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Henry a Wallace — Part 1
Page 177
177 / 228
a a
wage offers,esimilar refusals to arbitrate
the union shop, similar advertisements
in focal newspapers all over the country.
Asking for a general $12-a-week --
roughly 25-percent--wage increase, the
NFTW argued that telephone wages
had lagged behind those in other indus-
tries. Another kick came from the union
over wage differentials. Starting rates for
Operators varied from $22 a week in a
small Southern town to $31 in Detroit.
The employees asked that vacations
and pensions be liberalized, Employees
with 15 years of service had been given
a three-week vacation. Under the, new
contract they wanted four weeks’ vaca-
tion after 20 years of service.
The telephone workers found the
rungs from the bottom to the top of the
*. ladder too far apart. The length of time
required for a worker to go from the
Starting wage to the top wage for his
job was eight years, The NFTW wanted
“it reduced to five years, except in the
case of technical workers. To most of
these grievances the AT&T offered to
extend cxisting Provisions, which they
considered “fair and liberal.”
Labor Department Negotiators were
not aided, in secking scttlement of the
conflict, by the appearance of Represen-
tative Fred A. Hartley Je.’s (R, N. J)
bill to authorize the Attorney General,
on direction of the President, to halt a
strike by obtaining an injunction. The
effect, when coupled with other con-
ressional moves tending toward out-
" & lawry of the closed shop and against in-
* dustrywide bargaining, was to intervene
in collective bargaining on the side of
the AT&T. Last year a nationwide tele-
phone strike was averted 25 minutes
before deadline through a wage agree-
ment between the union of long-distance
operators and the AT&T, which employs
long-distance workers directly, with the
understanding that the wage increase
would also go to other unions. This year
the AT&T had shown signs of prefer-
ting a showdown fight. .
Tall Price
Illinois
TT: lives of Centralia’s 111 mine
victims seemed a tall price for the
information that the mu¢te heralded
government ‘seizure’ of US coal mines
iad ’ 4 . * -
aod . rn en ER ee RNR dN So Um
De re wee egg 3 * iin itt te
had bordered on fiction. The investiga-
tions and controversies over the cala:mi-
tous blast in the Hlinois coal fields last
week bathed federal powers over mine
safely in an unflattering glare. The
feeble reflection of government control
was in pale contrast to the noble light
shed by the Supreme Court when it up-
held the contempt proceedings against
the United Mine Workers and John L.
Lewis,
Senator Guy Cordon (R, Ore.), head
of the special subcommittee which
rushed to the scene of the blast, con-
cluded that “if there has been one thing
shown to this committee, it has been*
that there was gross negligence in the
handling cf safety conditions.” Repre-
sentative Gerald W. Landis (R, Ind.), 1
former miner, introduced a bill in the
House “to put some teeth in our Federal
Miné Inspection Act.” Ordinarily, en-
forcement of safety codes, as Interior
Secretary J. A. Krug conceded last weck,
depends on “widely Varying state laws.”
~ The emergency powers acquited by the
government when it “took over” the
mines last year contained no specific
provisions fur closing down unsafe
workings. Captain: N. H. Collisson, US
Coal Mines Administrator, had written
five times to the management of Cen-
tralia No. 5 to complain about viola-
' Argentine Atom
RGENTINE experiments in atemic
A physics have definitely heen
conducted under the direction of
Dr. Guido Beck, Czech-born scien:
tist, according to a Buenos Aires
dispatch by Virginia Prewett, corre-
spondent for the Chicago Sw. Beck
had protested that the New Re-
public linked him unjustly with the
Peron government's military pro-
grain of atomic development and, in
a letter to this magazine (the NR,
March 31), denied any connection.
Records now uncovered by Prewett
show that Beck “personally sug-
gested and directed” experiments in
atom-splitting between 1943 and
1945. Some of the results were re-
cently published in Revista Astron.
omica, Argentine science journal,
20 en ce RR a ee rea ee
NEW REPUBLIC
tions disccvered by US iAspectors. His
temporary power, however, to “disci- <
pline or replace the operating manager”
had not been exercised,
In the absence of federal authority,
the breakdown of ‘state regulation was
all the more catastrophic, Robert M.
Medill, director of the Illinois Depart-
ment of Mines and Minerals, took full
responsibility for orders which had di- .
verted state inspectors to the extra-cur- °:
Ticular tisk of dunning ‘Coal operators,
for contributions to the Republican is
mayoralty campaign in Chicago. Last
week Medill resigned “for the good of
the service.” Governor Dwight H.
Green, to whom Centralia miners had
addressed a plea “to please save our
lives,” weakly explained that “the let-
tee arrived at a time when I was away.
I never saw it."
The pathetic conditions in Ilinois
were no relicf to the heavy drama in
Washingten. The Buteau of Mines sup-
pled the tardy intelligence that although
it had conducted 3,345 mine inspections
in 1956, only two mines— worked hy
the Union Pacific Railroad in Wyoming
--had been found free of safety viola
ticns. Secretary Krug ordered that 518
of the 2,531 overnment-operated mines,
shut down by Lewis fog an Easter Week
“mourning” period be kept closed until
union safety committces decided they
were no longer dangerous. In rebuttal
Lewis requested that all mines cicepe
the pair in Wyoming cent: cmpty
until approved by federal a: rotary,
The muancuvers to shitt resp noabifity
for decating the nation’s mines fit to : £
work in pitched another climax inte the ~ 8:
Krug-Lewis melodrama. Lewis, playing a
to the hile, repeated the charge that
Krug was solely responsible for the
Centralia disaster. Krug thrust back fig-
ures to show that fatalities in the mines
had dropped during the 10 months of
federal operatien, John L. was scornful:
“This modern Hercules with the No. 12
shoes and No. $ hat has reduced deaths
from 95 a month to 85 and then he rests
from his labors,"*
This week, as the miners’ mourning
period expired, Lewis indicated a stub- ;
born intent to keep the pits idle untit ne
the federal government assumed the full we
responsibilities for mine cperation and
’
inspection,
Hs ermmemtne seca! bthenmant telah hatha netintened tal Thee RE se ran eae)
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