San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, April 16, 1965 Page: 1 of 8
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lto Frogre— Without Struggle '
"If there is no struggle, there k
progress. Those who profess to
freedom, and yet depreciate
ition, are men who want crop*
rithout ploughing up the ground.
,,. Power concedes Jothing without
|a demand. It never did and never
»!1L"
►—Frederick Douglas!
12c
• • -- • *■
Satv
Ajvtowiq Register
RIGHT • JUSTICE * PROGRESS
3TCD
tfie SAN ANTONIO »»8
SOUTH TEXAS NEWS
While It Is News. Com-
plete National and WorltJ
Wide News Coverage.
12c
I'd. SA—No. 7
~8AN ANTONIO. TKXAB. FKIDAT. AI'RII, 10. twn
ira IOUB NEWBPAP1
DELINQUENT GETS 14 YEARS FOR MIIRDER
Mm Gets 3 Years for Slaying Wife
Woman Killed When
Wrong Move Made
In Domino Game
A 34-year-old man who killed his wife as a result of her mak-
ing a "wrong move" in a domino game, Jan. 14, was sen-
tenced to a three-year penitentiary term, Tuesday, in 176th
District oourt.
Slain in a drunken brawl in a house in the 200 block of
Ellis alley was Mrs. Marie Williams, 42, address listed, at the
time, as 214 North Swiss.
Tuesday, her slayer, Alfred Wil-
liam*, .14, pleaded guilty to murder
without malice, and Judge John F.
Onion assessed the three-year sen-
tence.
The couple waa reportedly separ-
ated, and had been "having trouble
every time they met," and Mr*. Wil-
liam* reportedly carried a length of
iron for protection agnin*t her hua-
hand.
Mr*. Rosie Lee Gonzales, 42, 217%
Kills alley, friend of Mrs. William*,
and Mrs. Williams, hud been together,
and were later joined by Horace Oon-
tales, Mrs. Gonsales' husband.
Eventually Williams was located
on the insifltence of Mrs. Williams,
sad the group ended up at the Gon-
zales residence, where they drank and
played dominos.
Williams reportedly became ex-
tremely angry when Mrs. Williams
made "A wrong move," and a violent
argument developed. Hhe struck him
with the iron pips but fee took It
away from her. *• "
1b the ensuing battle, Mrs. Wil-
liam* was stabbed la the left breast,
and left aids of her neck.
Pollcs found the woman lyinff by a
fence la ths 200 block oi Chestnut
street. She was dead on arrival at
th# Robert B. Green hospital.
♦
NAACP Mass
Meeting, Workshop
Set for Victoria
State Executive Board
Meeting to Also be
Held Saturday Morning
(Special to flan Antonio Rff later)
VICTORIA, Teian—A etate-wlde
nam meeting of the National Aaaocl-
ation tot the Adranrtmmt of Colored
FMfl*. an exeeuUra board meetlnf,
and « civil rlfhta and antl-povertj
workshop at* ached uled for Victoria,
The maaa meeting will be held Frl-
ajr areolae, at Webeter Chapel Meth-
dM church, at $. o'clock. The princi-
«1 apeaher will be Clarence A. Lawe,
J 8oathwcet Kftoaal director of NA-
AOP.
Th. atat* conference eiecntlre
board will hold Ita flrat meetlnf of
th. /Mr, Saturday morning, at 10
e'elefk, at WebeMr Chapel Methodic
chsrah.
It haa flat been announced that
atatOTld. KAACP MMittre. wiU be
eeaplated daring th. board aeaalon,
aad atat. off Were, branch and 700th
council prtaUaaia, aad atat. com-
mittee chairmen will fit* progreaa
re porta, and outline fWOt 'or
(Be. VICTORIA.
♦
A)
Louisiana Radio
Station, Klan
Target, Gets Aid
Negro Preaa International
NEW YORK—A New fork mer-
chant group pnrchaetd 100 apota on
WBOX radio In llogaluaa, La., for
"fir. reading, of the preamble to the
Constitution each dajr, for 20 days."
Thia unusual order cam. in aup-
port of Ralph Blumberg, owner of
tha atation, who reported that he has
loat approximately 70 adveftiaera In
a Ku Klux Klan-lnltlated attempt to
font hla atatlap off tjie air for edi-
torial statements he mad. regarding
integration.
KTLN, in Denver, Colo., purchased
n aeriea of apota on tha llogaluaa sta-
tion, and th. announcementa "are
an excerpt from t£. Declaration of
Independence."
financial anpport from hroadcaatera
around th. country ia pouring ia to
lllumberg to back up hla right to
participate, af a broadcaster, In "thia
fight for free apetech."
BO THK BALLOTS WKItK RECOUNTED —On the r«|ueat of Roy Schaefer (left above), the bnllota
out for I'lace 4 camlidnten in laat week's dfjr conncil election, were recounted. Tliere were four candidate..
Following lnat wwk'a balloting, it waa announced that th. Kev. S. H. Jatnea bad a 217 majority over bia three
opponent., and had been elected, without a runoff bring necewmry.
After the recount, thia week, Janice hail a 213-vote majority, and waa declared elected, and haa been
duly worn In. He is the firet Negro to be elected to a city council seat in Texas. Janea. after the recount,
had 17.4UI votea; Schaefer, the caniHdaU cloeeat to him, had 0.404; O. L. Eaell racelvtd S.MM, and George
Corten, 2,132. Left to right are Srhaefer, Judge Charles W. Grace, Judge Peter Curry, Junes.
New Jersey Names
Negro 'Mother
Of the Year'
(Special to San Antonio Register)
BED BANK, N. J—A Negro bnal-
ntMwoman haa been choeen New Jer-
ez's "Mother of th. Tear." Sh. Is
Ifra. Mabel Jackson Robinson, a real
•atat. agency owner of Madlaon, and
mother of four children.
Th. honor came to her because of
her drio and religious activities,
"tralta highly regarded in mothers,"
and for the achlevementa of her chil-
dren.
She waa selected by the New Jersey
State Committee of the National
American Mothers Committee, Incor-
porated.
Mra. Robinson, a widow, will com-
pete for tb. national titl. in N.w
York next month.
□er children are: Aubrey E„ a
lawyer in Washington, D. O.; Charlea
R„ a veterinarian In Madlaon; Spen-
cer W., deputy director of sp*edcraft
system, at Douglas Aircraft company,
Santa Monica, Cal., and Mlaa Gloria
Roblnaon, an employe, of th. Alta-
dena, Cal., achool system.
Mra. Roblnaon Is th. second Negro
choMn for the Mother-of-the-Year
honor, lbs lat. Mra. Helen I*e John-
aon of Atlantic City waa aelected in
IOCS.
Sex Maniac Kills Girl, 7,
Two Women, Beheads Oae
By Negro Press International
BUTTON HARBOK, Mich,—rear and anger vied for (op bill-
ing here as a shocked community prepared to bury the three
latwt victimi of a mr.niaoal sex killer.
Three of the victim*—a white woman, a young Negro
housewife and a setrenyear-old Negro girl—were discovered
Sunday in a pine grove near here, their nude bodies mutilated.
Police laid the head of the Negro woman, identified aa Mrs,
KelSa* Jones, 37, waa Biasing from
l:er body. Her remalna were ao badly
dccompoaed that police were unable
to determine If she had been molested.
Tfi. seven-year-old girl, Diane Car-
ter, and Mra. Olin Boy or, 00, the
whit, victim, had been sexually mo-
lested, according to police.
A fourth victim, Delorea Young,
19, waa dlacovercd earlier, on Feb.
, la a burned-oat Benton Harbor
home. Folio, aald she, too, had hen
rn|«d.
The laltat tragedy waa brought to
light by a 12-year-old boy who atum-
bled upon the bodlea of Diane, Nr.,
Jtoyrr and Mrs. Jones while playing
In the pine grove.
While the search for th. killer went
on, frightened pnreuts escorted their
children to and from school and kept
them indoors at other time.,
Dlane'a mother, Mra. Verblna Car-
ter, 31, said th. little girl, who had
been looking forward to Easter, would
be burled In a new blue dreaa she
would hav. worn to participate in .an
Easter program at th. New Misalon
Baptist church.
Th. discovery of th. three bodies
lust two weeks before Beater recalls
th. Easter Sunday beheading eight
(See MANIAC. Page a)
■ r «-
San Antonio
Man Reported
Beaten, Robbed
la what vu listed aa a robbery by
Utouit case, James Johnson, 65, Tf08
Albert, Buffered multiple lacerations
about th. face and body, Wednesday,
April T, in the 1200 block of North
Zarsamora. He said that he had been
beaten and robbed of a wrist watch,
tad $25 cash. Earlier be had been
asea ft th. company of a well-known
police character.
A stolen radio waa recovered and a
teen-ager arrested and booked for
theft over |fi0 In a Glorletta street
Incident Wednesday. Penn Pranks, 62,
2G4 Hub, told police that light after
he walked away from bia car, In
which waa a $57 radio, parked In the
100 block of Glorletta, hla suspicions
were aroused by a youth who walked
paat th. marhlno. Several minutes
later, the youth appeared again, paus-
ed for a few minutes at the car, then
walked away.
Franks followed the suspect, no-
ticed the radio had been placed on
the ground, and the youth wns head-
ed for it. Franka recovered his own
radio, and a suspect wns arrested on
information given officera by Franks.
Booked in the case wns Reginald
M. Mitchell, 17, 224 North Swiss
street.
Elbert Washington, 02, 218 Hedg-
es, complained to police, Thursday,
April 8, that a tire and wheel were
stolen from his car while it was park-
ed at the Hedges street addreiw, and
another wheel and tire aubatituted.
Dorio Miller elementary school was
hit by burglars again, Wednesday
night or Thursday morning, with
food being stolen from the cafeteria.
Lewis Edward Tbompkina, 48,
318 Sterling, complained to police,
Sunday, that he had been at a 300
block Hedges street bar, had accept-
ed an orange flavored drink from a
"friend," and "passed out." Wheu
h. recovered consciousness, he dis-
covered, ha alleged, that he bad been
(See MAnTpms S.)
♦
1965 NAACI
Session Set for
June 28-July 3
Negro Presa International
DENVER—aome 3,000 delegates
from all over the country are ex-
pected to attend the aix-day annual
NAACP convention here from June
28-to-July 8. The Denver HHton
hotel will b. headquartera for the
confab.
According to Dr. John A. Morsell,
NAAOP assistant executive director,
the NAAOP ia concentrating ita at-
tention, in this off-election year, on
the role of Negro Toter. In local and
atat. oonteats.
"Community aelf-help Ideas* and
political action are anions the topics
to be discussed at the meet.
"Our aim," said Dr. Morsell, "is
to discover ways and means of using
local power in conjunction with al-
lies in the white community."
Schaefer Gets Reeaunt,
James Gets t ounfU Seaf
TiS Mtr. & H. Jam» waa formally iw)pi is u city council-
man, Saturday, after a recount of votei cast for Place 4
affirmed that he waa the winner of Tiefday week'a city elec-
tion.
When the result of the voting waa announced after last
week's balloting, James held a 217-vote majority over his three
opponents, his having a total of 17,401. Next came Boy 0.
Woman Civic
Leader Held for
Husband's Murder
Body Discovered in
Basement AfterWoman
Jailed for Forgery
Nepro Prrss International
CLEVELAND—The decaying body
of &t*year-o1d John Dortch. a mnchiu-
ist, was discovered in the fruit cellar
of his home here, and his wife,
young civil rights crusad'T, Is being
h»ld on a murder charge.
| Mrs. Eula Dortch, mother of sev^n.
! is aceus«»d of ahooting her mate in
the chest with a gun borrowed from
a business woman, and concealing his
hody in the basement for almost three
months.
Active in the fight for better
schools for Negro children, Mrs.
Dortch had been arrested a few days
b«-fore discovery of the body on charg-
es of forgery.
{ She was held to the grand jury for
allegedly misusing funds raised by the
Hazeldcll Parents association, of which
she was one of the most active mem-
bers. Police said she forged and cash-
ed checks totaling about $1,000.
The body was discovered by
brother, summoned by neighbors who
reported the seven children were alone
in the house, while Mr8. Dortch was
in jail under fo.OOO bond.
Dortch's body was found on tb»
concrete floor, A blood stain near-
by.
Deteetivcs said a sledge hammer
and shovel were found, and that the
Schaefer, with 9,400.
Schaefer demanded a recount.
When that recount wns finally com-
pleted, Saturday, James held a ma-
jority of 213. In the second counting,
his total was raised by one to 17.403.
Schaefer picked up four, to 1),41)4.
O. Ia Eaell gained one, his final to-
tal being G.564. Frank George Corte*
remained at 2,132.
District Judge Peter Michael Curry,
County Judge Charles Grace, County-
Court-at-Law No. 2 Judge II. P.
Garcia, City Clerk Jake Inselmann,
and Assistart City Clerk Jim Kenny
supervised the recount, at the Hexar
County Election center. The recount
did have some lighter moments, but
it wasn't vary fuany at the time.
A total of 240 voting machines were
Involved. Ctockers went through 238,
then discovered that two machines
that had been used in the Burbank
high school student council election
had been Sent to the center, instead
of the two* that had been used in the
city election.
This little mixup resulted in offi-
cial going to the school to check the
machinea. Then the keys to one of the
machines did not fit, but finally it
was done, and Rev. James returned to
city hall and was sworn in.
The council formally takes office on
May 1.
Bias Costs Chicago
$450,000,000 Per
Year in Wages
Negro l'ress International
CHICAGO — Dlsrrimlnatlon
against Nefroea and other
noa-whltifl la roatlni the Chica-
go community S4SO.OOO.OOO a
year la wages, according to a
report, "Manpower Survey—
,961" Issued by the Chicago As-
sociation of Commerce and In-
dustry's committee (or full em-
ployment. According to the
Three Ku Klux
Klanspien Indicted
In Liifzzo Killing
Negro Tross International
BIRMINGHAM Three alleged Ku
Klux Klanani'ii. charged with vio-
lating the civil rights of the late Mrs.
Viola G. Liuzzo, were reportedly
named in |a«lirtnn nts returned, last
week, by a federal grand jury.
A fourth man. also identified as a
member of the Klan, was not named
(See MT'RDER. Page 8.)
♦
Eight Children Die
As Fire Destroys
Slum Home
Negro Press International
JOLIET, 111—A flaah fir. In a
four-room alum home near here snuff-
ed out th. Uvea of eight Small chil-
dren last weeS—aefrt h one family.
Mra. Irene Harrta, Mfi, mother of
seren of tb. Tictlaa, managed to es-
cape ths Maae. along with a 30-year-
old I
Youth, Now 17, Pleads
Guilty to Murder of
Housewife, Year Ago
4 JUVENILE delinquent, and school dropout, now 17. wfc*
' never finished junior high school, was sentenced to 14 yeart
in the penitentiary, Monday, for the brutal murder of a 28 year-
old San Antonio woman, in an attempted burglary, April 4,
1964.
The murder victim was Mrs. Odessa Marie Jackson. 617
Blue Bonnet. She was stabbed in the chest, with an artery
being severed. [ ■
The youth who confessed her mur- mm p Iff* •
der is Tom Clifford Brown 118 Ira AllfllSkl
Gets State
NAACP Legal Aid
Aldridge. At the time he killed Mrs.
Jackson, he was on probation for 1
shoplifting. lie had al*o had two j
burglary charges against him. He ad- !
mitted a series of other burglaries,
after being questioned in the murder
case.
Brown, too young to stand trial
for murder, was sent to the Gates-
ville Htate School for boys, for pro-
bation violation. H* was 17 on Dec.
20.
Having passed his seventeenth
birthday, be faced the murder charge.
which, as he was a Juvenile at the
time, was not then a sapital case..
.Monday, in 175th t)Utrlct court, be ««i«ance. Attorney K.
pleaded guilty to murder witb juaJlie, | S*' **1 dlvlrion co-chairman
and was sentenced to 14 years in the | _n?'
penitentiary by Judga John F: Onion,
Pi'
State Counsel Fights
Conviction in Alleged
Sit-in Frame-up
(SjMrial to Han Ant»»nio RegUter)
MAR LI X, Texas—In response to 1
from the Marlin branch NAAC
j luv iwnw. UUU|
_ 008, JimmJe Lac.
Mrs. Katharine Wolline. 18, who
lived with Mrs. iTaTHfr, was not at
horns. Her siz-week-old son, Adrian,
was the eighth victim to perish in
the blaie.
Altogether, nine children and two
adults resided In the four-room tar
paper-covered framo house located in
a segregated and unincorporated area
known as Fairmont.
The tragic blass was started by
one of the children playing with
matches, according to authoritiea.
There are no fire hydranta in the
area, and water bad to be hauled
four miles by firemen.
Both Mrs. Harris and Mrs. Hol-
1 ius were reportedly receiving Aid
to Dependent Children relief.
Funeral services for the victims were
held last Tuesday at a Baptist church
near here.
The children of Mrs. Harris were
identified as:
Deborah, 14 { Kenneth, 12; Gloria,
7; Cynthia, 4; Robin, 4; and Lisa,
and Lorl, two-year-old twins.
Young Jiinmie Leo Harris, who
discovered the fire and spread the
alarm, said the blaze spread too
rapidly to allow him time to rescue
the children
Jr.
Brown, 16 at the time of the mur-
dor, had a record of usually failing
in school, and dropped out of junior
school completely a few months before
the slaying.
Mrs. Jackson, with Mrf. Ruth
Boyd, 20, had just moved into the
Blue Bonnet street address, to Mve
together. Both of thelx husbands
were in the military service, and sta-
tioned elsewhere.
Mra. Boyd had Istt the house to
visit her mother, leaving Mra. Jack'
Brown saw Mrs. Boyd aad C M
(Sea DELINQUENT, Page l)
Two Charged
aurvey, two-thlrda of all private iin ,he iutU,ict"" l:' .
bualnesaea in the
employ noo-whltea.
area do not
Mra. Liuuo. wife of a Detroit
(See KLANSMEN. Pane S.)
"Second Degree Lynching'
Charged Cop, Watehniaa
pOLUMBIA, S.
' ••» themselves fa
By Negro Preaa luternntlon.il
0.—A night watchman and a policeman found
themselves facing an unusual charge this week—that of
"second degree lynching."
Jailed on the charge were Cornell Wiie. 47: and Phillip
Plampkin, 22, a policeman, of Prosperity, S. C. Their arrests
stem from the terrorizing of a Negro prisoner.
Second degree lynching hae been defined as the infliction
troublemaker in.l ironid be punished
if he cauaed trouble for poli«nien.
The young prUmT Indicated that
he had been atraelt bv the nichtridera.
but vaa not Injured He waa trans-
ferred to fount) jail.
Tha arrest- were announced by J.
P. Strom, at n't 1«* enforcement divi-
aion cUlcf.
Robart ScofKin. grnnd dragon of
the South Carolina Ku Mux Klan.
aaid renegade poainn as Klansinen
were Napon*.!^ <»r tbe incident.
of violence upon a person by a mob
which does not result in death.
Wise, the night watchman, was on
duty, last Sunday night, when five
men, garbed hi white robe« and hoods,
took Freddie Jackson, 18, from his
•jail cell to a hallway. There they
threatened and slapped him, accord*
ing to reports.
I'lampkin had arrested the youth
the night before on a charge of dis-
orderly conduct.
Jackson, who was accused of resist-
ing arrest, was warned that ha waa c
ALFRED WILLIAMS
KILLS WIFE—THREE YEARS
—Alfred Williams, 34, pleading guil-
ty to murder without malice in the
fatal knifing of his wife, Jan. 14,
was assessed a three-year penitentiary
sentence, Tuesday, in district court.
Williams became enraged when Mrs.
Marie Williams made a wroajc move
in a domino game and they fought.
Texas Bank Fraud
Negro Press InternatfojMri
WASHINGTON —IVo California
real estate promoter*, Bernard 8.
Garrett, 42, at Loa Angeles | and Jo-
seph B. Morris, 48, Oakland, were
indicted by a federal grand jury, in
R1 t»aso last week, of defrauding a
now defunct Texas bank ef nearly
$100,000.
The indictments were announced
by Atty. Oen. Nicholas Katsenbaeh.
Garrett and Morris were accused
of misapplying funds belonging to the
First National bank of Marlin, Tol-
as, in violation of federal law. A sec-
ond count charges them with conspir-
ing to defraud the bank.
Both men testified two weeks ago
before ths Senate Investigation sub-
committee, headed by John L. Mc-
Clellan (I)., Ark.) in connection with
the inquiry into bank failures and
racketeer Infiltration of banka.
According to the indictment, Gar-
rett and Morria held controllnf In-
terest in the Marlin bank, owning
3.2GO of the bank'a outstanding stock
shares. It went bankrupt and haa been
closed.
I>uring their testimony before the
senate committee, the two m<<n charg-
ed that they had been eheated out of
a million dollars by white associate*.
ACP branch*®, will a<*t as count
for a Marlin mlniater convicted,
1908, in what was said a frame
in a ait-In case.
T!ie defendant, and allegedly frai
ed clergyman. i« the Rer. AlwxanJ
Mason. Penrice has summarixed I
case this wa;
"In July,
demonstration in Marlin. He was
X.
Uaann led a
He wt
nally broufiit to trial for anrara
aaaault upon a peace offlaar. While I
tha fourth floor of tha jail, afl
btlnt an toted for demonatratlnf
tha dty.
"The trial mail will dearly
la* all M ha vaa tiail
*. . . He waa «aari«ti4 aad gtam
two year*, aad fined ll.OOO JM
oourt of criminal appeals r itawH
th, Marietta, twice.
A Meral judfe frail ted
writ ef habeaa torptia am
memorandum opinion. The federal
judfe held taat Teias
jtatutea (nsaer which Muoo
convicted) ire aaconeututlooil
attorney feneraj fare notice ef
peal to th* ftfth circuit"
The federal judfe aleo ordered
(Sea MARLIN, Pate a)
Boys Get Church
Money as Purse
Falls Off Car
lliree boys who pounced on s » oik
an'e pocfeetbook when It feli froix
tha top of an automobile, Thursday.
April 8. have been arrested tor thsA
over $GO. A fourth youth was listed
as a witness.
Mra. Martha Fields. 5T, 434 Blue
Bonnet, told police that she placed her
purse on top of her car, in the 1000
block of Nevada, while ahe opened
a door of the vehicle. She forgot about
the pooketbook, got into tha marhine
and backed around the corner of Con-
nelly and Nevada. The purse fell off
the top of ths machine, onto the street,
and four boys grabbed it and ran.
They later divided the money among
them.
Mret Fields told officers that she
had just collected some chureh money.
The pocket book, she aaid, contained
almost $140.
Boys 10, 14, and 11 were annate#
In connection with the incident.
Violence,Guafireas Rights
Activity Shifts to Loaisiana
By Negro Press International
DOGALUBA, La—Civil rights activity shifted to Louisiana
D last week, where a Kegro exchanged gunfire In Jonesbord
with a carload of white youths, and violenoe broke out during
demonstration* against the activity of the Ku Klux Klan in
galusa.
The anti-Kl&n drive was being led personally by Jamel
Fanner, executive director, Congress of Racial Equality. i .
In Joneaboro, Elmo Jacobs, 88.
who was driving four volunteer eivil
rights workers, said he exchanged
gunfire early Saturday with four
white teen-agers in a station wagon.
At Bogalusa. about 000 Nagroea—
mostly teen-agera—and 15 white stu-
dents from Kansas university were
attacked by whites aa they marched
toward city hall.
A wild melee broke out after a
white man was accidentally Knocked
down and slightly injured by a police
car.
The angry crowd roughed up three
photographers and an FBI agent,
who was taking pictures, was attack-
ed by a Negro.
A man, deacribed later
leader, told a crowd of whitea 1
Negro civil rijrhts marchers alone
face a possible martial la*
The civil righta maa-chers had
lice protection for a second and
ceseful march to city hall.
In the Joneaboro gunplay, Ja
told authoritiea he might have
one of the white youths with one j
the four shots he fired from hie
calibre pistol.
Jacobs and Miss Oretha Castl^
CORE field secretary, said there 1
a Kltt
itoleM
alone |l
a
one m
ile 41
%1
i wm
' 1
(See MKJISIANA. Pafe e.)
'j
I'S
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Andrews, U. J. San Antonio Register (San Antonio, Tex.), Vol. 35, No. 7, Ed. 1 Friday, April 16, 1965, newspaper, April 16, 1965; San Antonio, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth403973/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.