Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 91, No. 213, Ed. 1 Friday, October 26, 1956 Page: 6 of 10
ten pages : ill. ; page 21 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
$
PAGE6
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS, BRENHAM, TEXAS
FRIDAY, OCT. 26,1956
MARKETS
at the park will open immediate-
ernburgers, homemade ukes, pies
Calves 100 Seady. Standard and
ed
somewhar
different
atong
contrl
over
17-17.50.
ever, with eighteen
CHICAGO PRODUCE
No other USDA price changes.
steady. 93 score 61; 92 score 60%;
trans-
BRENHAM COTTON
Hospital News
checks 27.
,23-—HUNIGARHAN-
up"by appropriate govei
set
UuXITSme---e
32
friendly nations.
winter.
Dulles? Dallas Talk
Radio -M
broadcast
On Nationwide TV
ixzort from Minne ipolis.
ity- ami .it was believed the r
are still
hell n there might be’ squ hed
shoes.
-—--
. Tene W-vmo
amzHxrzoc
0
Rohort MITCHUM • Toresa WRIGHT
yerner
OLoA
adkva..
ty’s pr test.
NOVEMBER 1
sgXl
was among the accredited mem-
I
Gwe
at
are."
• t me parking.
' DA Livestock;
.1. AS.
1
Shows: 7:00 & 9:00 p. m.
(Continued from page one)
October
27 th.,
5
242
Brings the Return of
t
I
3-3
I
DYNAMIC
WINSOME
Pat Cooke
On The
Vocal
ri
8
E
7
7
AND
ALL THE GAIETY OF GROUP SINGING
At
/
FASCINATING
SATURDAY’S
TAVERN
Luth
GAY HILL, TEXAS
SET-UPS
ATTENTIVE
7
BEER
SERVICE
to 15 lbs.
/ .
b
2
/
- V
Jetiwic0lo
3
2
R
52 Bulls and
11 Females
Plane With Stuck
Wheel Makes Safe
Ft. Worth Landing
JOHNSON RAPS
GOV. SHIVERS
ON TIDELANDS
SUNDAY & MONDAY
One of. the All-Timt GrtatsI
slice factoriets have been" "inad-
missable slow” in producing win-
ter footwear end-many factories
w"*
-rn
AUSTIN
COLISEUM
WASHINGTON (UP) — A lot of
Russians may have cold feet this
■ n Chun h
3 p. m. with
■■
Ki
6
fer nuclear materials to it.
2. When the atomic agency is
Knights, of Columbus Hall
Ham and Sausage Dinner
begins at 11:30 a. m.
Games throughout after-
noon.'
Classified ad will get the desired
rtfsuits.
W. HUNTS-
(Continued tram page one)
and candy, cold drinks and cof-
fee will be sold in add tion there
will be a snack shop in the pa-
vilion t<>r the sale of coffee, cak-
es and candy.
< an be mproved ’ the Communist
party newspaper Neues Deutsch-
hnd said. •
Max. 79
" Min 40
7 a.m. 61
Mrs. H. W. 'Hannan, Route 5,
Brenham, surgical.
Cold Feet Due
GRADE A MILK
6 71 per cwt. of 40
7< per peint ever —44
2
G
e-
ey
"Phyl"
On- The
SATURDAY’S 8 P. M. TO 1 A. M.
NO COVER
I I
5
1
\
1
Agency He pledged 11,000 pounds
of nuclear material to it imme-
Only One Texas
City Has Freeze
Pecans, 13--
%
UNGRADED MILK ce
30 to 75 lbs. dally bonus
' 10c cwt
76 to 100 lbs. daily bonus -
1
DICK TRACY •
TIRE CO.
Batteries
Recapping
TF Vulcanizing
( , Wheel
Balancing
agency nuclear material that will
‘match in amount the sum of all
quantities at such materials made
similarly available by all other
By UNITED PREMS
Texas’ latest cold front pushed
toward the southern tip of the
state, today, but a predicted light
freeze in the northern half of the
state failed to materialize.
the bird's nest, home-made pas-.
try and candy shop, bounce-the- ■ States Atomic Energy Commis-
ball, balloons, fishing, bean bag, ■ s* n- *
good slaughter calves 12-17. Other
grades and stockers scarce.
Hogs 150. But-hers 50 cents low-
s:5
c
ST. MARY’S MOTHERS’
' CLB
Halloween Festival
SUNDAY, OCT. 28
at
I
I
t
s
ge
SATURDAY
YELLOWNECK
in Trucolor
Starring
Lin McCarthy
Stephen Courtleigh
SATURDAY FREE VUE
Says Brownell May
; . Try To Sue
Texas
.,0
FRIDAY
- JOHNNY BELINDA
Starring
15c.'«wt.__-
100 Ibs oer.dally bonus .
25c /cwt. *
$3 00 per wt. 40
6c per point, over 4%
BUTTERFAT PER POUND
Sour Cream, 44c
Sweet Cream, 49c
c pt r shot.
yn
Times: 2-4:20 6:40 9.
military purpaes and the Presi-
dent did not mention atomic or
hydrogen bombs directly.
At its closing session, the con-
ference" opened for signature the
agency's governing statute unani-
mously approved by 82 countries
last Tuesday.
LoAass,
WELL SERVICE
Water Wells Drilled and
Reworked
—Pump Sales St Service —
Irrigation Wells & Pumps
Prompt Dependable Service .
tion in the United Nations if such
a cpurse seems feisible later on.
Charges could be made against
Only 2.‘
CINEMAScOPE
"TRACK OF THE CAT*
POULTRY
Large White Eggs. 40c
Medium Candled Eggs, 32c
Small Eggs, 22c P
Check Eggs, 15c
Geese, 12c
Hens. 11c .
Fryers. 20e
Old Roosters, 8c
is, 50c V_________
Ducks, 12c
Turkey Toms, 22c
Turkey Hens. 252
□ Cinemascope
“57′4.
ed
dress, took on new luster today
with announcement his talk would '
be carried nationwide on televi-
si n and radio.
The State Deprtment said Dul-
les speech before the Dallas Coun-
Saturday,
47.
"0
2 gthes ireyolt.mpmezfa
beyond he limits of the Hungari-
P-TA SETS-
(Continued from page 1)
Sale 1 p. m.
ANTIRED Protests
REPORTED IN ALBANIA
|
1
SUNDAY. (KT. 28th
At 1 :30 p. m.
las.
The State Department indicated
Dulles would make a general sur-
vey of U.S. fioreigm policy, with
particular emphasis upon the Mid-
dle East, including the Suez Canal
crisis, the Israeli - Arib tituation
and the Middle East oil problem.
N. N. Malloh, chairman of the
board of the Council on World Af-
fairs, said tmt Dulles also was
O
r
3
§
measure. dis-
As ' ,
A. -"t
Az,
ns of Hetmann Lodge"
'tiii iating. Bit-
Shelby ceme-
5
<
) $
Flat, reported a freezing temper-
ature. Salt Fiat’s law was 32 de-
grees. the exact freezing point. -
Dalhart reported 35, Junction
36 and Amarillo and El Paso 38.
but all other minimums were 40
degrees or more. The warmest
spot during the night was Corpus
Judging 9:30 a. m.
I from other countries.
The President's message was
detvered to the closing session at
the 82-nation conference on the
fin t global "atoms for peace”
viously purchased. New loads up to
24 Mo t of the salable a it tic sup-
; ply comprised onttle and cutter
cows selling at 7-10. few bulls
11 50 down. Stockers scarcc.
southern tip of Texas before night-
fiall. <
Skies Were clear throughout the
state today, except along the
diately and offered to match do-
nati ns of fissknable material
r
i
in three assaults on the pahia-
ment buildings in Euehapest.
turning out summer
Shisti, where the temperasure___A
■ -never gotsbelow 20— . Tmonitoredheresaid“some Soviet
The front was due to clean the
O ttlr 6000. Steady K-ceipts in-
cluded several loads stee rs pre-
______ CAPITAL AEEA I
\niww> AS3OCIATION \
A ANI
eluding calendar throw, robbing program by’ Adm. Lewis L.
..... Strauss, chairmn of the United
booths, in-
y MARLOW^/
nephews and three
remain open- during the entire! By BRUCE W. MUNN
evening.'Chili, sandwiches, west- United Press Staff Correspondent
■ CI IICAGO 41: P+------- Preduee :
Live poutry : M a r k e t quiet.
Broilers, rock fryers, caponettes
anti ducklings not quoted today
tery Th Simank . Biiske Service
Baby bef turkey hens 14 is harzeof rn nge ments
"I am trying not to get mad
'bout this,” Hagerty said. ‘But
I thik it is about the worst job
1 of reporting I have ever seen.”
the Soviets: oh grounds that hu-
man right's and the Hungarian
expected to discuss the riots in
{ Hungary and Poland.
pea-o treaty had been viohted by
Moscow’s intervention in Hun-
gary. . .
members- of the international .ecey .,
agency, and on comparable terms, I the 1956-57 season. This would net
for the penod between the esub-; them 5187 million in 8011 bank pay-
lishment of the agency and July 1 ments next year.
1 1960. " In another move, the department
’The International Atomic Ener- announced the purchase of $7.1
gy IAgency (IAEA) will have ne-million worth of hamburger, frozen
•’ atomic energy for turkey, eggs and lard in an .effort
to boost prices paid t farmers for
these products.
The department has purchased
J23.5 million worth of these pro-
ducts in the past five weeks.
The soil bank payments covered
all crops taken out of production
this year under the administra-
tion’s new program to cut down
surplus pnduction,
Iowa farmers got the biggest
amount $26.3 million. Texas farm-
ers were second with $10.7 million.
Payments by states through Oct.
19; Kansas, $2,099,841.57; Mil s uri,
$4,811,013.57; Oklahoma, $3,180,324,-
81.-------------------;------------
in Shetby Sunil,iv .
P , W E Di err o
nu will be n the
ATTEND THE ।
CAPITAL AREA HEREFORD
ASSOCIATION SALE
Fankie E
LAINE
sows 50 . ens to 100 lower. .This carnival Will be conduct-
No 1. 2 and 3 grades 200-270 Ibs ed atong somewhar cut ent
15 23 One lot No. 1 and 2 grade lines han in the pant Games of
195 lbs 15. Sows 13.50-14 . * chance have been eliminated,
Sheep 50. Killinz clases untest-1 there will be no bingo or other
ee Feeder Fimbs steady -Mixed Similar ' attractions. Plenty of
TURKEY
SHOOT-
THE HANG OUT PL E
i, ]miles west jof Brenham
P’alhrn:
V . h s
of Shelby
E"s ’ 136
:■ ■' %
KELLY-GUINNESS h
LOSS -
v G V : I m
• c, 7%e ' g.
wn‛ i-
emuasconentcotok \,
Msudenlt thindttorrheere ‛ DALLAS; Texas (UP) secre-
• | already billed as a major ad-
FORT WORTH, Tex. (UP)-An
American Airlines pitot’ flew
around the Dallas-Fort Worth
area for an hour Thursday night
trying to shake loose a stuck nose
wheel. He finally landed without
injury to the 40 passengers.
The plane tipped up on its nose
when it stopped.
The pilot, Capt. Bill Larson of
Dalbas, said he believed his plane
had’collided with a Bird ever the
Red River between Tulsa and
Dallas. He theorized that might
have caused the nose wheel trou-
ble. But he said he couldn't be
positive.
The twin-engine Convair, Flight
481, was due to land at Dallas’
Love Field iafter a flight from
Chicago via St. Louis and Tulsa.
But when the veteran pilot found
the nose wheel wouldn’t go dawn,
he began to circle the area. He
finally landed at Amon Carter In-
ternational Airport, located in a
sparsely settled area between
Fort Worth and Dallas, nather
than Love Field, which is sur-
rounded by residential and indus-
trial areas.
The plane glided, nose high,
down the runway without incident.
Allow!ntepped-end -tipped -pron--
its nose, the passengers were ta-
ken off safely,
AwMWF-ki 75
Lr A‛PS - n ( ptal
Uba » wot fer MEE
| sheuld be al ked: ‘Can you give
assuranee that Brownell will not
. sue Texis, like he did Louisiana;
t take away two-thirds of our
—L detanes?"
Johnson said he had heard re-
- —ports “that Brownell planned such .
•ion ‘right after th- ele tion S:ri t Mi. Id 31
Claims Adlai Hedged Middling: 312
hedged on the tidehnds qj--- n I ' iddmg. 75
| taken plate in a Sovict-vfffitroilpd
fact ry in the Russiin .mtellite
country of Albania, well-informed
sources said today.
The sources said workers in a
Urge Albanian '.chrome, copper
•5F2** i
-v T' i
g a.j
. A
Butter 517.00 pounds.
’ -Only one-Ierestation,mSal •7•Do— —
- St Jude:
randmother,
• rum i nn "t Salem :
M y Helen H n-
unge.‛
• ce will be hd at
_______________.
ST ARETE' —t=ee
UNITED MATIONS, N. Y. (UPY
—President Ei enhower today
.hailed the establishment of the
coast 1 The slight dsudiness thene-
was dissipating during the day.
Mild days and cool nights were
predicted for the weekend.
In the 24 hours ended nat 6:30
am, Lufkin reported .29 inch of
rain* Texarkana .27, Houston .16,
Port Arthur .08, Waco .01 and
Presidio a trace. ——,----
Shooting gallery, putting green,! Mr, Eisenhower said he wanted
darts, basketball throw, make-up the. United States to be "among
__booth where masks may also be the first to recognize by official
Tone seeured-and o'hers. taction’ what you at this confer-
H bby horses will be running, ence 113,76 faccomplished." There-
90 score 59% , 89 score 57%; car- a fire truck wil b on hand to fore, he said, he would follow a
lots 90 sc re 60% ; 89 tscore 57%. ' take k ddies for rides, and it is threezpoint program:
Eggs 1 8,300 cases. T ne about probable that ponies will also 1. When Congress reassembles
steady. White barge extmis 44; be available for rides. Also the he will present for natification by
mixed large extras 4212; me. African dip. haunted house and the Senate the governing statute
diums 2812; standards 33%; cur-other attraczions will be operat-for the new agency and request
rent receipts 31; dirties 2814; ed. congressional authority to
It- matters but little what your
neds may ba, a Banner-Press
ef hill country Democrats that rec
"we cannot stand four mo; < y> r‛ Mr
of Bens n farm policies nd Re - M e
‘ aqiican hard mone v. The Repub- ? .
hewn pnrty has never been inter- oc
csied in anythhng but high intere-t Y
rates and hardmoncy th hard- M '
to-get to nd of mbney."
> Ralph Yarborough, who Jost out
n the Democratic race or gov-
New International Atom Energy' Soil Bank Benefits
Agency Hailed By Eisenhower Total $101.7 Million
ly after the coronation and will1 - . , v I WASHINGTON, (UP* Farmers
3. The United Suutes will con- have received $101.7 mikion in
tinue to make available to the- soil bank Piyments from the
government so far this year.
The Agriculture Department also
said Thursday wheat growers have
contracted to take 10 million acres
out of winter "wheat production in
, , • ... and oil factory had organized a
■ deep fearin the ' Vie t protest demonstration against
’ th ' she Polish nd Hunsari- “hunger, salarie " in Albania.
an dehiane of the Soviet Union: The sources said "many" dem-
misht prcad t Eat Germany. . were arrested by police
m% Famed Out but they had ns further details on
TheRec militia, composod of the demonstration
' ted actory workers, was Report of the anti-Russian dem-
alr i throughout Eas Giermmy onstrations in Albarn. wis the
and was Eiven arms The Com- first from the tiny isolated sate-
munis ' ' ' lerted 60 000 Pli " life nation bordered by Yuzosla-
' rity troops which C uld via, Grece amnd the Adriatic,
attempt to put down . any revolt
E. H. MUELLER-
’ (Continued from page 1)
LIKE RELAPSE, ' +man- seronerrinpang
। —------- (Continued from rage One) will ^nake available 5,000' kilo-
‘ by cilling it a dead issue but ... . opg ... ■ (Continued from Page One) | gram * (11,020 pounds of
that the Democratic- e md date ed st ‘ ‘ ' "oton 605 ; - umn ayallable to the press in gen- ; uranium-235 from the 20,000 kilo-
hsnt given a definite nhswerst.---- , , -and -ehiidren. The- -Hungarian-se- , rnal after it W as critic ized by Hag- 1 gnams (44,080/ pounds) made
to whether,, if elected he would . • "ih, AW, "5, eret police was reported forced tolerty. An excerpt follows: available by .the government last
veto « measure to tike the tide- M *32 ,74 4378 take over Are® units in s me) "It w 11 be vigor u ly denied but February tor peaceful uses in
lnds away frof Texas MD 33 ,3157381 ves " President Eisenh wer apparently - ”
Shivers was,in Jackonvilte. Uhi., j Y ;3 3784 3., Budapest radio announced today sufsered a mild relapse oh his
Thursday n ght. makine * epee '. ru.3320. ..... st •' of 1 othr < meaign inwestern-eampaignstrip Whether
rsebenal $ .Qa . ... E
er .He said, that De m «rat - • < a !- 3; / 3475 tra es Of the rebells n the s ame something, more serious it hit Ike
ens are tryinguo b titte- " a. , 3260 3247 32 )8 report it made Thur day Soviet ' while he v1 Is drivin; back to the
.ealledprty lojlty "to' a head- E 0S nominal at 10 . tanks and iguns cordoned of the
- Ft race" be’wee ST8. ensn nd •
International Atomic Energy
DANCE
WASHINGTON HAIL
SATURDAY NITE, oct 27
Music by
JOE KI ( IEMBA .and his
Ue-stern Melody Kings
Come t fi r an enjoyable
vening.
'. by; seven
■ - - < < his
The emergency
Mae Emma N
and his frince
s • ot of LaGi
Funeral erv
' e st. P 1] -
i orahle discharge.
An employee f the Ford Mo
•or Comp iny "f LaGrange, he was
I never marred.
Mr Mueller was a member of
St Patil’s Lutheran Church of
Shelby and a member of the
Kou-ner La dge No. 28, ODHS, of
.Shelhy.
Survivors include his parents':
three brothen Arthur Mueller of
Brenham, Raymond Delphine
Mueller and August Mueller, Jr.
ba h of Shelby; three sisters, Mrs.
Augu- Panderm inn of Sandy
H ' M Lronard Brandt of Gen.
zales and Elinor Mueller of Shel.
fit end feeder ’lambs to feeders amusement will be offered, how-
• P 5911/013 ) be me nece s 1: y to call
IKKAWHIDE 1, oh.the 2 S '' “ ■■ ■
VrAgTE,) Honle " the n vere no
______ o! an impending revo t. But the
SATURDAY .Commun ts. fri ht ne I by even's many on December 5,1951,
^2™" " P '
GANGLAND EMPIRt! con • . 1 . ■ ' H- pi .| in Germ-
.n, 1,...... , , any From there he was sent to
, i t ' '' " the Bro iks Krmy Hospital in San
Antonio -n April 19, 1955. On
■ July 24 1955 he received his hon-
t."-. ITCHNICOLCR
SUNDAY 4 MONDAY
‛ ”ueF
W-.....46......
a
m
ft
E
2
2
IPHONE 3511 6aaed
TODAY
St EIB MEEa
CURTIS-MILIER-KEMNETY
Geo T Johnson Ph. UN 5-2393
Ray Stephens Ph. UN 5-3120
. BELLVILLE, TEXAS
Box 675
By UNITED PRESS
. “.U.S. Sen. Lyndon B Johnson
threw the tidelands question -back
_ M the pro-Eisenhower forces
Thursday, asking if Attorney Gen-
eral Herbert Brownell wouldn't
• ke some of the oil money away
Arm Texas right after the Nov.
• 6 election.
Johnson was in Dallas for a
trial appearance with Massachu-
E setts- Sen. John Kennedy. He i
noted that Gov Allan Shivers said i
he didn't trust Adlai Stevens
stand on th- ^ddands question
t., 71" s d he thought Shivers •
PAG'T CPDNAN VIENNA, (UP) Largc ' scile
LP.I 11 nlX IVI M 11* | anti- Russian dempnstrations have
Piano
E inenhower. I ... . .. ,.2, .. heHlir
"h. 14. (105 an capital and rebels seized the i lim usine to k off frem the motor-
38 3375 3378 1 rich old and uranium mines in cade anl sped to the airport fol-
3 3 377 3373. eastern and in southern Hungary.- lowed by a Secret Service car."
,5 3385 ,38 Even the ' official Communit Clls Pt arsons Office
3 - I" J 348 party newspaper Pravca conceded Penrson’s-office immediately be-
3; 38 ’* 41 3228 in Moscow tody the fight contin- Pearson’s ofice‛ immediately be-
32 60 32 10 2 60 ued i fore makinz the denial but was I ........... . . .
72 60 22 Mi ' ’ 6 - . “ . 11 .t f — , a i cu on World Affairs would be car-
•20 3. 32 O2 Rep of the general strike told the columnist was somewhere i - j v , j , . j
Spots cloed stendi at 2220 in- 1 ,1 . M > . . . .."i . Iried by NBC and iaiso broadcast
’ " . ■ 1 called to pralyze communication on his way o the midwest. Hag . . _ affilat. in mi
changed. ! and Industry in Hungary, came erty quoted Pearson’s secretary as b KR— a -BS affihate in Dn
ernor, spoke at Clovis, N.M. He oie, ice, from Austrnn railway, workers ; saying she would try to teach the
< d the Dem crats had "not only " 51 °P -‛F STPK - ' who visited Hegyeshalom, the first | c lumnist nd tell him of Higer-
the party but nlso the oandicite’ . .. 091. ' ‘-5 rail check point inside Hungary. "" "e"
this year "E ,100 . * No Details on Rebels
.In Austin. Weldon Har', coorri- [ ' . n a-t:Mty ant) j They said the Hungarian work-
mi r of the Texas pemocrats for ’’ due to limit- ers told them the strike was di-
F Eisenhower campaign sad Dem- E1,H..6P one .. canner rected by a "central ■workers em-
i o ratic leaders re -pre adinr st, j1. " C0"5 " . pominiy mittec" but they bd no details Hagerty said that neither Pear-
L "yieios and v u ■ r • r acinca S! ,, z- , of the rebel organization. son nor any representative of nis
, against Pr s dent F senhow r. 1 ’• . Cin up d< i.s nom. । There were these other devebp-
m4-, . 0I .00 ments in the cerh is: - hers of the.press prty accom-
Shivers and anyon, ' who । _ । ‛ n " high • nd- । in Berlin :i Swiss traveler told , panying the- President.*
dares to speak up agajnst th' r "gru" 0" E° slaughte cavesjthe newspaper B Z "I saw peo- ' "At no time did the Presidents
’ candidates." -, ,0: ple hang in rows edong the Dan-car leave he motoreade," Hager-
—-—----------- 1oES Ba seel on priees at 1 - | ube pjer, people rounded up and ty said.
' Followed Advice ’■ a y r’■ gaTit '• wk att shot on the spot or hanged, bur
____ . ’ 4 ' s 5t 0 dy Top 14 75 paid for , where the rebels won they were •
COFIL GABLES. Hi HP' 10-2101h l b. ! to i barrows and ruthless against the Soviet tro ps.
Policeman Don Krall followed his 15,210-26,1)8,1 3 50-14 50;’■I hive seen Red Army soldiers
wife’s bold advice to give tickets ,0 "b5 10 5013.25 Lisht 150-185 hanerd *
I to anyone "no m.tter who they N‛.,
260 lbs. 10.50-13.25. Light 150-185 hanged • , .
hos,1 25 140. Sows 30 ibs. । in Belgrade, the Budapest cor.
down 9-12. . repondent of Politika reported
He gave he a ticket for over- pi, i„ec, "thousns" of persons dead, hun- I
. FORT WORTH LIVESTOCK dreds killed nd b dies piled h gh 1
1 FORT WORTH, Tex , (UP)-(US- - - ’ ■ ;
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Whitehead, Tom S., Jr. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 91, No. 213, Ed. 1 Friday, October 26, 1956, newspaper, October 26, 1956; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1566563/m1/6/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.