Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 8 November 1940 — Page 8
‘LABOR POLICY OF PREVENTION MORE POPULAR
Trend Shown by Ingrease in Conciliaiton Requests, Steelman Says.
Labor - and business are showing & marked trend toward [prevention
instead of remed¥ in disputes, John R. Steelman, Conciliation Service director of the U. S. Department of Labor, declared here last night. He addressed the executive leadership forum of the Indianapolis Junior Chamber of Commerce at the Indianapolis Athletic Club. “During the year ended June 30,” Mr. Steelman reported, [there was 8 68 per cent increase in the number of controversies in which our assistance was requested and given.
A Definite Dispute
“We classify ‘controversy’ as a definite dispute—a potential ‘strike —which has .not yet reached the point where a stoppage of operations is imminently threatened. : “Still another angle of this preventive trend is the growing utilization of arbitration, especially in disputes over the interpretation or application of agreements. “Increasingly, in drawing up their contracts, labor and management are providing that, if a dispute over the meaning or. interpretation of the agreement cannot be settled by the parties ¢themselves, the matter tration,
“As for |the choice of arbitrator, where no’ individual is specified in the agreement, it is frequently provided that the Secretary of Labor or the U. S. Conciliation Service, upon request, shall sesifrais some neutral person.” Mr. Steelman explained that seven of the Labor partment’s most experienced conciliators had been assigned to the National Defense Advisory Commission and that because of this the Conciliation Bervice “has heen operating on almost a 24-hour day basis.”
FORD ASKS RULING ON ORDER OF NLRB
CINCINNATI, O., Nov, 8 (U. P.). =A petition by the Ford Motor Co. asked the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals today to vacate its recent decree which ordered partial enforcement of a National Labor Relations Board ‘‘cease and desist” order against the Ford Co. The order had been made after @ lengthy NLRB hearing on alleged violations of the National Labor Act by the company. The company also sought a rehearing on [its motion i have the NLRB order set aside |
Alumni Dine
Dean IL. C. Emmons . . . speaks to alumni.
A luncheon will be held for Hoosier alumni of Michigan State College at Bloomington preceding the Michigan State-Indiana University football game tomorrow. Speakers will include Roger Carlisle of Indianapolis, M. 8. C. Alumni Association Indiana Section president; B. A. Krantz of Lafayette, Indiana section secretary; Dean L, C. Emmons of M. 8. C. liberal arts division, and Glen O. Stewart of East Lansing, Mich., M. 8. C. Alumni Association secretary. The Indiana alumni will meet at 11:40 a. m. tomorrow and will then attend the game. Arrangements have been: in charge of Mr. Stewart.
SANITY HEARING FOR BUTSCH SCHEDULED
A sanity hearing will be held Nov, 22 for William' Ray Butsch, inmate of the Indiana State Prison, Criminally Insane Division, who is charged with the hammer slaying Jan. 17, 1939, of Mrs, Oarrie Lelah Romig. Butsch, who has never been tried on the murder ‘charge because of} the intervening ‘ruling of insanity, will appear for the ‘second time be-
of Martinsville. The sanity hearing will be held at Criminal Court here, ' Butsch ‘has been an inmate of the ‘State Ptison division for one year and a half,
$3,000,000 SUBMARINE LAUNCHED BY U. S.
GROTON, Conn., Nov. 8 (U. P.). —A new submarine, the Gar, rode at anchor in the Thames River today, awaiting trials. The Gar was launched yesterday at the Electric Boat Co. yards, with Mrs. George TT. Pettingill, wife of the Rear Admiral in command of the Washington, D, C., Navy Yard, as sponsor. The sub is about 300 feet long, has a displacement of 1475
tons and cost more than $3,000,000.
= MOSKINS
INEWSPAPERMEN CONVENE ATU
in today on the United States Pres-
fore Special Judge Omar O’Harrow
{forget
James E. Crown to ‘Deliver Don Mellett Lecture at Tonight’s Session;
Times Special BLOOMINGTON, Ind. Nov. 8.— Indiana newspapermen . assembled today on- the Indiana : University campus to hear James E. Crown, crusading editor of the New Orleans
sier Journalism Conference. Mr. Crown was to deliver the national Don R. Mellett Lecture in Journalism at the conference session tanight. He was prominent in the newspaper expose of the Huey Long regime in Louisiana. Speaking at the opening luncheon meeting today, Dr. Roy V. Peel, ‘director of the’ I. U. Institut Politics, declared.that polls on the Presidential race this year were much: moré “accurate than in the
States, and. attend the annual Hoo- s
1936 election, He ' explained that the Gallup| Poll, on the basis of incomplete returns, underestimated the strength of President Roosevelt by only 2.5 per “cent, compared with a 6.9 margin of error in 1936. The conference will close tomorrow.
RESTAURANT SERVES ‘GATEAU’ ROOSEVELT
BUENOS AIRES, Nov. 8 (U. P.). —A ‘Buenos Aires restaurant cashed
idential election. On the menu was “Gateau Roosevelt”—Roosevelt cake. The manager said, “The cake is the same as any other cake. I just thought it might sell better with the Roosevelt name. He's very popular down here now, you. know.”
NEGRO LEADERS ASK LOYALTY TO F. D. R.
WASHINGTON, Nov. 8 (U. P.. —Three Negro leaders today appealed to Americans of their race to
political diffefences and convene here next Friday to pledge their undying loyalty and support” to President . Roosevelt's defense program’ in the cause of peace. The three—President Edgar G. Brown. of the United Government Employees, Inc, representing 30,000 Negro Federal workers; Bishop R. R. Wright Jr. of the African Methodist Episcopal Church and Dr. ¢. T. Murray, trustee of the National Baptist Convention, Inc. —said in a formal statement that “this is an hour for racial national and hemisphere unity for us and our cousins in Central America and the Caribbean Islands at the
Panama Canal.”
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