The Daily Sun News (Levelland, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 153, Ed. 1 Friday, February 6, 1953 Page: 1 of 6
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: Hockley County Area Newspaper Collection and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the South Plains College.
Extracted Text
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Eisenhower Lifts All Controls on Wages, Salaries
THE
PRICE FIVE CENTS
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Your Hometown Daily Newspaper RCUIOVCS PTICG
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LEVELLANO. TEXAS. EBl DAV, FEBRUARY 6. 1953
Pay-as-you-go Budget
To Bring Big Cutbacks
By JACK BELL .
a Ml WILLIAM F. AKBOCAST
WASHINGTON B — Tho Eisen-
hower administration was de-
scribed as aiming today at a pay-
as-you-go spending, budget, with
sharp cutbacks in prospect for
funds voted by Congress in past
years.
Congress members who have
talked with Budget Director Jo-
seph M. Dodge said they gained
the impression that an unofficial
ceiling of $68,700,000,000 — the
amount of expected revenues—
would he placed on Treasury
spending in the fiscal year begin-
ning July 1.
This would represent a cut of
nearly 10 billion dollars under the
outgo estimated by former Presi-
dent Truman in his budget mes-
sage. Tt would balance the budget
if there were no cuts in taxes.
In this connection, Secretary of
the Treasury Humphrey, Dodge
and some others wen? reported to
have discussed the possibility of
continuing—for a time at least—
the excess profits tax on business
which raises about 214 billion dol-
lars yearly. This tax will expire
JUne 3Q unless renewed.
Without mentioning the excess
profits levy specifically, President
Eisenhower said in his State of the
Union message on Monday that
tax cuts should await budget bal-
ancing efforts. House Speaker Jo-
seph W. Martin of Massachusetts
reiterated last night his opposition
to any immediate tax reduction.
Martin said on a television pro-
gram that Secretary of State Dul-
les h^d toid him ho could "cut the
State Department almost in two."
"He cau do it,’’. Martin added.
Saying there are other placed
where savings cyp, be ajwqm-
plished, Martin wtent biv
“We have got to cut taxes but I
ture of approximately 316 million
dollars.
As for the reported pi an to pul
an over-all ceiling on government
spending. Secretary Humphrey al-
ready has suggested to tho com-
mittee on reduction in nan-essen-
tial expenditures that it might be
wise not only to freeze funds de-
partments claim have been obli-
gated l>ut to' reopen some existing
contracts.
The committee reported rcecntly
that of approximately 79 billion
dollars Truman estimated would
be spent in the next year, only 41
billion was to be provided by Con-
gress in new appropriations. The
rest would lie money carried over
from previous years.
Dodge and others arc said to be
eyeing a 10 billion dollar carryover
in foreign aid funds as a possible
place to begin cutting.
Missing files Crackdown
In Department is Asked
sens^--husiness
proach the reductions of a
a lions fflrst." i
Dulles’ reported’
to halve his department was held
out as a target for all federal agen-
cies today by Rep. Taber (R-NY),
Chairman of the House Appropria-
tions Committee.
Taber has called for overall cuts
of at least 10 billions in the next
fiscal year—an objective he said
will require the full co-operation of
every agency.
“If all the heads of the depart-
ments will do as Mr. Dulles in-
tends to do," he said, "there isn’t
any question that we can make
substantial cuts in the overall
budget.’’
Unless agency heads come along
with their own cuts, he added, the
appropriations committee, will do
it for them.
Rep. Clevenger (R-Ohio), chair-
man of a subcommittee handling
the State Depart man! appropria-
tion bill, agreed the department's
budget can be halved.
And there’s no reason why other
departments can’t follow suit, Cle-
venger added. He said he expects
some “bellowing” if deep cuts are
made in appropriation requests.
"When you wean cows, they bel-
low,” he commented. "You might
as well wean ’em all and get all
the bellowing over at once."
The 1954 State Department bud-
get as outlined by Truman last
month contemplates an expendi-
•^Officials Named
For County Fair
By G. MILTON KELLY
WASHINGTON (B—Two senators
Urged the new administration to-
day to crack down on persons re-
spor lible for the reported strange
disappearance of embarrassing let-
ters from State Department files.
Senators Dirksen (R-Ill) and
Mundt (R-SD) called for disciplin-
ary action as the Senate investi-
gations subcommittee headed by
Sen. McCarthy (R-Wisi called
more witnesses in its public in-
quiry into the way the files have
been handled.
Vladimir Toumanoff, ' assistant
chief of the division which mea-
sures State Department employes’
performance on the job, was on
today’s witness list. McCarthy de-
clined to name others in advance.
McCarthy said this may be the
last day of hearings "in this
phase" of the inquiry, but that
there will be other sessions in a
tf^'epn^s that Officials
of the State Department, in the
Truman administration dondont^d
"lodtinp" of the tiles.'
Hts grotip heai-dyestcrdAy thait
Officers and directors for Hock-
ley County’s 11th Annual Free Fair
scheduled for Sept. 17, 18 and 19,
have been selected here.
County Agent Bill Taylor has
been named fair manager and Roy
B^ufall assistant manager. Hor-
ace Gilmore, to be assisted by
Robert Conway and J. B. Harbin,
has been appointed general fair
superintendent.
Pat Ryan, chamber of com-
merce manager, was named sec-
retary - treasurer, and Mrs. Jewel
Robinson, county home demonstra-
tion agent, was elected superinten-
dent of the woman's division.
All except two of the 14 fair
directors that served last year’s
threc-<fay event, will serve as di-
rectors again this fall. The two
new directors are H. M. Woods, of
Smycr, and C. W. Fowler, of Ropes
ville. Others are as follows: Tom
E. Johnson, of Pettit; Eugene Wil-
liams, of Fairvicw; Earl Cunning-
ham. of Sundown: «J. B. Harbin,
of Whitharral; Kflly Teaff, of
Ropesville; E. L. Schlottman, of
Pep; Frank Locke, of Pettit; Clif-
ford Throckmorton, of Whitharral;
(Continued On Page Five)
Truman Tells Homecoming Crowd
He's Glad to be Back In Missouri
j documents which disappeared un-
der strange circumstances were a
report on a suspected Communist
in the U. S. Embassy in Ecuador
and others or male employes of
"unusual morals."
McCarthy, meanwhile, cautioned
against any attempt to intimidate
or tamper with his group’s wit-
nesses.
He said the subcommittee is in-
vestigating the case of a General
Services Administration employe
wh9 “apparently was severely
criticized" by his superior after
testifying tecently in a subcom-
mittee probe of the defense stock-
pile. He said the committee will
decide whether to bring contempt
of Congress charges against the
superior. ,
Dirksen voiced disgust with han-
dling of the files as described yes-
terday by a State Department
security officer, and said be ds
urging the subcommittee ,tq call
in sofne high department officials.
•’Dirksen* said he Wants dlscipltn- SEOUL
kry action and “possibly sonte dt*-' 1
missals" pltiS a fast tightening'of
security precautions.
Mundt said ho thought two days
of testimony have shown, that
"pinks and punks” were protected
either through "incredible negli-
gence” or design in handling of
the files.
John T. Matson, special agent
in the State Department’s security
and investigations division, testi-
fied yesterday that security pre-
cautions over the files arc “deplor-
able.”
He said ho once learned that
his 'own report on a Communist
suspect in the Embassy at Quito.
Ecuador, had disappeared from
the files, and that no action was
taken against the man until after
he wrote new report. He said he
never learned what happened to
the first.
Matson also testified that reports
concerning what McCarthy termed
unusual morals of some employes
were removed from their personnel
files.
;
ACTRESS MAY BECOME
NUN—Hollywood is a buzz
with rumors that actress June
Hover (above) may give up
her movie career and enter
a convent. She has told her
studio she wil not renew her
contract. The acress, who is
divorced from musician Jim-
my Zito, said she would
neither confirm nor deny the
rumor. (AP Wi rephoto),
WASHINGTON B — President
NUMBER 151 Klwmhower today ended all wage
*nd salary controls. |Jc also or-
tfcrcd price controls lifted from a
vkldc range of1 consumer goods, in-
fcjuding all meat products.
< . A White f l%»4iae statement said
the President" look the actions in
vc “toward eliminating in an
ly fashion the price and wage
ilk under which the Americar
>y has been required to op-
for the past two years.”
ending of wage and salary
4$ means employers and
\vorkers are free to make
agreements they wish about
tpatters.
vornment regulations have, in
Instances, restrained cm-
ployprs fropi granting wage boosts
when they were agreeable to them.
The cdnfrqlp were part of (he
government's efforts to battle tho
^Inflationary ‘ rise In pric-es and
Wage3 which set in sharply after
the Korean-]IVar broke 6ut in 1950.
Botwts Take Effect
Elsenhower1*' order as to wage
gnd salary oohtrols directs an im-
Aiediate suspension "of all wage
and salary regulations and orders
issued by Of administered by the
Wage Stabilization Board (or Wage
Stabilization Board (or the Office
of Salary SlAbUizatloni ortho Rail-
road and Airline Wage Board."
*The White House statement said:
^".Adjustments ir compensation,
including retroactive adjustments,
proposed in petitions filed by em-
ployers or by employers and un-
ions jointly and still pending Ire-
fore any of these agencies may
now be placed in effect.”
The announcement as to price
controls said the Office of Price
1
Si
£Mi
K
mmm
m
UNDER WATCHFUL EYES
INDEPENDENCE, Mo. B -
Harry S. Truman, who spent near-
ly eight experience-packed years
as president, choked with emotion
last night at the end of a talk to
a home-town audience and said;
"There never is and never can
be anything like coming back
home.”
The former President spoke at a
family-style homecoming dinner
attended by 650 neighbors and
friends.
Truman expressed thanks for the
warmth with which hr had been
received since his return.
Until his concluding remark, the
cx-Presidcnt had devoted most of
his brief talk to a folksy review
of his 30 years in politics and early
lift? in this Western Missouri town
of 40,000.
he said. “I don’t believe there has
been any president or presidential
candidate, outside of Lincoln, that
has been as thoroughly vilified as 1
have. But I came through it all
without any scars."
The 68-year-old former President
said that on his train trip home
last month after turning over the
presidency on, Jan. 1 to Republican
Dwight D. Eisenhower he and Mrs.
Truman were surprised at (he size
and good will of the crowds along
the way.
“The people turned out to greet
us as enthusiastically as if 1 had
Suspect in 'Kiss
of Death' Murder
Released in Sayre
SAYRE, Okla. B—A woman an-
swering the description of a fugi-
tive wanted in California's "kiss
of death” slaying Sunday was held
here briefly last night.
Beckham County Atty. Clark
said the woman registered at a
hotel here yesterday afternoon and
had bus tickets from San Diego
to Oklahoma City.
I-atc last night, the Amarillo,
Tex., News quoted the Beckham
County sheriff’s department as
saying she had been released and
had boarded a bus for Oklahoma
City.
Earlier, photographs of Ililde-
gard Garni Pclton, charged with
murder in the death of her hus-
band, William Thomas Pelton, 26.
were used for comparison. Pel-
ton’s body, with seven bullets in
the head, face and neck, was found
in his sports ear near Niles, Calif.
A lipstick imprint of a kiss was
on his forehead.
Black said the woman held here
denied being Mrs. Pclton and said
she lived in Kansas City. Earlier I
officers said a woman answering I
Mis. Pelton’s description took a i
bus at Los Angeles for Oklahoma !
Korean Fighting
------- ------- .. ww . *__.— Two Chinese Notionalist soldiers work a mortar under
watchful eyes of comrades during recent demonstration on Formosa. Their leader, Gen-
erolissimo Chiang Kai-Shek, praised General Eisenhower's decision to deneutralize Formosa,
a move which may efect the future activities of troops such cs these. This picture is from
movie film, mode available by Paramount News. (AP Wirephoto from Paramount News).
Civil Cases Set
For Trial Here
Eight civil cases will be tried
here when District Court convenes j
March 9, with Judge Victor H. j
________ _____ ___ ^tiivv wi t iim. Lindsey, of Lubbock presiding. |
Stabilization (OPS) was issuing or-I District Court will he in session <
________..I________« . __IT* 1 i
ders removing price curbs imme-
diately from "a wide and varied
list of consumer goods, including
all meat products, all furniluie,
all apparel, all mens sod in res-
taurants and pubic eating places
ft
Raya Coat roll* 'Ineffective
It said the price order affects
"nearly all of the thousands of
items normally sold in depart
ment stores, and many more."
wpslptop
been on a whistle-stop tour," he
recalled. "And Ihen when we got j City hut got off at Amarillo.
here at the Missouri Pacific depot I -----
there were 8,000 or 10,000 people to
meet us. That was the climax.
“I want to tell you. no ex-presi- [
He mentioned his decision, which j deni ever had a homecoming re-
was announced in March of 1952, ception like that."
not to seek re-election. j Truman also referred to his 1948 I
"My mind was made up in 1950,” I ■ (Continued On Page Five)
WEATHER FORECAST
West Texas: Mostly cloudy
and cool Friday and Friday
night with a few light showers
Friday. Saturday partly cloudy
and warmer in the Panhandle
and South Main ..
B ^ The Korean Waf
ground to a virtual'standstill today
covered the war-ton* peMnsuln.
The U. iS» Eighth Ahmjr reported
only light patrol activity.
U. S. Sabre jefs were the only
Alliod warplanes aloft ttSiay. Pilots
reported no contact with Commu-
nist MIGs in'murky skies over far
Northwest Korea.
Last night, 10 B29 Supcrforts
from Okinawa plastered 100 tons
of bombs on the Tacyu troop cen-
ter 35 miles cast of the Suiho
Reservoir on the northwest border
of Manchuria.
Crewmen reported Communist
night fighter planes made five non-
firing passes at the B29s.
A U. S. Fifth Air Force spokes-
man said F94B all-weather jet
.ighters with radical radar equip-
ment which guide* 0^ plane to its,
target -chAsad Cbntmunist planes'
in North Korea last night. But the
Reds streaked' for home without
a fight.
The planes are equipped with
fantastic radar and electronics
devices* These "lock" on target
aircraft and guide the jet in un-
erring pursuit. Guns are aimed
and fired automatically.
Almost always the first glimpse
the jet crew has of Red aircraft
is the trail of flame as it plunges
earthward.
The Marine air wing and the
Fifth Air Force yesterday took the
securily wraps off their deadly
night fighters. Both services have
been using them in combat in
North Korea since November.
The Marine jet is the Douglas
F3 Skyknight, a twin-jet that can
fly faster than the speed of sound.
The Air Force model is tiro
Lockheed F94B Starfire, powered
by a single Allison jet engine with
an after-burner which gives it
tremendous added thrust in an
emergency.
Really Thankful,
Agent Here Says
Wyatt Hanks, local Insur-
ance agent, Is one advertiser
Who didn’t complain wirnn the
type came out wrong Thors
day In an ad celebrating the
IJOth anniversary of the South-
western Life Insurance com-
pany and extending thanks to
the company’s patrons.
The signature, which should
have read WYATT HANKS
CLU, came out WYAT
THANKS. Hanks said that he
really did. And he said that
he was glad of the error, for
even with the tew pa|M*rs which
hit the street before the error
was corrected, lie got a lot of j
added attention aatl comment j
from friends; who ore readers
ol the Sun New a.
controls "have not been effective
In protecting the family budget
against high prices." . >
The OPS decontrol order was
described as the first of a scries
"under which all prices will be
decontrolled. ’’
The Wage-Price Control Law* ex-
pires April 30. and Elsenhower an-
nounced Monday that he would not
ask for its renewal.
The President’s executive order
was made public immediately af-
ter he had met for two hours with
his Cabinet, presumably to review
ihe impending actions.
Houston Steer
firings $18,800
HOUSTON An all time high
price of $18,800 was paid by Bill
Williams, Houston restaurant man,
to Jimmy Dfigiey. 13, of Goldth-
W»itc today for his 1205-pound
Hereford grand champion Houston
Fat Stock Show steer.
here also on Feb. 14 when a non
jury trial between Lorn Campbell
and C. L. Campbell gets underway.
Attorneys Allison and ’Allison will
represent Mrs. Campbell while C.
L. Harris will handle the case for
Campbell.
The following jury cases, with
attorneys listed, will be tried
March 9 beginning at 10 a. m.:
Robinson vs Texas Employer* In-
•auronco Association, Coffee nnd
Gilliland, Chenshaw. Dppre and Mi,
lam; Davis vs Hadley,.Allison and
Allison. Kiser and, Tgbor;,.4Jarron
vs Stanley. Huff and Munsterman.t
Allison and Allison; , Calvert v*
Woodson, Caldwell, Baker and Jor-
dan, and Cnenshaxy. Dupre and Mi-
lam; Morris vs Linn. Huff and
Munstcrman, and Crenshaw', Du-
pre and Milam; Early vs Traders
and General, Scarborough, and
Crenshaw, Dupre and Milam; Talk
vs TEIA, Cotton, and Crenshaw,
Dupro and Milam; Bcliz vs Amer-
ican Employers, Allison and Alli-
son. and Crenshaw, Dupre and Mi-
lam.
Hope to Reclaim Every Acre
Flood-ravaged Area
To Start Rebuilding
Rv JOSEPH DYNAN In Britain, A. G. Johnson, chief
AMSTERDAM. Tho Netherlands j drainage engineer of the British
B Elood-ravaged hut defiant Hoi- Agriculture Ministry, reported
land facing a billion dollar dam
age hill—fought hack today in her
age-old battle pgainst the North
Sea. Every inch of Dutch soil, said
determined officials, would be re-
claimed froth the crop-killing salt
waters.
A tew areas Where the angry
ocean threatened to pun^h through
weakened dikes stM were in dan-
ge- but official* repotted the dra-
matic evacuation of thousands at
persons from the flooded south-
west ‘khvlzirtds 1 qt(?n largely
fuj It )!:**•< Y) “M/ »
Rescue efforts,
were- concentrated
FORT WORTH B — The grand
champion steer of the 1953 South-
western Exposition and Fat Stock
show sold this morning for $6,000.
Big Spring Special II, owned by
Sue White of Big Spring, wont to
Amon Carter, chairman of the Ex-
position Board, at this prife, which
equalled past records. The steer
was donated to Lena Pope Home.
Bidding on the 1,020-pound Here-
ford champ started at $500 on a
bid by Hotel Texas’ Manager Andy
Anderson.
The reserve champion steer,
also a Hereford, owned by Billy
and David Bridgford. Colorado
City, sold to Leonard’s Depart-
ment Store at $3,850.
The previous, high was $18,600,
Also paid by Williams, for last
year's grand champion steer.
It was Les Tarrant, wholesale
drtig man, who made the $18,700
bid which showed the price to
the new high -bracket
It is the filthi grand champion
purchase made bjr Williams at the
show, and the $18,800 he bid is
Ihe highest price ever paid by
any individual for a fat steer in
the nation, slock show officials
said.
Motorists Fined
Fines totaling $25 were assessed
three errant motorists by City
Judge J. E. Baty in city court
Thursday.
Ronald Wartes and James Thorn
ton paid fines of $10 each after
pleading guUty to charges of driv-
ing without an operator's license
L. D. Nicholaon paid *. $5 fine for
fuiluic to otr-erve a -.top ui0ti.
Search for Missing
Girl in Seventh Day
LITTLEFIELD B — Officers
throughout the Southwest are
searching for Margie Nell Terry/
13, Littlefield seventh grade stu-
dent who ha* heen-4mssmg-aweekr-ate homeless and destitute and
She was last seen about noon 700,000 others are described as “in
J»n. 30 getting into a car with two
men. The men, a serviceman home
on furlough and a Littlefield resi-
dent, told officers they let her out
of the car in Littlefield about .7
p.m. that night.
tqttyy pn saving aboqt ,1JJQ0 per-
sons huddled in the town of Noor-
gouwe.
dike
viou
As
added up the staggering damage
bill from the storm that hit their
lands Sunday, the three - nation
death toll mounted to 1,919.
Britain listed 546 dead, Belgium
23 while Holland -by far the worst
afflicted of the three—counted
1,350. But this figure did not in-
clude hundreds of missing. Many
of their bodies, it is feaied, still
lie trapped in homes several feet
below sea level. Unofficial esti-
mates of the Dutch toll alone have
reached as high as 2,000.
Property damage, both actual
and potential, was described s
"appalling.” Some 300,000 Dutch
ate homeless
distress.
Both Belgium ard Britain were
in somewhat better shape. The wa-
ter has begun to recede from all
except a few of the flooded places
in Belgium..
’Everything is under coigrol.”
Johnson said that 500 .Spies haJkjj.-!
been tom in English dikes, ImiT" It
from 100 to 150 pf these already
have been filled in and rtepair
work on the others Was under way.
Dutch officials indicated their
next big job would be the resettle- —j
ment on safer ground of whof
towns and villages of Inspirit
inrn. women and children
m* south we sT* port
Holland. ■ i- i’x
(Cofotimwd On P*ge>ivfpi,','"'’f
, -••z.v'~ ~ V.» j
Condition of ChiM^-
ii <>',rrxq
■ -vtn
three-yea r-blrf
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Burl
Williams, of Levelland, who was
injured ir a traffic accident here
Tuesday night remained in a criti-.'
cal condition at Phillips-Dupre Il06-
ptal today.
The lot took a slight turn for
the worse today, attending physi-
cian, Dr. Leland George, rcportedH
The doctor said the child, who fljl
been battling for her life for three
days, showed a strong determin-
ation to live. Dr. George said the,
youngster would be given more ,
blood transfusions today. He add-
ed that it would lake another day,
to determine the outcome of h$r
case. ------- ^
The child suffered a broken left'
leg, collapsed left lung nnd skull •<
fracture when she was struck by. >
an automobile. The accident oecUr« t
'-d in the 1300 block of 8lh street :
when the little girl darted into th«
path of the vehicle.
Controversy Over Texas School
Financial Problems Grows Sharp
A T TCTTM iTh /-»: i «... -•
AUSTIN B Controversy over i Gilmer-Aikin
how to finance Texas’- public odu-1 passed
cation program continued to flare
today as legislators left the Capitol
for the week end.
The Texas State Teachers Assn.,
through its executive secretary,
made it plain yesterday Gov. Shiv-
el’s' plan to rearrange school fi-
nancing does not meet TSTA ap-
proval.
Shivers’ proposal "will seriously
handicap" plans to case the criti-
cal classroom shortage, declared
TSTA Executive Secretary Charles
A. Tennyson.
The governor wants local school
districts to pay a bigger share of
the minimum foundation program
cost than they now are. The mini-
mum program does not include
cost of school construction.
Answers Articles
"Many plans for new school
j construction may have to be serap-
j pod if local contributions to the
i Minimum Foundation Fund are
increased." said Tennyson.
His prepared statement was an
apparent answer to the first of
four articles prepared by Shivers
“and offered to Texas newspapers.
Shivers said he belied the old
ralio of 75-25 state-local support
of the minimum foundation pro-
gram ought to be reinstituted.
rii.tt tin. piacenta^fe when the
School Laws were . statements likely will represent
in 1949, but the fixed the two major points of view that
amount of local contributions ^ j will develop in the legislative fight
million dollars a year—now is only J over school financing. •
ednt of the state-
some 21 poi-
and-local total
Disputes Figures
Tennyson sai(l "those who i^ant
to rc-arrange the school financing
pattern cite only the figure show-
ing the local schools pay about 20
per cent of the minimum founda-
tion program cost. They fail to
cite the cost of current operations
and repayment of bonded indebted-
ness." ' .
When nil costs are considered,
local schools pay more than 40
per cent of the cost of public edu-
cation in Texas, he said
Tennyson also answered Shiv-
ers’ implied fear that local control
cannot be maintained unless proper
local support of schools is main-
tained. The governor has said: "I
don’t want to see any weakening
of local control' of our public
schools. The school is too close to
the home to be controlled by any-
ne besides the homefolks."
Says No Danger
Replied Tennyson: "There is no
danger of state control of educa-
tion when the local schools them-
selves are paying 40 per cent of
the education bill.”
ShiioiV articles and Tennyson's
The Issue possibly' would
have arisen if teachers had
demanded thnt the Legislal
sure (them a pay raise.' The
which boasts a mefnbcA,„ip or
53,000 of the state's 55,009 teachers,
is pushing for an increase of $601)
in the minimum annua) base pay
of beginning teachers.
Written by Staff
Shivers has recommended a cost
of living increase/-And this was
fixed at 10 per cent in the adminis-
tration bill to raise salar.es and re-
vise school financing. Ten per cent
would mean a $240 a year hike for
beginning teachers with a bache-
lor's degree.
The governor's articles arc
ting "fairly good use," in tho‘
newspapers. Shivers' press secre-
tary said yesterday. The articles —
like the governor's speoehc* are
written by members of Stivers’
staff, but they have to reflect his
exact views and have to win his
final approval.
The articles are going not only
to some 650 daily and weekly news- '
papers but also to prominent pori
sons throughout the state who are
Shivers' friands and can be ex-
pctlcy to help fHib)ki..e hi* $iCua"
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The Daily Sun News (Levelland, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 153, Ed. 1 Friday, February 6, 1953, newspaper, February 6, 1953; Levelland, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1117627/m1/1/?rotate=90: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting South Plains College.