Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 203, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 6, 1965 Page: 4 of 12
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TUESDAY, APRIL 6, 1965
i
Would You Shoot A Simple Asian Peasant?
«
paper
pany born of this need, if not
One of the largest, and con-
A
able, when Dr. Charles Herty,
Texas
homegrown industries
a radically new papermaking ris -County.
Education
nia.
L
A Study Of College Dropouts
N
N04-d
By WINFRED L. GODWIN
Students whose family income
I
exceeds 110,000 per year
are
men? How well prepared
are
23
shows. (Two -
7
main in college at rates con-
I
ResMaquisY
»
MeNaught Syndicate, Ine.
Yesteryear
if he didn't open his mail:
t
to
Enid Justin, remained in Noco-
years.
The findings in the Oklahoma na and continued in the craft of
over.
ernment was under intensive
careers to see how they fare.
ton's top industries.
Britain Leaves Africa
Little Remains Of O nee-Great Empi
Dire
pire, over which the Union Jack
nate him — did not apply to
proudly fluttered.
pav-
lation of 132 million persons. To-
Bechuanaland’s economy is
in the near future.
The fourth, Southern Rhodesia,
1
Single Copies Fvenin55 cents, Sunday 15 cents.
border controls, the plight of
these territories would become
And In Monday's case of the
In a few years Britain will be
in Africa. The Union Jack, first
and
at
will have been replaced as the
i
i
i
t
that are not suitable for lum-
ber use — small trees thinned
"It is clearly evident that
large numbers of capable young
girls are not being educated to
personal leather accessories.
NET: From a depression-va
Britain’s African domain once
comprised nearly 20 countries,
totaling an area of over 4 mil-
lion square miles and a popu-
was originally founded as a
means of meeting a national
writing the 5-4 decision, said:
The 14th Amendment's guar-
territories—Southern Rhodesia,
Basutoland and Bechuanaland.
Three of these are heading
toward self-government and in-
Service and the U.S. Forest
Service in fire prevention work
A significant and seldom noted
advantage of forests in Texas
and elsewhere in the South as
1
)
last of. the black states plum-
mets into the uncertain future
of independence.
mg.
Politicians, fully aware
Their vote is law among the
Swazi people.
year.
After 60 years of British rule
the plunge from tribalism into
modern politics has left most
(Following is the fourth
of a series of five articles
on "Homegrown Industries,"
written by Robert H. Ry-
an and reprinted from the
Texas Business Review, pub-
lished by the University of
Texas.)
DENTON PUBLISHING COMPANY
314 East Hickory
MAILING ADDRESS
a
J
It finally reached that point
Monday in the case of Bob
Granville Pointer, convicted in
Texas of robbing Kenneth W.
Phillips of 1375. By the time
Pointer was brought to trial
Phillips had moved to Califor-
)
d
1
J
l
1
<
1
made commercially from south- stock are produced by South-
ern pine was produced at the land, newsprint and kraftboard
necessity, was Southland Paper Lufkin mill in January 1940. m
1
I
76 per cent to 64 per cent, with of the few major leather plants
young men on academic, schol- in the South that carries on
arships persisting at the high- some of its own leather-tanning
est rate of any other type. Ath- processing. Two other leather
letes, with their fatter scholar- fabricators have also come to
er countries—-such as Sweden, for instance, which
also has a high level cf affluence.
The old West's hooligans always seemed (in movie
gram. The company plants'
about one and one-half million
V*e
te
FRAUD CHARGED
AGAINST LEAGUE
APRIL 6, 1925
a source of both lumber and
Homegrown Industries-4
Lufkin Firm Born Of ^latioiud Need
Denton Record-Chronicle
Telephone 387.3811, Area Code 817
Published every evening except Saturday and on Sunday morning by
Fraternity spoke before t h e and individuals.
Prisoners' AM Society in Hous- Among other things these
_, . amendments guaranteed trial
ton. They praised the society by jury, religious liberty, free-
cases to explain a delay of al-
most two centuries.
In 1791 the first 10 amend- -r- - i
ments to the Constitution — the II I I B I
Bill of Rights — were adopted ■ I 6p I E4KT I (
because the states were afraid --OJ JU y LU
the federal government might in . .
Eight members of the Pat time encroach upon what they
Neff Honor Farm Prisoners considered the rights of states NEW YORK (AP) — Things $1.50 a day.
a and individuals. a columnist might never know The unemployed on the island
versions) to be the derelicts and outlaws, and the
sheriff didn’t have too many obstacles in the way of
law enforcement, so the issue was swiftly resolved.
By camparison, settling today's threat to the peace
of a community can be a long-drawn-out endeavor
which would have frustrated Wyatt Earp or Marshall
Dillon Conclusively, law enforcement officials are
only as effective as the existing system of law en-
forcement.
It isn't hard to guess what would have transpired
if the frontier sheriff rounded up the troublemakers
and then attempted to determine what was bothering
them psychologically. The punks would have laugh-
ed themselves unconscious. Maybe the current crop
of young hoodlums is perpetually unconscious from
the same cause—laughter.
THE
WORLD
TODAY
By JAMES MARLOW
Associated Press News Analyst
I WASHINGTON (AP) - The
mills of justice grind so slowly
it has taken the Supreme Court
174 years to say a man tried for
crime in a state court has as
much right to question his ac-
less than $5,000
Box 369, Denton, Texas 76202
OTHER OFFICES: Capitol Press Room Austin, GR 7 1686, 1 16 5. Stele
Decatur, 62/ 3112; 209 Huttines Shopping Center, I ewisville KL 9 2223
Entered as second class mail at the post office at venton, toxas
Jan 13, 1921 according to Act of Congress. March 3 18/2
BASIC SUBSCRIPTION RA I IS
I
I
_E;
4
PAGE 4 ; : :: EDITORIALS AND FEATURES : : : : THE DENTON RECORDED RON ICLE r r :
cuser as a man tried for crime ceivably the most important, of
in a federal court. Texas* hemenuns- i-a.m-in-
Editorials
The Boss' Son
The Denton County Boy Scouts,
with fathers, leaders and friends state proceedings .
met at the farm of Tom Harpool, It was only las t June that .the
en..1 .e t - - court reversed itself on that.
1 South ofnAub trm over- Justice William J. Brennan Jr.,
nignt camping trip.
EDEN SUCCEEDS
SIR W INSTON
APRIL 6, 1955
gladly be corrected upon beinq called to the publishers attention ‘ ' '■ j , * S’
The publishers are not responsible for copy oitsinns tynoqranhicat ereus arrived in Denton
errors or any unintentional errors that occur other than to correct prepared for two showings
them in the next issue after it Is brought to their attention All ad the Denton Fair Grounds
vertising orders are accepted on this basis only.
Since he didn't show up at the
trial, Pointer’s lawyer couldn’t
cross-examine him. Instead, the
state offered as evidence
Its economy is based on ex- African territories which allows after he had married
ports of asbestos, iron ore and a legal Communist party to op- London secretary Ruth Wil.
cattle. Many thousands of Swa- erate, r1*------ —-i - 5
It isn’t hard to be a success in a successful busi-
ness, if you're the boss’ son.
It's an old gag—the one where a hired hand looks
at the new office boy, who happens to be the son of
the owner, and says? “I predict that boy will go far
in this business."
They probably said that about Ted Dealey, when
he started work on The Dallas Morning News 50
years ago '
He was following in the footsteps of an illustrious
father, George Bannerman Dealey, publisher of The
News.
But young Ted quickly proved that he could be a
successful newspaperman no matter what his name
was He was, and still is, a remarkably lucid, down-
to-earth artist with words. He had a nose for news
and knew how to write it: he still does.
He and his paper were, and are, fearless. You
might not agree with the editorial policy but you
never are in doubt what that editorial policy is.
And the news pages have retained the impartiality
that all of them should have.
Under Ted Dealey’s leadership. The News grew
greater; greater, probably, than it would have un-
der anyone else's direction.
His has been an outstanding career and at the
age of 72, he’s still at it. ,
A cordial salute to publisher Ted Dealey on his
golden anniversary year in journalism. May his
kind increase <
Outlawry On Wheels
Most western movies have one scene in which a
group of bad hombres invades and terrorizes a small
town Then it's up to "The Law," usually in the
form of a husky and dedicated sheriff, to subdue
them and run them off. Today, the modern counter-
parts of those menacing toughs ride around in cars
or on motorcycles and intimidate citizens in much
the same mariner. ‘
But today's buckos don’t confine their offensive
activities to small towns. Their forays are report-
ed from New York to California and similar intru-
sions against the peace have been related from oth-
„ pulp wood is the rate of growth
- • the report of southern pines, which is
To the extent this reser much higher than the growth
antee of due process of law for day it has shrunk to four small
everyone "secures against state ' ~
" invasion the same privilege that
the Fifth Amendment guaran-
from his Basutoland headquar-| emerged as top man.
ters threatened to overthrow the Khama was banished from the
South African government in a country and stripped of the chief,
bloody black uprising tainship of the great Bamang-
Basutoland is one of the few wato tribe by the British in 1952.
Th<> nam. nf ie x-,: -v-m vacumru ui report are not novel. Other her father by organizing the No-
-entisimned°mtmethaninnoh U.sfamilieshavesalarsesmedi- studies have proved that drop- Boot Co. Both companies
times a oar wP utsrdi i Ev vul rates are reiaied io parental have maintained an enviable
A . • ’ , ery year. You re safer from ac- income, academic aptitude, so- reputation for the making of
Ruotaheunotahlesin"e have sidents in a modern steel mill cio-economic background, sex quality boots. A third company
‘ in is the group is the Justin Leath-
, . Gradually in the years since '
ran wild as to whether Russia the court decided, although with
would actually engage in battle a slowness that seems unbe-
with Japan. lievable, that this 14th Amend-
IN DENTON: Only two can- ment meant various provisions,
didates had filed for the posi-of the Bill of. Rights did and
tion of trustee in the Denton must apply 16 states:
School District election But as late-as 1908 the court
Floyd Graham's College Aces specifically .held that the Fifth JOHANNESBURG, SOUTH AF- King Sobhuza II. swept into pow-
and the Variety Show again Amendment which, said: a RICA (AP)—Little remains of er mainly on the king's popu-
prepared to take to the road in manicanit bescompenedstosive Britain's once-great African em- larity with the tribal elders,
a tour of eight Texas towns . . . testimony which might incrimi- - •.......— -I
. .. . ,. . ... . siderably in excess of those
fully matching institutions and compiled by non-pledges.
My is of Lufkin, the first produc-
er of newsprint made from plant has been expanded great- whole pine logs against’revolt
southern pine wood pulp. In the ly and further expansion is ing stones. Kraftboard is made
mid - thirties, U.S. newsprint planned. Southland also recent from pulp produced by cooking
production was declining In । .......-ti---' -ed i -
creased imports seemed inevit-
vious decisions in saying a mas
The, accused of crime in a state
shortage of one resource by method. The first newsprint! Two major types of
substituting another. The com- i
d,
< Ad
Sir Anthony Eden became tees against federal infringe
England's 42nd Prime Minister ment — the right of a person to
following the resignation of Win-! remain silent unless he chooses dependence
ston Churchill. He was one of to speak in the unfettered exer- “
the youngest men ever to hold cise-of his own will, and to suf-
the highest office in Britain. . . . fer no penalty."
Winds of cyclonic fury. some be Back in 1942 the court took a
lieved a tornado, smashed step: an extremely timid one. in
through Pilot Point causing an Inaning ire •
estimated quarter of a million guarantee — — - ------ -
dollars worth of damage Mirac- cused of crime is entitled to a
ulously, no one was injured in lawyer ~ apply to state courts
{the storm. hut only if the accusedfaced the
in war than in nenc. An aqa,n in lost timu extra fuel ge ships, drop out at a greater Yoakum in recent years. includ-
in ar man in peace. An excep- in lost time, extra fuel costs. rate than other grant holders, ing circle Y Saddlery, where
erally preferred to remain Childhood psychology pets (The report says that more saddles riding equipment, and
clean-shaven. Queen Hatshepsut do as much as medicine for scholarship money is needed other leather goods are pro
of Egypt wore a ceremonial some emotionally disturbed each year f°r the estimated duced
gold beard as a svmbol nf her pHiiSnon K . I-, aisturoeo 2,500 youths in the under Leather goods have been
SI™
;i 5= - ■ g aHSSj? SU BSr. TKTJ
lie man Dacnenos and live animals lor Kids who are too that it is too early for conclu-er of a Texas leatherworking
■ sions and recommendations, it dynasty, set up his first boot-
: did find that too many students, making shop in Nocona in 1887
p __________ _____v x . 1 ...3, J - XL 1— .niA ....
The wood pulp for newsprint
Since then, the capacity of the is manufactured by grinding
...... _ ------——------— It was Mark Twain who ob-1 colleges, and because it will
one could be deprived of life. The nation now has some 15.000 served. "Be virtuous and you ;follow a large group of students
i " - 2 " 1 their undergraduate cated building came one of Den
Diedce social pine seedlings yearly and coop-
Pedge social erates with the Texas Forest
death penalty.
yte coptesi ounnny „ cens IN DENTON: County school After 21 years the court was
Home delivery on same day of publication by city carrier or by motor । superintendents received their ready to go further, and did. In
route 40 cents per week, first "briefing" here for begin 1963 the court ruled that every
Home delivery by meil (must be paid in advance) Denton and adjoininr ning the plan of administering state as well as every federal
counties$i 25 permonth, $12 per year, in the United Stafe anti - polio shots in area schools court, must provide an al
1 mon WX$ 18.per.xer TL . . . . , Marian naan donehteren"___
MEMEER OF THE ASSOCIAIED PRESS - The Associated Press is en "e N. . ... .... - v ‛-------- 2"0 - .--------
titled exclusively to use for publication of all local newss.printed in 01 Mr. and Mrs. M. L: Dean, but too poor to hire a lawyer,
this newspaper as well as all AP news dispatches won first place in the 4-H Dress A-- “
0. xn MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Revue, which was held in the
NOTICE TO PUB I- Anv erroneous reflection upon the character.main auditorium at TSCW-----
those whose annual income is tops, crooked sticks and the
I, the study like. Southland s major contri-
thirds of all bution to forest conservation
comprehensive study on student students so that both can pro-
admission and retention. "In duce to the limit of their re-
and Out of College,” has recent- spective capacities ”
ly been published by the Okla- The more able the student is. r. . ... . .. r,
homa State Board of Regents, as measured by test scores, the their ful potential.
It is the first report on a six- more likely he will survive the says . Te.heexten .. anu.. .g... —...... gvw.,
year study of 13.276 first time freshman year. Yet almost half voir of untapped talent is being rate of trees in Canadian and
freshmen who entered the 32 of the dropouts are quite capa- nvorineked heth "he c‘"‘“ ‘
Oklahoma private and public ble intellectually - tests place
institutions in September 1962, them in the upper half of
The group will be followed scores on the American College
through their collegiate ca- Testing Program
Midgets are born in only sitting still — to avoid stimulat-
.-g, ----— about one out of a million ing their appetites.
and thanked the public for tak dom of speech, of the press, and births. They occur in all the Transportation headache; ।
ing an interest in them . .. The of the people to petition the gov- races of mankind. Traffic tieups do more than 1
post office department issued a ernment for redress of griev- Throughout history men have cause upset tempers It is esti-
fraud order, against the Nation- ances. been more likely to wear beards mated they cost $5 billion a year
a Disabled Soldiers League, Two of these amendments - in war than in peace. An exceo- in lost time. extra fuel costs
pulp is blended into ground
wood pulp for the manufacture
of newsprint.
Besides providing the town
of Lufkin with one of its two
largest industrial payrolls,
Southland Mills has converted to
। economic use enormous vol-
umes of southern pine timber
overlooked, both the state and northern U.S. forests.
the natipoteneiaatlrnasomanhpowe"ooneor,the Xadvertisedaot
or rosircos ” Texas homegrown industries
er resources. s Tex Tan Leather of Yoak
; Freshmen whose parents both um among the nation's major
are college graduates persist producers of leather specialty
’through the freshman year of products, including casual foot-
college at a rate about 13 per wear, saddlery goods, belts
cent higher than those coming -billfolds, gloves, and gift wares,
from families in which neither Originally established in 1919,
parent holds a bachelor s de- Tex Tan is now organized as
8ree two divisions of the Tandy Cor-
ae ueyivga <». mp n Students who are on scholar- poration. Established in re-
of Cyprus spend most of the dav ship persist over non-scholar sponse to the availability of lo-
....^ ..... .7 ship recipients by a margin of cal resources. Tex Tan is one
toarstnn “mney“sinkraamalls theuErfth pndtmgth heare tion was the Romans, who gen-and wear and tear on vehicles.
"in DENTON: comess
dents: townspeople and four himself
professional soloists from Fort The Sixth said a person ac- Giyinity
Wor th_presented the oratorio cused of crime not only had a
‘The Creation by Hayden in right to be informed of the
the main auditorium of thejcharge against him but to con-
Teachers College (now NTSU) front his accusers and to have a
.Another case of smallpoxlawyer to defend him. m ,
was reported in Garza and pre- For much of its history the Natureanotesi Fish have no „The,high cost of cold wars. u>u amnu una wo many stuaens, makng snop in ivucuna m 100,
parations were taken to try to Supreme Court took the view eyelids. The stomach of a hippo- The U.S. Department of Defense not adequately qualified choke After his death in 1919, his sons
keep an epidemic from hitting that the Bill of Rights' guaran- potamus » Jong enough for a budget is bigger than the total freshmen classrooms only to moved the Justin Boot Co. t„
Denton. tees applied only to what hap- man to lie down and sleep in, goyernmental budgets of Great drop out during their sophomore Fort Worth. His daughter, Miss
U,gc, 4 ino pened within federal jurisdiction The cricket has its ears in its Britain, France, West Germany 5 H .... -
Hi >>lA I UI DS and not to the states at all legS. The gray fox can climb and Italy combined. ane
NEI TRALITY ACT In fact, more than 100 years trees. Walruses keep harems. Quickies: Nearly one-third of report
ago it ruled that the bills j_( .2 Ah .........co have a iange sei- studies nave proven mai arop- cona booi co. b<
APRIL 6, 1945 amendments applied only to dentissigned more than 100,000 cal, hospital or funeral bill ev- out rates are related to parental have maintained
L, nl .y.y a wL,,. federal jurisdiction. A change of times a year. e.....— Ve* • -
(Second । Armored "ninel and view set in, but ever so slowly. Quotable notables: "We have, cidents in a modern steel mill cio-economic background.
the than andeoprevious performance
porenthwTank Dwoismnnewere Te son
German metropolis of Han- 7 . » .
er Goods Co:, in Nocona, an
/Dwoen Wno marry De- But the study is important be- offshoot of Justin Boot, which
Camping out is becoming a , tween the ages of 30 and 34 are cause it is statewide, inclusive manufactures women’s hand
The Japanese gov- eyeronnermustihseandunaP 2 wontfe sor hrifctourists ' the east ikely to divorced of both public and private bags, men’s billfolds, and other
reers, with additional reports
Who are today’s college fresh- scheduled on pertinent findings. „au,u pez yean a. ,
- rree2 The report declares that “the less likely to drop out than from overcrowded forests, tree
they for the institutions of their typical Oklahoma college loses ' ' tone oreeked Stirke and "he
choice? How many are doomed about 42 per cent of its original
to drop out before graduation? freshman class by the begin- a.... ... ..... „ ...
These questions have been re- ning of the sophomore year." Oklahoma freshmen come from lies in its reforestation pro-
ceiving more attention in re- “Attrition rates on this order, families with an annual income
cent years than ever before, be- both in terms of human and fi- of $5,000 or more )
Suse ithe answers are.neces- nancial resources involved, are Freshmen who pieuge s,
Hryifthe needs of both stu- far too expensive . . . Instead fraternities and sororities re-
dents and institutions are to ways must be found to mini-
be met. mize such losses by more care-
The first installment of a * “ “ - -
ly announced plans to build a chipped pine wood in a caustic
new paper mill, to cost over $10 soda solution under stream
a research chemist, went to million initially and to employ eommoniy bleached, and Pcl
work to develop a process for about 200, in northeastern Har- tain amount of the bleached
is in a special and precarious political hotheads for fear of up-! entertained by
position. A white minority rul- - - -
noisozpprezhommin Twurmdtothe sagen Brothers becautse
there — the court reversed pre-
against Pointer a transcript of
testimony given by Phillips at a
preliminary hearing some time
before.
In the appeal to the Supreme
Court, Pointer's lawyer argued
that, under the Constitution's
Sixth Amendment guarantee of
an accused man’s right to con-
front his accuser, his client
should have been able, but
wasn't, to question Phillips.
The Supreme Court agreed.
Its decision was a landmark.
And what happened to Pointer
-in Texas can never happen
again — at least in that way —
in a state criminal trial.
But why did it take the Su-
preme Court all these years to
reach a decision which might
seem obvious to anyone reading
the Constitution? This is an ex-
planation, along with two other
133
- — --------- a white
legal Communist party to op- London secretary, Ruiii wii-
—. Witchcraft and black liams. Later they returned to
zis get by on subsistence farm- magic have been responsible for Bechuanaland and Khama pav-
ritual killings. Two chiefs await- ed the way for self-rule and in-
, that ing trial on charges of murder- dependence.
their existence depends largely ing three political opponents are Bechuanaland’s economy is
on friendly ties with South Af- running for election from the just as precarious as that of
rica, tread warily in their de- prison cells, most other black states Apart
mands for race equality. Once Ntsu Mokhehle, expected to from a small cattle export trade
a haven for political refugees lead the powerful Basutoland and a'few unrewarding mineral
fleeing from South Africa, Swaz-; Congress party to victory in the surveys, the future looks bleak
Hand no longer welcomes such coming elections, was recently All three protectorates are
- 2 ' 2 J . . t ■ ‘ J the Communist greatly dependent on South Af-
es there but Britain is Dressing setting all-white Chinese government. rica. Thousands of Swazis,
es there, out Britain is pressing can government. Large numbers of Basutos Basutos and Bechuanas trek to
kin th Ci th'A .. a policy of one man-one vote Basutoland, nearly twice the scratch a living from barren, this republic yearly seeking em
makingthe S ixth.Amend ment S The ruling minority is threaten- size of Switzerland, is complet- rocky soil. Tribal allegiance to ployment in ’the gold and8 dia-
guarantee that a man ac- ing a unilateral declaration of ely surrounded by South Africa,1 Paramount Chief Moshoeshoe II mond mines. Nearly all their
independence if Britain pushes The people will go to the polls is starting to wane and many imports are of South African
100 nard this month to elect the coun- observers believe that Basuto- manufacturers and most of their
Here’s a look at the three try s first all-Negro government, land is becoming an ideal place exports must, through geogra-
black protectorates soon to be For its largely illiterate elector- for further Chinese Commugist phical necessity, be channeled
free: 4 ate. colored cards'and symbols infiltration in Africa through South Africa.
Swaziland is1 a tiny 6.700 will be used Bechuanaland, at 275.000 if South Africa were to halt
____ reaera square mile mountainous en- A black horse, blue cow, black square miles, is the largest of । the flow of migratory labor from
--------------------------- ------ p.o.e an attorney clave, bordered by white-domin- elephant or golden hand will de- the remaining British territories these new states, or tighten its
. . . Marian Dean, daughter for a person charged with.crime ated South-Africa and Portugu- note the candidates—all the vot-in Africa. The great Kalahari '
ese-ruled Mozambique It al- er has to do is select one. To Desert comprises a large pro- these territories would become
And in Monday's case of the ready has self-government and ensure he doesn t vote twice his portion of the country, whose even more desperate.
Texas man whose lawyer wasn't hopes for independence within a thumb wil be thrust into a bot- basic industry is cattle farming. In a few years Britain will be
"hl •-----"------ tie of colored ink. The country took its first step divested of all her black empire
Of the three British protector- toward independence recently, in Africa. The Union Jack first
ates bordering South Africa, j Like its sister protectorates of hoisted in Africa 300 years ago
Basutoland is considered the Swaziland and Basutoland, it .....
------ ....... ... .— most dangerous by the South elected its first all-Negro gov.
circus Was sponsored by the court must be permitted to tribal Swazis bewildered. The African government, It openly ernment. As expected, former
I Denton Optimist Club. I cross-examine his accuser. | ruling political party, headed by i harbored Potiako Leballo, who'tribal chief Seretse Khama. 43/
$ 1
i
1, ,
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Denton Record-Chronicle (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 62, No. 203, Ed. 1 Tuesday, April 6, 1965, newspaper, April 6, 1965; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1517690/m1/4/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Denton Public Library.