Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 100, No. 220, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 4, 1965 Page: 2 of 16
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THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1965
BRENHAM BANNER-PRESS, BRENHAM, TEXAS
Higher Education
"tppke
/965
Weakness with Words
SS ASSOCIATION
W# .
►
The Brenham Banne Press, Inc.
•. r‘ 7nat.‘-—
Blocks Learning
JAMES E. BYRD
2
Editor and Publisher
1,1, 2
Editor Emeritus
V/
7^
I*,
Foreign News Commentary
49
A
After Sukarno What ?
0
.v
Did He Know
President Sukarno, a frequently------ .
Poverty In Texas
Federal Aid to the Helpless
more
has
Gives Community Life
20-40-80
7
Laredo is
a year.
K
3 388882 288 8
-
i0 YEARS
HANGOVER (LIRE
1
and interesiing topics
major official has lost his
and Foreign
principal
ALMANAC
E2-
Airport Aecess
FULNRIGHT VIEWS
WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen
William Fulbright says he
swer to the problem of airport ship b tween air transportation
M‘d
eventually, to include a spur
uzcasak
i
L
(ABC
N
N
THE HIGH ROAD
Its a matter of
EliiEE
and highway transportation. It
might be desirable, for example,
AGVE$eN
so SRALL
YBRI
A09
wnorus
IUE
one
job,
J.
has
/'Safety? Why We Even Have Seat Belts
For the Guy in the Back!"
Production Supt.
MRS. RUBY ROBERTSON
m.‘' '
F—..
roads of eomparable quniiy.
The Federaleid highoway pro-
By United Press International
Today ii Thursday, Nov. 4,
the 308th day of 1965 with 57 to
follow.
The moon is approaching its
full phase.
The morning .taf i« Jupiter
n
segments of the Interstate Sys- to extend the Interstate System,.'
tem or other general purpose eventually, to include a spur
route to serve every major air-
port
Since there are well-to-do and
middle-class residents, a lot of
people in Laredo have toe live
on less than $945 a year.
The climate is warm almost
year round taxes are low and
by buying vegetables and meat
A
p?3
, i#M2t
j034j9
80 YEARS
Nov. 4, IMS — Several
wagon loads of sweet potatoes
were marketed here on Friday
. 75 cents per bushel being the
40 YEARS
Nov. 4, 1925 — Mr. and Mrs
John J. Giddings and Miss Ot-
way Thomas have returned
from Wharton, where they at-
tended the funeral of Mrs. S.
W. Thomas, mother of Mrs.
Giddings and Miss Thomas
Mr. Giddings left last night for
Gilmer, where he is buying
cotton this season. Mrs. Gid-
dings and little sons will leave
Tuesday for Gilmer to join Mr.
Giddings and spend the re-
mainder of the cotton season
there with her father. Rev.
S, W. Thomas. Miss Thomas
will leave tonight for Dallas,
where she is teaching at S.MU.
There were 8.Ml bales of
cotton ginned in Washington
County from the crop of 1925
prior to Oct. 18. 1925 as com-
pared with 22,668 bales ginned
in Oct. 18, 1924, reports Julius
E. Gajeske.
While driving on Alamo
Avenue Sunday afternoon Mrs.
Carey ran into the sidewalk
at the First National Bank than
crashed into the marble base
of the show window at the
Brenham Pharmacy, a large
hole being broken. The damage
is said to be covered by in-
surance. Mrs. Harrison’s
brakes were not working well
and failed to hold, thus causing
the accident Noone was hurt.
three or
current i
Q Canptom’s Pictured Encyclopedia
r.pm
party and its leftist sympathiz-
ers to seize power, the question
is asked with even
A , WASHINGTON—(NEA)
A month hence, some college and other youthful demon-
strators again will be manning the anti-Viet Nam war ram-
parts across the nation. Most likely they will provide fresh
comfort for the warmakers in Hanoi and Peking.
We are told by some observers that Red leaders in these
Asian capitals are too realistic to be affected by the protests
of a tiny minority of U.S. youth, that they are far more
influenced by the tangible buildup of U.S. forces in the battle
area.
) But it is a serious question whether realism does in fact
have a very hard grip on Peking and Hanot. Green in their
memory is the French example, wherein noisy protests in
Paris and other home cities helped pressure the weary
French into getting out of the Indochina war.
A trip by air begins and ends
with a trip on the ground. Time
spent on the ground is a sub-
stantial part of ths trip: it not
infrequently happens that a
traveler spends more time get-
ting to and from the airport
than he does in the air.
The development of modern
expresswaya has been a great
boon to the air traveler. Such
expressways not only reduce
the time spent in traveling be-
I tween the airport and the down-
town center; they also make the
time of the trip more predict-
able because serious traffic jams
are much less frequent on con-
trolled access expressways.
When the Dulles International
Airport was built, near Wash-
ington, a four-lane controlled
access road was built for the
sole purpose of connecting the
airport with the Interstate Sys-
tem. The motorist who gets on
this highway by mistake will
find that the only way to get off
is to go to the airport and turn
around.
Granted that this may be the
best solution in certain special
situations, the best general an-
JOHN T. MUEGGE, Managing Editor
PEGGY WHITE, Advertising Director
CATHY COVEY, Reporter-Photogrzpher
Entered as mnnd ctas. mailer at Pot orfice
Rrenham, Texas under Act of March *8, 1879
CORPORATE OfFICERS —W.N Blanton, Sr
Chairman of the Board Ben r Blanton, Pm-
. . , tin, 4 1945 - Carmine .
News. Dr. and Mrs. A. C. Mil-
ler accompanied by Mn. Henry
.Hoile and son of Astin spent *
the weekend in the home of
Mrs. B K nolle in Industry.
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Doleshal
and son who spent the past
weekend In Austin and Lam-
pasas arrived here on Sunday
for a visit in. the C. F. Wer-
chan home
Mr. and Mrs. Barney Eilers
of Houston are spending his
vacation here in the home of
Mrs. W. O. Neumann
Chappell Hill News. Mn J.
R. Routt has returned from a
visit to her daughter. Mrs
L O. Crockett in Port Arthur.
Mrs. J. E. Routt and little
daughters, Marilyn and Rosana
of Houston are guests of Mr.
and Mrs. E. O. Routt.
Two soldiers. CpI. Edgar
Lentz and Pct. Gus Lentz, at
home on furloughs. were honor-
ed with a barbecue supper
Thursday. Oct. 25 given by
their parents, Mr, and Mrs.
Fritz Lentz at their home
Miss Dot Lindsey is a patient
at St. Francis Hospital, where
she is rapidly recuperating
after a major operation Her
condition is reported very
satisfactory.
1 gram is a part of the Federal
government’s overall effort to
bring about the orderly develop-
ment of a comprehensive, eco-
nomical and efficient transporta-
tion system. The various modes
of transportation should com-
plement each other, so that the
public will be able to take ad-
vantage of all modes.
With thia jn mind, the Con-
gress, in 1 962, enacted a require-
ment that highway projects in
metropolitan areaa of more than
50,000 population be developed
in conformance with a compre-
hensive, continuing transporta-
tion planning process covering
all modes of transporttion.
Clearly, the access-to-airport
problem is one which should be
taken into account in the plan-
ning process.
The Commerce Department’s
Bureau of Public Roads, work-
ing with the State highway de-
partments, is now engaged in a
study to determine the future
Federal-aid highway needs of
our country in the poet-1971
period.
It would be pertinent to this
study to consider the relation-
nity, and army units unceremo-
niously break into and search
installations of the Red Chinese
Embassy.
And from Peking comes a
heated protest.
Seal ana Treasurer; Carolyn T Blanton, Vice-
Preaident ana Bscr stary.
Copyright IBM by The Brennam Banner-Prem, lac , u rights reserved
A WELL-KNOWN DEMOCRAT, not a public officeholder,
says U.S. students’ anti-draft rallies "must be as heartening
to the Communists in Abia as (isolationist) America Hr2
rallies were,to Hitler’’ in the years before U.S. entry into
He goes an:
. "Fhe probable effect of the demonstrators’ efforts win
simply be to prolong the war, to encourage Hanoi to hangar
and shoot a few more Marines . . . The fellow who goes out
to demonstrate may be digging the grave of the guy who sits
next to him in class ...
"It is these people, therefore, who are the real war party
in this country.” *
Editor's Note: The more than
200,000 students in Texas insti-
tutions of higher learning face
increasingly more competition
Ps enrollments rise. The main
deficiencies of incoming fresh-
men was discussed by college
officiais in a poll made avail-
able to United Press Interna-
tional.
access is to make sure that
major airports are served by
EVEN MORE NONSENSE in this vein was heard from
Hanoi radio.
We have little evidence to suggest that reason governs
Hanoi and Peking. They see well enough the rising nmbers
of US. soldiers in the battle zones. But distant America__
and its true resolves in this war—are a filmy fabric of the
Reds' own making. They behave still as if Um fantasy ww
real. And some young Americans seem bent on helping tbem
hold to this distorted view, even at a»hat serial cots in the
lives of other young Americans.
public schools "and the -cor-
responding lack of individual,
detailed attention by the teach-
err to the matter of expository
writing ”
In that connection the direc-
tor of admissions at Trinity
■y United Press International
Student! entering Texas col-
leges this fall again showed a
weakness in the written and ।
spoken word, according to a
poll ef 15 top officials of both
public and private universities.
Better teaching-of high school
which would
that students keep coming to
their school* with inadequate
communication skills.
Segal posed this question to
seen no
, \ FASudtfa"
J 9>CCe:,
L W. PRENTISS, Executive Vice President
AMERICAN ROAD BUILDERS ASSOCIATION
000 grant and the public schools
a $180,000 grant tn prepare pov-
erty-stricken children for
school. The sisters at Ursuline
gave the children a hot meal and
the public schools sandwiches.
openly .* suspicious
Deputy Premier
(77
-0
Water West. be.
"frequent essays of
four paragraphs on
although the
a handsome and substantial
bridge over Wolf creek; about
—telve.miles .north of the city
Con on. The market was dull
and irregular on Friday 8 3-4
cents was paid for good middl-
ing
Mr Low’s new building, cor-
ner Sandy and St. Charles
streets, is to be constructed of
Houston brick. which are now
arriving by the car load
The public road between
Brenham and Washington is
sadly in. need of repairs as
soon as the winter rains set in
it will be almost impassable
for loaded wagons.
Prof. T. J Girardeau, of
Houston paid the Banner a
plea ant visit on Friday, Prof.
G. is a thorough journalist and
has done much to advance the
interests of our growing state
with his pen Although not now
connected with the press of the
state, he has our best wishes
for his success in any calling he
mav engage in
The dengue fever still holds
its own convalescents come
out every day and report their
experience, while new pat-
ients are taken down in some
cases there has been second
attacks and those who have
had the second dose are more
unfavorably impressed with the
disease than they were the
first time
- University,
lieves that
Minister Subandrio.
the academic
which specific
find incoming
new evidence
cause him to
[MeadlanesdrYesteryear
For years Sukarno successful-
ly maintained a balance be- tually know.
architect of Sukarno’s close ties
with Red China and long
regarded as a possible sucees
sor to Sukarno.
On the political front, Sukar
no closets himself with the Red
Chinese ambassador and ex-
changes promises of enduring
friendship.
But in the streets, demonstra-
tors stuck the Chinese commu-
By PHIL NEWSOM
UPI Foreign News Analyst
As the ravages of a kidney
ailment became more apparent
in the puffy face and limping
gait of Indonesia’s life-time
- omnce Manager and Rookkeepe
„Clasinea Aserkting a curculatien
...... .._____ Proofreader, Wire Newe
Teletvpenetter Operator
................... Teletypegetter Operator
_____________________ . Women's News
_____ -Adverusng Mtake-Up
----- Anaiatant Aavertlain Make-Lp
......—______ Pressman, Stereotyper
___________ ......Ansintant Stereotyper
---------------------- Operator
_______ .1........ viity Printer
* WASHINGTON COLUMN ★
— " ----
Labels Draft Protesters
'Real War Party7 in U.S.
BY BRUCE BIOSSAT
Washington Correspondent
Newspaper Enterprise Assn.
Sa 170
♦ • e
. $ Id
DEPOT RAT TRAPS —A
commuter checks the table
manners of a few of the
cats living on the lower
level of New York's Grand
Central station. Some 50
cats and kittens roam the
station keeping it free of
rats and mice. Their diet is
supplemented by daily
rations of cat food contrib-
uted by workmen and one
commuter.
Human Projects
Possibly the most effective
use of federal money has been
in human projects
The county received a $153,000
Youth Corps Grant Before that
Laredo's schools got a $30,000
grant that provided students
with jobs that enabled them to
avoid oecoming aropouts:
Som : worked in the corpora-
tion court offices. For the first
time, alf parking tickets w e r e
filed and traffic law violators
began to get notices to appear
in court.
Uruline academy got an $82,-
English and encouragement
from parents to read more at
home were prescribed.
Other deficiencies in mathe-
matics and science were noted
in the survey conducted by edi-
tor D. R. Segal of the Rio
Grande Valley Freedom News-
papers group But the presi-
dents and chancellors of almost
every major institution of high-
er learning in the state stressed
HKq-
orLF*P*ANAAss —
MR8 NELDA HYATT ..........
iig*“aroNza
MURIEL ------------
EMER„KAFCHHA-------
MFKua
RATMON BRNNKMEYER ...
I
leaders: "In
fields do you
freshmen most
army N is
of First
frequency.
For whatever else
tween the army and the three-
million - strong Communist par-
ty. That balance now has been
upset and even Sukarno’s
undoubted influence may not be
.able to prevent civil war.
*
rather than a few long essays
would also help." .
Remedial measures should
come before the student enters
college according to vice chan-
cellor Norman Hackerman of
the University of Texas Texas
offers a non-< redit course jn
rapid reading
President J, C Matthews of
North Texas State says that
"speed in reading is important,
but concentration of knowing
what one is reading is more
important "
in Mexico, where prices are
lower, a poor family can live
more comfortably in* taredo
than in the Midwest
Two Meals Daily
But even so, many families
live in two rooms— and Mexi
can-American—famihes, tend to
be big—eat only two meals a
day of the commonest food and
wear the shabbiest clothes.
Wages are low The un-
employment rate in Web Coun-
ty, of which Laredo is the
county seat, is the highest in
’Texas and compared with the
highest rates over the rest of
the Southwest.
In short, .Laredo culd well
have been the place govern-
ment economic experts had in
mind when they wrote the anti-
poverty program,
in the past two-and-a-half
years, Laredo has gotten more
than $5 5 million in various
kinds of government aid and
put up about $2 million of its
own in an effort to improve
itself and provide jobs for its
people.
One prominent citizen who
has been looking hard at the
poverty program as a means
of helping Laredo's people be-
lieves that the city could get
$6.5 million a year under the
enti-poverty program if it ap-
plied for everything to which it
is entitled
• Bears Burden
"As a community, Laredo
bear* a burden of national re-
sponsibility in assimilating im
migrants," says Mayor J, C.
Martin Jr. 'We are proud of
emerged from the violence and
contusion of the last 30 days
has come the clear proof that
Sukarno, as he has since the
days of the rebellion against
Dutch colonial rule, remains
the pivotal political figure in
Indonesia
' Even though Indonesia seems
teetering on the edge of violent
civil war, the description still is
valid.
For, although the right-wing
400,000 man army pursues its
drive to eliminate the Commu-
nists as a political force in
defiance of Sukarnos orders, it
has no political base of its own
and it knows it needs Sukarno
as a symbol to hold together
the 2,000 islands that make up
the Indonesian republic.
As for the Communists, even
though currently in retreat
they know it is upon Sukarno
they must depend if they are to
make a political omeback:
. Ong Major Mystery
About the ill-fated coup, there
remains contradictions and al
least one major mystery.
Even though the army is
holding under arrest or has
executed scores of minor
Communist functionaries, not
one maior Communist leader
has been arrested.
One small mystery is the
current whereabouts of party
leader D. N. Aidit.
Within the government, not
DALLAS ‘(UPl—Allen John-
son 39. was fined $100 and giv-
en a suspended 60 day sentence
m federal cqurt Tuesday on a
charge, of possessing moonshine
whisky
But his lawyer, A J Piranio.
told Judge T Whitfield David-
son his client kept the half-gal-
lon of corn whisky "for his own
use only because he did not
like the taste of bottled -in-bond
alcohol.
■ "It doesn’t give me a head-
ache like store bought whisky
does." Johnson said of his
moonshme.
- gdga,m.
' ,ii.f i - - a
A
gde2
THE ASSUMPTON of some Americans that we are desling
seems poorly supported by the evidence. Like and.Pektin
tarians, they tend to be entrsneed by their own propaganda
fantasies.
Four days after the Oct. 15-16 rash of anti-draft demonstra-
tions, Hanoi radio broadcast an editorial from the Hanoi
daily, Nhan Dan, which read in part:
"The appeal of the U.S. Viet Day Committee to organize the
international days of protest against the U.S, aggressive war
in Viet Nam has been turned into the American people’s
sweeping storms of hatred for the Johnson clique in the
United States... 1
"The noble attitude of David J. Miller, who burned his
draft card before tens of thousands of demonstrators, testified
to the iron will of large numbers of American youths who are
resolved not to go and die uselessly for the selfish interests at
the U.S. magnates.”
The evening stars af Mars, J
Venus and Saturn.
On thia day in history.
In 1842, Abraham Lincoln, 33.
married Mary Todd in Spring-
field. 111.
In 1918, the Austrian and 1
Hungarian armies accepted
World War I truce terms
dictated by the Allies.
In 1931, the League of
Nations cited Japan for willful
aggression in Manchuria.
A thought for
the day—American author Will
Durant said: "The health of
nations is more important than
the wealth of nations ”
By PRESTON McGRAW
United Press Imternational
LAREDO, Tex. (UPI)- La
redo, a pleasant border city
where many front yards have
palm trees and two staides of
bougainvillae, also has the rep-
utation of being the pool e--i
city in the United States
Government experts think
that real poverty begins when
income drops below $3 000 a
year for a family of about 2 2
persons. Ther averageincom in
that relate to health and edu-
cation. . .
Our people must have a
basic education and they must
iearn tades and they must
have the means io make a bet-
ter life fo themselves," Kazen
says.—— ------;--—----;———— ■
After Conventions
One of the biggest things re-
< ently in the life of Laredo and
its 70,000 residents was the
opening of a $12 million civic
tenter — auditorium.. display
rooms and Olympic-sized swim-
nong pool— that is expected to
bring conventions to the city.
Laredo's weather is. warm all
winter and it offers the attrac-
tion of visits to Nuevo Laredo
<nd other points across the bor-
cer in Mexico.
The government footed the
bill for about half of the cost
of th ■ new civic < enter and the
city put up the rest The swim-
ming pool was the first in the
city.
Li redo has gotten loans and
grants from the government to
plan projects, to pave streets
and to coordinate projects and
to improve its sewerage sys-
t( in
BEN F. BLANTON
D. THAT THE INVENTOR OF
Dle THE FRST PRACTICAL
SEWING MACHINE.WACTER
HUjffCl72?-l959)WAS
IN A SENSE RESPONSIBLE
fel FOR ARsRe
uegaf228CR0S.
PK BECAUSE HE
AlSO INVENTED
b THE LOWLY
r SAFETY PnaK.
■
59
d5
our success in this area, but as
a community we just do not
have the .sustaining finances to
effectively attack some of our
.problems.
“The federal assistance is
helping us help our people re
gamn,mhedigmity tosT by uncm-
ploymer t, undereduecation and
ihat forces that make them
seek employment n the fields
north of here and with the con-
ditions so often associated with,
thesej’ . ..
J Slate Sen. Abraham Kazen
Jr. says he is particularly in-
terested in -federal programs
asked question was "after
Sukarno, what?”
Just over a month since the
abortive Sept. 30 attempt by
Indonesia's Communist PKI
untWeftt write w hat they ac*
Hi attributes this
partially to heavy teaching
loads of the English teachers in
‘‘g •
"hom • ---
change or soften his criticism
of U.$. intervention in the Dom-
t inican Republic.
The chairman of the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee
told a meeting of the Sigma
Delta Chi journalism fraternity
Wednesday night that he still
felt the administration over-
CIRCULATION- Agenta-w. H. Musks. Henry Dreschel, >.r» Mu-
tin Webrock, Robert Ray l o—ch. Rufat Agent Meproe Eckermann
CORRESPONDENT- Miss Huas Stmemoner, ‘ashtng10u; Mn. Thelma
Rou. Crecbett. chappen Hui; Judith Jater. B: ion; Mm. G H Wike,
Lon Potnt-Zlnsvi, Mm. Fran Bednar, Ltum: Mrs Steve Kaman,
Weley: x LZwernemanh. Carminet MUton Klin, Chandan HIM,
lire. Etta Sterling, Somerville: Win Weeren, Burton. Caesar "Dutch" Hahn
Independence; Mies June Micke, Round Top: Mn H W Smith. Lyons
Cerolyn Vsuphen, Austin and Johnson City Mn. Jennie King Dime Box
4ally nowaraper January 1, 16. tor 41 yeare by J G Rankn;
dean ot Texas journalism, who srao one or the founders of the Tease
Prese Anvoctaton in 1800. President in 1898 Published every afternoon
■impt Saturday and Sunday at 223 Seat Main Street Brenham, Teses Tele-
phene cr a-zaga ____________ _________
SCaaCRTPTIOt. Rans: Delivered to the Moiety sorrier in Brenham”
ene month. 91.25; one year lit.SO. By mail to Wahington and adjoining
ounties 1.00 per year (Austin, Brazor, Buriemon, Colorado Fayette, Gnmes,
Lee and WaUer ‘counties): to other section ia Texas $12.00 per year, out of
Tua 315.00 per year. All subscriptona payable in advance Coplee that are
undelivered, changes ot addreea, and new subscription order should be ad.
4rensedtoths3ahner-Presa,P.o.Boxsas, Brenham, Texas, 77833.
noE: Any erroneous reneetion upon the ehnracter, standing or ceputa-
toe o nuy perpn, firm er corporation appearing la the columna of the
Hanner-Prems wil be gladly and prompt iv corrected when the article in
pueetton is called to the attention of the zanagement
THX AMERICAS CRKED
by William Tyler Page
I benteve in the United States of America as a government of the
people, by the people. lor the people, whose just powers sre derived from
the consent of the governed; a democracy in a republic: a sovereign nation
dr assay sovereign states: a perfect union, one and inseparebie, etabliahed i
HPOA thone principies of freedom, equaiity, justice, and humanity for
Walch _ s merlcan patrlots sacnriced their lues and fortune- .
I theretore believe it is any duty to my country to love it, to support
the cons tltuuon to obryita laws: to respeet its fag and to defend it
egainst all enemies
deficient, and what measures
would you suggest to remedy
them’’
Motivation Needed
The resulting advice to par-
ents was, in brim.that their
son or daughterMb become
college drop-outs" he hasn’t
the ability to ‘communicate easi-
ly by the spoken: and written
word, If he hasn't learned to
study hard and fast. If he
hasn't some strong motivation
to buck the wall.
Chancellor J. M Moudy of
Texas Christian University
summed up the views of most
with Judgment that "the most
serious, deficiency lies in tom
munications skills—abilities to
read with comprehension, hear
with comprehension, speak and
write clearly and articulated."
The president—otSutRes*-
State College, Dr. Norman Me:
Neil, suggests the remedy of
“more time (in high school)
teaching grammar, punctuation,
and sentence structure of the
English language.”
At Southwestern University,
according to president Durwood
Fleming, ‘many incoming stu-
dents read so slowly and im-
perfec tly . that they nave diffi-
culty keeping up with the quan-
tity of college reading
And Dr Joseph Schnitzer o‛
the University of Houston adds
thai ’the student who doesn't
like to read is likely to fail in
college ” “
Writing Deficiency
Writing is also vital, accord-
ing to president A. B Temple-
ton of Sam Houston State Col-
lege. who"finds many students
A major mystery of the coup
that failed is how much or little
Sukarno may have known about
it in advance. i
On Sept 30, on grounds of
illness he suddenly left a
platform where he had been
addressing technical students
From then until he appeared at
Bogor Palace on the night of
Oct. 1, his whereabouts were
unknown. In Ine meantime, the
plotters had killed six of
Indonesia’s eight leading gener-
als.
As the army pursues its anti-
communist ' campaign, it is
joined by long - suppressed politi-
tical parties and by Moslem
and Christian youths. Fighting
breaks out in central Java and
in northern Sumatra
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Blanton, Ben F. & Muegge, John T. Brenham Banner-Press (Brenham, Tex.), Vol. 100, No. 220, Ed. 1 Thursday, November 4, 1965, newspaper, November 4, 1965; Brenham, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1578503/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Nancy Carol Roberts Memorial Library.