The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, April 24, 1970 Page: 2 of 4
four pages : ill. ; page 16 x 10 in. Digitized from 35 mm microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
April 24, 1970
P*g> Two
1
by the Chicago Joint Board of the
for the children of union
his children is increasingly becom-
money
Reilly Printing Co., 1710 South
leaving the outer crust in one Harwood Street 428 8385-6.
CHECK YOUR
IRON WORKERS'
PRINTING NEEDS
N MUM
I
/envelopes
/letterheads
PITZINGER
LEGISLATURE
/ PUBLICATIONS
PLACE 3
/Any Other Printing Needs
Clarence H.
EMERSON
UNION WATER. MARKED RARER AND ENVELOPES
CARRIED IN STOCK
Fire . . Life . . Automobil
Buy
Sickness
Telephone
INSURANCE
Union
428-8385
Phone 742-7517
Label
ROEDER & MOON
Merchandise
Suite 601
That PkaAU
Mercantile Dallas Building
Reilly Publishing Company
41
Member Better Bumineme Bureau
I
-4
I
cs
/ImmTL.
Education Emerges As
Contract Fringe Benefit
I of Industrlal Organtstions,
not represent the Bolshevik,
Coi
It
$
LOCAL NO. 481
GEORGE TERRELL
Business Agent
£
I
THE DALLAS CRAFTSMAN
BwiMM Office and Hom — 1710 S. Harwod, 428-9385
Cocktail Sandwich Bread
(Makes 50-60 slices)
1 loaf French or Italian bread
(about 8 inches round and
18 inches long)
4 (3-oz.) packages Neufchatel
cheese, softened
Brand Cheese, softened
1 cup (about % lb.) boiled
ham, cut into % -inch
cubes
2 hard-cooked eggs, cut into
h-inch cubes
% cup dill pickles, drained
cut in -inch cubes
2 tablespoons parsley flakes
% teaspoon salt
% teaspoon pepper
Cut bread in half vertically and
trim crusty ends to make two 8-
iHinunttHmnniHnuiuiimnMiHiiiiiiiHtitiNnuuiiiitiiiiinwiiiitiBHiiiM.
Recipes
■ 80
1
Hoisting and Portable
Engineers Local No. 714
By C. O. ROSS
Financial Secretary
Pacifie Avenwe, Ground Root, Medicel Am Building
Pheme Eiverside 1-1066 KhmM, 24493
EASE THE STRAIN ON YOU* EES
Being Yow Physiciem’s Presoriptiea to Ua fee A-1
QuALIT GLAssas
THOMAS OPTICAL COMPANY
82}.
- 88328 E <,
as Rut tessr&nsf'si
HJA Dmndlem.
Washington ■— Educational op-
portunity for both the worker and i Clothing Workers that provides
(4-) package LederkranzwadPerseurreleannmedsum-
A . ; ■ ■ “
zet5-
Well, me and another member
of the office crew joined the Hasp
Gang.
Bro. Wood was not feeling good
yesterday. Hope he is better today.
Well Friday night is the night
for the dinner. Hoping to see a
good turn out. We were talking
about the Brothers still here that
belonged to the old Local 59 and
believe we counted 5 but there
may be more. I am not sure.
We want to invite the Mayor
of Red Oak, Bro. Hart to the
dinner. Not very often we have a
Mayor a member of Local No.
481, also a Mayor Pro Tem, Bro.
Gordon Adams of Cockrell Hill.
Maybe we will have a lot more
attending the dinner, also I want
to invite Bro. C. Pierce and his
wife and Bro. J. B. Moon and his
wife.
I am thinking maybe Bro. A. C.
Wood was a member of old 59.
Let us know about this Woody.
Don’t forget there will be no
drunks tolerated so will see you
Friday night.
/membership APPLICATIONS
Published by The
REILLY PUBLISHING COMPANY
1710 South Harwood Street
Mall Address, Post Office Box 15844
Dallas, Texas 75215
Telephones: 428-8385, 428-8388
] gether until smooth. In another
medium-size bowl combine ham,
eggs, pickles, parsley, salt, pepper
and % cup reserved bread crumbs;
fold into cheese mixture and mix
well. Spoon cheese filling into
bread shells. Shake down the fill-
ing, holding the bread with both
hands. Wrap another piece of
waxed paper around ends of each
loaf. Chill thoroughly overnight.
Remove paper and cut into % -inch
thick slices.
CHEESE CUES FOR
COCKTAILS
Cheese and cocktails go togeth-
er so well and so often, yet the
combo is always a delightfully
refreshing one as these cheese
slices created in the Borden Kitch-
en show. Fill the hollowed out
center of a sturdy French or
Italian bread loaf with a creamy
spirited blend of Neufchatel and
Liederkranz cheeses, ham, eggs
and pickles. Make ahead, then re-
frigerate until the party is ready
to swing. Just slice and serve.
mg a collective bargaining ob- members to go to college.
THE DALLAS CRAFTSMAN
inch loaves. With sharp knife
carefully remove center of bread,
TERMS OF ADVERTISING
AND SUBSCRIPTION RATES
Adv. Ratee Furnished on Application
Entered at the Poet Office, Dallas,
Texan, as Second-Class Mall Matter
Under the Act of March 3, 1879.
The Dallas Craftsman represents the
true trade union movement, voicing
the aspirations and achievements of
the American Federation of Labor-
Educational funds negotiated in
I New York by the State, County &
’ Municipal Employes and by Local
3 of the International Brother-
hood of Electrical Workers.
The recent General Electric
settlement which will make 144,-
000 GE workers represented by
unions eligible for $57.6 million
worth of free education a year.
Levine predicts that by the end
of the present decade “the Ameri-
can worker and his children are
likely to have won educational op-
portunity as a collective bargain-
ing benefit... as inextricably wov-
en into the labor-management re-
lationship as are the social wel-
fare provisions and pension and
health insurance.”
“Education as a new fringe
benefit in bargaining,” he sug-
gests, “can have a profound effect
not only on the character of or-
ganized labor but on the quality
and skill of the American work
force. It can also significantly
alter the nation’s education sys-
tem.”
Reilly Printing Co., 1710 South
■ Harwood Street. 428 8385-6.
1 piece. Reserve % cup of the
crumbs. Wrap a 20x8-inch piece
of waxed paper tightly around
each bread shell. The paper should
I not extend over the ends. Tape
- ........
e 4 acu-ca ■ ‘-Lncammhaa-
jective, according to an article in
the March issue of the American
Federationist the AFL-CIO maga-
zine.
The author. Dr. Herbert A.
Levine, director of labor educa-
tion at Rutgers University, also
reports that this emphasis on edu-
cation benefits is bringing sub-
stantial results.
His article, “Education: An
Emerging Fringe Benefit,” cites
provisions appearing in union
contracts that call for joint labor-
management responsibility and
sometimes government cooperation
in a wide range of education pro-
grams.
For the worker, these programs
may mean training or retraining
for skills that will help him keep
his job in the face of automation
as well as opportunities for ex-
panding his general knowledge.
For the worker’s children, they
offer the chance for higher educa-
tion beyond the limits of the
family’s income.
Even though unions are taking
scholarship proposals to the bar-
gaining table, Levine notes that
they still “correctly” maintain
“that education primarily is a
public responsibility to be sup-
ported in the main as a social
charge on the public treasury.”
Levine describes a number of
different educational plans nego-
tiated by unions:
A program negotiated by the
Plumbers and Pipefitters with sev-
eral national construction firms
which has provided more than $11
million in grants for apprentice-
ship training.
Training courses for workers
and their children under a plan
negotiated by Laborers’ Local 222
with building contractors in south-
ern New Jersey.
A contribution of 1 percent of
payroll by New York’s voluntary
hospitals to train members of
Local 1199 of the Retail, Whole-
sale & Dept. Store Union for bet-
ter jobs.
An educational fund negotiated
/working cards
We received word of the death
of Bro. Clint L. Dickerson, who
has been a member of Local No.
714 since Jan. 1967. Bro. Dicker-
son suffered a heart attack last
Wednesday, April 15. His funeral
and burial was at McCoombs,
Mississippi last Saturday. We wish
to extend our deepest sympathy
to Bro. Dickerson’s family.
We have several on the out-of-
work list and certainly hope they
can get to work as soon as pos-
sbile. We also see quite a few out
of town members coming by look-
ing for work from other Locals.
However, our Local members
MUST go out first regardless of
the “hard luck turnip green"
stories. I will attend the Four
States Building Trades Confer-
ence in New Orleans, La. this week
end. This should be a good meet-
ing from the Information we have.
Again I want to request all of
you new members who have not
been obligated to be present at
our next meeting on May 11.,
7:30 p.m. for initiation.
/dues BOOKS
/ruled FORMS
L W. W., Anarchists,, Radical, or any
other movement Injurlous to the peace
and mtability of American institutions
It Is for America, first. and last, and
for the honest, moral, upriht, pou-
rageous and true unlons all the time
THE DALLAS CRAFTSMAN
Dallas. Texas
Issued Every Friday
Founded 1918 by Wm. M. Reilly
FALLACE C. REILLY Editor
SHELBY T. WHITE Adv. Mgr.
P. B. Smith Advertising
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Reilly, Wallace. The Dallas Craftsman (Dallas, Tex.), Vol. 56, No. 47, Ed. 1 Friday, April 24, 1970, newspaper, April 24, 1970; Dallas, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1561389/m1/2/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .