Word: ribicoffs
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Later in the week Stevenson traveled east to Hartford, Conn., where a conclave of top New England Democrats gave him a welcome that warmed his heart. At lunch, with Governor Abraham Ribicoff (who in January pledged Connecticut's 20 Democratic votes to Adlai), Stevenson was assured that he had no cause for worry in New England. That evening, expanding in such a congenial atmosphere, he gave 1,500 guests at Connecticut's Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner a sample of the new-style Stevenson fight talk...
...cost of $27.2 million; 1,943 business establishments and 922 farms suffered losses of $136,400,000. Last month a second flood ravaged Connecticut, taking 17 lives and causing about $30 million worth of damage. Last week a 20-man Flood Recovery Committee recommended to Governor Abraham Ribicoff that the state's share of the bill-about $35 million-should be spread by a short-term tax program among all the people of the state because "the material loss to the survivors must be shared if the total community is to survive...
...roads, bridges, schools, playgrounds and other public properties. ¶$16, 286,000 to state departments and agencies for the repair of state highways and bridges, for the repair of buildings administered by local housing authorities, and for rehabilitating state properties such as parks, forests and official cars. Next week Ribicoff will propose to a special session of the legislature that almost all the state taxes be raised 10% for the next two years so that the cost of the flood can be evenly divided...
...Hartford, Connecticut's Democratic Governor Abraham A. Ribicoff came to a high boil when he read in a pamphlet put out by the state government workers' union: "The C.I.O. won't give up on major issues, and will connive, persist and annoy or do anything to get what you [the workers] have a right to have." Rumbled Ribicoff: "Anyone caught conniving or annoying ... in any department of the state government while I am governor will be fired on the spot...
...wake of the recent disastrous floods in New England, Connecticut's Governor Abraham A. Ribicoff loudly denounced as "ghoulish" reported attempts to lure hard-hit industries to the flood-free South. Actually, no industries have left the state as a result of the floods. But his suspicions were understandable. With industry spending a record $27.3 billion on expansion this year, almost every state, county and city in the nation is hungrily trying to lure new industries. Says Victor Roterus, area development chief for the U.S. Commerce Department: "Competition to get new industry has never been rougher...