Word: hewes
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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...Congress directs. Few of its 1,153 employees are first-rate, and none are high-paid. The commissioner gets only $20,000 a year, compared with $48,500 for the school superintendent of Chicago. Urgent suggestions that the office be made a Cabinet-level department have come from former HEW Secretary Abraham Ribicoff, former Harvard President James B. Conant, and many others, but HEW's new Secretary Anthony Celebrezze wants the improving done "within the present framework...
...lose accreditation when the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools meets at the end of this month. "If one teacher is fired for his views now," says History Professor Silver, "it will be curtains for the university." The faculty is thus free at last to make Ole Miss hew to law and learning. By all evidence, most professors are now solidly behind one colleague's summation: "The powers of darkness abound. It's up to us to work for the powers of light...
Politics '62 (ABC, 1:30-2 p.m.). Campaigns in Connecticut, Ohio, Illinois, Indiana and Nebraska. Interviewed are: former HEW Secretary Abraham Ribicoff, candidate for U.S. Senator from Connecticut; Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen, up for re-election in Illinois; Senator Homer Capehart, running for re-election in Indiana; Robert A. Taft Jr., candidate for Congressman at large in Ohio; Michael Di Salle, running for re-election as Governor of Ohio; former Interior Secretary Fred Seaton, running for Governor in Nebraska...
...that vote." For his part. Seely-Brown favors medical care for the aged, but he fears that the Administration's proposal for financing it through social security could bankrupt the whole retirement system. He concentrates his fire on Ribicoff's job jumping, from the governorship to HEW and now to the Senate campaign-all within two years. "Ribicoff made too fast a turn-around." says Seely-Brown. "If he gets into the Senate, maybe he won't like that, and he'll go after something else. I've never run away from...
...union's demand for the right to veto future job cutbacks. This and other unresolved issues will be submitted to binding arbitration this week by a three-man team (Heineman, Leighty and Lawyer Sylvester Garrett, chairman of the U.S. Steel-Steelworkers' arbitration board). The arbitrators will probably hew to a policy recommended by an Administration fact-finding board last June. It proposed union-management consultation on payroll cutbacks, came out against a union veto, but urged adequate compensation for discharged employees (to which the C. & N. W. has already agreed...