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 203, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 5, 1954 Page: 1 of 11
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WEATHSK
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Devoted To
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NBA FutoeSenici
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Tot* M Na ao
Truett Trammel k Named
Circulation Manager Here
BRCCKSNKIDGE TEXAS —TIT ESDAY* OCT. \ 1954
PRICE 5 CENTS FEB COW
Trwtt Trammel, former resident
of Breckenridge and employe of the
American, has been appointed cir-
culation manager of the American,
coming here from the Sweetwater
fopn/*r, where he was a member
of the advertising staff.
Trammel. 2B has a brood back-
ground of experience in the news-
paper circulation field, having been
associated with several Texas
dailies in the circulation depart-
ment
He was circulation manager for
the American here for two years,
in 1960-1962, before going to Kil-
leen to organize the circulation de-
tow Receives
Light Showers
Low hanging Gulf clouds, rolling
over Wfat Texas from the heela
of a kquall-triggered downpour a-
long the Rio Grand- VaJley, had
dropped JX of an inch of rain on
Breckenridge Tuesday morning,
according to reports from the city
water department, with more
showers in prospect Tuesday aft-
ernoon and Wednesday.
The clouds began moving in
from the southeast Monday night,
and light showers fell early Tues-
day morning, and again around It
a. in. Skies remained heavily over-
cast. especially to the south and
southwest.
Skies are expected to
overcast t"
additional
West Ttxas
and W
partment and become circulation
manager of the Killi-en Herald
when it changed ti> a daily from a
semi-weekly publication.
Before
night and on a part-time basis.
He graduated from Ranger Jun-
ior Cidlege in 1962, and attended
Texas Wesleyan College in Fort
Worth and Hardin-Simmons U. in
Abilene, where he studied in busi-
ness administration- and public re-
lations. He is presently taking a
correspondence course with the
Howard Pharris School of Classi-
fied Advertising, Miami, Fla.
Following his tenure of service
at Killeen, Trammel joined the
advertising staff of the Sweet-
water Reporter in 1963. where he
worked for appproximately 18
months before accepting his pres-
ent position with the American.
He is married to the former La- j
Nell Cotten of Breckenridge. In
addition to his duties as circula-1
tion manager, he will also assist
in the advertising department and
other office duties.
with
forecast for the
Tuesday night
A minor break at 10 feet from
the surface was reported in the
ftaaum Kingdom thermochne re-
port Tuesday. The major break was
reported at 21 feet
A water-logged tropical storm
dwindled to a drizzle in southern
Texas Tuesday after dousing the
lush lower Rio Grande Valley with
up to eight inches of rain.
Elsewhere, rain and scattered
were comm
nee ted with the Fort Worth Star-
Telegram, Fort Worth Press, Abi-
lene Reporter-Nev s and the Dallas
Morning News in various circula-
tion capacities.
Trammel served with the Fort
Worth Fress in Fort Worth as a
circulation crew manager and later
was promoted to district circula-
tion manager in I960.
Born in Jean. Young County.
Texas, Trammel graduated from
Rreekenridge High School in 1948,
and. served three years in the IT. S.
Marine Corps, receiving his dis-
charge in 1949. Following his dis-
charge he began his full-time news-
career, attending college at
ana and a coot wave
most of the nation's north.
The Texas storm gave the border
city of Brownsville the heaviest
rinsing, flooding about 200 persons
from their homes in the area and
covering 2# to 30 blocks with
water.
h lo*t strength as it drove in-
land Monday night and apparently
ended its career with a druzie over
Laredo.
TW lashing rains were blamed
for two deaths, both auto acci-
dents.
Midwest cities meanwhile contin-
ued to get heavy doses of rain, in-
cluding US inches at Omaha. Neb.,
and 1.06 at Lamoni, Iowa.
The damp weather accompanied
cool temperatures which stretched
from the Rockies to the
Great Lake* and
ati
nnrwvvvvvMiMnnnMwvwr
: SEEN otHEARD
By C. M. H.
>juiwww*i*
f i i :J
iSireeKenrioge
Students Attend
Tarlcton College
STKPHENVILJLK. Oct 5 (SpL>
—Thirteen Breckenridge area stu-
dents are now attending Tarleton
State College.
They are Donald Thomas Pendle-
ton. son of Mr. and Mrs. H. M.
Pendleton; Lon L. Ama-son, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Bill A mason; Carol
Keith Ketley. son of Mr. ami Mrs.
Homer Tudor; John Michael Kel
try. sen of Mr. and Mrs. J. M.
Ketley; Joe Ned Baker, son of Mr.
and Mrs. F. S. Baker; Neal James
Noah Jr.. son of Mr. and Mrs. N.
J. Noah; Charlene Anne Davis,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. A.
Davis; Billy G. Bell, son of TKr.
and Mrs. W. A. Bell; Margaret
Marie Wilburn. daughter of Mrs..
Arline Wilburn; Billy G. Mills, sonTj
of Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Mills of
Moran; Robert Mae Lovinggood. son
Of Mr. and Mrs. Thurman Loving-
mod; Thomas S. Power, son of
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Power; and
Tonuny Lee Hailey, son of
T. H. Hailey of Ivan.
Unidentified
Plane? Cause
Formosa Blackout
TAIPK, Formosa, Oct 5 -
Four waves of unidentified planes
caused a 45 minute blackout of
Taipei Tuesday and one wave ap-
proached to within 15 miles of
Chiang Kai - Shek's Nationalist
headquarters.
No bombs were dropped. There
was no exchange of gun fire be-
tween the planes and artillery
batteries.
Meanwhile, a Communist Chi-
nese army group commander was
reported to De building up a force
of small craft along an 80-mile
stretch of the soutn China coast
near Nationalist held Quemoy.
In addition, there have been re-
ports of Red Chinese paratroopers
massed in Fukien province oppo-
site Quemoy.
These reports followed closely a
prediction by the Quemoy island
command that the Reds would at-
tempt an ipvastyn—Uhu> in . the
near future.
PAWNS PROGRAM EXPECTED
BEGM ffllUN 90 MY$
This
of "Seen or Heard" is
written by a Sw«et—*ter^ spjf^Roy
Scudday. in the ___ |t
Hall, who i takteg well-wned
vacation. Any resemWaw* between
this column and one of sir. mn"
jwn efforts is completely accttfen-
tal. and the author hopes he will
get out of town with a whole kin.
•t the Wgh_
Film* of
Mr.
Board To Study
The Nationalists 3aid the Com-
munists probably would hit Que-
moy with hordes of paratroopers
and masses of heavily-loaded fish-
ing junks under cower of concen-
trate! Russian - style artillery
barrages.
Father Of Local
S^iS.>£xi.v«.a
DEATH MANGE — Hurtling
past a sixth-floor window of the
Hotel Taft in New York from
which a policeman looks help-
lessly, Mrs. Mary Frieh plung-
es toward her death seconds later
on the marquee of the Roxy
Theater. Mrs. Frieh jumped
from seventh floor early Mon-
day before the eyes of 5,000
horrified onlookers after 35 min-
utes of sitting and dangling from
window leilge. (Copyright 1954
by News Syndicate, Inc. (NEA
Tele photo)
Stephens County
To Receive New
Farm Highway
A new farm-to-market road for
Stephens County has been desig-
nated for the near future, Robert
J. Milligan, of Brownwood. district
engineer, Texas Highway Depart-
ment has announced.
The roud will be approximately
seven miles in length, from farm-
to-market road 717 at LaC-asa, 10
miles south of Caddo, east to the
Palo Pinto County line, where it
will intersect a farm-to-market
road to Strawn, Milligan said.
No exact date of construction
h;is been set. but work is expected
to begin as soon as final planning
is completed and right of way for
the road has been secured. J. B.
Brannan, of Breckenridge, resident
engineer, will be in charge of con-
struction in this area.
The Texas Highway Commission
has taken the first steps toward
inaugurating a new two-year farm-
to-market program for Texas. E.
H. Thornton, Jr., chairman of the
State Highway Commission, stated
that funds for the program are be-
ing derived from the Federal Aid
Highway Act of 1954. and state
highway funds. Federal money will
be matched on a dollar-for-dotlar
basis by state funds, Thornton ex-
plained.
Marilyn And Joe
To Call H Quits
After 9 Rontks
leTOre 1 ilhlf mfiTi * w w ■■■ w■■ U9V
Cost To Be Less
Than Previous
Contracts: Boty
"It is hoped to have equipment
on hand within 90 days or less to
begin Breckenridge's paving pro-
! gram," Glen Doty, city manager,
! told approximately 60 persons at-
SOLID RESVLTS—Secy, of State John Foster Dulles, center, re-
turning to Washington from nine-power London conference <>n West
German sovereignty, is met at airport by Herbert Hoover, Jr., left,
vrno- was sworn in Monday as Undersecretay of State and Walter
Bedell Smith, retiring under-secretary. Dulles told newsmen confer-
ence produced "solid results." (NEA Telephoto)
Funeral services were held
Brady Monday at 3 p. m. for E. L.
Guyton, father of John R. Guyton
of Breckenridge.
Mr. Guyton died Sunday. October
3. in Brady following a lengthy
illness.
MEXICO .CITY. Oct. 5 <U.E>—
William O'Dwyer, former L". S. am-
bassador to Mexico, said Monday
he would testify next week in Los
Angeles before a congressional
committee investigating Commu-
nist aggression in the Western
Hemisphere.
"That is an important inquiry,"
O'Dwyer said, "and I'll offer what-
ever cooperation I can give."
While O'Dwyer was ambassador
and as a private lawyer, since he
left the diplomatic service, he has
maintained very close contact with
a number of Mexican businessmen
and government officials. He is
considered well informed on prac-
tically all facets of current Mexi-
can life.
Ends 9-Y<
ITALY AM
PACT TO PAimmi TRIESTE
C mSSSmm win
kt the gate*, with
Firemen w.
trash fires over the
neither resulting in
.. . M. P. Meyer of
the American office
port the ton o£ * _
that Cindy.
strayed awayfroma farm between
a. ■*
lead an to Cindy's
wilt he most
tire Meyers family.
4
srsiKss
im* K it l«MMt I* twiaa.
AUSTIN, Oct. 5 T.P>—Texas'
Board of Pinions and Paroles may
decide within the next week or 10
days the case of Kenneth Massey.
who is serving 15 years for a hold
up another man has confessed.
The board Monday held a hear-
ing to consider Massey's plea for
release, based on a confession by
William Karston, 28 -^ear - old
murderer under sentence to die in
Iowa.
Karston confessed last July, the
day before he was convicted of
murder, that he held up the El
Paso drugstore for which Massey
LONDON, Oct 5 (HE)—Italy and
Yugoslavia, after nine years of dis-
puting the possession of Trieste,
signed an Anglo-American spon-
sored agreement Tuesday which
partitioned the strategic area.
The two countries approved for-
mally an agreement worked out
through Anglo-American diplomacy
just one year after the two south-
ern European nations stormily re-
jected an Anglo-American settle-
ment by decree.
The accord splitting the strip of
Adriatic coast between Italy and
Yugoslavia cloned a troublesome
gap in western defenses. It also
permits the withdrawal of 4,000
American and :t,M0 British troops
was sentenced to prison in Texas, from the area, ending a nine-year
III HUrlilV Ia 1 c!Lm ■-a:„
ln worn S B6St ■ I£hiIR£ mKmN
occupation.
Italian Ambassador Manlio Bro-
sio ami Yugoslav Ambassador
Vladimir Velebit signed Uie settle-
ment at the British foreign office
here.
Sign for I'nited States
U. S. High Commissioner to Aus-
tria Llewellyn Thompson and Brit-
ish Assistant Foreign Undersecre-
tary Geoffrey W. Harrison signed
for their nations. Thompson and.
Harrison were active participants
in the past 10 months of secret ne-
gotiation which led to the agree-
ment.
The United States and Britain
guarantee Tuesday's accord and
promised that they will not be a
party to any future alterations of
the settlement of the dispute.
The agreement roughly divides
the free territory of Trieste, cre-
ated by the 1947 Italian peace
treaty, along the existing line be-
tween Yugoslav-held Zone B and
Zone A which has been occupied by
Anglo-American troops.
By it LINE >HXSBT
HOLLYWOOD, Oct. 5 (CB—
Three years ago a famous ex-base-
ball player and a blonde movie
starlet fell in love over spaghetti
on a blind date after he had ad-
mired her pin-up pictures.
But Monday Marilyn Monroe, by
now everybody's favorite blonde,
and Joe DiMaggio, a jobless ex-
sports great, called an end to a
marriage the world had eagerly
watched.
What was behind Marilyn's sud-
den phone call to her studio that
she and Joe had a spat and were
calling it quits?
Marilyn and Joe were from dif-
ferent worlds—she of movies, pub-
licity, cheesecake and glamour,
while Joe was a king of sports.
She is warm and outgoing; he is
quiet and shy. Yet one day in 1961
Marilyn excitedly told a friend, "I
have a blind date to meet an in-
teresting fellow. He's a baseball
player and he's famous.'
The girl who brought prosperity
to the calendar business and re
vived sex in the movies had years
of loneliness behind her. She start-
ed life in an orphange because
her mother was mentally ill and
her father dead. She had It sets
of foster parents before she was
15. Just before her 16th birthday
the freckle-faced, gawdy girl mar-
ried the boy next door. Seaman
Jim Dougherty, so she could have
a home ami love at last
Marilyn later had fatherly ro-
mances with two older men, the
late agent Jimmy Hyde and 20th
Century Fox executive Joseph
Schenck. Instead of dating men
her own age, she concentrated on
learning how to walk, talk, act and
sing. She underwent psychonnlysis
to erase the scars of her unhappy
life and her feelings of inferiority
and insecurity.
o-
country's
SAN ANTONIO, Oct. 5 «f.P>-
Adm. Arthur W. Radford declared
Tuesday that the United States
must build the best fighting ma-
chine in the world because it can-
not depend on anything else for its
"ultimate security."1
Radford, chairman of the Joint
Chiefs of Staff, warned that this
armed forces are "rela-
ill" compared to those of
the Communist bloc.
To counter this power, he said
America must develop more effi-
superior
better techniques
"any other nation." He said it
a "vigorous"
military program
wffl'a a "high plateau" of
"for mm many years
ft#
"In war there is no
U^Tnaa Mid-Continent Oil A
Second best is to be
defeated, and military defeat car-
ries with it national disaster—
Political,' economic, social and
spiritual disaster."
He said the administration's de-
fense program avoiife "one of the
main pitfalls of the past" by build-
ing strength steadily rather than
in sports and stops.
"Instead of pushing the throttle
wide open, or tight shut, we are
setting it carefully at a realistic
cruising speed." he said. "We have
adopted a program of preparedness
for the long poll, a preparedness
in which our armed forces are not
aupers tomor-
J gh Degree mt
There must be a
of readiness" and
lance oft forces
before , he
viet thief
temporary
"Short-term'
To 3
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Jitter)
Reid are parents of a baby boy
born Monthly, October 4, at 11:55
a. m. in the Breckenridge Clinical
Hospital. At birth the baby, who
has been named James Waytan.
weighed eight pounds and 15
ounces.
Mr. and Mrs. Candido G. Rod
riquez are parents of a baby girl
born at 8:10 a. m. Tuesday, Octo-
ber 5v in the Breckenridge Clini-
cal Hospital. At birth the baby
weighed seven pounthi. She has
been named Maria Esmeralda.
Mr. and Mrs. B. A. Thurman are
parents of a baby boy bom in the
Stephens Memorial Hospital at
7:15 a. m.. Tuesday, October 5k
at huth the baby
and four ounces,
Desire Credited
For Buck Victory
"Our victory over Abilene Fri-
day was due to the overall fight
of the team," Buckaroo coach Joe
Kerbel said Tuesday. "We won
over a fine team which perhaps
we shouldn't have beaten if it
hadn't bee for the fight and de-
sire our hoys showed hj the game."
The BUckaroos, fresh from three
straight victories outside competi-
tion, take a breather this week be-
fore diving into competition in dis-
trict AAA-X, against the Plainview
lildogs here on Oct 15.
Kerbel warned that scout reports
show that Plainview has a fine ball
club, one that is long overdue. Al-
though the Bulldogs have tost
three games, injuries to many key
players have crippled them, but
they should be in good shape for
the Buckaroo tilt
"They have a great quarterback
in Lonnie Holland,"' Kerbel said,
In district court Monday held be-
fore Judge Floyd Jones. Calvin
McDaniel. colored. Breckenridge,
pleaded guilty to charges of theft
under |50 and was fined $25. costs
and 15 days in jail.
A P'^a of guilty was entered by
David Parrott of Throckmorton to
swindling by check. He was fined
II and costs, totalling $24J .
J? •iU3t'cs the peace court two
Abilene men were fined $19.50 each
for
McCarthy b Sued
For $1 MKon
LAS VEGAS, Nev., ©ct. 5 (EBV—
Herman M. (Bank) Greenspun,
newspaper publisher and bitter foe
jF Sep. Joseph R. McCarthy, Tues-
day demanded {1 million frost She
Wwwonwn Republican for allegedly
calling him an ex-Communist.
tUMi HI district court Monday. The
swt accused McCarthy of ntahmc
"defamatory, libelous mad
that Greenspan
Russia Presses
Charge of Piracy
Against Chiang
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y., Oct.
r (tnEV—Russia pressed a diplomat-
ic flank attack against the Chinese
Nationalists in the United Nations
Tuesday, charging Chiing Kai-
Shek with "piracy" in the China
seas.
The general assembly's 15-menr-
ber steering committee scheduled
a meeting to decide whether the
Soviet charge should be put on the
agenda for debate.
The steering committee also will
have before it Soviet Delegate An
drei Y. Vtshinsky's request that
assembly put the Kremlin's latest
disarmament proposals on its agen-
da as a special item.
Little opposition was expected to
putting the "piracy" item on the
agenda. But the committee was ex-
pected to atempt to persuade Vi-
shinsky to agree to having his dis-
armament proposals included as
pari of the debate on the overall
problem of arms reduction which
is expected to open the main politi-
cal committee's work late this
week.
a boy who can pass and run very
well." Despite their poor record.
Kerbel said that Plainview still has
ne of the finest teams in,the dis-
trict.
"We will start on fundamentals
again, with our open date," Kerbel
explained. "It will bt- just the same
as if we were starting the season
anew." '
Several Bnckaroos were singled
out by Kerbel for their perform-
ances against Abilene Friday. He
said Bennett Watts did a fine job
a quarterback on offense and turn-
ed in a fine defensive performance.
"All of our backs did a great job,"
he said, naming Watts, halfbacks
Jake Sandefer and Clyde Harris
and fullback Dick Carpenttr.
In the line Jesse Chaney, Jerry
Cramer, Jerry Payne and Sonny
Everett all did good jobs, Kerbel
said.
Four victories were posted by
teams of district AAA-1 in last
week's games, while three teams
lost and one was idle.
In addition to the 35-15 Bucka-
roo win over Abilene. Bitr Soring,
defending champion, topped Ysleta,
:«M3 and Snyder romped over El
Paso Jefferson, 51 I). to give the
district three unbeaten, untied
teams.
Vernon defeated Law ton, Okla.,
27-0V for the fourth district win.
Losses included Sweetwater's 2t-D
defeat by San Angelo, Amarillo
.'52. Plainview 21 and l liill'ps 32,
Levelland 26: Lamesa was idle.
Other games thrs week include
Big Spring vs Lamesa; Snyder vs
Levelhind and Vernon vs Plain-
view, Sweetwater and Breckenridge
are idle.
DALLAS, Oct. 5 'I'D—A general
reshuffle occurred among the
stated top to Class AAA A school-
boy football teams in the latest
(Continued on PsiJie Two>
tending" the regular monthly Com-
i n unity Breakfast Monday morn-
! ing at the Y. M. C. A.
"This paving cost will be consid-
erably less than previous eon-
tracts," Doty assured the geoup.
He stated that the equipment is to
1 he used for the maintenance and
| improvement of the present pavmg,
some of which can be repaired <
ily and part of which is in «
of major repairs.
Doty discussed the three
important items appearing on the
city budget which rons. from Sep-
tember 30, 1954 to the same date
in 1905. The items are
appropriations. Idle water
ment and bonded indebtedness.
According to Doty the general
appropriations will have a cash
balance at the end of the year of
approximately $27,000' while the
water department should have
around ?6T,000.
The city has $378,000 in bonded
indebetedness, but during the ques-
tion and answer period Doty point-
ed out that most cities the sue of
Breckenridge have indebtedness
running into two million dollars
and are still considered stable.
In explaining water department
expenditures Mr. Doty said that
additional facilities will- be provid-
ed for bringing the water from
the pickup station to the eity. And
he announced a long range- plan-
ning program which nritt eventu-
ally provide for a 12 to 16-inch
water main loop ;
*ty.
Doty pointed out
indebtedness
Patients AciniiHed
Local hospitals report admitting
nine patients (hiring the weekend
from Saturday noon and dismiss-
ing only one.
Entering Breckenridge Clinical
Hospital were Mrs. Tino Malder-
ado and Mrs. W. L. Hall as medi-
cal patients. E. B. Duncan was dis-
charged.
Stephens Memorial Hospital re-
ports medical admissions as C. B.
Sears, Walter Clegg, Kenneth Sat-
terwhite, Duke Pttrttom. Mrs. Clara
Griffith. Mrs. Ula Grfford and
Tom Yancey.
Sawyers
I
vVByiKt I
Attend
Mr. and Mrs. Lee- Sawyers of
Breckenridge attended the fitnerat
of Mrs. Sawyers? brother-in-law,
Brace Woodson, in Snyder Monday.
Woodson waa drowned in Lake
J. P. Thomas near Snyder Satur-
Elks Club To Host
Bucks At Dinner
The F'.lks Ctul> will be host to
the Breckenridge Buckaroo football
team at a dinner Wednesday at
«:3 p. m., in the High School cafe-
teria.
All Elks members are invited to
attend, as there will be no lodge
meeting Wednesday night.
the
ed indebtedness is not a
fund item but is a separate:
representing 18.02 percent aC total
tax income.
The group voted to change the
meeting time of the monthly break-
fasts from the first Monday of
each month to the first Wednesday
morning of the month.
Jimmie Ferrel presided in the
absence of the president. Lester
Clark, and introduced members of
the commission attending, com-
mending them for their good work
g done
being
for the benefit of the
entire eity. Mayor Charlie
presented Doty to the group.
ItfiUhm
College Staff
Fox
I!
Mrs. Janice J. Kiker of Breck-
enridge has joined the faculty of
the Breckenridge Branch of the
Ranger Junior College, it was an-
nounced today by Dr. Price R.
Ashton. president.
Mrs. Kiker attended Stephens
College in Columbia, Me.. South-
ern Methodist University at Dallas,
and East Texas State Teachers*
College at Commerce, where she re-
ceived her B. A. degree.
She is a member of Sigma Tau
Delta, National Honorary English
P'raternity, and she has done grad-
uate work in speech at Columbia
University in New York City.
Mrs. Kiker, well known in this
area as an active civic, church, and
club woifker, is the wife of Mr.
Charles Kiker, Music Instructor of
Ranger Junior College.
"We feet indeed fortunate to
have such a well qualified addition
to our faculty," Dr. Ashton said.
PROHIBIT DEMONSTRATIONS
Police Rove To Halt Segregation
Riots Ib Baltimore Aid Washington
WASHINGTON, Oct. 5 (EE)—
Washington and Baltimore police
took steps Tuesday to euro a grow-
ing wave of student demonstrations
against the end of racial segrega-
tion in the public schools of the
two cities.
Baltimore Police Commissioner
Beverly Ober announced that an
old city law prohibiting interfer-
ence with children attempting to
attend school would be rigidly en-
forced to stop picketing and as-
semblage near schools. He- acted
after 2,000 shouting teen-agers
"stormed" city hall Monday pro-
mixed Negro and white
classes.
In Washington, Police Chief
Robert V. Murray cancelled days
off for atl day-shift officers and
added two extra hoars to men am
the other two shifts after pteketteg
and demonstrations spread to the
nation's capital for the first time.
He declared that "rowdyism, disor-
derly conduct and assaults on the
person would not he tolerated."
The action came on the heels of
the largest demonstrations thus far
against the Supreme Court's his-
toric decision striking down, i
gation in the nation's
schools. Similar incidents had oc-
curred at Milford, Dei. and White
Strfphur^Sprm^ ^W. Vi. '
ctear sney cm not
from the school
term' "
emee
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Breckenridge American (Breckenridge, Tex.), Vol. 34, No. 203, Ed. 1 Tuesday, October 5, 1954, newspaper, October 5, 1954; Breckenridge, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth134904/m1/1/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Breckenridge Public Library.