Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 28 November 1940 — Page 6
| PLANE WORKERS Posters Stress Citizenship A ELTO KEEP I:
SEE HIGHER PAY|
C-1. 0. Organizer Says Other Southern California Plants 2 To Be Tackled.
DOWNEY, Cal, Nov. 28 (U. P.)— The United Automobile Workers Union began today a ‘drive to se- _ cure wage increases throughout the ' Southern California airplane industry, working at top speed on $800,000,000 worth of orders for United - States and British Military craft.
Buccessful in its two weeks’ strike.
against Vultee, the union will next tackle the Ryan Aeronautical Co. at S&n Diego, according to Wyndham Mortimer; C: I. O. national organizdF. The Vultee company granted -8 “new contract raising the basic wage from 50 to 6214 cents an hour. “Our victory at Vultee smashes tHe 50-cent minimum in the indust¥%,” Mortimer said. “We intend to > eontinue our efforts for still higher wages’ and expect in time to bring pay in the aircraft industry up to automobile wage rates.” ‘After negotiations at Ryan, the union will seek to open discussion of pay raises at North American Aviation, Los Angeles; Menasco Manufacturing, ‘Inglewood, and the Harvill Aircraft Die Casting Corp., Los Angeles. : {All the plants hold defense contracts for airplanes or vital parts. {The 1000 Ryan employees already have designated the U, A. W. as their bargaining agent-and a peti"tion by the C. I. O. union for an election at North American is pending before the National Labor Relations Board. North American employs 7000. No mention ‘was made by Mortinier of this area’s two largest plants —- Lockheed and Douglas — which hold millions of dollars worth of contracts for attack ships and light and heavy bombers.
DOUBLES FOR FILM DOG
: BOYSTOWN, Neb., Nav: 28 (U. B) —Bogts, 3-year-old part poodle dog and “parts of something else, » is probably wondering. why Marianna Greco, 17, is being such a nice mistress these days. + Boots has, been selected to double tor a Hollywood canine In the -picBue “Men of Boystown,” sequel to film which made Father Flanly home for boys at Omaha Enown all over the world.
: FALL BRUISES BABY : COLUMBUS, O., Nov. 28 (U. P.) — 4 Eighteen-month-old Rowell Godd had only minor hurts to show br a two-story fall fr a window his home here. Physicians could nd no broken bones.
Miss Leslie Shippey,
student from Greenwood, Ind.,
a sophomore government and eilizanship pins one of a series of citizenship
posters on a Butler University bulletin board. Citizenship classes under the direction of Dr. Franklin L. Burdette are sponsoring hanging of the posters, a riew one being displayed each week.
Model Pretty; ‘Judge Tough
NEW YORK, Nov. 28.—(U. P.). —Magistrate William Ringel frowned down at beautiful Bunny Hartley, the model, and: decided that’ what she needed was “to be put over. someone’s: lap and given a good ‘old-fashioned, strapping.” The magistrate was upset because Miss Hartley had caused the arrest -of her ' former ‘husband, James Peeley, on disorderly conduct charges, and then had failed «to-show: op to press the complaint. The entire dispute, it developed, was over a~{raveling bag. “I'm going to-give you 10 days in the work house,” he stormed. : “You've been acting like a two-year-old and a person with a’ 30 1.Q.." ‘he added. Miss Hartley was so insistent that her former husband be arrested that she herself was charged with disorderly conduct. Magistrate | Ringel gave both suspended sentences. . .*The Mimosa Pudica, a tropical plant, wilts on being touched.
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RESCUERS SEEK MEN STRANDED ON ISLAND
GALVESTON, Tex., Nov. 28 (U. P.)—Coast Guard cutters and aircraft searched the scores of small islands-off : the ‘Texas gulf coast today for four men stranded on: one of them since Sunday. Missing were Ray Boggess, owner of a Houston finance company: his son, . Carleton, 18; Denzil Hollis, 17, and George Erickson, a sailor. { With W.-D. Noland they had been on a fishing trip aboard Boggess’ 21-ton yacht. Sunday they stopped a few miles south of- ‘Galveston and the four men started ashore in the Bagheera’s small boat. It capsized near shore and Noland saw the four swim to the island. Noland, unskilled in seamanship, could not handle the yacht. It drifted until early yesterday when its gyrations attracted the Navy utter, Simpson, which took Noland aboard 180 miles south of the mouth
of the Rio Grande, off the coast of ne fr
Mexiow, The yacht had drifted almost 400 miles,
All Re- elected as Convention. Ends Today.
NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 28 w. P). —The American Federation of Labor convention today re-elects President William Green and all other A. F. of L. officials, selects a 1941 meeting place, and adjourns. Favored for the next: convention is Seattle.
The Federation’s executive council ]
meets tomorrow to consider jurisdictional and other matters. No important decisions _are anticipated. Major policies for the coming year were shaped yesterday with disposition of 60 resolutions.
They included conditional co-|
operation with the Government in the deferise program; reaffirmation of the boycott against Japanese and German ' goods; ' indorsement © of President: Roosevelt's aid-to-Britain policy; : demands that the Government curb the anti-trust drive as it applies to unions and condemnation on certain WPA policies. Only casualty of the sessions appeared to have been the dove of peace which PreSident Roosevelt sent aloft when the meeting opened Nov. 18. He asked the A. F. of L. to ‘make a new try for peace with the Congress of Industrial Organizations in the interest of national unity. The convention agreed to keep alive its peace committeé, but leaders regarded this as only a gesture toward Mr. Roosevelt. They said privately that the two organizations have projected prices for labor unity that are so inflexible as to make negotiations futile until one or the other yields._ The multi-billion dollar defense program - and labor’s responsibility under it were dominating convention issues. Another was the question of purging racketeers and gangsters from top union jobs. The convention condemned wrong-doers and, while it ‘went further than heretofore in attempting to meet the situation, -it said it was prevented by Federation rules from setting. up disciplinary machinery.
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PIONEER: PROUD 2 ed Utah, Nov. 28 wo. old Bountiful pioneer, has Hever fought Indians, shot buffalo, marwhile (ried, but—he has shaken hands with every president of the Latter Day Saints (Mormon) church has ever had, except Joseph Smith. That, to him, is the greatest dl — venture of his life.
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