The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, May 26, 1961 Page: 4 of 4
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1
May U, 1961
1
Church, $159,862.00. Shiloh
and
No esti-
5217 Ross Avenue.
t
Make
se-
loan
program and eliminate the
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T. C. Bateson.
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Sen. Blakley Endorsed
By Lou-Etex Conference
The Louisiana-East Texas Typo-
graphical Union, at its regular
quarterly meeting, held Sunday in
Tyler, unanimously adopted a res-
olution, urging the election of Sen.
Wm. A. Blakley, in the special
election, May 27.
Secretary Maurice Honeycutt of
Dallas, introduced the resolution,
calling for the interim senator’s
election since he has twice held
the post as an appointee of Gov-
ernor Price Daniel, also since he is
a Democrat and is better qualified
than John Tower.
There are some 1,200 members
of the conference, who work as
printers for the various newspa-
pers and g the commercial plants
in North and East Texas and in
Louisiana.
DALLAS BUILDING
TRADES COUNCIL
ByLE. DILLEY
Clarence H.
EMERSON
Fire . . Life . . Automobile
... Accident and
Sickness
INSURANCE
BOEDER & MOON
Mercantile Bank Bldg.
PHONE R12-6886
cation and to allow flexibility in
the stipends so they maybead-
justed to reflect changes in the
cost at living.
On student loans, Schoemann
present annual celling of $90 mil-
lion placed on such loans.
Extend the provision of forgive-
ness of up to 50 per cent of the
loan—now granted borrowers who
become public elementary and
secondary school teachers—so that
it would include those who become
college and university teachers.
Contidnue for three additional
years programs of financial as-
sistance for strengthening science
Job reports for week ending
May 19, 1961:
High School Addition, 4200 Fm-
erson street. Junior High Addi-
tion. 3520 Normandy street, High-
land Park, $331,000.00. Buckner
and Son.
Antenna Test Building, Collins
Radio, $250,00000. (Estimated).
Richardson, Texas.
permanent the student
°me” ** “odentehag7“"*62e6e6%
*iLberalonzalezsas
HeVoteforBlakly
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Washington. — "Extension and
strengthening" of the National
Defense Education Act of 1958—
enacted in the post-sputnik era
when Soviet space achievements
pointed up weaknesses in the U. S.
School system—is needed to in-
sure “high quality in education,”
the AFL-CIO has declared.
Testifying before a Senate Ed-
ucation subcommittee, AFL-CIO
Vice President Peter T. Schoe-
mann, chairman of the federation's
Committee on Education, said con-
tinuation of loans for needy col-
lege students and federal grants
for specific educational programs
would insure “strengthening the
Gus Thomasson
Construction Co.
declared.
The federation spokesman had
a “strong exception’ to register on
one phase of the Administration
proposal—its provision for simple
extension for three years of the
area vocational training program
Continuance of aid only for the
training of “highly skilled tech-
nicians’’ and failure to include
skilled workers, Schoemann said,
would be “seriously objectionable.
The “statement of findings and
purpose of the act, he pointed out,
set a goal of “improved training*
opportunity ... for defense-re-
lated occupations of technicians
and skilled workers." Before pas-
sage, however, an amendment of-
fered by Sen. Prescott Bush (R-
Conn.) was adopted restricting the
program to “highly skilled techni-
cians.”
The federation urged that skilled
workers be included in these pro-
grams, that their scope be broad-
ened to include technical as well
as scientific knowledge, and that
the fields in which training is giv-
en go beyond national defense to •
include the nation's “economic
well-being.”
Schoemann told the subcommit-
tee headed by Senator Wayne
Morse (D-Ore.) that the AFL-CIO
endorsed the key provisions in the
Hill measure, which would:
m"ue
A cm’tom Tee:
tained in a bill introduced by Sen.
Lister Hill (D-Ala.), is an import-
ant adjunct to Administration bills
calling for federal grants for class-
room construction and teachers’
salaries, federally-financed schol-
arships and loans for college con-
struction programs, Schoemann
Roads. Meere
1844 D.PED
Office Building Addition, $47,.
075.00. Mocking Bird Lane at
Roper. T. C. Crist
Drive In Grocery, $22,000.00.
3014 Monticello street. T. A. Pet-
CONGRESSMAN JIM WRIGHT FOR BLAKLEY
Congressman Jim Wright (at left) has been campaigning with
U. S. Senator William A Blakley, Democratic candidate in the
important Senate runoff election' Saturday, May 27. Rlalrlay is
running against the Republican candidate, John Tower. Wright
is strongly supporting Senator Blakley and has declared that the
election of a Republican to the U. S. Senate would be a “danger”
to Texas. Wright ran a strong third in the special election April
4 in which Blakley and Tower qualified for the runoff.
> mathematics and modern language
instruction in elementary and sec-
ondary schools.
Adjust the amounts reserved for
private school loans to reallot
funds not needed in a particular
state, and to reduce somewhat the
interest rate on loans to non-prof-
it private schools.
Increase from 1,500 to 5,000 the
number of fellowships awarded an-
ern foreign languages.
He pionted out that the Admin-
istration’s proposal on federal
scholarships "takes the better view
and allows each to study what he
will without discrimination,” and
asked that tills proposal be extend-
ed to the National Defense Edu-
cation Act.
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“One • elec-bat!cec"FGreuinteazater
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of Raybur.)
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Bell Cleaning & Laundry
a $ SAVES YOU MONEY S
4 ON LAUNDRY A CLEANING
APMM SHOE REPAIR
dmb MEN’S AND LADIES
,3 o . furnishings
For Better Savings and Better Service
Go To
Bell Cleaning & Laundry
BRANCHES IN ALL PARTS OF CITY
qeeis-ezge
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. - urged elimination of provisions
quality of our elementary and sec- calling on “special consideration
ondary education in the shortest for students showing a special
aptitude in exact sciences or mod-
The Dallas Craftsman solicits
news stories from local unions and
auxiliaries. Select some one in
your union and have them corre-
spond regularly. Your members
will enjoy keeping up with what
is happening in your organization.
•gaint *■
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tenia whatE
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DEMOCRATS SOLID FOR BLAKLEY
Wn9ht pledaZ Pemocp3
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By loyamene
enc-,uatc® ' e"*
3 at
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possible time.”
The proposed extension con-
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________________ _ _ ____________THI PALLAS CRAF T S M A N
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Johnson Support Goes to Blakley
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von DEMOCRATIC SATURDAY, may 27
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Reilly, Wallace. The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 48, No. 1, Ed. 1 Friday, May 26, 1961, newspaper, May 26, 1961; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1549895/m1/4/: accessed July 11, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .