The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 354, Ed. 2 Monday, June 16, 1952 Page: 1 of 26
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i her?" In-
VOL. LXXI, NO. 353
"WITHOUT OR WI TH OFFENSE TO FRIENDS OR FOES WE SKETCH YOUR WORLD EXACTLY AS IT GOES"—Byron
Associated Press (AP)
ABILENE, TEXAS, MONDAY EVENING, JUNE 16, 1952 —TWENTY PAGES IN TWO SECTIONS
KOREA, INDOCHINA, GERMANY
Big 3 Meet; Gromyko's Shift
May Be Effort to Split West
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WASHINGTON ( - Under the
threat of a possible new Russian
drive to split the West, United
States officials start today a series
of talks with British and French
representatives on problems di-
viding the three powers.
Korea, Indochina and Germany
are high on the list.
And the talks get added urgency
from the week-end disclosure that
Moscow is assigning its chief dep-
uty foreign minister. Andrei Gro-
myko, to be ambassador to
London.
This looks to some officials like
a major new Russian move in the
cold war—and, more than likely,
one aimed at disrupting the U.S.-
British-French alliance.
FRANCE WANTS MONEY
Against this background, the Big
Three Powers will discuss, among
other things:
t. France's desire for increased
American help in carrying on its
biltion-dollar-a-year war in Indo-
china. This was expected to be the
main theme of conferences to be
held by Jean LeTourneau, French
minister for relations with the
Indochinese States, who had an
appointment with Secretary of
State Acheson today. The French-
man also is seeking to learn from
State and Defense Department of-
ficials how much assistance the
United States will give in case
of a massive Chinese Communist ican officials next week end. Alex
attack on Indochina
2. The conduct of Korean truce
negotiations and the handling of
Communist prisoners of war.
These matters are expected to be
taken up by the British defense
minister. Lord Alexander, who is
expected here to see Defense Sec-
retary Lovett and other top Ameri-
ander is in Korea for a personal
look at the situation. There has
ANDREI GROMYKO
. , .seeks Western split?
EVENING
FINAL
PRICE DAILY Sc, SUNDAY 10c
irmen Down
Psstor.
er KRBC
Victory”
. T. Gran-
services.
Ihe Home
I.”
Mad Pris-
Lost.”
open air.
lurch.
ghty Gos-
night.
attend.
East German
Riots Halted
UDY
s to the
ry!" Yoe
dint and
ys, “I’m
ince and
ch she’ll
me she’ll
ring her
.oil until
oo much
I tale is
n’t mean
ike Bible
-going is
into her
in habits
BONN, Germany June 16 IB—
Five thousand German Communist
police appeared today to have
stamped out a wildfire of revolt in
more than a dozen Soviet zone vil-
lages where East Germans protest-
ed their eviction from the Com-
munist frontier security belt.
The fights between police and vil-
lagers—at times reaching the pro-
portions of pitched battles-have
been going on for five days. Scores
have been arrested. More than 30
casualties have been reported.
Police riot squads were reported
dispatched by the Communists to at
least 16 villages along security
belt, as desperate civilians resisted
being forcibly moved out ruthlessly
to make way for the new frontier
no-man's land. The villagers also
protested a Communist police hunt
for “undesirables”' in the border
area.
The resistance centered in the
border state of Thuringia. In Kal-
tennordheim. 1,000 villagers tried
to free two families of "political
unrellables” from the village jail.
They clashed with 300 Red police
reinforcements.
At Streudorf angry farmers arm-
ed themselves with axes and
ed before riot squads rushed in and
quelled the revolt.
In many other incidents, police
were reported ambushed or attack-
ed openly. Patrol cars were smash-
ed and burned. In some places, en-
tire villages joined in the resist-
ance. But at present, police rein-
forcements appeared to have the
situation under temporary control.
The East German Communist
government began a radio and
newspaper propaganda campaign to
justify its police measures as need-
ed to "save democracy and our re-
public.”
At the same time the East Zone
Communist bosses were reported
sending a new wave of spies and
agitators into West Germany to
whip up resentment against rearm-
ing for Western defense.
Allied officials said the Reds took
advantage of the flight of thous-
ands of refugees from the Soviet
zone to step up infiltration of Com-
munist agents in the West. The of-
ficials outlined this picture:
Since the East German govern-
ment plunged into a big armament
program last month, the flood of
refugees pouring into West Ger-
many has more than doubled. The
Communists filter into refugee
been growing criticism in Britain
of the way the Korean sector of
the struggle with communism is
being run, and the feeling has been
voiced that if Britain had had a
larger role it might have been run
better.
BIG 4 TALKS?
3. How soon and under what
conditions the Western Powers
should offer to meet with Russia
to discuss German issues. These
are the key questions to be an-
swered in the preparation here,
beginning early this week, of a new
move to Moscow on German uni-
fication and peace. The Russians
have been pressing for talks. The
Western Powers have taken the
position that the Reds must first
agree to a nation-wide political
survey of Germany. Recently, how-
ever, there have been indications
the French and perhaps the British
thought a meeting of Big Four of-
ficials might be held anyway
4. A review of the whole range
of Allied difficulties, undoubtedly
including the Korean, Russian-
German and Indochinese as well
as other problems. This is expected
to be held by the British. French
and American foreign ministers
when Acheson goes to London in
little more than a week.
Western uneasiness developed
quickly over the London assign-
ment of Gromyko, one-time Soviet
envoy to Washington.
Officials here said this placed a
Soviet diplomat of more than ordi-
nary prestige and influence in a
key Western European capital.
They thought it unlikely the Rus-
sians would make such a* move
simply as part of a routine re-
shuffling.
While it was possible Gromyko
was simply being booted out of the
Foreign Office, the importance of
the assignment and the state of
political relationships among the
Western Allies at this time made
it seem that he was hand-picked
for an important task.
Swedish Search Plane
Ike Enters
Fight; May
Go Farther
By JACK BELL
WASHINGTON Wn—Gen. Dwight
D. Eisenhower is edging slowly
into the role of a fighting candi-
date. He and Sen. Robert A. Taft
may yet be slugging it out toe-to-
toe for the Republican presiden-
tial nomination.
Two weeks of civilian campaign-
ing appear to have drawn the five-
star general much farther into the
active battle for the nomination
than he expected when he first
returned from Europe. ‘
Some of Eisenhower's associates
are predicting that before the end
of another week he will abandon
his already strained “no personal-
ities" rule and will be striking out
directly at Taft, his chief rival.
Already, his aides say, the gen-
eral came closer in a Saturday
night speech in Detroit than ever
before to becoming the battling
candidate they want to see in ac-
tion.
‘NO-DEAL’
camps set up inside West Germany
and pretend to be fleeing persecu-
tion. Some are nabbed by watchful
scythes and tried to beat off a po-
lice patrol bent on evicting eight
families and deporting them to the
interior. Three police were wound- screening Others get through.
WITH THE GOODS
Obliging Bootleggers
Come to Cop for Arrest
on
ces
R’
is been
services
ore be-
in the
e who
FOR
★
Pastor
His
This bootlegger’s delivery back-
fired.
When City Policeman E. L.
Odell. 441 Amarillo St., answered
a knock at his door Sunday night
a man standing on the porch told
him. "I’ve got what you ordered
A fifth of gin."
Odell told him he hadn't ordered
anything. Then startled his caller
with this information: "I'm a po-
lice officer and you're under ar-
rest." The policeman then called
the station and when Patrolmen
Jesse James and B. F Fillmon
arrived they opened the paper
sack the man was holding and
found — a bottle of gin
"How'd you get here?" they
asked the bewildered caller. He
told them "in that car outside
there.”
The officers went out to the car
and found a man sitting behind
the wheel. They asked him if he
had brought a man to 441 Ama-
rillo St. He told them he had: so
they searched the car
They found two fifths of gin.
three fifths of whisky three plots
THE WEATHER
of whisky and six cases of beer.
Both men were placed in city
jail for the night. Charges were
to be filed today. A previous
charge of bootlegging is pending
against each man now.
Gls Crush
Red Attack
SEOUL, Korea (—Infantrymen
of the U. S. 45th Division today
smashed an artillery - supported
Chinese attack on a hill formation
on the Western Front. The five-
day-old battle has cost the Reds
more than 1.000 casualties.
The reinforced Americans
knocked back about 750 Chinese in
a bitter seven-hour scrap. The
Reds' objective was the bottom
part of a T-shaped bill west of
Chorwon. U. S. troops hold three
knobs of the hill.
Fighting also continued at a
stepped-up pace at other friction
spots on the 155-mile front. There
were brisk clashes Sunday near
Panmunjom, Korangpo and Yon-
chon in the West, around Kumhwa,
Kimsong and the Pukhan River in
the center, and near the Punch
Bowl in the East.
U. S. Eighth Army staff officers
have offered no explanation of the
stepped-up fighting, the toughest
of the year.
American Sabre Jet pilots re-
ported three Communist jets de-
stroyed and one damaged in two
fights Sunday south of the Manchu-
rian border.
Second Lt James Low of Sausa-
lito, Calif., only six months out of
pilot school, shot down one and be-
came America's 17th jet ace with
a total of five MIG kills. He has
been in Korea only six weeks.
In that speech Eisenhower la-
beled himself a "no-deal” candi-
date-a thrust at Taft’s maneuvers
to control the machinery of the
GOP convention opening in Chi-
cago July 7.
Having kissed babies, ridden
bareheaded in parades, signed
autographs and accepted carved
wooden elephants. Eisenhower has
come a long way from the attitude
he expressed in Europe. There he
said if the American people wanted
him they knew where to find him.
The next step, some of his ad-
visers say, will be to join per-
sonally in the hue and cry his
campaign managers have raised
about what they call the theft of
delegates by the Taft forces in
Texas and other states
The general hadn’t got that far
in a Detroit news conference yes-
terday. He said all he knew about
this was what he read in the
papers.
TAFT FAVORS FIGHT
Taft backers generally will wel-
come a knock-down fight with Ei-
senhower. believing the Ohio sen-
ator is more adept at that kind of
politics than the general.
Compared with the smooth op-
eration of Taft's well-trained po-
litical aides, the Eisenhower cam-
paign still bears the aura of an
amateur performance.
Eisenhower himself makes it
plain he isn't used to doing many
of the things now required of him
and doesn't like some of them. He
regards It as a chore to have to
make speeches, particularly those
with prepared texts The general
has found he isn't his own boss
any more.
Although he has been briefed ex-
tensively since his return, he still
sn't familiar with political details.
He didn’t know, for instance, that
Secretary of Defense Lovett and
John J. McCloy, high commission-
er in Germany, are Republicans.
MYSTERY “JEEP” OF COMPOUND 76 — A paratrooper
of the U S. 187th Regimental Combat Team examines the
mystery “jeep” of notorious Compound 76, on Koje Island.
Before demolition of the compound by UN forces, reports
had been received that the Red POw's had, among other
luxuries, a jeep. The vehicle turned out to be a dummy, made
of wood and paper.
DRIVES JEEP IN COMPOUND
Boatner Plans Work,
Play for Koje Reds
KOJE ISLAND. Korea (—The
U. S. Eighth Army plans an exten-
sive work-and-play program for
Communist prisoners of war on
Koje once the POWs recognize Al-
lied authority completely.
Brig. Gen. Haydon L. Boatner,
Koje commander, hopes to start
the program soon after he finishes
splitting the present large, unruly
compounds into small units.
The dispersal operations proba-
bly will be completed within a
week.
Field Marshal Lord Alexander.
Britain's minister of defense, in-
spected the POW stockades today.
He toured the island in a Jeep
driven by Boatner.
Alexander was accompanied by
Gen. James A. Van Fleet, U. S.
Eighth Army commander, and a
party of leading military and dip-
lomatic figures.
COMPOUND 76
The group drove through the ru-
ins of Compound 76 where more
than 6,000 prisoners fought desper
ately to prevent being broken up
into small units. Boatner told Alex-
ander it was "a bell of a fight.”
Alexander made no public state-
ment while on Koje.
But Selwyn Lloyd, British minis-
ter of state for foreign affairs,
said "obviously the situation is be-
ing cleared up very fast and a
great deal of good work is being
done.”
Alexander's party returned to
the Korean mainland.
Once he has uncontested control
over the prisoners, Boatner plans
to use POW labor on road construc-
tion and other engineering proj-
ects. He also plans to expand ath-
letic and other recreational facili-
ties inside compounds. Sports
equipment has been ordered.
FIRM POLICY
No such work projects have ex-
isted on Koje in its 18 months as a
prisoner island.
NO EDUCATION
There will be no effort to rein-
troduce the education program
that was abandoned last April be-
cause of prisoner indifference.
Camp officials say that any ef-
fort to start it up again would "not
be appropriate now.”
Perhaps the most ambitious part
of the new, long range program
will be the athletic side.
It is planned to expand facilities
and provide equipment for track
meets, soccer, volley ball and oth-
er sports allowing for mass par.
ticipation.
It is also expected that recrea-
tional facilities will include stagea
in each compound for plays, musi-
cal entertainment, dance perfor-
mances and singing. Prior to the
current breakup of the large com-
pounds. there was a stage in each
compound.
ry age.
not juet
that is
every
20th. It
tion of
the old
8:45
ch
litioned
Eighth Army officers stress that
there will be no relaxation of the
new firm policy in handling POWs.
The basic policy governing op-
I eration of Koje prison camps is
strict adherence to the Geneva
Convention.
Of Koje’s present POW popula-
I tion of 80.000, some 30,000 will be
moved soon to other islands off
South Korea.
Remaining POWs will be set to
work building roads, drainage
ditches, fences and camp build-
ings.
Camp officials declined to say
whether prisoners would be paid
for such work, as they were in
« World War II.
COWBOYS NEED
SIGNAL LIGHTS
REFUGIO, June 16 (—Down
on the Fagan Ranch, near here,
they're thinking about install-
Ing traffic lights.
Reason is that there waa a
bad horse wreck there Satur-
day night, in which two horses
were shaken up and two men
badly injured.
Freddie Fagan, 33, received
a concussion which left him
unconscious for an hour Ranch
Hand Domingo Perez. 35, got a
fractured ankle. Both were still
In Refugio County Hospital to-
day. uncomfortable but recover-
ing.
Rounding up calves for a rop-
ing session at ranch headquar-
ters they collided at full speed
while coming ’round a clump
of mesquite trees from opposite
sides.
ABILENE AND VICINITY: Fair and
not today, tonight and Tuesday. Windy
today and tonight High temperature to-
day 103, low tonight 75. high Tuesday
RLPAND SOUTH CENTRAL TEXAS-
Clear to partly cloudy Monday afternoon
and night ana Tuesday with scattered
thunderstorms northwest portion Monday
night, not much change in temperature,
moderate southerly winds on the coast.
NORTH CENTRAL TEXAS: Clear to
partly cloudy Monday afternoon and night
and Tuesday with widely scattered
thunderstorms Monday afternoon: not
quite so warm west and north portions
“WESI TEXAS: Clear to party cloudy
Monday. Monday night and Tuesday with
widely seattered thundershowers la the
Panhandle late Monday or Monday night.
Not an warm in the Panhandle Monday
and TEMPERATURES
Sunday P. M. Monday AM
: 3 = t #
Wosee........3:30 ............C
WIN SILVER BEAVERS - J. E. Burnam, left, of Coleman, and Roy Arledge. right, of
Stamford, are shown with their wives Sunday afternoon as they received Silver Beaver
awards, given by the Chisholm Trail Boy Sco ut Council, in ceremonies at Camp Tonkawa.
Burnam, a Coleman businessman, is current! y serving as camp director at Tonkawa. He has
been connected with scouting for the past 27 years Arledge, a Stamford businessman, is
the national council representative, and has been connected with scouting for the past
„ 10 years. Burnam is scoutmaster of Troop 31, sponsored by the Coleman First Baptist
""" * “ em" Church. (Staff Photo by Clint Kapus)
re for * hours
Abileniansto
PollsTuesday
Judges in Abilene's Municipal
election Tuesday are not expect-
ing a heavy turn-out at the polls.
Only three voting stations will be
set up
The election has been called to
fill the vacancy of the City Com-
mission. Place No. 2. created by
the resignation of Col. C. E. Gat-
lin
Only candidate for the post is
John Womble, former Abilene
Chamber of Commerce manager.
Gatlin has moved to Washing-
ton, D. C., where be holds a key
civil defense Job.
City Secretary Lila Fern Mar
tin said Monday that voting sta-
tions will be set up at the South
Fifth and Butternut St. Fire Sta-
tion, the Woman's Building at Fair
Park, YMCA Bldg (N. Second and
Beech St.), and the North 16th and
Orange Bt. Fire Station.
Swedes Protest;
Craft Unarmed
STOCKHOLM, Sweden, June 16, (AP) — Soviet jet fighter
planes shot down an unarmed military search plane off the
coast of Estonia today, the government announced. The sev-
en-man crew was picked up later by a German merchant ship.
Two of the Swedish crew were reported wounded.
SOVIET MANEUVERS
The plane was searching for another Swedish Air Force
plane missing with eight men aboard in the same area, where
the Russians are reported holding vast air and sea maneuvers.
The Swedish government, reflecting the anger of people
in the streets, delivered a strong protest to the Russians.
Soviet Ambassador Constantine
Rodionov was summoned to the
foreign office to receive the proteat
personally from Prime Minister
Tage Erlander, who is also foreign
minister. Crowds In front of the
Soviet embassy jeered Rodionov
as he left and spat Into the em-
bassy compound.
Sweden demanded an Immediate
Investigation and prompt punish-
ment of “those responsible for the
outrage"
HALT ESPIONAGE
Erlander also delivered a second
request to the Russians that they
halt further espionage activity by
their diplomats in Sweden. This
note referred specifically to the
trial which opened here today of
seven Swedes charged with selling
out this nation's entire vital north-
ern defense system to the Rus-
sians.
The Swedish military plane, an
unarmed Catalina, was searching
for a Swedish Air Force transport
missing since Friday. It is feared
that plane also was shot down by
the Russians during their maneuv-
ers. This would be a fate similar
to one met by a U. S. Navy priva-
teer aircraft which disappeared in
the same area two years ago with
10 men aboard.
The Catalina was attacked about
60 miles off the Soviet-held Eston-
ian coast. Swedish planes search-
ing for the missing craft had been
instructed to keep 15 miles off the
Russian-held coast. The Russians
claim 12 miles out as their own
special territory.
SEVERAL ATTACKS
The pilot radioed that his plane
was “hit several times” by bursts
of 20 millimeter cannon from two
Soviet MIG-15 jet fighter planes.
The Swedish air force said It had
reports that the plane was attacked
seven times.
After it was hit the plane tried
to make the Swedish coast some 110
miles away. The plane went down
apparently around 90 miles off the
coast, where the crew was res-
cued by the German merchant
ship.
The German vessel put the men
ashore on the island of Hangoe.
on the southwest tip of Finland
about 60 miles southwest of Hel-
sinki. ,
49th Division Moves
Out to Firing Ranges
NORTH FORT HOOD, June 18
(—Civilian soldiers of the 49th
National Guard Armored Division
moved out to firing ranges today
for training with machine guns,
rifles, carbines and tank weapons.
The National Guardsmen stream-
ed into the big Army installation
nete yesterday for two weeks of
training.
Major General Albert Sidney
Johnston, 49th commander, said he
hoped to start tactical training and
division tests next week.
Heat Due to Hoist
Mercury to 103
Fair, hot and windy.
That's all the weatherman can
promise Abilenians today and to-
night. The mercury is expected to
hit the 103 - degree mark this aft-
ernoon. It probably won't fall be-
low 75 degrees tonight, the weath-
erman added.
Along with the heat today will be
wind. It should subside by Tues-
day.
101 SUNDAY
Yesterday Abilene sweltered in
101 degree heat — a record for the
year. The same kind of weather
prevailed over most of the state.
Searing hot winds In excess of 20
miles per hour blasted across the
Panhandle and South Plains early
Monday. Lubbock, Amarillo, and
Big Spring bore the brunt of the
winds but no dust was reported.
Increased winds, the weather bu-
reau hinted, would surely send the
dust swirling into the air
A 40-year-old Mexican farm la-
borer, Jarramilio Olmos, died Sun-
day night on a farm near Pecos
after collapsing while chopping cot-
ton In the area's 107-degree heat.
The sultry weather sent the mer-
cury sky-rocketing Sunday with
Presidio's 110 degrees the state's
highest. It was 105 at Wink. 104 at
Childrens and Dalhart, 103 at Lub-
Malik Brings
Germ Warfare
Before UN
UNITED NATIONS. N. Y. June
16 (—Russia’s Jacob A Malik
today called a meeting of the
United Nations security council
for Wednesday at 1 p.m. (CST)
to discuss Soviet charges that the
U. N. is carrying on germ warfare
in Korea.
The Soviet Union thus apparently
decided to air its charges of germ
warfare in the Security Council
after falling to obtain any action
in the U. N. Disarmament Com-
mission.
The United States and other U.N.
countries have repeatedly denied
such charges and have in fact chal-
lenged Malik to take such action.
Malik. June chairman of the
11-nation Security Council, also
placed on the agenda of this meet-
ing the issue of new members.
The Great Powers were asked by
the U. N. Assembly in Paris to
reconsider the applications of 14
countries. This step is in response
to that request There has been no
change in the stalemate on new
members.
Malik’s decision to call this meet-
ing recalled his dramatic series
of council meetings in August, 1950.
when the Korean War was the hot
issue.
Nothing was done by the council
except argue, and the council
eventually dropped the Korean
War from its agenda.
Malik startled the world to
March this year with his violent
charges that the United Nations
was waging germ warfare in Korea
and China. The disarmament com-
mission finally voted him out of
order, saying that the commission
was set up to discuss disarma-
ment only.
Malik's term as council ehair-
man ends June 30. He will be
succeeded by Sir Gladwyn Jebb
of Britain
Zweifel Sends
bock and Amarillo and 102 at
Wichita Falls. Mineral Wells and
Midland bad 101 degrees with
most other Sunday temperatures In
the high 90s.
The heat was off to an early
start Monday with El Paso report-
ing 80 degrees at 4:30 a m Other
temperatures at that time Included
78 at secluded Salt Flat, 70 at Gal-
veston, 76 at Austin, Dallas. Fort
Worth, Del Rio: 75 at San Antonio
and Amarillo and 74 at Junction.
Lufkin’s 70 and Beaumont's 71 were
among the lowest pre-dawn tem-
peratures.
The beat, centered in West Texas
Sunday, was due to move eastward
with searing winds and few clouds
today. Temperature* well In excess
of 100 degrees were expected in
the heavily populated Dallas-Fort
Worth area
The only rain reported Sunday
was .02 of an inch at Dalhart. None
was expected today, weathermen
said at dawn although a late fore-
cast had called for thundershowers
In the Panhandle late Monday af-
ternoon and night.
The hot weather brought thous-
ands of Texans to beaches and
swimming pools over the state. At
least three persons drowned over
the week end as they sought relief
from the heat. U
‘Facts’ lo Ike
By Th* Associated Press
The state campaign leader for
Sen. Robert Taft of Ohio, today
wired Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower
what he called an outline of the
situation among Texas Republi-
cans.
Henry Zweifel. of Fort Worth, na-
tional GOP committeeman from
Texas, repeated his previous con-
tentions the general's supporters in
Texas were Democrats and not
bona fide Republicans.
Zweifel also quoted Texas elec-
tion laws which he said left party
contests up to the party's state
executive committee.
Meanwhile, Dallas Eisenhower
backers lashed back at Sen. Taft’s
charge that newspapers and maga-
zines “deliberately" distorted ths
facts of the Texas fight over dele-
gates
Alvin Lane. Texas stale Elsen-
hower leader from Dallas, said Sen-
ator Taft's charge that Democrats
swamped the Texas Republican pri-
maries was "utterly ridiculous."
Lane said the state executive
committee had no right whatsoever
to “disfranchise" the qualified vot-
era of Texas who signed the Re-
publican pledge.
WHAT'S NEWS
ON INSIDE PAGES
CHANGES LOOM-Bio chang-
es ore due in the Justice Deport-
ment as three top lofficials re-
sign. See pope 5-A.
ADMITS SLAYING—Young
AWOL Marine soys he killed
motorist who gove him o lift.
Story on pope 8-A.
GIRLS FAVORED—Itll help
if you're o female if your pool in
life is to be 100 years old. Hol
Boyle talks about it on pope 9-A.
SOX WANT SWEEP — The ,
Blue Sox will try for their third
straight win over the Lubbock
Hubbers here tonight. See pope
2-B.
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 71, No. 354, Ed. 2 Monday, June 16, 1952, newspaper, June 16, 1952; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1648911/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.