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Dineto Dec 16 in S.F. Friday evening, December 16, kovsky as a "living testimonb'l to jails; torture both physical and -address the national AFL C!.'. at the Fairmont Hotel atop Nob the ne-ed for hu'man rights." mental; deprilvation, isolation and convention in Los Angeles. Hill in, San Francisco, California Meany told the delegates, "For misery-and for what crime? The Jack Henning, executive. officer AFL-CIO trade unionists and their most Americans, the phrase 'hu. crime of t h i n k i n g a -different of the state AFL-CIO, and John friends'will gather at a dinner to man rights' bri1ng9s the Soviet tlhogt, of uttering a different F. Crowley,.secretary of the San pay tribute to V/ladimir Bukovsky, U n i o n to mind first. For, of word, of v ocaIIy yearning for Francisco Labor Coun'cil, are e-o- the Russian civil right leader, course, there human rights. are fredom." chairmen of the San Francosoce who has spnt the major portion denied in wholesale fashion." Bukovsky, a 3S-year-oId biolo- dinner, with officers. of o t h of his adult life in Soviet jails and Noting that the Russian Wuld gist, was finally released 'by the northern California centrai lah- instiNtutions as a political prisoner. address the convention during its USSR last December. In Febru- bodies and other AFL-CIO lea&-- "No-host" cocktail service be- sessions, the AFL-CIO leader em. ary, he testified before the Com- serving on the general comm.iii".- gins at 6:30 and dinner will be phasized: missioni for Security and Coopera- Tickets, at S20. a person, Ia- srved at 7:30 p.m. "His story is'a story of oppres- tion in Europe, urging the U.S. available from The General ComX In his opening address to the sion, of human thought so brutal1, to adopt a firm stand in dealing mittee' for the Sukovsk' -Dinner,' national AFL-CIO convention in so inhumane, so terrible, that 't with Soviet political leaders. c/o San Fra'ncisco Labor Co-unti,- VLADIMIR BUKOV/SKY Los Angeles on Thursday, Presi. i's hard to believe. Yearsin men. Just beore coming to San Frain 3068 Sixteenth Street, San Ara- "Livin.Testimonials" dent Geore, Meany described BuJ tal institutions, which are really cisco, the Russian i's scheduled to cisco, CA 94103.

Vol. 20- No. 49 December 9, 19 7t:~,7.. AFI-CIOStsUpNewAFL-CIO CONVENTION OPE'NS .J Formationofanewdepartment world, was formed 4tobring sci- T c n m c H withinlthe AFL-CIO to con)e with entific. Drofessional and cultural*_** the growing need of professional employees into relations of mu- AFL-CIO President George Meany this Henning also --noted that althoughi -the employees for effective collective tual assistance and cooperation," week called Federal Reseirve Board Chair- "twinds of conservatism have been blowing bargaining was announced thlis they said. man Arthur Burns "the first barrier to re- across Californila," they havre slackened,.-.a's week on the eve of the opening Charter affiliates of the new de- storing economic health to America" and evidenced by the people's rejection. of, :an.- of the AFIZCIO's 12th Constitu- partment, w h i c h succeeds the urged that he not be reappointed as FRB anti-worker in-itiative that s'ought toutlaw. tional Convrention in Lo Angeles. Council of AFL-CIO - Unions for chairman. collectiv'e bargaining and strikes by public Creation of the new Depart- Professional Employees, are 26 employees. ment for Professional Employees, AFI"10 unions that represent Pointing out that the Conlgressional Bu-dg- more than 1.5 million professional et Office now estimates that every one per- Promoters- of the meas'ure 'announced AFL-CIO, "reflects the growing cent reduction in the unemployment rate l *t

TEMPORARY -CHAIRMAN John F. Henning, executiv'e officer of the CaliforniIa AFL-CIO, addresses the first meeting of the now Department for Professional Employees Wednesday in Los Angeles. , The now department embraces 26 AFL-CIO unions, representing 1.S million profess'ional and white collar workers. Albert Shanker,, AFT president,, was elected president of the DPE. @ Nationwi*de: Inj'u'nctumo-

The National Labor Relations making a law abider out of J. P. is the first time a court injunc- Board's decision in- the last -week Stevens," Finley declared. Ho ex. tion has been sought against an of November to seek a nationwide prese hope- that the combination employer. injunction in federal court against of thts NLRB's stand with his The labor relations board. in- J.- P. Stevens & Company' to'halt union's anti-trust suit and nation. formed both the Stevens. company "un-lawful conduct" in its stub- wide boycott a g a i n s t Stevens. and, t-he Amalgamated Clothin born fight to keep uni;ons out of Oucts W;Ill "make the COmPany and Textile Workers UJnion that its ,plants wa~s hera-ld'ed by Mur- see that it Will be0 cheaper in the it had authorized a court petition ray Finley, presidetnt of the Amal- long run tO obey the law." against the 'company, its officers, gamnated Clothing and T e x t i.I e He pointed out, though, that if board of directors, supervisors' Workers of America, as justified, the company chooses to -fight the and agents enj'oining them againt by the "company's massive and injuncxtion "the contempt hearinlgs interfering with -th rights of' continued violations" of federal and -all the legal steps could take workers in Stevens'plants to form labor laws. years and'years." a union. The NLRB action is "one more In the entire history of -the Na- The petition woulId be filed in Important step on tlw road to tional I-bor Relations Act, this Federal District Court in , where Stevens has its cor p o r a t e headquarters. The Hatfel lew & BBA resident board said the 'inj'unction would - be sought "absent. satisfactory ac- -and P'rime tion or settlement" of violations ISRAEU LABOR P>ARTY LEADER forerm Minister of lwaol Yitzhak Rabi'n (riht) 'Is by Max ssb,l Califrn-ians.Wi n Appintment pending before fth board. California Labor Fedwation Vice President and lInternatbonal Vice On December X, James E. Hat- appointmenlt of Frank Carter to Such an iniunctlon would pro- President, Amalgamated Most Cuttw & Butcher Workmen of Nol field became the- ninth Interna- serve as Area I Vfice President hibit in1a-rene with workors in America, when the la*er. played hos to the Midle Eastern lao tional President of the-Glass Bot- and Carl Legler as Area -III Di- their Oforts to. organize and for- leader during his recent trip to.San Diego.' tle Blowers Association, AFIP rector. bid the company to coerce or CIO- suicceeding Tulley, threaten work*r, kep thun' un- Harry.A.. As pmsident of Local 122, Car- der surveillance or discrieminate retired. Hatfield previoulsly. has tor helpod dvelop the -meirger of U. S. Ag'ency Offers Seminars on been International aoainst them becaus of union. Secretary- four operators' locals in the Los related Treasurer, Represdntative, Exec- Anpils area into Local Union 29 activity. 'Humanilti'es for Labor L.eaders utivre Officer and Area Director and served as' president of,.the "Given the employer's post his- The National Endowment for phers, historians and others. of GBBA. tory an 'ivnthe. evidenc that merw local until Woming. In its uinfair labor' practi'ces stil.! co'n- the Humanit'ies, an independent The semiars are designed to Walter J. MacL;uskl*, fornwrly tornationat ftprisontative in 1963. tinue after all these y'ears, the federal agency, announced this give participants an opportunty Aroa 1. VICO President, has bOon Ho Was .'kl Exe'cutive Officer, National Labor Relations Board week that it will continue its pro to stand back from their work and Paintd in Hatfleld's stead' as at the 196S convention and be fears that without broad judicial gram of, humanties seminars for explore the humanistic dimensions International Secretary-Treasurer. camw Area Dtr*etr In 1%9. ,protection, the union's campaign labor leaders in 1978. of their professions by studying Hatfield, a West Virginia native, Legler succeeds' Carter as Area efforts will be met by unlawful The seminars, which are held such topics as the 'historical ori- was 22.when. he began work in the III Director after serving seven conduct that will effectively stifle during. the summer at selected gins of the American labor move- -glass industry. in Columbus, Ohio, years as-Director of Research and the statutory rights of the em- colleges- and uniersities,. will ment and changing patterns of 'bcoming an a'ctive member and 'Education. Following. service in ploye'es 'involved," the board said. bring labor.leaders together for a work within the United States.' officer of LAcal 106, GBBA. He the Martime Service in World War Stevens has bon'fhund guilty month of full-time study under the: Other seminrs open to mem- had been Intemnational Secretary-' IIt,. Legler became a member of IS times of violating Jabo- law direction of distinglaished philoso. bers of various professions,. ni Treasurer sic 1974.--- Local 148 irx May*o6d, California,- and has'paid $1.3 millio'n In finn -cluding. labor' leaders, will deal The new- president annouanced and served as Financial- Secretary and back- wages since the arly with the ethical.dimension in con- of the local. Be'fore .becoming D)i-,- 'temporary life, value conflict in rector Of Rdsearch and- Education, -Ixadd!fof tops vio Wi.ii, our soceb the culturi fo he served th GBBA in -other posi- the board cited alleged conllu,' -tions of responsibility. ing violations in dsx plants in five states, Alabama, Georgia, Cori ThepporCI oferlapaque society,. and contemporaryli-'--19 necticut, Virginia and North Caro lo inmovemen* lina, according to Tom Miller', a From 12 to 15 people_ wll attend RIOrnoDprment board.spokesman. each seminar tuition-fi receiv- 'authorization to seek the depicting. the struggle for human cover The. AFL-CIO Industrial Union ~The rights and dignity of striking. ing up to $1,200 to expenses, 12th -convention' elected injunction, Miller said, "is 'sort plus reimbuement for.traveLv Dept.'s of a shortcut" to a v o i d the members of Brewery Workers Elected officials Jacob Clayman to lead-it for the Local 366 against the A d o I p h -and profes- next two 'and a. lengthy process of seeking out sioa staff at all levels -of thie la- years adopted relief in individual cases. Coors Company of Golden, Colo- nuber of constitutional changes court rado, for $10 apiece, according bor movement may'apply. to and the' de- The board said that it -would The application deadline is ten- strengthen update on the "past rec- to A. D)avid Sickler, N a t i o. n a I partment. rely -company's Coors Boycott Coordinator, in Los tatively set for AprilI 17,, 1978..Fur- ord of unfair labor practices, as ther information, applicatio'n The 250 delegates, representing found by the board and th courts, Angeles.' a of "The is to forms and selection 'criteria may 58 affiliates with membership a record that has "red'Sthe com- boycott continuig be obtained by writing to: Profes- si million, also approved a series the as te-most -be effective," Sickler says, .not- pany 'reputation that COOrS -sions Program, Division of Fellow- of resolutions focusing on major notorious recidivist in the field 6f ing representatives ships, Nati'onalI Endowment for the national andi infernatinonl proh- labor law,"'"a dzesription app1i*d are traveling throughout the lems with particular attention on country attempting to offset and Humanities,, Washington, D.-. C . to St*v*ns in th contempt cita- 20506. unemployment, trade and imports tion handed down by the UJ. S. reverse the- boycott's effect. and organizing. JAM'ES E. 'HATFIELD' Court of Appeals for the Second Local 366, members. in the Clayman, who succeeds r'etiring GB8A Pr*sIdent Judicial Circuit on August 31. field supporting the m e s s a g e Federal Act president I. W. Abel, will serve as It was the third time the com- against the anti-union brewer cor- Com'p. president and secretar-treasurer AFLO pany had. been cited for contempt poration are "in desperate need Trhe Federal Employees' Com- under a constitutional cfiange' 0IO.Delegates for violating court orders to stop, Of funds in order to continu-e the pensation Act covers more than adopted by the convention. He h'as To Be-Entertained interfering with legal organizing vital need of spreading the word" 3 million employees, includng the been. I U D secretary - treasu'rer to consumers. 2.8 million currently in federal since 1973 and has' been with the The George Meany Center for The plaque serves the doulble civilian employment, with bene- IUD since 1960. Abel, retired pres- Labor Studies in cooperation with purpose of encouraging and pub- fits -for job-related illness, injury ident of th'e Steelworkers, has .the Associated Actors and Artistes Equal Pay. Equal Rights licizing the un'ion's griev'ances or- death. Trhe Act. is administered served as president- of the IUD of America will present an "Eve- Are Supportd in Poll againt Coors and- of a'ssisting by the t Office of Workers' Com- since 1968. ning in the'Arts" for delegates to On issues affecting women in with finncial needs. It will serve pensation Programs, U.S. Depart-. The convention was held in At-. the national AFL-CIO Convention the U.S. eco'nomy, a random poll as a certificate of support on be- ment of Labor. lanta at the end of October. Dele- in Los Angeles- on Monday, Dec. taken by Associated .Press and half of the strike and boycott. As gates elected three new members 12 at 8:15 p.m.. NBC News nationwide showed 92 time passes, it will become a to the newly renamed 24-member Thle program entitled "The percent believed women doing the souvenir. of a historic labor strug- Publisher's Notice. IUJD executive 'council (formerly Sights of Stage and Screen" will same work as men -should be paid gle. The California.AFL-CIO. Hows' executive committee), set up a include Theodore- Bikel, Kathleen equal wages. Further information on order- is. published -weekly bY tho Cali- general executive board repre- Nolan, Jean Stapleton and others, Fifty-three- p e r c e n t 'favored in-g may -be obtained- from the fornia Labor. FderitiOn, -AOL- senti'ng each department affiliate wilth. a special excerpt from the- passage of the Equ'al Rights Coonr Boycott Crn-min"e*^ 2M2 CIO, 995 Maret SUret, -,San to meet at least annually, and film "Bound for Glory." Amendment (ERA) to the federal West Eighth Stmet, Los Angeles, Francisco, Calif. "94103. -Seco'n changed the constitution to put an The prograim is assisted by a constitution. The ERA was pro- CA 9000S. Telephone numbers are clan p'osta9epd Pat !-Sam. fa-' age limit of 65 on candidates for grant from the National Endow- portionately more popular with (213) 389 8693 or (213)- 381-160. CiSCO, Calif. SU b5Cr;Pt4N0"- Orders at should S.3.50 a.-Year. -PubliCat;On, Hum- office. ment for the Arts and -will be held men OM6% than with women $10 per plaque ber 083400. F The three new members of the those include the name of .the union, JAm.n 'He"nial9 in the California Ballroom of the -(50%) among qulestioned. eXo U t;iv SeCrehqtary asurer; council are Shelley Appleton, sec- Bonaventure Hotel. Admission willl The poll was conducted in late Organization or individual order- Glenn Martin, editOr (Continued on Page 4) be free. November. ing, for appropriate inscription.

Page 2 'December 9, 1 977 AMVPI Se-minars 0n ~~~~~~ I

NLRB Reional Cief Quit snS. p§¢ I Pro ram Found An I nion I lkn ao' od Once ;they learned the nature OPresident George- Meany in,,his dav's econiomy. of td program, all regional di- Fanniing's letter said 'that the report to Ithe nationa'l AFI Meany pointed out that th re- rectors of 'the National Labor Re- regional directors were 'mvited by convention which opened Thurs-~ form program for overhauling the lations Board withdrew from a an-. organztion called the "'Af- day in Los Angeles warned that federal labor laws would only hit .nationwde.series of management- firmative' Managem'ent Practices oppositioii -by. buasiness and em- 4'law violators." The attaclcs of sm s.aimed at counsling em- Institute" -but were not-informed ployer interests to National Labor law-abiding employer 'groups on pWers;on how to ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~fight:h uin -of the- na'me -of th'e semmar,or Law Reform proposals in Con- the measures risk the lOBSs of-good- iieffoirts.of their' employees. the -gene6ral pur-pose of'. -the pr0- gress, which are backed by or-, will between worker-and employ- . fli-was the word received by gram. ganlized lab;or and the Carter Ad- er in thie future. Joi:F. ennilg,executive offi- "After the (regional) directors ministration, may be Ao n AL{CIO sources stresd that cer -of' the California LbrFed- received copies''of the brochure laibor-management rela'tions in Meany isn't saying the bitterness MUM., AFI,I,tis week from a-ttached to your' letter, they. con- America for years,to come..- will It in "more strikes or -a NLRB chairman John H. Fanning. tacted..tl* office of£ the gee'ral "There is a serious:and grow- refusal to bargain, but will -result o h in- coun".l and inM'dicated their r'e ing threat, to stable labor-mnanage- in a 'hardening of.attitudes anxd a- Henning had.p Iutac to. participate in a cono ment reIatio.n's 'in the United setback to the spirit of coopera- v.llof the NLRB. 16nal tion. that has marked labor-man- Jlin a k1r sent to Fan.- ferenc which was being held for States,'! Mea'ny asserted, adding: the purposes expressd in that "It comes. f-rom those companies. aentrelations. in years. n: bSt month, pointing. out that The -re'cent'the House- ."thl avowed pr ose dthe son- brochure,"' Famn said.' which place themselves above the program passed "The ~~vaozinset law, and it is buttressed -by those of Representatives after a hard inaw. is diametrically oppose to agreed GEORGE MEANY to th statuto deication and com. that it w'ol be' lnappor businss leaders who stand -silent-. fight and'is. expected face -de-. milf the'NaHonaJ Labo for :.8ot to" ly by or secretly -encourage their termiuned.-- opposition. mi- the U.S.- pat. In that con4rnce, and a's corporate' brethren -to' break-the discrimmlate. -aga=nst :*o`rker-6- for. Seat,Where -it- is' Iy ob In respons, Fanning said: a resul al -d iwtrw law.. .union act-ivities, based ona -modern considere'd. early -next-year.. "IU have discussed the matters ftonth" he add. Tht-refort package is designed. economisc factors. The lawy has not raised in your letter with. general The AMPI brochure -was titled. to expedite cases pending befr been chne 'in these regards for Joi, 9uzsi^ty -conel.John, S. Irvinig who ad-. "The-Blueprint. for Avoiding {Un- .the -National L ab o r Relations over 40 years and the -legal sanc-. -Union Label and,-union Shop that no direc- ionztionA Do-It-Yourself Board and to provide' for -penal- tions against employers violati Card-they mea quality fryu dSdme. regional Ap-- on -who ..ar participating 'M these proach." ties. employerg 'illegally the, law are 'insiificant int t jobs for. fellowwoies It.- said that "in each seminar location} the. National Labor Re- lations 'Board will be represented Gar"aters Lma'l 771. Apprentice Is Winner Of- Internati'onal 'Award by th regional-.director" and A Californian has won one of son Tiophy, a w a r d e d by- the past, three ye'ars that Watsonville went on to name the- director -of 'three top, award& in the. 1977 In- UJnited Brotherhood of Carpenters has had -either -a first, or snd each region incuding. Natalie P. temnational' Carpentr iApprentice-- and the'Olav Boen Trophy, pre- place carp'enter wmr.in the- 'in- 977 Allen of Region 204 -in San Fran- s4i tt hld is week: in -sented_--byfthe&attle Northwest ternational con-test. Jamesl Bres- -a wD.I.yBenefitis CiSCO. Anahim.t Chapter of the Associated General nahan, was second place. wimnner ..Kwvr onJnay-1. --ne The NLRBs general cousl Richard Walker, Local 77i, Wat- Contractors. In additions he re- in 1976 'at Lss Vegas and IAe AS. notified' the sponso.rs of his de- sonville, was jude the best car- ceived a $1 -000 cash award. Hoffseth was first place winner Ateis -.o 1of-bYsembl-r cision not to permit, agencgt par- penter aiftEr two'days of written.. Walkser,-employed by a 'Castro -in 1975- at . ....7.. ticipation --but the brochures had anid maknipulati've competit'io'n Ville. eonst -ction firm- for the The contest is sponsored by the -already.-been d.istributed, :ftnning with some 50,co'mpetitors, 'winer past year, -built a coln and Brotherhood of C-arpenters, the.e explained, adding that. *'I1 com- of state and provincial contests overhead beam, concrete form and' Ass-ociated General Contractors o6f -m aXliMmum. disabili-t br urance pletely agree" with the general from around the U.S. -and Canaa. afinished carpentr project. America, and the National, Asso s : - be increased%0 from counsel's 'decision. He received the John. R. Ste'ven- This As the third time in the ciation of Home' Builders. k1-b$ eky b ii STICK- TOHER-PASs THiEAM:BY-

an W: The b49U firnis are eur-- 'rt..:- Ho. iy -16i bo- E ort a..wes*. I!eo. Mfg.C.,ce :mIferyvllle, bM M1- the"Caor `IA o Fe.d- fl.at>XSX >mab°r I~~ntirstate D Sacrameiito. >R d l N N i -er'ins IM7 leiXUeProgram. A ftlof 46,873 cla'.s e placed -on -the list in resp,onse to Sirl-oin B> 8ew 'Unlimited.. Restau Rylock -Company, Ltd.,,128 -*;itten requests from sfiites Rd o Mtr, 2001-West ra,13 aatg"mnve 'Atlantic Union ceived theirk. first payments in and only after approval by the . Point Way, Sacramento.- a,Srto. Ave., City. --obrof- 1977 under.Sh stat Executive Council. .The Nut,Triw and thle Coffee disabili-ty.insurance program and All trade unionists and~ friends 'tree Restaur'ants on Interstate St8so lepuOAs 55E a Tennessee PI^stfcs of Johnson coontinuing clainu amounted to -of organized labor are. urged. -not between San FWrancisco and Sac- n e;a t City, Ten'nessee. i91,330.- to patronize firmsglisted here. ramento.- Igr Yel e taur nt 10 In the. ten month.,' January Afiliates involved are ulrged to Sunnyvale-Saratoga, Road, Sun- through October, the total amount inform. the FBederation of any fu- .San Frakncisco SayArea' Evl tare contract se'ttlements o'r other . Magic. Pan Restaurant, 335 S. -San Franeisc'o Bay Guardian paid to disabled workBers under developments that. would -wartrant Tb olwgrsarns n Winchester Blvd., San Jose. -this progra'm was $3539447 895. the removal of any of these anti; HmnS ti anFacso XOu of, GenJi l Catbay Restau- Near claims. dur'ing the same tpe union firm from the list.' as,mbrds- -rat,' 1335 N. Fbirst St., San Jose. San Rafael Inidependent-Jour- riod totaled :-Mother. I e - --.d .- 483,940. :. F I a, g g s AtdenWaat--a Rtestaurant, firms Pst-1, Unfa"ir a're:beethrZXe"WeD0llt By comparison, in the first ten -VW=ae R1eal}Talo the -CamX Iadition Federatini a EHomesteasd nRoacd &Alto.Lawrence months of 1976, total -of -$342,- 616,901 was paid in benefits -and supporting. such nation-al AFL- Budgm Bay West TravYelodge, 940 Weddel Drive, CIO -sponsored boycott's as, those, new claims totaled 459,762.. Fresno Area Fes -Sunnyvale. in progress against the Kingsport Disability wnurance benefits are Fresno Teweouse,, -2220 Tlu- Victora8a eBrn Restaurant, 2500 Cun- Press of Kingsport. Tenn.,, pub-. financed. entirely by w o r k e r' s' lare St-.,. Fresno.- Tbe Dell ninghamn Ave., San Jose. lishers' of the' ""World -Bobk" and through a payroll tax of 1.0 per- t0A| A ~~~~~TheGo:dfther Intemsational Hueseof Pancakes, "iChilderaft' -series. cent 'of earnings up to- $1.1,400. sngEes rea ~~~MinaIZYa ., 3S9.5 Stevens Creek Blvd. Sai annualy. - NewoKer , Newport".Beaeh Jim92 Gril Jose. Nerm'i Restaurant at fthe f:ol- Restaurants, in -Ghirardelli lowing. locationt in the -Los An- Square, -San Francisco:- Stockto'n Areat Broadway Theatre, 4th' and * ..Equiq Prosident -.. geles area: magic Pa's Stockton Ina MotelI and- Restau- -Broadway, Santa Ana. 250- E'sFt 8laisn- Ave.., Hun. ThE Mandarin irants, 4219 Waterloo R'oad, jat Hwuy. Knai Theater C:orporation,. J.-.amet-by .Cator - ,Ghirardelll Wine :ellar. Cafe 9.. -operators of the following 'anti- 289 Souh -La Cienega Blvd., -Ottol's Place, 7824 ThiDrnton Rd. union theaters -in Santa. Cruiz and . -On. Coune'it.of Arts Culver- CitY; Other 'eating place's in' San Stuart Anderson's Blacek Angus Mlon'terey Counties;' President Carter has namned 4700 Sunset Blvd., Los'Angeles; Frrahcicsteo: Restaurant, 2605-- hI arch Lanie . 'Cinema TO li Monterey; :.The6dore Bikel, president of Ac- 270 North. La' Cienega -Blvd., MclDonald's. HAmburger (al1); Stackton Joe's Restauran't. 1503 'Steineck NMeater in Moiiterey; tors'.Equity, to a three-year term Los Angeles;.- Colonel. Saders. Kentuclcy St. Mark's Place -Plaza..- vailey Cinema i; Carmel Val. ona the National Counicil of -the 13"6 Sherman Way, Van: Nuys. Fried Cbickce .(410-- Vag'abond Motor Hotel. 33 N. ley; Arts. Other Norm's Re'staurants in. H.- Salt Eiquidre Fish: & Chips Center. Globe. Theater. In SaHns; B3ikel, who has -haded the actors' I.os-Angeles County.excluding the Denny's Restaura'nts, '3950 E. Cinema Theater In union since -serves on- .fivre listeid above are. in goodl Jack. In -e Soquel; and,, 1973, also Box.(alt); Waterloo Rd. &' 642-W. Charter Tid I & IllI .the 'National Commi-ttee for -Cul_ standing with organized labor. BWana of Tokcyo; Way. -Aptes. -tural Resources, the' theater 'ad-: lBead. Hunter Amusement Park Sambo's Restaurant,, 11 N. Cen- of the: National Coun-r : Te- folloing: Queen Mary._ Marriott'Is Great, American' vWry~pane} SpeeiRMY. ReteAu'raNtS IR LAJg of San Francisco; ter. Theme Park and HIotel,--Santa cil for Arts4 & Educati'o'n-and .is Nan Kan Gardens; Jelly Tiger Resta'urant, .4747 Pa-, 'Clara. vice, cliairman of the' American 7%6 IUrd 7NelSo. lta Carl Doa's; cific Ave. CDuncil for the- Arts. Nababay lRestauranlt; andl Se Wiorld, San Wiego Bikel's new appointment is sub Sir Wiuton ClurehffUts 'The Casbah. ject to Senate confirmation. Ihe'Verandah GrDIl San Jose Area Cor Beer AH1 banquets and fast food The following hote'ls, motels and- --Social Dynami-te stands. Nboo 1 Cronin A Co., inuance Te follovng San Diego -area restaurants- in San'ta Clarat--un- "About 55 percent of unemploy- motels: ty: Grfters SaMter.pndlicb , agents, San Franciscol. ment in our country is among the Bahia Motel and -Motor' Lodge, Vagabond Motor Hotel, i488 -Norlh }ffer4ka and- Knowles, 8an- young and that is social dyna- Catamaran -Notor -Hotel and. Firstt Spn Jose.- -rcsoarehiteet mite."-U. S. Congressman -Ron. Giorgi's Pizza House.- 1445 Fox- lowa Boof Pne"so"rs, Dakota. ald V. Dlus(D-Borkeley). worthy, San Jose. City, Iowa. XoatgmeryWard In Redig.. 04coo ber 9, .1977 -: ~~~Pag3 Cayman Eetd AFL-CIO CONVENTION OPENS De 21 earing

To Head Industria. 0 . or Union0 Deartment (Continued from Page 2) The state Agricultural L.abor retary-treasurer .of the Ladies'I TO~~~~~~~~IUb tcllmlIlat Relations Board will hold more Garment Wo'rkers; Davrid Fitz- hearings December 12-13 on' its (Continued from Paoe' 1 ) * Leavingr cities as. the' lo'cus for the lowest- rule allowing labor union organ, maurice, prosident. of the Elec- issue toward the Num- paid workers, welfare recipients and concen- -trical, Radio & Machine Workers; campaign -jobs-and izers access to farm workers in ber One -issue of the conse'rvative opposition trations of slums will, only compound.-the -the fields. These latest J. C. Turner, president of the Op- -'1balance. -the " declared: urban problem," he warned. .. hearings. erating Engineers. The other 21 budget,' Meany will]b-hleld' in the Statei Person- "The best and surest way to balance the -The legislative fight to win the recently nel Board'buidig.t Sacgrmento" members were reelected. is to the jobless back to work." enacted 'increase in''the federal minimum -committee re- *budget get The meeting-wil inclu.de &cw-7 The constitution Burn's has maintained that high inlterest -wage, Meany said, helped to awaken "A'mer- sion of the access ruXe, along with port s'aid that extensive discussion policies would curb wh'at is termed -"excess ic'ans who believe Iin economic and social other board rules and, regulations. on structural changes in the IUD: demand" inflation. just'ice "to the, growing power. of corpora- led to the unanimous opinion that 'in political life. The corporate influ- The ALRB provided -for ffi .ace- the president of the department But; Meany.said.that.the inflation of the' tion-sence, all'ied -with the. most. r'egressive anid cess rule -when it first bega to' should be ".a full-time office of past nine years 'has.'not -been caused -by rationary' forces in society, sought to F administer the new farm labor the department and the xhief ex- -excess demand!'. the minimum wage- and tusrn. back.the clock relations 'law' in 1975. It was chal- ecultive officer and spokesman."' "Consumers h-a v e. n o t h a d too mu.ch on social1 progress," he n'oted.- lenged in the courts but the heard addresses money with. which to buy too -few goods'., board's right -to esablish such. a TRhe delegates Rather, -th'e prices of goods-fueled by price But, Meany observed: rule was upheld by 'the U.S. Su- 'by -Abel, AFIXCIO Secretary- the labor not .Treasurer , Ver- increases .for food, ol and interest rates * No grou-o movement, preme Court. have been h ig h er than consumers could the civil rlgt and- women's or.ganizations, Latyear, the rule -was moi non Jordan of the National Urban afford-" nlot the churehes--can by.-themselves match fied -to pemt -access on a farm League -and Senator DZaniel P. .the raw and finaneial might-'of -big .to a -year,, Moynihan (D-N.Y.) and acted on P'rospects -for a significant reduction. in political four'30-day periods are "not -and won't business. But, together, these, groups repre- giving orgaliizers the right to about 50 resolutions laying out the unemployment bright" sent. miUllons of people, not for hours department's policy positions. be until "new and expanded approaches. are pol,and. contact workers thiree adopted," he warned.- .money, are what thsnatio.n is. all about." a day-during lunch and on'e hour The resolutions dealt with a. In the course of his l12-page report to each before and'after work. wide range of national and inter-' Specifically, Meany called for: indicated the AFL-CIO delegates 'representing 106 na- ALRB representativres national problems with he'av'y em- V Actions to curb "unrelenting" tional u!iions with a total membership of this-:. month's -harings wvill deal' phasis on the need for a full em- d'ump-ing of foreign import on the U.S. mar- about 14- million, Meany.also called for: with issues involved in three b-asic ployment policy and passage of ket, often at prices lower than those charged questions relating to the access the bill, -ad- in the country of orign V A, constitutional amendment that guar- Humphrey-Hawkins. without to sex; rule. These are: ditional sti'mulus for the- economy, V Government planning to achieve full' antees. equality -regard hour. Some farmn- a educa-! * The lunch the need for raw materials pol- employment like that mandated by the Hum- V Schools that 'provilde `quality ers do not set -a designated lunch icy, aid for mass transit, new phrey-Hawkins Full Employment and.Bal- .tion- for all -children-not one standard for with the a for those hour and some do not have thei trade legislation to deal anced Growth Act and like that, practiced. tlie. affluent. and sub-standard workers take- off a 'full hour for growing.flood of imports and loss by every -corporation; of, less -means" nd lunch. Iherefore, the bord is' of American jobs. * A "roperly planned 'and coordinat- V Ratification of the P an a ma Canal open to suggestions on changs In the international area, the ed" national urban pol'icy; and;, Treat'ies. in this part of the rule.4 resolutions stressed the IUD's V Special employment and t-raining pro- While -commending the Carter Admin- *Should the u n i o-n be, 'pr' commitment to the human rights grams. and new government policies in -pro- istration's "new directions" in relat'ions with mitted to have ac'c.es afte the campaign, strong opposition to curing and locating offices that would.'make Africa and Latin America, he expressed mis- ALIRB has conducted a -'repre- the policies of South Africa, and government the "'leader. in revitalizing the givings about the. "recent sudden shifts" in, sentation election among-the orkc- reaffirmation of support for Israel cities where the.largest concentrations of un- -its policy toward 1srael and urged firm sup- ers on the. famn but' before the and thie need for the American empl'oyed workers live; port of Israel. ALRB has certified th election? govrernment to provide economic and * Should the Snonba M military support.. after it- has been. certified as 'the The convention adopted resolu- n W it tions calling for. free tuition in SetsUpNew Worker'S.hoice wokr'bargamnn AFI,CIO thas not, yet'-workbed out a e"-*ntadt public higher education, legisla- with he farmer, Asl. he tive 'and bargaining policies -to AULB noteak,s ,Xa,..... achieve a 32-hour work week, the creation of a binding and enforce- able code of intemnational fair (Continued ftom P ge 1 ) ion;..Internatio'nal Association of The inljured worker's right to labor standards and opposition to- tural life of the Machinists and Aerospace. Work- the creation of -a separate depart- countr; be treated by his or her own V Extension of full bargain- ers; American Guild of Musical, doctor from the da-te of I 'ury ment of education in the IJ.S. gov- American Federation of errnment. ing rights to health service em- Artists; under workers' compensation will ployees; and, Musician; O ff i c e 'and Profes- becomne effective in California on A statement -on energy called V Reform of the Natio'nal.La- sional jEmpIoyees .International January 1, 1978, linder terms of for a national commnitment to ex- bor Relatioris Act to take into Union; Brotherhood 'of Railway -the use of nuclear SIB 520 (Chapter 1172, Statuts of pand energy consideration the special needs of and Airlmne Clerks;' Retail Clerks 1977) which was enacted by -the and legi.slation to require that a the growing white collar' labor- Interniational Union;. Retail, legislature. SB 520'was -sponsored reasonable portion of oil imports foree. Wholesale and Department, Store be carried on vessels. by -the Calfforna AF"10O as part U.S.-flag Charter affiliates of the DPE Union; ; Sea- of its legislative program and was Abel, in his openig remarks, are: Actors' Equity Assoc'iation, farers International'Union; Serv- a liberalization of the "free pinpointed the gravity of job National Assn. of Broadcast Em- ice Employees International Un- choice" after 30, days, achieved losses due to. imports, pointing out ployees & Teehiin;Cmu ionx; -Intrnat.ional Alliance of. The two -years earlier. that in addition to the 20,000 steel- nications Workters of America; In-, -atricail Stage Epmloyee-s and Mov- Preparatory to the effective workers recently laid off,- at least ternational Union of Electrical, ing Picture -Machine. Operators;' date,. the State D'iv'is'ion of Indus- 150,000 jobs in the textile and gar- Radio aiid McieWorkers.; In- American Federation of St a te, filed with the ment industries, 70,000 Jobs in ternational Brotherhood- of Elec- County and MncplEmployees; trial Accidents has shoes and over in Federation of Teach- Office of Administrative Hearings 25,0N0 TV-set trical Workmers; International American a set -of adninistrative rules by production havre been lost. Federation of Prfsin and e.rs; American Federation-of Wele which. the. new law will- b carried This'loss of Jobs he said, "can Technical ngnees; Intrnation- Vision,and Radio Artists; Associa- tionl of 'Theatrical -Press out. be traced straight and dlruy -to. al Union of Operating Engineers; Agents in- a stubborn refusal on. th part of' American Federationl of Govern- and Mngers; and the. United The right of the industrially fth-9*vrnmWs, 4moono.d and ment Employees; I n s.u r a n c e Asociation of Jourey.men and j;ured employee to immediate act Workers In- of the Plubn and cesto his or her personal'physi- th overnmnwWs pikiy makws to Intemnational Union; Apprentices u on fan -the eonomic r"litios of our ternational Chemical Workers Un- Pipe. FittingInuty cian is contingent p prior till' .notification in writin before the i n j ur y or 'occupational illnes Clayman, 72, is a native of Bos- arime. ton, grduated from Oberlin Col- Rewood Cast Senior Ciizens. "Personal physician" is. defined lege and the Univers'ity of Michi- in the aet "the gan law school and, was elected as. employee's Aware Carter b ouncil regular -physician and surgeon .. . to the Ohio legislature. HIe served' directed the as the secretary-treasurer of the Janms Patton, director of the Patton pointed out, saying, "We who has previously Ohio CIO from 1948 to 1955. He retired members depprtment,, Cal- do not want to see. senior citizens medical treatment of the em- ow behalf ployee, and who retains the em- was special assistant to the presi- -ifornia AF"10I, on. November 21, act exclusively in their medical records ... dent of the Clothing Workers from .presented a charter to the'Red. but in behalf 'of the general wel- ployee's 1955 to 1958 and beca'me admin'- wood Coast Senior Citizens Club, fare." trativre director of thse IUD in 1960. a unit of the National Council of Elected as le'gislative director S.- Court No'lds Senior Citizens, in ceremonies, at for the new club 'wa's Raymond K.' U.o Eureka. Nelson, California., Labor Federa- .Eq.ual-Work,-..EqualPay The nlational council has the -sup- tion Vice President. Other offi.cers port of the AFL-CIO, the United seated include: .Applies to Tea"hars teachers $300omore- 'per year:tha Auto Workers', the Teamsters and, Robert Stokes, president; James In the first reported deci'sion female tbcEsdigequivalent the ILWU. While, memb6rs' are Whitson, vice president; Dave Ex- involving the application of the wrork. drawn heavily from retired unon line, second vice president; Irene federal E:qual Pay Act to elev, The.jnn in the suit filed mepibrs,,it in ludes man. - older --t son se.ay "E.v a l e a n mentary and secondary school by the U.S. Department of Labor wke other.fomer Mrkr Soes itat.a y,and teachers, the U.S. -District Court ordered. the school distsect to pay- A ., Sevens as kvl. X- ;. x arris, treasurer. in HIouston ruled that-the A & M' $35,674 i n b a c k wrages. plus The.nevv organization works not The club has about 60 Gold Consolidated Indepentdent School $8,061.92 in -interest to 12 female Products only to hel . older eitizens, but 'i's -Card members according to P?at- District in College Station;, Te. eaeswho were uiierpaid dur- active in the whole co'mmunity, ton.: violate the act by puying miale ing the 1972-73 school. year. em 9 1977 ,.... mie".1A 'i. tt 1: . , . . . .1