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Show 90 they making progress, not were Governor Lee out of office, they should. Governor at least they were study undertaken by Lloyd ported that teachers In 1961, C. Whitlock, were ln Of .course, UEA field man, re- interested in higher salaries than 0 th' er lssues suc h as form of power some . was i dec k lng eC1Slon-ma knowledge so necessary raises, the UEA that teachers . some interested. were were were that teachers might be faced with was 40 . lnvo 1 vemen t believed necessary in order to get Legislature and the Governor there had a In 1962, more With the thought UEA study were the economic benefits in which teachers that the a 1947-48.39 ground" since . th ey they thought in his second term was "suffering." concluded that teachers had "lost another had not received what George Dewey Clyde and teachers claimed they Even with economically interested in money and not doing what the UEA given appropriate salary difficult decisions. Although previously been talk about the effectiveness of union tactics, such tactics had by and large been avoided if not shunned. Such were tion. its that simply not The UEA had position.41 more part of the arsenal of a professional organiza- always held faith that the public would agree with Yet, it must have become clear to UEA leadership drastic act ion would be necessary to obtain higher salaries 39"Quo Vadis--An Editoria1,11 Utah Educational 7. Review 55 (November 1961): 40L10yd tional C. Whitlock, I4A Voice from the Field, Review 55 (January 1962): 6. 41For II Utah Educa a representative statement see the article by a former I II UEA president, L. Earl Acord, "The President s Page, Utah Educational Review 37 (May 1944): 256. |