The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, June 19, 1964 Page: 2 of 4
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Dallas Craftsman and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the UNT Libraries.
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I
4
J— it. 1H4
THtDALLASCRAFTSMAN
we an-
It is with deep regrets
i
worked anywhere but in
he never
Demand the AFL-CIO Label.
after 25 years of bargaining
13,
or with
with the publishers jointly
ers Association, notified the pub-
VOTE JUNE 20th FOR
want to maintain
MARVIN ALLEN
the newspapers
this
group
of the lock-
permits them the use
IRON WORKERS LOCAL 481
(
PAT H. ALMQUIST
Liret
b,
607 NO. OAKLAND
I
. DALLAS, TEXAS
Riverside 2-4493
Phone Riverside 1-1066
ELECT
r
■S'
/:
GORDON R. ADAMS
4
\
FINANCIAL SECRETARY-TREASURER
and DELEGATE TO INT'L CONVENTION
<K-,
IRON WORKERS' LOCAL UNION 481
" I
; Mi-ncJ
Union Upheld on Getting
Out of Bargaining Unit
Sacheli
actly a
TAI-1651 Bus.
BR 9-9224 Res.
retired June 1 after ex-
halr-entury during which
Association in a runoff election
to choose the exclusive collective
bargaining representative of 1,177
Yonkers teachers. The vote, con-
ducted by the Board of Education,
was AFT 582, NEA 507. The local
has asked that the board permit
those who were ill to vote or elim-
inate them in counting the ma-
jority.
CARPENTERS LOCAL
UNION NO. 198
IRON WORKERS'
HAPPENINGS
LOCAL NO. 481
By MARVIN ALLEN
heecA
Vec
A & R ELECTRIC CO.
residential installation AND repair
Remember this coming Satur-
day is Election Day—Become vote.
BUSINESS AGENT and
DELEGATE TO INT'L CONVENTION
FREE ESTIMATES — REASONABLE PRICES
_ All Union Labor Used —
S. B. Lynch & Company
Wholesalers
>
Washington.—A
same right as management to
withdraw at an appropriate time
rom bargaining with a group and
instead to bargain individually
I
1
RE-ELECT
MALCOLM FULLER
FINANCIAL SECRETARY-TREASURER
Iron Workers' Local Union No. 481
Een
their Detroit Newspaper Publish-
C. W. Clark all with foot or leg
injuries. Bro. Floyd House has
a back injury. We are thankful
that these are not serious and we
all wish each of you a speedy re-
covery.
Work is still holding up well,
with some good jobs in the mak-
ing at this time.
In the union’s attempt to strength-
en its bargaining position and to
regain the unhampered right to
strike individual employers.
“It is not for the board to se-
lect that type of unit which will
tend to balance the bargaining
strength of the parties,” he wrote,
because Congress did not give it
that right. He added that if the
board wishes to reconsider its rules
for withdrawing from group bar-
gaining units, the new rules “will
have to apply equally to employ-
ers and unions.
withdrawing from group bargain-
ing: one, the withdrawal must ,
be timely; second, it must not be a
"mere sham br pretense.” In this
case, he said, Local 13 met both
conditions.
The examiner pointed out that
B)
asked that negotiations be con-
ducted "separately and individu-
ally” but not jointly. The asso-
ciation refused, and the union filed
unfair labor practice charges last
February 25.
Bisgyer noted that under past
board decisions, employers have
had- to meet two conditions for
EASE THE STRAIN ON YOUR EYES
orng Your Physician’s Prescription to Us for A-1
QUALITY GLASSES
THOMAS OPTICAL COMPANY
Pacific Ave., Ground Floor, Medical Arts Building
‘g.8, gj p
15. -ge ,
t-em
Demand the AFL-CIO Label.
a union shop—or for a union.
He quit school at 14 and went
to work on June 1, 1914, in a
union shoe factory. In 1923 he
joined Upholsterers’ Local 69 to
open more thatn 40 years of activ-
ity in the union, both local and
international, and in the Roches-
ter labor movement. He was busi-
ness agent of Local 69 and a mem-
ber of the auditing committee of
the international union’s health
and welfare fund.
i. Ward, 76, who passed away
Monday, June 8. His services were
held at Restland Wednesday at 2
p.m. with grave side services by
his Masonic lodge. Bro. Ward
joined the Brotherhood in 1934 and
moved his membership to our local
in 1944. He had held continuous
membership here since that date.
He had retired from the trade sev-
eral years ago but kept in close
contact with the labor movement
up until his death. He was in our
office a few days before his death.
He is survived by his wife, a
daughter Mrs. David J. Henry of
Dallas, three grandchildren and
one great grandchild. We offer
our heartfelt sympathy to the fam-
Uy and friends in the passing of
our friend and brother.
About twenty-five members of
labor are to attend the Democratic
nounce the death of Bro. Thomas
bargaining because
TWES.
75S‘N 41
Mmbe Better Buamness Bureau
convention at Houston Tuesday
morning. We, being one of the
delegates, will leave Monday after-
noon and will not be f back in the
office until Wednesday morning. It
is for this reason we will not be
in the office Tuesday to write the
column, and are having to get it
out ahead of usual date.
Notices will go out Monday to
all our members owing April dues,
notifying them that they will be
out of benefits unless one month’s
payment is not received by the
last day of June. All members re-
ceiving such notices should give
it their immediate attention. Fail-
amill X
ing to do so they will notbe back
in benefits until 90 days after they
pay up to and including the cur
rent months duea We have had
one member this year to lose his
wife's benefit and one widow to
lose her husband’s benefit, who
were paid up but had not been
back in benefits the required 90
days. We mention this so that one
might realize it could happen to
them.
Members working at the trade
should not get the idea that bene-
fits are to include working at the
trade. By-Laws call for current
months dues to be paid when
working.
Adv. Reates Furnished on ApDilention
Entered at the Post ort!ea Rallas.
z tC was
union has the out weapon but “there is certainly
nothing fundamentally unlawful”
The Dallas Craftsman represents
the true trade union movement..:
En the aspirations and achievements
of the American Federation of kabo.-
ngress of Industrial Organizations
R does not represent the Rolshex 1
L W. w., narchista. Radical?or.anY
other movement injurious to the PA
and stability of American institutiona
it la for America frst and st.rne
for the honest, moral, upright. cou-
Egeous and true unlons all the time.
KM
1, f
Miblem.
THE DALLAS CRAFTSMAN
Issued Every Friday
Founded 18U by W.m. M. Reilly
WALLACE C. REILLY----- tmeitor
H*sBFi"aaNereiMe
REILLY pebzuzhgacnxashBompany
Telephones: HA 8-8385-6
Editorial orfice: Labor.Temria
1727 Young Street—HA 8-8385-6
nouncement of the election re-
turns. Work on the new school
budget is scheduled for completion
in two weeks.
Mrs. Mary Ellen Riordan, DFT
president, hailed the union victory
as a new era for teachers in
Detroit.” Immediate objectives in
bargaining with the board, she
said, will be reduction of class
site, improvements in salaries and
elimination of non-teaching chores.
"The youngsters in the Detroit
schools win have a better chance
for a good education than they
ever had before,” she asserted.
In Yonkers, N. Y., another local
of the Teachers dumped a chapter
in my efforts to serve you I have given my very best,
and if you appreciate honest effort I will ask
for your vote on June 20, 1964
I have been informed by Mrs.
James Upton that if she could get
13 pints of blood from volunteers
to the Wadley Blood Center it
would save her considerable ex-
pense. Do not confuse this vith
our own Blood Bank. As we will
replace from our bank 13 pints.
This is in addition to that. If you
wish to donate a pint please notify
me at once. I will donate a pint,
will you?
It seems that we have had sev-
with each employer in the group,
a National Labor Relations Board
aide has found.
Upholding Detroit Printing
Pressmen's Local 13 in its right
to bargain separately with the
Detroit Free Press and the De-
troit News, examiner Paul Bisg-
yer recommended that the news-
papers be ordered to bargain col-
lectively with the union in sep-
arate bargaining units and, if an
understanding is reached, sign sep-
arate contracts.
The decision, said Bisgyer,
“turns on the novel question
whether a labor organization
should be accorded the same right
as that enjoyed by employers to
withdraw at a proper time from
an established multiemployer unit.
He concluded that it should, noting
that the issue has not been settled
by the NLRB or the courts and
- that the Supreme Court expressly
reserved a decision on the point
in its Buffalo Linen case permit-
ting employers to defend them-
selves against union "whipsaw”
strikes.
The dispute arose when Local
Teachers Win
Detroit Victory
Detroit. — Unionism scored a
whopping promotion here when
teachers graded their own organi-
zations and place the Detroit Fed-
eration of Teachers at the head of
the class. The AFL-CIO union
became sole negotiating agent for
the public school system’s 9,700
teachers when it defeated the un-
affiliated Detroit Education Asso-
ciation by a decisive vote of 5,739
to 3,848.
The representation elec tlo n
wiped out the Detroit Board of
Education’s proposal for propor-
tional representation by the rival
organizations, Apian endorsed pre-
viously by the DEA.
The teachers' union local, which
brought about the election through
a year-long campaign, made plans
for bargaining sessions with the
school immediately after an-
--------- . . eral injuries this past week. Bros, of the mighty National Education
Ushers last Dec. 27 that it wanted । w A Young, James Carr and - - -
to negotiate contract changes and
Allied Sand Blasting Co
Waterproofing - Sand Blasting
Interior and Exterior Building*
6721 Maple Avenue FL 7-7477
Upholster Retires After
Fifty Union Years
Rochester, N. Y.—John M.
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Reilly, Wallace. The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 4, Ed. 1 Friday, June 19, 1964, newspaper, June 19, 1964; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1552089/m1/2/?q=%22%22~1: accessed July 9, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .