San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, October 5, 1962 Page: 1 of 12
twelve pages : ill. ; page 20 x 15 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
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"TV
\
N,
£ tafiMa Wttfcout Struggle
\ "W tiara ta BO struggle, there b
M- progress. Thou who profess to
Cwor freedom, and yet depreciate
•••Station, an men who want eropa
without ploughing op the ground.
• w Power eoneedea nothing without
a ttemand. It neve? did and nets*
will"
■-Frederick Douglas!
right • justice
Register
progress
City Edition 12c
jig*
i* *i
With
Out
is
Ex-General, Texas
Governor Candidate,
Jailed for Insurrection
City Edition lie
&ld1
the SAN 'ANTONIO fltfl
SOUTH TEXAS Nefl
While It Is NEWS. Com-
lete National and World
ids New< Coverage.*
r
Wl
*OlR NEW8P
Enters
By th* Associated Negro Preas
ryXTOED, Kill- Missitsippians from Gov. Ross Barnett on
.town now know to what extent the federal government will
go ta annre that the right* of one of iti citisens are protected.
What had evidently been a teit on the part of Barnett and
other extreme segregationists of the limita to which the govern-
ment would go to hack np court order* calling for Jams* Mere-
dith'* admittance, came to an end when he wa* enrolled at Uni-
verajty of Mississippi Monday morn-
Two 'Sippi Solons
Support Kennedy
In Meredith Case
Two Say 30-40 Other
Legislators "Privately'
Back Them, but Scared
By tho Assoclatsd Negro Press
JACKSON, lllaa.—Two lone mem-
Wn of Mississippi'* house of rep-
resentatives. last week, prained I'resi-
drat Kennedy's "great strength" in
decline with the state's flouting of
federal order* to admit Jamea Mere-
dith to the 1'niveridty of Mississippi
Confirming a view that hn« been
held in many circles, they naid that
Mississippi officials, iiiclii«Iin«c <»"v
Roan Harnett, were deliberately s^k
iog arrest and the entrance of federal
troofM "for political advantage."
The two, Joseph K. Wroten of
Cjr»H\iLU^jid Karl Wiesenbur* of
Panraffoula, hate stood virtually alone
ia their public opposition to Gov.
H»r»e<t'« policies.
■ Wroteif'and Wiesenbur* disclosed a
hitherto unknown feeling when they
«*kl that .10 to 40 member* of the
lit fat kooat privately backed them
but did not aipreii* their viewi public-
ly out of fear of reprisals.
Tkia disclosure repudiate* claim* by
Barnett that he ha* unanimous legis-
l*tive support in hia defiance of fed-
eral court rulings.
The twt Mlaaiaaippl leginlstors
MHtl their own mail wax almo*t unani-
mously in Cavor of the po*ition they
had taken.
They said they were certain that
many legislator* "would push the 'no'
button" if Barnett attempted to dose
the university to prevent the Negro
»■ indent's registration. Both men said
that la any case they believed the
federal court* would invalidate such a
Wroten said that Barnett wan
"poshing Miaaiasippians to choose their
slkgianc*" between the *tat* and the
United Bute* It waa a course of
aStion that would lead to "open de-
fiant* Of law and order," he declared.
P-
Rider Pinned
h Truck;
In Collision
linger in a truck Involved In
hkle collision. Wednesday,
tat North Walters and Gulf,
i In the wreckage of the
rescuers had to pry it
tpfi to him.
.'The man, Tomaa Gonaalea, 20,
314 Keller, who waa riding in a Ham
dandy company truck driven by Wil-
lie Bcguiu Caaanova, 20, 807 Kaldcna,
suffered a laceration on the aide of
hks right eye, abrasions of the left
1,^>, and undetermined injuries to
fc*U lega.
Driver of the other vehicle involved
(8m MDBrTPago • )
ing.
The cost of registering Meredith
van the highest ever pnid to euter a
student in an American public school.
By the time Meredith rented' to
the registrar on the Ole Miss enm-
|mis, Monday morning, two persons
had been killed. 75 injured, and al-
most 100 arrested.
In addition, a state governor and
his lieutenant governor hud been cit-
ed for coutempt and more than $!,•
000. 000 spent to assemble a force
of 700 deputy marshals and several
thousand troops, including the Miss-
issippi national guard.
EX-GENKRAL ARRESTED
And a former major general
of the United States army. Ed-
win A. Walker, recent candidate
for governor of Texas, who led a
charge of rioters, has been ar-
rested and charged with insur-
rection against the t nited States.
The litigation alone cost the NA-
A('P more thau $24,000.
Meredith himself aptly phraaed the
situation when he said : "The price of
progress is indeed high, but the price
of holding it back i* much higher."
Meredith'* enrollment marks the
first crack in the high Jim Crow wall
surrouudiug public school* in this
state.
Before the Ole Mis* campu* is real-
ly integrated and the door* of grade
ind high school* are thrown open to
_j|| (student* resardleiue of race, it is
believed the price will have increased
greatly.
Gov. Barnett. In an ungraceful re-
treat from his defiant stnnd, indicated
there will be more litigation eveu in
the Meredith case. And with tempera
whipped up by Barnett'* rnl>ble rous-
ing it i* almost Certain there will be
more violence.
It i* almost certain that before
Meredith can settle down to his stud-
ies, he will be summoned to answer
charge* that he falsely registered to
vote in February, 11161. He was
arrested on this charge in June and
the United States court of appeals
enjoined the Hind* county attorney
l'aul G. Alexander, from prosecuting
the case until the Ole Mis* issue was
settled.
There are other legal issues that
can be rnised to harass Meredith *o
long aa he trie* to remain in the
school.
In retrospect, it wa* the opinion of
many here that Barnett had never
intended to carry out hi* vow to go to
jail rather than ob*y the federal order
to integrate the 114-year old all-white
university.
It is evident now," a lawyer said,
"that Barnett wanted to test how
far the federal government would go.
He knew from the outset, he couldn't
win, but he hoped that hi* bluff would
cause Washington to back down and
accept aome *ort of a compromise."
Chi Plasterer
Falls 40
Stories to Death
By the AuocUtrd Negro Press
CHICAGO — Three hundred and
fifty men employed on the $36,000,000
(8m PLASTERER. Page *.)
xfr*
ft
B
Tine, Classmate Says
By ths A Mounted Negro Frew
ftXrOM), Hi«e.—A white former classmate of Harry B. Mur-
v/abr SB, the Negro printer who attended the University of
IfsSsppi in 194646 aa a navy V-12 itudent while pawing for
WMte. rfttlnaad her* last weak that ha recalled Murphy having
~ai*od fr* and socialising with white coeds on the
mnfmttlnd school OftBUNU.
"Leslie, a drug iter, onarator here, aaid Murphy "was
tt" who spent a Ijt of hi* | Oxford campus.
*»• «
during Id the ual»*r*ity
heated that Marphy AM
araun* •• aanipas timklly.
*" " r, a.astlta Atlaataa
aw tart, wa* ."aw*-
a toad talker." bat
jfl'snd)
I mada Maafc easily.
last a4Titant." Iieatie aaM
Mat*
I tSa Uarvky waa bold
to Jain a pop of other
k |r hrviiu the lata Sen.
*>')• of MMaalppI when
irli ill—apoke on the
" 1 'arin, lh« 3JK5-V1 [trm. . ..
1 «p%at a aa —I yaar «i iU
eampna.
. NEW YORK—A 35-year-old New
Tork printer, wha according to m-
kaowa what ka'a talking about,
MlaaiaaipftUna were fighting a
. loat yaar* ago, referring
' tha Jaawa Meredith eaae.
Barry 8. Murphy, Jr., a fair
earn pinioned Negro who one* panned
for white, haa iliarloaed that he apent
nine montha nt the sll-yhlte J'nirer-
•it- of Miaaisaippi in 1945-4(1.
Murphy, a native of Atlanta, where
kin ^ father nlao fa in the printing
bnsineaa, haa lived in New York the
(*M CLASSMATE, Pat* e.)
Two Negro GIs
On Ditehed Plane
Dead or Missing
i Philadelphia!! Dead,
i Atlanta Paratrooper
i Listed as Missing
(From Prens I)i*patches) i
1'IIILADKLI'IIIA, Pa—A Phila-
delphian—one of 11 children—and nn
(Atlanta, (la., noldier—one of eight
children—are among the Negro known
dead or niiaHing, when au airliner
carrying army ncrvice men and their
familit-n, Wta ditc.ie«l in the choppy
Atlantic ocean, aome .VM) mile* went
of Ireland.
Linted a* dead wu* Private Harold
(I. LeHane, Hon of Mr*. Ma Me I/e-
Sane who lives in North Philadel-
phia. The father, Thaddeu*. work* for
a Philadelphia randy company.
A paratrooper. J'oung LeHane left
Kdi*4»n high *ch«Nd here lust March t«i
enter the army, lie trained nt Port
llenning. <5n., for two month* and
wn* traiiKferred to Fort l)ix for fur-
ther training.
The Atlantan lintcd a<« mining—
and probably dead—-Waa Private
JamcH T. McCiiuty, the 17-year-old
won of Mr*. I^Hn L. Mctlinty. He had
l>een in service for about nix mouth*.
He volunteered before finlnhing Wonh-
ington high *ehool. where he was a
itudent. and wa* went to Fort Gor-
don for baaic training.
She moid he had *|H>ut only one day
in Atlanta with hiM Jamily after
having fininhed airborne training at
Fort Penning, and left here for Mc-
(itiire Air Force bane where he even-
tually boarded the ill-fated airliner
for aatfignmrnt somewhere in Cier-
many.
Pvt. McfJinty wa* one of eight
children—all boys—of Mr*. McfJinty.
He wan the third olde*t. Another of
her hour, Hgt. William Donald Mc-
flinty, in a career noldier now nta-
lioned in Alanka. She aaid Jamea had
decided to make a career of the army.
Mm. McfJinty aaid her liii«!»nnil left
her about seven years ago and she
had struggled to rai*e her eight sons
since.
Another Atlantan, Private Willie
Smith, wa* rcst-ued.
There were 70 pernon* aboard the
plans when it ditched in the ocean
PLANE, Page
-in-Law
lUfc'IllRY MAWIsa-'Mondny. Oct. 1. hint<xj %aa g.irir w
Itohert 11. tireen Mciuuriul howpital. Dr. Kohset L. M. BiHi;ir<l.
Antonian, became the fir*t Negro in the South toli^elief reni
ohstetricM-gynecologv iepeftment of a major tea'ciing fcnspit.il
- > Ism.-
when, at the
native San
renident of the
Above. Dr. Hilliar^^ft) i* being congratuto^H Ify
assistant adminintrator of the Bexar County Hospital jilt riot.
P. Tlmmonfl,
Tot, in Tub, urowns
In 8 Inches of Water
« , i
A two and-one-half-year-old boy drowned in,the bathtub of
hi* Jforfleet street home, Vridar night, b shout eight inches
of water. —— - ■—
'fllj1 lot, SlClurO. Johnaon, aon of Mr.
0. XoHfinm; 1U> vurflaat, was prcnounoerf deai
Brooke General hcspital.
The boy'a 36-year-old mother said that ihe placed the child
* ''-Haatt,Olitside * 1* ** — 1 —a—
San Antonio M. D.
Department Chief
Resident at Green
History Made in South
As Dr. Robert L. M.
Hilliard Assumes Post
A hiKtory-making event very quiet-
ly unfolded. Monday, October 1, at
the Itohert B. (Jreen Memorial hfis-
pital. Without fanfare, snd very
matter-of-factly, ltdibert L. M. Hil-
liard. M. I)., native San Antonian.
and product of the local Hchoola, be-
came the first Negro in the entire
South to l»e the chief resident of the
obstetrics-gynecology department of a
major teachiug hospital
The Robert It. Green is a .1.10-bed.
charity Institution operated by the
Uexar County Hospital district. W.
H. Forster. administrator. The hos-
pital district al*o operates a 2S0-bed
long-term, convalescent und geriatric
Kanatorium.
Dr. Hillianl. ion of Mr. and Mr*.
O. H Hilliard, (.'untou street,
relieves Dr. Jerald King who ha*
been the chisf resident of the service
nines July 1, lMftt. Tha position of
• liief rtaidsnl rotates aatong the Menior
'• -''lent* of a department. Dr. Hii-
jliard will aervs through I>e<ember 31.
r.iOJ. At this time. Dr. King again
becomes the chief. Then, on April 1.
UHW, TV. HfNIard assumes the post
until he completes his training at the
tireen.
Dr. Hilliard ix a graduate of Phil-
lis Wheatley high school, and uiluta-
torian of the clnas of 1047. lie re-
ceive* hia bachelor of science degree
from H<mard university, Washing
Man Dies of Fractured
Skull Three Days
After Deing Struck
A 33-year-old Canton street man wag charged with murdeS
t\ Thursday, Sept. 27, following the death of his 28-year-old
brother-in-law, Tuesday, Sept. 28, from a fractured skull report,
edly suffered three days earlier, when the two were involved
in an altercation, Saturday, Sept. 22, at North Hew Braunfefi
avenue and Nolan.
Arrested waa Van "Billy" Jackson, 219 Canton street. I
The slaying victim wan Robert l*e*
in the tub. and "v.Uit uiitMdc for
a'few. njinutes," about 0:30, Friday
night.
When she returned, she declared
that she found her son under water.
She stated that the tot had suffered
convulsions before, and that he might
have hud such a seizure, Friday night.
He took his Internship training at
the District of (Vdnnrhlo' General
hospital. Washington,. D. C. Upon
•ompletion of this training, he spent
.Ti months at Lackland Air Force
base li<itpitfll Where he Attained the
• « -
(Sea CHIEF, Pate S.)
In-Laws Wounded
In Battle of
Knives and Fork
Two men—in law»—were wounded
in a battle of knives and a fork. Sat-
urday morning, in a house in the
1300 bloek of 1/ombrnno.
Joe Ricks Stokes. 52, 1325 Lombra-
no, was clashed on the right leg with
a long kitchen knife, and ntahbed
in both arms with a fork, allegedly
by William Washington. V*. his son-
in-law. ssme addreMS.
Stokes stabbed and cut Washing-
ton on the back, arm, and abdomen
with a Howie knife.
Stokes said that Washington came
home. Saturday morning, shortly be-
fore 4:30k, and told Stoke*, who was
in bed, that he was going to kill
him.
Washington then went into the
kitchen, returned to the bed, ripped
Stokes on the leg with a kitchen
knife, aud stabbed him in the arms
with a fork, when Stokes jumped out
of bed.
Stokes said that he then got his
Bowie knife and went to work on
Washington.
Stokes was carried to Santa Rosa
Medical center by an American am-
bulance, and a Oorten ambulance
carried Washington to the Robert
B. <5reen.
Police reported they neixed a Bowie
knife and a small knife from Stokes,
and a long kitchen knife and a large
JjasS. «W a shin gton.^
Spears, i!K, address listed ss 36*
Frederick walk, where he lived with
hia mother. He had been carried to
the Robert B. tireen hospital at 2:40.
Tuesday morning. Sept. 2.". by his
estranged wife. Mrs. Lucille S|»ears
27. 210 Canton.
Spears was in a coma. He died
three hours later. II«Mtpital attendants
said that Mrs. Spears told them that
Spears had been sick for two weeks.
Au autopsy revealed that Spesrs
had died of a fractured skull.
not of pneumonia a« had been first
thought. Dr. Kuben Sant«*». assistant
county medical exuminer. requested
police investigation.
The investigation resulted in the
murder charge against .Jacksou.
Friday. Jackson was releused under
l>ond set by Justice of Peace
A. A. Setnaan.
It was the eleventh homicide of the
year involving Negroes, and Spears
was the tenth Negro to be nlsin. | Bn,| Karly tjoodson. on behalf of thel*
Interrogsted. Mm. Spears declared , children. Ksreu and Michael Jam£
that she snd Spears had been mar-1 ^ an<4 ymn\ #nd
ried for ten years, but had been 1 jr
aeparated "ior a«ne tiae" Hhe J roUowlM . ^ th»
aiu»aaa dart racentij bj ^ A.^xiMlaa
he )»,( I, i.. "77 ■ I 4^»aneemeB« <4 Colored re#>
rhnrte Irt*. WfMov Berrr. fto—o.
Aoro'rdin, to her atorr. abo,.( 2 L"?,' V*,."ft?"1 v\ Mn* . &
• i i . « i a a am I action against the i oakum indepeas
"dock. Saturday n.ornin*. He,,t. » K.hl>,| <Jj,trjrt
«he her father, John Jackaon. and A, tbnt 4
her hrother, Van Jaokaoo. .'reata L||w XAACP Southwe^
,\.Tth .New Braunfela avenue cotter ,h,f „7Vl.hIe
Yoakum Election
On School
Desegregation Set
School Board Also
Files Answer to
Descifregation Suit
<Register News Bureau)
TOAKI'M — The Yoakum si IkmjI
board has called an integration ref-
erendum here for Nov. 3. after re-
ceiving petitions, signed by more thaa
90 |»er cent of th.- <Mitrlet*a total
voters, requesting the election.
A suit to integrate the di»trict
was filed Aug. 22 by M. C. Jsmisoa
shop, when her husband entered the
place and tried to force her to leave.
He allegedly grabbed her purse
from a table and walked out, followed
by the woman, her father and broth-
S|M»ars insisted on taking her
home. Her father and brother re-
portedly advised her to go with him,
(See ROCK. Page 21.)
»
Mother Seeks
Tot's Molester
To Kill Him
high,
the*
For two days, a 32-year-old mother
reportedly looked for a man. who had
attempted to rape her three-year-old
daughter, to kill him. she *aid. but
finally reported the rape attempt to
police.
Wednesday morning. 8ept. 26. the
mother wa* vi*iting a relative on
Haya street. The little girl wa* up-
stairs with a 22-year-old man, when
the mother heard the girl cry out
*everal time*.
Inventigating. she found the msn
adjusting hi* clothe*. He told her
that he wa* changing clothe*. Later,
when she questioned her daughter,
she learned of the rape attempt.
For the neit two days, the mother
searched for the man. resolved to kill
him.
Thursday, a doctor examined, and I
prescribed for. the child, and ad- |
vised the mother to contact police.
resource of the XAACP from th«
state office, to national bendqua^
tern, was available to aupport th#
Yoakum branch.
The Yoakum suit contends that
the Jamison and Coodaon childrei
were denied admittance to the high,
and junior high, school, when
applied for admission, last May.
The Yoakum district has filed af
answer to this suit in federal di»
trict court at Victoria.
The answer declares that no actioft
was ever taken on the letter by Jami*
son requesting the admission. bu$
that the board did ask for an opiuioA
by the state attorney general 00
whether integration without previous
approval by referendum was legal.
It notes that an opinion by th4
attorney general on Aug. 30 declare®
thia unlawful, and that the boarf
soon thereafter initiated petition* ra»
questing the election.
The consensu* of the board,
answer declares, ia to proceed **■
all deliberate speed."
"Since the board of trustees . . •
is proceeding in g<M>d faith and aa
rapidly a* possible under the ci^
cumstance*. judicial intervention bf
thia court at this time would be pr*
mature and inadvisable . . .** tha
petition states.
Any Intervention by thif
court at this time would siaapfr
interfere with the orderly process
under way and would tend to redu<4
the poNsibilities of a calm and peae*
ful adjustment in said district," M
continues.
The petition asks the court to dia>
.3
(See TOAKI'M, Pafe 7.)
'Xrt <HK
NEW NEBRASKA STREET INDBKPA88 FORMALLY OPENED—With
ul >U. VAl,»<ialrn atrost iinil<trl\hSK ST The Mitutouri-Ksnsjln-TeKAJI ' hIIm
PiKW nUflMona m nnr.i rva»iw>a«ia «/a aaiiuv—T
ribbon-cuttinit, the new Nebraaka atreet utfirffTM* »r the MiHHOiiri-Kanaas-Teaaa' I
mall, opened Wadneaday morninft, Sept. 26—deapite the rain.
ta tha top picture above, Antntwy JJruce Johnaon, third-frade atudeat ^
and Bevartj lo Waahinston. aixth itinflei at Dorte Miller acbool, perform the ribbon .
ter W. MeAlliater. directly behind Anrttm, Br««e, approvingly. Th,' aaajor,
nreaented the ceremonial aciaaora "to t^e Jjontoters.
Mayor MeAlliater had been rntr«an«e<r Hy' Jamea E. Taylor, Jr., part of whoaa
left Taylor waa maater o( ceremouiea. Sacond from left ia city councilman Jack
right ia T. S. Carter of Dullaa, MKT railroad vice preafdent.
The lower photo shows city ond mlwad offMni. apecial iuvited
• ' ' *--- tk. „.11 un.inl-lful fnrninl nrion
.fanfare
traditional
reporteM°"and"wn« "ai^-tntOTa" on 'land la* welWinklcd formal opepiag
Following the ceremoniea, the city ily children Tttcinling_ Dorie Miller
council hooted a luncaeou "for ifuests a
and officlala at St. Fhilip'a college
The new $110,837 underpaaa elimi-
nates what had long been a deadly
aa* MMul traffic haaard, extremely
for pedeatriaua, particvlar-
ing
Tfcere
aidewulka.
The new atructure conaiata of a 42-
foot roadway—four lanea—witli four-
foot, nine-tub sidewaUa.*a"«eh aide
ta lnaurt th* safety W padtatriana.
Th» |
May
right-of-w'ay, waa for-
I Whitcomb Ililey acliool.
j ritanl. as Major Wal-
jig brief remark", had
X; , .
i ahuvva at the extreme
man, and aecond from
•r, taleviaiao, and radio
v.rtleal e|»ataiice. The
tqrfn-'l ^wiib hanci:
/tiuMl safety.
nailer cqaatruction Nnce
„a nciualiy been open to
traffic mat* the opening
Ar^Jsnrfctifed
By Love Rival He
Once Beat Up
Leon l.iggett. -HI. Slfl South llack-
licrry. waa treateil. Saturday night, at
llrooke tlenaral hoapital. for knife
wounda about the arm and body. He
Kjiitl he waa attacked at South Tine
Ami Iowa street by a man he named.
He declared thnt both of them had
l„.,n 'Tooling around" with tbe aame
woman, and, on one occasion, Liggett
hud beaten up the other maa when
he caught hint' with hia flrl.
f
-a
Kinlock Violence Laid te
tiircsi BreiHiy l'ovprfy
r rv-<\ i»h..
By th® Associated iNsgro Press
I/INL0CH, Mo.—Tha violence which erupted last week U
A this predominantly Negro suburb following the fatal shoot-
ing of a 19-year-old youth by a 74-year-old policeman stemmed
Omaha Street Fire
Does $3,500 Damage
A fire, thought to have been start-
ed hv a stove, raced Into th» attic
and did some W.S00 damage*. Thura-
,lny. to the residence of Manny Walk-
er. at S30 Omaha atreet.
Most of the damage was caused by
smoke and water. The building an*,
taiued some $3,000 damages, the eoa-
teats, S0OUL
from a combination of forces in the impoverished community,
observers report.
Kinloch's outburst of disorder resulted in part from i
unemployment, lack of recreation facilities and tha desire
young residents to Improve poor eon-'
ditiona. these observers say.
Whits sn uneasy peace had settled
over the coauauaity. it had been th*
*-ene of shoortngs. fir**, aad violence
dnriaj the post ■»«• - '
latest reports indicated that ■
fire, had been aet hwc ainca- th*
fatal shooting Sunday. Sept. 23, af
Donnell Dortch hy pollfetnaa Israel
Mason, when I>octch resisted arrest
on drag race charges.
The ahootlng triggered decp-aeated
resenbtiient -fcg&inct-the fivr ir.an po-
lice force, which young Kinloch r*sl.
dents feel Is incompetent, their lenders
said.
A ahatgna waa flni through a
window of the police department
the night oi Dortch's hilling
one waa Injured.
However, an tho following
aad aarly th* Itoaday Booming.
gath*r*d In th* MnHa and ha
and Sutd at the tolic* Haavlly i
boring Mnnicipaliti**, poand into the
taara of R.SM to re*tor* order.
A shotgun blast from the windo«
of a slum clesrsnce project woundaa
three whit* poHceaien aad a Negra
bystasdrr.
Coanly Policemen K*aa*th Ana-
stcad, 29, and Hugh Hodgea, 28, wtae
tSa* KINIiOCH. rag* t) y^-
•4
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Andrews, U. J. San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 32, No. 31, Ed. 1 Friday, October 5, 1962, newspaper, October 5, 1962; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth403680/m1/1/: accessed July 18, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UT San Antonio Libraries Special Collections.