The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 305, Ed. 2 Tuesday, June 9, 1953 Page: 16 of 24
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2-B
\ THE ABILENE REPORTER-NEWS
Abilene, Texas, Tuesday Evening, June 9, 1953
EDITORIALS
... if we desire to secure peace ... it must be
known that we are ot all times ready for war
George Washington to Congress, 1793
MARQUIS CHILDS
Cabinet Telecast Took
Work, Skill, Rehearsals
N. p. Th would be * revolution against Rhee, not
Nora Kcal I est against their comrades in arms. In all
... . -___probability the valorous ROKs would like
All hands are agreed that Presidentto see an end to the fighting as much as
senhower’s first real, all-or-nothing test our own men, and they know a withdraw-
of strength in Congress hinges on a six- al from the line would mean an end not
month extension of the excess profits only ^ their own military might, but to
tax. Treasury Secretary George Humph- the very existence of the Korea they
rey said yesterday chances for extension have been fighting for.
are “very good,” but hardly anybody How far Rhee gnd his underlings will
agreed with him. , carry their madness remains to be seen.
But it is hardly a fair test of presiden- As this was written they seemed to have
tial strength for a number of reasons, lost all sense of caution and restraint.
The President, the secretary of the and if allowed to carry out their threats
Treasury, and most other leaders who one of the great military disasters in
have voiced their opinion on the subject modern history seems imminent. The fact
admit EPT is a bad tax, an unfair tax, is that Rhee has been a thorn in the side
an inefficient tax, and ought to die aa of UN commanders from the start,
soon as practicable. But Mr. Eisenhower, If worst comes to worst, and the ROK
Mr. Humphrey and others in the admin- defense line crumbles and the Commun-
istration argue that its continuance an- ist hordes pour through, we will in all
other six months is vital to the program likelihood see the first use of atomic
of attaining a balanced budget as soon as weapons to prevent a total rout of Unit-
possible. If allowed to die, the deficit ed Nations forces. It would be eminent-
would accumulate another billion-dollar ly justified.
minus sign. .
A presidential defeat on this would
'provide no certain yardstick of his real Angelo Nixes Bonds
strength in Congress, hence it isn't a Angelo PICS Bonus
fair test. The dice are loaded against The voters of San Angelo on Saturday
him. . , . ___, t. turned down, 2,888 to 2,003, a proposed
In the end, the proposed extension $5 million tax bond issue to finance
may never get out of the ways and building of more dams on the South Con-
Means Committee, whose chairman, Rep. cho watersheds to solve the city's water
Dan Reed (R-NY) is bitterly opposed to problem. Only t single precinct, Santa
it. He would not agree to report out the Rita, which we gather is the equivalent
trade extension act until the White to # “silk stocking’’ area, gave the bonds
House gave him assurance no effort a majority. One opponent of the bond
would be made to couple it with EPT in issue hailed the defeat as a triumph for
the form of a rider, the small taxpayer.
If Reed decides to pocket the EPT ex- Victors and vanquished alike attribut-
tension and never report it out of com; ed the bond issue defeat to a prospective
mittee, it would relieve the President of agreement between the city and the Up-
the possible embarrassment of having, per Colorado River Authority under
Congress vote it down. In that way Mr. which San Angelo would buy water from
Eisenhower’s defeat would be charge- the huge new dam on the North Concho
able to a single individual who happens River at the city’s edge.
to possess sn inordinate amount of pow- Since this contract is yet to be worked
er in legislation affecting taxation. out, and since the new darn has still to
If as momentarily seems likely an ar catch any water, some of San Angelo's
mistice is near in Korea, the chances of neighbors may get the impression that
getting EPT through Congress if it geta the voters labor under a Maginot Line or
out of committee are too small to be Atomic bomb complex.
Perhaps an unconscious factor was in-
volved. Water shortages are a new thing
for San Angelo, and until two or three
years ago water was not a prime concern
of the city government or the city
President Rhee's opposition to recog- electorate; the system was privately
nition of a truce in Korea along the lines owned. The average citizen—the voter—
agreed to by the United Nations and never had to worry about water bond is-
the Communists has now received the sues end water taxes.
formal support of his cabinet and the Since it took over the waterworks
Republic of Korea National Assembly, about 35 years ago, Abilene has never
Both these bodies are under the per- turned down a bond issue so far as we can
sonal domination of the stubborn old recall—and most have been adopted by
man who heads the government - large majorities, some almost unani-
Obviously, this poses a dangerous mously. Our people have been in the wa-
and complicated problem the solution of ter business long enough to know that
which isn't discernible st this time The waterworks don't grow on trees, and that
supreme folly would be for Rhee to or- guarding against shortage is an intensely
der the ROK troops out of the firing line personal and vital thing. The very life and
— an act scarcely more insane than some development of the community depend
of Rhee’s other recent actions. on it. Because it acted vigorously and
Suppose he did order a withdrawal of imaginatively in the late 20s and middle
his troops, who bold almost three-fourths Ms, Abilene has escaped the sort of
of the 155-mile battleline? That would be wracking water shortage that has
as disastrous as it is inconceivable. If the plagued so many communities during
troops obeyed, all United Nations fore- this drouth, including especially San An-
es in South Korea would be placed in gelo.
dire extremity, faced by an alert fee, and We realize here at Abilene that the
with its main line of resistance crumbl- task is unending, and that there to no
ing. At the worst, under Rhee’s orders discharge in this war. To build a city you
the ROKs might turn upon their com- must build a water supply, by the same
rades in arms, token, when you build a water supply,
Frankly, we doubt if the ROKs would you build a city There is no cheap and
obey such an order from Rhee It might easy way out. There are no abort cuts,
lead to a revolution, but so far as the There is no balm in Gilead for the sloth-
ROK fighting men are concerned, it ful and the unwary.
Crowning of the Queen of the Himalayas
ROBERT ALLEN REPORTS
AF Fund Compromise Brewing
ly controversial natural gas “rip-
per" bill that the Oklahoma oil
millionaire skilfully maneuvered
through Congress in 1951 only to
be stopped by a presidential veto
The old measure will be trotted
seen by the human eye.
Madness in Seoul
CAPITAL COLUMN
Ta 1 be
Sits on Uneasy Seat
By PETER EDSON
NEA Washington Correspondent
WASHINGTON (NEA) — The man on one of been to office,
the uneasiest seats to Washington these days
to Harold K. Talbott, Secretary of the Air Force.
The reason for Ma discomfort to that the Air
Consequently, Secretary Talbott has flown some
45,000 miles in the first four months as has
Parse budget for next year has been mat by
over U billion.
should heunde sene.emitehteeateeeictisaed
and its economy program? Or should he speak
out to favor of more airpower now - and take
the political consequences?
If the new Secretary of the Air Force to a
bit bewildered by this dilemma, K is small won-
der. He has been described as being a good
bit like the tanner found standing at the side
of the road, studying a piece M rope to Me
a hands. When a passerby stopped to ask why
1 the farmer appeared to be so bewildered he
I answered: *1 can't make uy ay mind whether
i I've lost my male, ar found a piece of rope.”
Bigger airpower advocates to Washington are
■ urging and hoping that the secretary will speak
, out tor getting back his Met mules. But if he
1 does, he may hang himself with his own rope.
Secretary Talbott to a good Republican and
I a good friend of Tke's — dating back before
1 the Chicago convention. In fact, Mr Talbott is
I one of the select coterie invited to the While
1 House for evenings M bridge “To belong” in
' Washingon these days, a big shot must either
1 golf or bridge with the President
Harold Talbott was tapped tor a Washington
I job shortly after the election. President Elsen-
• hower considered him tor several spots. But
Mr. Talbott said there was only one that inter-
ested him That was to be Secretary M the
Air Force.
Airplane Company President st M
He had been to aviation since World War L
, when he was president, at 28, of the Dayton
Wright Airplane Co it held contracts for build-
ing some $300 million worth of planes. Mr Tai-
> bott got to be a major to thr Signal Corps.
‘ which ran the flying service then. la World
! War □ he was far a time director of aircraft
I "Au "mine him secretary the Air Force.
President Elsenhower toM Mr Talbott that the
way to learn his job was not to sit at a Pena-
gon desk, but to get out and see its installations.
He has covered the main European bases
and nearly all those la the Pacific. He still
hasn't been to Thule, M Greenland, nor to the
Moroccan bases, but they're on his list.
Weekends, the Secretary has discovered, are
the perfect times to inspect aircraft factories
• the U. S. With the plants shut down and no
workmen around, he can move with greater
freedom along aa assembly line. He can stop
M inspect the jigs, fixtures and dies, and get
a better idea of what the plant needs, with the
least disturbance of production.
With all this inspecting, Secretary Talbott
hasn't spent too much time in Washing-
ton. While he's away, the department is run by
Air Force Undersecretary James H. Douglas,
Jr. A Chicago lawyer, he was chief of staff for
Air Transport Commend to World War U. Mr.
Douglas got this job when Robert Sprague,
New England manufacturer, refused to sell Ma
stocks
Sold Holdings to Get
Secretary Talbott was one
forced to sell, to win Senat
confirmation. The holdings 1
a reported $700,000, included
Auto-Lite, Owens Corning r
and state taxes took Brown
considerable of a personal a
top government job.
. But Secretary Talbott has
of polities since the 1930‘s. H
M New York Gov. Thomas 1
chairman of his finance e
1948 campaign.
He was born to Dayton, 0
Yale, and to Ma day was q
was
r Ma
. for
etric
deral
was
en a
riend
was
the
d at
He is see 65, but doesn't
good head of hair, graying 1
At 2 Peon he has %
reputation as an aloof chars
pends on whom you talk to.
as a pretty good sport. There is — _,____
Msn which definitely puts him in the latter
class.
as a
and
Ma
about
AN AIR OF
London
Always
By HAL B
LONDON I* - 1
pass through In you
a feeling of some
gay, depressed or
The towns you ne
turn to are the tor
you, not the ones
unhappy. But the
ways want to see
ones that gave you
And London to 1
town. It is more fu
most towns are In
* It has been cal
town," and it make
a man. It has a a
ture about 1L an a
ean-happen. And sir
thing you can thin
pened here in the p
pen again-to you
even dig you up
WASHINGTON. — The changes television screen—a monitor—in a
television to bringing in public lite sound truck parked just outside the
could hardly have been better illu- entrance to the White House
strated than in the , eparations offices. The BBD & 0 specialists
leading up to the “show” by Presi- not expertising the performance in
dent Eisenhower and four mem- the large conference room inside
bers of his Cabinet over the TV were outside in the truck watching
networks. The word “show” is not the monitor to see exactly how the
meant disparagingly. It to the term show would look to the millions
invariably applied by TV produc- who would see it in their homes,
era and directors to any perfor- Reporters stationed at the White
mance on television, whether it is House who tried to look at the
a solemn discussion of the morale monitor were kept away by White
of mass atomic bombing or hilari- House policemen. This was on the
ous vaudeville. theory that you don't customarily
From the first, the White House invite the critics to a dress rehears-
was in the hands of pro- al which may be spotty and full
fessionals skilled in the business of of flaws that can be corrected,
popular presentation. Here is the The President and his Cabinet
sequence that led up to the mom- members devoted an hour to this
ent when the all-star cast flashed rehearsal. On the day of the per-
on millions of television screens formance, another run through was
across the country, held in the White House.
A week before the telecast, ex- Long since, of course, the main
peris from the New York adver- text of each principal had been put
tising firm, Battan. Darton, Durs- on cue cards—large placards with
tine, and Osborne came to Wash- the words easily read as the cards
ington to assist in directing the are held up out of range of the
operations. Among them was the TV cameras. Such cue cards have
president of BBD * 0. Ben Duffy, long been part of the apparatus of
They collaborated with TV pro- shows meant to be "spontaneous
fessionals of CBS which handled and unrehearsed."
the operation for all the networks. Huge Audience
A “script conference" was held If all this seems a little elabor-
in the President's office with the ate. one must remembr the fan-
experts and the cast. It was agreed tastic size of the TV audience and
at this conference that there could the tendency of TV-viewers to top
be no reading from prepared that button if they are bored or
manuscripts. Nothing is more de- indifferent. The Radio Television
pressing to a TV director than a Manufacturers Association, which
character who reads from a script, compiles industry statistics, says
That was one of the many faults, there are now 23,256,000 television
from the professional viewpoint, of sets in use in the country. With
the TV appearances of former new TV stations rapidly being put
President Harry S. Truman. into operation. It is estimated that
With agreement on no manu- two-thirds of aU Americans have
scripts, the principals would have access to television. That means a
to do a lot more work. With potential audience of around 100,-
their own public relations assist- 000,000.
ants they would have to prepare There are hazards to presenting
material to present to informal and serious issues wrapped up to pro-
seemingly extemporaneous fashion, fessional production. The tendency
Every Word Watched to always to over-simplify, to boil
This, as TV-viewers are well it down so that a theoretical Joe
aware, to a tough assignment. It Citizen of less than average intelli-
is especially difficult for response gence can understand. Many issues
ible public officials who must to this complex world simply do
guard every word they utter, not lend themselves to that kind of
Mrs. Oveta Culp Hobby. Secretary oversimplification. Joe Citizen may
of Health, is, for example, so got a wholly wrong impression
cautious in the preparation of the when the question is reduced to a
speeches she reads that every few one syllable words.
comma to combed over for any Last fall the Republicans spent
significance it may or may not heavily for 30-second and one-
have. minute spots to the commerical
The three secretaries — Mrs. break on television and radio.
Hobby, George Humphrey of the Even candidate Eisenhower re-
Treasury, Esra Taft Benson of corded some of those spots. Bo-
Agriculture—and Attorney Gen- tween his favorite programs. Joe
oral Herbert Brownell got down to Citizen heard simple words about
their home work. The day before ending the war in Korea, prosper-
the show was to go on, the experts ity, cutting Federal spending. In
called a dress rehearsal. view of the looming problems still
So important was this trial run ahead, those words may have been
considered that it was actually too simple.—(United Feature Syndi-
telecast over a private circuit to a cate, Inc.)
By ROBERT S ALLEN
WASHINGTON. June 8 — Bar-
ring an upset, there will be a com-
promise on the hotly embattled Air
Force budget.
lAAs-poerd bekte drive out again, but its advocates are
—under way to work out an agree- still undecided whose name should
mens * . „ be attached to it. . -
With President Eisenhowers full Democrat Kerr think. . R.ouh legedly “hunting” during his mys-
^Vnd^co^^d^ Uc^^or^^ terious viatt to Mexico i. former
are taking part in this conciliatory
effort.
Nothing definite has yet been de-
cided on.
However, Inside reports indicate
that an understanding to possible
and wlU be reached on the inflam-
ed issue of slashing Air Force funds
by more than $5,000,000,000 to the
coming fiscal year.
Several proposals are being con-
sidered In the secret discussions.
The most faverod, particularly
by the Administration, would add
another $1,000,000,000 to the Air
Rerea owl exeendutireri Congress, he won • resounding
Previously voted victory in Truman’s Power Com-
"Under the Administration’s bud. mission ,
get these “planned expenditures,” The tagency. by * 2 to 1 vote,
as the combined appropriations are ruled it did not have the authority
termed, would be limited to 81S - to fix natural gas rates claimed for
100,000,000. The Air Force contends i by Congress. President Truman
it needs $11,500,000,000. The propos- and teasupreme Court in a num-
:4..compromim .2., “ ^ declared itseir poweries:
lever at around $16:000,000.000.4 n€ to regulate natural gas prices.
This solution would “save face” Head of the Commission at the
for both sides time was Moo Wallgren, former
It would give the Air Force a Governor of Washington State and
considerable increase, particularly onetime Senate crony of Truman.
: de:
= E #*: .eoinn
At the Am. s consin. Wayne County, Mich and
refary wnson wound Aen x the cities of Milwaukee, Detroit
Artion that. D P and Kansas City asked the courts
- - A to throw out the Commission’s rul-
Pune lo the ing and declare that it does have
Another formula under consider, the right to control gas rates.
-aismi crates, loenl "mom T MEY ine card ...-----..-----...---—--
the or 6m t takes to order the Commission to resume Mocked by what might seem to- Ridge Mountains, I would have
Ament adime taker regulating gas prices. surmountable odds gone hungry the first morning I
mass =9. Last week, the Federal Circuit Dr Remmlein assistant director spent here with my brother and
A Court of Appeals, to Washington, of the National Education Associa- his wife:
MMsante teca handed down exactly that kind of tion's research division, a lawyer, . have
Bharpty reduce the lead time verdict. The tribunal held that the and one of the few women permit- Jam sure you
required for new combat planes Natural Gas Act of 1938 gives the ted to practice before the Supreme hungry two x t
and thus make Mg savings in the Power Commission authority to Court, author, university teacher you would have looked the
amount of money that has to be pass on interstate gas rates This and happy - wife, had three Mg breakfast with an equal mixture of
appropriated for this purpose in the decree to subject to Supreme Court hurdles te riper before she reach- Horror, and amazement and .
coming fiscal year. . review, but It has already handed ed her goal: ond. Late 5o much that there Questions & Answers
Note: Secretary Wilson has urg- down similar judgments to a num- 1 She was stricken with potto to wouldn Shave been any left for you. %*-
ed the President to issue a state- ber of cases. That’s why the Cir- early childhood and were braces for Breesteitis _ Q—ts there proof of the actual
ment citing our numerical super- cult Court acted as it did. until she was 16. Instead o-tarting orim or date of Shakespeare s birth?
ority in atomic weapons as one of And that, in turn, is why the old 2 Her family frowned on a car- ange juice or prunes down A No.
the controlling reasons for cutting Rizley - Kerr Mil is sbout to re- eer as "untodvlihe" sod sent her to to a slice of lee cold, red hearted ----
military expenditures appear in Congress. a women’s college to study litera- watermelon. Q—How many lives were lost in
More Gas A new drive will be launched to ture and music a demon’s eyes. It was the kind of the sinking of the Titanic?
An eld battle - scarred piece of put it on the statute books. Wto 3. She had no money. watermelon you can set to close A 1517.
legislation is about to pop up in will be the nominal author of the “These difficulties only made me to the rind that you can read a ---
Congress again measure is still a secret but ane try harder," the slender little newspaper through Qis the Platte River toiviga-
It’s Senator Robert Kerr’s wide- thing is certain: Regardless of who brunet confided as she fitted a After that came hominy grits, bier.
eigaret into a long ebony holder. “I half submerged in country butter.A-No.
operated on a shoestring. I work- cold black-eyed peas, a slice st o in what state aid rice pro-
ed like the devil.” country ham, treading te its own duction begin to this country?
She left her woman's college. In red-eye gravy, hot biscuits as light A Couth Carolina
Pennsylvania, arrived at the Uni- as a mockingbird’s feather, and -
versity of Chicago with $25, work- home-made peach preserves Q Where on the earth's sur.
ed as a typist for di cents an hour A gourmet would look with scorn face is the magnetic attraction of
while majoring in psychology and on piping hot hominy grtts and the
philosophy, got her B. S. degree cold black-eyed peas, but to a Geor- L
three years later. She took a gian who was raised on them they A—The aclinic line circles
Norwegianfreighterto France, put in the shade such vittles as the earth clone to the equator,
where she entered the Sorbonne at pate de fole gras, pheasant smoth- At on points along the line a
Paris, earning her way by writing ered in truffles, hummingbird’s magnetic needle will balance,
articles for professional journals tongues in aspic, and oysters with no dip to one side or the
and doing free lance research un- -
til she earned her doctor’s degree
“Once I lived for three weeks on
free samples of rolled cats I reek-
ed up in my room,” she said
From 1933 to 1934 she was direc-
he is. Senator Robert Karr will
have a lot to say about hla selec-
tion and about what happens to the
legislation in the coming months.
Big Game
According to one report in Sen-
ate cloakrooms, the real “game”
that Senator Joe McCarthy is al-
He argues that would improve tie Ambassador William O’Dwyet. It
chances of enactment la a GOP is being hinted the one - time
Administration. Actually, former j .
Republican Representative Ross mayor New York i under se-
Rinzley, Okla. In the GOP-control- eret investigation by McCarthy on
led 80th Congress, introduced the
first bill to bar the Federal Pow-
er Commission from regulating the
sale of natural gas that crosses
state lines Risley's proposal got
nowhere and Kerr, who came to
the Senate in the Slst Congress, -----.---------------
picked up Use ball and stormed Sherry, former Assistant Attorney
down the field only to be thrown - *
for a loss by Truman's veto.
But while Kerr was licked In of Assistant U. S Attorney Gener-
al Warren Olney, who is largely re-
sponsible for pushing the case
against Samish Representative
James Donovan (D-New York
City) may bolt to the Republicans
in next year’s election Donovan,
who was originally elected to the
House as a coalition candidate
against leftist Vito Marcantonio,
has gotten in bad with local Demo- ____-____. _____
Cratic leaders and they are throat- but there'll always be a little red Boiled Peanuts
ening to drop him tor another clay stuck to hla heels. For Mach we just sat on the
choice Friends of Donovan are I realise this every time I return porch and worked on salt boiled
Mating be mayretaliate by jump- ,„ m_ native state. The wind makes peanuts. Now, brethren, here is a
ing the traces to the GOP—Post- a different aound in the pines, the dish that la as country as a ‘pos-
Hall Syndicate I seersucker wrinkles a little more turn up a tree, and you don't have
across the shoulders, the wagon to be a cordon bleu of a chef to fix
wheels creak a little louder, and 'em, either. If you happen to have
JANE EADS the speech is soft and gentle to the a peanut patch in your back yard
-5 “airs,” instead of the ears. or one growing in a window box,
u 1 As tor the food, well, it is as dif- here’s the recipe.
Washington Letter ferent from the bill of fare of, say. Pull up the peanuts when they’re
New York or Los Angeles, as that rips, wash the devil out of them,
WASHINGTON — This story by of the Hottentot and the French- and then boll’em in brine. A wash-
Dr. Madaline Kinter Remmlein man. If I hadn’t acquired a taste tubful is about right for a family
should bring hope and encourage for "Cracker" food when I wax of four. When they have boiled for
ment to any eareer-minded young growing up in the land of the Chat- an hour or two let them soak over-
girl whose passage to success istahoochee River and the Blue night in the brine, and then start
. _ ---blocked by, what might seem in- Ridge Mountains, -I would have eating them. If you don’t have any
regulating gas prices. surmountable odds. gone hungry the first morning I fresh peanuts you ran use the big
Lat week the Federal Circuit De Remmlein. assistant director spent here with my brother and raw one, aranabe at any market:
Court at Appeals, to Washington, of the National Education Associa- his wife: 9 AX:
$7 . Meet *-*" fyIona am u sou.voud heveAmt wmamm
Power commission t coure, pnoe, miersite* "toSS you would have looked on the —McNaught Syndicate, Ine.)
pass on interstate gas rates This and happywife, had three big
decree is subject to Supreme Court hurdles to clear before she reach-
review, but It has already handed ed her goal
down similar judgments in a num- 1. She was stricken with polio in
ber of cases. That’s why the Cir- early childhood and wore braces
cult Court acted as it did until she was IX
tax charges.... Justice Department
Insiders are predicting that a spe-
cial U. S. Attorney will be named
to try the government's case
against California's millionaire lob-
byist "Artie" Samish. The re-
puted special prosecutor is Arthur
General of California in charge of
criminal cases, and close friend
HENRY MCLEMORE
Oh to Be in Georgia
Now Mealtime’s Here
ATLANTA — You can take a tel- Just stir the grits and peas to
low out of Georgia, but it’s well gether and their marriage results
nigh impossible to take Georgia in a tests that conjures up pictures
out of a fellbow. of the first Battle of Dull Run,
He can get his shoes shined in Jefferson, Davis, magnolia blos-
New York, Paris, ar Hong Kong, soms, and fried banjos,
but there’ll always be a little red
clay stuck to his heels.
Life’s Darkest Moment till
FLOok,DUGGIE. I KNOW I PROMISED
E You we D RUN AWAY OUT WEST
I AN BE COWBOYS BUT I OUST €
I REMEMBERED THAT MA WAS 1
■ GONNA HAVE FRIED CHICKEN 1
TWIGHT, AN'A CHOCKLIT
CAKE, AN IM HUNGRY
so WHADOYA SAY E
WE GO BACK P soe
I VERSTLA—ROTR
north and south magnetic
poles equal?
A—The aclinic line
THE ABILENE REPORTER NEWS
CHICKEN „
Me of research for the Pennsylvan-
la State Department of Education
During that time she met and mar-
ried Cyril David Remmlein, a
radio engineer now with the U S.
Signal Corps. When they decided to
“sink roots” in Washington she got
a job analyzing legal contracts for
NEA
“Until then I'd had no law, ee
f took courses at George Washing-
ton University.” She told me “1
found the subject fascinating. I'm
proud to have helped get income
tax reduction for summer school
attendance, as a business expense,
for teachers. Now we're working
sukeserian to MI Rs ess
******* tones par oua • *
Merib Second and Orarese ------- Aslene. Texas
^E ceen:*Z—A "£‘%-.
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The Abilene Reporter-News (Abilene, Tex.), Vol. 72, No. 305, Ed. 2 Tuesday, June 9, 1953, newspaper, June 9, 1953; Abilene, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1649216/m1/16/: accessed July 16, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Abilene Public Library.