<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<itemContainer xmlns="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5 http://omeka.org/schemas/omeka-xml/v5/omeka-xml-5-0.xsd" uri="http://seafarerslog.org/archives/items?output=omeka-xml&amp;page=20&amp;sort_field=added" accessDate="2026-04-03T16:24:54-07:00">
  <miscellaneousContainer>
    <pagination>
      <pageNumber>20</pageNumber>
      <perPage>32</perPage>
      <totalResults>1900</totalResults>
    </pagination>
  </miscellaneousContainer>
  <item itemId="951" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="955">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/9645bb99a3acb99c7f2e53cdfe56bada.PDF</src>
        <authentication>86913a674a91d1fb3b4b66ee073f7b4b</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47431">
                    <text>Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA
VOL. XI

NEW YORK. N. Y., FRIDAY. MARCH 18. 1949

No. 11

US Stifles Own
Fleet, But Builds
Shipping
Foreign Tonnage
Seen To Surpass
Pre-War Totals

Den'tTaOcSIU,
Is Warning To
CS Crewmen

The 16 nations receiving Mar­
shall Plan goods need American
economic aid in many fields, but
one field in which they need
nothing is shipping, the facts
demonstrate.
According to a survey made
public this week, the combined
fieets of the Marshall Plan coun­
tries will be 5,000,000 deadweight
tons bigger than they were in
1939, when current shipbuilding
programs are completed.
Nevertheless, the Marshall
Plan beneficiaries keep asking
for American support to "re­
build" their already rebuilt mer­
chant fleets and for more cargoes
to cari-y, Washington observers
point out.
They add that this probably is
the root of the "Hoffman Plan"
to reduce the participation of
American ships and American
crews in the foreign aid trade.
US TREADS WATER
Among the sizable shipbuild­
ing programs in Europe now are
the following:
Great Britain, 3,216,000 tons;
Norway, 2,799,000 tons; France,
762,000 tons; Sweden, 683,000
tons; the Netherlands, 279,000
tons; Denmark, 254,000 tons.
The survey of the European
program reveals that the foreign
fleet will not only be bigger
than it was before the war, but
will be much faster.
Meanwhile, the American ship­
building industry is treading
water for want of a long-range
program commensurate with this
country's size and world posi­
tion, all authorities agree—ex(Continued on Page 5)

The conclusion of the Cities
Service collective
bargaining
election is now awaiting the bal­
loting of the SS Government
Camp.
Meanwhile the SIU Atlantic
and Gulf District advised all proUnion men on the company's
vessels to keep mum on the
union question until the final
results are announced.
The Union's advice to the CS
tankermen was made in face of
the company's determination to
fire men suspected of pro-Union
sentiment.
The Government Camp, the
last of the nine ships eligible to
be balloted, is expected to vote
when she returns to Montevideo,
Uruguay, sometime within the
next few weeks.
Although she was to have been
voted last week, the Government
Camp left Montevideo without
voting because the ballots did
not arrive in time.
In cautioning the Cities Service
tankermen against openly dis-

Former CS Men
Men discharged from
Cities Service ships since
January 1 for any reason
whatsoever are urged to get
in touch with Lindsey Wil­
liams, SIU Director of Or­
ganization, immediately.
Those who are unable to
come to SIU Headquarters
are urged to write, giving all
details of their employment
and discharge. SIU Head­
quarters is at 51 Beaver St.,
New York 4, N. Y.
* Meanwhile, all pro-Union
men aboard Cities Service
Oil Compemy ships are urged
to remain on their vessels
until they win the protection
of an SIU contract. The com­
pany is making every effort
to replace men with known
pro-union leanings. Stay on
the ships until the fight is
won.
cussing the Union question the
SIU recommended that all mat­
ters connected with unionization
be placed in the hands of the
shipboard organizer who acts as
contact with the Union.
Careful-adherence to this pro­
cedure will greatly reduce the
possibility of a man being fired,
the SIU pointed out. Company
policy calls for the immediate
dismissal of any man suspected
of even the slightest degree of
sympathy with the Union.
Men with pro-Union leanings
have been fingered by company
stooges aboard all CS ships.
Charges of unfair labor prac­
tices have already been filed with
the. National Labor Relations
Board by the SIU in behalf of
more thsui 30 men recently fired
for having pro-Union sentiments.

Representatives Ready To Consider Bland Bill
The House of Representatives the LOG of March 11, the Senate purchased in this country, how­
is scheduled to consider the Foreign Relations Committee on ever.
Bland Bill on Monday, March 21, the advice of Paul G. Hoffman,
It was Paul G. Hoffman who
according to the latest informa­ ECA Administrator, appi'oved a touched off a battle which has
bill limiting the 50 percent par­ lasted upwards of three months,
tion from Washington .
The Bland Bill, which has been ticipation of American ships to when he proposed taking advan­
unanimously approved by the cargoes originating in this coun­ tage of a loophole about freight
House Committee on Merchant try.
rates in the present 50-percent
Marine in a slightly revised form, The Senate Foreign Relations clause in the Marshall Plan
guarantees that 50 percent or Committee did not limit the legislation, to ship all foreign
more of all government financed American taxpayer's liability for aid bulk cargoes in foreign bot­
cargoes, including Marshall Plan foreign aid purchases to goods toms.
cargoes, must go in American
ships no matter where they
originate.
Headquarters officials this
week continued to urge all Sea­
With three weeks of the 60- Voting began on March 1 fol­
farers to write their Senators and
day
voting period exhausted, lowing approval of the ballot in
Congressmen urging its enact­
voting
continues strong in SIU membership meetings at all
ment.
Halls
around
the coasts on the Branches. Seafarers are given
SENATE JUMP
transportation
referendum. The the choice of two proposals,
The Magnuson Bill, the Senate
two
proposals
being put to a which read:
measure identical with the Bland
Bill, has not yet been considered vote, thoroughly discussed in the Proposal No. 1:
by the Senate Committee on In­ pages of the SEAFARERS LOG
terstate and Foreign Commerce and at shipboard and shoreside "Whenever . transportation is
which is expected to wait for the meetings over a three-month pe­ due a crew under the terms of
riod, have stimulated a great the contract, all hands must ac­
House to act first.
deal
of interest on . the part of cept that transportation and get
In fact, the Magnuson Bill's
the
membership.
Reports from off the ship, whereupon new re­
opponents got the first jump in
the
various
ports
indicate
heavy placements will be .shipped from
the Senate.
the Union Hiring Hall."
voting.
Last week, as was reported in

Paced by the SIU, A&amp;G Dis­
trict, the maritime industiy ini­
tiated a campaign of protest,
pointing out that hundreds of
ships would be laid up and
thousands of seamen would be
thrown out of work.
Hundreds of labor unions, rep­
resenting millions of workers in
every corner of the countiy, ral­
lied to the SlU's side and thous(Conthiiii'd on Page 11)

A&amp;G Transportation Balloting Going Strong
Proposal No. 2:
"When transportation is due a
crew under the terms of the
contract, those men who desire
to stay on board the ship can
do so, providing they do not col­
lect transportation. Those men
desiring transportation can col­
lect same and, upon receipt of
the money, shall get off the ship
and replacements for those va­
cancies shall be shipped from the
Union Hiring Hall."
All members are urge.-^ to vote
on this issue.

�Page Two

TA E

SEAFARERS LOG
Published Weekly by the

SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. March 18, 1949

I'jti reeuiy dSor anollier
. tmnsfusiort.. .

JPN

GIVE/

At 51 iSeaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Entered as second class matter June 15, 1945, at the Post Office
in New York, N. Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

Now Is The Time
Let's not kid ourselves.
The American merchant marine is sick. It is suffering
from pernicious economic anemia complicated by cuts,
bruises and lacerations..
What is more, it is getting sicker.
Every time somebody comes along with the body­
building foods the merchant marine needs, somebody else
shoulders him aside and starts belaboring the merchant
marine with a club.
The picture described above is not just editorial
playfulness. Think of Paul G. Hoffman, the eminent
automobile manufacturer who heads the Economic Ad­
ministration which runs the Marshall Plan, as the man
with the club. The joke is pretty grim. Moreover, Paul
Hoffman isn't the only clubwielder. There are plenty of
others.
As a result, the American merchant marine grows
thinner day by day while foreign fleets grow fatter. The
facts are plain enough. Anybody unfamiliar with them
need only read the report starting on page one of this
issue of the LOG.
American shipbuilding is lagging far behind what is
being done in European shipyards.

Hospital. Patients
When entering the hospital
notify the delegates by post­
card, giving your name and
the number of your ward.
Mimeographed
postcards
can be obtained free at the
Social Service desk.

The American merchant fleet shrank by nearly 600
ships in a single 12-month period.
More than a thousand American built ships, manned
by underpaid crews, carry American trade under the
flags of a score of nations.
It's high time the sick body of the American mer­
chant marine received a little attention.

Men Now In The Marine Hospitals

Staten Island Hospital.

You can contact your Hos­
The Bland Bill on foreign cargoes must be passed,
pital delegate at the Staten
but the Bland Bill is not enough. Proposals to jiggle
These are the Union Brothers currently in the marine hospitals, Island Hospital at the follow­
interest rates or remove restrictions on subsidies may be as reported by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging ing times:
important and desirable, but they are not enough either— heavily on their hands. Do what you can to cheer them up by Tuesday — 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
unless they are linked to a long-range overall program, a writing them.
(on 5th and 6th floors.)
BOSTON MABINE HOSP.
program commensurate with this country's economic
W. WISLCOTT
Thursday — 1:30 to 3:30 p,m.
J. E. GALLANT
V. SALLIN
(on 3rd and 4th floors.)
strength, volume of ocean trade and world position.
VIC MILLAZZE
A. WARD
Saturday — 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
If such a plan of treatment is not formulated and F. ALASAVICH
E. RHOEDS
(on 1st and 2nd floors.)
implemented, the sick patient may wither away entirely. N. L. OLSON
W. LAMBERT
L. L. GORDON (City Hospital) E. PAINTER
The Seafarers International Union, Atlantic &amp; Gulf
W. T. ROSS
S. CAPE
S. X SDistrict, demands that immediate action be taken to
L. E. FOSKEY
MOBILE MARINE HOSP.
P. SADARUSKI
nourish and build up the merchant marine so that it may WILLIAM SULLIVAN
H. STILLMAN
J. M. SKINNER
W. GARDNER
R. R. WINGERT
LOUIS HOWARD
meet this country's economic needs.
C. B. VIKIN
J. DENNIS
LIVERPOOL BYRNING
There is no time to waste.
LIPARIA
J. B. BERRIER
XXX
TIM BURKE
E. PRILCHARD
STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
C. D. CAREY
J. P. BUCKALEW
F. NERING
F. LANDRY
P. M. VANDEREIK
W. HALLETT
G. ROLZ
J. LANGLEY
N. DORPMANS
D. CANN
XXX
With spring just aroujid the corner. Seafarers should,
S. HEIDUCKI
A. TREVINO
among other things, be thinking of voting in the current NEW ORLEANS MARINE HOSP.
BALTIMORE HOSPITAL
J.
LAFFIN
M. J. LUCAS
Referendum—those Seafarers who haven't yet expressed J. PUGH
THOMAS T. OLIVER
J.
JENSEN
jtheir choice of a transportation rule, that is.
R. SOUZA
W. WALKER
R. ORTIZ
V. HOLTON
G. STEPANCHUK
But just in case spring and things have been monopo­ W. CURRIER
G.
E.
CAMPBELL
D.
BAYELLE
J.
J. O'CONNOR
lizing the minds of the men who haven't cast their bal­
L. KAY
H. GIERDE
B.
RABINOWITZ
lots, we'll remind them that the ballot offers two proposi­ R. WALLACE W. N. SEARS
XXX
tions, both of which appear on the front page of this J. DAROUSE
C. H. JOHNSTON
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL
B. A. GOLD
issue. Look them over, decide, then go to the polling place E. LYONS
L. E. HODGES
A. E. DUNTON
W.
CHAMPLIN
in the nearest A&amp;G Branch Hall and vote. How you
A. C. McALPIN
S.' A. SWARTZ
vote is your business, but you should have your say before E. DRIGGERS
S.
KASMIRSKI
•
M. ARONG
S. JEMISON
A.
C.
PARKER
the 60-day balloting period expires on April 30.
S. GAMIER
W. ROCHELL
XXX
G. A. CARROLL
C.
RAFUSE
After all, you can think about the things you think
GALVESTON MARINE HOSP.
C.BROWN
C.
SIMMONS
about in spring all year round, but you can only vote F. CHEAUETTA
J. B. PURVIS
G. GONZALES
on the kind of transportation rule you want until April L. GALBURN
C. H. JONES
L. WILLIAMSON
^0.
J. HAVERTY
R. HENDERSON
&gt;
F. KORVATIN

You Decide

�THE

Friday, March 18, 1949

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Three

Lack Of Program Condemns US Shipping
(Continued from Page 1)
cept those who are opposed or
indifferent to maritime problems.
A recent survey disclosed that
of about 1,160 ocean-going ships
under construction in the world,
American shipyards were work­
ing on only 15 percent of the
total tonnage.
During 1948, the nation which
built 6,000 ships during the war
delivered only 24 seagoing ves­
sels of 257,069 deadweight tons.
And of these 24 ships, 15 of
141,406 deadweight tons were de­
livered for foreign account or
foreign flag operation. In other
words, less than half the tonnage
delivered provided jobs for Am­
erican seamen.
The delivered tonnage for 1949
will be larger, according to pub­
lished reports, since 34 tankers

are to be completed. -However,
where those tankers are going
is another matter.
American shipyards began 1949
with orders for 72 seagoing ships
on hand. They will total 2,000,000 deadtveight tons, but many
of them will not be finished un­
til 1951.
By that time many shipyards
will be virtually idle, unless ad­
ditional orders geared to Amer­
ican needs are placed, critics of
maritime policy maintain.
ONE DRY-CARGO SHIP
Of the ships now on order, 61
are tankers. Only one is a dry
cargo ship. In addition, there
are 200-odd commercial craft
building for harbor and inland
water operations unrelated to
ocean commerce.
Lack of activity in American

shipyards is no more than a re­
flection of the decline of Amer­
ican flag shipping, SIU officials
and others point out.
ThAt decline, too, is the direct
result of the failure to set up the
kind of long-range, large-scale
program the SIU has demanded
over and over again, from 1947
on.
As of January 1 of this year,
the number of ships in the Mari­
time Commissions up-river boneyards totalled 1,966. This was an
increase of 548 over the number
in the mothball fleet as of Janu­
ary 1, 1948, according to the
American Bureau of Shipping.
More have gone to the boneyards this winter and the end is
not in sight, if the Paul Hoffman
Plan for handling Marshall Plan
cargoes goes through.

Alaska Lawmakers Endorse Bland-Magnuson Bill
Alfri4 A. Omni |r. - Third Dwition
P.O.Boi 86T
Aadiaragt, AUsk*

NINETEENTH SESSION

CON'MITTEE MEMBERSHIP;
Fisheries, Fish &amp; Came
Labor, Capital O 'lmmigration
Transportation. Commerce &amp; Navigation
Ways &amp; Means •

HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

llaroh 2,1949
Paul Ilall, Secretary-Treasurer
aeafarers International Union of Ilorth Ameri.ca
Atlantic &amp; Sulf District
51 iJeaver otroet
New fouric 4, N/

Dear Sir and Brother: "
Ted Ericksen, Secretary of the Alaska Territorial
I'ederation of labor brought your letter of February 8th
to him, to my attention. I noticed that most of the
support for the nland. Jlagnuson bill was coming from
labor organizations. It occured to me that a boost from
a different angle might be helpful.
I took up the idea with the governor of Alaska, and
with his support I drafted, introduced, and got passed
unanimously the enclosed resolution.

Fraternally yours,

The above letter from Alfred Owen, Representative in the Alaskan House of
Representatives, demonstrates the extent of the support—both geographic and organiza­
tional—that is being swung behind the SIU in its fight to have the Bland-Magnuson
Bill passed by Congress. Representative Owen drafted and introduced a resolution that
was adopted unanimously by the Alaskan legislature. The adopted resolution states that
the passage of the Bland-Magnuson Bill, would have a direct bearing on the social and
economic welfare of the United States and Alaska. The full text of the resolution follows:
To the President of the United States, the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, the
House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee. Senator Magnuson. Congressman
Bland, and Delegate Bartlett:
WHEREAS, Alaska is vitally interested in. the Merchant Marine of the United
States as the connecting link between itself and the rest of the world, and
WHEREAS, water transportation is as yet the basis upon which the economic
growth and defense of the Territory rests, and
WHEREAS, Alaska is looking forward toward the assumption of the duties which
fall upon a state, among which is concern and interest in the social and economic wel­
fare of the several states, and
WHEREAS, the strengthening and maintenance of the Merchant Marine is an
Integral part of our economic and defense structure, and
WHEREAS; its strength or weakness has a direct bearing on the social and econ­
omic welfare of the several states, by fostering gainful employment of a trained labor
force, maintaining ship construction, repair and outfitting facilities; all of which have
proven thair worth during the past emergency.
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED: that the House of Representatives of the Terri­
tory of Alaska respectfully urge the passage of the Bland-Magnuson Bill (H. R. 1340 in
the House, and S.R. 591 in the Senate).

The only counter trend to the
boneyard parade has been the
substantial increase in the pri­
vately owned American oceango­
ing fleet, which now stands at
1,181 ships of 14,125,000 dead­
weight tons. However, the in­
crease' in the number of pri­
vately owned vessels is not
enough to reverse the overall
decline in shipping, which ex­
plains why so many seamen are
on the beach.
One reason for the decline of
American flag shipping was the
Ship Sales Act of 1946 which au­
thorized the Maritime Commis­
sion -to sell war-built vessels to
foreign nations. This provision
of the Act was knocked"out in
March 1948, but not until a great
deal of damage had been done.
A BIT LATE
By then the Commission had
sold 1,112 ships for foreign registi-y and only 644 to American
flag operators. Those 1,112 ships
are now competing with Ameri­
can ships all over the world.
Plenty of them come in and out
of American ports.
Of the 1,112 ships sold for for­
eign flag operation, 218 went to
the Bi'itish flag.
Another 147
went under the Panamanian flag.
Most of the rest were distributed
under the following flags: Italian,
122; Norwegian, 102; French, 98;
Dutch, 84; and Honduran, 28.
The remaining few went under a
sprinkling of other flags.
Here are some of the results
of the Ship Sales Act, and other
shortsighted policies.
In January 1947, American
ships carried 59.1 percent of this
country's dry-cargo exports. And
then the steady decline set in
with only a temporary upsurge
in the winter of 1947 to offset it.
By August 1948, American ships
were carrying no more than 34.2
pei'cent and the total amount of
exports had also slumped pre­
cipitously. (Ed. note: These fig­
ures apply to all cargoes, not to
Marshall Plan cai-goes only.)

TANKERS WAY DOWN
.The tanker cargo export pic­
ture was even drearier. In Jan­
uary 1947, American tankers car­
ried 43.2 percent of the nation's
export tanker cai-goes. This per­
centage dropped to 14.4 percent
in January 1948. From there on
it rose to
37.2 percent last
August.
•*
The import picture was brighter
percentagewise, with American
ships carrying well over 50 per­
cent of all dry-cargo imports
most of the time from January
1947 until last June when a per­
centage decline set in. However,
these percentage figui'es are mis­
leading
because
the
actual
amount of imports has been far
below exports.
Tanker imports were a differ­
ent matter. About 75 percent of
all tanker cargoes imported came
in American ships.
This winter a new interest in
the merchant marine has de­
veloped in Congress. Many be­
lieve it is the result of the Paul
Hoffman Plan to divert all Mar­
shall Plan bulk cargoes to for­
eign ships.
That plan and the fury with
which the mdustry and organized
labor spearheaded by the SIU
opposed it drew attention to Am­
erica's position on the seven seas.
As a result, there are at least
some proposed remedies for the
situation.
There is the Bland Bill guaran­
teeing that American ships get
50 percent or more of all gov­

ernment financed cargoes, includ­
ing the Marshall Plan cargoes,
regardless of where those cargoes
are loaded.
This bill, in a
slightly revised form, has been
approved by the House Commit­
tee on Merchant Marine, of
which Representative Bland is
chairman, and has been intro­
duced into the Senate. But Paul
Hoffman is still fighting
to get
his crippling proposal enacted
into law.
Representative Bland has also
introduced two' other bills into
Congress which would provide
more ships, more jobs—and fat­
ter profits for the shipowners.
One would remove the 50 per-.
cent restriction now imposed on
construction subsidies. The other
would provide construction sub­
sidies for ships in domestic
routes and give non-subsidized
operators some of the tax ad­
vantages enjoyed by subsidized
lines.
Similar bills were pa.^sed by
the House of Representatives last
year, but failed to i-each the Sen­
ate in time to be considered.
All of these bills are a long
way from becoming law. There
will be powerful forces, includ­
ing foreign nations, fighting
against all of them at every
turn. That is why. Headquarters
officials point out, Seafarei-s
should not let up on their cam­
paign to get the Bland Bill
passed.
MILITARY. TOO
At the same time that Paul
Hoffman proposed shipping more
foreign aid cargoes under for­
eign flags, the Army and Navybegan edging further into the
merchant marine.
The Army is already in the
process of taking over the C-4
passenger ships. And, in accord­
ance with a plan announced
early in the winter the Army
has been taking more cargo ships
from layup, and may eventual­
ly turn its entire fleet over to
the Navy to be manned by Navy
crews.
To Seafarers beset from many
sides, it looks as if American
seamen are in danger of ending
up with a few crumbs left over
from the military services, af­
ter Paul Hoffman gets through
shipping American financed
goods on foreign vessels.
The only answer. Headquar­
ters officials declared this week,
was for every SIU member to
take steps to make himself felt
in Washington.
"Don't just write one letter to
one Congressman," they said.
"Write a couple every day.
Write as many as you can and
then write another."

Let 'Em Know
The Arnold Bernstein SS
Co. is applying for an operat­
ing subsidy lo operate two
passenger ships in Service
1—Trade Route 8, which is
the New York - Rotterdam Antwerp run.
It is important to the Sea­
farers that this subsidy be
granted so that more jobs
will be available to SIU
members.
All members are urged to
write or telegraph the U.S.
Maritime Commission. De­
partment
of
Commerce,
Washington. D.C.. requesting
them to approve the Bern­
stein application.

J

�THE SEAFARERSLOG

Page Four

Friday, March 18. 1949

HISTORY IN THE MAKING: BOUND VOLUMES OF LOG

Mobile Notes Shipping Upturn,
And Hopes Trend Will Continue
By CAL TANNER
MOBILE—At long last we can and the Corsair, headed for the
report that shipping in this neck Island run; the Lafitte, on the
of the woods has taken a turn way to Europe; Waterman's
Greeley Victory, on the sixteenfor the better. And now that the day express run on cqastwise
patient is on the road to re- trade; and the Morning Light,
covery, we hope that there is pointed back to Puertq Rico.
no relapse.
RUDE AWAKENING
77 bookmen and nineteen per­
mits got out last week, and for Isthmian's SS Steel Mariner
us that amounted to a wartime was in from New Oi'ieans in
boom. We had a total of seven transit, and the ship was in fine
payoffs and six sign-ons, with shape except for one permit who
two sign-ons on continuous ar­ thought he could sleep all day
and let the rest of the men do
ticles.
his
work.
All payoffs were smooth, and
the few beefs that existed were , This character was pulled off
cleared up right on the ship. by the boarding Patrolman, and
Ships paying off for the week
were: SS Corsair, SS Planter, SS
Puritan, Alcoa; SS Hurricane, SS
Jean Lafitte, SS Morning Light,
and SS Governor Comer, all un­
der the Waterman flag. The Gov­
ernor Comer is being sold to
other interests, and we are
watching closely to see where
she will wind up.
Sign-ons included the Puritan

Port Savannah
he will be presented with a,, set
that will set him
Looking Ahead ofbackcharges
on his heels.
It's high time those wise-guys
To Basy Weeks learned
for once and for all that
By JIM DRAWDY
SAVANNAH — After going
through a very quiet week here
we're looking ahead to plenty
of activity in the next couple
of weeks. Ships scheduled to ar­
rive during that period are the
SS Southwind, SS Southland and
the SS Cape Nome. Even though
things should begin popping
pretty soon, we have a suffiicient number of men on the
beach to take care of the re­
placements.
The membership and the offi­
cials of the Branch extend their
deepest sympathy to the family
of Brother Marion Ackerman,
who died in Mobile last week.
Brother Ackerman was buried
in his home town of Charleston,
S.C., last Saturday afternoon.
GOOD UNION MAN
Almost all of us down this
way have sailed with Brother
Ackerman and we feel that the
A&amp;G District has lost a good
Union man, as well as a good
shipmate and sailor.
The Port of Savannah sent a
wreath to the funeral. Since
we did not know the time the
services were scheduled for, we
were unable to send a represen­
tative as we would have liked
to do.
May Brother Ackerman find
peace with our other departed
Brothers who are sailing the
little white ships for the Mas­
ter way up yonder.
Well, we're hoping to have
plenty of shipping news in the
near future. See you next week.

the Union will not tolerate men
who want to ride on the backs
of their shipmates.
In line with the traditional
SlU policy of helping legitimate
I selves in a tough spot when the
By JOE ALGINA
unions in their beefs, the SlU
disease hits them full force about
here has offered to help, in any
NEW YORK—Before plunging 500 miles out at sea.
way possible, the AFL Electri­
There was a case recently
cians in their strike at the Pas- into a report of the week's hap­
cagoula, Mississippi, shipyards. penings here, which are not too where a man had been suffering
So far the Electricians have not encouraging anyway, Td like to a serious illness for some time,
needed any pickets, but we are pass along a bit of advice that but it didn't hit him fully until
ready and able if they do need might save a member's neck the ship was in a foreign port.
By then it was too late, and he
them.
someday.
Some of our Brothers are in
When men sign on for a long died because of the lack of
the Mobile Marine Hospital, and trip, such as to the Far East, medical facilities. The lesson is
when they were visited last they know they're going to be there.
Men suspecting that they are
week they mentioned that they out of the range of medical at­
were also writing letters to Con­ tention for a long time. If they iir should get a check-up before
gressmen to support the Bland- get sick in the middle of the signing on. If they think they
Magnuson bill.
ocean, the meager aid available might have something serious,
The . hospitalized, but fighting. aboard ship won't help much in they should turn in at a marine
hospital for a complete check.
Seafarers include: William Sul­ the event of a serious illness.
Somethi.ng
serious can be cured
livan, Louis Howard, Liverpool Sometimes men, eager, to take
right
there.
Bryning, J. B. Berrier, Tim a job, will ignore the warning
Burke, J. P. Buckalew, P. M. symptoms of an illness just to
TURN IN
Vandereik, and J. Langley.
get out. Later they'll find themWhile on the subject, men who
become ill or injured while on
a ship should turn in at a

Medical Check-Up May Save Trouble Later

Says hreign Flag Ships Fxpand
At Fxpense Of United States

while his own merchant marine
fleet dwindles at an alarming
rate.
No foreign flag shipping firm
will pay the same amount of
wharfage fees as the American
companies. Nor do the British
or any other foreign maritime
nation order in this country the
few necessities that keep a ship
in operation.
Do they invest or spend any
money with local merchants in
the various ports? What usually
happens is that the city fathers
or the politicians are invited to
join the captains, or other peo­
ple representing the foreign
shipping companies, at tea and a
lot of hand-shaking takes place.
A lot of goodwill is created but
it doesn't help our merchant
fleet, which is being sacrificed
right down the line.

Victory, Nathaniel Currier and
Hastings, Waterman; the Frank
Spencer, South Atlantic, and the
William Carruth, Fuel Transpor­
tation.
The Currier and Spencer
signed on again, along with the
Monroe, Bull; Steel Director,
Isthmian; Maiden Creek, Water­
man. There were several ships
here in-transit, but we have so
many men on the beach that the
calls for men made hardly a
ripple in the backlog.
That's it for the week. We can
only mention, as we did last
week, that the Gold Coast is cry­
ing for men. If you've got the
fare, that's the place to be right
now.

No Payoffs, Sign-Ons
But in-Transit Ships
Heip Port Gaiveston
By KEITH ALSOP

By WILLIAM McKAY

TACOMA — While the Ameri­
can steamship operators are giv­
ing up dock and wharfage space
that they have occupied for years
on the Pacific Cdast, British
firms are right now in the Port
of Tacoma surveying docking
facilities, with an eye to step­
ping up shipping operations here.
If you study the positions of
the various maritime nations, you
will notice that the British are
not only back to their pre-war
standing of being the foremost
maritime power, but since the
end of the war, they have built
more and better ships than all
If you don'i find linen
the other countries combined.
when you go aboard your
ship, notify the Hall at once.
As a maritime nation the US
A telegram from Le Havre or has rapidly declined since 1947.
Singapore won't do you any
The British used American
good. It's your bed and you
money to rebuild their maritime
have to lie in it.
industry. And the American
'taxpayer is footing the bills.

ATTENTION!

One of the highlights o'f late 1948 was the SIU victory over Mississippi Shipping Com­
pany, a Victory which paved the way for an across-the-board increase to all Seafarers. This
and many other SIU highlights of laie 1948 are now available to members interested in keep­
ing a record of the Union's progress as reported in the pages of the SEAFARERS LOG.
Bound volumes of the LOG for July through December 1948 are now on sale at SIU Head­
quarters at the cost price of $2.50. Bound in sturdy cloth and lettered in gold, the volumes
make a handsome addition to any library and serve as a constant source of reference.
Also available are earlier volumes in six-month editions for the years 1946, 1947 and
January through June IS'^S. The price is the same for each.
Seafarers wishing a bound volume or volumes are urged to act promptly, as the supply
is limited. Mail orders by check or money order should be addressed to the SEAFARERS
LOG, 51 Beaver Street, New York.

Taking off to the hills for a
hospital as soon as they hit port,
couple of v/eeks before hitting
the hospital trail won't help the
doctor's work any, and it won't
help any case the man may have
against the company.
With that out of the way, the
shipping situation this week can
be summed up in one word:
slow.
We paid off the Suzanne, Fran­
ces, Beatrice, Bull; the Robin
Locksley, Robin; the Bessemer

GALVESTON — During the
past two weeks we played host
to no payoffs or sign-ons. Our
only business came from a half
dozen or so in-transit ships. For­
tunately, the ships took a good
block of replacements, enough
to keep, the boys coming around
the Hall every day.
We expect the coming week
to improve somewhat, as a pay­
off is scheduled and several
other ships are due in this area
about the same time.
All in all, conditions aren't too
bad down here when compared
to the general maritime picture.
We are holding our own.
Cities Service ships, when
they come into the-SIU, will in­ - y
crease the activity o f this
Branch a great deal, so the long
range outlook is pretty favor­
able here.

�THE SEAFARERS

Friday, March 18. 1849

Unha Wre€kers Are Warned
The SIU is on record that charges will be placed against
men guilty of being the following:
PILFERERS: Men who walk off ships with crew's^equipmen or ship's gear, such as sheets, towels, ship's storesT cargo,
etc., for sale ashore.
WEEDHOUNDS: Men who are in the possession of or
who
marijuana or other narcotics on board an SIU ship
or in the vicinity of an SIU Hall.
GASHOUND PERFORMERS: Men who jeopardize the
safely of their shipmates by drinking while at work on a ship
or who turn to in a drunken condition. Those who disrupt the
operation of a ship, the pay-off or sign-on by being gassed up.
This Union was built of, by and for seamen. Seafarers
fought many long and bloody fights to obtain the wages and
conditions we now enjoy. For the first time in the history of
the maritime industry a seaman can support himself and his
family in a decent and independent manner. The SIU does
not tolerate the jeopardizing of these conditions by the actions
of irresponsibles.
In any occupation there is a sm^ group of foulballs.
While the Union has been fortunate in keeping such characters
to a minimum, we must eliminate them altogether from the
SIU.
All Seafarers, members and officials alike, axe under
obligation to place charges against these types of characters.
Any man, upon being convicted by a Union Trial Com­
mittee of actions such as outlined here, faces Union discipline
up to and including complete expulsion from the Seafarers.

Strong protests have been
leveled against the move to
finance the construction of 3,
500,000 ton of shipping in Nor­
way with ECA unds. Norway,
which has asked for aid to bring
its merchant marine to the 1939
level, would with the additional
tonnage have almost seven-andone-half million tons of shipping.
The country's fleet in 1939 to­
talled 4,500,000 tons.
* * «
Wide attention in Washington
is being given the recommenda­
tion of the Hoover Reorganiza­
tion Commission that all trans­
portation services be placed un­
der a single head. The commis­
sion suggests that the regulatory
functions of the ICC, the Mari­
time Commission and the CAB
remain as they are. The Depart­
ment of Commerce would take
over the operating and adminis­
trative functions of the govern­
ment bodies.
The 1949 season on the Great
Lakes is scheduled to open offi­
cially on March 25. The port of
Buffalo opened for business on
March 16.
* * *
The Army, which took over
operation of nine C-4 passenger
ships, will operate six in the
transporting of displaced persons.
The remaining three will be put
on idle status. No commercial
passengers will be carried.
* &lt;•&gt; *
A suggestion by a group of
Senators to use troop transports
in the tourist trade with roundtrip costs of $250 has aroused the
interests of maritime unions. The
ships would be made available to
the State Department to carry
students and teachers as well as
displaced persons. In light of
the recent acquisition of C-4s by
the Army, labor men want to
know if the ships will operate
with civilian or Army crews.
« « *
Two corriplaints expected to be
probed during the promised Con­

Page Five

LOG

Taft-Hartley Act Limits Union
Administration Of Woifaro Plans

not, one thing that many unions
experienced in the handling of
•welfare plans advise is to stay
away from commercial insur­
ance companies as far as is
possible. However,, there are in­
stances'where unions must use
commercial insurance companies
or set up insurance companies
of their own.
For instance, in New York
State if a welfare plan pays
death benefits of more than
$500, it must be organized to
fit the State insurance laws.
Under these circumstances, a
welfare plan can:
(1) keep the death benefits low
Much has been written about
(2) buy commercial life in­
how union welfare funds are
surance or
administered. However, one
(3) form its own insurance
point must be made: As of right
company as the plan of the Am­
algamated Clothing Workers,
CIO, has done.
Forming a life insurance com­
pany might be a difficult under­
taking for any but a very large
union.
The Norwegian Parliament has single man is six Norwegian
The reason that many unions
approved the pension scheme for crowns a year for each month warn against using commercial
Norwegian seamen, effective at sea, with a maximum of 350 insurance
companies,
except
months, equivalent to 2,100 where unavoidable, is that such
January 1, 1948.
The scheme is financed by a crowns a, year. A married sea­ companies are "commercial."
contribution from the seafarers man's full pension is 2,800 They are in business to make
amounting to 5 per cent of their crowns with an addition of 210 money. Accordingly, they are
wage plus an equivalent sum crowns for each child under 18 not anxious to pay benefits and
from the employer, the balance years of age.
almost inevitably will favor their
Wartime service at sea counts own jpterests whenever possible.
being covered by the state.
The basic pension fund con­ for double. Provided for are
However, other unions, small
sists of the capital which was widows' pensions, amounting to ones especially, might have dif­
created by the earnings of the 60 per cent of the full pension. ferent views of this question.
gressional investigation of the
Norwegian merchant fleet during For officers, the rates are from
When it is necessary to use
merchant marine, are that the
20 to 40 per cent higher.
a commercial insurance com­
Army is operating too many the war.
A reduced pension may be pany for one or more benefits,
Pensions vary according to
ships in competition with com­
length of service, the qualifying granted to seafarers between 55 welfare plans obtained through
mercial companies, and that the period being 150 months, and all and 60 years in the event of their
Maritime Commission has sold seafarers of 60 years and over retiring from the sea when the collective bargaining generally
require that the employer or
more ships abroad than it should are eligible.
sum of their years of service and employers purchase what is call­
The pensions payable to a age is 80 years or more.
have.
ed "group insurance."
So far as the SIU is concerned,
AID TO THOSE WHO AIDED
it might well be that insurance
companies should be sidestepped
entirely. Inquiries made by
REGISTERED NURSES GUILD
NO. sia
Headquarters in the process of
•UlLOINO SKftVICC CMPLOYCBS INTCRNATIONAL UNION
working up a statistical survey
A. r. o» U
of
seamen have revealed that
7» RBAOE STREET; NEW YORK 7. N. Y. - ROOM 303
insurance companies use actuar­
WORTH 2.704t
ial figures
compiled 15 to 30
years ago in writing life policies
for men who make the sea their
living.
Union conditions have brought
February 16th, 1949
many changes since 1935. How­
ever, whether to use an insur­
Mr. Paul Hall. Secretary Treasurer
ance company, for any part of
Seafarers International Union
the SIU plan, is still to be de­
51 Beaver Street
cided.
Bew^Vork 4, HT
The following is another
in the series of articles on
union welfoire plans. In re­
sponse to a membership de­
mand voiced late in January,
Headquarters officials are
studying the welfare plans
of other unions and investi­
gating the needs of seamen
as a preliminary to formu­
lating a welfare plan for the
SIU. The plan will be pre­
sented to the shipowners by
the Negotiating Committee
after it has been drawn'up.

now, no union can be sole ad­
ministrator of a brand-new wel­
fare plan. The reason? You
guessed it—the Taft-Hartley Act.
Section 302 of that law speci­
fies that health and welfare ar­
rangements must provide for
an irrevocable trust fund estab­
lished for the sole benefit of
employees, their families and de­
pendents.
The purposes for which bene­
fits can be paid are limited. And
unless the plan was in opera­
tion before January 1, 1946, as
some were, the employer must
share in the administration. In
addition, there must be provi­
sion for a neutral person to pre­
vent deadlocks.
Be the administration joint or

Norwegian Parliament Approves
Pensions For Merchant Seamen

Dear Mr. Ball.
Will you please accept for yourself, Mr. Bernstein, and all
the nemhers of your organi«atl&lt;n , the very appreciative and
hearty thanks of the memhers of the Heglstered Burses -Guild
# 312, for the ma»ilficent piece of work you did on our hehalf.
To he able to contact all those locals is sometning which
we would never have been able to do without your help and
assistance. Even the spreading of the news about Now York
State that there is a Hureee Guild will be of inestimable
value to us.
Our Bsniberf, at the regular meeting last night, were amazed
and delighted with what was acoomplished, and have requested
me to express their deep appreciation to you.
Sincerely yoi^
y
Ksn T. C£uming BB
Field Bepresentative

'
One of the first unions to support the SIU in its drive to save the
American merchant marine in the face of ECA culs was fhe Registered Nurses
Guild. No. 312. Recently Jhe SIU. through its Headquarters facilities, returned
the favor by coming to fhe aid of the nurses union in its drive io improve
condUions in New York Stale. The above letter from fhe Guild's field repre­
sentative expresses the organization's appreciation tor the assistance of the SIU.

Cities Service Sued
For Price Rigging
The Cities Service Oil Com­
pany apparently finds the gen­
eral public as likely a target for
abuse as the men who sail its
ships, hilt the Attorney General
of the State of Texas aims to do
something about it. He's filed
anti-trust suits against Cities
Service and nine other oil com­
panies.
The suits charged that the re­
fineries and marketers had "com­
bined their capital, skill and
acts" to set uniform prices on
gasoline delivered to Texas fill­
ing stations since July, 1946.
Eight of the defendant oil
companies, including Cities Ser­
vice, joined to keep the price
of crude oil down so they could
maintain "the abnormally large
profits existing as a result of the
wide spread between the crude
oil prices and the selling prices
of refined gasoline," the Attorney
General charged.

�Page Six

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, March 18, 1949

Seafarer Joe Bums, Cross-Country March Of Dimes Fund Thanks
SIU Crews For Generosity
Cupid, Sends Two Down The Aisle
A letter from the Greater New
York chapter of the National
Foundation for Infantile Paraly­
sis thanking SIU crews who con­
tributed to the March of Dimes
has been received at Union head­
quarters.

It isn't every day a guy gets a chance to play Dan Cupid, so when Sea­
farer Joe Burns spotted the trim young lass across the aisle and the per­
sonable Marine Corps man sitting alongside of him as the train pulled out
of Frisco, the wheels
The Union-endorsed organiza­
started going around —
tion, which recently concluded
and fast. By the time the
its fund raising drive, voiced ifs
train reached Omaha two
appreciation for the interest and
assistance shown by Seafarers
days later. Brother
in the work of stamping out
Burns was the best man.
of the crippling disease.
All three principals in the
whirlwind romance were stran­
gers before the east-bound trip
began on a Afonday night, a few
weeks ago. The bride, Mary El­
len Taunt, 19, was headed for
her home in Flint, Mich. The
bridegroom. Corporal Floyd Simonis, 28, expected to spend his
leave with his mother in Mil­
waukee. Joe Burns was just
going home to Brooklyn, U.S.A.
The Seafarer and the Marine
occupied a seat directly *across
the way from young Mary Ellen.
The marine, a bashful sort, was
Joe Burns displays a newspaper account of his successful
minding his own business. Joe,
whose weather eye has been organizing campaign.
sharpened by many years at sea,
$
shuttled surveying glances back
tion, when the Marine gritted
and forth between the marine
his teeth like a guy who is
and the miss. Joe, a happily mar­
about to step out of a landing
ried man himself, decided this
FAIRISLE. Jan. 5 — John A.
craft under fire.
was a situation a marine should
Urban. Chairman; Claude John­
"Okay," he said.
have well in hand.
son, Secretary. Delegates re­
After they had established an Corporal S i m o n i s stepped ported everything shipshape.
acquaintanceship
by
talking' across the aisle to "no man's New Business: Department dele­
about the things people talk land." In two hours the Marine gates elected: John A. Urban,
about on trains, Joe dispensed was in control. When he saw the Ship's Delegate; W. L. Hammock,
with formality, and settled on!whites of Mary Ellen's eyes, he Deck; Loran Harris, engine; T.
the course. He gave the marine fired the question. She went Horan, steward. Motion carried
a meaningful nudge and rolled down, head over heels,
for the ship's delegate to see if
his eyes toward the girl across
"I'd already made up my mind the slopchest can be opened for
the aisle. The Marine was as' to say yes if he asked me to cigarettes. Motion carried for
balky as an army mule. He marry him," said -Mary,
Wiper and OS to take turns
scared, he just couldn't
cleaning the rooms of the Bosun
get^the lead out of his legs.
Thursday night, the and Deck Engineer. Motion car­
'This IS worse than trying to
® J
ried for each department to take
squeeze a draw out of a tight- o+oi* c
* -D i i /-. j • turns cleaning the laundry. One
- . , oi •
)i
J T i T~Staff Sergeant Robert Godwin,
H I"- disembarked. Godwin was to he niinute of silence for departed
SL,
o?'ch.Tr
bridesmaid. For a moment it Brothers,
plenty of chatter.

In its letter the organization
listed five SIU ships and contri­
butions of over $100. The five
ships listed were the Marine
Star, Robin Sherwood, Jean, Ro­
bin Gray and Gadsden. Although
other- crews contributed, the
committee had only the names
of ships -that donated 'in the port
of New York.
FULL SUPPORT
Active SIU participation in
the campaign came as a result
of the adoption of a resolution
to support the drive at a mem­
bership meeting held on Novem­
ber 3. Secretary-Treasurer Paul
Hall served on the Foundation's

AFL committee, throughout the
course of the.drive.

An excerpt from the letter of
thanks follows:
"We wish to thank you for
contributing so generously to
help combat polio. It is only
through such interest and as­
sistance of our many friends that
we can attain our goal of stamp­
ing out the dread disease of in­
fantile paralysis..." The letter
was signed by L. Robert Wein­
berg, Labor Director.

The Voice

Of The Sea
By SALTY biCK
Vicenzo Marconi has been
squawking because he can't go
catching shrimp for 88 days.
There's a new state law. Heard
from a friend that George Moran, who calls all captains by
their first name, is pumping malteds in San Pedro.

Juan Velez got off a ship
here, but is anxious to be back
in New York. Did you know
the Alcoa Corsair is known as
gestion made to keep gear locker SS French Market? I under­
clean. Steward agreed to put stand the whole crew comes
out a better variety of night from there. Someone called
lunches. One minute of silence Frisco from here asking for
a job. The man was told if
observed for departed Brothers.
he had a book and a rating
STEEL APPRENTICE, Jan. 23 to come on out.
—Welch, Chairman; B. Payne,
It seems Mississippi Steamship
Secretary. Delegates reports ac­ Company wants to get in the
cepted. Motion to curb practice catering business. Quite a few
of stevedores running through parties have been given on
th% house and passageways. Edu­ board ships while in port. We
cation: Discussion on transporta­ feel -we are on the ships to
tion rule. Decision to draft a serve passengers, but not the
letter on the ruling to be sent guests of private parties. Henry
to Headquarters. Good and Wel­ Gerdes is around here every day
fare: All departments agreed to and he's about the best-dressed
keep laundry cleaner.
seaman on the beach.
4. i S.
NOONDAY, Feb. 27—Pete Mo(Ed. Note: Salty Dick sends
reni.
Chairman;
W.
E.
Harper,
GADSDEN^ Jan.^16— H. R.
word that he's tied up for re­
Orkofsky, Chairman; J. Kalmick, Secretary. Delegates reports ac­ pairs at the New Orleans Ma­
Secretary. Delegates reported no cepted. Men warned that they rine Hospital and expects to
beefs. ' New Business: Motion will not receive draws unless be out of action for several
made to have messhall painted. their names are added to the weeks. His pals are urged to
Deck delegate to see Mate for draw list. New Business: Mo- write him at the following ad­
OK. Good and Welfare: Sug­
dress: Salty Dick, c/o Marine
(Continued on Page 7)
Hospital, New Orleans, La.,
Ward 1-G.)
FAMILIAR MESSROOM SCENE

MINUTES OF SIU SHIP MEETINGS

UP AND AT 'EM

' would be dashed by the Ne­
braska law which says the age
So Brother Burns peppered of consent is 21. Since Mary is
away at Corporal Simonis. On only 19, she'd have to get her
Wednesday night Joe was just parents' permission, the County
about running out of ammuni- clerk told them.
All hands decided to thumb a
ride across the river to Council
Bluffs, Iowa, where the age of
consent is 18.
Be they praise, criticism or
By this time the press had
query, the SEAFARERS been alerted, and when the
LOG wishes to receive let­ couple was united by a Council
ters from its readers. A sec­ Bluffs Justice of the Peace, flash
bulbs were popping like mad.
tion of the Union newspaper
Next
day
romance-hungry
has been set aside for the
readers
throughout
the nation
expression of opinions of in­
read the story and saw the pic­
terest to the membership, tures of Joe Burns- and the two
and all are invited to make
newlyweds he had sponsored.
use of the pages.
The Corporal and his missus
The only rule contributors
went on down to New Orleans
and the Mardi Gras, as guests of
are asked to adhere to is
a
national radio program. Bro­
that all letters must be
ther Burns went back to where
signed. Anonymous letters
the tree grows.
cannot be printed. A writer's
Nobody was happier than Joe.
request thai his name be "It kind of makes a guy feel
like he accomplished something,"
withheld will be honored.
he explained.

Sign It, Brother

.1

Log Subscribers
Readers notifying the SEA­
FARERS LOG of a change in
mailing address are re­
quested to include their old
address along with the new.
In addition to making easier
the switch-over it will also
guarantee uninterrupted
mailing service.

This sketch by artist David Pascal was used in connection
with an article on the Seamen's Bill .of Rights which appeared
in Salute magazine some time ago. Picture was submitted to
LOG by Seafarer John A. Bruno.

All notifications of change
of address should be ad­
dressed to the Editor, SEA­
FARERS LOG, 51 Beaver
Street, New York 4, N. Y. ^

�Friday, Maxch 18, 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Seven

Digested Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings Sea£sacerS^

(Continued from Page 6)
tion carried to have a latch put
on all screen doors. Education:
Discussion led by Smira on rules
of shipping and the SIU con­
stitution.
Good and Welfare:
Welch suggested that when men
are gassed up they hit the sack
and sleep it off instead of dis­
rupting the rest of the crew in
the messroom. One minute of si­
lence observed for Brothers lost
at sea.
S- S. S.
CHICKASAW, Feb. 26 — Paul
Arlhofer, Chairman:
William
Zarkas, Secretary. Delegates re­
ported on number of books and
permits in their departments.
New Business: Motion carried
that the delegates see the Cap­
tain to arrange a variety of
clothing for slopchest.
Motion
carried that the delegates see
about a new ship's library. Edu­
cation: Brother Zarkas said a few
words to tripcard men in regard
to behavior aboard SIU ships.
Union literature was given the
men. Motion carried that the
recreation room be kept clean by
the three departments.

•ii!

\ V^

Good and Welfare: Discussion on
sanitary work. Agreement that
laundiy will be cleaned weekly
by rotation among the depart­
ments. Minor repairs listed to
be called to attention of Chief
Engineer. One minute of silence
observed for departed Brothers.
4 4 4
ROBIN KIRK. Feb. 6 — J. E.
Jailt. Chairman; A. Bear. Secre­
tary. Delegates reported minor
beefs in their departments. New
Business: Motion can-ied that the
engine department keep all oil
drums from the crew recreation
deck. Motion carried to forward
Christmas Menu to LOG for pub­
lication. Dinner was very poor.
Good and Welfare: Suggestion

made that all foc'sles be cleaned
before getting off.
Question
raised on coffee purchased in
South Africa.

4 4 4
JOHN B. WATERMAN. Jan.
23—Luke Collins. Chairman; F.
Jones. Secretary. Delegates re­
ported number of books and per­
mits in their departments. New
Business: Discussion on slopchest.
Radio operator asked delegate
from each department to draw
up list of articles required and
he would attempt to get them.
Motion carried' to elect Collins
as ship's delegate. Notice posted
to keep messroom clean at all
times. Good and Welfare: Dis­
cussion on purchasing washing
machine.
Agreed that ship's
delegate take up collection for
machine at the payoff.
4 4 4
CAPE MOHICAN. Jan. 27—
Tuczkewski. Chairman: Schirmacher. Secretary. Delegates re­
ported no beefs pending. Motion
by R. Sirois that Steward be
notified by department head
head when early or late meals
are expected .so proper arrange­
ments can be made. Motion by
Sandas to have delegates check
food and .slopchest when supplies
come aboard. Crew to take ac­
tion if not in good order.

HE JULY-DECEMBER, 194-6 ISSUES OF

THE SEAFARERS LOO
HAVE BEEN BOUND, AND ARB NOWAVAILASLBIO-THB MEMBERSHIP
THE PRICEOF BfNDfNG. ALSO AVAILABLE.
ARE EDITIONS COVBRlNG JAH.-Ji;Aje,AND
JULV-'DEG. 1946; JAM.-JUNE, AND JULY
— DEC. 194-7; AND FOR JANrdUNE, i«946
AT ^2.50EAGM. THESE VOLUMES GA/M^
BE BOU6HTAT BAiSGAiSE ROOM, S\

©BAVER ST, MEW YORK

NV-

A4A1L ORDERS MUST BE ACCOMPAA/IED
BY CHECK OR MOAiEyORDER.

CUT and RUN
By HANK

4. 4.. 4.
FAIRLAND. Feb. 27 — Fred
Travis, Chairman; Adomailis,
Secretary.
Delegates reported
disputed overtime. New Busi­
ness: Motion carried that all
water be checked by Public
Health officer as tanks ai-e dirty
and contain fuel oil. Good and
Welfare: Night Cook and Baker
volunteered to exchange ship's
library in Baltimore. Discussion
on getting a lock for the fan
room aft so crewmembers won't
play with the heating system.'
One minute of silence in honor
of departed Brothers.
4. 4. 4.
MARINA, Feb. 22—Jack Mays.
Chairman; Russell Lee. Secretary.
Delegates' reports accepted. New
Business: Motion by Musco. car­
ried, that ship be fumigated. Mo­
tion by Swanson. carried, to have
table tops in galley refinished or
replaced. Motion by Musco. car­
ried, to have toastmaster fur­
nished for both messhalls. Mo­
tion by Musco. carried, to have
glass library cabinet installed in
recreation room. Good and Wel­
fare: Cooks asked crew to ac­
quaint them with any beefs on
food. Steward complimented
crew on the cleanliness of the
laundry room. One minute of
silence for Brothers lost at sea.

Don't Bite A Dog!
What happens to Seafarers
while taking the ships to the
far flung ports of the world
makes interesting reading to
the rest of the membership.
There is an old saying that
if a dog bites a man. that's
not news but if a man bites
a dog. that's news. We're not
suggesting that you go 'out
and bite a dog; however, if
you've had an interesting ex-

perience on your trip that
was a little out of the or­
dinary, share it with your
fellow Seafarers through the
pages of the SEAFARERS
LOG.
You don't have to be a
Jack London to knock out the
details of the experience.
Just give us the facts and
we'll do the rest.

4 4 4*
STEEL EXECUTIVE. Jan. 2Tommy Tucker. Chairman; T. J.
Sullivan, Secretaijy.
Delegates
reported number of books and
permits in their departments.
NewBusiness:
Motion
carried
that members who- have been
drunk in port and while secur­
ing for sea be fined $50. Motion
carried to give Steward a vote of
thanks for his work in preparing
Christmas and New Year's din­
ner. . The work of the Cooks and
Baker described by the crew as
"reminiscent to many of the boys
of better d^ys spent in the dining
room of the Waldorf-Astoria."

Pictures, too make a story
more interesting. If you. or
a fellow crewmember, are
lucky enough to have a
camera along — send your
snapshots to the LOG. We'll
take care of the developing
and printing and the return­
ing of the negatives and
prints to you.
Send your bits of news and
snaps to: SEAFARERS LOG,
51 Beaver Street, New York,
N. Y.

4 4 4
MARYMAR. Dec. 27 — Guy
Walter. Chairman; Stephen Zubuzycki. Secretary. Delegates re­
ported number of books and per­
mits in their departments. Mo­
tion carried to elect George Hildereth as ship's delegate. Good
and Welfare: Suggested that
crew wait until next meeting to
see, how messroomsv are being
cleaned before taking steps to
insure their cleanliness. Carpen­
ter agreed to install mirror in
Steward department head. Deck
Engineer agreed to repair spigot
in deck department head.
"4 4 4
TELFAIR STOCKTON. Jan. 16
—Lawrence E. McCune. Chair­
man; Peter Piascik. Secretary.
Delegates reported number of
books and permits in their de­
partments. New Business: Ques­
tion ai'ose on Brother who piled
off the ship the morning of sail­
ing.
Motion carried to refer
matter to Patrolman. Education:
Crew ui'ged to make ship a clean
and orderly ship, the difference
between a good Union ship and
a rushbucket. Oldtimers agreed
to devote their spare time to
helping the young men in prob­
lems that arise aboard ship.
Schedule drawn up for cleaning
of recreation room.

A vote of thanks goes this week to Brother "Whitey" Olson
aboard Waterman's Bessemer Victory — one of four Waterman
scows on the "paper run" hitting Georgetown, South Carolina,
Tampa, Florida, and other ports. "Whitey" recommended sending
weekly bundles of LOGS to the Gator Bar in Georgetown and
the Ideal Cafe in Tampa. In this way the crews off these ships
won't miss too many issues of the LOG while they pass away a
few hours in these waterfront spots.. . Speaking of bars and LOGS
there is the Gaarkeuken Bar at 113 Albertdok in Antwerp, Belgium,
which shall be getting more LOGS every week due to the fact
that one Brother sailed in this week and told us .that SIU crews
are picking them up steady. Brothers, remember this address
when you hit Antwerp. Your Union newspaper benefits you at
all times.

Brother Clement Hospedales is sailing soon with his
mustache for India. He hopes the ship hits the West Coast
coming home so he can see some of his shipmates out there
where shipping is booming steady ... Brother Mike Gottschalk.
Steward and oldtimer, announced last week that he was one
of the first to be eligible to start collecting unemployment
benefits from one of the steamship companies with headquar­
ters down South. That's good news. The full story should be
in the LOG soon for the welfare of the other Brothers..Two
Cooks are doing some tine landlubbing cooking below the
Hall. Brother Jose Pacheco (with his mustache) and Brother
Pete Gonzales specialize weekly in cooking up dishes of chicken
and rice and other rare-to-New York chow.

Seafarers In Town: Robert Arnold with his pipe... Fred Paul
with his mustache . . . Archibald Anderson . . . George Renstrom,
the Deck Engineer ... Gene Sinclair ... David Wright who shipped .
recently with his mustache... Eugene Milanesi, Brooklyn citizen,
and his pencil-styled mustache. Say, if you Brothers are wondei'ing
why we have mentioned so many Brothers carrying mustaches it's
because we haven't seen anybody with a beard in a beard's age.
We sure will mention the first Brother who comes in with heavy
growth.

The weekly LOG will be sailing free of cost to the homes
of the following Brothers—Arvid Gylland of New York, Ray­
mond Linkowski of New York, George Glock of Maryland,
Mallory Coffey of North Carolina, George Meltzer of Connecti­
cut. John Russell of North Carolina. Edward Crelan of Con­
necticut. Tom Danzey of Alabama, Joshua Gibbs of North
Carolina.
4 4 4
FAIRHOPE. Jan. 16 — John
Wulzen. Chairman; Frank Justura. Secretary.
Delegates repoi-ted all in order, except for
small bit of disputed overtime.
J. D. Otto elected ship's dele­
gate. Good and Welfare: Bosun
asked that men. going off watch
at night clean tables in messhall.
Ship's delegate asked crew to
cooperate in keeping ship orderly
while in port.

Book Department—Sea Routes to the Gold Fields, by Oscar
Lewis, $4.00, Alfred Knopf Co., The Maritime History of Maine,
by William Rowe, $6.00, W. W. Norton Co., They Took to the Sea,
by D. Klein- and Mary Johnson, $3.75, Rutgers University Press...
The Latest Flash News—Pete Di Pietro sure got a big kick telling
us of the oldtimers down in Galveston who are on the beach
having "cool ones" and tropical sunshine. There's Eli Winslow, Red
Barron, Jesse Barton and Old Mac McDonald... Brother Drew
"Hoss" McKinnie, the Steward, sailed in last week and no doubt
has sailed out again since then,.. Brothers, keep those ships clean
and happy. Keep your jobs shipshape—according to the agreement.

�Page Eig^

THE

THE SEAFARERS

Friday, March 18, 1948

LOG

SPEAKS

SS Kendrick Crewmen, Victimized By Siam
Port Monopoly, Offer Trust-Busting Plan

HOT ISN'T THE WORD

Koh Sichang is a small island lowed (by the Chinese chandler)
about 40 miles from Bangkok, to come aboard to collect, pro­
We believe that a report of and is the nearest that deep craft viding they gave him a cut. The
our recent voyage aboard the ships can approach Bangkok.
agent was authorized by the
William H. Kendrick to Siam
Captain
to pay off all debts af­
should be made available to as There are no docking facilities ter each crewihember certified
in Koh Sichang, but there is a
many American seamen as pos­
good anchorage. All ships' agents the amount and signed for it.
sible, so they will know what to
come down from Bangkok, but This method was unsatisfactory
expect should they go to Siam.
due to poor transportation facili­ to all, but we had no choice in
Specifically, our experience ties, they make the trip infre­ the matter. We were led to be­
took place in Koh Sichang, Siam. quently. Thus all the details are lieve that we would not be given
left to the ship chandler. The customs clearance until we paid
chandler is the gent we wish the chandler.
to warn you about. He is a
We feel that the chandler is
Chinese merchant who, with his
taking undue advantage of the
family, has a virtual monopoly
situation, and steps should be
of the island's business. Here's
taken to break his control over
the way his empire reads:
American seamen. We suggest,
He owns the largest bar; he the following steps be taken by
To the Editor:
owns the launch service; he owns crews of ships heading for Siam:
Buddy Gordon (right), tries to keep cool on the deck of
Just a few lines to say hello the only decent launch landing,
the Steel Chemist during stopover in Bombay, India, recently.
to the boys and to let them which is situated in front of his 1. Wire the agent at le&amp;st one Unidentiiied lad ed left is a friend of Gordon's from another
know I'm still at the hospital bar. His son runs the laundry week before arrival for an ade­
(Metropolitan) here in New York service. His son-in-law controls quate draw in American money. ship in the port.
and I figure that I will be here the food supplies available to (Make sure you specify Ameri­
the ships. AH the other mer­ can currency.)
until the end of this month.
chants
on the island must pay 2. If- the money is not avail­
Brother Gordils is going home
off
to
the
chandler before they able at arrival, contact the Am­
after being here about two and
are
allowed
to do business with erican Embassy and tell them
a half months. Of course, I wish
the
ships.
the story. The American Em­ To the Editor:
I were going with him. Anyway,
I am 50 years old and I have
bassy
is
handling
all
relief'
rice
I wish him the best of luck
to
wait 15 years more to be eli­
CONTROLS CITY
shipments from Siam, and will In a letter published in one gible to receive old age pension
when he joins his first ship. The
men certainly should like his In addition to that which he be available in Bangkok. The of New York's morning papers money. If I live that long. So
chow, because he is a very good and his family own directly, he chandler is apparently working recently a Coast Guardsman who has a right to squawk.
also controls the customs and in collusion with customs officials squawked about the President
cook.
police. Moreover, he exerts a and shipping agents, so the Am­ being opposed to tax exemption And now a word to the SIU:
REMEMBERED
Keep up the good work. I have
very strong influence over the erican Consulate or Embassy is for servicemen.
been following the work of the
If
the
Coast
Guardsman
thinks
the only recourse.
I happened to receive a Val­ ships' agents.
Union in the SEAFARERS LOG,
he
has
reason
to
squawk,
what
entine card from a Union Bro- The bar and launch service 3. Try to deal with other mer­
and it always braces me up some
,ther who signed his nickname, tie in together. All launches land chants on the island and main­ about the merchant seaman? when I get my copy of the LOG.
What
about
us.
Do
we
get
any
"Sunshine." I appreciate his re­ at the dock in front of his bar. land so as to break up the mon­
I am a retired Union niember.
membering me very much. I Anyone desiring to go to the opoly, which offers nothing but tax exemption? No. Did we get
a
bonus?
No.
Did
we
get
a
GI
can't exactly place the fellow at others must walk about a mile, poor quality goods at high prices.
Henry Sorensen
the moment, although I am sure or if one desires to go to the This monopoly is not in keeping bill, do we get pensions, _do we
Cambridge. N.Y.
get absentee voting privileges?
that I will run into him soon. mainland he must take another
But I want to say, thanks a lot. launch, owned by other parties. with fair play and hits hard at The answer is no to all of these.
Brother Sxmshine. He sure is The chandler's bar is the larg­ .seamen's pocketbooks. This is our
ON BEACH
. one of the oldtimers who never est, but certainly not the cheap­ suggestion for breaking it up.
I am on the bbach now with
forgets to remember his ship­ est or the most comfortable. In
a bum ticker, after spending 32
M.
Backxnan
mates when they are in the regard to prices at this bar, we
years at sea, 19 of them in the
E. E. Williams
; hospital.
were forced to accept the chand­
Isthmian Lines. Do I get a pen­
D. M. Wiggin
Thinking back to an incident ler's prices regardless of whether
sion? Of course not. But T would
that occurred about three months or not they were reasonable, in­
S. W. Hopkins
have gotten one if 1 had sailed To the Editor:
ago, I am moved to offer a sug­ asmuch as there was no money
SS William H. Kendrick in the Coast Guard.
gestion to some of the Brothers. available for a crew draw. Some­
At last this writer has the
In the time that I have been how the chandler has the sole
three essentials—^paper, pen, ink.
EMILY POST, PLEASE NOTE!
here in New York, I have kept power to furnish money to the
So let's get something off his
in close touch with the Hall. I crews of ships entering this port.
chest about what to do when you
understand that several Brothers When asked for a draw his
go on a trip.
have failed to Observe regula­ first excuse was that it was a
Remember your trip is inter­
tions and have run into" trouble bank holiday. (We later learned
esting whatever the ship and
as a result.
that this was not true, the banks
wherever it takes you. Yoii
were open.) However, generous
should have many memories of
OBSERVE RULES!
soul that he was, he agreed to
the trip, and of other trips. And
- I would suggest, therefore, make up for the lack of money
you should do some things to
that these Brothers observe our by extending to us all the credit
help out that memory.
^ Union rules and regulations and we wanted. We had jjo choice
One thing worth taking along
not try to put the next Brother but to agree.
is
a camera—with plenty of film.
For
four
days
he
stalled
us
off
on the spot. Furthermore, these
And
a diary is well worth keep­
by
various
means,
and
repeated
men should get closer to the Eding.
Between
the diary and the
appeals
to
the
agent
were
of
no
ucationail progrdm, show as much
camera
you
can
have a complete
interest and pay as much atten­ use. We were allowed to sign
record
of
this
trip
and all the
tion as they can to it. This will for anything furnished: food, li­
others.
, help them to understand things quor, hotel and luxury items.
The record will recall to your
better and will enable them to We were kept from trading with
other establishments, both on the
get along without difficulty.
mind strange, foreign foods you
have eaten; people you've met
I'm talking from experience. mainland and the island, all of
which
offered
better
quality
for
and
known; weather and atmo­
• Some of these men have come
less
money.
Some
men
managed
spheric
conditions generally; ex­
to me and they don't seem to
to
obtain
credit
from
other
places
otic
customs,
beliefs and music
know the score.
on the strength of the supposed
of
other
lands;
what the dollar
In closing, I'd like to say to forthcoming draw, thereby es­
will
buy—and
what
it won't; and
all the Brothers: Keep up the caping the high costs of the
a
hundred
other
things.
If
you
get
a
little
shaky
every
time
you're
introduced
to
a
good work and steady as she chandler's bar.
dutchess, just look closely while a couple of old masters from
You can keep the record al­
goes.
THE LINE UP
ways, even if you never go bade
the Fort Bridger show how it's done. Assuming the correct
Rafael Orliz
again.
When it came time for us to stance. Bing Miller. DM, raises milady's greasy mitt to his lips,
Mefropolifan Hospiial
leave, aU the creditors were al­ while Blackie Mason, AB, looks positively dee-lighted.
"Sir Charles"
New York CiJy
To the Editor:

Ortiz Scheduled
To Quit Hospital
At End Of Month

Retired Seafarer Hits Tax
Squawk Of Coast Guardsman

Keep Trip Record
To Relive Voyage,
Says Sir Charles

�Friday, March 18, 1949

Strathmore Men's
Aid Appreciated
By Widow

THE SEAFARERS

MORE TO COME

This shot, taken aboard the Seatrain New Orleans in
Havana, shows in the rear row (left to right): B. Lowderback,
OS; Rusty McNary, AB; Jack. MM; "Red." Og. and A. L.
Hatch, Bosun. Bottom row: J. W. Alstadt, AB, and E. J.
Wright. OS. Another photo of the full crew will follow soon,
says photographer E. W. Farzekas.

Ramirez' Tattoo Talk Brings Him Client
To the Editor:
We Seafarers aboard the SS
Suzanne had the privilege of
bringing the first
load of this
year's sugar- ci'op from Puerto
Rico to the states. The sugar
•was consigned to an outfit in
Yonkers, N. Y.
Since these trips on the sugar
run are comparatively short
ones, there iS( not much news to
report, except for the fact that
some of the oldtimers come
aboard now and then.
This trip we had Tommy
(Beachie) Murray, the Bosun,
He's joining the "TTT Club" in
San Juan for awhile. Coming in
•we had Isadore Levy and "Red,"
the Electrician.
STEP UP CLOSER
I'm enclosing a photo of Tom­
my Murray in which he displays
his famous tattoo. A "made in
P.R." job, that is. A great deal
of talk about tattooing has been
heard aboard this ship since the
articles by Homer Spurlock and
myself have appeared in the
LOG.
In fact, I think it may be
rather interesting . to let you
know that my writing on the
subject of tattooing led to a

Tommy (Beachie) Murray
displays his latest tattoo ac­
quirement. the full-rigged ship
Caledonia.
somewhat unusual situation—or
almost. The other day a fellow
came to me with the story that
his sister is enthusiastic about

Sellers' Kin Thanks Dorothy Crew

tattoos. She is so much of an
admirer of the art, that she is
even quite anxious to have a
tattoo of her own. Since she
doesn't want it where it would
attract attention in public, the
tattoo would have to be done
on some part of her anatomy that
is not generally visible.
SEEKS FEMALE ARTIST
Under these circumstances my
friend asked me if I knew of
any woman expert on tattooing
who could be recommended. Un­
doubtedly he took me for a
tattoo artist, because after I
told him my acquaintance with
tattoo experts was limited to
males, he stated that he had
sufficient trust in me to do the
job. He added that he didn't
think he'd have any trouble in
convincing his sister that my in­
terest would be purely profes­
sional.
The only hitch, and something
of a surprise to me,-was that
my friend expected me to charge
half more than the regular price
because he expected something
for his trouble. I don't blame
him for that, however. Unfor­
tunately, I couldn't take the job
because I'm no tattoo artist.
But I do wish you would send
me the address of Brother John
Bruno, who in a recent letter
to the LOG said that he had a
book completely covering the
ancient art of tattooing. I'd like
to ask him if he could recom­
mend a teacher or a book of
instruction to me. The next time
I get an opportunity such as the
one I've just related, I'd like
to be able to undertake the job.
Luis Ramirez
(Ed. Nofe: There'll never be
a next lime, Luis.)

SS Dorothy, and we don't have
words to express our apprecia­
We have received, the letter tion for such a kind tribute from
and money from the crew of the the crew of which our son was
a member.
Our hearts are burdened al­
most beyond what we are able
to bear, but it is a great con­
solation to us to know that our
To the Editor:
son was liked by all who knew
him and that he was able to
I thought some of the boys
make such loyal friends. Any­
might like to know that Frank time any of the crew can find
Smith became a father last week.
time to write us a line we shall
It's a boy!
be more than glad to hear from
Frank, by the way, is finding
you.
the going a bit tough. His wife
Again let us thank you for To the Editor:
required a few transfusions, and
your
kind expression of sym­
As the wife of Seafarer Rob­
isince Frank has to stick around
pathy.
ert Laliberte I would like to
home for the present, the un­
extend my warmest appreciation
paid bills are mounting.
Mrs. Sarah F. Sellers
for
the thoughtfulness and kind­
I mention this because
I
and family
ness of the Stewards Department
thought some of his friends
(Ed. Note: The death of of the SS Robin Kirk in sending
might like to g^ve him a lift.
Should anyone want to help Seafarer A. B. Sellers was re­ me a huge bouquet of flowers
Frank out in any way, I suggest ported in the LOG of Febru­ at the time of the birth of our
they give him a telephone call ary 4. Brother Sellers was kill- son Norman,
Both the yobngster and I are
at his home in Brooklyn, 55 Bay
14 St. The number is CLover- " ed in a fall into an open hatch doing fine. My deepest apprecia­
aboard the Dorothy on Janu­ tion for this fine gesture.
dale 6-0907.
Mrs. Robert Laliberte
Sieve Klemeras
ary 19.)
To the Editor:

FRANK SMITH'S
WIFE HAS SON;
GOING'S TOUGH

Unions Are Only Buttress
Against Slump, Says Member
To the Editor:

To the Editor:
The money donated us by the
crew of the SS Strathmore ar­
rived safely, and it sure came
in handy. I am going to buy
shoes for the baby and some
things little Jimmy needs. The
new baby will arive about March
26.
If any Seafarer friends of my
late husband are ashore at any
time Td like very much to have
you visit us. The address is: 330
West 95th Street, Apartment
22-B, New York City.
Christine Millican
(Ed. Note: Widow of Sea­
farer James J. Millican and
mother of two small children,
Mrs. Millican has been' hard
put since the death of her
husband in January. Her plight
was brought to the attention
of the membership in the LOG
of January 21.)

Paga Nine

LOG

SEAFARER'S WIFE
THANKS KIRK MEN
FOR BIRTH BOUQUET

Nationally and internationally
the signs are ominous. Though
the figures are played down by
the press and radio, jjnemployment is rising by leaps and
bounds. The maritime industry
was the first to feel the full ef­
fects, now it is spreading
throughout the nation.
This means that wage stand­
ards will be attacked. They must
be maintained at all costs. Coup­
led with rising unemployment
is the propaganda of newspapers
and radio to the effect that the
cost of living is falling. That is
untrue.
What are the facts? Milk, but­
ter, bread, rents, shoes and meats
have shown no appreciable de­
cline. Nothing to warrant the
wild claims being made of low
prices. Yes, of manufactured
products, such as radios, refrig­
erators, furniture and household
appliances there are strong de­
clines due to the glutted market.
These, however, are not the
basic essentials of life.
As employment declines these
expensive items must give way
to the struggle for bread, as far
as the average wage earner is
concerned. He has no choice.
HIGH LIVING
Housing has been neglected
bcause real estate lobbies do not
want to see low-cost housing.
Workers are paying double the
price for what they paid for a

Porpoise In Life
By JAMES P. CONROY
Oh. to be a porpoise.
What a surplus thing to be;
A porpoise with no purpose.
But to dance about the sea.
To spend my day just racing
ships.
And chasing other fishes.
Oh. to be a porpoise.
Yes. what human misses.
Dashing.
diving. flashing,
flying;
Wingfinned eagle of the sea.
Stop and look, now leap
away.
So thankful you're not one
of me.

But To This
By I. H. PEPPER
Seems incredible
That love.
Being so wonderful.
So blissful, kissful
Could ever evolve
To this—
Being so blunderful.
So fateful, hateful—
Makes one wonder.
Doesn't it?

comfortable apartment before the
war, now wholly unobtainable.
The pressure within the na­
tion
is growing intolerable.
Wages offered by employment
agencies are even lower than
pre-war wages, even though the
cost of living has doubled. On a
comparative basis, the present
wages, $35 a week, are worth
$15 a week in pre-war purchas­
ing power.
The only jobs offered today in
New York City are those of
salesmen. Door to door canvass­
ing—the attempt of manufactur­
ers to unload his goods, which
aren't moving in the stores, up­
on the consumer in his home.
These are commis.sion jobs. A
fancy word for starving to death
while lugging a suitcase.
Surely a sign of the times is
the construction of 26,000-t'on
tankers. One of these will re­
place three tankers. You may be
sure that one regular crew wiU ,
operate the new giants, where
three earned their livelihood be-'
fore. More seamen on-the beach.
Marriages^ are falling off. In
Brooklyn (3 million population),
only 27,000 marriages took place
in 1948, the lowest number in
the boro's history. How many
children will result from these
few marriages is left to your im­
agination. Half a million persons
are jammed in with in-laws be­
cause of the lack of housing.
Who can have children under
these circumstances?
A healthy and fundamentally
progressive society? A bunch of
fools bent on the destruction of
all that America stands for. Cer­
tainly we cannot blame Joe Stal­
in for this situation or anyone
else but the greedy and ignorant
vested interests which profit from
the misery of the people.
We see now why there are
such frantic efforts to save the
Taft-Hartley Act. The striking
power of the workers and the
unions must be shackled.
DOWN IT GOES
The recovery of Europe, the
glutting of markets at home and
abroad, the loss of U.§. credits
in China, the end of Marshall
Plan shipments of all commodi^
ties except war goods, all spell
falling stocks in Wall Street and
a steadily increasing army of
unemployed.
With the need for manpower
no longer strong, men of 40 are
too old to work. Advertisements
call for men under-35. Later on
it will be single men under 25,
then 20 and finally the end. And,
as yet, the old age pension is
kept at 65. This means that all
men over 40 should die or bum
nickels until they are 65. Selling
apples on street corners and
flopping in the Bowery is not
conducive to long life.
Is this the America of unlimi­
ted opportunities, of an expanded
economy, or is it a nation of
small, greedy business men of
very limited intellects, unable to
solve the problems of unemploy­
ment and markets.
Only through the maintenance
of strong unions and union wage
structures, the extension of un­
ions, government sponsored work
projects to put people to work,
can America be saved. The un­
ions must now play their great­
est role in the shaping of the
destiny of America. There is no
other way out.
Wandering Seafarer

�Page Ten

THE SEAFARERS

Friday. March 18, 1949

LOG

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings In Brief
SAVANNAH—Chairman, E. M.
Bryant, 25806; Recording Secre­
tary, A. Pricks, 60; Reading
Clerk, O. F. Martin, 44731.
Motion cai'ried to accept and
post on bulletin board the Secretai-y-Treasurer's financial report
and report to the membership.
Agerit took floor and reported on
status of shipping. Motions car­
ried to accept minutes of meet­
ings held in other ports. One
minute of silence observed for
departed Brothers. New Busi­
ness: Motion carried that a floral

York. Good and Welfare: Sev­
eral members hit the deck to
speak on the present dispatching
pi'ocedures followed in the Port
of
New York.
SHIPPED SHIPPED TOTAL
STWDS. SHIPPED
ENG.
4 4 4
BALTIMORE—Chairman,
Wil­
5
5
17
55
59
180 liam Renlz, 26445; Recording Sec­
29
36
106 retary, A1 Stansbury, 4683; Read­
51
44
173 ing Clerk, Bennie Gonzalez, 125.
16
13
47
Charges read against number
8
11
39
of
Brothers and refen-ed to Trial
19
11
47
Committee
elected from the
38
26
106
floor.
Motion
carried to non- 133
94
329
19
45
16
34
8
5
50
36
138

A&amp;G Shipping From Feb. 23 To Manh 9
PORT

REG.
DECK

REG.
ENG.

REG.
STWDS.

TOTAL
REG.

Boston
New York
Philadelphia....
Baltimore
Norfolk
Savannah
Tampa
Mobile
New Orleans..
Galveston
San Juan
West Coast

23
150
45
105
18
17
24
29
91
43
27
44

11
116
39
62
19
13
22
37
97
32
11
34

9
147
46
66
15
9
14
38
143
22
9
30

43
413
130
223
52
39
, 60
104
331
97
47
108

7
66
41
78
.18
20
17
42
102
.10
21
52

GRAND TOTAL..

616

493

548

1,657

474

SHIPPED
DECK

392

395

1,261

PHILADELPHLA — Chairman, ports. Agent's report accepted. General discussion on the wel­
E. Higdon, 182; Reading Clerk, Accepted resolutions on Honolulu fare of the Branch. Meeting ad­
concur with that part of the Nor­
Don Hall, 43372; Recording Sec­ Hall and vacation pay. Headquar­ journed with 91 members pi'es- folk New Business calling for
wreath be sent to funeral of
ters' and Patrolmen's reports ac­ ent.
Deck Engineers to show dis­
Brother Marion Ackerman. Good retary, J. Sheehan, 306.
cepted and filed. Trial commit­
4 4 4
charges
for three years. Minutes
and Welfare: Discussion on ma­
Motion carried to go into New tee's findings in cases of three
SAN JUAN — Chairman, H. of other Branches read and ac­
rine hospital in Savannah. Meet- York minutes and read charges men read and accepted. Meeting
.ing adjourned with 102 members from last meeting. Minutes of adjourned with 300 members Spurlcck, 11101; Recording Sec­ cepted. Motion carried to post
retary, J. Lincoln, 35046; Reading and file and West Coast and
present.
meetings held in other ports ac­ present.
Great Lakes minutes. Resolutions
Clerk, W. Lea, 37523.
cepted, except for that part of
4" 4' 44- 4&lt; 4"
on
Hall in Honolulu accepted.
BOSTON—Chairman, J. Green- San Juan minutes requesting the ' NEW ORLEANS — Chairman, Minutes of meetings held in Other reports accepted. Good
baum, 281; Recording Secretary, printing in the LOG of all com­ Leroy Clarke, 23062; Recording other ports accepted and filed. and Welfare: Discussion on topics
mittee reports. Agent reported
E. Dakin, 180; Reading Clerk, E. that lease on Hall had been ex­ Secretary, Bill Frederick, 94; Outgoing Agent Colls introduced of general Union welfare. MeetReading Clerk, C. J. Stephens, the members to the new Agent, ng adjourned with 250 members
B. Tilley, 75.
tended for one month, while ne­
L. Craddock. He asked the present.
76.
Motion carried to accept min­ gotiations take place to draw up
membership to extend Craddock
4 4 4
Report on New Orleans finan­ the fine support and cooperation
utes of meetings held in other a long term lease. Resolution on
NORFOLK—Chairman,
Whii«,
Hall
in
Hawaii
turned
over
to
cial situati'n read and accepted. he had been given during the
ports, except that part of San
Headquarters
for
study.
Motion
Minutes of other Branch meet­ past year.
Juan New Business calling for
Agent Craddock 56; Recording Secretary, Rees, 95.
Agent pledged full cooperation to the Reading Clerk, Bullock, 3535.
the publishing of all committee carried to have Agent buy a flag ings accepted and filed.
reports in the SEAFARERS LOG. and banner for the Hall as there reported on shipping picture in membership in. San Juan. He
Routine communications read,
Resolution from New York con­ is none on hand. Trial Commit­ port. Also reported* that film was given a rousing ovation from
accepted
and filed.
Trial Com­
tee's
reports
accepted.
One
min­
will be shown following meeting. the membership. Agent Colls
cerning a Hall in Hawaii ac­
mittee's
reports
accepted.
Resolu­
Accepted resolution on Honlulu then took over and reported good
cepted and referred to Headquar­
tion
on
opening
Hall
in
Honolulu
Hall and forwarded it to Head­ shipping, with plenty of jobs
ters for consideration. Resolu­
quarters for study. Resolution available. Trial Committee find­ read. Motion carried to non­
tion from Mobile concerning va­
on vacation pay forwarded to ings read and accepted. One concur. Agent reported on the
cation pay accepted, and re­
Headquarters for clarification. minute of silence observed for jusihess of the port and th^
ferred to Headquarters Negotiat­
Five
members took the Union Brothers lost at sea. Good and situation in Virginia Ferries.
ing Committee.
Richard ' H.
ute
of
silence
observed
for
Broth­
Oath of Obligation. Good and Welfare: Considerable discus­ Good and Welfare: Several mem­
Lowe, Arthur B. Kingsley and
ers
lost
at
sea.
Meeting
ad­
Welfare: Discussion on coopera­ sion on Bland-Magnuson bill and bers hit the deck to discuss the
Roy Leo took the Union Oath of
journed
with
186
members
pres­
tion between Bosuns and crews. need for larger quarters in San Jnion's drive against the Hoff­
Obligation. Balloting Committee
ent.
Meeting adjourned with 274 Juan. Meeting adjourned with man move and the status of the
elected from floor. One minute
election in the Cities Service
4
4,
4.
members present.
of silence observed for Brothers
110 members present.
MOBILE—Chairman,
O.
Stev­
fleet. Meeting adjourned with
lost at sea. Good and Welfare:
4 4. 4
'444
ens,
115;
Recording
Secretary,
;
34 members present.
Considerable discussion on cur­
TAMPA—Chairman Paul Hall,
NEW YORK —Chairman, Joe
James
Carroll,
14;
Reading
Clerk,
rent status of Hoffman move and
190; Reading Clerk, L. Craft, Algina, 1320; Recording Secre­
Cities Service drive. Meeting ad­ H. J. Fischer, 59.
journed with 73 members pres­ Motion carried to accept min­ 286; Recording Secretary, Ray tary, Freddie Stewart, 4935;
ent.
Reading Clerk, Robert Matthews,
utes of meetings held in other While, 57.
Norfolk New Business tabled 164.
until clarification has been re­
Motions carried to accept the
ceived. Motion carried to non­ New Business sections of meet­
concur with San Juan minutes. ings held in other ports. Trial
Reports from other ports ac­ committee's report read and ac­
In protest of the nomination of
cepted and filed.
Elliott Wil­ cepted. Appeal of one member
James
Boyd as director of the
liams took the Union Oath of on decision of Trial Committee
A phony front organization. 1. That his foremen's league
Federal Bureau of Mines, Presi­
read. Motion carried to refer to dent John L. Lewis of the Uni­
Tigged by management to pre­ is really an organization of bus­
Trial Committee. Discussion on ted Mine Workers has called a
vent repeal of the Taft-Hartley iness corporations.
shipping procedures in New two week strike of bituminous
Act, was unmasked at a House
2.
That
the
real
purpose
of
the
Labor Committee hearing in
and anthracite miners. The walk­
league is to propagandize fore­
;Washington last week.
out began on March 11.
men into believing they are
Operating as the Foremen's "part of management."
In calling the strike, Lewis
Obligation. Good and Welfare:
League for Education and Asso­
made use of a contract provi­
For over an hour members took
Every member making a sion which allows a memorial
ciation, the , outfit maintains a 3. That membership is open on­ the floor to discuss matters of the
donation to the Union for period for men killed in the
high priced lobby in an attempt ly to business concerns.
Union. Meeting adjourned after
any purpose should receive pits.
to convince Congress that fore­ 4. That dues are $100 a year one minute of silence for de­
tn official receipt bearing
men don't want union represen­ and. that any company paying parted Brothers.
The period of mourning will
tation.
the amount of the contribu­ emphasize the miners' opposition
that sum, may name its presi­
4 4 4
tion and the purpose for to Boyd, whom Lewis described
The revelation came after dent, vice president, or person­ GALVESTON — Chairman,
which
it was made.
Harry P. Jeffrey, secretary and nel director as "members" of
as "an incompetent, unqualified
Keith
Alsop,
7311;
Recording
Sec­
general counsel for the stooge the league.
If a Union official to whom persoi&gt; who has usurped the of­
"foremen's" league told the An embarrassing question put retary, R. Wilburn, 37739; Read­
contribution is given does fice and functions of Director of
House committee that an opinion by Representative Bailey (D., ing Clerk, Jeff Morrison, 34213.
-not make out a receipt for the Federal Bureau of Mines
poll showed that foremen were Va.) also forced Jeffrey to re­
the money, the matter should without Senate confirmation as
report
not interested in organizing for veal that William Ingles, a no­ Headquarters financial
immediately be referred to required by statute."
collective bargaining purposes, torious Washington lobbyist, rep­ and report to membership ac­ Paul HalL Secretary-Trea­
The miners, Lewis stated, will
Motions car­
but preferred to deal as individ­ resented Inland Steel, Allis- cepted and filed.
surer, SlU, 61 Beaver Street, pray for "relief from the mon­
ried to accept minutes of other
uals with management.
New York 4. N. Y.
strous and grotesque injustice of
Chalmers, Fruehauf Trailer, and Branch meetings.
Agent re­
Pro-labor members of the com­ other large corporations at the ported on tempo of shipping and
In advising the-Secretary- an ignorant nnd incompetent
mittee, skeptical of this testi­ same time he represented the balloting. Five members took the Treasurer' of such transac­ Boyd having the power to de»
mony, then fired a series of de­ Foremen's League. It was dis­ Union Oath of Obligation. One tions, members should state cide whether they shall live or
vastating questions at the wit­ closed that Ingles received $1,000 minute of silence for Brothers the name of the official and continue to die in the mines."
ness. In the course of the ques­ a month from the companies for lost at sea. Resolution regarding
the port where thA money
Lewis noted that 1948 saw
tioning, Jeffrey was forced to his work—as well as being paid the opening of a Hall in Hawaii
was tendereid.
55,115 men killed and injured in
admit:
by the league.
the pits.
accepted. Good and Welfare:

Eastern Miners
Take Two-Week
'Memorial' Rest

'Foremen's' League Is Exposed
As Front For Corporations

6et A Receipt

�• •/
Friday, March 18, 1949

THE SEAFARERS LOG

Page Eleren

American Seamen Make Comeback
By AUGUSTUS H. COTTRELL ment than the merchant seaman, sailor, is of the best, prepared
His brawn and his muscle are 'by trained Cooks.
To become a seaman in 1800 it life sustaining; his spirit—this
Living and pay conditions on
was merely necessary to wear same American spirit dormant American ships, are not due to
a sheath knife, have an abund­ for many years—is life giving. mere generosity on the part of
BROTHER LEVY
HENRY ROOF BAHAM
ance of tattooing on your arms
He is utterly essential to the the shipowners. The seaman has
Who sailed as Messman on the
Please get in touch with your
and stand at the bar of any wa­ usefulness of our millions of learned the lesson that he must
SS Venore, is asked to leave the
father.
terfront saloon.
have someone ashore to protect
tons of steel ships. The finest
punching bag with the baggage
5" ft
4"
You would not stand long be­ ship, without him and his spirit, his interests at all times, and to
man
in
the
Baltimore
Hall.
CONSTANTINOS NICOLAIDIS
fore a genial tar-haired mate becomes mere scrap iron, a dead see to it that his pay scale re­
4. 4. 4
C. BROWN
would invite you to a few but­ thing.
mains on a par with the pay
MICHAEL R. BAAL
Get in touch at once with H.
tered rums.
scales
of the other skilled pro­
Your wife, Lorraine, wants
COMEBACK
S. Thomas, 56 Seventh Ave.,
A stubborn recruit might need
fessions.
you to get in touch with her. It
New York. It is very urgent.
There is ample evidence that
a harangue on- the virtues of
It is quite obvious that these
is
very urgent.
4. 4. Si the sea, the merits of the par­ the spirit of the American sea­ things can only come to pass
DONALD PL5SHETTE
4 4 4
ticular ship, the wonderful Cap­ man is very much alive today. when the seamen of America be­
PAT JENSON
Get in touch with your father.
tain, and a confidential report on Not so very many years ago long to an honest all-American
A money order for you, from
He is very anxious to hear from
the ladies of the South Sea and only about 12 percent of the maritime organization, free from
B. F. Allison, is being held for
you.
—thrown in for good measure— seamen on American-registered radical and foreign influence.
you
in the Philadelphia Hall.
S- 4i
the possibility of prize money. ships were American born. Many
The membership of the Sea­
4 4 4
JAMES T. HILL
After about three buttered ships", especially those under farers International Union know
FREDERICK L. JORDAN
Communicate with your father
rums, the befuddled seaman charter, sailed with 100 percent when they are far at sea that
Mrs. Jack J. Martin, 112 Eastat White House, Texas.
touched the pen or made his foreign-born crews—not an Am­ the home office is always busily
view Drive, New Orleans, La.,
4 4&gt;
mark, and shortly found himself erican could be found from the bargaining with the shipowners
would like you to write to her
TOM GALVIN
deposited in a reeking forecastle Stoker's grating to the bridge. for them, obtaining always the
Your old buddy, George on a matter of great importance for a long sleep—to awake at Such conditions no longer exist
best possible conditions for the
pianchard, 485 Ashmont Street, to you.
sea, bound for Java, France, Na­ aboard American ships. Respon­ membership, and striving to pro­
NORMAN
WEST
Dorchester 22, Mass., would like
sible for this metamorphosis is tect all that has already been
gasaki, or Batavia.
Your mother, Mrs, Clarence
you to write to him so that he
His immediate concern was to the membership-controlled Sea­
can send you some of your prop­ West, in Punta Gorda, Florida, learn as quickly, and as pain­ farers International Union of gained.
There is never any doubt in
would like to hear from you.
erty.
lessly as possible, the ancient North America.
the
minds of the seamen of the
4
4
4
4. 4. 4.
No foreign finger
or policy
law of the sailor, "promotion for
SIU
that upon returning to an
SYLVESTER WALKER
CLARENCE LEWIS GUNSETT
the nimble and the cat-on-the has ever entered this great or­ American port after a long trip
Owen Anderson, U. S. Marine
Your wallet and papers are in
ganization. Dictatorship is un­
triangle for the laggard."
the baggage room of the New Hospital, Neponset Branch, is
known in it. The lowliest mem­ at sea that they will find any­
LIFE
WAS
SIMPLE
anxious
to
hear
from
you.
York Hall.
ber, in good standing, can run thing but the same quiet, effi­
His long-term goal was port, for office, and be elected. The cient harmony, and cooperation
4 4 4
4. 4. 4
JOHN
HERINDA
the fast spending of his few membership has a voice in all throughout their Union Halls.
BEN BONE
Under the present standards
Your
mother,
Mrs.
Susie
Herindollars
per month, if and when matters concerning its welfare.
James Barnette asks that you
of
pay, living standards and op­
da,
3437
Pi-eble
Ave.,
Pittsburgh
he
got
it,
a
few
more
buttere'd
leave his handbag in the Balti­
The elected officers of this or­
portunities, and with the mari­
more Hall with the baggage man, 12, Pa., is anxious to hear from rums and another ship.
ganization protect the interests
you.
Nobody won-ied about his age, of the membership with all the time calling firmly established as
to hold for him.
his health, his . education, his zealousness of a great barrister a career, the United States mer­
4 4 4
is now manned by
present or his future. He carried protecting the interests of a chant fleet
RICHARD FLAHIVE
thousands'of
clean-cut, intelligent
Pete Cruze, 1339 University no papers, belonged to no sea­ wealthy client.
American
seamen.
Ave., Bronx 52, N. Y., wants you man's unions, and took as a mat­
The dark days when every
The maritime service is at­
ter of course a few impressed forecastle was a Tower of Ba­
to get in touch with him.
tracting a finer type of American
years
on
a
British
frigate
or
4 4 4
bel are gone, but not forgotten
youth, educated—often with col­
hulk.
BALTIMORE
14 North Gay St.
JAMES M. MULLIGAN
by the many old-timers who
lege background—upstanding and
When
he
was
an
old
man—
William Rentz, Agent
Mulberry 4540
Get in touch with your Draft
tread the decks of the American
outstanding, of *high ideals and
BOSTON
276 State St.
thirty or thereabouts—if he was ships of today.
Board
at
1910
Arthur
Ave.,
£. B. Tilley, Agent
Richmond 2-0140
morals.
lucky,
he
married
a
woman
with
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141 Bronx 57, N. Y.
SECURITY
America can scarcely avoid
a farm near a lighthouse, plant­
GALVESTON
30854—23rd St.
4 4 4.
But
it
is
a
joyous
feeling
for
becoming
the world's greatest
ed corn in the spring, and was
Keith Alsop, Agent
Phone 2-8448
ARTHUR SAMOEA
the
seaman
of
today
when
he'
maritime
nation
in number and
MOBILE
1 S«ath Lawrence St.
Hadvey Righette, 29 Surfline off to sea before it was ready "signs-on" to know that, through j tonnage of vessels. When, added
Phone 2-1754
Cal Tanner, Agent
to harvest.
NEW ORLEANS
523 Bienville St. Place, Apt. 1, Long Beach 2,
He was hardy, could stand his maritime organization, he is to this, she can boast of the newE. Sheppnrd, Agent
Magnolia 6112-6113 Calif., wants to hear from you.
pain, fight
with knives, was a assured of a decent living wage,'est, fastest, and most efficient
51 Beaver St.
NEW YORK
4 4* 4
from
exploitation, ships and the best trained and
HAnover 2-2784
Joe Algina, Agent
practical — if profane — religion­ protection
healthy
food
and
living
quar­ organized seamen, she has truly
JAMES
BURKE
..127-129
Bank
St.
NORFOLK
ist, and bowed to no man but
Phone 4-1083
Ben Rees, Agent
ters.
L. F. GAMBARO
returned to the heroic days of
his Skipper, and not always to
PHILADELPHIA...614-16 No. 13th St.
He still growls at the Cook days of 1800—when the Amer­
Contact
Ben
Sterling,
42 him.
J. Sheehan, Agent
Poplar 5-1217
Broadway, New York.
SAN FRANCISCO
.'.85 Third St.
His contribution to American and curses the coffee, and longs ican Clipper ships were known
Frenchy Mlchelet, Agent Douglas 2-5475
spirit and tradition was so vast for a farm ashore and swears on every sea.
SAN JUAN,'P.R
252 Ponce de Leon
WARD LEWIS HOWIESON
and tremendous that it is beyond he's on his last trip—tradition
L. Craddock, Agent
San Juan 2-5996
gave him these things—but when
Get in touch with Miss Jane measuring.
SAVANNAH
2 Abercorn St.
he's
off watch he packs a nour­
Howieson,
22-27
93rd
Street,
If carried him, the merchant
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phonej 3-1728
TACOMA
1519 Pacific St. Jackson Heights, N. Yr,^ on a seaman, on to the Golden Age ishing meal under his belt, takes
Broadway 0484 matter of great importance to
of Sail, the very soul of 'the a shower, listens to the radio,
TAMPA
1809-1811 N. Franklin St. you.
swift Clippers and the heart of and reads and relaxes in wellRay White, Agent
Phone M-1323
4 4 4
a
pugnacious, nation-building lighted quarters.
WILMINGTON, Calif., 227'/, Avalon Blvd.
(Continued from Page 1)
If, at the end of a voyage, he
BERNARD LAPORTE
Terminal 4-2874
fleet of heroic merchant ships.
has any legitimate complaint, his ands of letters and telegrams
HEADQUARTERS. .51 Beaver St., N.Y.C.
Get in touch with Michael
ANOTHER ERA
SECRETARY-TREASURER
Union representative is present poured into Washington.
Thornton,. 3952 Camp St., New
Paul Hall
It
carried
him slowly — and at the payoff to handle the com­
Hoffman's Plan, originally
Orleans,
JA.
6171.
Important.
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
fighting — to steam, to an ex­ plaint for him.
scheduled
to go into effect Janu­
Lindsey Williams "
panding navy, to a horrible war
Living conditions on the Am­ ary 1, was postponed to Febru­
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURER
between brothers; to a dark pe­ erican ship of today are the vei-y ary 1 and then to April 1. If
Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
Joseph Volpian
riod of reconstruction when prof­ finest in the world. All per­ Congress does not act before
its by land so exceed profits by sonnel are quartered above decks, April 1, it is now believed
sea that he was tempted and fell. with a few exceptions. Each Hoffman will postpone the plan
For seventy years that spirit man has his own commodious again.
HONOLULU
16 Merchant St.
Phono 5-8777
lay dormant and almost invis­ locker and clean, large berth.
According to close observers,
PORTLAND
Ill W. Burnside St.
ible. It flared up in half-hearted
Among
the
more
than
202,000
the
prime movers behind the
His
forecastle
is
heated
and,
in
Beacon 4336
legislation, in the emergencies the tropics, air conditioned or Hoffman Plan to eliminate the
RICHMOND, Calif
257 5th St. Massachusetts workers who may
Phone 2599 be covered by unemployment of wartimes, in a thrilling res­ cooled by fans. He has running American flag and American sea­
SAN FRANCISCO
59 Clay St. cortipensation, if a pending bill cue here and a bold trade pact hot and cold water, and ample men from the foreign aid trade
Douglas 2-8363
are the European maritime na­
is passed, are 3,000 maritime there.
space for his personal effects.
SEATTLE
86 Seneca St.
For
forty
years
an
American
tion
in alliance with the Ameri­
workers,
including
towboat
and
The
food,
i-ecognized
as
the
Main 0290
WILMINGTON
440 Avalon Blvd. collier personnel, and workers seaman in the forecastle of an most necessary requisite of the can State Department, which has
Terminal 4-3131 on other ships which go to dis­ American ship was an utter
long been opposed to a strong
American merchant marine.
tant ports but which have their stranger. He did not understand
Paul G. Hoffman has even
main base of operations within the language nor the customs of
his mates; he could not stomach
been reported as saying that he
MONTREAL
1227 PhUips Square the state of Massachusetts.
Plateau 6700—Marquette 6909
would demand a Presidential
Benefits for unemployed sea­ their food. There were not ten
PORT ARTHUR
63 Cumberland St. men can reach a maximum of American-bom seamen to a hun­
veto of the Bland Bill if it were
Phone North 1229
dred foreigners. Our merchant
enacted in its present fox-m.
PORT COLBORNE
103 Durham St. $25.00 per week for 23 weeks,
This led a Headquarters official
seaman—he
and
his
spirit
and
plus
$2.00
per
week
for
each
Phone: 6591
to ask what right Hoffman had
fOftONTO
illA Jarvis St. child. Although no seaman would his tradition—almost died out.
Elgin 6719 trade this for the base pay he
as a Govei-nment administrator
In the vast program of the
VICTORIA, B.C. ....602 Boughton St.
to demand any such thing,
United
States
merchant
marine,
could
earn
while
sailing,
under
Empire 4631
"Let Hoffman resign, then let
VANCOUVER
6«S Hamilton St. an SIU contract, nevertheless, it in the hundreds of great ships
him make his demand," the
there
Pacific 7824 would be some security for the under the American flag,
Union official said.
is no more mportant single ele­
dark days.

SlU HRLLS

SIU, A&amp;G District

Congress Ready
For Bland Bill

SUP

Canadian District

Massachusetts Bill
Grants Unemployment
Insurance To Seamen

j^qctarwum

�T H E SE A F A R E R S

Page Twelve

LOG

Friday, March 18, 1949

WHAT
itWMIC..
QUESTION: What suggestions do you have for improving rwreational and general wel­
fare facilities available aboard ship during off hours?

EUGENE MILANESI, AB:

ARVID GYLLAND, Bosun:

MICHAEL ROSSI, Bosun:

PASQUALE PRIOLO, OS:

SAM LUTTRELL, Bosun:

'l think some means of provid­
ing music for ihe fellows should
be aboard the ^ ships—if it can
be handled without annoying
anyone. Crews could get toge­
ther and purchase an inexpen­
sive phonograph or radio for the
use of all hands. On ships that
make runs to warm weather
ports, the guys could get up
baseball teams — like some of
the Robin Line men have done.
Gear could be , purchased and
kept aboard ship. When the ships
meet in a foreign port, the crews
could arrange games, or they
could meet local teams. Baseball
is played in many places, es­
pecially
by
English-speaking
people.

Crews should chip in to get
more and better books aboard
the ships than the Merchant Ma­
rine Library Association is able
to provide. There are a lot of
educational books that would
come in handy on any ship. Af­
ter all, a man's education is
never finished — no matter who
he is. Some of the ships have
movies. It would be a good
idea if more crews chipped in
for movie equipment. Personally
I've never gone in much fpr
sports, but I'll go along with
any crew that wants to buy
sporting equipment. My own in­
terests are chess and checkers.
I'd like to see every ship have
plenty of sets.

On my past ships the crews
did little for recreation other
than read books and play cardi^
Once a crew decided to purchase
a radio, but the Skipper vetoed
the plan. He said there would
be too many aerials stuck around
the decks. Some ships I've been
on had washing machines put
there by the company or other
crews. If I get in with a crew
intexuling to purchase a washing
machine, I'd make sure it wasn't
put over the engine room as is
the usual practice. It's too hot.
Back in the gunners' quarters a
full laundry could be rigged.
I haven't been part of a crew
where movies were shown, but
I think it's a good idea.

Crews of ships I've been
aboard have taken little group
action other than to hold edu­
cational xAeetings. Personally I'm
in favor of more up-to-date
magazines . and books. Some of
the magazines on ships today
are ancient. I'd also back a
crew radio, as the ship's radio
operates on the whims of the
radio operator. The radio could
be had for about fifty bucks, and
the crew could put it in the
messroom,- where they could
tune in the stations they want.
If the ship I were on had no
washing machine I'd favor crew
action to build up a laundry.
Seamen today shouldn't be made
to scrub their clothes by hand.

I suggest crews buy an inex­
pensive record player and build
up a record library. I brought
my record player aboard sev­
eral ships. Then we held a tar­
paulin muster and we collected
enough money to buy a consid­
erable number of records of all
kinds. I took the record player
with me when I left a ship and
brought it aboard the next one.
The records, of course, remained
on the ship on which the col­
lection was made. On one vessel
on a shuttle run, we accumu­
lated more th^h 1,500 records.
The gear was left in the messroom for anyone to play.

GORDON MARBURY, Elec,:

GENE NOWOKUNSKI, Ch. Ck,:

BILL WILLIAMS, AB:

JAMES M. HAND. Deck Eng.:

JAMES ROGERS, Wiper:

One of the essentials in mak­
ing life better on any ship is
a good laundry. Facilities should
be rigged so a man can wash—
and dry—^his clothes. Buying a
washing machine is not the en­
tire answer. Then again, there
should be a larger section of the
library devoted to Union edu­
cation. There should be more
education meetings on the ships,
too. The men would have a pret­
ty good time in well-planned,
well-run education meetings. For
instance, they could learn how
to go about writing their Sena­
tors and Congress their views on
big labor, maritime and other
issues.

It's a good idea to have a
little organization beforehand for
recreation and welfare. For in­
stance, 1 think crews should
provide every ship with a wash­
ing machine. Pretty soon all the
ships would have them. I've
helped buy a couple, they come
to a couple of bucks a manMost ships have radios or phon­
ographs and those that don't
should have them. If the boyfl
want movies, I'd go along with
them although I'm no movie fanEach crew should decide what
it wants and get it in advance.
But don't forget that what you
plan may depend a lot on thq
run.

I think the recreation rooms
on most ships could be improved
with good facilities for reading
and writing. The libraries on
most ships I've been on have
been pretty sad. The books are
old and dry reading. This could
be corrected very easily. I would
suggest that these comparative­
ly expensive books be replaced
by the 25-cent pocket-sized books,
which are up to date and cover
a wi^e variety of subjects.
They're space savers, loo. Some
good technical books should be
available for those who want to
use - off time for serious study.

A crew that wants more and
One of the drawbacks on the
better organized recreation Liberty ships is the lack of
should decide what it needs, space for recreational facilities.
chip in and buy whatever is Even the messroom is inade­
needed. For instance, a crew quate, except for card games
should be sure that they have and the like. Of course, if a
plenty of cards, checkers and guy wants to read, the best place
chess sets. Right now, cards are for it is his. own bunk. But for
the only game equipment you the guys who like physical. ex­
can buy from the slopchest. Per­ ercise I think some kind of a
haps the slopchests should stock gym could be rigged up on most
other games. Crews could have a ships, and cheaply, too. Bar­
lot of fun if every ship had bells can be made by sticking
some sporting equipment. Boxing both ends of pieces of lead pipe
gloves, punching bags, softballs, into cans filled with cement.
bats, gloves and so on. What you , Skip ropes are no problem.
get depends to some extent on Punching bags can be rigged on
the run. Maybe the Union could the fantail. But count me out,
work up a purchasing plan.
I get enough exercise on deck.

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9898">
                <text>March  18, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9974">
                <text>HEADLINES&#13;
US STIFLES OWN FLEET,BUT BUILDS ALIEN SHIPPING&#13;
DON'T TALK SIU, IS WARNING TO CS CREWMEN&#13;
FOREIGN TO SURPASS PRE-WAR TOTALS&#13;
REPRESENTATIVES READY TO COSIDER BLAND BILL&#13;
A&amp;G TRANSPORTATION BALLOTING GOING STRONG&#13;
LACK OF PROGRAM CONDEMNS US SHIPPING&#13;
MOBILE NOTES SHIPPING UPTURN,AND HOPES TREND WILL CONTINUE&#13;
PORT SAVANNAH LOOKING AHEAD TO BUSY WEEKS&#13;
MEDICAL CHECK-UP MAY SAVE TROUBLE LATER&#13;
SAYS FOREIGN FLAG SHIPS EXPAND AT EXPENSE OF UNITED STATES&#13;
NO PAYOFFS,SIGN-ONS BUT UN TRANSIT SHIPS HELP PORT GALVESTON&#13;
TAFT-HARTLEY ACT LIMITS UNIOND ADMINISTRATION OF WELFARE PLANS&#13;
NORWEGIAN PARLIAMENT APPROVES PENSION FOR MERCHANT SEAMEN&#13;
CITIES SERVICE SUED FOR PRICE RIGGIMG&#13;
SEAFARERR JOE BURNS,CROSS-COUNTRY CUPID,SENDS TWO DOWN THE AISLE&#13;
MARCH OF DIMES FUND THANKS SIU CREWS FOR GENEROSITY&#13;
EASTERN MINERS TAKE-WEEK 'MEMORIAL' REST&#13;
'FOREMEN'S' LEAGUE IS EXPOSED AS FRONT FOR CORPORATIONS&#13;
AMERICAN SEAMEEN MAKE COMEBACK&#13;
</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9975">
                <text>03/18/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10054">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10063">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10072">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10081">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10134">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 11</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13049">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="952" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="956">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/962f1d9435beee42d001c64e554dadad.PDF</src>
        <authentication>56ae90d8efe013a56f01e77aaf772e5e</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47432">
                    <text>Gov't Gamp
Should Ballot
By March 31

Convention
Opens 28tli
In Baltimore

The SS Governjnent Camp, last
of the nine Cities Service ships
to be voted in the collective bar­
gaining election now being con­
ducted by the National Labor
Relations' Board, is en route to
Puerto La- Cruz, Venezuela, and
is expected to arrive in Monte­
video on March 31, according to
a letter received this week from
members of the ship's crew.
The Camp crew will be polled
shortly after arrival in the South
American port and the ballots
will be returned to the NLRB in
New York.
In the communication, the
Cities Service tankermen pre­
dicted that" a large majority
wnuld vote for the SIU as their
bargaining agent. On the basis
of past performances, it is also
expected that an equally large
majority would be fired by the
company for having pro-Union
sentiment, although flimsy ex­
cuses will be offered for the dis­
missals.

The fourth biennial convention
of the Seafarers International
Union of North America will
open Monday, March 28 in Balti­
more at the Southern Hotel.
Present will be eight delegates
from the Atlantic and Gulf Dis­
trict.
Representatives of the various
Districts constituting the Sea­
farers International will meet to
discuss and formulate^ action on
various problems facing the
maritime industry.
High on the agenda will be
consideration of the problems
arising out of the proposed
Panamanian boycott, Taft-Hart­
ley Act, ECA». 50 percent rule,maritime unemployment and in­
ter-district relations.
In addition to the Atlantic and
Gulf, other Districts expected to
send delegates are: Great Lakes,
SUP, Canadian, Staff Officers,
Atlantic Coast Fishermen, West
Coast Fishermen and Cannery
Workers.
At the confab, delegates will
submit reports on their District's
activities since the last meeting
of the International in Chicago
two years ago.
The agenda will also include
election of International officers
to serve during the , coming two
year period. A&amp;G officials Paul
Hall and Cal Tanner are cur­
rently serving as Vice-Presidents.
Delegates for the Atlantic and
Gulf District are: Paul Hall, L.
A. Qardner, L. J. Williams, E.
Sheppard, C. Tanner, Ray White,
A. Michelet and A. S. Cardullo,
Charles Raymond (Alternate).

Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA
VOL.'XI

NEW YORK, N. Y.. FRIDAY, MARCH 25, 1949

No. 12

S^ill no iatketv 1

TWO HOSPITALIZED
Two of the Government Camp
crewmembers, suffering from
severe attacks of
dysentery,
signed off in Trinidad just be­
fore the ship left for Puerta La
Cruz and were admitted to a
hospital for treatment, the letter
said.
Names of the two men were
given as Tommy Sgardelis and
I
f

'

'

Former CS Men
Men discharged from
Cities Service ships since
January 1 for any veason
whatsoever are urged to get
in touch with Lindsey Wil­
liams, SIU Director of Or­
ganization, immediately.
Those who are unable to
come to SIU Headquarters
are urged to write, giving all
details of their employment
and discharge. SIU Head­
quarters is at 51 Beaver St.,
New York 4, N. Y.
Meanwhile, all pro-Union
men aboard Cities Service
Oil Company ships are u^ed
to remain on their vessels
until they win the protection
of an SIU contract. The com­
pany is making every effort
to replace men with known
pro-union leanings. Stay on
the ships until the fight is
won.
Walter Parkhurst, both Ordinary
Seamen.
Several morie members of the
Government Camp crew ivere
stricken but not seriously enough
to require hospitalization, the
message disclosed.
Conditions aboard the tanker
were described in the letter as
typically Cities Service. One of
the beefs concerned the rationing
of food at the breakfast meal.
Despite the grimmer aspects of
the voyage, the Government
Camp crew drew some laughs
from an incident inspired by the
Cities Service Tanker Men's Ass o c i a t i o n , company stooge
"union." A message received re­
cently by the tanker urged the
men to "Vote No, Protect Your
Job."
LAUGH PROVOKER
The appeal wps posted on the
ship's biilletin board. Shortly
thereafter, crewmen scanning the
board were chuckling over the
following comment, posted along(Continued on ?uge It)

Bernsteia's Bh
For Operating
Subsidy Gains

Tell Congress: We Want Bland Bill
Keep those letters in support
of the Bland-Magnuson Bill and
telegrams going to your Senators
and Representatives in Washing­
ton, Headquarters Officials urged
all A&amp;G members this week, as
the fight on Marshall Plan car­
go distribution neared a climax
in the House. Let Congress know
how seamen feel, the Officials
said.
The Bland Bill was to havebeen voted upon by the House on
March 21, but because debate on
the bill seemed likely, it was re­
ferred to the Rules Committee.
On Wednesday, the Rules Com­
mittee was reported to have
cleared the way for action.
Meanwhile, powerful forces
consisting of an alliance of for­
eign shipowners, the State De­
partment and ECA chief Paul G.
Hoffman continued to fight the
Bland-Magnuson measure.
At the end of last week, the
House of Representatives. For­
eign Affairs Committee was re­
ported to have favored a bill re­
stricting American ships to 50
percent of all foreign aid car­
goes originating in this country,
with ECA chief Hoffman auth­

orized to waive the rule at any
time. Before that, the Senate
Foreign Relations cornmittee al­
so voted to restrict American
ships to half the cargoes loaded
in the United States.
The Bland Bill, now. before the
House of Representatives and the
similar bill which Senator Magnuson introduced into the Senate
would guarantee that American
ships manned by American sea­
men get 50 percent or more of
all government financed cargoes
whether they are loaded in the
United States or somewhere else.
The A&amp;G District has plumped
for enactment of this measure
since it was first drafted by Rep­
resentative Bland of Virginia.
FIRST STEP
In a statement made public this
week, a Headquarters official
said:
"The SIU, Atlantic &amp; Gulf
District, sees no reason why
American ships manned by Amrican seamen should not carry
100 percent of the cargoes Ameri­
can citizens pay for. However,
the Bland Bill would be an im­
portant first step toward getting

a merchant marine in line with
this, country's world position."
It was ECA Administrator
Hoffman who touched off a bat­
tle which has lasted nearly four
months, when he proposed tak­
ing advantage of a loophole
about freight rates in the pres­
ent 50-percent clause in the
Marshall Plan legislation, to ship
all foreign aid bulk cargoes in
foreign bottoms.
Paced by the SIU, A&amp;G Dis­
trict, the maritime industry in­
itiated a" campaign of protest,
pointing out that hundreds of
ships would be laid up and thou­
sands of seamen would be thrown
out of work.
Hundreds of labor unions, rep­
resenting millions of workers in
every corner of the country, ral­
lied to the SIU's side and thou­
sands of letters and telegrams
poured into Washington.
Hoffman's Plan, originally
scheduled to go into effect Janu­
ary 1, was postponed to Febru­
ary 1 and then to April 1. If
Congress does not act before
April 1, it is now believed Hoff­
man will postpone the plan
again.

The Arnold Bernstein Line's
bid to operate two American flag
passenger ships in the New YorkAntwerp-Rotterdam trade moved
a step nearer realization this
week when the Maritime Com­
mission gave partial approval to
the company's plans.
The Maritime Commission, in
studying the company's applica­
tion for a ship operating sub­
sidy, held that the present ser­
vice in the trade is inadequate,
but withheld approval of a sub­
sidy until further study has
been made.
Bernstein's plans call for the
operation of two P-2 type con­
verted transports in the service
at low cost. Cargo specialty
would be unboxed automobiles.
The service would have a heavy
appeal to students and teachers.
Several months ago, in study­
ing the Bernstein application, a
Maritime Commission examiner
recommended disapproval of the
application, holding that the P-2
type ships Bernstein proposed to
run in the route should be bar­
red. The Commission, this week,
stated that this matter would be
decided later when the Com­
mission goes into the application
in more detail.
FILED FOR CHARTER
In the meantime, Bernstein has
filed charter application for the
use of two P-2 passenger carriers,
the General W. H. Gordon and
the General Meigs, which it is ex­
pected he would rush into ser­
vice immediately, should he re(Continued on Page 11)

�'-•

Page Two

THE

SEAFARERS

r Jvrrrr.;;-.w-jiI,i»T^»ir--

LOG

Friday/ March 25, 1949^

SEAFARERS LOG
Published Weekly by the
SEAFARERS IIMTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMEJtlCA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor
At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Entered as second class matter June 15, 1945, at the Post Office
in New York, N. Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

Write Now
Congress may act within a matter of days on the
measures guararjjeeing American ships and American sea­
men something like their rightful share of governmentpurchase dcargoes, including those moved under the Mar­
shall Plan.
Whether Congress acts soon or late, the future of
the American merchant marine will be decided by the
gentlemen in Washington.
If they go in one direction, they will run the ships
of the American merchant fleet on the rocks of the I^ul
G. Hoffman plan to eliminate the American flag from
the high seas.
But if they steer in another, they will send the ships
into the broad roadstead provided by the Bland Bill now
before" the House of Representatives.
If they choose the latter course, they will advance
the American merchant marine to a point from which it
can depart on a sound future program. If they choose
the course across the Hoffman rocks, there will be no bluewater future at all for American ships.
There are powerful forces urging Congress to run the
ships on the rocks. Foreign governments, foreign ship­
owners, the State Department, Paul G. Hoffman and
others do not seem to understand that American industries
and American workers were not to be sacrificed in the
laudable process of restoring Europe under the Marshall
Plan. This Union must fight these forces to the end.
One way the SIU,. A&amp;G District, can fight is to
continue to rerhind Senators and Representatives of what
seamen think and want. That is why all Seafarers are
urged to write again to the lawmakers in Washington,
asking them to support the Bland Bill in the House and
the Magnuson Bill in the Senate.

One Answer
No segment of the American merchant marine is in
a sorrier state than the passenger ship fleet. The number
of US flag passenger ships has reached such a low that war
built troopships are handling a large part of the passengercarrying trade. For months an SOS has been out for
greater passenger ship operations, but no takers.
The Arnold Bernstein Line's recent bid to the
Maritime Commission for a subsidy to operate two P-2
type passenger ships to Antwerp and Rotterdam has met
with hostility from shipping interests here and abroad.
One American company, US Lines, operators of the only
American passenger service to North Europe, has an­
nounced openly its opposition to approval of Bernstein's
application. Its reason: a monopoly of the trade. Despite
the fact that US Lines vessels touch only at LeHavre, the
company feels that some of its trade will be diverted to
the Bernstein ships. Bernstein's announced rate of approxi­
mately $225 may be one of the reasons for US Lines' op­
position. Foreign operators feel much the same way.
A need for the type of service Bernstein proposes is
obvious from the action of the Army recently, when it
took over the operation of six C-4 ships to use in the
European tourist trade. The Army claims that it alone
can offer low rates to the summer student trade. However,
its announced rate of $250 has already been bettered by
Bernstein.
At a time when there are no American passenger ships
in the inadequately serviced trade to Antwerp and Rotter­
dam, and the unemployment situation in American mari­
time is becoming acute, the Maritime Commission would
Jbe giving the American passenger fleet, a much needed
jboost if it approved the Bernstein application for a subsidy.

JHIeu Now In The Mwine Hospitals

Hospital Patients.
When entering the hospital
notify the delegates by post­
card, giving your name and
the number of your ward.
Mimeographed
postcards
can be obtained free at the
Social Service desk.

Stolen Island Hospital.
You can contact your Hos­
pital, delegate at the Staten
Island Hospital at the follow­
ing times:
Tuesday -—1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
(on 5th and 6th floors.)
Thursday — 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
(on 3rd and 4th floors.)
Saturday — 1:30 to 3:30 pmi.
(on 1st and 2nd floors.)

These are the Union Brolhers currently in the marino hospitals,
as reported by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging
heavily, on Ih^ hands. Do what you can to cheer them up by
writing them.
L. GALBURN
BALTIMORE HOSPITAL
R. HENDERSON
S. FLOREAK
W. WISLCOTT
H. GJERDE
V. SALLIN
J. SCHUMSKY
A. WARD
S. GAMIBR
-i
E. RHOEDS
A. E. DUNTON
S. RIVERA
W. LAMBERT
A. H. SCHWARTZ
G. STEPANCHUK
E. PAINTER
C. JOHNSTON
K. JENSEN
S.
CAPE
R. S. feEWASKY
R. L. GRESHAM, JR.
P.
SADARUSKI
C. SIMMONS
J.
A. WAITHE
H.
STILLMAN
R. J. LANNON
4 4 4
W. GARDNER
WM. T. ROSS
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL
J. DENNIS
C. I. COPPER
L. E. HODGES
LIPARIA
F. KORVATIN
A. C. McALPIN
E. PRILCHARD
W. MAY
S.
KASMIRSKI
0. D. CAREY
J. J. O'NEILL
A.
C. PARKER
F. LANDRY
4"
4 4 4
NEW ORLEANS MARINE HOSP. G. ROLZ
BOSTON MARINE HOSPITAL
D. CANN
J. LAFFIN
J. E. GALLANT
J. PUGH
4
4
VIC MILAZZI
STATEN
ISLAND
HOSPITAL
W. WALKER
F.
ALASAVICH
D.
P.
GELINAS
W. CURRIER
H. M. FAZAKERLEY
F. NERING
D. BAYELLE
L. L. GORDEN (City Hospital)
A. TREVINO
L. KAY
J. McNEELY
4 4 4
R. WALLACE
MOBILE HOSPITAL
PEEWEE GOODWIN
J. DAROUSE
J. L. BUCKALEW
Mi J. LUCAS
E. LYONS
J. B. BERRIER
N. DORPMANS
W,. CHAMPLIN
Ni W. BUSBY
S, HEIDUCKI
E. DRIGGERS
.
R.
P.
ROBERTS
4 4 4
S. JEMISON
GALVESTON MARINE HOSP.
SOI HO
W. ROCHELL
Gt GONZALES
J, HOPKINS
G. RAPUSB
L. WILLIAMSON
P.
LEVINE
C. BROWN
J.
HAVERTY
Bi
RABINOWITZ
F. CHEAUETTA

�Fvid^, Masah 35^ iai9

THE SEAFARERS

BUILD YQVR LIBRARY OF LOGS

LOG

A Problem That All Unions Face:
Drinks,Drinkers—And Performers
By JOSEPH I. FLYNN

Bound volumes of the SEAFARERS LOG for July through
December 1948 are now on sale at SIU Headquarters for $2.50
each. Bound in sturdy cloth and lettered in gold, the books
make a handsome addition to a Seafeurer's library. Also avail­
able are earlier volumes in six-months editions for the years
1946, 1947 and January through June 1948. Money orders
are okay.

Corporation Profits Rise
And So Does (Aiemploynient

Page Three

A union is a coalition of mem­
bers with a homogeneous pur­
pose for the benefit of the maj­
ority. The membership elects of­
ficers to represent and guide
their welfare. Each member has
an individual responsibility to his
fellow-members and to the union
as a whole. A constitution and
by-laws form the hypothesis
from which the officials and
members work out their various
differences of opinion.
The union, in, turn takes on
certain responsibilities to form
and negotiate contracts for the
employment of its members, to
establish headquarters where
meetings can be held, and regu­
lar business carried on and to
provide facilities that lend to
the benefit of the membership—
a rotating shipping procedure, an
educational program, a news­
paper to keep the membership
informed.
MEMBER'S ROLE

This is Ihe first of a series
of articles on alcoholism,
written by a former seafarer.
The Union's position on
drinking is clear enough.
The membership has gone on
record
time and again
against gashounds and per­
formers who make trouble
aboard ship or in the Union
Halls. Irresponsible . gashounds are becoming exmembers at a swift rate in
line with this policy.
However, another tenet of
Union, policy is that how
much a man drinks away
from the ships and the Union
Halls is his own business.
Nevertheless, since seamen
are" as prone to alcoholism as
stock brokers, movie stars or
insurance
salesmen,
the
Union feels that these ar­
ticles in which alcoholism is
viewed as the disease medi­
cal science recognizes it to
be should be valuable.

Humanitarian Gold Medal for his
work in this field.
About the
same time. Dr. Benjamiij Rush
propagandized alcoholism as a
sickness in the United States.
Yet now, almost 200 years
later, their views are just com
ing into the open, backed by
modern science.
Today, in the United States, it
is figured that 3,000,000, in an
adult population of 87,000,000,
are chronic excessive drinkers of
whom 750,000 are alcoholics, five
out of six being men.
The economic loss runs to a
billion dollars a year, perhaps
more. The quoted figures are:
potential wage loss, $432,000,000;
crime, $188,000,000; accidents,
$89,000,000; medical care, $31,000,000; maintenance in local
jails, $25,000,000—not to mention
broken homes, and brain power
lost to the country.
TOPS ALL
Compare this figure of 750,000 alcoholics with other much
heard about sicknesses: tubercu­
losis, 680,000; infantile paralysis,
175,000; cancer, 500,000.
Yet how little the average per­
son knows about alcoholism,
which has been called by an As­
sistant Surgeon General of the
U.S.P.H., "the nations fourth
major public health problem!"
It is intended that a series of
articles on this subject would
help us see the difference be­
tween the drunkard and the
drinker, give an understanding
of the symptoms of alcoholism,
the social implications of drink,
and an objective view and reali­
zation that for some of us to
drink is suicide.

The individual union member
n
return pays a nominal fee as started by examining the effects
WASHINGTON — Startling
Business leaders expressed a dues, and takes part in business of alcohol on the physical make­
"new peaks" and "new highs" mood of optimism and watchfulup. This opened the door to
in business and industry profit waiting for the future, despite functions — meetings, confer­ the many other aspects of the
ences,
etc.
levels for 1948 were made pub­ rising unemployment. In a Gov­
problem.
lic in financial statements filed ernment survey taken in 92 ma­ He has a definite knowledge of
a
particular
job
in
which
he
is
Leaders from all fields — psy­
by corporations last week.
jor labor market areas, business­ employed. He realizes his re­
chology,
sociology, anthropology,
Scores of manufacturing and men said they expected an up­ sponsibility to his fellow-mem­ law and religion—were drawn in
business concerns—from makers turn in employment within the bers, and remembers at all times to add their views for considera­
of razor blades to the bottlers of next 60 days.
that he alone would be helpless tion.
Coca-Cola — reported earnings In the meantime, many indus­ n gaining the privileges and op­
between 10% and 150% above tries reported sharp production portunities that the union offers Their opinions are diversified,
but there are certain factors that
record sums amassed in previous cut-backs'. Unemployment com­ him as a member.
all
agree upon, one being that
years.
pensation applications jumped This should be common knowl­
alcoholism is a sickness.
The 1948 profit level, accord­ 163,000 last month, to a total of edge to every union man, and
Back as far as 1783 a young
ing to a survey by the National 1,971,000 for the nation. Some it's with' this premise that we
English
physician, Thomas Trot­
33
states
reported
a
rise
in
the
City Bank of 2,100 leading Am­
lead into the subject of drinking. ter, was awarded the British
erican firms,
was 20% higher number of men and women filing
The SIU has taken action
claims for unemployment com­ against what is known in the
than in 1947.
seamen's language as the "gas
Total profits of these compan­ pensation benefits.
Robert 0. Goodwin, US Em­ hound" and "performer," be­
ies amounted to $7,118,000,000,
against a $5,925,000,000 net in ployment Service director, said cause they are hurting the Union
employment trends could not be and are dangerous and annoying
the year before.
charted
definitely until May.
to their brother-members, as well
This total was less because of
as
setting a poor example in and
the unusually huge sums which
Stretching the dollar is prob­ Cleaner at 11(^ a pound is ap­
But here, so you can see for
many corporations ploughed back yourself, is a graphic cross-sec­ for the imion.
ably one of the toughest jobs proximately the same product as
Spic and Span which costs 23«f.
in reserves, remodeling and plant tion of profits by corporations
confronting the average family
PROTECTS MAJORITY
expansion.
for the year 1948:
Some of the best savings to be
trying to get along on a moder­
They are given warning and if
found at co-ops are in drugs and
not heeded, action is taken. This ate income. But smart shoppers toiletries. Co-op Vitamin B com­
1948
1947
protects the SIU and is for the are saving some of the family plex tablets, for example, cost
(through Dec. 31) (through Dec.
good of the majority.
money by making their pur­ $1.69 for 150 tablets; one large
General Electric Co
$123,835,000
$ 95,299,000
But it is also known that fear, chases of soaps and other house­ drug chain checked by this
Radio Corp. of America
24^022,047
18,769,557
warning or dismissal alone is not hold goods at consumer coopera­ writer charges $2.63 for the same
sufficient to clear up this prob­ tive stores.
Eastman Kodak
amount.
55^404,425
43,199,254
lem.
It
takes
understanding
of
.Westinghouse Elec
52,656,351
8,101,000
For example, here's how your
SAVE ON AUTO SUPPLIES
the subject of alcoholism, which
E. I. duPont de Neumours
family buck has more cents when
157,445,622
120,009,760
like all sicknesses—V.D., T.B.,
You can also save substantially
you use it at a co-op:
Celanese Corp
39,484,000
24,173,417
cancer—must be understood, rec­
on
auto accessories, sold both by
Co-op While Floating Soap
American Tobacco Co
43,912,204
33,217,491
ognized, and treated to bring
co-op markets and service sta­
about recovery and prevention. costs 11% less than either the tions. Co-op first-line
General Motors
440,447,724
287,991,373
tires in
It should be understood by the comparable-quality Ivory or the 600x16 size are $13.45 plus
Chrysler Corp
89,187,240
67,181,221
membership that these articles Swan. Co-op soap flakes and tax. Not only are they $3 less
Shell Union Oil Corp
111,396,447
59,874,698
are in the form of education, and powders are approximately 4'.' a than the nationally-advertised
Standard Oil of Ind
140,079,286
94,880,715
the writer takes no stand for or package less than the nationally- brands, but a recent test found
General Foods Corp
24,555,752
18,303,594
against drinking, but looks upon advertised bi-ands.
the Co-op tire superior to four
Co-op stores sell trisodium well-known brands tested at the
certain forms of drinking as a
United Fruit Co
59,740,232
54,140,794
social problem and a sickness phosphate, one of the best gen­ same time.
Union Pacific Ry
26,540,409
16,957,217
that can be helped by proper eral household cleaners, for 13(i a
Co-op auto batteries are an­
American Can Co
26,910,269
21,836,624
pound. It's the same thing as
knowledge.
other
good example of the more
Coca-Cola Co
33,794,170
31,221,945
Yale University started study­ Oakite, which is 13&lt;i for only immediate savings to be found
,Wrigley Co
11,455,114 '
ing alcoholism in 1930. They 1014 ounces. Co-op Household in non-edibles, on which private
8,490,561
distributors generally take a
higher profit margin than they
do on foods. The co-ops offer a
17-plate
battery with 21 months
WASHINGTON — Indications tive Vinson of Georgia. Other
Actually, the Army has drafted better conditions than draftees
guarantee
for $19.25. A welllire that inductions into the Army authorities hedged a bit, fewer than 30,000 of the more could expect.
known
brand
with the same spe­
In addition, another 80,000 or
Army under the present draft but confessed that the chief of than 9,160,000 who registered. At
cifications
sells
for $25.85.
law will be suspended for the personnel was probably correct. the same time, upward of 81,000 so of draft age have signed up
These
are
savings
any wagelife of the law which will expire
Principal reason for this state men of draft age have enlisted for various Army and Navy re­
earner
can
make
on
his own,
June 24, 1950.
of affairs is that so many men in the Army and the Air Force serve services, thereby exempt­
since
already-existing.cooperative
This is the opinion of the Army's volunteered to beat the draft, the since the draft law went into ing themselves from the draft
but committing themselves to stores are located in most goodchief of personnel as reported to draft itself is no longer neces­
effect
early
last
summer.
These
sized towns, whether or not his
considerable
military activity.
the House of Representatives by sary. Another reason is that
union takes them up as a buy81,000
are
now
described
as
Upshot
is
that
seamen
of
draft
tte chairman of the House Armed overall Army plans have been
ing-club venture.
"stuck." They enlisted to get age can stop worrying.
Services Committee, Representa­ somewhat cut.

Wage Earner's Buck Buys More
When It Shops At Co-Op Stores

Ikre's Good News: Vokmteers May Make Army Draft Unnecessary

�Page Four

THE SEAFARERS

New Orleans Called Steadiest
Of All Ports For Seafarers
By EARL SHEPPARD

LOG

thiott Wreckers Are Warned

TAdBY. March 25. 1949

Panama Tankers Up
By 229% Since War

The SIU is on record thai charges will be placed against
men guilty of being the following:

The Panama flag, refuge of the
low standard operator, now flies
PILFERERS: Men who walk off ships with crew's equipover three and a half times as
men or ship's gear, such as sheets, towels, ship's stpres, cargo,
many of the world's tankers as
etc., for sale ashore.
it did before the war.
• This fact is revealed in tanker
WEEDHOUNDS: Men who are in the possession of or
registry figures compiled up to
who "se marijuana or other narcotics on board an SIU ship
Jan. 1, 1949, showing thfr tre­
or in the vicinity of an SIU Hall.
mendous shift in flag registra­
tion that has taken place since
GASHOUND PERFORMERS: Men who jeopardise the
safety of their shipmates by drinking while at work on a ship the end of hostilities.
In the postwar period, tankers
or who turn to in a drunken condition. Those who disrupt the'
under United States registry
operation of a ship,, the pay-off or sign-on by being gassed up.
have declined by about 30 per­
This Union was built of, by and for seamen. Seafarers cent, while during the same per­
fought many long and bloody fights to obtain the wages and iod tankers flying the Panaman­
conditions we now enjoy. For the first time In the history of
ian flag increased by 229 per­
the maritime industry a seamim can support himself and his cent.
family in a decent and independent manner. The SIU does
Up to Jan. 1, the US had 595
not tolerate the jeopardizing of these conditions by the actions
tankers of 5,656,497 tons, com­
of irresponsibles.
pared with 316 tankers of 2,684,608
tons under Panama registry.
In any occupation there is a small group of foulballs.
On
the same date the world
While the Union has been fortunate in keeping such characters
tanker fleet
numbered 1,872
to a minimum, we must eliminate them altogether from the
ships
of
more
than 15 million
SIU.
gross tons. Of these tankers, all
All Seafarers, members and officials alike, are under
of which are of 2,000 tons or
obligation to place chafes against these types of characters.
more, 985 are operated by Euro­
pean nations and 872 by coun­
Any man, upon being convicted by a Union Trial Com­
tries
in the Western Hemisphere.
mittee of actions such as outlined here, faces Union discipline
Britain
accounted for 472 ships
up to and including complete expulsion from the Seafarers.
of some 3,650,000 tons.

NEW ORLEANS—Mardi Grasi Normally this is shirt-sleeve
is over, the confetti and broken weather with the temperature
bottles swept up, and the old hovering around 55' degrees, but
town ^has quieted down some­ this year the weather man play
what.
ed a dirty trick and brought
The bright spots (clip joints along near-to-freezing tempera
to you) are still going strong in tures. This caused a rush on the
the Vieux Carre, but they have baggage room, with wrinkled
to get their trade from the tour­ top coats and jackets jerked out
ists these days—seamen are get­ of sea bags to meet the crisis.
ting too wise to spend their The sun is out today, however,
dough on cheap "music and "B" and there probably won't be
girls.
any more cold spells for awhile.
Shipping is normal in New Or­ Like the natives say about Flor­
leans. Those who need a job, ida freezes, "this is unusual."
and are willing to take the first The Hall is just as spic-andthing that comes along, can al­ span as the day it opened, and
ways get out pronto—but those the first thing a new arrival in
who are waiting for some spe­ New Orleans hears is, "Have
cial wagon, or some special run, you seen our new Hall yet?"
have to cool their heels a little Without doing any undue
longer.
bragging, all ports can take a
Speaking of normal operations lesson frcttn ' the New Orleans
you can take a yearly average membership on how to maintain
on New Orleans and you will a Hall.
find it to be just about the
A cigarette butt on the deck
steadiest port in the country,
is
as rare as turkey on a limey
both as regards shipping and in­
tramp,
and winos have long ago
come and general union opera­
learned
not to even come close
tion.
to
the
front
door.
The companies operating
So
that's
the
way New Or­
steady and regular runs furnish
leans
is
at
this
time.
You can't
the foundation, and throughout
figure
on
just
bouncing
in, reg­
the year seasonal imports and
exports—cotton, grain, coffee and istering and shipping out the
transshipped river cargoes—bal­ same day—but neither do you
By CAL TANNER
ance each other to keep things have to wait around until you
wear out the seat of your pants. MOBILE—Shipping in the port
on an even keel.
A good many oldtimers are Here you can figure just about of Mobile perked up a bit in the
on the beach, and quite a few how long you have to wait for past seven days. Eight payoffs
more are homesteading the reg­ the kind of job you want. That and nine sign-ons took a total
ular runs. All of them drop in is the reason so many members of 120 men—80 book and 40 per­
at the Hall regularly.
make this their home port, and mits—off the beach during the
Some of them are waiting for high tail it here regardless of period.
Sole representative for the Al­
the first thing out, but most where they payoff.
have acquired the budget habit There's no guess work, every­ coa outfit among the payoffs was
and are making the most of their thing runs smoothly and regu­ the Cavalier. The rest were all
vessels:
Bienville,
last payoff and holding down lar. We've got a good port, a Waterman
the beach in style.
good Hall and a good alert mem­ Fairhope, John LaFarge, AntinSomething always has to come bership—and you can bet your ous, DeSoto and Lafayette. (Ed.
along to spoil an otherwise last buck that New Orleans is Note: The name of the eighth
ship paying off was omitted.)
pretty picture.
going to keep it that way.

Port Mobile Reports Pkk-Up In Shipping

New York Has Hopes For Passenger Ships
By JOE ALGINA
NEW YORK—There's a slight
note of optimism in this port
these days. In addition to a
slight pick-up in shipping, plans
of two SIU operators, if they
materialize, will give us a much
needed shot in the arm.
Bull Line's purchase of the
Puerto Rican Line—a passenger
ship, two freighters and the
company's facilities—would help
us a great deal, if the company
puts the passenger job into op­
eration between this port and the
Islands. It's still in the planning
stage, and nothing definite has
come from the company as yet.
Our other sweepstake ticket is
the plan of Arnold Bernstein
Steamship Company to operate
two passenger vessels in the Ant­
werp-Rotterdam-New York trade.
If this deal crystallizes, and
the Maritime Commission this
week gave partial approval, the
port of New York will take a
new lease on life. All of this is
stUl in the indefinite stage, how­
ever.
While on the subject of pos­
sible increases in shipping, rumor
has it that Eastern is seriously
considering operating the Yar­
mouth between New York and
Nova Scotia this summer.
If the company is successful,
the rumor goes, they may go
back into the winter cruise trade.
The talk earlier of the company
dissolving is not definite yet.
Back to the present. The ship­
ping scene shaped up like this

during the past week: We paid
off the Sea Trader, Mar Trade;
Chrysanthystar, Try ton; Kathryn
and Elizabeth, Bull; Steel Flyer,
Isthmian; Purdue Victory and
Azalea City, Waterman; Robin
Grey, Robin.
Sign-ons covered were the
Steel Age, Robin Tuxford, Sea
Trader, Chrysanthystar. These
were supplemented by a heavy
stream of in-transit vessels.
Reports continue to come in
telling of good shipping on the
West Coast. It might be a good
idea for Seafarers living in the
midwest to heed the call and go
west. Excellent shipping is more
than we can promise here.
What with the customs men
cracking down on dope smuggl­

ing by seamen, it might be worth
a word of caution here to point
out that seamen caught smuggl­
ing will get a rough time.
Chances are that the SIU is
cleaner than any other outfit in
this respect, but a few foul-balls
always show up at one time or
another.
In the crackdown, seamen are
being relieved of their seamen's
papers by the Coast Guard. In
addition to civil action, the men,
if they're members of the SIU,
will face strong disciplinary ac­
tion by the Union.
A guy is crazy to attempt dope
running in the first place, but
if he insists on playing the game
he risks losing his means of live­
lihood in the maritime industry.

The Cavalier signed on again
for her usual run. She was
joined by another Alcoa ship, the
Planter, which headed for the
bauxite trail. A new tanker, the
SS Tini, shoved off for the Neth­
erlands.
.
Other sign-ons, all Waterman
jobs, were the Bienville and the
Hurricane, both destined for
European ports; Antinous and
DeSoto, coastwise travelers; the
Claiborne, making Puerto Rican
ports, and the Fairhope, bound
for the Mediterrean.
SMOOTH PAYOFFS
All payoffs were extremely
smooth, with only a few minor
beefs cropping up. Everything
was settled to the satisfaction of
ail hands. No trouble at all was
encountered at the sign-ons. Re­
pairs and stores were checked
before the articles were signed.
Of the ships paying off this
week, one—the SS John LaFarge
was lost to the layup fleet. How­
ever, we picked a new ship, thus
evening the score. She's the
Tini, a former Carras tanker
which has been converted to a
cargo ship.
The Tini took her first crew
out of here yesterday operating
under a standard SIU freight
ship agreement, until such time
as a contract is worked out be­
tween the company and the
Union.
The Marine Hospital was
visited by the Patrolman on Fri-

Rare Combination Helped Beget Taft-Hartley Act
WASHINGTON — Murder began to out last week at the
House Labor Committee hear­
ings on the Truman Labor BillGerald D. Morgan, who serv­
ed as a special legislative coun­
sel to the House Labor Com­
mittee last session when the
Taft-Hartley act was^ passed,
came in to give his ideas on the
new law. Under some pretty
close questioning by Congress­
men, he broke down and made
these admissions:
1—Although serving as coun­
sel at thd special request of
Chairman Fred Hartley, his

$7,500 fee was paid not by the
House but ' by the Republican
National Committee.
2-i-As counsel he sought the
aid and help of two "outstand­
ing experts" in the labor law
field — who turned out to be
Gerard Reilly, now counsel for
General Electric and the Print­
ing Industry of America, and
Theodore Isser^an, counsel for
the Chrysler Corp.
3—They started out on a new
labor law by taking the vicious
Case Bill, vetoed by the White
House, with the equally vicious
Smith amendments to the Wag­
ner act, plus some "additional

ideas Mr. Halieck (R., Ind.)
thought would be appropriate."
Under questioning by Rep. Carl
Perkins (D., Ky.) a former UMW
attorney, Morgan admitted that
it was Halieck who said "You'll
get your money even if we have
to take up a collection."
Thus—from a reactionary Re­
publican congressman, a turn­
coat Democrat lawyer working
for the Republican National
Committee, and two industry
lawyers—was born what the Re­
publicans now proclaim as a
"bill of rights for the working
man."

day. Seafarers listed as patients
there are J. L. Buckalew, J. B.
Berrier and N. W. Busby.
On the beach at the moment
are Brothers D. M. Zuniga, A.
Hammac, R. i Henderson, A.
Griffin, Lionel Jackson, E. E.
Ritchie, A. Hollings, T. D. York,
M. McClintock, R. A. Jackson, J.
L. Nicholson, and E. Annio.
DRIVE ON T-H
In a drive by every labor or­
ganization in the city, thousands
of letters have been mailed to
Washington, urging the lawmak­
ers to repeal the Taft-Hartley
law.
Approximately 600 Seafarers
in the Mobile Branch have writ­
ten to their Congressmen and
Senators asking for their support
in the fight on the anti-labor
law.
The campaign will continue
until a decision on the fate of
T-H is reached in Washington.
^ Furthermore, we have been
flooding the Maritime Commis­
sion with telegrams, phone calls
and letters urging them to give
favorable consideration on the
subsidy application of the Bern­
stein Steamship Corpoi-ation,
which is seeking to start a IOWT
price passenger service to Eu­
rope.
All organized labor in this city
is pitching in to aid us .

Bet A Receipt
Every member making a
donation to the Union for
any purpose should receive
an official receipt bearing
the amount of the contribu­
tion and the purpose for
which it was made.
If a Union official to whom
contribution is given does
not make out a receipt for
the money, the matter should
immediately be referred to
Paul Hall, Secretary-Trea­
surer, SIU, 51 Beaver Street,
New York 4, N. Y.
In advising the SecretaryTreasurer of such transac­
tions, members should state
the name of the official and
the pofrt where the money
was tendered.

�Friday, March 26. 1949

Shipping Scene
is Brighter
Port Tampa
TAMPA — The general picture
is becoming a little brighter here.
Shipping continues slow, but
there is a ray of light entering
the picture in the expected ar­
rival of a good number of ships.
So far this week, we have had
the Iberville, Bessemer Victory
and Canton Victory—Waterman
ships. Three more are due this
week.
Although most of these ships
take few replacements we do
manage to send a few boys out
the door to jobs.
had one
payoff from foreign, and we can
always count of the Canton Vic­
tory for a payoff every two
weeks.
There has been some talk of us
getting more coastwise ships for
sign-ons and payoffs here. If the
talk materializes we will be the
boomingest port in the Gulf.
Voting on the transportation
rule is slow here. The men rid­
ing the coastwise jobs have long
since made their "X" one way
pr another.
The members here enjoyed the
showing of the SIU film, "The
Battle of Wall Street." All of
the local unions have sho^n it
to their members. We rate it
four stars; in fact, we are consid­
ering entering it for the academy
award.

THE SEAFARERS
iL

Voting On Transportation
As the 60-day voting period approaches the mid­
way mark. Seafarers who have not yet cast ballots for
their choice of a transportation rule are urged to so as
sqpn as possible. The-referendum ends on April 30.
Two propositions appear 6n the ballot, as follows;
PROPOSAL No. I:
"Whenever transportation is due a crew under the
terms of the contract, all hands must accept that trans­
portation and get off the ship, whereupon new replace­
ments will be shipped from the Union Hiring Hall."
PROPOSAL No. 2:
"When transportation is due a crew under the terms
of the contract, those men who desire to stay on board
the ship can do so, providing they do not collect trans­
portation. Those men desiring transportation can col­
lect same and, upon receipt of the money, shall get
off the ship and replacements for those vacancies shall
be shipped from the Union Hiring Hall."

Page Five

LOG

Operators' West Coast Expansion
Means More Jobs For Seafarers
By FRENCHY MICHELET
SAN FRANCISCO — Wonder­
ful is the word for shipping on
the West Coast. From all indica­
tions, conditions will remain that
way, because our contracted
companies appear to have some
pretty big ideas.
Number one of the reasons for
this optimism is that the Isth­
mian Steamship Company is put­
ting eight ships on the "pipe
run."
These eight ships will leave
West Coast ports carrying pipe
to the Persian Gulf area. Ob­
viously, ^sthmian's stepped-up
activity will provide quite a few
regular jobs for the membership

Magellan Foand Way To Far Fast

of the Atlantic and Gulf District.
WATERMAN EXPANDING
Then there is the Waterman
Steamship Corporation, which is
considerably expanding its ope­
rations out of West Coast ports.
In addition to its present
coastwise and Far East runs, Wa­
terman has .inaugurated a new
intercoastal run, which includes
calls at ports in the island of
Puerto Rico.
The latest of Waterman's ser­
vices should prove to be a very
desirable run for the member­
ship.
One vessel, the SS Oshkosh
Victory, is already operating in
this route, and it is expected
that Waterman will place a to­
tal of eight ships in the service.
In view of these develop­
ments, our big problem is man­
power. Despite the favorable
shipping picture, we find it dif­
ficult, for some obscure reason,
to keep men out here.
As many of our members can
testify, the West Coast is a
permitman's paradise. In fact,
conditions are such that we have
allowed permits to remain
aboard vessels for two trips and,
in some instances, three trips.
FRISCO ACTIVE
The big spot, of course, is
Frisco. Wilmington and Tacoma
are, more or less, transit ports.
It has been our policy to delay
the payoffs of vessels calling at
these two ports until they arrive
at Frisco.
Summing up, we are happy to
be able to say that the Atlantic
and Gulf District is enjoying the
best of health on the West Coast.
We'd like to recommend once
again that permitmen finding the
going tough in any of the other
A&amp;G ports would notice a com­
pletely different atmosphere here
on the West Coast.
There are jobs for them and
there are a number of runs to
choose from. And that should
certainly sound like an invita­
tion.

By AUGUSTUS H. COTTRELL pean states and towns kept their round the Cape of Good Hope
accounts in pepper as if it had and return to Seville' with a
It is perfectly safe to say that been gold.
crew of eighteen and a rich
very few of us ever give a sec­
With pepper you could buy cargo of spices which returned
ond thought to the spices used land, .pay dowries, purchase the the backers of the expedition a
in seasoning our food. And very freedom of the city. Nor was huge profit and more than made
few realize that in Magellan's pepper the only product of this up for the loss of the other four
day pepper, for example, was sort. Ginger and cinnamon were cockleshells.
worth more than silver.
weighed upon apothecaries Originally Magellan had set
With the return of^early sailors scales, the windows being care­
from the East Indies, laden with fully closed lest a draught blovf- out with 265 men on his vessels.
spices, the tongues and imagina­ away the minutest fragment of The eighteen were the only ones
who were ever seen again and
tions of the people at-home were the costly dust.
they
returned to Spain on a
fired with an urge to obtain more Magellan's trip around the
crumbling
vessel, but with the
and more of the tasty spices; world was the first in recorded
flag
of
triumph
flying
at the
and, overnight, spice became the History. But, as so often hap­
WANT THE PIC
masthead.
immediate cause for the adven­
With the State Federation con­ ture which resulted in the cir­ pens, Magellan was not really
appreciated in his own native
vention coming up the first of cumnavigation of the globe.
Portugal, and he was forced to
next month, one of the old- With spices bringing premium
seek assistance from the Spanish
timers in the AFL, Uncle Jim prices it was not too difficult to
monarch, who ordered the cen­
No SIU Crew is to pay off
Barrett, has asked that it be arouse the interest of the King
tral shipping guild to finance the
any ship until the crew's
shown at the convention.
• of Spain in a voyage of discov­
adventure.
quarters and equipment are
The average person here can­ ery to find a shorter route to. the Magellan worked night and
as clean as any Seafarer likes
not understand the militancy and Spice Islands, as the Indies were day to recondition the five
to find a ship when he first
cooperation of the unions which known in that long-ago day.
cockleshells and assemble .sup­
goes
aboard. Patrolmen have
assisted in the Wall Street beef. In-any event, it was the quest plies for a trip to last several
been
instructed that the
Interested anglers will be for spices which was chiefly in­ years. And not the least of his
crew's
quarters must be ab­
pleased to know that fishing is strumental in financing the Ma­ energy was expended in recruit­
solutely
clean before a pay­
still good around here, although gellan expedition.
ing a motley crew of foreigners, off will be allowed. Please
we can stand a little rain to At that period pepper had be­ and in mastering intrigue.
cooperate with your officials
muddy up the water a bit. The come a symbol of values; Euro- Finally the expedition got un­
in carrying, out this member­
bass are striking any bait
der way. For months Magellan
ship order.
thrown their way.
explored the coast of South
America, seeking a route to the
Oldtimers around here are en­
Spice Islands, and a great
joying the sunshine and fishing.
amount of time was consumed
Any Sunday you can find Jimmy
Merchant seamen of Great Bri­ exploring estuaries of wide rivers
Jones, John Walton and Isaac
tain have been granted increased before discovery was made of the
Craft fishing on the beach.
By WILLIAM McKAY
During the week here the leave, unemployment and acci­ fact that they were not the pas­
pinochle players are busy run­ dent benefits as a result of agree­ sage through the continent.
TACOMA — Shipping in this ten years and am a first-class
ning off a tournament. The loser, ments reached at, recent meet­
port
was fair last week, thanks man." the newcomer says.
JOURNEY'S END
I understand, is hit for a round ings of the National Maritime* Mutiny was dealt with ruth­ to a payoff of the Warrior and
My reply: "There is a fine big
Board.
of cokes.
the
servicing
of
the
Alawai
and
Army
camp only twenty miles
lessly. The nobleman who was
The Chemical Workers in this
Under the Established^ Service the ringleader was executed, and the Demostar, the latter taking from here. You just take the
port—a newly organized outfit- Scheme, weekly payments made two others were abandoned on a full crew. It made for a pretty bus to Fort Lewis. The uniforms
called on the SIU recently for a in addition to the regular unem­ the bleak and hostile shore. good period for us.
are pretty, the pay the same as
little assistance. They were hav­ ployment benefits have been up- Finally, after much suffering and
Nobody likes to tell a man ATS and the chow better."
ing a little trouble with company ped by an average of two dollars. privation, Magellan sailed what port he can call his home, So much for that. It goes on
rough stuff.
The payments vary according to through the straits which have but a guy is wise if he hangs and on all day. It's understand­
A few SIU members went over the seagoing rates of pay.
ever after borne his name.
out in a port where he can get able in a way. Tliis is the first
to the plant to pass out literature
Under .terms of the new agree­ • Having no knowledge of the along while waiting a ship.
seamen's union hall in this city
and found things peaceful. They ments, an Establishment Benefit length ^and breadth of the un­
It's tough on a man to be in over thirty years.
weren't bothered and the job has been set up to provide pay­ charted Pacific Ocean, he con­
stuck in a port where he knows The big union here is the ILA,
was done is fir^ rate fashion.
ments for injured established tinued bravely on, always sail­ no one and he's running low on and there are many ex-seamen
seafarers, whether on company ing into the setting sun, only to the green stuff. My advice is among the membership. All the
or general services contract, who discover the Philippines.
stick close to home when waiting seamen hitting this port find
are entitled to industrial injur­ In an attempt to flaunt his au­
them to be the hardest working
for a ship.
ies compensation..
thority to a native chief, a course
and
best liked longshoremen they
Just for a laugh, here are a
Leave allowances also haye of conduct entirely inconsistent
have
run across anywhere. Taco­
been broadened to include un- with his nature, he obligingly en­ few samples of how would-be ma is a good union port.
established seafarers. Formerly gaged a rival chief in combat, seamen come into this Hall look­
there was a difference between and fell mortally wounded, a vic­ ing for jobs:
"Say, is this the Hiring Hall?"
The French merchant fleet will the amount of leave granted an tim of his own frailty.
soon exceed its pre-war size of established seafarer who had The expedition, therefore, be­ he says.
670 ships totalling 2,735,000 tons. signed a two-year contract, and came one of trading rather than
"You're looking at it," I say.
If you don't find linen
Under the current fleet expan­ that of an unestablished British exploration. Without a leader, "Well, you old goat, how are
when
you go aboard your
sion program, new vessels seaman.
disease, hunger and desertions chances for a job?" he crows.
amounting to 675,000 tons are be­
Now the unestablished seafar- followed. Full crews from the This bird is promptly ushered ship, notify the Hall at once.
ing rebuilt for service.
A telegram from Le Havre or
.er will be entitled to the same small ships would go over the out.
Singapore won't do you any
Exclusive of the tonnage now amount of leave as the establish­ side, leaving their ship dead in
Next case:
good. It's your bed and you
under construction and repair, ed seafarer, provided he has 12 the water.
"Say,
I have all ratings, have have fo lie in it.
the French fleet comprises 574 months of continuous service It was truly a miracle that
one remaining ship was able to been sailing Army Transport for
with the same shipowner.
ships, totalling 2,300,000 tons.

Notice Te Crews

British Seafarers
Win New Benefits

Tacoma Has Fair Shipping Week

French Shipping
Soon Wiil Exceed
its Prewar Status

ATTENTION!

�fage Six

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, March 25. 1S49

SHIPS' MINUTES AND NEWS
Member Warns Of Cab Outfit
That Passed Hotel Pickets
If you ever find yourself in
Perth Amboy, New Jersey, and
,have .to' have a .
+ make
taxi• to
, . ...
your ship, hail a General Cab.
'
If you can't spot a General, take
anything you can get so long as
it isn't a Yellow Cab.
That's the advice of Seafarer
Richard Pawlak.
Pawlak was in downtown
Perth Amboy the other day on
business when he felt the need
of a bracer. He stepped into the
bar of the State Hotel, and, in
the course of hoisting a quick
one, he fell into conversation
with a man who turned out to
be a representative of the local
Bartenders Union.
The bar had been picketed un­
til a few days before, the union
agent told Pawlak, but now the
place was under contract with
a full crew of union bartenders
drawing the cool ones and" mix­
ing the fancy ones. Pawlak was

When he came off with some of
the crew, he and his companions
spotted a Yellow Cab.
They went up to the driver,
^ ,, ,.
,
,
told him they wanted a cab.
Then they told they weren't go­
ing to use his and told him why.
So off they went in another cab,
leaving the Yellow Cab stranded.
Pawlak hopes other Seafarers
will act in" the same SIU style
in Perth Amboy.

Log Subscribers
Readers notifying the SEAFARERS LOG of a change in
mailing address are re­
quested to include their old
address along with the new.
In addition to making easier
the switch-over it will also
guarantee uninterrupted
mailing service.
All notifications of change
of address should be ad­
dressed to the Editor. SEA­
FARERS LOG, 51 Beaver
Street. New York 4, N. Y.

Charter Member Paul Cook
Dies Suddenly Aboard Harte
Paul J. Cook, 37-year-oId Sea­
farer, died suddenly of natural
causes aboard the Bret Harte on
March 10 and was buried at sea,
the LOG learned this week.
The Bret Harte, which clear­
ed the U.S. on November 25, had
left Singapore and was eight
days out of Port Aden when
Brother Cook succumbed.
A charter member of the SIU,
Cook had joined the Union in
New York in 1938 when he

COFFEE TIME AND SACK TIME ON THE CURRIER

transferred from the American
Federation of Labor Seamen's
Union. He held Book No. 206
and sailed as Fireman.
Surviving him is his mother
who lives in Whytherville, Vir­
ginia. Brqther Cook had a long
record of activity with the SIU.
He held strike clearances from
all of the Union's waterfront
campaigns.
Cook usually sailed from Bal­
timore, but was well known to
Seafarers in all ports. A memor­
ial service was held in Why­
therville on March 16.

The Voice

Of The Sea
By SALTY DICK

Relaxing behind their mugs of coffee, crewmembers of the Nathaniel Currier, Waterman
ship, flash smiles for cameraman Shelly While. The ship was enroute to Bremen, Germany,
at the time. From left to right, the boys are T. Catherine, Wiper; Steve. Oiler; Deck Engineer;
Chico, Wiper; Steve, Stewards Utility; Harry Reynolds, AB, and Eddie Erikson, 3rd Cook.

'Get Tough Poliey'
Against Wreckers
Wins Crew's Favor
The crew of the SS Azalea
City has unanimously endorsed
Union policy calling for strict
glad to hear that the boys had disciplinary measures against ir­
won their beef, and, since the responsible elements whose ac­
minutes had passed swiftly, tivities endanger the general
phoned for a cab to take him welfare.
to his destination.
At the Feb. 27 shipboard meet­
ing held at sea, a motion pre­
CROSSED LINE
sented by Calvin M. Owens, and
He happened to call General seconded by Andy Hourilla, rec­
Cab. When he asked to be pick­ ommended "that the crew of the
ed up at the State Hotel, the SS Azales City go on record as
taxi dispatcher asked whether being highly in favor of our
the pickets were still there and elected officials using strong ac­
only agreed to send a car when tion against all habitual drunk­
Pawlak said the beef was over ards and so-called weed hounds.
"We do not wish our contract
and won.
to be jeopardized by a small
After the cab picked him up,
minority," the motion stated.
Pawlak asked the driver what
The motion won unanimous
the story was. The driver said approval.
that Yellow Cab jockeys had
In the meeting period devoted
repeatedly crossed the picket to good and welfare, the Azalea
line for fares, but that the Gen- men selected three men to ineral Cab men had reapee^ J""® j ;;Vtigrte7rte IOT
matoe ngidly. Thafa why Pawlak
New York.
IS advismg Seaf^ra to nae Gen- „ „
^
er^ Cabs and avoi
e ow
cost, the crew will purchase one for use of the unLater that day he had a licensed personnel,
chance to make his advice ef-| Fred Roman chaired the meetfective. He went aboard the SS.ing and Satirias Foscolas did the
Chrysanthystar, an SIU tanker.' recording.
RICHARD PAWLAK

Currier crewmember Howard Rhodes, AB, relaxes in his
sack awaiting his removal to a hospital. Brother Rhodes was
stricken with appendicitis a day after the Currier cleared the
English Channel. The ship was turned back to Falmouth,
where Rhodes was placed in a hospitaL

Beaver Men Eager For SIU Education
Eager Seafarers on the SS
Beaver Victory are making Un­
ion education a 24-hour project.
Each of the shipboard meet­
ings features a discussion period
on topics of Union interest. To
fill in between the session, an
Education Committee was elect­
ed on Feb. 13 to aid the trip-

carders and permit men in ob­
taining a full understanding of
the aims and functions of the
SIU.
At the Feb. 13 meeting John
Wade, chairman, and Jack Gridley, secretary, reviewed the SIU
Constitution for the benefit of
the members of other unions
aboard the Beaver Victory.

While in Tampa recently I
went over to see the Florida
State Fair. I also visited our
Hall almost daily. Ray White is
the new Agent. I must give
credit to the Brothers for having
the Hall so spick and span.
Saw many familiar faces
around, including Snuffy Smith,
N. Ellis, Dud Carpenter, Abe
BHis, Will Franguez and Joe
Pagola. I can easily understand
why these brothers stay in Tam­
pa so long: a good Hall, good
weather and a good little city. ,
. Joe Ficcurotta, engine de- .
partment man, is always play­
ing cards, but is ready for the
wide open spaces: the sea ...
Another member here is work­
ing on a jig-saw puzzle. It'll
turn out to be Mt. Vernon...
I visited a beer tavern here
called Lucky Seveii Michael.
A few of the boys go there
when dry.
Gasparilla and his pirates (an­
nual celebration) invaded Tampa.
This parade was one of the
best I've seen. May I make a
suggestion: If you haven't seen
the parade, do so whenever pos­
sible. The population is usually
140,000, but on Gasparilla Day
they had a crowd of 600,000.
Drove down to Miami and
then to Key West. From there
I flew to Havana. While there
I came across a seaman who
made a rumpus and gave us fel­
lows a bad reputation. He wasn't
SIU but the public still thinks
he's one of us because he is a sea­
man ... The best burlesque sho\y
is held in Havana. I' just had
to see it. I found prices high.
I ate the common cuban dish of
arroz con frijoles (rice and black
beans). ... There is a rumor go­
ing around that a ferry will ply
between Key West and Havana.
(Ed. Note: Salty Dick sends
word that he's lied up for re­
pairs at the New Orleans Ma­
rine Hospital and expects to
be out of action for several
weeks. His pals are urged to
write him at the following ad­
dress: Sally Dick, c/o Marine
Hospital, New Orleans, La.,
Ward 1-G.)

�THE SEAFARERS

Friday, March 25, 1949

LOG

Page Seven

Digested Minutes Of SiU Ship Meetings
BRET HARTE. Jan. 9—Vincent
Kuhle, Chairman; Frank Mit­
chell, Secretary. Delegates re­
ports accepted. Ship's delegate
reported that Captain advised
men to put in for full amount of
draw wanted, and that he would
find out later if surplus could be
turned in. He said that it was
not necessary to draw the full
amount requested. Food com­
mittee reported they found the
meat okay, as far as they could
determine, and that the boxes
and storeroom were in good con­
dition. Motion carried to send
letter to SEAFARERS LOG and
Agent Ben Rees about checking
on stores from Cavalier Grocery
Co., as tainted butter and some
moldy bread was discovered
among stores when vessel left
Norfolk. Steward was instructed
to see Captain about having but­
ter condemned. Chief Cook urged
to keep meat block and area
around it absolutely clean. Crew
gave vote of thanks to Messman
J. IRllman for his good service;
to J. Short for keeping utensils
clean, and to the Stewards de­
partment for the good Christmas
and New Year's Day dinneis.

3^ 4- i
NEW LONDON, Jan. 9—J. E.
Sweeney, Chairman;
W.
J.
Prince, Secretary. Minutes of
previous trips read and accepted.
Motion carried to have Patrol­
man see Mate about OS doing
Carpenter's work. It was agi*eed
crew would abide by Patrolman's
decision regarding condition of
the slopchest. Chairman Sweeney
spoke on the necessity of getting
repair lists properly made out
and turned in to Department
heads before the ship makes
port. He said these tankers are
only in port for a few hours and
therefore repair lists should be
turned in at least a day before
arrival, so that some time could
be put aside for making repairs.
Under Good and Welfai'e there
was considerable discussion on
slopchest and repair lists.
4 Si
HASTINGS, Jan. 30 — C.
Howell, Chairman; C. J. Oliver,
Secretary. Delegates reported all
in order in their departments.
Good and Welfare: Suggestion
made to draw up a recommenda­
tion for a permitman having suf­
ficient time for a book. One
minute of silence for Brothers
lost at sea.

ALAWAI, Jan. 10—C. Collins,
Chairman; Carlos Diaz, ' Secre­
tary. Motion carried calling for
slopchest to be open at hours
convenient to crewmen. Ship's
delegate Ralph Di Paola. made
his report. Reports from follow­
ing delegates were also heard:
Joseph Caruso, deck; Marco
Fortes, engine; Antonio Morales,
stewards. A motion carried urg­
ing that books in library be
changed for next voyage, and
that Patrolman is to be consulted
on the matter. Each delegate is
keep a copy of his department's
repair list to be turned over to
Ship's delegate. At payoff every­
one is to remain aboard until
Patrolman gives the word. One
minute of silence in memory of
departed Brothers.

overtime work. One minute of
silence for Brothers lost at sea.

STEEL SEAFARER. Jan. 7—
E. Leger, Chairman; Pete Bluhm,
Secretary.
Ship's delegate re­
ported that he had spoken to the
Chief Engineer about moving the
coffee urn in the PC mess to
the pantry. This is to be done
when vessel arrives in Singapore.
Minutes of previous meeting read
and accepted. It was decided
that delegates would meet jointly
to see if food and menus could'
be improved. Beef in galley gang
to be straightened out. Agreed
that if voluntary method of
keeping messhall clean does not
woik out, definite action will be
taken at next meeting to see that
cleanliness is enforced. At re­
quest of some crewmembers.
Brother E. Leger explained the
working of the Social Security
Act.
S S S
SEATRAIN NEW JERSEY;
Feb. 13—J. B. Brown, Chairman;
W. Bernelt, Secretary. Delegates
reported on number of books and
permits in their departments.
Good and Welfare: Suggestion
made that new tablecloths Be
purchased - in New York. Crew
told how crew movie fund op­
erates. Each man donates $1.50
per trip toward the films. Crew
asked that smaller washing ma­
chine be put aboard.

2^

4 4 4
THOMAS CRESAP. Jan. 23—
Pat Willis, Chairman; Blackie
Wagner, Secretary. Departmental
delegates reported on the stand­
ing of their department. Hume
elected deck delegate to replace
Causey who was forced to resign
because of illness. Patrolman to
be asked to investigate the prac­
tice of putting canned potatoes
aboard the ships. Motion carI'ied that a letter be written to
Headquarters outlining the plan
of the crew to purchase penicil­
lin for general use. Suggestion
made that plan be brought be­
fore the membership in meetings
in all ports. One minute of sil­
ence in memory of departed
Brothers.
4 4 4
STRATHMORE, Jan. 6 —Emil
Kardinal, Chairman. Stanley
Schuyler, Secretary. Delegates'
reports accepted. New Business:
Motion carried to elect ship's
delegate. Emil Kardinal elected.
Suggestion made that crewmem­
bers read educational pamphlets
that were put aboard ship. Sug­
gestion made that crew purcha.'^e
a new washing machine.

CUT and RUN
By HANK

In - the past several weeks we have noticed Brothers sailing
in and then sailing right out again in a matter of days. It's good
shipping
when the Brothers grab ships regardless of what ports
4 4 4
with those jobs.
ALCOA CAVALIER. Jan. 9— and companies involved. Brothei-s, don't filibuster
W. Purdy. Chairman; L. Eck- Grab them and sail them... Brother Richard Weaver sailed in
holm. Secretary. Delegates re­ with his mustache after some intercoastal voyaging.
ported on money collected for
projector. New Business: Motion
4
4
4
carried that a new gangway be
Norman "Ozzie" Okray is wondering if he has any retro­
purchased for crew. Motion car­
active
greenbacks or unclaimed wages due from Calmar Line.
ried that garbage situation on
Well, it sure pays to be curious, is all we can say... Brother
the crossalley be clarified. Good
and Welfare: Suggestion made
Wilson Joyner, who has been shipping out of New Orleans,
that a fire station bill be put in
sailed out of our New York town about four weeks... Frank
each crewmember's foc'sle. One
Lillie is in town... Omar Ames has been anchored in town
minute of silence for Brothers
for awhile. Another Ames. Les. is in town after an Isthmian
lost at sea.
voyage... James Barrett sailed last week with his portable
4 4 4
slopchest of quickie jokes.
SEATRAIN NEW YORK. Jan.
2 — Henry Gregorski, Chairman;
Charles Goldstein, Secretary.
Delegates reported number of
books and permits in their de­
partments. New Business: Re­
pair list made up and appioved.
Suggestion made that ship's dele­
gate see Captain about a draw
before ship docks in Havana.
Good and Welfare: Electrician
gave a little talk on cutting
cable in messhall, which en­
dangers the lives of the ci'ew.
Ship's delegate spoke on per­
formers and warned that charges
would be brought against men
guilty of performing. One min­
ute of silence for departed
Brothers.

4. 4. 4
IRVIN S. COBB, Jan. 9—Ed
Robinson, Chairman; D. W. Conroy. Secretary.
Departmental
delegates reported no beefs.
Books are to be checked before
next meeting time. Motion by
A1 Mitchell, seconded by Phil
Carlino. that ship's delegate be
elected. Ed Robinson got the
post by acclamation.
Brother
Conroy moved and it was carried
that at no time should ship's
delegate appear before Captain
on Union business without a
crewmember being present as a
witness. During general discus­
sion on recreation room and
laundry, it was decided that
stewards department would keep
4 4 4
rec room clean and that deck
SOUTHLAND, Jan. 1—Arthur
and engine departments would
L. Fricks, Chairman; H. W.' Mcalternate on the laundry.
Mahon, Secretary. Delegates re­
4 4&gt; 41
ported no disputes in their de­
ALCOA PARTNER, Jan. 31— partments. Motion by McMahon
E. Mayo, Chairman; J. Pursell. that before any new rulings are
Secretary. Delegates reported passed which concern the entire
sjnall amount of disputed over­ membership, the proposed rules
time. New Business: Motion by are to be submitted to all
Drozrek, carried, that everyone branches for a period of at least
be sober at payoff. Any member 60 days so the entire membership
drunk to be fined $50. Good" and will have the opportunity to ex­
Welfare: Discussion on the sou- press their sentiments. Educa­
geeing of alleyway. Repairs sug­ tion: Brother Weeks spoke on the
gested and added to list. Discus­ advances made by the SIU, par­
sion on the absence of penicillin ticularly during 1948. Good and
aboard ship. Men i-emained to Welfare: Chief Steward thanked
keep up-to-date record of their crew for fine cooperation.

4

4

4

"Blackie" Flowers, the Electrician, sailed for the perfumed
ports of France with his genuine, technicolored cowboy boots he
bought down in Houston. Smooth sailing, Blackie... Jim Bentley
sailed into town last week ... Looks like Fred Heck shipped ...
Roger Trottier is in town... Fred Paul shipped with his mustache
and radio ... Brother D. D. Story writes of the following oldtimers
aboard the Alcoa Pioneer on the shuttle run between Halifax and
Trinidad: Bosun Huff, Kenney Lewis, E. Janosko, Bill Stern,
Steward W. Greenveld, Earl Cain, Jack Woods and Weldon Smith
... In the Mediterranean Brother James "Pop" Martin is no doubt
re-reading—and perhaps even trying to re-write—the book, "A
Bell For Adano."
4

4

4

Brother Ed "Buck" Buckley writes from Port Said. Egypt,
to say that he and "Big Dutchy" Bolz Euen't losing weight.
Their ship, the SB Michael, is a fine feeding ship... The weekly
LOG shaR be sailing free of cost to the homes of the following
Brothers: Richard Logan of Ohio, Frank Brazell of Georgia,
James Stewart of Mississippi, Stanley Kutkowski of Florida,
W. Pennington of California, J. R. McCarten of Connecticut.
Joseph Dodge of New York. W. O. Boiling of Virginia. George
Hinnant of North Carolina. John Likness of New York. Richard
Carrello of Louisiana. S. Turberville of Florida. James Hackett
of Louisiana... The Schubert Bar in Bremen. Germany, ,is
being placed on the list to receive a weekly bundle of LOGs.
Pick up those LOGs. Brothers. Take a few copies. Leave the
rest for another SIU ship.
4

4

4

In every port the Brothers are writing letters to Washington."
And they're writing letters to their families so they can understand
why they also should write to their hometown Congressmen and
Senators—urging them to pass the Bland-Magnuson ECA bills
without any destructive amendments. These bills will save thous­
ands of jobs for American seamen. After all, the maritime fleets
of other nations will continue to sail, our ships must, too.

�Page Eight

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, March 25, 1949

THE MEMBERSHIP SPEAKS
Seamen: Realists Or Romanticists?
Wunderlieh Touches Off Hot Debate
To the Editor:

not to say that it is foolish to
have open-hearted affection for
people or things, but it is not
necessary to get sloppy about
it.
There are a number of writers
who make the seamen a fabled,
grotesque lot. Their concoctions
of plot and characters thrive on
piracy, murder, debauchery and
the like, with overtones of amor­
ousness that would make a Don
Juan pale. The public, thereby,
has been given a very quaint
and distorted idea as to what
a seaman is really like. •

LOWERING THE COLORS

To the Editor:

In the March 11 issue of the
I have read with interest Bro­
LOG a Brother, whose name was
ther Wunderlich's story in the
withheld by request, took issue
Feb. 18 LOG, in which he sets
with my article in which I at­
forth a somewhat romanticized
tempted to portray the " average
picture of the seaman—what he
seaman of today.
is and how he feel^ about his
life.
First of all, I wish to con­
gratulate my fellow Brother who
I have also read the Brother's
wrote the article on his master­
rebuttal in the March 11 LOG,
piece of English composition. 1
in which he brings Wunderlich
am afraid—and I certainly hate
to account for dressing up the
to admit it—that several words
seaman in colorful garb of ro­
were above my head.
manticist, dreamer and adven­
turer.
I am an ^verage seafarer and
my English is very limited, but
The theme on which these
WRONG SLANT
with the aid of Mr. W.ebster I
Brothers have written is a very
interesting one. I wouldn't say The notion that the seaman succeeded in translating it all in­
A1 Sacco. OS, gathers in the flag at sundown aboard the
that Wunderlich is in error for is a swaggering roughneck with to plain English. After getting a Catahoula, Cuba Distilling tanker. The molasses-carrying tanker
the sentiments he expresses in I a penchant for strong drink is full understanding of my Bro­
was running from New York to the Dominican Republic at the
behalf of seamen, although I more prevalent than that of a ther's analysis of the seafaring
time
the pic was shot.
imagine the average Seafarer seaman who is a sober and re­ class, I must beg to differ; my
reading Wunderlich's column liable guy. As the Brother, in observations . of my shipmates
would find it hard to place him­ his rebuttal to Wunderlich's have shown me the contrary of
self in the category of a ro­ gaudy portrayal points out, we what the Brother maintains.
mantic adventurer.
are realists who are very con­ Then I also would add that
It is not, as I say, the senti­ cerned with the practical. Mak­ the author of the article in ques­
ment that is wrong, for we do, ing a living and supporting a tion is not and never will be an To the Editor:
was a vote of thanks for a swell
more or less, feel stirrings of the-i family is of great concern to average seafarer. I have to con­
Stewards department. Tony Ferheart when we see the beauty
It's been a fair trip on the raro. Carpenter on the Frances
fess that I have my doubts if
of nature unfold at sea, the arPurdue
Victory so far, that is for two years, well-known ar­
As far as pleasure goes, we he is an active seaman or has
rival at a strange port and so on.
disregarding low overtime and ound New York by all, gave us
been
one
for
long.
His
handling
take it uninhibitedly and direct­
a Mate who "does nothing except a little speech on presenting
ly. We have no illusions about of the subject shows a far differ­
SEA IS LONELY
worry about his job. He tries to minutes and repair lists. Fol­
ent
backgroimd
and
education,
life, for most of us have run the
The long days at sea beget
cut a few corners by doing odd lowing Tony, the ship's delegate
for
which
I
must
say
I
envy
gauntlet and know that only
longings to see again our famil­
jobs when no one is looking (he gave a lecture on gassing and
struggle and fight will win us him. My main goal in .life is
ies and friends. And surely we
thinks).
what
he
has
apparently
already
performing.
any conditions and security.
feel some elation at hitting our
acquired: mastery of the English We are trying to buck his un­ Tony claims I shanghaied him
home ports again after months Although I differ with Wun­ language to a degree where one scrupulous habits by putting in on here, so now I'm trying to
derlich in his conception of a can express himself the way a
at sea.
for overtime money for work he get him to payoff in Frisco to
It is rather the picture Wun­ seaman, no disparagement is in­ writer must in order to become does. Some of the boys are af­
compensate for it. Tony says his
derlich paints that is unreal. For tended. In fact. Brother Wunder­ a success.
raid of germs or other means of topcoat isn't heavy enough for
lich
is
to
be
commended
for
his
it is diffused and hackeneyed in
contamination when he breathes this lovely California weather.
COMPLETE ANALYSIS
its stark sentiment. Most of us
contributions to the LOG
down their collar.
Brrr. Now he's going back to
prefer to conceal our softer side, and for his writing on subjects So, even though I admire him
Bull.
A
very
hale
conversationalist,
or give it no stress in our traffic that are seldom touched upon immensely as a writer, I defin­
this Mate. If you're chipping the We expect to bring this sco\y
with the world, for we would
others,
itely disagree with his opinion hull, he's there to add a few in clean in all departments.
John J. Flynn of the average seafarer. As an
not be deemed unmanly. This is I
works to the subject. Such as, That's it from here.
ardent student of psychology "don't hit the hullplates so hard.
R. E. Weaver
where the seamen are concerned, See the dents you make. WSA
Ship's Delegate
and having spent my entire life will have me fired." Gr, "You
among
those who know nothing boys aren't going to charge Wa­
terpretations of its purpose dur­
To the Editor:
SEAFARER WHITE
ing these past few years, and but the sea and its men, I con­ terman very much overtime for
I have a problem which I be­ feel that this problem should be sider myself well informed in this job, are you?"
SUBMITS SOME PIX
lieve is one for the entire mem­ defined so as to cover all angles the subject and would gladly I try to give him a sarcastic
bership. The problem concerns and questions regarding it.
submit a complete article of my answer each time to show him OF CURRIER TRIP
shipping rule No. 32, regarding
observations without a flight in­ our appreciation of his bright To the Editor:
watch standers who would like The key question is this:
to fantasy and rhetoric, as my suggestions. We liv6 for the oc­ I am enclosing some pictures
Is it considered a violation of
to have an occasional watch or
fellow
Brother claims I did in casions when we say "Mate, this taken on the last trip of the
the shipping rules or any other
two offf in their home port.
my last article.
calls for two hours plus a penal­ Nathaniel Currier to Bremen. I
existing rule for a watch stander,
Lots of fellows have run afoul such as Fireman or Oiler, to So, how about it. Brothers of ty."-He then rushes to his room, would appreciate it if you could
of this rule in one manner or have another Fireman or Oiler of the seafaring class. Do you want takes a couple of aspirins and find room to publish some of
other simply because they did another watch take over his me to? Let's hear from the rest gets to work on an alibi for the them as the fellows in the pic­
not know cither of its existance watch by mutual agreement in of you. The only way to get a penalty. He'll pay off with ulcers. tures are all pretty well scat­
or exact meaning.
tered by now, but might like to
any port where there is a union complete analysis is by hearing
SMALL FRY
from the majority of seagoing
I have heard contradicting in- Hall?
see these reminders of the voy­
Here I am raving on about age.
Also, would infractions of the men.
the
Mate when he's just small I would also like to recom­
rule occur if watch standers ro­ I'll close for now with a cheer­
time
stuff. Any time a good SIU mend that the Schubert Bar in
ful
"hello"
to
all
my
former
tated their watches either as a
bunch
can't handle a creep like Bremen be put on the LOG mail­
shipmates
and
friends.
Be
see­
convenience or to equalize over­
that
I
guess we'll all anchor ing list, as it is only about three
ing
you
all
through
the
pages
time while the vessel is in a
Send in the minutes of
blocks from the grain docks and
down
on
a farm.
of
the
SEAFARERS
LOG.
port where there is a Union
your ship's meeting to the
the
proprietor goes out of his
As
our
minutes
show,
there
John
F.
Wunderlich.
Jr.
Hall? Some action on this sub­
New York HaU. Only in that
way
to help seamen have a good
ject wUl stop dissension between
time.
way can the membership act
the membership and make a PETE SAYS SEATRAIN LIFE IS TOPS
Another good thing about the
on your recommendations, delegate's job a much more
People spend a lot of money place is that it doesn't have a
To the Editor:
pleasant one.
and then the minutes can be
Just a few liftes to let you to go on a cruise in cold weather. bunch of moochers arid chiselers
printed in the LOG for the
Charles E. Burns
know all is well on the Seatrain Just think we get paid for it. hanging around as is common in
benefit of all other SIU
(Ed. Note: Swapping of Havana. We're having a good Here on the Seatrain Havana most waterfront bars. There are
crews.
watches in port is not a vio­ time on this ship at both ends of we're getting first-rate food and plenty of nice girls, however,
lation
of the shipping rules; the run. Down in Galveston the the work is far from back-break­ and there is dancing nightly. The
Hold those shipboard meet­
however,
the Union suggests boys are getting used to stopping ing. This is the first time I have place is at Liegnitzstrasse 38.
ings regularly, and send
Shelly C. White
that if a crewmember wishes in at Brother Walter Brightwell's been on a Seatrain and it's the
those minutes in as soon as
(Ed. Note: A couple of Bro­
to take off for more than a new ginmill, the Circle Bar and best job I ever had.
possible. That's the SIU wayl
E. (Pete) DiPieiro
ther White's pictures appear
couple of watches he contact Grill. The seafarer-Business-man
Seatrain Havana
on page six of this issue.
the Union Hall for a relief.)
is serving good food.

Worry Wart Mate On Purdue
Victory Suffers OT Ulcers

Port Time Off Rule Draws Query

Send Those Minutes

�Friday. March 25. 1949

THE SEAFARERS

SCANNING THE HARBOR

Paradisacal Scene
By LEO H. SIGL
Tropical heaven—
Yes. that it be;
Oh. lucky seven—
Conjuring sea.
Tropical moonlight.
A kiss from your lips.
A sign and a smile.
Enchanting seas;
Trees in the night.
A pause from eclipse.
A chill for awhile.
A mist in the breeze.
Paradisiacal love scene.
Tropical breeze.
Tropical love birds.
A kiss! That would please.

Stages Of Man
By I. H. PEPPER
To be born—
To ponder where from.
To love—
To wonder why.
To grow old—
And question purpose.
To die—
And know the answers.

Change Of Mind
By I. H. PEPPER
Down to the cold,
cold river he went.
Grieved at the way
his life had been spent.
He gazed at the water;
took out his knife—
Then taxied on home
and murdered his wife.

On The Way
(Submitted By
DANIEL D. RUIZ)
Another day spent out.
And I lie on the hatch
Feeling the propellor beat
Like a wild heart.
And I think of you.
Everywhere I look
I see you; in the rigging.
Taut with wind; in the sky.
The solitude of space.
Nothing is so lost
As' a ship at sea;
No man so lonely
As a sailor.

Sailing Short
All delegates aboard SlU
ships are urged to make cer­
tain that every ship is fully
manned before it leaves port.
If the company tries to vio­
late the contract manning
scale by sailing shorts the
' ship's delegate should call
the nearest Union Hall immediately.
The Union will take im­
mediate action to see that
cur agreements are observed
to the letter, as it did in the
recently-reported instances of
Isthmian vessels sailing short.
Know your contract and
report all violations to the
. Union right away.
\

LOG

Page Nine

Aiding Other Unions Moves
Labor Forward, SaysMember

something the shipowners would .
To the Editor:
I'd like to extend a bit of in- have loved to see us do.
formation that might be of edu- Not only would the ILA strike
cational benefit to some of our have .lasted longer, but when we
members, a few of whom do not went on strike we would not
understand why we assist other have their much needed support.
unions in regards to picketing, No one ^can take all the time;
distributing leafiets, etc. I would one has to give sometime.
UNITY DID IT
like to clarify this point.
These men say we had no bus­ When we supported the gar­
iness in the Wall Street Strike ment district beef, we enabled
and the Garment District beef. them to obtain contracts that
They're wrong. As a union it is were believed impossible to get.
our business and duty to as­ It wasn't just our union alone
sist other unions to obtain un­ that achieved this fact it was
ion wages, benefits and contracts. the unity and cooperation of
We cannot isolate ourselves to several unions combined.
When and if the Bland-Magnuthe job of handling only our
affairs of the sea any more than son Bill is passed, it won't be
our nation can isolate itself from solely our doing, but the com­
bined "effort of all the unions
world trade.
Had we not cooperated to the who aided us. There were many
- Robin Tuxford crewmembers line the rail in Capetown
harbor to catch a peek at the SS Sterling Castle in the back­ fullest extent with the ILA who aided us as past issues of
ground. When the crew wasn't taking in the sights they spent when they were on strike we the LOG will show.
their off-time practicing baseball around the decks. They later would have been guilty of sabo­ These organizations came to
taging the labor movement, our .assistance not because they
took on local teams in Durban.
are thinking solely of their own
good, but because it is an un­
written bond between laboring
men and labor organizations to
help each other. That's what is
meant by the term labor move­
ment.
A great combination of
One thing that I think that
To the Editor:
labor
unions
of all affiliations
The welfare plan just adopted will require consideration in our moving in one direction for the
by the ILA, in which about organization's study of a wel­ betterment of laboring men ev­
22,000 members will participate, fare plan is the nature of our erywhere. If we help another
is one that merits the endorse­ employment. Seamen, unlike men union we are moving the whole
ment of the majority of Seafar­ in other industries, change their movement along one more step.
employment several times in the
ers, in my opinion.
James Carroll
If, in our quest for a welfare course of a year, often working
plan for Seafarers, we could ob­ for as many as five companies
tain something similar but which in that time. Thus we would
would be flexible enough to per­ have to arrive at a plan where­
mit improvements from time to by the employment would be
time, we would be solidifying judged on a cumulative basis, re­
our position and the security of gardless of the various compan­
ies for which a man worked.
our membership.
Catching a breather between
I mention this because if a To the Editor:
meals. PO Messman Frenchy BROTHER FILIPPIS
man's
claim is honored only I am sending you the minutes
Blanchard grabs a smoke. Pho­
for
the
time he works for an in­ of our last meeting aboard the
LIKES
LOG
SERIES
to taken by Rudolph (Gabby)
dividual
company, then we'll SS W. E. Downing, Mathiasen
Gross, who invites Tuxford ON WELFARE PLAN
have
lots
of
Brothers sticking to tanker. The crewmembers would
crewmembers interested in To the Editor:
one
company,
which, in turn,
copies of the photographs to
Glad to read you are taking could develop company-minded- appreciate it if these minutes
were entered in the LOG.
write him at 2 Marshall Street. up the fight for organized labor
ness
among
some
of
our
mem­
Wallingford, Conn.
on every front. Your data on bers. This would not be of bene­ We expect to arrive in Monte­
video, Uruguay, on March 8,
welfare plans is really something
fit to the membership.
We
have signed six months ar­
to think about.
ARMORED CORPS
The
welfare
plan
is,
in
my
ticles
and expect to be out that
Hope you keep on the educa­
SEAFARER ASKS
opinion,
a
wonderful
and
very
long.
The
articles were signed in
tional side for us and our famil­
sound
idea.
But
for
the
best
New
York
on Dec. 1, 1948.
PALS TO WRITE
ies, who do not fully appreciate
interests
of
all,
let's
try
to
work
So
far
the
Captain has been
the value of organization, nor the
To the Editor:
out
something
solid
right
.in
the
requested
by
the company to
aims of the SIU.
I would like to learn the ad­ Your efforts to create a better beginning, even if we have to procure three months' stores at
take a little longer in evolving Montevideo. The skipper. Cap­
dress of the U.S. Maritime Com­ understanding between us clari­ a plan to do so. It'll be time
tain McPherson, has been very
mission for the purpose of secur­ fies and justifies the fact that we well worth spending.
cooperative
so far in the voyage.
are a Union of stolid Seafarers.
ing ribbons issued during the
At
each
port
he has tried to ob­
*
Luis
Ramirez
Lewis J. Filippis
tain American currency for the
late war. I've made quite a
boys.
search, but no one seems to
RAISE 'EM HIGH, BOYS
He is also a good man to deal
know exactly where I should
with whenever we have beefs.
write for these items.
He has requested that all our
In March of 1948 I quit sailing
beefs be written down on paper
and have been a "doggie" for the
and copies presented to him, the
past seven months. It sure is a
Chief Engineer and the Chief
lot different that being aboard a
Mate. In this way, he says, ev­
solid SIU ship, but I think I'll
erything will be squared away
live through it. In case some of
with less friction between the
my old shipmates are lying
licensed and unlicensed person­
around the Hall with time on
nel.
their hands, I'd be glad to hear
Joseph Scaramuiz
from them. I've got more time
Ship's Delegate
than money and will answer
SS W. E. Downing
every letter received. My ad­
dress is: Pvt Harold Watson, RA
Scotty Ross' Widow
16267706, Hq. Btry., 14th AFA
En., 2nd Armd. Div., Camp Hood,
Thanks Seafarers
Texas.
To the Editor:
Snuffy Waison
I wish to take this opportunity
to thank the members of the
(Ed. Nole: Write to the fol­
Seafarers International Union
lowing address specifying the
for their kindness and sympathy
ribbons you are applying for
during the illness and death of
and they will send you the
my husband, William (Scotty)
necessary forms to be filled
SS Suzanne crewmembers cool off with the brew at the Ross,
out: Captain Frank Rusk.
With best wishes for the fu­
Mayaguiz
Dock Terminal in Puerto Rico. Left to right—Carl
Executive Secretary. Medals
ture,
I remain
Wamsley. Luis Ramirez and Isadora Levy. 'Ramirez, who sub­
Award Board. U.S. Maritime
Mrs. William Ross
mitted the photo, stated that the shot was made by "a lady
Commission. Washington 25.
Mobile, Ala.
beachcomber."
D. C.)

Complete Study To Insure
'Solid' Welfare Plan Asked

Downing Skipper
Has Right Tack
On Cooperation

�Page Ten

THE SEAFARERS LOG

Friday. March 25. 1949

Some Facts About Social Security
Survivors* Insurance

other than employment does not
Men and women in service are person who paid funeral ex­ insurance means income for your
affect the right to receive these not under social security because penses.
old age, and protection for your
Your Federal old age and sur- payments.
they are employees of the Fed­
Where death occurred on or family if you die.
virors insurance, which will pro­ Payments to a wife will stop eral Government.
Eifter January 1, 1947, lump-sum
If you work on a job covered
vide income for your old age, if she is divorced from her hus­
payments are paid to the widow, by social security, tell your wife
also provides protection for your band, and payments to a widow,
Lump-Sum Payments or widower, and only if the that there wiU be something
family in the event of your young or old, will be stopped if
If a worker dies leaving no spouse was living with the wag^- coming to her if you die. The
death, at any age.
she remarries. Notice, however, one eligible who could claim a eamer at the time ,of death.
chances are that she doesn't
If a worker dies "fully in­ that if a widow remarries and monthly insurance payment in
If there is no widow or know it.
sured" tmder this part of the her payment is stopped, the pay­ the month of death, a lump-sum. widower, or the spouse was not
For everybody we suggest two
Social Security Act, monthly in­ ments for the children may con­ payment'may, be made.
living with the wage-earner,
rules
to remember: '
surance payments will go to:
tinue.
Again, the wage earner must lump-sum payments may be paid
to
the
person
who
paid
the
fu­
His children until they are
1. Whenever a worker reaches
A child's payment is suspended have been either "fully insured'
18 years old
65, if he has been working
if he works, and stopped entirely or "currently insured" under this neral expenses.
His widow, if she has such
under social security, he
if he is adopted by someone out­ part of the social security pro­ The claim for lump-sum pay­
a young child in her care
should get in touch with
side his immediate family. A gram. These terms have been ment must be filed within two
His widow, if she is 65 or
the nearest office of the So­
child's payment will also be discussed earlier. The amount years of the wage earner's death.
older, or when she reaches stopped if he or she marries.
cial Security Administration
payable is from $60 to about There are some exceptions for
65.
and find out where he
Similar restrictions are im­ $250, depending upon earnings. servicemen and their survivors,
or
where
the
wage
earner
died
If a worker leaves no widow posed on dependent parents re­
stands.
Where death occurred before
or child, his parents may qualify ceiving monthly insurance pay­ January 1, 1947 these lump-sum outside of the United States.
2. If a worker dies after work­
for monthly insurance payments ments.
payments go to the widow,
ing under social security,
Things To Remember
at age 65, but only if they were
widower, children, grandchildren
someone should get in touch
dependent on him.
or parents in the order named,
Your SS Card
If you have been following this
at once, with the nearest
Lump-sum death payments are
but if none of these survive then series of articles you know .that
office of the Social Security
If you have a social security the lump-gum may be paid to the
made where there is no one
Federal old-age and- survivors
Administration.
eligible to claim a monthly in­ card, the Social Security Ad­
ministration is keeping an in­
surance payment.
A worker is "fully insured" if dividual record" of your earnings
he has worked and has been paid in a big central office at Balti­
at least $50 a quarter (under so­ more, Maryland.
When you work under social
cial security) for one-half the
New York, the greatest port 68—W. 28th St.
35—Jefferson St.
quarters after January 1, 1937, security your employer sends in in the world, poses a problem 72—W. 30th St.
.
•
36—Jefferson St.
or after age 21, and before the each three months a report of for anyone who is unfamiliar 73—W. 33rd St.
37—Clinton St.
your earnings, and gives your with its vast network of harbor 74—w: 34th St.
quarter of death38—Montgomery St.
A wage earner who has name and social security account facilities. The SEAFARERS LOG 75—W. 35th St.
39—Montgomery St.
worked and has been paid at number, as you gave it to him. publishes the following list of 76_W. 36th St.
40—Gouverneur Slip
least $50 a quarter for 6 out of These reports go finally to the metropolitan-area piers and their 77—W. 37th St.
41—Gouverneur Slip
the last 13 quarters of his life Social Security Administration locations in the hope that it will 78—W. 38th St.
42—Gouverneur Slip
may be "currently insured" if he office at Baltimore, where they serve as a useful guide for SIU
79—W. 39th St.
43—Jackson
St.
are posted to the individual members:
is not "fully insured."
80—W. 40th St.
44—Jackson St.
In this case, monthly insurance records.
81—W. 41st St."
67—E. 19th St.
payments will be made to a
There are more than 70,000,000
NORTH
RIVER
83—W. 43rd St.
68—E.
20th St.
young child, or to a widow with social security accounts in Balti­
69—E.
21st St.
84—W.
44th
St.
such a child in her care, or a more. No one can keep your A—Nr. the Aquarium
86—W.
46th
St.
70—E.
22nd
St.
1—Nr. the Aquarium
lump-sum payment may be record straight unless you do
88—W.
48th
St.
73
-E.
25th
St.
2—Battery PI.
made.
your part! You must see that
105—E. 90th St.
90_W. 50th St.
3—Morris St.
Social security protection was your employer has your name
106—E.
91st St.
92—W.
52nd
St.
7—Morris &amp; Rector Sts.
given to veterans of this war by and social security account num­
110—Moving
Docks
93_W.
53rd
St.
B^Rector St.
legislation which the President ber just as they appear on your
94_W.
54th
St.
9—Carlisle St.
signed on August 10, 1946.
social security card.
95_W. 55th St.
HARLEM-RIVER
10—^Albany
St.
If a veteran served 90 days or
You should have only one so­
96—W.
56th
St.
more during the war, and was cial security account. If you lose 11—Cedar St.
123—E. 108th St.
97_W. 57th St.
honorably discharged, he is con­ your card, get a duplicate with 13—Cortlandt St.
132—E. 117th St.
98—W. 58th St.
sidered to be "fully insured" un­ the same number. If you change 14—Fulton St.
99_W. 59th St.
der the Social Security Act, if your name, be sure to notify the 15—Vesey St.
BRONX
119_W.
135th St.
he dies within three years after Social Security Administration, 16—Barclay St.
120—W. 155th St.
E. 138th St.—Ft. Morris, Tiffany
his discharge.
so your record can be corrected.. 17—Park PI.
121—W. 156th St.
Sts.
18—Murray St.
Payment will be calculated as
If
you
want
to
know
how
122—W.
157th
St..
184th
St.—(HR.) (Ford ham
though the veteran had an aver­
19—Warren St.
much
your
social
security
ac­
123—W.
158th
St.
Landing)
age monthly wage of $160. This
20—Chambers St.
124—^Dyckman St.
actually works out to something count shows, you' may have a 21—Duane St.
statement
once
each
year.
Mis­
B W 67th St.
BROOKLYN
over $56 a month if the veteran
22—Jay St.
takes
in
social
security
record
D
W
68th
St.
leaves a widow and two children.
23—Harrison St.
Bush Dock Piers 1-8—Bet. 50th
E W 69th St.
This applies to all veterans usually cannot be corrected after 25:—N. Moore (New)
&amp; 40th Sts.
four
years.
F W 69th St.
who qualify, even if they have
26—Beach St. (New)
3—Ft.
Doughty St.
H W 70th St.
never worked under social se­
27—Hubert St.
4—Ft.
of Vine St.
Who
Is
Covered
G W 70th St.
curity.
28—Laighl) St.
5—Ft. of Poplar St.
Grand
Central
RR
Piers
If you work for somebody else 29—Vestry St.
There is one exception. Since
6—Ft. of Middagh St.
66 St. 7 Ave.
this special payment is based on in business or industry you are 32—Canal St.
7—Ft. of Cranberry St.
3 blk. W. Subway
military service, no payment will probably under the Federal old- 34—Canal St.
8—^Ft. of Orange St.
be made under this new part of age and survivors insurance pro­ 36—Charlton St.
9—Ft. of Pineapple St.
EAST RIVER
the Social Security Act if the gram.
37—Charlton St.
10—Ft. of Clark St.
veteran's dependents get a vet­
4—Broad St.
Actually the law says that if 38—King St.
11—Bet. Clark &amp; Pierrepont St.
eran's pension from the Veterans you work for someone else, with­ 39—^W. Houston St. .
5—Jeannette Pk.
12—Ft. of Pierrepont St.
Administration, since such pay­ in the United States, Alaska or 40—Clarkson St.
6—Jeannette Pk.
„
15—Ft. of Montague St.
ments are also based on military Hawaii, you are under this pro­ 41—Leroy St.
7—Coenties Slip
16—Ft. of Remsen St.
service.
8—Cuylers Al.
42—^Moi-ton St.
gram unless your work is:
17—Ft. of Joralemon St.
Every person receiving either 1. Agricultural labor.
9—Old Slip
43—Barrow St.
18—Ft. of State St.
Federal old-age or survivors in10—Jones La.
2. Domestic service in a pri­ 44—Weehawken St.
20—Ft. of Atlantic Ave.
isurance payments is required to
11—Jones La.
45—W. 10th St.
vate home.
23—Ft. of Pacific St.
report certain events which may
13_Wall St.
3. Casual labor not connected 46—Charles La.
24—Ft. of Amity St.
suspend or stop payments.
14—^Depeyster St.
47—Charles La.
with a business.
26—Ft. of Congress St.
Any person receiving a
15—Fletcher St.
4. Service performed for a s(m, 48—W. 11th St.
27—Ft. of Baltic St.
monthly insurance payments who
16—Burling Slip
a daughter, or a spouse, or 49—Bank St.
29—Ft. of Kane St.
works under social security and
17—Fulton Market
by a child under 21 work­ 50—Bethune St.
30—Ft. of Irving St.
earns as much as $15 is re­
18—^BeekmanSt.
ing for his father or mother. 51—Jane St.
32—Ft. of Degraw St.
quired to notify the Social Se19—Peck Slip &amp; Beekman St. 33, 34, 35, 36, 37, 38—South of
5. Services in the employ of 52—Gansevoort St.
eurity Administration. His pay­
20—Peck Slip
the Federal, State or local 53—Little W. 12th St.
Hamilton Ave. (Atlantic
ment is suspended for the month
21—Dover St.
government.
54—W. 13th St.
Basin)
Su which he (or she) works.
22—James Slip
6. Services in the employ of a 56—W. 14th St.
39—Ft. of Coffey St.
&gt;
Work that is not covered by
25—Oliver St.
religious, charitable, or edu­ 57—W. 15th St.
40—Ft. of Van Dyk St.
Federal old-age and survivors in26—Catharine Slip
cational non-profit organiza­ 58—W. 16th St.
41—Ft. of Beard St.
eurance does not affect the pay­
27—Catharine Slip
tion.
59—W. 17th &amp; 18th Sts.
45—Ft. of Conover St.
ments. A retired worker, or a
28—Catharine &amp; Market Slip
If you work for yourself or if 60—W. 19th St.
46—Ft. of Van Brunt St.
young widow receiving pay­ you are a partner in business 61—W. 20th St.
2^Market Slip
47—Ft. of Richards St.
ments, may" operate a business you are not under this law. If 62—W. 22nd St.
30—Market Slip
48, 49, 50—Bet. Richards &amp;
©r do domestic or agricultural you work for a railroad you are 64—W. 24th St.
31—Pike Slip
Dwight St.
work without suspending the under the Railroad.. Retirement 65—W. 25th St. _
32—Pike St.
monthly insurance payments.
51, 52, 53, 54—Ft. of Columbia
33—Rutgers St.
Act, which is entirely separate 66—W. 26th St.
Of course, income from sources from this program.
St. (Erie Basin)
34—Rutgers St.
67—W. 27th St.

New York City Pier Direetory

�FtidajT' Match 25. 1949

Page Eleven

THE SEA FA RER S LflG

Bernstein Bid For Passenger
Ship Subsidy Ciears Obstacie
{Continuei from Page I)
ceive the Commission's approval.
The General Meigs, which is
scheduled to be returned to the
Maritime Commission this week
by the American President Lines,
like the Gordon, is capable of
carrying up to 1,600 pasBengers.
The company has stated that
it is not seeking a long term
charter of the ships, as the final
objective is to purchase outright
two P-2 class carriers from the
Maritime Commission.
The two ships eyed for pur­
chase by the company are the
General John Pope and the Gen­
eral William Weigel, which
would be concerted to carry 750
passengers. Immediate approval
of the company's application
would allow the ships to be in
operation by mid-August. The
chartered ships, carrying 1,300
passengers, would be ready for
service by mid-May and have a
twenty-one day turnaround.
An old hand at operating pas­
senger ships, Bernstein prior to
the war owned a large passenger
fleet. A German subject he op­

erated his Red Star Line between
Antwerp and New York.
When Hitler came to power
Bernstein's property was con­
fiscated. He fled to this country
and went into the freight trade,
operating freighters in the tramp
trade. During the war he oper­
ated one freighter which he
owned. Following the end of hos­
tilities, he operated 12 freighters
under charter for some time.
He then attempted to resume
tourist travel operations under
the U.S. flag, but was unable to
work out his plans with the Gov­
ernment. For several months last
year he operated the SS Contin­
ental under the Panamanain flag.
The SIU has thrown its full
support behind the Bernstein
move and recommends that Sea­
farers write to the Maritime
Commission urging their approv­
al of the Bernstein application
or a subsidy to operate passen­
ger ships in trade route 8.
The Bernstein Line is contract­
ed to the SIU, and the Union's
relations with the company have
been excellent.

SS SEATRAIN HAVANA
A. Packert, $2.00; J. Scott, $2.00;
INDIVIDUAL DONATIONS
H. R. Hutchins, $5.00; A. Olagiiibel
• C. Pipinos, $1.00: K. E. Mori., $1.00; A. Browne, $1.00; M. Laca, $5.00; W.
Pietro Paulln, $5.00;. Leslie L. Wilson, Wung, $5.00; C. L. Graham, $2.00; T. $2.00; J. A. Anderson, $1.00; J. B
$5.00; C. Papactimitriou, $1.00; Linous Smigielski, $1.00; R. Ruff, $1.00; H. Lightfoot, $I.OO:B '. R. LeBlanc, $1.00;
Otto Sehon, $5.00; Herman Meijer, Childs, $2.00; J. Byrne, $2.00; N. Tas- G. S. Wickers, $2.00; F. Massey, $2.00
$5.00;
Milton J.
Karlovec, $5.00; ka, $1.00; P. Willoughby, $2.00; J.
SS STEEL ARCHITECT
Thomas M. Cower, $5.00; S. Miskow, Stachowic2, $1.00.
A. Sprung, $1.00; G. B. Samat, $2.00;
$3.00; Frank Delgadoi $1.00; C. B.
A. L. Driessens, $2.00; S. Rivers, $2.00;
SS NEW. LONDON
Rodriguez, $tKOO; Philip Wolf, $5.00;
H. E. Mossburg, Jr., $1.00; M. Stein- R. J. Sturba, $2.00; W. Nash, $2.00;
Thomas J. Heffarty, $5.00; Rosarlo P, sapir, $1.00; E. Crosby, $2.00; C. P. Jemigan, $2.00; J. E. Melton, $3.00;
Nieves, $5.00.
Sanders, $2.00; A. F. Callaiian, $3.00; A. C. Taylor, $3.00; E. E. Roberts,
F. J. West, $1.00; J. B. Schutte G, E. Lothrop, $1.00.
$3.00.
$2.00; Thomas E. Freeland, $5.00; Wal
SS TEAL
SS
BEATRICE
ter W. Love, $2.00; Francis T. DiCarlo,
J. P. Hancock, $1.00; D. E. Nash,
G. EdeC $5.00.
$3.00; C. J. Robles, $1.00; C. S. Kowal
$1.00; W. R. Wilkins, $2.00; J. Vilasis,
ski. $2.00; J. C. Simmons, $1.00
SS MICHAEL
$2.00; L. W. Ritch, $2.00; R. W. JopMichael Miller, $2.00; R. S. Cantor,
J. Norris, $2.00; J. R. Gordon, $1.00; lin, $2.00; R. Gischram, $2.00; O.
$1.00; L. D. Furman, $5.00; Wm.
James Stewart, $1.00; M. P. Cox, $3.00; •Bowdreau, $4.00; A. D. Amaral. $2.00;
Armstrong, $5.00.
F. T. DiCarlo, $2.00; G. O'Rourke, C. S. Couch, $1.00; W. W. Perkins,
, SS GOV. BIBBS
$1.00;
W. F.
Knesek, $1.00;
B. $1.00; E. H. Falkner, $1.00; W. J.
F. M. Welch, $1.00; C. M. Futch Schwartz, $2.00; Jose DaCunka, $1.00; Schafer, $2.00; N. A. Cobb, $2.00.
$2.00; H. A. Garcia, $2.00; P. B. Ryan E. A. Gibson, $3.00; J. J. Martus, $1.00;
SS JULESBURG
$2.00; B. C. Lynn, $2.00; W. F. Harris. Jose Dacuhna, $2.00; C. ^ M. Glj^jtis,
L. J. Guillot, $5.00; R. L, Smith.
$3.00; I. A. Chauncey, $2.00; E. Prit $3.00; M. Livanos, $3.00,-' E. Papalios,
chard, $2.00; M. Bernes, $2.00; R. B $3.00; Omar Ames, $3.00; C. J. Quinnt, $2.00; G. Pagano, $1.00; A. Seeberger,
$1.00; H. Rodgers, $2.00.
Hunt, $4.00; W. C. Coleman, $1.00.
$1.00.
SS HEYWARD
SS ALCOA PATRIOT
SS R. SEMMES
H. V, Erickson, $2.00; W. M. 5.
J. O. Beck, $1.00; W. V. Click, $2.00
J. Valencia, $1.00; J. D. Otto, $1.00: Forney, $2.00; R. J. McConnell, $1.00;
H. J. Thompson, $2.00; W. J. Blancol J. Bubose, $1.00; F. Simione, $2.00.
J. W. Eichenberg. $2.00; F. L. Barclay,
$1.00; E. R. Crowell, $1.00; C. Buleoa
SS HILTON
$2.00; K. G. Karlson, 2.00; W. Stevens,
$1.00; C. J. Fetters, $2.00.
E. T. McCambridge, $1.00; V. Speys, $2.00; A. A. K. Leiro, $1.00; G. K.
SS HELEN
$2.00.
Brown, $1.00.
• D. Nixon. $5.00; W. J. Smith, $1.00
SS MARINE ARROW
SS ARLYN
A. Coelho, $5.00; C. Itquierdo, $1.00.
R , H. Ingle, $1.00; G. R. EspenC. Gunsett, $1.00; D. Seda, $1.00; S.
SS ROBIN KETTERING
slade, $1.00; J. J. Davies, $2.00; W. Nathan, $1.00; P. Bazaar, $1.00; E.
J. Hauser, $5.00; W. Hollard, $5.00 Jones, $2.00; B. Price, $2.00; J. AxelConrad, $1.00; L. Brigida, $1.00; P.
son, $2.00; L. Dower, $2.00; P. C. Perez. $1.00; L. Soler, Jr., $1.00; F.
Mendo2;a, $1.00; M. Wautlet, $2.00; R. Bonosora, $1.00; F. Carraro, $5.00; A.
ROBERT McALPINE
JOE STACKOWICZ
Bridge, $1.00; J. Wolkowski, $1.00; C. Torres, $1.00; P. Seidenberg, Jr., $1.00.
Anyone knowing his where­
Mail is being held for you at
Partello, $1.00.
SS. AFOUNDRIA
abouts
is asked to contact his
the
SIU
San
Francisco
Hall.
P. F. Rasmussen, $2.0(1; J. F. Kozar,
SS P. LAFITTE
mother, Mrs. Sylvia McAlpine,
ft
F. Douglas, $1.00; B. Woturski, $1.00; A. P. Lazzaro, $1.00; C. Micallef,
McGregor, Michigan. He has
$1.00; R. H. Porturnicki, $2.00; L. $1.00; G. A. Burke, $3.00; W. A.
JAY I. BROWN
Beyer, $1.00; D. C. Austel, $2.00; K.
BALTIMORE
..14 North Gay St. Gilmore, $1.00; J. Sharp, $1.00.
missing
since he payed off the
Bill Porter asks you to con­
G. Sivertsen, $2.00; J. Araya, $1.00; C.
William Rentz, Agent
Mulberry 4540
Choctaw
Trail in New Orleans
SS T. CRESAP
Moonan, $2.00; W. Koszubski, $2.00; tact him at 203 Washington St.,
BOSTON
276 Slate St.
T. Kuhn,$2.00 .
on
Feb.
2,
1946.
R. Padilla, $2.00; E. M. Metts, $2.00; Steubenville, - Ohio.
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Richmond 2-0140
H. Connolly, $2.00; M. Rzenkowicz,
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141
SS ALAWAI
ft ft ft
GALVESTON
30823rd St.
C. V. Parker, $i.OO; J. G. Avery, $2.00; M. Coratti, $1.00; John FedesoJESSE R. ADAMS
Keith Alsop, Agent
Phone 2-8448 $2.00; J. H. Parnell, $2.00; H. J. Sul- vich, $1.00.
MOBILE
1 South Lawrence St. livan. $1.00; R. L. McCombs, $1.00;
SS ROBIN NOWBRAY
Contact your mother at LaCal Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-1754 Bill Brannan, $1.00; L. L. Childs, $1.00;
C. C. Hunter, $1.00; R. N. Kelley, guna Beach, California.
NEW ORLEANS
523 Bienville St. A. S. Holland, $1.00; J. M. Kelly, $1.00; $2.00; F. F. Farthing, $1.00; J. Mor­
Members who forward
E. Sheppard, Agent
Magnolia 6112-6113 E. W. Seeley, $5.00.
ft ft ft
gan, $5.00; A. Thevik, $2.00; W. Mortheir membership books to
NEW YORK
51 Beaver St.
ANGEL CABRERA
rell, $2.00; R. J. Sullivan, $1.00; D. D.
SS POLARIS
Joe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784
the
New York Hall for retire­
G. M. Maximo, $3.00; R. R, Jose, Lupton, $2.00; E. T. Petterson, $1.00;
Your son, Charles, asks you to
NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St.
1.00; Wm. J. D. O'Connor, $25.00; J. A. Mosher, $1.00; R. O. Kuntz, $1.00.
write
him
at
112
Garfield
Ave­
ment are urged to mark the
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
SS CHRYSANTHP STAR
W. Young, $2.00; Elison Brown, $1.00;
nue, Endicott, N. Y. Emergency. envelope with the notatioa
PHILADELPHIA...614-16 No. 13th St.
C. G. Crevier, $2.00; J. A. Pilutis,
Receipt No. 75399, $2.00; F. Boyne,
J. Sheehan, Agent
Poplar 5-1217
ft ft ft
$2.00; S. R. Masters, $1.00; S. Wallace, $4.00.
"Attention: Sth floor," in-or­
SAN FRANCISCO
85 Third St.
CHARLES SLANINA
$2.00; J. Ramas, $1.00; F. J. Clinski,
Frenchy Michelet, Agent Douglas 2-5475
der to insure quicker hand­
$2.00; R. Pole, $1.00; R. M. Guarino,
Communicate with your wife
SAN JUAN, P.R.... .252 Ponce de Leon
1.00.
ling of the matter.
L. Craddock, Agent
San Juan 2-5996
at East Shirley Street, Box 30,
SS MOSTANK
SAVANNAH
2 Abercom St.
Nassau, Bahamas.
Marking of the envelope in
R. Severson, $1.00; F. Kaufman,
Jim DraVdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728
the manner advised above
$1.00;
1.
Peacock,
$2.00;
W.
Davas,
ft ft ft
TACOMA
...1519 Pacific St.
GUY F. PLAHN
will save time and will result
Broadway 0484 1.00; R. Derrough, $1.00; W. Clifton,
TAMPA
1809-1811 N. Franklin St. $1.00.
in
prompt return of the book
Get in touch with A. Joffrion
Ray White, Agent
Phone M-1323
SS h{ONTGOMERV CITY
to
the
sender.
at 215 Canal Street, New Or­
WILMINGTON, Calif., 227 Avalon Blvd.
R. J. Rundberg, $2.00;' A. Leiner,
leans.
Terminal 4-2874 $2.00; G. E. Zimmerman, $2.00.
HEADQUARTERS.. 51 Beaver St, N.Y.C.
SS HILTON
SECRETARY-TREASURER
A. Jensen, $2.00; W. L. Mauck,
Paul Hall
$1.00; H. L. »Alexander, $1.00; F.
(Continued from Page 1)
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
Mazet, $1.00; E. Caravona, $2.00; F.
side
the CTMA plea by an
Lindsey Williams
Fischer, $2.00.
The SEAFARERS LOG as the official publication of the Sea­
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURER
anonymous
commentator:
SS STEEL ADVOCATE
farers International Union is available to all members who wish
Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
M. Hook, $3.00; G. Shaffer. $2.00;
Joseph Volpian
"A Fool is a man who knows to have it sent to their home free of charge for the enjoyment of
W. Piedzczuk, $2.00; B. Centeno, $2.00;
their families and themselves when ashore. If you desire to have
everything,
A. Duda, $2.00; A. Wargo, $1.00; A.
the LOG sent to you each week address cards are on hand at every
Gintel, $2.00; T. Anurychowski, $2.00;
"A smart man is one who pro­ SIU branch for this purpose.
H. Bullock, $1.00; F. Proctor, $1.00;
HONOLULU
16 Merchant St. M. Gulp, $2.00; A. B4namili, $3.00.
fits by his mistakes,
However, for those who are at sea or at a distance frorh a SIU
Phone 5-8777
SS
T.
NUTTALL
"A sucker is one who can better haU, the LOG reproduces below the form used to request the LOG,
PORTLAND
Ill W. Bumside St.
D. Tussel, $3.00; J. C. WaUace,
Beacon 4336
himself, but doesn't;
which you can fill out, detach and send to: SEAFARERS LOG, 51
$1.00;
A. Baum, $3.00; F. F. Reese,
RICHMOND, Calif
257 Sth St.
Beaver
Street, New York 4, N. Y.
$1.00;
T.
O.
Rainey,
$1.00;
E.
C
Hill,
"Don't be a sucker. Vote YES
Phone 2599
SAN FRANCISCO
59 Clay St. $1.00; M. M, Cross, $1.00; J, M. Foster.
for SIU,
Douglas 2-8363 $1.00.
"Apd be SURE of your
SS STEEL SEAFARER
SEATTLE
86 Seneca St.
J. R. Longhurst, $2.00; R. J. Rod­
Main 0290
protection!"
WILMINGTON
440 Avalon Blvd. riguez, $2.00; M. E. Folts, $3.00; A. A.
The voting of the Government
Terminal 4-3131 Felts, $2.00; S. Vergara, $1.00; E. R.
Goulet, $4.00; P. Delacemn, $2.00; J. Camp will wind up the NLRB
P. Trust, $2.00; A. Rodriguez, $2.00;
R. G. Atizada, $2.00; T. M. Diahgson, election, which began with the
Name
MONTREAL
1227 PhUipa Square $2.00; P. B. Aton, $5.00; G. G. Malby, balloting of . the SS Fort Hoskins
Plateau 6700—^Marquette 5909 $4.00; E. A. Ely, $1.00; S. C. Gibbons, crew in New York on Feb. 20.
PORT ARTHUR
63 Cumberland St. $5.00; B. Duplantis, $4.00; R. Marrero, Other Cities Service ships whose
Street Address
Phone North 1229 $1.00.
ballots
are
already
in
are
the
PORT COLBORNE
103 Durham St.
. SS R. INGER30LL
Winter Hill, Bents Fort, Royal
Phone: 8501
City
Zone
State
C. H. Lewis, $1.00; C, Harvey, $1.00;
TORONTO
lllA Jarvie St. D. B. Militar, $2.00; C. Oliver, $2.00; Oak, Salem Maritime, Lone Jack
Elgin 8719 GO. B, Smith, $1.00; Guy McKinley, and Bradford
Island.
Seven
Signed
VICTORU^ B.C.
902 Bough ton St. $5.00; A. Debelich, $3.00; L. B. Gooch,
other
ships
were
voted
last
year.
Empire 4831 $2.00; H. B. Rains, $1.00; C. A. SchuesVANCOUVER
868 HamUton St. sler, $2.00; R. Cronin, $2.00: A. C. They went overwhelmingly SIU
Book No.
Pacific 7824 Touchon, $2.00; E. M. Villapol, $1.00: and were so certified by the
NLRB. '
P. Daily, $2.00; J. L. Neel, $2.00.

SlU HULLS

SIU, A&amp;6 District

RETIRING BOOKS

Gov't Camp
Should Ballot
By March 31

Notice To All SIU Memliers

SUP

Canadian District

PLEASE PRINT INFORMATION
To the Editor:
I would like the SEAFARERS LOG mailed to thei
address below:

�THE

Page Twelve

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, March 25. 1949

1:^

WHAT
ttfllWK.,

•• •
'•

-v

QUESTION: Shipboard and shoreside educational meetings are becoming increasingly
popular with the membership. What do you think are some of the topics that should be dis­
cussed at these sessions?
-mm:.

T. FORSBERG. ABs
The membership, especially Ihe
newcomers, should be informed
of fhe SIU's role in bettering
conditions in maritime. Although
this has been stressed at meet­
ings which I have attended, there
are alyrays members around who
weren't ashore at the earlier
meetings. This matter cannot be
stressed enough. It should be
hammered away at time and
time again, so that the member­
ship will appreciate the condi­
tions that have been won. Con­
ditions on SIU ships are much
better than any others, and I've
been on ships of many flags and
unions. We're at the top. The
youngsters should be continu­
ally reminded of this fact.

B. HARDACKER, Steward:
The union education meeting
is an ideal place for Seafarers
to get a complete knowledge of
their organization—how it is set
up, how it operates and what it
is trying to achieve for the mem­
bership. Such discussions would
be particularly important to the
permit men. The whole subject
could be broken down into sec­
tions like union finances, with
am explanation of the matters of
dues and assessments and the
reasons for them.
Members
should also be made to underfldtand their obligations to the
Vitkm and the membership. And
meetings should be held every
week. .

DINO DeVITA, OS:
I'd like to hear the educational
department inform the member­
ship of the great job that is be­
ing done in the organizational
drive. A lot of ihe members
don't know how much of the
Union's energy is being devoted
toward securing more jobs for
the membership. I was aboard
an unorganized ship for five
months ^nd I saw Organizers
come aboard who really knew
their jobs, thanks to the .educa­
tion they had received at these
meetings. While I was aboard
this unorganized ship I didn't
know much about the SIU, but
since attending 'the meetings I
have learned much of the SIU's
structure and background.

FRANK ZANANSKI, Oiler:
One thing that could be profit­
ably discussed in education meet­
ings is our agreements. Those
agreements should be carefully
analyzed for the membership.
There have been a lot of misun­
derstandings aboard the ships
I've sailed, misunderstandings
with the Captains and Engineers
that could have been avoided. Of
course, there are other things to
be discussed. That's why educa­
tion meetings are a good idea.
The meetings can be used to ac­
quaint the membership with cur­
rent and past Union activities.
Another subject worth kicking
around is what to do with gashounds.

J. L. GREEN, AB:
Anything that is of importance
to the seamen's welfare is worth
being aired at Union education
meetings. At the moment, one
of the things I think should be
brought up from time to time is
the problem of gashounds and
performers. Although' these have
been reduced to a minimum, any
gashound or performer is always
a danger to his shipmates. This
fact should be stressed in the in­
terest of protecting our contracts.
Another thing to be emphasized
is the importance of organizing
the unorganized because non­
union seamen are always a
threat to our conditions.

CHARLES LYNSKY, OS:
One of the important problems
to be tackled is that of gashounds. These birds should be
lectured on the harm they do
their Union Brothers. At the
same time the members should
be informed of the machinery for
handling gashounds who don't
want to straighten up. Another
idea worth kicking around is that
of planning how members can
live in a port while waiting for
a ship. If the Brothers can offer
ideas on this, and consolidate
them into a sort of directory o£
the inexpensive places to eat«
sleep, etc., it would help a
Brother in a strange town stretch
his slim finances.

JAY SAVAGE, OS:
I think the meetings should
work toward familiarizing the
members with the Union in
general. Stress should be put
on organizing and its importance
to the Union. They should be
told how to go about getting jobs
on unorganized ships, even if
the outfit has only one ship. The
bigger outfits will follow in due
time. In line with this men
should be shown that they have
nothing to fear aboard unor­
ganized ships. Some men be­
lieve that to go aboard as an
Organizer will put them in dan­
ger of being dumped. On the
parliamentary side, members
should be taught the methods for
conducting meetings.

JOHN ADAMS, Oiler:
At Union education meetings,
the contracts should be discussed
fully so that every man may be
considered as qualified to fill the
job of delegate, even though only
one man is officially chosen to
represent each department. The
constitution should also be re­
viewed at these meetings because
I have noticed that many Broth­
ers have indicated by their ac­
tions af' meetings that they
don't fully understand it. Now
that there is a decline in ship­
ping, it might be wise to discuss
possible plans for equalizing the
employment possibilities for all
of the membership.

JOHN LOCKE, OS:
Amng the things I, think
should be thoroughly discussed
at Union education meetings is
the group registration procedure.
This is a highly important mat­
ter. It appears to me that a lot
of guys don't quite understand
how group registration works.
Full discussion would give all
hands the score. Another thing
that should be'a topic at the edu­
cation meetings is the Union or­
ganizing program. In this way
the men could be kept up to
date on the progress the Union
is making in the unorganized
field, and of the difference in
conditions aboard SIU and un­
organized ships.

JOSEPH MALONE, Steward:
I've been to a number of edu­
cation meetings and think we
should have many more of them.
You'll never hear anything to
hurt you, and the chances are
you'll hear something to benefit
you.
One subject I haven't
heard discussed at any meeting
I've attended is what we must
do to protect our present con­
tracts. That's an important sub­
ject. Then, too, we ought to pay
a little more attention to. out
political friends, in my opinion.
Maybe a union shouldn't be in
politics, but there comes a time
when it is much easier to reward
friends than cope with enemies.

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9900">
                <text>March 25, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9976">
                <text>HEADLINES&#13;
GOV'T CAMP SHOULD BALLOT BY MARCH 31&#13;
CONVENTION OPENS 28TH IN BALTIMORE&#13;
TELL CONGRESS:WE WANT BLAND BILL&#13;
BERNSTEIN'S BID FOR OPERATING SUBSIDY GAINS&#13;
A PROBLEM THAT ALL UNIONS FACE:DRINKS,DRINKERS-AND PERFORMERS&#13;
CORPORATION PROFITS RISE AND SO DOES UNEMPLOYMENT&#13;
WAGE EARNER'S BUCK BUYS MORE WHEN IT SHOPS AT CO-OP STORES&#13;
HERE'S GOOD NEWS:VOLUNTEERS MAY MAKE ARMY DRAFT UNNECESSARY&#13;
NEW ORLEANS CALLED STEADIEST OF ALL PORTS FOR SEAFARER&#13;
PANAMA TANKERS UP BY 229% SINCE WAR&#13;
PORT MOBILE REPORTS PICK-UP IN SHIPPING&#13;
NEW YORK HAS HOPES FOR PASSENGER SHIPS&#13;
RARE COMBINATION HELPED BEGET TAFT-HARTLEY ACT&#13;
SHIPPING SCENE IS BRIGHTER FOR PORT TAMPA&#13;
OPERATORE MEANS MORE JOBS FOR SEAFARERE&#13;
MAGELLAN FOUND WAY TO FAR EAST&#13;
TACOMA HAS FAIR SHIPPING WEEK&#13;
MEMBER WARNS OF CAB OUTFITS THAT PASSED HOTEL PICKETS&#13;
CHARTER MEMBER PAUL COOK DIES SUDDENLY ABOARD HARTE&#13;
BEAVER MEN EAGER FOR SIU EDUCATION&#13;
AIDING OTHER UNIONS ,OVES LABOR FORWARD,SAYS MEMBER&#13;
COMPLETE STUDY TO INSURE 'SOLID' WELFR PLAN ASKED&#13;
SOME FACTS ABOUT SOCIAL SECURITY&#13;
NEW YORK CITY PIER DIRECTORY&#13;
</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9977">
                <text>03/25/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10139">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10140">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10141">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10142">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 12</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="12461">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13050">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="953" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="957">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/89435e8171b50d240399d0199f08b90d.PDF</src>
        <authentication>77b739ef58144747e72930b7aedcc4f1</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47433">
                    <text>CONTINUE FIOHT AGAINST T-H,
GREEN TELLS SlU Report
CONVENTION
Of A&amp;G Delegation
Lists District's Activities,
Gains DuringPastTwo Years
BALTIMORE, March 29—In an opening day
address to the SIU's Fourth Biennial Convention,
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf DUtrut, Seafarers International Union of NA at the Southern Hotel here, William Green, Am­
No. 13 erican Federation of Labor president, denounced the
NEW YORK. Nt Y., FRIDAY. APRIL 1. 1949
VOL. XI

*Taft-Hartley Act and said
The Seafarers International
Union will never give up the
Hiring Hall provisions you
now have in your contracts,
for your success and free­
dom depend upon its main­
tenance."
The Taft-Hartley Act was the
principal subject of the 30-ininute speech, but the AFL presi­
dent also took occasion to com­
pliment the SIU on its many
achievements over the years. He
especially lauded the SIU's vmfiagging resistance to communist
infiltration on the waterfront.
President Green said that, al­
though the labor committees of
both the Senate and the House
of Representatives had approved
bills to repeal the Taft-Hartley
Act, he expected labor's enemies
in Congress to wage a strong
fight on the floors of both houses
to retain the obnoxious law's
worst features.
He declared that labor unions
themselves must not let up in
their campaign to get the TaftHartley statute erased from the
book and called upon the SIU to
do its part. The results of last
fall's election were noh^in them­
selves enough, he said, to guar­
antee repeal.
Earlier in the day, George
Meany, AFL Secretary-Treasurer,
also addressed the delegates. He
expressed much the same views
and the same fears about the
Taft-Hartley Act as President
Green was to voice later.
But the burden of his speech
was concerned with the AFL's
current international program of
promoting free trade unionism in
Europe, South America and the
Far East, while combatting com­
munism on all fronts.
He also praised the SIU for
its consistent and continuing
stand against the communists.
The Fourth Biennial Conven­
tion of the Seafarers Interna­
tional Union was called to order
by SIU President Harry Lun"The Seafarers Interna­ deberg, at 10 a.m. on Monday,
March 28.
tional Union has always
In addition to President Green
been in the forefront of the and Secretary-Treasurer Meany
AFL's fight against the of the AFL, guest speakers on
(Continued on Rage 3)
communists." AFL Secretary-T reasurer George
Meany declared in opening
the morning session of the
first day of the SIU conven­
Construction experts met in
tion. In the course of a
"Washington this week to discuss
half-hour address. Meany adding defense features to a new
outlined in detail what the 48,000-ton passenger liner.
The group will consider secret
AFL is doing both in this
war
features, which undoubtedly
country and abroad to com­
will establish a pattern for all
bat the communists, so that
future ship construction, includ­
free trade unionism can ing such things as gun plat­
flourish in as many parts of forms, hull bracing, control
equipment and increased speed.
the world as possible.

Raising The Curtain At The SlU Convention

iiiiiiilliiiiii
iiliiiiiiiil

^ liiiiiiii

Piii
"The Seafarers International Union will never give
up the Hiring Hall." AFL President William Green told
delegates to the SIU convention in opening the after­
noon session of the meeting's first day. President Green
also stressed the importance of the fight against the
Taft-Hartley Act. and said that it was not yet certain
what Congress would do with the bills to repeal the
law although they have been approved by the labor
committees of both the House of Representatives and
the Senate.
"The Seafarers Interna­
tional Union can count on
the Maryland Federation of
labor for continuing support
on the Bland Bill." Harry
Cohen, the Federation's
President, promised as he
welcomed SIU convention
delegates to Baltimore.
Cohen said Jhat many
unions in Baltimore and
elsewhere in the state had'
protested against the Hoff­
man Plan. Ho also pointed
to the fine cooperation AFL
unions in Baltimore were
receiving from the SIU.
through William (Curly)
Rentz. A&amp;G Port Agent.

British Revealed As Active
Lobbyists For Boffman Plan'
WASHINGTON—If ever there
was any doubt about who was
behind the "Hoffman Plan" and
the organized opposition to the
Bland Bill, the cat was out of-the
bag this week.
According to a highly reliable
private news service" in Washing­
ton, the British are alternately
wailing and hurling charges in
the capital in an effort to sweep
the American flag from the seas
and grab all trans-Atlantic busi­
ness for themselves and their
European colleagues.
Specifically, they are alleging

that American shipowners and
operators are using the Marshall
Plan to set artificially high
freight rates to the detriment of
the European maritime nations.
The British are concentrating
much of their fire on the all im­
portant "country by country"
provision of the Bland Bill,
which would require that a
minimum of 50 percent of all
cargoes -financed by the U.S. Gov­
ernment be carried in U.S. ships
without restriction on where
they originate or in which direc(Continued on Rage 5}

New Passenger Ship
May 6et Defense Gear

�.. ,-^f

Page Two

THE

S E AFAR E nSL.O G

Friday, AprU 1. 1849

SEAFARERS LOG
VuBUshed Weekly by the
SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA

Atlnntic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor
"At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Entered as second class matter June 15, 1945, at the Post Office
in New York, N. Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912. ^
267

Of Vital Concern
The SlU, Atlantic and Gulf District, firmly believes
that the privacy of its members must be respected at all
times. In pursuing its objectives, the Union concerns itself
principally with wages, working conditions and other
matters related to the general welfare.
It has been pointed out repeatedly in the columns
of this paper that what a member does as an individual
is his own business. How often and how much he drinks
when he is away from the ships and the Union Halls
is nobody's affair but his own, the Union feels.
The Union makes no attempt to set up any moral
code for the conduct of its membership, because it holds
that sermonizing does not fall within the framework of
its functions as a trade union.
However, when an individual member allows his in­
dividual actions to develop to the point where his ship­
mates and Union Brother are affected, then the Union is
interested, and rightly so.
The membership has made it crystal clear that it
will not tolerate activities of performers endangering the
continued progress of responsible seamen.
"We think the case for the Union's "get tough" policy
toward irresponsible elements was well put by a trial
committee in the Port of New York this week. The com­
mittee, which was elected to consider the case of a
(Crewmember charged with a narcotic violation (see story
on page four), declared:

Bospital Patients
t

When entering the hospital
notify the delegates by post*
card, giving your name and
the number of your ward.
Mimeographed Postcards
can be obtained free at the
Social Service desk.

"Na man found guilty of trafficking in drugs need ex­
pect leniency or sympathy from, this Union; for such
offenses threaten the welfare and interests of every crewmember, as well as reflecting-discredit upon the Union.
"It is not the intention of this Union to yiterfere
with the personal business of any member, or to tell him
how he shall live his life. But when he jeopardizes his
These are the Union Brothers currently in the marine hospitals,
shipmates and his Union Brothers by his actions, then
as
reported
by the Port Agexils. These Brothers find time hanging
those actions are no longer strictly personal business...
keavily on their hands. Do what you can to cheer them up by
"They become the vital concern of the Union..."
writing them.
BALTIMORE HOSPITAL
P. CHEAUETTA
The trial committee's statement, as the membership
L. GAT .BURN
S.
FLOREAK
'
action which resulted in present Union policy on per­
R.
HENDERSON
H.
GJERDE
formers, makes sense.
W. WISLCOTT
J. SCHUMSKY
V. SALLIN
The activities of Union wreckers only make trouble S. GAMIER
A. WARD
A. E. DUNTON
—for all hands.
E. RHOEDS
A. H. SCHWARTZ
W. LAMBERT
C. JOHNSTON
E.
PAINTER
R. S. SEWASKY
S.
CAPE
C. SIMMONS
P. SADARUSKI
R. J. LANNON •
,
For months last fall the transportation rule was one WM. T. ROSS
H. STILLMAN
of the chief topics for debate among Seafarers asea and C. I. COPPER
W. GARDNER
J. DENNIS
ashore.
F. KORVATIN
LIPARIA
W. MAY
^
In view of the considerable interest shown by the J. J. O'NEILL
E. PRILCHARD
membership, the Union set aside a discussion period to
C. D. CAREY
S,
ft
4^
P.
LANDRY
allow for full expression of all viewpoints, after which
G.
ROLZ
NEW ORLEANS MARINE HOSP.
a secret ballot was to be held to resolve the issue.
D.
CANN
J. LAFFIN
The letters pages of the LCX} fairly bristled with J. PUGH'
ft ft ft A
pro and con comment on transportation rulings. Then W. WALKER
STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
the referendum began on March 1.
W. CURRIER
D. BAYELLE
D. P. GELINAS
A month remains in which to vote—April 30 is L. KAY
P. NERING
the last day.
R. WALLACE
A. TREVINO
J. McNEELY
Seafarers who haven't yet voted should demonstrate J. DAROUSE
E.
LYONS
PEEWEE
GOODWIN
that they wish to take advantage of the democratic W. CHAMPLIN
M. J. LUCAS
process employed by their Union. They should cast a E. DRIGGERS
N. DORPMANS
ballot before April 30.
S. JEMISON
S, HEIDUCKI'
W. ROCHELL .
R. P. ROBERTS
The two proposals appearing on the ballot are re­ C. RAFUSE
SOI HO
printed on page 12 of this issue. Study them, then vote!
C.BROWN
J. HOPKINS

Staten Island Hospital

Men Now h The Marme Hospitak

Time To Vote

You can contact your Hos­
pital delegate at the Staten
Island Hospital at the follow­
ing times:
Tuesday — 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
(on 5th and 6th floors.)
Thursday — 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
(on 3rd and 4th floors.)
Saturday — 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
(on 1st and 2nd floors.)
1

.

.

•—1

P. LEVINE
B. RABINOWITZ
S. RIVERA
G. STEPANCHUK
K. JENSEN
R. L. GRESHAM, JR.
J. A. WAITHE
» » »
BOSTON HOSPITAL
E. POLISE
G. E. GALLANT
G. MIKE
H. FAZAKERLEY
F. ALASAVICK
V. MILAZZO
L. L. GORDEN (City Hospital)
ft ft ft

MOBILE HOSPITAL
J. B. BERRIER
J. P. BUCKALEW
CYRIL LOWERY
J. LANGLEY
% % %
OALVESTON HOSPITAL
J. D.- JACKSON
L, R. WILLIAMSON
J. HAVERTY
G. GONZALES

�Friday, AprU 1, 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Pa0» Three

A&amp;G Conventioif Report Lists Many Gains
the first day, the Atlantic &amp; Gulf Norfolk, Tampa and Boston, the had given effective aid to many month fight against the Hoffman
(Continued from Page 1)
the first day were Harry Cohen, District distributed its own bi- report stated.
a union long before September Plan.
President of the Baltimore La­ ennial'report to the 40-odd dele­ Other features of the A&amp;G 1948, the report demonstrated.
These close relations with other
bor Council and the Maryland gates present from all SIU units. District's report included a re­ Among those helped were Lad­ unions were well demonstrated
Federation of Labor, and Omar
This report on two years of view of two years of organizing ies Garment Workers, Teamsters, the first two days of the conven­
P. Hoskins, a representative of Atlantic &amp; Gulf history was ex­ activity which brought 32 new Teachers, Financial Employes, tion and over the weekend be­
the Federal Conciliation Service pected to be one of the conven­ companies under contract,
Jewelry Workers; Airline Pilots, fore the convention started,
for the San Francisco area.
tion's outstanding features. The - Of these new companies, 11 Printers, Retail Clerks, Bakers, when A&amp;G delegates were
Cohen declared that the SIU delegates accepted the report on were dry l:argo outfits while 21 Longshoremen, and others too swamped by hundreds of tele­
could count on the Maryland Tuesday afternoon,
ran tankers, the report showed. numerous for the report to list, grams from labor .unions up and
AFL for continuing support on
down the coast.
The report described the 21 tank­
THANKED SIU
ASSETS DOUBLED
the Bland-Magnuson Bill, He re­
These telegrams, which were
er companies as a "wedge" in
ported extensively on the ac­ The report was broken into the tanker field.
still
being received at this writ­
As an indication of the effec­
tion Maryland unions already seven sections and was printed
ing,
were being read into the
tiveness of this SIU aid, the re­
had taken, and said that he felt .as an illustrated 16-page pamph­ Among the 11 dry cargo ope­ port contained a two, page cen­ record as they came in.
rators, the largest and most im­
that Maryland Representatives let.
ter spread picturing some 9f the Delegates to the SIU Biennial
portant was Isthmian,
and Congressmen were well
letters
received expressing Convention represented the fol­
aware of the problem the Bland- The seven sections were: Con­ Because the entire history of thanks.
lowing member unions: the At­
Magnuson Bill was designed to tracts and Negotiations; Finan­ organizing and striking Isthmian,
lantic &amp; Gulf District; the Sail­
ces; Members of the A&amp;G As the last of the big, open-shop Those displayed came from the ors Union of the Pacific; the
solve.
Applies
to Contract Jobs Avail­ dry cargo companies, had been New York Teachers Guild, the Great Lakes District; the Atlan­
The SIU itself had given fine
able;
Organizing;
Publicity and carried in great detail in the Airline Pilots Association, the. tic Fishermen; the West Coast
isupport to many AFL unions in
Education;
Relations
with Other LOG, the report did not review Inte^natdontal L-ongshoremen,'^ As­ Fishermen and the Cannery
and around Baltimore, he said,
Unions; and Legislation,
the Isthmian story with much sociation, the State, County and Workers,
Municipal Employees, the Reg­
SHRINKING FLEET
One of the principal high­ more .than passing mention,
istered
Nurses Guild, the Nassau
EIGHT DELEGATES
„ Hoskins, a maritime specialist lights was the A&amp;G's financial
LENT
A
HAND
County
Typographical
Union,
the
for the Conciliation Service, de­ report. In the two-year stretch
The A&amp;G Delegates, were:
scribed the already near-fatal between the spring of 1947 and
The section on organizing also Retail Clerks International Asso­ Paul Hall, Secretary-Treasurer
shrinkage of the American mer­ the spring of 1949, the District's brought the Cities Service situ­ ciation, the American Federa­ of the Atlantic &amp; Gulf District
chant fleet as the principal ob­ assets more than doubled, rising ation up to date for the benefit tion of Municipal Transit Work­ and First Vice President of the
stacle the SIU and other seago­ from $618,450,02 to $1,383,014,65, of the delegates, and surveyed ers, the Qffice Employes Inter­ SIU; Lloyd A, Gardner, Head­
ing American unions must face the report showed.
miscellaneous organizational work national Union, the United Fin­ quarters Representative; Lindsey
today.
Even more striking was the in the Virginia Ferries, tugboats, ancial Employes, and the New J. Williams, Director of Organi­
York Newsboys' 'Union,
zation; Earl Sheppard, New Or­
He made it clear that a dim­ gain over earlier* years. As of shoregangs and related fields,
inishing fleet meant not only loss December 31, 1943, the District's A large section, of the A&amp;G Brother and sister unions ral­ leans Agent; Cal Tanner, Mobile
assets were only $241,898,74, At report concerned the District's lied to the defense of the SIU, Agent and Vice President of the
the time of-the 1942 convention, relations with other unions. The A&amp;G District, as readily as Sea­ SIU; A, Michelet, San Francisco
the A&amp;G District had only $76,- report showed that at the Spe­ farers went out to lend a hand Agent; A. S, Cardullo, Headquar­
754,46,
cial Agents' Conference held in to brother and sister unions, the ters Representative; and Charles
Haymond, Headquarters Repre­
In addition to the cash assets New York last September, the report showed.
Listed were approximately 150 sentative (serving as alternate
of $1,383,014,65, as of the spring District crystallized a policy of
of 1949, the A&amp;G District also helping other unions which had unions, smaU locals and huge in­ for Ray White, Tampa Agent),
owns $289,910,04 in real estate. long been followed without a ternationals, state federations and The convention was expected
This was the value of Union clearcut program for doing it. city centrals, which had support­ to end on Friday, April 1, or
property in New Orleans, Mobile, However, the • A&amp;G District ed the Seafarers in the four- Saturday, April 2,

Alcoholism: Unnecessary 'Heritage Of The Sea'
By JOSEPH I. FLYNN

Omar Hoskins. a member of
the Federal Conciliation Serv­
ice in the San Francisco area,
drew a' gloomy picture of the
future of the American mer­
chant marine unless something
is done about the situation.
Citing the harsh statistics that
spell the decline of the mer­
chant fleet during the past two
years, he emphasized the
growth of foreign fleets in the
same period. He pointed out
that the shrinkage -of the fleet
would create difficult problems
for the maritime unions beyong the loss of jobs. Negotia­
tions would become increas­
ingly difficult unless the layup trend is reversed, he said.
of thousands of jobs and hun­
dreds of ships while foreign
fleets grew, but also meant other
difficulties, notably in negotiat­
ing contracts,
EUROPE REPORTS
Guest speakers on the second
day included J, H, Oldenbroek,
General Secretary of the Inter­
national Transportworkers Fede­
ration, who had come to this
country from his London head­
quarters, and Willy Dorchain,
the ITF's American representa­
tive.
At the afternoon session of

This is the second of a series of articles on alcohol­
The life a man leads aboard
ism.
written by a former seafarer.
ship builds up inner tensions
that have no outlets such as are
The Union's position on drinking is clear enough.
available to the person ashore.
The membership has gone on record time and again
Family and social connections
against
gashounds - and performers who make trouble
are missed, and their influence
aboard ship or in the Union Halls. Irresponsible gasbecomes remote.
hounds are becoming ex-members at a swift rate in line
Consequently, once he reaches
port, the average seaman turns
with this policy.
to alcohol ajnd uses it as a firstHowever, another tenet, of Union policy is that how
thought safety valve.
much a man drinks away from the ships and the Union
The only outlets the seaman
Halls is his own business. Nevertheless, since seamen
has aboard ship are his pride in
are
as prone to alcoholism as stock brokers, movie stars
his job, the bull sessions in the
messroom, the gab-fests about
or insurance salesmen, the Union feels that'these articles
the so-called good times he has
in which alcoholism is viewed as the disease medical
had, the spinning of yarns which
science recognizes it to be should be valuable.
occupy an important recreational
niche, and reading.
Traditions among seamen in­
Ashore, part of the heritage of up a notorious reputation of their
clude the "piece-off," probably
the sea are the visits to houses own.
Their first objective is to outdo born during the days when ship­
of prostitution and saloons or
places where drink flows freely. the oldtimers in regard to both ping was at low ebb, and the
There is excitement aboard ship women and liquor, until they ones who were lucky enough to
as it nears port; the draw list is build up a tolerance and accus­ make a trip had to help those
who were not so fortunate.
going around; the older hands, tom themselves to this life.
who may have seen the port be­ There are many—influenced by
This practice spawned the
fore, usually paint a glamorous youthful training, religion and "Towline," A Towline is formed
picture of it for themselves as good habits—^who will find other when a mam who is "alive"—that
well as for the ones who have interests and places which pro­ is, just paid off—takes along an
vide better outlets for emotions assortment of hangers-on, as he
never been there.
The young fellows, .who may pent-up by the work at sea.
goes from bar to bar, to keep him
be making their first trip, listen The majority gain all the satis­ company, give him attention, and
avidly and are so spellbound by faction they need by looking for­ eventually drink up his money.
place to
the oldtimers' tales, that they ward to each port as
This position is reversed when
cannot wait to have similar ex­ have a good time. Many of
he
goes broke, for then he at­
periences of their own to tell, if them eventually become alcoho­
taches
himself to a shipmate or
not on their present ship, then lics or—as the seamen put i^
some
friend,
until he is sick and
gashounds, performers, bottle
on some voyage in the future.
disgusted
with
drinking or runs
New men are introduced to babies.
The latter term describes a into a streak of "bad luck"
strange, local drinks. Then fol­
low introductions to girls who seamen who, after years at sea, whereby he sobers up and signs
would not receive a second now makes only an occasional aboard a ship.
Some give up shipping en­
glance from the same men when trip, if any, but frequents the
haunts where he will find ship­ tirely and become fulltime fol­
sober.
With such an initiation, they mates or sailors who are like his lowers of towlines. This leads
accept this port routine as a nor­ own former self and in search of logically to becoming a bottle
baby and, with fellows like him­
mal habit and set about tp build a good time.

self, a member of a "bottle
gang."
The performer is the most
lively of them all, for something,
whether it be funny or serious,
is always happening to him once
he is drinking, such as winding
up in jail.
The exact nature of the esca­
pade makes little difference. He
is usually the type of person who
is funny and amusing .at one
time, dangerous and " argumenta­
tive at another, depending on
what happened to him just be­
fore he started the present bout.
The bottle gangs can be found
along the waterfront in seamen's
hotels and institutions and in
furnished rooming houses of the
lower type, referred to as snake
ranches, where a group hiber­
nates in a . room, if luck is good,
with fellow alcoholics.
The alcoholic seamen who
form these bottle gangs and
cliques tend to lose their true
identities much in the same way
as hobos and tramps do.
They customarily call one an­
other by first names or nick­
names such as Blackie, Whitey,
Shorty, Slim, Crying Sam, etc.,
or names based on nationalities,
as Scotty, Limey, Polack and
Mickey,
Their life, for years, has ;become a vicious cycle: a spree—a
trip—a spree. Each trip is to be
different, but few know that
they're the victims of habit, of
environment, of a pattern that
has to be realized and broken.
Many thousands of alcoholics
have recovered by finding new
outlets, new interests and new
values—by developing in the
problem drinker a new habit
pattern and attitude toward him­
self and his environment.

�THE

Page Four

Mobile Seafarers Crack Down
On Three Who Missed Ship In PR

SEAFARERS

LOG

IN THE DAYS OF WIND AND SAILS

Port Savannah
Gets A Boomiet
By JIMMIE DRAWDY

By CAL TANNER
MOBILE — Four smooth pay beef on the Monarch of the Sea
offs and five sign-ons, three of delayed the payoff, but we won
them on continuous articles, con the dispute quickly and the pay­
stituted the week's activity in off wound up in good shape.
Three men aboard the Mon­
the port of Mobile.
The four payoff scows were arch of the Sea were brought up
the Alcoa Clipper, back from on charges for missing ship in
her 17-day trip on the bauxite a Puerto Rican port. They caught
passenger run; Waterman's Mon up with it in another island port
A trial committee recommend­
arch of the Sea, in from Puerto
Rico; Iberville, of the coastwise ed that these men be fined, since
trade, and the La Salle, return this practice has been going on
for some time on ships making
ing from Europe.
Sign-ons were the Monarch PR.
of the Sea, Iberville and Clipper, Men missing ship, without val­
all on continuous articles, and id reasons, work hardships on
the Lafayette and Jeff Davis their shipmates. The member­
Waterman ships headed for the ship is definitely of the opinion
Far East and Europe, respec­ that this practice must be halted.
The Seafarers lost two Bro­
tively.
Only minor beefs arose on thers last week with the deaths
the ships paying off and they of Walter (Liverpool) Bryning
w^re all settled satisfactorily. A and Mack W. Busby.
Brother Bryning was a retired
bookmember who had been with
the SIU since its inception. He
died in the local Marine Hos­
pital after a long illness.
V*
I
Brother Bryning was a real
oldtimer. He held discharges datA sketch of the three-master Glenlui by Capt. R. J. Peter­
ng back to 1903, and he began son, who at the age of 16. boarded the ship in England in
lis sailing career out of his na­
1909 for an 11-month voyage to Buenos Aires and Australia.
tive city of Liverpool, England.
By KEITH ALSOP
"She could sail like a witch." says Peterson. On arrival in
KILLED BY AUTO
Newcastle. Australia, "to discharge ballast, in a place rightly
GALVESTON—A week which
Brother
Busby
was
killed
in
called
Siberia, 18 of us ran away from the Glenlui. leaving
netted us seven payoffs, six signan
automobile
accident
while
he
our
pay
behind, glad to be free." Peterson recalls.
ons and seven ships in-transit
was
out
of
the
Marine
Hospital
wound up as one of the best
we've enjoyed around here in on a one-week pass. He had
been taking treatment for a frac­
quite awhile.
tured
arm. Busby was a permitWe sent a good number of men
man.
out to jobs, with the result that
To the families of both these
The regularly elected New Union; for such offences threat­
many familiar faces have dis­
Seafarers,
we
extend
our
deep­
York
Trial Committee consider­ en the welfare and interests of
appeared and have been replaced
est sympathy.
ed this week the case of a mem­ every crewmember, as well as
with newcomers to these parts.
Those of our members who are ber charged by the Coast Guard refiecting discredit upon the Un­
We paid off the Zebulon Pike,
in
the Mobile Marine Hospital and the Federal Authorities with ion.
Ponce DeLeon, Jeff Davis, Arizpa
this
week include J. B. Berrier, possessing and attempting to
"It is not the intention of this
and Stonewall Jackson, Water­
P.
Buckalew, Cyril Lowery smuggle marijuana.
Union to interfere with the per­
man; and the John Hansen,
The member's defense was that sonal business of any member,
White Range. We signed on all and J. Langley.
Among the men currently on he was ignorant of the contents or to tqll him how he shall live
of the ships except the Hansen.
All ships hitting the area were the beach in Mobile are Newton of a package containing mari­ his life. But when he jeopardizes
in unusually good shape with Breedin, R. A. Holland, T. W. juana— which he said was giv­ his shipmates, and his Union
what beefs that cropped up set­ Keyser, J. H. Edlund, A. J. Mil­ en to him by a native in Durban. Brothers by his actions, then
tled in short order. All dele­ ne, L. Donald, A. Demmdo, P. The committee voted to sus­ those actions are no longer strict­
gates were on the ball, having J. Covington, W. Hurlstone, ,J". W. pend him, pending the outcome ly personal business.
the beefs outlined for quick Fleniing, B. Veiner and S. Tu- of the Federal investigation, giv­
"They become the vital con­
ing him the right to appeal for cern of the Union!
handling when we came aboard. berville.
a new trial should the Coast
Chuck Allen, SIU oldtimer, hit
"Once narcotics are found on
Guard and Federal authorities
port'aboard the Hansen and said
a ship, every member of the
clear him.
he's staying aboard for another
crew is under suspicion. Their
The Committee issued the fol­ names go on record in connec­
trip. With Chuck as ship's dele­
lowing statement to the mem­ tion with this rotten business.
gate we're sure she'll come in
bership:
beefless, as she did the last trip.
Should the question of drug traf­
"No man found guilty of traf­ fic come up at any future time,
NEGOTIATIONS ON
By
JIMMIE
SHEEHAN
ficking in drugs need expect len­ all those on the ship so impli­
Now that spring is here, we've
sat down with G&amp;H Towing
PHILADELPHIA — Shipping iency or" sympathy from this cated come under double sus­
Company to work out a new con­ has slowed down to a standstill
picion.
tract. We're after alterations in in this port. Consequently there
"Not only their freedom, but
the working conditions, etc. It's are quite a few men on the
their
jobs and their ability to
a little too early in negtiations to Quaker City beach.
earn
a
living is involved. Inno­
say what the final result will be, These men have drifted in
cent
wives
and children in ports
but it is our opinions that it will from New York and Boston in
and
cities
across the country,
be one of the best in the in­ anticipation of fairly good ship­
who
are
the
families of these in­
dustry.
ping here, apparently. If it's any
jured
crewmembers,
are thus
On the organizing front we've consolation to them, and we hope
threatened
with
insecurity,
too.
been able to do a good job on it will turn out to be a consola­
"Then, in addition to these
the Cities Service ship, Abiqua. tion, we expect to have a couple
lasting injuries to his shipmates,
She's in drydock here and that of payoffs within a week.
the humiliation and inconvenL
gave us plenty of time to con­
Meanwhile, the weather is fine,
ence which the discovery of nar­
tact the men with SIU literature. and the boys hang on the side­
cotics causes to all those aboard
We showed the movie. The walk to watch the girls go by.
ship must be considered.
Battle of Wall Street, to the That's all they can do because
"Those who have seen the
membership at the meeting. they are broke. But having girls
Federal men shake/down a ves­
Everyone seemed well pleased, to look at is something to do.
sel following discovery of nar­
and several recommended that Nobody makes any wisecracks at
cotics know what it is to have
further movies be produced for the girls, either.
one's personal things torn apart
the education of the membership. Everybody here sends con­
and minutely inspected on the
In spite of the good shipping, gratulations to the Fourth Bien­
ship,
and perhaps two or three
there are still a handful of nial Convention of the SIU npw
times
on
the dock, before getting
hardy oldtimers holding tight to in session over in Baltimore. We
ashore.
the beach. A few of them are know that our A&amp;G delegates
Members of the Port of New
Henry (Andy) Anderson, Frank will do themselves proud, and we York trial committee which
"At such times the slightest
Baron, Abbie Ellis, Joe Buckley, look for the SIU conference to denounced irresponsible ele­ infraction of rules—an extra pack
Bob Hunt, John Morrison and O. be a bang up success.
ments whose actions harm en- of cigarettes, or an odd item of
W. Orr.
If only a few payoffs and sign- lire membership. Seated here clothing purchased abroad and
If shipping continues at the ons would appear out of the are (front to rear):' Joseph usually overlooked by customs
tempo of last week, we expect to blue, this port would be in swell Malone. Tony Montemorano inspectors—results in confiscation
and fines.
shape.
thin their ranks considerably.
and Albert Birt.

Port Galveston
Cnfoys Week Of
Good Shipping

Friday. AprU 1, 1949

SAVANNAH—Shipping picked
up a little in this port this week.
In fact, for us, we had a fairsized boomiet, which means that
we shipped 19 men.
South Atlantic.'s SS Southland
came in and paid off. Then she
signed right back on again.
Saint Lawrence Navigation's
SS Algonquin Victory did the
same thing, namely, she paid off
and signed-on in a hurry. She
headed back for Eui'ope, as did
the Southland.
Bull's SS Dorothy stopped by
in transit on her way to the
Islands, and even she took a
couple of men. All in all, we
had quite a. bit of activity for
port of our size. Certainly
shipping was better than we had
seen it for a month or so.
Moreover, we should be having
fair week coming up. Two
more South Atlantics are due to
payoff here. These are the SS
Sputhwind and Cape Nome.
The Nome is going into dryr
dock for a while. But she ought
to be taking a few standbys to
hold her until she's ready to
steam out again.
Meanwhile, best wishes to the
A&amp;G delegation at the Baltimore
convention. They'll do a crackerjack job there, we know.

Trial Committee Warns Of Drugs

Mr

At A Standstill

"This Committee points out
again to the membership that
the Union has long been on rec­
ord against all traffic in drugs
aboard our ships or on Union
property.
"It is the duty of every mem­
ber, for his own protection, the
protection of his shipmates and
their families, and the welfare
of the entire Union, to bring up
on charges any man found pos­
sessing, using, or smuggling mar­
ijuana or other narcotics on SIU
ships.
"Apart from the moral or so­
cial implications of drug traffic,
when the actions of one man
can so threaten and endanger
the welfare of a whole crew—
and further, when, as- a member
of this Union, he reflects dis­
credit upon his Union—he is no
longer worthy of friendship and
acquaintance."

At the other side of the
table are committee members
Sylvester Monardo (wearing
hat) and Zollie Swor. The
committee photos were taken
shortly after the committee is­
sued its statement on per­
formers.

�Friday. April 1. 1949

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Five

SlU Survey Provides Welfare Plan Basis
The first step in formulating a
welfare plan for the A&amp;G Dis­
trict has been completed, Headiijuarters announced this week,
and the next step will be the
drafting of the plan itself. »
The initial job consisted of
studying and breaking down wel­
fare plans of other unions and,
more important, getting the vital
Statistics concerning A&amp;G mem­
bership—without which no plan
could be realistically drawn.
With a clear picture of SIU
welfare needs at their disposal,
and the experiences of unions in
bther industries before them, the
Committee is now engaged in
drawing up a specific welfare
plan for the SIU, A&amp;G District,
which—if approved by the mem­
bership—will be presented to the
operators as a Union demand this
year.
FACTS. FIGURES
Several articles in the LOG,
starting with the issue of Febru­
ary 4, have discussed aspects of
welfare plans, and have indicated
that the Seafarers have many
special requirements not met in
other industries.
Although it is not advisable at
this time to publish all data and
figures that have been compiled,
a summary of the scope and gen­
eral findings of this survey will
point up the problems of the
Union in breaking into the wel­
fare field.
First, a mass of factual mate­
rial was collected from govern­
ment agencies, private statistical
bureaus, steamship operators,
and other unions—and of course
the SIU records were broken
down and analyzed.
Actuarial figures of insurance
companies and reports of surveys
made by \miversities and foun­
dations were sifted for facts on
death rates, injury rates, and
economic trends,

as shown by Union records. If a
welfare plan is to include death
benefits, these things had to be
known.
From reports of the Marine In­
dex Bureau, the Department of
Labor, the National Safety Coun­
cil, insurance companies, the
Public Health Service and other
sources, death rates and causes
of death were ascertained for the
industry.
Thus we' know the probable
cost of death benefits to a wel­
fare plan.
Section Two analyzes the prob­
able cost of sickness and hospital
benefits. The number of seamen
who become sick or injured, and
the average length of time lost
were determined.
Again, figures
from many
sources were assembled and
brought into focus with facts
known about our own Union.
As would be expected, we
know now that the injury and
illness rate on ships operated
under SIU standards of wages,
food and working conditions are
much better than for the indus­
try as a whole, and far above
those indicated by surveys made
ten or fifteen years ago.
PRESENT BENEFITS

Thus we have definite facts on
the subject and can estimate the
needs of our membership in the
field of sickness and hospital
benefits, and their probable cost.
Section Three is a study of the
old age,' unemployment, injury,
and death benefits and protec­
tions which are now available to
seameh. This section also sumarizes the maritime laws now
affecting seamen's security.
For instance the laws govern­
ing company responsibility to
sick and injured seamen, their
access to the Marine Hospitals,
and their protection under social
security, unemployment insur­
ance laws, etc., vary widely in
some cases from conditions in
other industries, and must be
born in mind in drawing iip a
welfare plan.
Further, care must be taken
that existing benefits and laws
favorable to seamen are not un­
dermined. when a welfare plan
goes into effect. It would be a
small gain, indeed, if sickness
benefits operated in such a way

as to curtail the present Federal
Whatever time is stipulated in up plans to meet various needs
statutes guaranteeing seamen the our plan, these figures will show, under widely divergent laws and
right to sue for damages under at a glance, the proportion of our bargaining conditions.
membership which would be Section Nine contains a general
employers' liability.
covered.
summary of the needs of theAGE A FACTOR
Section Six, not yet completed, SIU, A&amp;G District, in the light
Section Four is based princi­ will be an analysis of security of material contained in the re­
pally on membership inquiries, systems and welfare plans cov­ port, and points out legal and
and ascertains the age, responsi­ ering seamen of foreign coun­ technical considerations govern­
bilities, and resources of our tries.. Much of this material ing the actual operation and ad­
members. Welfare plans in other from the International Transport ministration of such a plan.
Officials of the International
industries have found that the Workers Federation in London
and
from
foreign
countries
has
Ladies'
Garment Workers Union,
needs of workers vary with the
not
yet
arrived,
but
will
form
a
who
have
had years of experi­
average age of the workers. Ob­
viously the obligations of the part of the report and give a ence in administering the many
membership — the percentage perspective on the position of welfare provisions in their in­
who are married, and the per­ American seamen in relation to dustry, opened their books to the
SIU and freely gave advice and
centage with dependents — will those throughout the world.
Section Seven deals with the recommendations which will be
have a large effect on the kind
size of company payrolls, and greatly helpful to the SIU Com­
of welfare benefits they need.
A single man in the Marine the average seamen's income. mittee when it enters into ne­
Hospital is in quite a different Since welfare plans are usually gotiations with the operators.
The moneys paid into such a
catagory from a man with a wife paid for by company contribu­
tions
based
upon
a
percent
of
plan,
and the reserves that are
and several children dependent
the
payroll,
the
scope
of
any
built
up—which
may run to mil­
upon him.
plan
must
hinge
'
on
the
esti­
lions
of
dollars—become
irrevo­
We know that a very large
mated
money
thatwill
be
avail­
cable
trusts,
remain
separate
proportion of our membership
from all Union funds, and are
has one or more dependents. We able.
This was easily obtained from administered by the fund's trus­
know the average age of our
members, the percentage who are Union records of contracted jobs. tees.
The SIU is not entering the
between 20 and 30—the percent­ But, further, the Union makes
periodic
surveys
of
the
industry
field
of welfare without being
age who are over 60, and over
in
order
to
anticipate
manning
prepared.
As in all matters in­
65. With these facts we can as­
requirements
and
economic
volving
the
well-being of its
certain the kind of benefits most
trends,
and
is
furnished
sup­
membership,
the
SIU has been
needed by the majority of SIU
plementary
estimates
by
many
of
carefully
studying,
consulting
men, and can judge the probable
our
operators.
and
planning.
cost.
In a project as intricate as a
At the same time, we know Section Eight contains a gen­
the percentage of Seafarer who eral review of welfare plans in union welfare plan, it is essential
have bank accoimts, or own prop­ other industries. Much of this that the groundwork laid in pre­
erty or insurance. In other words section was carried in articles paration for the plan be solid.
Whatever plan finally evolves
these who have some measure of previously published in the LOG.
Here
the
Committee
will
have
must
be sound in every respect
personal protection against emer­
access
to
the
experience
of
many
and
yet
flexible enough to allow
gencies.
Unions over the years, in setting for expansion.
TIME IN UNION

British Revealed As Attive
Lobbyists For 'Hoffman Plan'

Section Five breaks down the
Union record of the members.
Here charts and figures
show
what proportion *0f bookmen,
or permitmen, and of the total
membership have been in the
Union for one year, for two
these latter rates were only
(Continued from Page 1)
years, and on up to ten years. tion they move. The measure shout $1.85 to $2.25 a ton above
Under welfare plans, minimum would also require that the 50-50 European rates despite Paul
MANY SOURCES
lengths of time are required in or better division be calculated Hoffman's claim that the differ­
the industry, and in the union, on a "country by country" basis. ence was as much as $4.50. Since
Then all of these were related
as prerequisites to receiving cer­ There is no "country by coun­ then, European rates have risen
to facts learned about our own
tain benefits.
membership.
try" clause in the weakly worded and are now only about $1.35 a
For instance, in the cloak ai\d shipping section of present Mar­ ton below American rates.
There are nine sections in the
suit industry in New York, shall Plan legislation. Conse­
report. The first two deal with
The British claim that the
eleven years' union membership, quently, it should come as no present American fleet is twice
seamen's deaths and Injuries.
of which five must have been surprise to anybody that the the size of the pre-war fleet is
Section One is an analysis of the
continuous, are required for re- British themselves are carrying not borne out by the facts.
death rate, age at death, and
cause of death of American seatirement benefits after the ageja^
^ minute fraction of the
According to the Maritime
of 65.
men, and of the SIU membership
Marshall Plan cargoes going to Commission, the US merchant
England. French, Dutch, and fleet consisted of 11,400,000 dead­
Scandinavian shipping men are weight tons in 1939. Right now,
clamoring to get cargoes going the Commission estimates the
to their own countries, each active fleet to amount to 14,200,stoutly maintaining that Amer­ 000 deadweight tons.
ican vessels can carry goods go­ ^ On the other hand, the Bri­
ing somewhere else. This is why tish had 24,054,000 deadweight
Congressman
Bland, chairman of tons in 1939 and have already
As an inducement to Radio
NORFOLK — Marine Radio mission to broadcast material
the
House
Merchant Marine rebuilt their fleet to 21,398,000
Officers to cooperate in spread­
;WPG in this port has inaugurat­ from the SEAFARERS LOG.
Committee,
wrote
the "countiy tons. Norway had 6,931,000 tons
ed a new and unique press Wayne Miller, operator of ing the daily news, WPG is of­
by
country"
clause
into the bill. in 1939 and has rebuilt to 5,broadcast service free to ships WPG, is reported to be a long­ fering two Presentation Model,
The
British
and
the
rest, ap­ 873,000 tons, the Commission
time supporter of trade union­ Vibroplex "bugs" as prizes in
at sea.
parently
unmindful
of
4he
fact says.
The present schedule starts at ism, and to believe that all sea­ two contests.
that
American
money
is
paying
Meanwhile, the postwar US
7 p.m. Eastern Standard Time men should be organized. How­
WIN THAT BUG
for
the
Marshall
Plan,
are
going
shipbuilding
program is negli­
(OOOOGMT) and the broadcasts ever, he is non-partisan so far
around
Washington
spluttering
gible,
but
the
16 Marshall Plan
One
of
the
"bugs"
will
go
to
include news items of general in­ as individual unions are con­
nations have a shipbuilding pro­
the Radio Officer who best de­ about "retaliatory measures."
cerned.
terest-as well as maritime news
Bona fide members of seago­ scribes in a 100-word piece, why They also are claiming that gram well under way which will
in general and maritime labor
ing unions may "deadhead" he copies and posts WPG broad­ the US merchant fleet is twice give them a combined fleet of
news in particular.
items of general interest to WPG. casts for the benefit of the crew. its pre-war size, and wailing that 5,000,000 deadweight tons above
When the major leagues start
will not have the pre-war level, it was re­
Such messages must be prefaced The other will go to the Radio European fleets
their season later this month, "deadhead press," a term any
reached pre-war size by the end ported a couple of weeks ago.
Officer who writes a 100-word
WPG will run complete baseball
Figures to the contrary not­
ship's radio officer will know. letter on the same subject and of the Marshall Plan in 1952.
results every day. The baseball
This charge is arrant nonsense, withstanding, slick Briti.sh diplo­
gives the greatest distance of observers here point out. Ameri­ mats are making the rounds of
KILOCYCLES
news wiU supplement the sta­
tion's already wide sports cov­ At present, WPG broadcasts his vessel from WPG at the time can shippers cannot maintain ar­ the capital. And just the other
erage.
from 7 p.m. until 11 p.m., EST, of receiving a press message. tificially high rates, they say. day they are said to have en­
New prizes will be awarded at Most liner freight rates are gineered a meeting of Marshall
Radio officers are expected to using 6380 kilocycles. Later on
it
will
also
use
8640
kilocycles,
the
end of each calendar month, set by international conferences. Plan officials. Congressmen and
copy these reports and post them
11310
kilocycles,
16920
kilocycles
the
station has announced. En­ Tramp rates on Maritime Com­ American shipowners in an at­
for all hands to see.
WPG has been using news re­ and 22500 kilocycles. Meanwhile trants should address their es­ mission vessels chartered out to tempt to work out a "compro­
leases from the SIU, A&amp;G Dis- it stands watch on 500 kilocycles, says and letters to Marine Radio, the bulk trades are set by the mise" on the Bland Bill.
The jobs of American seamen
trict, regularly and has asked 8280 kilocycles and 12420 kilo­ WPG, 109 EasfMain Street, Nor­ Commission. *
folk 10, Virginia.
At the beginning of the winter, are no concern to the Brituh.
for and has been granted per­ cycles for incoming calls.

Tell Sparks To Keep Tuned For SIU News
Sent Out By Marine Radio WPG In Norfolk

�Page Six

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Fridai7, AprU 1. 1949

SHIPS' MINUTES AMD MEWS
Paddy Crone, Loyal Son Of Erin, 'Manila Watch' Reports Port
Under Anti-Commie Guard
Has Day Of Festivity On Del Sud
It was a great day for the
Irish—and, for that matter—any­
one else who was aboard the SS
Del Sud on March 17. All hands
were celebrating good and proper
in honor of St. Patrick and Sea­
farer Paddy Crone, "grand old
man" of the Delta Line's trim
cruise ship and as fine a lad as
ever set out on the bounding bil­
low.
You didn't need a ticket for the
shindig and nobody cared what
your favorite color was, so long
as it was green. Bill Click, OS,
who staged the party, decreed
that it would be open house.
Ship's Delegate A. C. Flynn,
who thinks this would be a bet­
ter world if more shamrocks
grew in it, made it plain to the
LOG that the Sud's affair was
the clambake of the season.

about over, all hands joined in a
salute to Brother Paddy Crone.
They wished the proud lad that
there'd be many more St. Pat­

Ludvico Agulto, better known
to Seafarers as the Manila
rick's Day for him. They meant Watch, has reported to the LOC
it too, even if most were feeling this week that he is finding it
a little bit too much on the green extremely difficult to contact
side.
SIU ships touching Manila be­

cause of Covernment security
measures against the communists.
Agulto, who has been contact­
ing ships to distribute LOCs and
take pictures of the crews, re­
ports the government has become
security conscious since the com­
munists overran a good pai't of
China and the CP leaders of the
Philippines announced their al­
legiance to Russia in event of
open warfare.
The government, he reports
will allow no photographs to be
taken on the docks. His at­
tempts to contact SIU crews
aboard ship have in many cases
been fruitless.
The arrangement for Agulto to
meet SIU ships and distribute
LOGs has been in practice for
the past two years.

Late Seafarer

PADDY'S DAY
"Sure, it was a whopping suc­
cess," Flynn wrote: "It was a
happy gathering that came to
pay tribute to the two noble sons
of Erin."
Spirits were there, too, said
Brother Flynn, though banishees
were as scarce as. orange flags.
Down in the Sailor's Lounge,
where the carryings-on took
place. Host Bill Click kept things
going at a lively pace. Flynn re­
ported that Click's take-off on
crewmembers was one of the e;^terfainment high-spots.
When the evening was just

Celebrators at St. Patrick's
Day frolic aboard the Del Sud
toast "grand old man" Paddy
Crone, guest of honor, who is
seated in center of group.
Standing behind him minus a
By SALTY DICK
shirt is host Bill Glick, and at
Roy Velasco is getting so fat
Suggestion (I'm full of 'em):
extreme right is Max Lipton,
chief cook and contributor of it's almost impossible for him to Change delegates on board
some fancy confections—green get behind the steering wheel. ship frequently. This is the
He's driving a cab now... When democratic way... In 1946 dur­
frostin, of course.
you're in Tampa ask for a Suban ing the General Strike I was
mixed sandwich. It's a treat... in Tampa and the cigar makers
The other night I went to the union came to our aid. This is
fairgrounds and saw Joie, Chit- one union that always lends us
wood and his daredevils, who a hand.
drive like madmen. They gave • The New Orleans Hall has
us a good show. I then paid a quite a few packages and mail
visit to the Royal American for Union Brothers. All mem­
show and had a good time.
bers in the vicinity ought to
check and see if anything is be­
ing held for them . . . Alfred
Ybrough paid off here in New
Orleans and then took a bus for
Frisco. Before he left he spent
a pleasant evening with Bill
Champlin.
The old Hall in Chartres Street
is now a beer tavern and you'll
still see some of the gang there.
Upstairs you can rent a bunk
Hot Tip Department: Seafarers and sleep it off in good sur­
on the beach who own a tele­ roundings . . . I've said it before
phone and a radio are touted and I'll say it again: All SIU
this bit of information by a Sea­ ships are clean ships, so help
farer who signs himself "Spike, keep yours spotless. We have a
27052:" .
reputation to live up to.
"If you are listening to Stop
All you guys who sailed Cal­
The Music on Sunday evenings mer Lines during the war
and your phone rings, the title would be wiser and perhaps
of the current mystery tune is richer if you would write to
St. Paul Steeple," says Spike. the company and inquire whe­
In his communication to the ther you have any mpney
LOG he states that the jackpot due. Give name of ship and
is about 2 grand and odds are other daJA ... Since Frenchy
about 30 million to 1, but, as Michelet has been asking for
Spike puts it, "who ever heard men to go to the Gold Coast,
of a seaman that was scared by the cross-country bus lines are
the odds against him."
paying bigger dividends. I
The Editors of the LOG pass know of one bus that wds
this information along as a pub­ caUed the "SIU Special.""
For the benefit of those who
lic service to our readers. Frank­
Paddy Crone cuts into one of the cakes baked especially ly, we'll stick to our racing don't know, Vieux Carre is the
, French Quarter to seamen.
for the :^'casion.
forms.

'The Voice Of The Sea'

Spike's Giving
Away $2,000
Worth Of Info

Paul Cook, 37-year-old Sea-farer, who died March 10
aboard the Bret Harte. BrotherCook was buried at sea while
the ship was enroute from
Singapore to Port Aden.

Joseph H. Smith, a Deck En­
gineer, who lived in Lowville,
N. Y., died of a heart attack in
a Rochester hospital recently, the
LOG has been informed. He was
49 years old.
Smith, who ig survived by his
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John W.
Smith of Carthage, N. Y., and a
brother, James R., of Lowville,
had been sailing aboard mer­
chant ships since he was dis­
charged from the Army in April
1945. Smith also served in the
Navy before the outbreak of the
war.

ATTENTION!
If you don't find linen
when you go aboard your
ship, notify the Hall at once.
A telegram from Le Havre or
Singapore won't do you any
good. It's your bed and you
have to lie in it.

�T H E S E AF A R E R S

Friday. ApriM. 1949

LOG

Page Seven

Digested Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings
RAPHAEL SEMMES. Jan. 9—
K o s 1 a Hotainusios, Chairman;
James Moore. Secretary. Dele­
gates reported minor beefs. New
Business: Moved and carried
that all beefs be cleared through
the ship's delegates and depart­
ment heads to Patrolman. Motion
made and carried that crew not
sign on until slopchest is prop­
erly stored in New York. Ship's
delegate elected. Motion carried
to back up delegate 100 per cent
against discrimination by ship's
officers. Crew asked to be moi'e
cooperative in cleaning of wash­
Business: Discussion
ing machine.
portation rule.

t t

PONTUS H. ROSS. Dec. 17—
James A. Wilke, Chairman;
Harry Franklin. Secretary. Mo­
tion by Joseph Pilutis to have
Steward draft a letter to Paul
Hall regarding trip to Seattle
from New York. Motion to thank
Captain in writing for his _fair
attitude regarding transportation
money. Motion by \ Franklin to
invite officers to use of recrea­
tion room and pastry table. Good
and Welfare: Agreed to rotate
care of recreation room among
the three departments.

.'$L

against habitual gashounds and
performers. Discussion on inade­
quate slopchest. Matter to be
settled at payoff. Several sug­
gestions offered on ways to main­
tain a clean SIU ship. Deck En­
gineer agreed to repair all leaky
showers and plumbing fixtures
immediately. One minute of sil­
ence in memory of Brothers lo.st
at sea.

on

trans­

» » &amp;
BESSEMER VICTORY. Feb. 1
—J. Hand. Chairman; L. W6tler.
Secretary. Delegates reported no
beefs. New Business: Motion by
Tavares to have fidley doors
closed at all times. Motion by
Wille to keep passageway doors
closed in cold weather. Delegate
to get in touch with Union Hall
to find out if Patrolman will be
at payoff. Steward asked for a
greater variety in dry cereal. One
minute of silence for Brothers
lost at sea.
4&gt; 4. 4.
SEATRAIN TEXAS. Feb. 22—
R. H. Wilson. Chairman; R. L.
Niedermeyer. Secretary. Dele­
gates reported no beefs.
New
Business: Motion caiTied to give
a vote of thanks to the Steward
for typing up the meetings' min­
utes.
Motion carried for the
ship's delegate to see the Captain
concerning a room allowance for
not having hot water. Good and
Welfare: Oldtimer warned car
deckmen to stay on their deck
and do their work. Ordinary
and Wiper and Steward's Utility
to take turns keeping the laun­
dry clean. One minute of silence
for Brothers lost at sea.

4 4 4
MARQUETTE VIQTORY. Feb.
13—J. Kuhley. Chairman; C. Kowalski. Secretary. Previous meet­
ings minutes read and accepted.
Agreed that each department
would clean laundry on rotating
weekly basis. Everything was
reported ship-shape in the three
departments.
Motions carried:
that membership respect chair
and stand when addressing meet­
ing; that delegates give members
24-hour notice.
Members not
having legitimate excuses for not
attending are to be fined,
and
proceeds to be turned over to
members in hospitals.
Under
Education second part of Con­
stitution was read and discussed.
Pro and con discussion on tran.sportation ruling.

ANV
NUMBER I
CAN plAW

POMY

HESITATE -JO
HIT THE DECK

AT SHIPBOARP
OR SHORESiDE

OR

VURlNG- &lt;?00'D
AA)D WELFARE
IF You HAVB SOMEJUING- fo OFFER THAT IS THE HAY THE L^AJlOA/ /AAKES
PROGRESS — BY UTlLlZihiG "pHE SUM

-TOTAL OF THE MEMBE15SMIP&lt;S
AAID ^NOWLBVGB.

CUT and RUN
By HANK

In all SIU ports every Brother should read and re-read the
excellent SIU booklet "Report of the Delegates of the Atlantic
and Gulf District on the State of the Union" as presented to the
Baltimore SIU Convention. Every Brother will certainly realize the
pork chop job security (with all the trimmings) he has through
4 4 4
4 4.
membership in the SIU. 1949 and 1950 should continue to be even
ANNA DICKENSON. Jan. 26—
NOONDAY. Feb. 11 — Sharp,
greater years for our membership with all hands keeping the ships
C. F. Aycock. Chairman; C. B.
Chairman; Stanford. Secretary.
and the policies of the SIU in ship-shape style.
Skipper, Secrelary. Agr'eed that
Delegates reported no beefs.
4
4
4
pi'oceeds of fines imposed for dis­
Ship's Delegate Welch asked
Flash News—Big Bill Rodslein's Dinner and Supper Club
orderly shipboard conduct would
crewmembefs to be sober at
(he's a former Seafarer) down in good old Philadelphia has
be used to purchase materials
sailing time. New library to be
honored our Union by dedicating one of its dishes—a $2.50
and games for crew's welfare.
picked up in New York. Chair­
meal—to the SEAFARERS LOG. It's Half Spring Chicken.
;Oiscussed case of member who
man informed crewmembers that
Fried or Broiled. And this place isn't cheap at all. They have
refused to attend shipboard
a consignment of union literature
an amazing dish (Walter Winchell. please note) called Fresh
meeting. Recommended that his
is available to Brothers inter­
Grilled Alligator Steak a la Floridian for (hold your dough,
case be turned over to Patrolman
ested. One minute of silence for
fellas) $249.50. No kidding. Also there's a humorous dish called
for disciplinary action. Suggested
Brothers lost at sea. A short lec­
Big Bill's pride. It's Toasted Bagel with Garlic Butter. Wow!
that Negotiating Committee at­
ture was given by Welch, on
4
4
4
tempt to have liquid penicillin
"Why we should be loyal to our
Recently
Arrived
Brothers-^William
Porter, Fred Lewan who
placed aboard ships instead of
union." Good and Welfai-e: Sug­
has
been
away
from
our
town
for
a
long
time, Rudy Haryasz,
the tablet form. One minute of
gestion that sailors get more time
Archibald
Anderson,
Frank
Meo
...
Other
Brothers
in town—John
silence observed in memory of
for coffee when called out.
Whalan,
Steve
Kliderman
who
after
waiting
and
waiting for
departed Brothers.
mail,
finally
received
some...
Frank
Gardner,
the
oldtimer
and
4. 4 4
4 4 4
stamp
collector
waiting
for
over-due
mail...
Edmund
Edgington,
SEATRAIN NEW YORK. Jan.
ALCOA CORSAIR — Eddie the mustached Electrician... The weekly SEAFARERS LOG will
30 — John Mehalov. Chairman;
Stough. Chairman; Joe Seaver. be sailing free of cost to the homes of the following Brothers—
C h a r 1 e s' Goldstein, Secretary.
Secretary. Reports of the vari­ Leonard Bugajewski, of New York, Melvin L'Esperance of Virginia,
Delegates reported number of
ous delegates read and accepted. E. F. Cooke of Florida, Paul Hansen of Illinois, Earl Allen of
4- 4" 4^
books and permits in their de­
Motion carried: To purchase a California, J. Howell of Louisiana.
ROBIN GOODFELLOW. Feb.
partments. Ship's delegate re­
music box and speaker for crew's
4
4
4
ported on letter from Galveston 11 — Carl Reardon, Chairman;
use; Chief Steward spoke on the
Salted Book Department—Mobtown Clipper, by S. S. Rabl;
pointing out the union taxi com­ Jake Longfellow, Secretary. Dele­
recreational value of such a pur­
published by Cornell Maritime Press. Cambridge. Maryland for
panies in Texas City. Crew rec­ gates reported no beefs. New
chase. Also moved and carried
$3.00.
This is a story of the men who built and sailed the'
ommended Frank's Cab and Business: Motion carried that all
to purchase uniforms for baseball
clipper
ships. It also has women in H. Brothers... Facts De­
United Cab. Steward explained packages, parcels and bags be
team. This motion amended to
partment—Sailors
are among the fe^ unemployed in Denmark.
why a hot plate was installed in carefully checked for ship's gear
read that Barney Craig, team
We
sure
would
appreciate
knowing what every Congressman
midship pantry. Crew urged not when leaving a ship. Education:
manager, secure estimates and
and
Senator
in
Washington
thinks of such a situation overseas
Lengthy
discussion
on
Hoffman
to soak clothing in buckets. New
present them to next shipboard
and whether it should be the same here in America for our
lockers to be put on repair list. plan. Good and Welfare: Sug­
meeting. A motion calling for
merchant seamen. Furthermore this is why every SIU Brother
gestion made that ship's delegate
purchase of magazines for ship's
and members of his family in various states are seriously
inquire about getting messroom
libi'ary was killed. Joe Seaver
urging their hometown Congressmen and Senators to protect
painted on the day men's week­
was elected ship's treasurer.
the jobs of our seamen from any destructive amendments or
end time off.
There was one minute of silence
other bills involving our seamen and ships under the ECA
t 4. 4
in memory of departed Union
program. Continue to write those letters. Brothers. Your Con­
FAIRLAND. Feb. 23 — Jesse Brothers.
gressman
should realize the true story of what will happen if
4" 4" 4"
Baugher. Chairman; A. Adomaithe American merchant marine is so easily disregarded!
CARABULLE. Jan. 16 —Wil­ tis. Secretary. Delegates reported
4
4
4
liam Serpe, Chairman; Frank that there were no disputes on
Here's another fact we clipped from the newspapers. Although
Lanliere. Secretary. Delegates re­ overtime. John R, Dixon was
the signal does not apply "to vessels under way—five long blasts
ported number of books and per­ elected Ship's Delegate. Agreed
of the whistle* or siren -aboard ship berthed or anchored in San
mits in their departments. New that cardplayers were to clean
Francisco Bay means a shipboard fire. Good thing to remember,
their games.
Business: Motion carried to elect up after finishing
4 4 4
Brothers, when in Frisco... R. O. Brewer writes of trying to splice
William R. Serpe as Ship's dele­ There was one minute of silence
W. E. DOWNING. Feb. 28— a few months of shipping on the Great Lakes... Brother H. O.
gate. Education: Explained to in memory of departed Brothers.
Jacques Greenhaw. Chairman; Tennant, ship's delegate aboard the Seatrain Texas, says that all
new members procedure on
4&gt; 4, 4
(secrelary not named). Depart­ Seatrain scows should know that the Seatrain Bar in Belle Chasse,
handing in overtime to delegates.
AZALEA CITY. Feb. 27—Fred ment delegates reported. Motion Louisiana (which also receives weekly LOGs) is under new and .
Crewmembers explained the im­ Roman. Chairman; Satiras Foscocarried to announce crew's uani- more seamanlike ownership. And how about nickel beers, though?
portance of writing congressmen las. Secretary. Discussion on
mous support of the fight being . . . Eddie Calandra is at present aboard the SS Sanford B. Dole.
and senators giving their views rusty water tanks. These tanks
waged by Union against Hoffman That's the spirit, Eddie, keep picking up those LOGs! ... Oldtimer
on the Hoffman plan.
were supposed to have been Plan. Under Good and Welfare M. F. Morrison reveals that the Ward Hotel in New Orleans
^ ^ %
painted during pi-evious stop in agreed that Steward would post charges $5.50 a day and a minimum requirement of three days
MADAKET. Jan. 27 — R. A. New York. Matter will be held on bulletin board the list of abiding there—with no doubt, paying for in advance... Brother
Michaud. Chairman: W. C. Kel- over until ship returns to port. stores to be ordered in Monte­ Lawrence Leonard is now a cadet at the Georgia Military College
ley. Secretary.
Delegates re­ Motion passed to go on record video. One minute of silence in ... Keep those ships clean and happy Brothers. Protect those agree­
ported everything in order. New favoring strong union action memory of departed Brothers.
ments, indeed.

�Page Eighl

THE SEAFARERS

rriday, April 1. 1949

LOG

THE MEMBERSHIP SPEAKS
Fast-Moving Pace Of Peacetime
Dims War Role Of Seamen: Flynn

ITS WARM ON THE CHILI RUN

bists trying to advance their
age of houses and heavy taxes
that we are indeed older and cause, and concerned with the
We are prone to ponder at poorer, that the sacrifices made ever present peril of Russia.
times on things touching our in the last war were not suffi­ -But gone is that spirit, gone
life. Outwardly we remain calm cient.
and going yet is that great mer­
and do our jobs, but sometimes
chant fleet which astounded and,
QUESTIONS COURSE
we must ask ourselves what have We got rid of two enemies and thrilled the world by its size.
the years brought us. For over now are coming to war-like But not gone, for it never was
the years no one can be sure grips with another. What is this bom, is a Seamen's Bill of
when the Four Horsemen of the cycle of wars, peace, depressions Rights which would have given
Apocalypse will not ride again. .and wars? Where is this loving something decent to the seamen
Let us now look at ourselves and humanity which rose from the in return for services to their
some aspects of our national life holocaust of the last conflict and country.
as relate to us.
WELFARE NEEDS
cried, 'Teace!" A peace so won­
I read once in one of those derful and shared by all men. Is it asking too much for hos­
popular psychology books that It was a lovely vision to con­ pital care for seamen without
a man's personality undergoes a template during those war years. discharges, to prove he sailed
marked change every seven It came, but it is unfulfilled, ex­ recently, although he sailed for
years, that the habits of earlier cept in the determination of our a number of years during the
years are sloughed off and re­ leaders to make it binding by a war? Is it asking too much for
placed by other habits, to a show of strength in armaments, a man disabled by the hazards
greater or lesser degree into his the services and the atom bomb, of war to be given federal com­
present maturity. Few of us real­ costing us fifteen biUion dollars. pensation when he is partly or
ize these changes as we are ab­ It is worth it I suppose if it totally unable to support him­
sorbed so much in the present, wiU keep us out of war, but self? Is it making excessive de­
Four unidentified Oremar crewmembers pose under the
and the gradual changes are so must we go on mulling over mands that a man interrupting
infinitesimal in our thinking, what we ought to have in social his normal education to sail the South Atlantic sun during a voyage to Cruz Grande, Chile.
physical, being that we are sel­ legislation while Congress dallies perilous convoy routes be given
Brother A. H. Reasko who took the picture reported the ship
dom aware of them, until we in filibusters
and interminable a tuition to recontinue his educa­
will payoff clean. Pic was submitted to the LOG by Bennie
are faced with a situation which committee reports without get­ tion?
Gonzalez.
demands things from us what ting anything concrete done?
These and other welfare
only a younger self could supply.
True, the President proposed clauses would be in the seamen's
This of course is not a negation, many useful measures like the Bill of Rights. It would imdoubtfor with our added years and 75 cent minimum wage, repeal edly cost the government a
experience we could hardly en­ of the Taft Hartley Law, more couple million dollars, but it
visage things that once would and better housing and so on, would be the most deserved ex­
have satisfied a younger man. but his program is bogged down penditure that the government
Be that as it may, but most of by an obstinate Congress who, racked up for a worthy cause. To the Editor:
who think in dollars and cents,
us can see and appreciate the though I believe would like to Billions is spent in implementing
are not interested in US mer­
fact—as cast by the world's tor­ advance constructive legislation, the European Recovery Program, The United States, practically chant marine. There are too
tuous events of a disillusioned are caught in the mire of their but the men that manned the speaking, is not a continent. It many foreign flag vessels listed
peace, crises upon crises, the own bureaucratic red tape, com­ merchant fleet during the great­ can be compared to the penin­ with them as ready to carry car­
preparation for war again, short­ plicated by maneuvers of lob- est war in history are now spur­ sula of Portugal and Spain, both goes at lower rates than US ves^
ious peace expendables.
sels. A foreign freighter is cheap­
It seems a long time ago since great maritime nations that went er than an American Liberty,
DEL NORTE CARICATURES
the war ended, for the history down due to their grandees' un- and that is all that matters to a
of this epoch is crowded with satiable greed for American big business man interested only
momentous exigencies that are gold. (We have no grandees in in profits from imports and ex­
in turn relegated to an historical USA but we have a few grand— ports. Busy as he is,: he cannot
limbo when _ new crises appear.
be expected to be interested in
The significant events of yester­ as we'll see him in the end.)
keeping up our merchant marine
day ar6 no more but a feeble The United States, a center of for Rational defense.
. %e U* ENGINEER
echo of today; and the conside­ world commerce a country rich
BELIEVE IT oi? NOT"
Tug LIFE OF THIL
"There's a government in
tvMCAf THt PAOTy IS
"APPILLO, ^ GOOD
rations due men for their part in resources, a land of the free
COOK, AND TM£
ov T»e Hooie
Washington
paid to watch the
in the war are but papers col­
^ BfST"U3N6 srotty
ramparts," he grunts with his
and
home
of
the
brave,
should
60IN6 TO
lecting dust and age in the ar­
be a great maritime nation, na­ snout down as he, roots, busy
chives of Washington.
with his tusks chewing up the
It comes back to that query turally meant. The Atlantic, Pa­
roots of the oak tree, US mer­
I made in the beginning of this cific, and Gulf give us a long
chant marine. "That's right, the
essay: sometimes we must ask coastline with many big seaports
Capitalist will cut his own
ourselves what have the years
throat for profit," Lenin would
for
ocean
vessels
to
carry
the
brought us. We're older for one
say
if he were alive today.
world
trade.
thing and the buck is a shrink^
And yet, as' a maritime nation,
ing illusion for another: And
R. J. Peterson
,\/^wAiTee CAciQPA
with little over a thousand ves­
whether
the
politicians
will
ever
'DlONT fCNOW r»£Kt
A/lPt so MANY GLAEJfS
get around to that Bill of Rights sels in active service, we are just
IN A SNIP UNTIL Ht NAO
before we get senile is another. a mediocrity and a far cry from UNION OLDTIMER
TO WASH THEM
So
it would be evident at pres­ Roosevelt's promised plan for
yes. You euisstD IT
hIAlTCPS ST/ii WASH ALL.
ent that the SIU proposed wel­ the best merchant marine in the LIKES MARITIME
GLASSES ANO SlLMEP
fare plans are perhaps the only world arid the best manned ships SLANT OF LOG
~ USED IN THE SHIP
concrete proposition layed out to sail the seven seas.
The big business men in US, To the Editor:
for us.
John J. Flynn
I am sending you a few lines
So IONS, BNOTHtPS
in
praise of your newspaper the
I 'M etTTiue orS
SEAFARERS
LOG. I have been
M6NT COOK NICK
^ SEE. YOU NEXT
ALMOrr LSFT A
TPIP
reading it for a long time and
w/Dow lAi rvePY
the names of those to whom we
To the Editor:
POtfT
'Ha P£LL Dt
are
indebted for the excellent think it is the best Union paper
JTAIPS
We Seafarers who are patients service. The entire staff has been on the waterfront. I am a sea­
man and have packed a union
in the Savannah Marine Hospital swell.
book since 1916.
wish to extend our thanks to the
All have cooperated in getting
staff of institution for the very our men in and out of here in Your paper is a real rank and
fine care they are giving us. And good condition in the shortest file newspaper and gives good
we should like this fact made time possible.
maritime news from all over. I
public in the LOG."
am now a member of the Ma­
A. C. McAlpin
Throughout our stay—and we
rine Firemen's Union and must
J. F. Goudd
are still here — we have been
ask that my name, not be printed,
Stanley
Kasmizsky
given the finest attention. Unfor­
fellow crewmembers on
E. Reyes sketches some of
T. C. Musgrovs
(Name Withheld)
tunately we cannot provide all
and off the job.
To the Editor:

US Seen Entering Ranks
Of Fallen Maritime Powers

•

h

I?
li'-

SIU Patients Praise Hospital Staff

�FridBy, April 1, 1949

THE SEAFARERS

Page Nine

LOG

Member Answers Paper's Attack
On Seamen, OK Of Hearing Units
The Beachcomber
By JOHN F. WUNDERLICH. JR.

Sauntering along in tKe sand,
on the beach in a foreign land.
Thankful for the shadow of a cloud—
pockets empty, but head held proud.
Time is gone, when he ran aloft;
years ashore have made him soft.
The ocean holds no wooden ships
where iron men can make their trips.
Twenty years ago or more
'bout sailing ships he knew the score.
But sail went out, and steam came in;
the men of iron couldn't win.
Now we have the iron , ships,
where wooden men can make their trips.
The men of iron went ashore
to bum the beach forevermore.
So . when I meet a bum that's old,
but who once was sailing, brash and bold.
I remember that I might have been
one who went out as steam came in.
Thank you, oldtimer, who blasted a trail,
'cross oceans in fullriggers under sail.
You were a pioneer of the seas;
take a bow, if you please.

•

%

Member's Wife Follows HoffmanMove
To Ihe Editor:
I have been receiving the SEA­
FARERS LOG for five
or six
mont^is, and I cannot tell you
how much pleasure I get out of
reading it. I even find
myself
waiting for it eagerly a day be­
fore it arrives.
My husband, now out on a
iship, will be home at the end of
April. I have saved all the LOGs
for him so he can catch up on
the news of the union.
I am writing to ask if you
would send the LOG to my new
address. Since it has been three
weeks since I moved, I have
missed several issues. It has dis­
tressed me, for I was following
the news of the Hoffman plan
and would like to learn of the
outcome.

Moment In Jeddah

I would also like to know if
you have any of the bopks that
are made from the SEAFARERS
LOG and the price of each.
Before closing I would like to
say that I think the SIU is
about the best organized and
most efficiently run labor union
that I know of. Stick to it, boys.
Keep fighting
for your rights.
Mrs. Sanlo Panebiango
Houston. Texas
(Ed. Note: The LOG is
pleased to hear that a Seafar­
er's wife is interested in the
fight for EGA cargoes. The
back issues of the LOG are
being sent to you, and vol­
umes are on sale at SIU Head- '
quarters in six-month editions
for $2.50 each.)

nois AFL President Victor dan­
der, who was member of the
AFL Seafarers' Union.
In connection with your de­
mand for anti-union coast guard
kangaroo courts to place the
merchant marine under navy dis­
cipline, let me again remind you
that marine transport is a private
enterprise, and not a branch of
the navy. The merchant seamen
are wage workers in an industry
operating for profit, and have the
same rights as all workers.
If you insist that the potential
military use of U.S. ships cancels
their rights, you might as well
insist on the logical extension of
this formula to all workers, for
total war involves them all. But
bear in mind that no country
which has abolished its fi-ee
labor movement has remained a
free country. Even your pre­
cious "free enterprise" goes out
the window about the same time.
HONEYMOON DAYS
It is laughable to recall that
your worries about commies on
the ships were even expressed
in the days when th^ commies
were locked in Ifiving embace
with the government during
1941-45.
U.S. maritime law adequately
provides for so-called "mutiny,"

While the Joseph N. Teal was
in Foosan, Korea, we sat down
to the best dinner any member
of the crew ever enjoyed. It was
Washington's Birthday, and the
following quotes from crewmembers give you an idea of how
much we enjoyed celebrating our
first president's birthday:
James Allen, Bosun: "Just for
this I'll have to make another
trip to reduce."
M. Barnett, Chief Eng.: "I
don't want to see any food for
a whole month."
S. J. Smith, Deck Eng.: "I'm
on a diet, but my eyes were a
lot larger than my stomach."
E. Erickson, AB: "My table
muscles developed a whole inch
in one meal."
Captain James Gris thought so
much of the way the food was
cooked and served that he said
he would personally write to the
LOG about it.
Woody Perkins, Chief Cook,
told me that it was a lot of
work serving the crew, but see­
ing the men go for the chow
was real gratifying.
After the dinner everybody hit

his sack. It almost took a block
and tackle to get them away
from the table.
The boys responsible jfor the
fine feed are: Chuck Tletcher,
Chief Steward; Woody Perkins,
Chief Cook; Rudy Rice, 2nd Cook

which no longer exists anyhow,
except where invented by the
fertile imaginations of anti-union,
editors, as happened last sum­
mer in the case of the SS Will­
iam Carson. There is nothing, fur­
thermore, to stop a skipper from
beaching drunk or incompetent
seamen. As for being "rude" to
passengers, no seaman would
want to cut his income from tips
by such conduct.
As for the U.S. Army cargo
ships, there is no reason why
they should not deal with civi­
lian seamen's organizations when
it is the policy of other govern­
ment agencies to deal with
unions. You want the govern­
ment to keep its hands off busi­
ness, yet you are the first to dem a n d that the government
shackle the labor movement.
Seamen, whose jobs are un­
usually insecure, who in war had
a higher casualty rate than the
armed services, and who in
peacetime have a higher accident
rate than any occupation except
lumbering and mining, are en­
titled to all the improvements
and protection which self organi­
zation can give them, the hateful
policy of the Tribune notwith"
standing.
Virgil J. Vogel

Lost; 3 Shots Of Chain
- Finder See Purdue Crew
To ihe Editor:
So ends another trip of the
Anchorless Victory, sometimes
known as the Columbia River
Cruiser, but officially called the
Purdue Victory. The trip as
whole could be considered very
good for an intercoastal where
the turnover runs pretty high.
I believe the payoff in New York
this Friday will be as clean and
quick as most.
About the aliases this scow
has acquired. All shifts on the
Columbia dre at night. And
though there never was any

GW's Birthday Occasion For Bang-Up Meal On Teal
To the Editor:

Charles Oppenheimer doesn't
ship on bumboats. He just
hopped aboard this one for a
fast picture in the Arabian
port.

(Ed. Note: Brother Vogel
sent the following letter to the
Chicago Tribune in answer to
an editorial published there on
March 22. The editorial at­
tacked Hugh Bryson, head of
the MCS, for being opposed to
the Army's acquiring of 11 C-4
ships. The editorial went on
to kick the seamen in the teeth
by quoting a Coast Guard re­
port on the value of the hear­
ing units. The CG report
said in part: "Until safety at
sea, discipline, and national
loyalty are enforced by re­
visions in the present shipping
code and strengthened dis­
ciplinary powers for the Coast
Guard, the merchant marine
will be a weak and failing part
of the national economy and of
dubious value in national de­
fense.")
Dear Sir:
Your editorial entitled "Wan­
ing Ocean Trade," March 22,
1949, repeats some of the errors
you made last August 31, to
which I fruitlessly called your
attention at that time.
In the effort to sustain your
long standing policy of smearing
American merchant seamen by
the propaganda technique of as­
sociation, you are now reduced
to quoting commie stooge Hugh
Bryson of the Marine Cooks and
Stewards, a small west coast
union with a reported member­
ship of only 7,000 in an industry
employing nearly a quarter mil­
lion.
Since Joe Curran defeated the
commies in the NMU, Bryson is
the only important Moscow wheel
horse remaining at the helm of a
seagoing union. Yet you blow
him up to create the impression
that merchant seamen are led by
"subversive" influences, in com­
plete disregard of the anti-com­
munist Seafarer's International
Union, AFL, and a half dozen
other seagoing unions, AFL, CIO,
and independent, all of which
have signed the government's
anti-communist affidavits.
I notice also that the Tribune
recently had some very kind
words to say about the late Illi­

and Baker; Robert Rackley, 3rd
Cook.
Speaking in behalf of the
crew, this is by far the finest
Stewards Department that I have
ever had the pleasure to sail
S. J. Smith
with.

Teal crewmembers line the rail in anticipation of the big
feed to come. The slack shown around the waist had disap­
peared about one hour and seven courses later. Left to right
the crewmembers are: Kelly. Wiper; Trieste. Saloon Mess;
Woody. Chief Cook, and Lucky. Oiler.

moon or female company that's
the derivation. Then, coming in­
to Bradwood to top off, the pilot
tried to swing her around with
the port anchor in the current.
Results: we were minus a port
anchor and a half a shot of
chain. Five of us replaced it that
night with a spare.
STARBOARD. TOO
After leaving Bradwood we
were at Tounge Point when fog
shut in. So the pilot tried to
swing into the tide with the
starboard anchor. Result: we
were minus the starboard anchor
and three shots of chain. She
swung all fight — just hard
enough to hang up on a bar.
But with the flood
tide she
floated free. Next morning we
proceeded to Pedro for bunkers
and another anchor. Hence the
alias.
That's about it, except for a
few instances of personal goingson. An Oiler had his permit pull­
ed for performing and an E.T.C.
jumped ship in Portland, the
Second and Third Mates were
hospitalized as a result of a car
wreck.
MORE OF SAME
An OS had to got off with an
infected throat, the Chief Elec­
trician was taken to the hospital
with a stomach ailment, but he
managed to make the ship any­
way. Oh yes, the Bosun was laid
up with a sprained ankle ... this
could go on all day.
May the Oiler's case cited
above stand as an example.
There's a time and a place for
gassin' and boozin', but during
working hours on ship just isn't
it.
I'm sure this crew won't leave
this ship the waj"- she was left
last trip, so you guys looking for
a job can stop looking.
R. E. Weaver
Ship's Delegate
Purdue Victory

�THE

Page Ten

SEAFARERS

Friday, April 1.^1949

LOG

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings in Brief
NEW YORK — Chairman. A.
Michelet, 21184; Recording Secre
tary, F. Stewart. 4935; Reading
Clierk. Robert Matthews. 164.
Minutes of meetings held in
outports accepted and filed
Agent reported optimism on
various operators securing pas
senger ships for operation out of
New York. Announcement of
SIU Convention made. No New
Business.
Meeting adjourned
with 812 members present.
4. 4. 4.
NEW ORLEANS — Chairman.
Johnston, 53; Recording Secre­
tary, Bill Frederick. 94; Reading
Clerk. Buck Stephens. 76.
New Orleans financial report
read and accepted. Minutes of
previous meetings in other
Branches read and accepted.
Agent said that shipping had de­
clined, and that 27 ships here intransit in past two weeks aided
considerably.
Immediate pro­
spects are not especially good
and he advised men to steer
clear of the port for the time be­
ing. He reminded the men con­
vention will start in Baltimore
on Mar. 28. He advised men with
suggestions to forward them to
Headquarters, so that delegates
may receive them in time for
presentation to the convention.
Agent's report accepted. Com­
munications read. Six members
took the Oath of Obligation. One
minute of silence in memory of
departed Brothers.

AStG Shipping From March 9 To March 23
REG.
DECK

PORT

GRAND TOTAL

TOTAL
REa

SHIPPED
DECK

SHIPPED SHIPPED
STWDS.
ENG.

115
57
38
65
575

522

19
15

..

REG.
STWDS.

54
10
15
309
78
88
26
130
23
63
49
262
(NO FIGURES RECEIVED)
12
13
9
11
42
18
14
7
47
8
(COMPLETE FIGURES NOT RECEIVED)
147
69
79
120
382
40
59
61
59
156
21
14
73
29
19
60
58
76
183
67

16
102
50
98

Boston
—
New York
Philadelphia.
Baltimore
Norfolk
Savannah.
Tampa
Mobile
New Orleans
Galveston
San Juan.
West Coast

REG.
ENG.

not bad during past two week
period. Motion carried to accept
report.
Minutes of previous
: Branch meetings read and ac­
cepted. Several members were
excused from meeting after pre­
senting valid reasons. Commit­
tee to be elected to handle re­
quests of two Brothers seeking
to transfer from present depart­
ments.
Various subjects of
Union interest were discussed
under Good and Welfare, with
considerable time being devoted
to problem of vessels sailing
short-handed. Meeting adjourned
at 8 PM with 147 men present.

18
85
42
88

20
122
38
76

541

1,638

conditions and cited the number
of payoffs in port this week. He
said that a flag and a Union
banner had ben ordered for the
Hall. The membership was re­
minded that the SIU's fourth
biennial convention would get

437

410

TOTAL
SHIPPED

14
87
24
54

39
253
73
166

12
5
102
54
9
73

34
20
145
150
174
47
216

434

1,317

all written requests. seeking ex­
cuses from meeting attendance
be referred to Dispatcher. At
conclusion of meeting the Union
movie of the Wall Street strike
was shown.
if

if

if

BOSTON—Chairman, T. Flem­
ing, 30821; Recording Secretary,
S. Bayne, 13; Reading Clerk, E.
B. Tilley, 75.

the freight-ship agreement on
vessels eqvupped with automatic
steering gear. Trial committee
report calling for one-year pro­
bationary period for member accusecj of jeopardizing welfare of
his Union Brothers was accepted.
Balloting committee's report ac­
cepted. One minute of silence in
memory of departed Brothers.
Meeting adjourned at 8:45 PM
with 94 book men present.
if

i

if

SAN FRANCISCO—Chairman,
Robert Pohle, 46826; Recording
Secretary, R. Flaherty, 49784;
Reading Clerk, P. Robertson,
30148.
New business of minutes of
other Branch meetings read and
accepted.
With Port Agent
Michelet on east coast attending
international convention. Acting
Agent Pohle discussed the ship­
ping picture, for the next two
weeks and asked the member­
ship's cooperation in dealing with
several problems. Most impor­
tant of these, he said, was the in­

Trial committee elected to hear
under way in Baltimore on Mar. charges against a member ac­ flux of gashounds aboard inter28, Motion to accept Agent's re­ cused of actions detrimental to coastal ships, who appear to be
port carried. Secretary-Treas­ welfare of his shipmates. Min­ singling out this port for their
urer's reports read and accepted. utes of other Branch meetings performances. The Acting Agent
Meeting
adjourned with 190 read and accepted. Headquar­ assured men that offenders would
if if if
ters and Secretary-Treasurer's fi­ be treated in accordance with
NORFOLK — Chairman, Ben members present.
nancial reports read and ac­ Union policy on question of per­
if X %
Rees. 95; Recording Secretary, J.
cepted. Balloting committee to formers whose actions jeopardize
BALTIMORE
Chairman.
B.
S.
White,
56;
Reading
Clerk,
Buiif
if
Gonzalez, 125; Recording Secre­ serve on transportation referen­ the general welfare. He asked
MOBILE — Chairman, Louis ock, 4747.
dum elected. Motion carried: all hands to do their utmost in
Nerica;
Recording Secretary. Previous - meeting's minutes tary, A. Slansbury, 4683; Reading that we do away with the pres­ cleaning up this situation. Com­
James Carroll, 14; Reading Clerk. read and accepted, as were Clerk, H. Gilham, 10850.
Secretaryent two calls and return to ship­ munications read.
Harold J. Fischer. 59.
Oath of Obligation was ad­ ping on the hour from 9 AM to Treasurer's report read and ac­
routine commimications. Motion
Minutes of previous meetings carried to elect new members to ministered to three members. 4 PM; that Headquarters Nego­ cepted. Meeting adjourned at
in other Branches read and ac­ balloting committee. Following Trial committee elected, with tiating Committee obtain clarifi­ 7:55 PM, with 85 members pres­
cepted. Agent's report revealed Brothers were designated: Mason, following bookmembers pccept- cation of section 7, article 3 in ent.
shipping prospects for port in Lancaster, Frange, Harrell, Wase- ing'the assignment: R. Stoskoff,
next two weeks, and reminded luk and Jones. Agent discussed C. Bomman, R. Vorke, J. Christy
membership of referendum cur­ shipping conditions and port and H. Fowler. Secretary-Treas­
rently being conducted for selec­ business. Under Good and Wel­ urer's reports read and accepted.
fare several members . took the Several members who presented
deck to discuss union nxatters. legitimate reasons were ' allowed
Meeting adjourned with 74 mem­ excused from the meeting. Re­
By JOE ALGINA
ports of the following were ac­
bers in attendance.
cepted: Port Agent, Deck, Engine
if i&gt; if
For several months the Unioij
NEW YORK — The weather
PHILADELPHIA — Chairman, and Stewards Patrolman and turned nice, the birds came out has been urging alien member?
Don C. Hall, 43372; Reading Dispatcher. Considerable discus­ to chirp and Shipping took a of the Union to take steps to­
Clerk, J. Sheehan, 306; Recording sion on vacation pay, with mo­
ward securing citizenship papers,
tion to accept it and get off ship slight siu-ge -upward this past if they had the necessary amount
Secretary, D. Sheehan, 22856.
week.
tion of a transportation rule.
carrying imanimously. One min­
We know the weather will stay of seatime.
Agent reported that he had ute of silence in memory of ^ de­
Agent also told of the communi­
We understand that a man
cations sent to Washington, ask­ been conferring with owners of parted Brothers. Motion pictures relatively nice from now on, but
short
in his seatime cannot apply
ing for favorable ruling on oper­ present quarters here about a of the UFE strike were shown. jurt how long the shipping will
for
citizenship,
but we feel that
ating subsidy application made new lease, and that he had also Presentation was roundly ap­ stay fair is anyone's guess.
oldtimers
who
have
been around
One
thing
is
sure—^if
it
stays
by Arnold Bernstein Company, been investigating two other plauded by membership.
for
ten
or
twerity
years
have had
better
than
average
for
awhile,
which is seeking to place two buildings in town that might
if» if if
plenty
of
time
to
take
the
neces­
t
will
clean
up
the
backlog
of
passenger ships in the European serve our purposes. He said he
GALVESTON—Chairman, Jeff men here on the beach. Until sary steps.
trade. Communications read and was interested in finding out Morrison, 34213; Recording Secre­
In line with this, a recom­
accepted included those from: who would give us the best deal. tary, Keith Alsop, 7311; Reading then—and we frankly don't think
mendation
was made at the last
the
time
will
come—^men
in
the
Agent
also
spoke
on
waterfront
International Brotherhood of
Clerk, C. AUen, 21785.
outports are better off where membership meeting in New
Electrical Workers, Local 773,
thanking us for support in their
Minutes of previous meetings they are. Don't come to New York that alien members meet­
strikes at Pascagoula shipyard.
in other Branches read and ac­ York expecting a boom, as ship­ ing the necessary qualifications
for citizenship not be allowed to
Maritime Commissioners D. J.
cepted, Port Agent reported that ping is not that good.
ship
after July 1, unless they can
For payoffs we handled, the
Every member making a
Coddaire and Joseph Carson in
shipping has picked up consider­
prove
they are being processed
donation to the Union for
reference to Bernstein subsidy
ably in past two weeks. The following ships: Robin Grey;
for
naturalization.
[Bertram Goodhue, South Atlan­
application. Motion carried to any purpose should receive
Good reasons for not becoming •
tic; Sanford Dole, Mar-Trade;
an official receipt bearing
donate $10 for purchase of
a
citizen will be accepted, but
Jean,
Bull;
Scatrains
New
York.
the
amount
of
the
contribu­
Easter Seals for benefit of crip­
lame
excuses, won't do. Ship
Texas
and
Havana;
Steel
Archi­
tion
and
the
purpose
for
pled children. Secretary-Treas­
delegates
and Patrolmen should
tect,
Isthmian;
J.
B.
Waterman
which
it
was
made.
urer's reports read and accepted.
and Bessemer Victory, Water­ check these men at sign-ons and
If a Union official to whom
Balloting committee reported.
prospect for the coming week man; Wanda, Epiphany Tankers. give them the score. It is to
Two members took Union Oath contribution is given does
not make out a receipt for
looked fair, be ®id, with several The Goodhue, Dole, - Wanda their own advantage.
of Obligation. Meeting adjourned
One more note before closing.
the money, the matter should
payoffs seheduled, and the pos­ and the .Seatrains headed out
with 250 members in attendance,
Some
members are confused as
immediately be referred to sibility of some r^Iaeement jobs again along with the Azalea City
t ^ t
to
where
they should phone to
Paul Hall, Secretary-Ereasaboard in-transit caUers. He cKs- and Hastings, Waterman, and
SAVANNAH—Chairman, E. M.
have
their
beefs settled in the
urer, SIU, 51 Beaver Street, closed that the B^neh is pre­ Helen and Frances, Bull. The
Bryant, 25806; Recording Secre­
New
Yprk
Hall. Ask for the
Helen
had
been
in
lay-up,
and
New
York
4.
N.
Y.
sently conducting negotiations
tary, F. D. Wray, 102313; Reading
6th
Deck.
came
out
to
take
a
full
crew.
The
In advising the Secretayrwith the G&amp;H towing company
Clerk, A. L. Fricks, 60.
There the counter Patrolmen
Treasurer of such transac­ for a contract renewal. Agent's Frances had a skeleton crew
Headquarters report Jo the tions, members should state
stand
ready to handle dis­
aboard.'
report, along with Patrolman's
membership and Secretary-Treas-' the name of the official and and Dispatcher's, was accepted. The usual number of vessels putes of all kinds. That's the
urer's report read and accepted.
the port where the money
Motions carried: to accept bal­ touching - port in-transit ac­ one and only place for members
Agent discussed shipping in port.
was tendered.
loting committee's report on counted for the remainder of the to take their problems when in
He revealed that shipping was
New York.
transportation referendum; that men shipped.

New York Urges Eligible Aliens
To File For Citizenship Papers

6et A Reeeipt

�•THE

Friday. April 1, 1949

SEAFARERS

Page Eleven

LOG

Applications For Scholarships
To Oxford Must Be In By May 1
Application blanks for the of labor problems at the uni1949-50 labor scholarships at versity level.
Ruskin College, Oxford Univer­ Both men and women are eli­
sity, England, are now available gible, but there are no accomo­
rents from the ships to plates in the office of the SEAFARERS dations at Oxford for husbands
immersed in the water nearby. LOG. Any Seafarer who wishes and wives of scholarship win­
The process is a development of to attempt to win a scholarship ners, the prospectus points out.
The Selection Committee will
the Dow Chemical Company. It must have his application in by
attempt to choose the fiva
is designed for use at the laid- May 1.
up fleet sites.
There are five
scholarships scholars so that a fair cross sec­
i 4 4.
open to American trade union tion of the American labor move­
The Great Lakes navigation members. Last year. Seafarer ment will be represented.
Ruskin College was founded
season began on March 25 with Irving Suall was one of the five
the departure of the first shipg selected from among the thous­ primarily to give British work­
upbound for a cargo of iron ore. ands of CIO and AFL members ers the education they would
otherwise miss. The interest of
There are 266 ships in the ore applying.
most of the students naturally is
fleet this year, one less than in
Each of the five scholarships is directed toward history, econ­
1948.
worth about 800 dollars covering omics, and government, but stu­
4, 4 4
tuition,
room and board from dents may rove much farther
A permit to operate to Jack­
October
1949
to June 1950, with afield if they choose. This is the
sonville, Florida has been grant­
about
300
dollars
left over for third year that scholarships have
ed the Pan-Atlantic Steamship
personal
expenses.
Corporation, a wholly-owned
been offered to Americans.
The five
scholarships are
subsidiary of Waterman. The Successful applicants must pay
company expects to handle 230,- their own fare to England and backed by the British Trades
000 tons of cargo in and out of back, however. It is also recom­ Union Congress which sponsors
mended that any American trade two. Foreign Minister Ernest
the port during the year.
unionist picked have another 200 Bevin who also sponsors two, and
4 4 4
A proposal to use idle ship­ dollars or so to take care of Sir Robert Mayer who sponsors
yards for the construction of pre­ things he will want to do.
one.
fabricated houses is getting ser­ To be eligible, an American
Applications, when filled out,
ious attention in Washington. trade unionist must be active in should be mailed to the Commit­
The proposal was put forward the trade union movement, be tee on Ruskin College Labor
by the Industrial Union of Ma­ between the ages of 20 and 35 Scholarships, Institute of Inter­
rine and Shipbuilding Workers, and show talent for leadership national Education, 2 West 45th
headed by John Green.
and capacity for continued study Street, New York 19, N. Y.

Keel laying on the three roundthe-world liners of the American
President Lines will take place
at the New York Shipbuilding
Corporation yards at Camden,
N;J. on April 4, June 1 and Aug­
ust 1. The ships are expected to
be ready in the summer of 1950.
4. 4. , 5A plan to encourage shippers
Wage talk&amp; between the oper­
ators and the Masters, Mates &amp; to use American flag tonnage
Pilots began in New York this has been proposed by Commis­
week. Following the MM&amp;P, the sioner Carson of the Maritime
NMU, Engineers and Radio Of­ Commission. Preliminary steps
ficers will enter into negotia are being taken to get govern­
ment-industry cooperation in the
tions with the operators.
planned campaign.
Special equipment that gives
4* 4* 4*
Seatrain Lines has applied to
"in transit sterilization" to fruit
being carried from South Amer the Interstate Commerce com­
ica to New York has met with mission for approval to carry
success in its first test aboard petroleum in its ships' side tanks
the Moore McCormack freighter from Texas City and New Or­
Mormacisle. The equipment elim leans to New York. The company
inates the possibility of infest­ has been trying unsuccessfully
ation by the Mediterranean fruit for years to secure approval to
fly and allows the fruit to be load­ carry the cargo. Seatrain tanks
ed without having to undergo have a total capacity of 8,000
extensive treatment in Argen barrels.
4" 4" 4*
tina.
An NLRB trial examiner has
4.
4Replacement costs of the Brit­ found the MCS and MFOWW
ish liner Queen Elizabeth have guilty of an illegal secondary
been estimated at six million boycott by picketing six Gulf
pounds, $24,000,000 in U.S. cur­ port shipyards last fall during
the West Coast strike. Under
rency
provisions of the Taft-Hartley
Act the unions have been or­
dered to refrain from such ac­
tivity in the future. The unions
held that they picketed the yards
SIU, A&amp;G District to prevent ships under repair
BALTIMORE
14 North Gay St. there from being sent out dUring
ROBERT W. NORDIN
William Rentz, Agent
Mulberry 4540 the strike with scab crews. The
V. Jayne Nordin, 716 N. 11th
BOSTON
276 State St.
yards affected are affiliated with Street, Apt. 1408, Milwaukee 3,
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Richmond 2-0140
Pacific-American Shipping Wisconsin asks you to contact
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141 the
GALVESTON
308 —^23rd St. Association, a unit involved in
him in reference to a business
Keith Alsop, Agent
Phone 2-8448 the strike.
matter requiring your attention.
MOBILE
1 South Lawrence St.
4» 4» 4»
Cal Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-1754
4 4 4
The 1948-1949 whaling season
NEW ORLEANS
523 Bienville St.
ANTHONY SILES
E. Sheppard, Agent
Magnolia 6112-6113 in the Antarctic ended on "March
Tony Genoski requests that
NEW YORK
51 Beaver St. 27, with the British factory ship
Joe Aigina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784 Balaena reporting the largest you' communicate with him at
NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St.
due 816 Delaware Avenue, Glassport,
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083 catch. The Balaena, fishing
south of South America, report­ Pa.
V The increase in Panama Canal
tolls which had been ordered by
President Truman for April 1
has been postponed until Sep­
tember 1. Meanwhile a Congres­
sional Committee is making a
study of tolls and will report not
later than June 30.
$1

SlU HULLS

PHILADELPHIA. . .614-16 No. 13th St.
J. Sheehan, Agent
Poplar 5-1217
SAN FRANCISCO
85 Third St.
Fretachy Michelet, Agent Douglas 2-54Y5
SAN JUAN, P.R
252 Ponce de Leon
L. Craddock, Agent
San Juan 2-5996
SAVANNAH
2 Abercorn St.
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728
TACOMA
1519 Pacific St.
Broadway 0484
TAMPA. .. . .1809-1811 N. Franklin St.
Ray White, Agent
Phone M-1323
WILMINGTON, Calif., 227'/, Avalon Blvd.
Terminal 4-2874
HEADQUARTERS. .51 Beaver St., N.Y.C.
SECRETARY-TREASURER
Paul Hall
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
Lindsey Williams
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURER
Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
Joseph Volpian

SUP
HONOLULU
PORTLAND
RICHMOND, Calif
SAN FRANCISCO
SEATTLE
WILMINGTON

16 Merchant St.
Phone 5-8777
Ill W. Burnside St.
Beacon 4336
267 5th St.
Phone 2599
59 Ciay St.
Douglas 2-8363
86 Seneca St.
Main 0290
T.440 Avalon Blvd.
Terminal 4-3131

Canadian District
MONTREAL
1227 Philips Square
Plateau 6700—Marquette 5909
PORT ARTHUR
63 Cumberland St.
Phone North 1229
PORT COLBORNE
103 Durham St.
Phone: 5591
TORONTO
.lllA Jarvis St.
Elgin 5719
VICTORIA, B.C
602 Boughton St.
Empire 4531
VANCOUVER..
565 Hamilton St.
»
Pacific 7^4

t-—

—

FRANK SMITH
Communicate with your wife
at Star Route, Richmond, Vir­
ginia. She is worried about you.
4 4 4
WALTER H. HOFFMAN
Please get in touch with your
mother at once. Very important.
Mother is sick.
4 4 4
WILLIAM DOYLE
Will this man who was aboard
the SS Hampden Sydney Victory
FRANK LIVINGSTON
from January to- June 1946
Contact Mrs. Mary H. Houl- please get in touch with R.
berg, Danvers State Hospital, FO Weaver, SIU Hall, 51 Beaver St.,
New York 4, N. Y.
Hawthorne, Mass.

ed nearly 190,000 barrels of oil
worth about $10,000,000. Other
countries engaged in the opera­
tion were Norway, the Nether­
lands, South Africa, the Soviet
Union and Japan.
i
t
Requests by the Canadian Sea­
men's Union to Australian and
French dock workers to boycott
ships sailing with alleged scab
crews have met with success in
one port, and contradicting re­
SS STEPHEN GAMBRILL
ports in another. In Melbourne,
the Canadian collier Haligpnian Below^named men, who were
Duke has been lying idle as aboard this vessel on or about
"hot" in that port since Feb. 24. Dec. 20, 1946 and who witnessed
In Saint Nazaire, France, it has accident in which Charles L.
been reported that the French Simmons Lustained injury, please
dockmen have ignored the Can­ communicate with Herman Rabadian plea to boycott the Can­ son or Ben Sterling at 42 Broad­
adian coal carrier Vancouver way, New York City.
County. A Canadian Seamen's John W. Graves, William A.
Union official, however, has an­ Driver, Iris H. Arkerson, Luther
nounced the receipt of a letter H. Hamand, Arlie C. Lucas, Juan
reporting that the St. Nazaire Medina, Ramos P. Narela, James
dock workers are boycotting the L. Connor, Gabriel Bonefort,
ship^ as requested and will boy­ William H. Johnson, Mario Figcott all other Canadian ships re­ ueroa, Joaquin Passapera, Cruz
ported as having scab crews Negron, Leroy F. Amerson.
aboard. The boycott requests Also W. E. Harper, Richard B.
have come as a result of Can­ Tucker, Donald K. Tighe, Harold
adian crews being dumped off O. Aaronson, Antonio Oriz, John
ships in foreign ports to be re­ Guimly, E. F. Tappy, Marion G.
placed with crews of other na­ Batchelor, Wayne S. Hamilton,
Oscar G. Coover, Charles J.
tions.
Evans, Andrew J. Dougherty,
4" 4i 4"
A plan for controlling bottom Leo Pescopo, H. H. Lewis, Nor­
fouling by electrolytic action is man Ross, Booker J. Pompey,
being studied by the* Maritime Harold Rill, Lee Rankin, John
Commission. The system calls Lee, E. Sugendez and Robert A.
for the passage of electric cur­ Ledee.

ERICH KUNCHICK
Communicate with John J.
O'Connor, Chase National Bank,
Pine St., corner Nassau, New
York 5, N. Y.
4 4 4
• STANLEY G. COOPER
Get in touch with Mack
Kreindler, care of Gay and
Behrens, 70 Pine St., New York
City.
4 4 4
ALLEN BROWN
Communicate with E. Nelson,
61 Cambridge St., Roslyn Heights,
Long Island, N. Y.

CYRIL^ J.^IAGNAN
Your parents have had no
Get in touch with Ben Sterl­ word from you since December
ing, 42 Broadway, New York and are anxious to hear from
City .
you at once.

LESTER\INLEY

Notice To AH SIU Mombfers
The SEAFARERS LOG as the official publication of the Sea­
farers International Union is available to all members who wish
to have it sent to their home free of charge for the enjoyment of
their families and themselves when ashore. If you desire to have
the LOG sent to you each week address cards are on hand at every
SIU branch for this purpose.
However, for those who are at sea or at a distance from a SIU
haU, the LOG reproduces below the form used to request the LOG,
which you can fill out, detach and send to: SEAFARERS LOG, 51
Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.

PLEASE PRINT INFORMATION
To the Editor:
I would like the SEAFARERS LOG mailed to the
address below:
Name
Street Address
City

Zone..
Signed
Book No.

State

�Page Twelve

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

AprU

CS Engineers Bone Up
On SlU's Agreements
Cities Service is in a quandary. Another development — one
According to reports from crew- that galled the officers, but there
members of Cities Service tank­ was little they could do about
ers, there are two schools of it—was reported by a Seafarer
thought among the company's who had spent almost a year in
Cities Service fleet aboard three
ship officers today.
ships.
On his last ship the offi­
• The old never-say-die anti-un­
cers
knew
he was pro-union
ion crowd is still doing business,
throughout
the
three trips he
but there is another group com­
made.
They
niade
plans to dump
ing up which feels that unioni­
him
at
the
end
of
every
trip, but
zation is inevitable and the best
thing to do is to get ready for because he was a skilled man,
and the crew turnover was so
it.
The Cities Service seamen re­ great, they had to grit their
port that on some ships the offi­ teeth and keep him aboard.
cers are continuing to fire crew- On one occasion, while the
members suspected of pro-SIU Brother's ship .was maneuvering
sentiments, while others have out of port, the inexperienced
taken up the off watch occupa­ Fireman on watch became so
tion of boning up on the SIU rattled and unnerved that the
tanker agreement^ figuring that pro-SIU crewmember was roused
an SIU contract is only a mat­ from his bunk to do the woi'k.
ter of time.
The ship's officers hated the
The reports of Cities Service's thought, but they knew they
left hand not knowing what its couldn't do without him. During
right is doing were reported to the third trip they thought t^y
the LOG this week by men who finally had him. The Engineer
have recently . completed voy­ told him to save his money as
ages aboard CS tankers.
he would need it at the end of
In their reports, the crewmem- the trip.
bers brought to light some new
But when the ship hit port
twists — good and bad — in the two Firemen quit, and the En­
Cities Service fleet.
gineer begged him to stay
One Seafarer reported the of­ aboard. He'd had enough of that
ficers on his ship held regular ship, however, and told them so.
roundtable discussions in the sa­ He quit. A year with CS under
loon, where they culled the crew present conditions was enough
list, name by name. Each crew- for him.
member was given a shipboard
From the reports that are
"loyalty test," the blackballed
coming
in it seems that a lot of
crewmen to be tossed off at the
the
company
officers are begin­
first U.S. port touched.
ning to feel that he and the
SKELETON CREW
other pro-SIU men have the
On this particular ship so many right idea.
crewmembers failed to conform
to what Cities Service calls a
loyal employee, that the ship
was in danger of being stripped
completely of nlnlicensed person­
nel at the payoff. The unhappy
As the 60-day voting period approaches the mid­
officers had no choice but to al­
way mark. Seafarers who have not yet cast ballots for
low known pro-union men to
their choice of a transportation rule are urged to so as
stay aboard if the ship were to
soon as possible. The referendum ends on April 30.
sail without delay.
Two propositions appear on ihe ballot, as follows:
One CS tankerman who was
fired without valid reason told
PROPOSAL No. 1:
of the Engineers on his ship
"Whenever
transportation is due a crew under the
reading SIU tanker agreements
terms of the contract, all hands must accept that trans­
while on and off watch.
The Engineers didn't bother to
portation and get off the ship, whereupon new replace­
hide the agreements as they were
ments will be shipped from the Union Hiring Hall."
seen scanning them clause by
PROPOSAL No. 2:
clause while working in the en­
gine room. Engine men were
"When transportation is due a crew under the terms
told that they figured they should
of the contract, those men who desire to stay on board
be ready for the day when an
the ship can do so, providing they do not collect trans­
SIU contract will be signed.
portation. Those men desiring transportation can col­
It's no wonder they were in­
lect same and, upon receipt of the money, shall get
terested in what they read, the
Seafarer related, as on that par­
off the ship and replacements for those vacancies shall
ticular ship chaos reigned. The
be shipped from the Union Hiring Hall."
duties of the black gang were
not outlined specifically, but
were assighed to the men by
the Engineer on watch as the
jobs came up.
Much to the dissatisfaction of
WASHINGTON—The Lesinski showdown could be forced and
the Engineers, they could not al­
low the men to work as they Bill repealing the Taft-Hartley amendments could be barred.
Congressman
Lesinski
(D.,
were supposed to, as all auto­ Act and reinstating the old Wag­
matic controls were out of order ner Act with minor amendments Mich.), chairman of the Labor
Committee insisted that the bill
and one false move on the part
of a crewmember might have en­ encountered a parliamentary run- would pass if offered under such
around in the House of Repre­ conditions. But at hearings of the
dangered the entire ship.
In addition to the rugged sentatives as organized labor's Rules Committee, Congressman
working conditions, the former enemies in Congress commenced Cox (D., Ga.), with a little help
GS man reported that the men throwing their weight around. from Congressman Howard
Smith (D., Va.) and others start­
found it impossible to develop
The
cute
tactics
are
showing
ed what amounted to a filibuster
a real shipboard spirit of com­
up
at
hearings
before
the
House
to stall the bill along.
radeship.
Rules
Committee
which
has
an
The pro-union men were hesi­
REPUBLICANS^
tant to make their true feelings anti-union majority. The House
known, and those few who were Labor Committee, which recent­ Then the Republicans entered
anti-union or indifferent were ly voted overwhelming approval the picture. Notably, Congress­
afraid to open their mouths to of the bill, demanded that the man Allen (R., 111.) came up
criticize conditions for fear of measure be handled on the floor with a barrage of questions, all
under "closed rule" whereby a of which had been answered be~
being fired.

Voting On Transportation

CS Cuts 65 Million Melon,
ButTankermen GetBrushoff
The Cities Service Company,
whose Marine Division has been
swinging a broad axe on tankermen suspected of pro-Union sen­
timent, cut itself a record hunk
of melon last week — some 65
million dollars woi-th.
Accoi-ding to the company's
annual financial report last yeai-'s
volume of business was the
'greatest in the 39-year history of
Cities Service. Petroleum ac­
counted for 78 percent of the
$593,509,484 of gross income.
Company president W. Alton
Jones pointed out in the report
that a considerable sum was
spent in expansion during the
past year, with $75,000,000 being
expended by petroleum sub-

Taft-Hartley Act Repealer Gets Runaround
fore but which served to kill
time.
Charges were hurled that the
Lesinski bill had been "railroad­
ed" through the Labor Commit­
tee. However, the bill's backers
patiently pointed out that the
Taft-Hartleyites on the Labor
Committee had plenty of time to
study the bill in all its ramifica­
tions.
Supporters of the Lesinski Bill
also recalled that two years ago,
the anti-union House Labor Com­
mittee of the 80th Congress had
called for a vote on the TaftHartley bill without giving the
pro-union "Ininority on the com­
mittee so much as a chance to
read the text.

sidiaries for additions and im­
provements.
Obviously, this report will in­
tensify the convictions of Cities
Service tankermen that only
through the medium of a genuine
trade union contract can they
benefit by the company's pros­
perity.
None of the expenditures made
for "improvements" were chan­
neled to bring advantage to the
men who sail Cities Service
tankers. In fact, during the past
year the company has become
more abusive in its treatment of
tanker personnel.
Jones also stated in the report
that "only from. the profits of a
corporation or of individuals can
come the means to give America
that expanding economy which
has made it the leader of the
finance, production, distribution
and standard of living."
If Jones includes the working
citizenry of this nation who aid
in the production of profits in his
"America," he had better com­
municate the fact to his Marine
Division.
Meanwhile, Cities Service tan­
kermen are looking forward to
their greatest gain—the certifica­
tion of the SIU as' collective bar­
gaining agent.
In the election, conducted by
the National Labor Relatione
Board, eight ships have already
been voted. The Government
Camp, last of the nine eligible
ships covered by the election, ia
expected to vote in Monteiadeo,
Uruguay, this week.

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9902">
                <text>April 1, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9980">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 13</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10001">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10022">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10085">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10103">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10153">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
CONTINUE FIGHT AGAINST T-H GREEN TELLS SIU CONVENTION&#13;
RAISING THE CURTAIN AT THE SIU CONVENTION&#13;
BRITISH REVEALED AS ACTIVE LOBBYISTS FOR 'HOFFMAN PLAN'&#13;
NEW PASSENGER SHIP MAY GET DEFENSE GEAR&#13;
OF VITAL CONCERN&#13;
ALCOHOLISM: UNNECESSARY 'HERITAGE OF THE SEA'&#13;
MOBILE SEAFARERS CRACK DOWN ON THREE WHO MISSED SHIP IN PR&#13;
PORT SAVANNAH GETS A BOOMLET&#13;
PORT GALVESTON ENJOYS WEEK OF GOOD SHIPPING&#13;
TRIAL COMMITTEE WARNS OF DRUGS&#13;
PHILLY SHIPPING STILL A STANDSTILL&#13;
SIU SURVEY PROVIDES WELFARE PLAN BASIS&#13;
TELL SPARKS TO KEEP TUNED FOR SIU NEWS SENT OUT BY MARINE RADIO WPG IN NORFOLK&#13;
PADDY CRONE, LOYAL SON OF ERIN, HAS DAY OF FESTIVITY ON DEL SUD&#13;
'MANILA WATCH' REPORTS PORT UNDER ANTI-COMMIE GUARD&#13;
'THE VOICE OF THE SEA'&#13;
SPIKE'S GIVING AWAY $2,000 WORTH OF INFO&#13;
CS ENGINEERS BONE UP ON SIU'S AGREEMENTS&#13;
VOTING ON TRANSPORTATION&#13;
CS CUTS 65 MILLION MELON, BUT TAKERMEN GET BRUSHOFF&#13;
TAFT-HARTLEY ACT REPEALER GETS RUNAROUND</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10154">
                <text>4/1/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13051">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="954" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="958">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/7c42ac2cf21d677eb9e9f610bd61f84a.PDF</src>
        <authentication>9c2e2f26a182ba5e245fd5341e542896</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47434">
                    <text>CONVENTION SETS SlU COURSE
The Fourth Biennial Convention of the Seafar­
ers International Union completed its business on
Friday, April 1, after five busy days, during which
all details of the Union's structure and position
were examined &gt;and a program was drawn up for
the future by the 40-odd delegates from the several
SIU units.
Before the delegates rolled up their sleeves and
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA got down to committee work, the gathering in
Baltimore's Southern Hotel heard addresses by,
AFL President William Green and AFL SecretaryNEW YORK, N. Y.. MONDAY. APRIL 11, 1949
No. 14
VOL. XI

Senate Passes Compromise CCA Cargo Bill

Treasurer George Meany both
of whom praised the work of
the union.
Ond of the principal centers of
interest was the group of reports
submitted by the Seamen's Or­
ganizational and Grievance Gom­
mittee, Report No. 1. of which
appears on the back page of
this issue.
In brief. Report No. 1 reaffirms
the Inter-District Preferential
Shipping Policy adopted last
September, by which the mem­
bers 'Of a District have prefer­
ence on that District's jobs, re­
gardless of the area in which a
ship may be lying. But when­
ever the first District cannot fill
the jobs, other SIU Districts
must be called upon.

moved from the Bland-Magnuson Bill requires that the cargoes be military ships cannot be in­
Bill with its stronger, farther computed on a "country by cluded in the 50 percent or more
reaching guarantees.
country" basis, meaning that allotted to American vessels.
One improvement, borrowed half the cargoes going to each However, action may be taken
from the Bland-Magnuson Bill, recipient nation must go in Am­ on this point later.
would be that the 50 percent erican ships. It was this pro­
By way of a cheerful note,
would have to be computed sep­ vision which drew strong pro­ Hoffman himself
gave some
arately for dry-bulk cargo, dry- tests from the British, Norweg­ slight evidence that the storm
ians and others who are trying he had aroused by his December
cargo liner and tanker services.
Another is a provision aimed to get aU the cargoes for them­ proposal to ship bulk cargoes in
at barring ships registered un­ selves, and some believe its foreign ships had left its mark.
der the Panamanian and Hon- elimination to have been a con­ It was reported that he had
liti(
of the Atlantic Pact.
duran flags to avoid taxes and dition
agreed to route at least a third
union wages from carrying EGA TA
Another
provision of
the of all EGA oil cargoes carried in
cargoes.
Bland-Magnuson Bill which is the so-called ci-oss trades (Aruba
Still another is the stipulation missing from the amendment to France and the like) in Am­
This" would
that American ships could be passed by the Senate is the erican flagships.
CLOSER TIES
used at "market rates for United stricture that- cargoes carried by
(Continued on Page 3)
_ In addition. Report No. 1 lays
States flag
vessels." Failure to
down a policy of closer associa­
include this stipulaflon in the
tion among Districts through fre­
legislation passed last year gave
quent meetings and coordinated
FALLS SHORT
Paul Hoffman the opening last
joint action on all maritime prob­
Gertainly the Senate measures December to try to shift bulk
lems. In conclusion, Report No.
are a far cry from the Bland- cargoes to cheap foreign tramp
1 calls attention to the great ad­
Magnuson Bill, unanimously ap­ ships, thereby touching off the
vances made by American sea­
proved by the House Merchant four month batt,le on EGA ship­
men
as a direct result of the
Marine "Gommittee and now be­ ping rules. However, during the
Representatives from US sec­ Ganadian affiliate for the follow­
efforts
of the Seafarers Interna­
ing withheld from the floor ^f winter it became clear that Hoff­ tions of the Seafarers Interna ing reasons:
tional
Union.
the House of Representatives, the man would save no money by tional Union are now conferring
(1) Its members are fellow
Other reports of the Seamen's
officials said. The Bland-Mag- using foreign ships and that the wifh officials of the Ganadian Seafarers in a beef.
Organizational
and Grievance
nuson Bill makes it mandatory real motive for his original pro­ District which is now involved
(2) They are good trade
Gommittee
emphasize
the effec­
for at least 50 percent of all posal was to appease European in a bitter struggle for its exist-- unionists fighting the full
tiveness
of
the
AFL
Maritime
government financed cargoes, in- shipping interests.
ence with the communists of the strength of not only the com­
Trades
Department
and
urged
deluding EGA cargoes, to move
munist
party
of
Ganada
but
the
Ganadian Seamen's Union.
The weaknesses of the Senate
ever
increasing
cooperation
at all
in American ships whether they
Gonferences are being held in communist international as well
measure are shown when further
(Continued on Page 3)
are loaded in American ports or
which has as its constant goal
comparison is made with the all Ganadian ports in an all out
not.
control
of
the
world's
water­
effort to evolve a program of
Specifically, the measure which Blahd-Magnuson Bill.
support by the American Dis­ fronts.
MANDATORY RULE
the Senate passed provides that
In line with their traditional
tricts for their Ganadian Broth­
the EGA Administrator shall
The Bland-M a g n u s o n Bill ers. All Districts are on record policy of opposition to the com­
"take such steps as shall be makes the 50 percent rule man­
The new Hall in Philadel­
to back the Ganadian Seafarez's munists everywhere, the Ameri­
necessary to assure, as far as datory—not "as far as is prac­
can' Seafarers welcomed the op­
phia
opened for business
to the limit, whose organization
is FK-acticable, that at least 50 ticable."
portunity to join hands with
Thursday.
April 7. The big­
is of, by and for the seamen
percent of the gross tonnage of
their Brothers in Ganada. By
The Bland-Magnuson Bill does of Ganada.
ger and better quarters for
commodities procured out of not restrict the 50 percent rule
driving out the real scabs of the
Quaker City Seafarers are
The International Longshore­ trade union movement—the com­
funds made available under this to cargoes "to or from" the
located at 337 Market Street.
title and transported to or from United States, in recognition of men's Association, AFL, in an­ munists—Seafarers will open the
The old Hall was abandoned
the United States on ocean ves­ the fact that many EGA cargoes swer to a request from the SIU, way for all Ganadian seamen
after the landlord tried to
sels, computed separately for originate in South America, the is also rallying to the side of the to obtain the wages and working
jack up the rent when the
Ganadian District.
dry-bulk carriers, dry-cargo liner Far East and .^Europe itself.
conditions they need, under the
lease was up.
and tanker services, is so trans­
The SIU is supporting its banner of the SIU.
Moreover, the Bland-Magnuson
ported on United States flag ves­
sels to the extent such vessels
are available at market rates for
United States flag vessels; and,
in the administration of this pro­
vision, the Administrator shall,
The long anticipated world­ the boycott was taken after the Atkins, President of Local 88 of tions, safety and engineering^
insofar as practicable and con­ wide boycott of Panamanian flag Convention's Organizational and the MM&amp;P.
standards, income taxes, social
sistent with the purposes of this vessels, and possibly vessels of Grievance Gommittee discussed
This committee will direct boy­ security taxes and other social
title, endeavor to secure a fair similarly tainted registries, is all phases, international and na­ cott operation on the Atlantic responsibilities.
and reasonable participation by now at the tactical planning tional, of the Panamanian prob­ and Gulf coasts. Their plans will
Upwards of 150 war-built Am­
United States flagships
in car­ stage.
lem with Oldenbroek and Dor- be coordinated with plans for erican ships went to the Pana­
goes by geographical areas."
the Pacific coast and European manian flag
under the Ships
All that remains is to work chain.
As a result, Oldenbroek and South American and other ports. Sales Act of 1946. before such
out the final details and to set
LOOPHOLE EXISTS
Tentative plans call for pickets transfers were stopped in this
Although they found some vir­ the date, both of which tasks Dorchain attended a meeting of
in
front of every Panamanian country. Other American ships,
the
AFL
Maritime
Trades
De­
tues in the Senate measure, A&amp;G will be accomplished at a meet­
ship
that enters a port where many of them dangerously over­
partment
in
New
York
on
April
officials identified the words ing in London, on April 29, of
members
of
the
practically age, also hhve been registered in
5,
at
which
an
American
Boycott
"take such steps as shall be nec­ representatives of the Seafarers
world-wide
International
Trans­ Panama.
Gommittee
was
named.
essary to assure, as far as is and dockers' unions of the In­
portworkers
Federation's
affili­
Members
of
the
committee
are:
Whether Panamanian tankers
ternational
Transportworkers
Fed­
practicable," as a loophole. They
ates
operate.
Joseph
P.
Ryan,
President
of
the
will
be boycotted along with the
eration.
did not see why these words
The
area
covered
will
include
International
Longshoremen's
As­
dry
cargo ships is a question
The
Ldndon
meeting
was
sch­
were necessary unless the State
the
U.S.
waterfront,
most
of
the
sociation,
Chairman;
John
Owens,
still
to
be decided.
eduled
when
J.
H.
Oldenbroek,
Department and Paul G. Hoff­
Plans for the boycott date
man plan to ignore the 50 per­ general secretary of the ITF, and Secretary of the ILA and Ex­ European waterfront, and a sub­
Willy Dorchain, the ITF's Am­ ecutive Secretary of the MTD, stantial part of the South Am­ from last July when the ITF
cent rule.
However, the Senate measure erican agent, conferred with del­ Secretary; Paul Hall, Secretary- erican and Asiatic waterfronts. representatives, including dele­
Reason for the boycott is the gates from the SIU, met in Oslo,
would strengthen the legislation egates to the Seafarers Interna­ Treasurer of the SIU, Atlantic &amp;
practice
of American and Euro­ Norway. May 1 was tentatively
Gulf
District;
Morris
Weisberger,
now on th6 books in several tional Union at the SIU's Fourth
pean
shipowners
of transferring set as the date for the boycott
East
Coast
Representative
of
respects if it were properly and Biennial Convention in Balti­
ships
to
the
flags
of
Panama and to begin, but the April 29 meet­
the
SUP;
Fred
Howe,
General
honestly administered, A&amp;G of­ more.
in
some
cases
of
Honduras
to ing in London will set the ex­
Secretary-Treasurer
of
the
Radio
The
decision
to.
reaffirm
the
ficials said, although they still
avoid
union
wages
and
condi­
Officers
Union;
Captain
Tommy
act day.
SIU's
two-year
old
position
on
demand that the wraps be reThis week, as the BlandMagnuson Bill was withheld
from action, the Senate passed
amendments to EGA legislation
• requiring that 50 percent of all
Marshall Plan shipments moving
through American poi'ts move in
American ships "as far as is
practicable" and offering other
safeguards to the American mer­
chant marine.
Despite solemn assurances to
the contrary, SIU, A&amp;G officials
declared that the Senate amend­
ments give Paul G. Hoffman,
EGA Administrator, ample op­
portunity to shift as many car­
goes to foreign ships as he
wishes, unless a careful checkrein is kept upon him.

SIU Seamen'sDistricts Rally
To Aid Canadian Seafarers

New Philly Hall

London Meeting To Set Panamanian Boyrott

�Page Two

THE SB A F A ft E R S

LOG

Mondar, AprU 11, 1849

SEAFARERS LOG
Published Thrqe Times a Mpiith by the

SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf Distwct
Aailialed wiih the American Federalion of Labor

At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Entered as second class matter June 15, 1945, at the Post Office
in New York, N. Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

Danger Ahead
Organized labor can never relax for a moment in the
belief that its house is secure against attack. The enemies
of organized labor never let up for a minute in their
campaign to reduce the trade union members of this
country to the status of serfdom.
In Washington this week a group of labor's legisla­
tive enemies are fervently at work trying to stall the
machinery that would spell finish for . the Taft-Hartley
error.
^
These labor-haters not only are fighting repeal of the
T-H law, they are seeking to replace it with something
that is even worse, impossible as that may sound.
A coalition of anti-labor forces in the House of Rep­
resentatives is hoping to substitute a legislative monstros­
ity known as the Wood bill for the measure proposed by
Rep. John Lesinski which has Administration backing,
and which has been accepted by organized labor.
The Lesinski bill would repeal the Taft-Hartley law
and re-enact the Wagner Act with a few amendments.
The Wood bill, on the other hand, would tighten the
Taft-Hartley law. It would retain all the most reprehen­
sible features enacted by Taft, Hartley and Company
and it- would add a few that the original band of laborbusters didn't think of two years ago.

HospUdl PaUenU

It is quite clear that the action of the crowd back­
ing the Wood bill stems from a blind, personal hatred of
organized labor. It is based on a concept that entirely
ignores the welfare of the community at large, in addi­
tion to ignoring the needs of the vast numbers of working Aipif UgkUM In f3fcp MiVittP HnSnitills
men and women who are absolutely dependent upon trade
mOnaC nQSpKWS
These are the Union Brothers currently in the marine hospitals,
union organizations for economic protection.
as reported by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging

The elections last November saw a large number of heavily on their hands. Do what you can to cheer them up by
labor-haters swept out of the legislative halls of the na­ writing them.
tion. Unfortunately, enough hangovers remain to hatch MOBILE MARINE HOSPITAL
V. E. WILLIAMS
such vicious plans as the Wood bill.
C. P. RONDO
J. L. BUCKALEW
J. E. PEWITT
F. HIGGASON
'If nothing else, this latest blast from the anti-labor CYRIL LOWERY
C. I. COPPER
camp should clearly indicate that an around-the-clock vigil J. BERRIER
t
.i
is a "must" if organized labor in this country is to T. S. LAMBETH
STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
D. P. GELINAS
C. SNODGRASS
remain free.
« iJtfr

Forward Together
0

The Seafarers International Union of North America
wound up its Fourth Biennial Corlvention the night of
Ffiday, April 1, in Baltimore.
It was a good convention. What was accomplished
bids well for all members of the SIU's affiliated Districts.
We settled many tough internal problems of the sort
that inevitably arise in large organizations, and we formu­
lated a program fo^ ever increasing participation in the
affairs and activities of the American Federation of Labor
at local, state and national levels.
We re-affirmed our faith in our integrated strength
.which im such a very few years has enabled the SIU, in
concert with other AFL unions in the field, to surge to
the top of maritime.
Under this program we—all Districts, all members—
go forward together.
Our final objective: One Union for maritime work­
ers—the Seafarers International Union.

When entering the hospital
notify the delegates by post&gt;
card, cfiving your name and
the number of your ward.
Mimeographed
Postcards
can be obtained free at the
Social Service desk.

Staten Island Hospital

You can contact your Hos-.
.pital delegate at the Staten
Island Hospital at the follow­
ing times:
Tuesday — 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
(on Sth and 6th floors.)'
Thursday — 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
(on 3rd and 4th floors.)
Saturday — 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
(on 1st and 2nd floors.)
=3

J. DAROUSE
E. LYONS
W. CHAMPLIN
E. DRIGGERS
S. JEMISON
A. TREVINO
C. WALTERS
W. ROCHELL ,
J. McNEELY
4 i
C. RAFUSE
PEEWEE GOODWIN
BOSTON MARINE ifOSP.
C. BROWN
M. J. LUCAS
G. E. GALLANT
F. CHEAUETTA
R. A. ROBERTS
VIC MILAZZO
L. GALBURN
T. ROZUM
F. ALASAVICK
R. HENDERSON
A. EWING
G. MIKE
W. WISLCOTT
H. FAZAKERLEY
M. J. OLSEN
V. SALLIN
J. F. THOMSON
C. SAUNDERS
A. WARD
E. POLISE
H. F. BEEKER
E. RHOEDS
F. MAZET
J. GARDNER
W. LAMBERT
L. L. GORDON (City Hospital)
D. HERON
E.
PAINTER
W.
J.
MAHONEY
% % %
S. CAPE
&gt;
BALTIMORE MARINE HOSP.
N. V. ERIKSEN
P. SADARUSKI
O. O. MILLAN
O. F. KLEIN
H. STILLMAN
C. H. JOHNSTON
J. TURNER
W. GARDNER
W. J. MEEHAN
V. C. GILL
3, DENNIS
R. SAWYER
D. LALLAVE
LIPARIA
R. F. SPENCER
S. RIVERA
E. PRILCHARD
C. SIMMONS
G. STEPANCHUK
C. D. CAREY
J. E. TOWNSEND
R. L. GRESHAM, Jr.
'F.
LANDRY
F. KORVATIN
%
%
G.
ROLZ
E. W.^ CARTER
NEW ORLEANS MARINE HOSP.
D.
CANN
E. TOMMELA
J. LAFFINJ. J. O'NEILL
S. GAMIER
H. GILLIKIN
G..A. CARROLL
W. D. MAY
W. S. SIMS

J. PUGH
W. WALKER
W. CURRIER
D. BAYELLE
L. KAY
R. WALLACE
If -f-'j:

•

^ '
I
'.i
V

% X

GALVESTON HOSPITAL
J. D. JACKSON
L. R. WILLIAMSON
J. HAVERTY
G. GONZALES

1
1}

�Monday. AprU 11. 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Three

Convention Charts Future Course For SlU

minimum wage and other meas­
(Continued from Page 1)
levels with other unions in the ures, the delegates believed.
LEARNING ABOVT AN AFFILIATE
On Friday morning, the At­
American Federation of Labor.
lantic
&amp; Gulf delegates present­
It was made clear that coope­
ed
"The
Battle of Wall Street,"
ration with other AFL unions
the
20-minute
movie that the
must be at national, state and
A&amp;G
District
made
of the 1948
local levels so that the full ef­
strike
of
the
United
Financial
fectiveness of the SIU's strength
Employes against the New York
may
be
used
at
any
time
to
fdr"Ship chandlers and other
ther the cause of all organized Stock and Curb Exchanges.
merchants servicing ships and
labor.
OFFICIALS ELECTED
seamen in the dock areas of
Last business of the Conven­
Baltimore face a loss of $3,000,LEGISLATIVE AIMS
tion
was the election and instal­
000 worth of business a year un­
The Seamen's Organizational
lation
of officers. The following
less the shrinkage of the Ameri­
and Grievance Committee
can merchant fleet is reversed,"
brought in its recommendations were elected: President, Harry
a spokesman for' the Seafarers
on the proposed Panamanian Lundeberg; Secretary-Treasurer,
International Union, AFL, At­
Boycott as a supplementary re­ John Hawk; First Vice-President,
lantic and Gulf District, disclosed
port after conferences with rep­ Paul Hall; Vice-Presidents, Les­
recently.
resentatives of the International ter Balinger, Mrs. Andrea Go­
"That's what they tell us in
Transportworkers Federation. It mez, Patrick McHugh, Lester
Baltimore," he said, "and we
was recommended that the SIU Caveny, Morris Weisberger, John
are certain that inquiries in Bos­
reaffirm its previous stand in Fox and Cal Tanner.
ton, New York, Philadelphia,
support of such a boycott, and The following units of the
Norfolk, Mobile, New Orleans,
subsequent developments on this Seafarers were represented at
Houston, San Francisco and Se­
matter are reported elsewhere the meeting: Atlantic &amp; Gulf
Part of the audience of approximately 250 Seafarers who
District; Sailors Union of the
attle would yield similar an­
in this issue.
heard Sister Andrea Gomez describe the organizational de­
Pacific; Great Lakes District; At­
swers."
The several reports of the Sea­ lantic Fishermen; Inland Boat­
velopment of the Cannery Workers Union of the Pacific, an
NO DOLLARS
affiliate of the SIU, during her recent visit to the New , men's Organizational and Griev­ men's Union; West Coast Fisher­
ance Committee were accepted men and Canner Workers.
York Hall.
The SIU official pointed out
unanimously by the delegates on
that foreign ships, reluctant to
The A&amp;G Delegates were: Paul
Friday,
April 1.
spend dollars, .buy as little as
Hall, Secretary-Treasurer of the
Another committee report dealt Atlantic &amp; Gulf District; Lloyd
possible in the way of supplies
with
the organizational prob­ A. Gardner, Headquarters Rep­
in American ports. lems
of
the Fishermen's, Can­ resentative; Lindsey J. Williams,
Also to conserve dollars, for­
nery
Workers'
and Allied Mari­ Director of Organization; Earl
eign seamen are not given much
time
Workers"
units affiliated Sheppard, New Orleans Agent;
shore liberty nor many dollars
with
the
International
Union. Cal Tanner, Mobile Agent; A.
to spend ashore in American
Mrs. Andrea Gomez, ViceSister Gomez stopped off in The Convention voted to ad­
ports.
Michelet, San Francisco Agent;
With American ships swiftly President and Business Manager New York after attending the vance a substantial sum of mon­ A. S. Cardullo, Headquarters
disappearing from off-shore trade, of the SlU-affiliated Cannery SIU's fourth biennial conven­ ey to the West Coast Fishermen Representative and Charles Ray­
tion in Baltimore, where she was for organizational purposes.
waterfront merchants are facing
mond, Headquarters Represen­
elected
to a vice-presidency of
The Convention adopted reso­ tative.
ia severe slump, the Union offi­
the international for the fourth lutions recommended by the
cial said, and asked, "Who
time.
Resolutions Committee calling for
knows what kind of a chain re­
liberalization of the national so­
During
her
visit,
the
Cannery
action might be set off?"
cial security laws, a broadened
Workers
official
toured
the
Hall
"This is only a hidden aspect
housing
program, increased cov­
and
inspected
the
A&amp;G's
facili­
of the entire merchant marine
ties. She also spoke informally erage by the minimum wage law
problem," the spokesman de­
to approximately 250 Seafarers and a widening of national
clared. "The American merchant
in the third deck recreation health laws.
marine is rapidly disappearing
The Convention also acted fa­
room.
from the seas—falling apart, is
vorably
on resolutions support­ A claim for lifetime mainte­
Mr.
Gomez
traced
the
develop­
the way Senator Magnuson put
ing
Histadrut,
the national labor nance and medical care by a
ment
of
her
organization
and
ex­
it the other day. That is why
federation
of
Israeli
trade unions, merchant seaman, who was
plained
some
of
the
organiza­
the
Seafarers
International
and
the
AFL's
Labor
League for totally disabled as a result of an
tional
problems
which
con­
Union, the other sea-going
Political
Education.
fronted
it
in
the
formative
accident during the war, has
Unions, and, in fact, a large sec­
The decision to step up ac­ been rejected by the Supreme
stages.
Her remarks were
tion of organized labor all over
tivity within Labor's League for Court in a 5-4 decision.
warmly applauded. '
the country, are fighting for
The Cannery Workers' Los Political Education was taken Suit for 550,000 had been
enactment of the Bland-MagnuAngeles Harbor District, of in realization of the fact that pressed by William Farrell, who
son Bill in the form in which
which Sister Gomez also serves seamen's jobs, rights and condi­ fell into a drydock at Palermo,
it was approved by the House
as
Business Manager, has juris­ tions are in considerable measure Sicily, in February, 1944 while
Merchant Marine Committee, of
diction
in Long Beach, Wilming­ dependent on legislative action he was returning to his ship, the
ANDREA
GOMEZ
which Representative Schuyler
ton
and
San Pedro. Branches as ai'e those of workers in other James E. Haviland.
Otis Bland of Virginia is Chair­
are
maintained
in each of these fields. It takes concerted action In his suit, the seaman named
Workers
Union
of
the
Pacific,
man.
Los Angeles Harbor District, cities, in addition to the one re­ by all labor to fight such meas­ the United States as his em­
BLOCKS MILITARY
visited the A&amp;G District Hall in cently opened at Oxnard Hue- ures as the Taft-Hartley Act, and ployer. Decisions of lower courts
"That bill guarantees that at New York this week.
work for better national health. —Federal Disti'ict and Circuit
neme.
least 50 percent of all cargoes
Courts in New Work—held that
financed by the United States
his disability was caused by
Government, including the ECA
negligence.
cargoes, be carried in American
The Courts ruled that he had
ships, regardless of where they
received
in Government hospi­
erican
and
Australia
be
blocked
man
Bland
had
sponsored.
He
(Continued from Page 1)
are loaded. That last provision
tals
the
maximum care that
on
the
grounds
that
Italy
had
added
that
if
the
compromise
is important because many relief mean that if the Senate Bill amendments were not observed no need of the tonnage. Fear medicine and surgery could ac­
cargoes financed by this Govern­ becomes law he might make fur­ by the ECA Administrator, he was expressed that under the complish.
ment never pass through an Am­ ther concessions in the direction would propose much stronger Italian flag the ships might try . (Present day provisions for
of the •Intent of the Bland-Magerican port.
to compete with American ships. maintenance and care insure that
legislation.
"The bill requires that the 50 nuson Bill which would require
Working closely with its Wash­ seamen injured in the service of
Another pi'opoSal by Senator
percent be computed on a coun­ American participation in the
ington
Representative, Matthew the ship will receive aid at the
Magnuson that was defeated
try-by-country basis, which cross trades to the extent of 50
Dushane,
the Union will con­ expense of the employer so long
showed
a
different
trend
in
means that, we might get a pei'cent.
Senatorial thinking which A&amp;G tinue to keep its membership as treatment will be of some
At the same time, the House
cargo for England once in a
officials found alarming. Magnu­ thoroughly informed through the benefit to the man.)
while. And it includes a ban Merchant Marine Committee,
son
proposed that the transfer of LOG on further developments in
OLD LAW OUT •
on letting Army or Navy ships which approved the Bland-Mag­
10 Victorys to Italy to carry ECA cargo fight and other legis­
In
its
decision on the appeal,
nuson
Bill,
is
reported
ready
to
carry any of the 50 percent the
Italian erhigrants to South Am­ lative matters.
the Supreme Court ruled that
merchant marine should be get­ constitute itself a "watchdog
the old time law of the sea,
committee" on Hoffman. If the
ting.
which calls for aid to seamen
"There is a lot of talk about Senate Bill passes the House, and
beyond the duration of the voy­
this 50 percent guarantee, but if Hoffman 4oes not respect its
Seafarers who have not yet voted in the trans­ age, could not be made to cover
the Bland-Magnuson Bill is the provisions, the committee may
only one that really has a guar­ immediately propose the Blandportation referendum have approximately three weeks the facts in the case.
Justice Douglas, who was
antee with teeth in it. All the Magnuson Bill.
left in which to do so. The voting period ends on
joined
in dissent by Justices
other bills, including the official
While introducing and sup­
April
30.
Black,
Murphy and Rutledge,
ECA bills, have watered it down porting the compromise amend­
Two
propositions
appear
on
the
ballot,
and
there
stated
that
"if men are to go
to conform with the notions of ments to the ECA Bill on the
down to the sea in ships and
are voting facilities in all Atlantic and Gulf District
ECA Administrator, ^ Paul G. Senate floor. Senator Magnuson
Hoffman, who has been trying confessed that he personally pre­
ports. All hands are urged to make their choice before face the perils of the ocean,
those who employ them mu.st be
since December to eliminate ferred the measures he and"
the April 30 deadline.
solicitious
of their welfare."
Senator O'Conor and Congress­
(Continued on Page 10)
^

Baltimore Faces
Lasses Under
Present Polky

Cannery Workers' Official
Visits The New York Hall

Court Refuses
lifetime Aid To
Injured Seaman

Senate ECA Cargo Vote Is A Compromise

Voting On Transportation

�THE

Pag» Four

Frisco Shipping
Levelling Off
After Splurge

SEAFARERS

Monday. April 11. 1949

LOG

Seafarers Have Good Word For Savaaaah Hospital Staff

By ROBERT POHLE
SAN FRANCISCO —Shipping
on this coast has begun to level
off. After the terrific two weeks
of shipping we have just had,
things for the next two weeks
are expected to approach nor­
mal.
Only the usual amount of intercoastal and in transit runs are
on tap for Frisco. In addition,
a payoff on an Isthmian intercoastal is slated for early in the
week.
At the present time, the man­
power supply looks ample
enough to keep us going for the
next few weeks. So we don't
advise any mass migration of
men to this coast by men ex­
pecting to step into immediate
shipping.
However, we're keeping a close
eye on the shipping prospects
and if you'll watch this column
you'll be kept up to date on
,West Coast job developments.
PERFORMERS' ERROR
We'd like to use this oppor­
tunity to call the membership's
attention to the fact that an
increasing number of performers
have lately decided that this
port would be a haven.
These performers are going to
run into direct membership ac­
tion out here. Several of the
foul-ups have already found out
how the guys feel about this
important matter.
Anyone who has the idea that
he can come into this port and
foul up our contracts in any way
wiU find that he can expect no
leniency. Our membership has
fought too hard for the present
conditions, and we don't intend
to compromise in any way with
people who jeopardize these con­
ditions.
Crews having performers
aboard their ships will receive
full cooperation from us in
straightening them out. Please
report all cases involving per­
formers the minute you hit this
port.
We will close now with a bit
of comment on our beautiful
weather, which is allowing sun­
ny California to live up to its
reputation.

When Savannah Port Agent Jim Drawdy visited the SIU
patients in the Marine Hospital last week, he heard what have
now become standard reports on the excellent services availabl in that institution. The doctors, nurses, galley force and
orderlies all came in for te full measure of praise. This group
of photos, submitted by Brother Drawdy, shows some of the
Seafarers who have commended the Marine Hospital staff, and
two of the nurses who have done so much to contribute to
the comfort of the hospitalized.
In upper left photo is Brother S. M. Lake; directly above
(left to right) are Nurse Donaldson and Brothers R. C. Shedd
and S. Kasmirsky: upper right shows Brother J. B. Causey.
At left is Miss Eva Lee, head nurse of hospital's ihird floor,
and at right is Seafarer Anthony Parker.

Port Mobile Shows Improvement
^rom

^Le

»SixtL

By EDDIE BENDER
Each man who is or ever was
a member of the SIU, A&amp;G Dis­
trict, be he permitman or holder
of a book, has an identification
card on file at Headquarters. We
call it an ID card.
Many of the IDs in our files
are incomplete, but as time goes
on .we are bringing these cards
up to date. Nevertheless, some
cards are obsolete, and others
lack the information we should
have on every individual mem­
ber.
These cards can be made com­
plete only through the coopera­
tion of each and every Brother.
So, it is worthwhile to make

sure that your ID is in order.
When you hit New York, call at
the Sixth Deck and check with
the counter Patrolman on duty.
Or if you don't see much
chance of making New York,
send complete information about
yourself through the mail. Send
your book number, the depart­
ment in which you sail, your
present rating, your complete
name, the date and place of
your birth, your Z number,
height, weight, color of eyes and
hair, and the name and address
of next of kin.
Printing or typing the above
information will make it easier
to handle.

Yarmouth To Resume
Her Old Summer Run Boston Manages To Keep Moving
BOSTON — Eastern Steamship
Lines will resume its Boston to
Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, cruise
run on June 17, the company an­
nounced this week.
There will be three weekly
round trips until September 18,
when the service will be discon­
tinued again, the company said.
The ship which normally makes
this run is the SS Yarmouth,
which carries a full SIU crew.
Last year. Eastern announced
termination of all activities. But
during recent weeks there have
been rumors that Eastern had
changed its mind. Announcement
that the Yarmouth run would be
resumed was the confirmation.
No announcement has been
made which would cover the
company's other ship, the SS
Evangeline, which was forced
out of the Bermuda-West Indian
luxury cruise business last year
by the big foreign flag liners.

By ERNEST TILLEY

BOSTON — Since the last re­
port out of this harbor we've had
three payoffs and three sign-ons.
No record-breaking achievement,
but enough to keep this port
active.
The coastwise Waterman ship,
Winslow Homer, paid off and
signed on, taking a full crew un­
der the present transportation
ruling.
We paid off and signed on the
tanker New London up in Port­
land, Maine. She's well on her
way to South America by now.
The final ship in the trio was the
Colabee, which paid off and
signed on, taking sixteen men in
the crew and 15 men for three
days of stand-by work.
The Colabee, by calling for
'stand-bys, became the finst ship
to call for such work in two
years in this port.

The call was well received
and we sent the men out in a
hurry. The men did a bang-up
job on the newsprint-hauling
ship and sent her out of here
looking like the King of Zamboozu's yacht.
Well, at long last we shipped
the oldtimer of these parts.
Brother J. G. Greenbaum, aboard
the Winslow Homer as Deck En­
gineer. Another well-known SIU
Brother, E. Dakin, landed on
the same ship as Bosun. What
with a full crew of bookmen,
that ship is in fine shape.
Despite the shipping of a good
number of bookmen, we still
have a good number of members
waiting around for jobs. We
have the Marquette Victory in
port, which may provide us with
a few jobs, but other than that
the shipping i)icture is bare.

By GAL TANNER
charges
MOBILE — An improvement Offenders will find
awaiting
them.
was noted in shipping here dur­
ing the past week. In fact, we
There are many men on the
can say it has been fair. From beach who are»very anxious to
the activity inspired by four get jobs and we cannot afford
payoffs and five
sign-6ns, we to waste employment opportuni­
were able to ship 99 men for ties by allowing the practice of
the week.
missing ship to continue.
The vessels paying off were
Furthermore, even when the
the Corsair and Roamer, Alcoa, fact is reported in time for
both of which re-signed for trips someone to make a pierhead
on the bauxite trail; the Morning jump, there is usually only about
Light, Waterman, scheduled for a half hour's time for a man to
the yards and a 20-day repair make the job. This certainly isn't
job before resuming the run to fair. .
Puerto Rico, and the Iberville,
Waterman coastwise ship.
Other sign-ons included the
La Salle, which is going to
Korea, and the Wild Ranger,
which just completed a threeweek layup for repairs and is , The passenger ship, SS Borinback on the Puerto Rican run. quen, purchased with two
The SS Del Mundo, Mississippi freighters and the holdings of
passenger cruise ship, called here the Puerto Rico Line from the
in transit on her way to South Agwilines, has been delivered to
America. She's in good shape. its new owner, A. H. Bull Line.
Bull has not announced def­
WATERMAN TUG
Waterman started branching inite plans for the use of the
out her tugboat operal^pns this vessel as yet, except to state that
week when the tug Commodore a survey will be made and in­
was sent down to work out of ventory taken before the trans­
Gulfport, Miss., for an indefinite fer.
period. Operations of the tug The new ^acquirement by the
were covered by the same agree­ SIU company had* been requisi­
ment in effect for tugs in the tioned frorn her former owner
by the Government for transport
Mobile harbor.
Looking ahead, we don't ex­ duty in December, 1941.
pect much activity in this port Following the war she was re­
nexf week, as neither of the two converted at a cost of $1,500,000
major companies have anything and returned to service in June,
1947. She maintained regular
big on tap.
The Marine Hospital li.sts the passenger service between New
following Seafarers as patients York, San Juan and Trujillo
this week: J. L. Buckalew, F. City.
Higgason, Cyril Lowery, J. Bar­ In her postwar operations she
rier, T. S. Lambeth, C. Snod- made 43 round trips and has car­
ried 25,000 passengers. The 440grass, and C. Walters.
The membership is again re­ foot vessel's passenger capacity
minded that missing a ship, with­ is 354.
out reporting that the job is The two freighters pXirchased
open, is a serious offense and by the company are the Agwlwill be dealt with accordingly. comet and the Cinch Knot.

Bull Takes Delivery
Of SS Barlnquen

-I

�THE SEAFARERS

Monday, April 11, 1949

Looking At The Scab
By JACK LONDON
After God had finished the rattlesnake, the toad, the
vampire. He had some awful substance left with which He
made a scab.
A scab is a two-legged animal with a corkscrew soul, a
water-logged brain, a combination backbone of jelly and glue.
Where others have hearts, he" carries a tumor of rotten
principles.
When a scab comes down the street, men turn their backs
and angels weep in Heaven, and the Devil shuts the gates of
Hell to keep him out.
No man has a right to scab so long as there is a pool of
water to drown his carcass in. or a rope long enough to hang
his body with. Judas Iscariot was a gentleman compared with
a scab. For betraying his Master, he had character enough to
hang himself. A scab has not.
Esau sold his birthright for a mess of pottage. Judas
Iscariot sold his Savior for 30 pieces of silver. Benedict Arnold
sold his country for a promise of a commission in the British
army. The modern strikebreaker sells his birthright, his country,
his wife, his children and his fellow men for an unfulfilled
promise from his employer, trust or corporation.
Esau was a traitor to himself; Judas Iscariot was a traitor
to his God; Benedict Arnold was a traitor to his country; a
scab is a traitor to his country, his wife, his family and his
class.

LOG

Tage Five

Alcoholics Can Always Present
Full Jnstification For Drinking
By JOSEPH I. FLYNN

having trouble because of drink
the hardest one to convince.
The more obvious reasons a
person drinks can be put into
four groups. It's understood that
even though a person uses
these reasons for his drinking it
does not necessarily make him
a gashound or a performer. Most
everyone who drinks does it be­
cause of one of the following
reasons.
It is only when one is unable
to recognize these or other rea­
sons—and has become such a
slave to alcohol through use of
them, that he no longer can man­
age his own life—that he can
be classed as an alcoholic ad­
dict.

at fault and is always quick to
say, ""Why, I can drink or leave
it alone."
Ask him why he doesn't. You
will be let in on the most il­
logical reasoning here yet de­
veloped by man.
Only when the gashound or
performer gets to the point where
he can no longer believe that
he drinks because it's too hot
or too cold; too much money; a
wife, no wife; good shipping,
poor shipping; nice day, bad day;
long trip or short trip; and all
excuses leave him with the' fact
that he is" killing himself, it's
at this point that effective ther­
apy and help will enable him to
recover.
To-day there is a great deal
of knowledge of alcoholism, and
no one need suffer for years from
an illness before awakening to
the fact that treatment and ad­
vice will help them.

"Who—me an alcoholic? Why,
I can take it or leave it alone!
is a cliche that is heard often
enough by us all.
No one really believes it, much
less the seaman who continues
to get into trouble because of
his drinking.
No one wants to be looked
down upon. We all strive to be
a part of the herd, part of the
group we belong to.
It's striving for admiration, ap­
preciation and proper respect
that makes us act and form cer­
tain habits of conduct. The per­
son who feels he is not a part
of the herd has to try to con­
vince those in the group that
FRUSTRATIONS
he is just as good as they.
1. Social: In a previous ar­
This factor, plus others, usual­
ly make the guy who is really ticle many of the social -factors
were mentioned and need not be
gone into again, except to say
that seamen as a group look up­
YES OR NO
on drinking with acceptance. It
is believed by some that the
The following questions will
quantity of liquor a seaman can enable one to judge whether
handle depends on his virility. another or he himself is on the
The seaman who does not drink road to alcoholism. Answer the
OSLO (LPA)—Last fall eight tries like France, for human or peace, he does state that the is often times looked upon with following "yes" or "no." '
Norwegian trade unionists ac­ needs are not very different and Russian people want peace. Of suspicion by his fellow crew1. Do you need a drink the
cepted an invitation from the the inadequacy of wages in re­ the citizens of war-racked Stal­ members. The. outlets and hab­ next morning after a binge? (A
Russian government to tour the lation to prices is still greater ingrad he remarks: "They desire its of seamen are built around little hair of the dog that bit
Soviet union. They were wiped, in the Soviet Union than in peace to rebuild their city. drinking, making the seaman you.)
who does drink more acceptable
2. Is your drinking harming
and dined, and escorted in great western Europe. Such a move­ They've had enough of war."
Before Hegna and'his colleag­ and less open to ridicule.
your relationships with friends,
Style. But they kept their eyes ment from below can only be
kept in check by a strong state ues went to Russia the Commun­
open.
'
2. Relief of tensions: Alcohol family and Brother members?
authority
which, day by day, in ist press in Norway, as in the acts as a sedative, helping a
3. Do you have less self con­
Recently Trend Hegna, chair­
large
and
small
matters,
demon­
Soviet
Union
itself,
urged
them
trol
and are you careless about
seaman to eliminate the ten­
man of the delegation, has -writ­
strates
its
powers,
and
which
in­
to
make
the
trip.
Now
that
the
your
appearance?
sions and frustrations built up
ten a series of articles on the
tervenes
quickly,
ruthlessly
and
delegation's
official
report
has
4.
Has
your initiative decreas­
by a- long voyage. It lowers re­
trip, and the life of the Soviet
effectively
against
the
least
at­
been
released,
and
Hegna's
ar­
ed
since
drinking?
(Did you give
straint
and
judgment,
enabling
workers as the Norwegian un­
tempt
at
action
of
any
sort."
ticles
have
been
published
in
up
hope
of
ever
getting that
the
seaman
to
indulge
in
the
ionists saw it. This is a sum­
the
Norwegian
papers,
they
are
ticket?)
"While
Hegna
declines
to
guess
usual
outlets
open
to
him
in
for­
mary of Hegna's reports.
targets for bitter Communist at­ eign ports, without building up
5. Are you moody, lack effi­
The a'verage factory worker's what the policy of the Soviet
tacks.
ciency
and more sensitive since
government
really
is
towards
war
further
frustrations,
guilt
and
wage in the Soviet Union ranges
' drinking?
disappointments.
Alcohol
acts
as
from 850 rubles a month down
6. Do you turn to an inforior
a safety valve for pent-up emo­
to 600 rubles, and in some cases
environment
while drinking?
tions.
less. In other words, 2.5 to three
7.
Has
any
one called you a
3. Escape: For those who can't
rubles an hour.
gashound
or
a
performer?
By JOE ALGINA
take it, it's use&lt;{ as an excuse
Comparing this to wage rates
8.
Do
you
get
logged, miss
in Norway—^where living stand­
NE"W YORK—An encouraging selves for settlement and were for avoiding responsibility and watches, get in fights
due to
proper behavior. It helps one to
ards have not yet been pulled week which netted us 13 pay­ squared away in short order.
drinking?
up to pre-war levels, Hegna re­
The ship of the week—if there be ,less aware
. of disappointment
9. Do you have to drink to
offs and 11 sign-ons has us hold­ were such an honor—would go to j
frustration,
to forget^ For
marks:
gain
social ease, make friends,
ing our breath, hoping it will the Robin Trent. She gave us' anyone, it's always a
means
"A Russian worker must work
and talk freely?
of
solving
problems.
a fine payoff. Her tip-top crew
one hour for a loaf of bread, continue.
10. Have you ever been behind
4. A s a crutch: The only
while a Nor-vv^egian worker can
"While the taxi drivers are on is a real tribute to the calibre
in your Union dues and assess­
means of finding
enjoyment be­
manage it in 12 minutes. He must strike here and few people are of men in the SIU.
ments because of drink?
cause
of
habit
and
lack of other
work 10 hours for a kilo (2.2
FEW ABSENTEES
If you can answer "yes" to
moving by that means of trans­
pounds) of margarine, while a
Speaking of the calibre of the interests. For the weak and in­ any three of these questions, you
portation, a good number of SIU
Norwegian worker manages it
men of the SIU, it is commend­ ferior, alcohol is irresistable. It are on the road, if not already
men are moving out on SIU
in 24 minutes. He must work 20
able that the number of men enables them to kid themselves there.
scows. This is by no means an
hours for a kilo of butter, while
absent from regular membership into doing and being what they
invitation for men in other ports
cannot do sober. Whether it be
a Norwegian can earn it in 2
meetings is very low.
to head in this direction; we've
This is the third of a series
Considering that we have 1,000 telling the Chief Engineer to
hours."
got enough men on hand to
take a long walk on a short
of articles on alcoholism,
to
1,500
men
on
the
beach
here
100 TO 60
handle the jobs that will come
written by a former seafarer.
for meetings, the handful of dock, or putting on airs as to
Hegna continues: "There are ^ up.
The Union's position on
men asking to be excused is ex­ their true capabilities—such as
other factors which must be
Those ships that came in for ceptionally small.
the AB who always becomes a
drinking is clear enough.
taken into account. After com­ payoffs are: Raphael Semmes,
The membership has gone on
Howeverj one problem facing 2nd Mate, or the messboy who
paring them all quite theoretic­ Thomas Hey ward, James Jack­ the Union is the practice of some advances himself to Steward
record time and again^against
ally the delegation cqpie to the son, Maiden "Victory, and Kyska, men to come around a week alcohol will make them less sen­
gashounds and performers
conclusion that if the standard Waterman; the Seatrain New after the meeting to offer their sitive and conscious of their true
who make trouble aboard
of living of the Norwegian work­ Jersey; Suzanne and Elizabeth, excuses for being absent.
selves and help them keep their
ship or in the Union Halls.
ing population is put at 100, that the latter a port payoff, Bull;
Irresponsible gashounds are
There's not a heck of a lot that illusions.
of the Russian workers cannot be • Evistar, Triton; Carruth, Fuel can be done for these Brothers.
becoming ex-members at a
COMPENSATIONS
put higher than 60, perhaps Transportation; Bull Run, Petrol They should have sent in tele­
swift rate in line with this
more correctly at 50 or less.
Remember, these are just some
Tankers; Robin Trent and Robin grams or letters before the meet­
policy.
of
the
reasons
for
drinking,
and
In another article, the Scan­ Sherwood, Robin.
However, another tenet of
ing offering their excuses for
dinavian union representative
A good bunch of them signed non-attendance. The letters and that all who use them are not
Union policy is that how
comments upon the relationship on and took off. The Seatrain telegrams sent before the meet­ necessarily alcoholic.
much a man drinks away
between the low living stand­ New Jersey, Suzanne, Elizabeth, ing are the only truly valid ex­
All men try to live by the
from the ships and the Union
ards in Russia, and the lack of Evistar, Carruth, Bull Run, cuses the Union^can consider.
norrnal or accepted standards of
Halls is his" own business.
democratic freedoms under the James Jackson and Thomas HeyNevertheless, since seamen
Well, we can't suggest that their surroundings. The alcohol­
Stalinist regime.
ward all took off. Other sign- members seeking a quick ship ic, because of his actions while
are as prone to alcoholism as
stock brokers, movie stars
"Such a low standard of liv­ ons, left overs from last week, should head for the West Coast. drunk, his failure to control him­
or insurance salesmen, the
ing," he points out, "would un­ are Steel Architect, Robin Locks- Reports have it that shipping has self, and his broken promises,
has a strong sense of inade­
Union feels that these articles
doubtedly -be -impossible with ley and John B. Waterman.
tapered off a bit out there.
quacy,
guilt
and
inferiority.
in
which alcoholism is view­
Now that shipping is not par­
freedom to organize, free elec­
By the length of that roster
ed
as the disease medical sci­
tions, and the freedom to strike. it is evident that the Patrolmen ticularly red hot in any port, it
To compensate, he becomes an
ence
recognizes it to be
looks
like
a
flip
of
the
coin
is
expert at the art of rationalizing
"If these rights existed in Rus­ had a busy time for themselves.
should
be valuable.
as
good
a
way
as
any
of
select­
or
making
excuses
for
his
be­
sia there would certainly be On the Semmes and Sherwood
ing
a
poi't.
havior.
He
dare
not
admit
he
is
more strikes there than in coun- a lot of beefs presented them-

Norwegion Trade Unionist Reports On Low
Living Standards In 'Workers' Paradise'

New York Has A Bustling Week

�THE

Page Six

SEAFARERS

LOG

Mon^y, April 11, 1949

MINVTES AMD MEWS
Takes Log Hint
Robin Locksley Cargo Shift Spurs Brother
— Query Brings Cash Reply
Warning For Loading Precautions
The dangers posed by the lack of air-tight precautions in lashing cargo
were emphasized this week by a Robin Locksley crewmember as he told of a
mishap aboard the vessel when it bucked a storm on the return trip to New
York. Struck broadside
by a giant swell, the
Locksley sustained a 20degree portside list after
150 tons of her cargo
broke loose and shifted.
According to Jerry DeMeo, OS,
the Locksley was within a day's
reach of New York on the morn­
ing of March 7 when a heavy
storm arose. The Robin ship con­
tinued on her course, battling
strong head winds and heavy
swells.
At approximately 12:35 P.M.,
De Meo said, a huge wave hit
the Locksley broadside. The im­
pact loosened 150 tons of cargo,
consisting of manganese ore,
chrome ore, hides and bark,
which shifted to port and caused
the 20-degree list. DeMeo said
the port gunwhale was below
water.
Chief Mate Emanuel K. Bredel, pinch-hitting for the Locksley's Skipper who had remain­
ed in Capetown on busmess, im­
mediately headed the vessel
slowly out to sea, DeMeo said.
All hands were then turned to
righting the cargo. It took two
days of steady work to restore
things to normal and allow the
Locksley to resume her course
into New York, DeMeo reported.
DeMeo attributed the cargo
shift to the fact that shifting
boards were not used on the
'tween decks.
"Careful loading and proper
equipment are absolutely neces-

Photo by Jerry DeMeo shows the Robin Locksley with a
20 degree list to port after cargo shifted in storm.
sary if similar occurrences are
to be avoided," he warned.
The fact that no one was injured during the Robin Locksley
mishap was just a stroke of g&lt;»d
fortune, the crewman said. He
added that insecurely lashed car­
go is always a constant source
of danger to life 'and limb.
No vessel should leave port
until it has been determined
that the cargo is secure, DeMeo
said.
The Locksley, which sailed
out of New York on Dec. 27,

1948, paid off in the same port
last week. Her ports of call ineluded Capetown, Port Elizabeth,
E^st London, Durban and Lorenco Marques.

If you want to turn your fro­
zen assets into working dollars,
take a leaf from the book of
Brother James Rocks. He's a few
bucks better off today because
he takes seriously what he reads
in his Union newspaper.
Recently Jim saw an item in
the LOG advising former crewmembers of Calmar ships to
write to the company to see if
they were entitled to any of the
unclaimed wages that had ac­
cumulated.
Jim recalled that he had sail­
ed aboard the SS Frank Stock­
ton, a Calmar scow, back in
January 1946 on an eight-month
trip. With a what-can-I-lose
shrug of his shoulders Brother
Rocks sent a query to Calmar,
giving the name of the ship and
the dates of employment.
Not more than a couple of
weeks later, as Jim was opening
his latest batch of mail, his eye
latched onto an envelope with
the Calmar company imprint.
Yep, it contained a check for
some back wages. Came in
mighty handy too, especially
since he had never counted on
it.
Brother Rocks thought his
profitable experience ought to
be inspiring to men who have
sailed Calmar. When you write,'

he says, don't forget to name the
ships you've sailed on and when
you were aboard.
A word to the guy who could
use a few bucks — and who
couldn't—ought to be enough of
a shove.

Deceased Member

Brother Marion Ackerman,
whose death in Mobile twd
weeks ago was reported in the
previous issue of the LOG, as
he appeared before he became
ill.

RETURNING TO THE ISLANDS RUN

'The Voice Of The Sea
By SALTY DICK
The Times-Picayune carries a take an Alcoa ship to the Islands
big ad of the Pan-Atlantic ... Lonnie Akridge with his
Steamship Company — six more brother, Johnnie, here in New
ships in the coastwise trade and Orleans getting ready to ship to­
better jobs for those who must gether. They both want Alcoa.
be home more frequently. Wa­ ... It won't be long before Cities
terman" is going places, and so Service will be flying the SlU
are we . . . New York better banner. These men made a smart
step on it cause New Orleans is move when they voted for our
close on the big town's heels as Union ... Frank Vivero worked
a port. I believe tlie International ashore for awhile, but he says
Mart and lower rates here are he's going back to sea. Perhaps
responsible for good shipping. * Montevideo has something to do
In the near future we ought with his plans.'
When you're reading the LOG
to discuss homesteaders. There
are - some who are good Union always take a peek at the Per­
men. The reason they home­ sonal column. Maybe your name
stead is because of family ties. will be there ... Have you a va­
Collect your
But I know, and so do you. cation coming?
that some of the homesteaders money at the company office ...
Haven't seen Chris Hansen .in
have other reasons.
They tell me that doctors die ages. The last time 1 saw him
earlier than the average man. he was playing cards in the New
And, of course, women live long­ Orleans Hall.
er than men . . . These men: Al Kessen on the Del Mar is
Gila Vila, Bill Frank and Charles head waiter... George John, for­
Garner were fired from Cities mer department store head, is
Service because of pro-Union now sailing as waiter and en­
sentiment. Pretty soon they joying it... Emil Collazo can and
might be working again on these does build homes, but the sea is
something he can't forget. He
same tankers.
Sol Campbell is living off the wants to go to South America to
fat of the land, ^t is willing to see his son who works there.

Elizabeth Stewards Department crewmembers now under more familiar skies are. Sifting,
left to right-^Manuel Collaco, Fidel - Camacho, Frank Vega and Ramon Rivera. Standing are
Gabriel Colon, Gonzalez, Blaf Ramirez, William Stevens and Julio P. Rey. Photo was taken
by John Ferraira, the Stewards Department delegate.
\
Recently returned to the more
familiar New York to Puerto
Rico run is the Elizabeth, which
for six months was on time
charter to Black Diamond line

in the European trade. In addi- Europe. Now finished with haultion to the Lizzy hitting the un- ing scrap metal to the U.S. the
familiar ports of Antwerp and veteran C-2 will resume her
Rotterdam, better than half of carrying of more familiar taxthe crew got its first glance at, goes.

�THE

Monday, April 11. 1949

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Seven

Digested Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings
MARQUETTE VICTORY. Feb.
6 — F. Albore. Chairman; A.
Campbell. Secretary. Delegates
reported no beefs and asked crew
to go easy on the water. New
Business: Brothers to be fined
25 cents for leaving cups any­
where but in the pantry. Educa­
tion: Read and discussed SIU
Constitution. Good and Welfare:
Suggestion made that radio be
turned on more often. Slopchest
to be moi-e complete next trip.
4. 1 4.
ALCOA CORSAIR. Jan. 29—
R. E. Stough. Chairman; J. Rob­
erts. Secretary. Election of ste­
wards department delegate; Joe
Seaver elected by acclamation.
Good and Welfare: Suggestion by
Rubin Bellety that all stewards
department men get their work­
ing schedules from Chief Ste­
ward, Second Steward or dele­
gate when coming aboard ship.
Steward stressed the importance
of all crewmen being on ship in
in time to sail. Ship's delegate
informed men that relief men se­
cured in Mobile would be paid
straight overtime pay instead of
stand-by pay. Delegates to se­
cure replacements and depart­
ment heads to hold money for
relief* men. One minute of sil­
ence for Brothers lost at sea.

4&gt; 4- 4'
WARRIOR. Jan. 30—(Chairman
not given); Curtis. Secretary.
Delegates reported on books and
permits in their departments.
Larson reported delayed sailing
in Oakland and moved that sail­
ing board time be requested.
Lorendas elected ship's delegate.
Two members of each depart­
ment elected to. draw up a set
of rules for the benefit of the
crew.
4 4^4
CAPE NOME. Jan. 16—C. W.
Thompson. Chairman; Fred
Shaia. Secretary. Delegates re­
ported beef on delayed sailing
time. New Business: Men who
i*efused overtime told to stop
beefing. Deck delegate requested
a special meeting of deck depart­
ment to follow for purpose of
settling overtime beef. Motion
carried that the crew not sign
articles imtil the ship is stored
according to the Steward's re­
quisition. Motion carried to have
medicine chest and hospital
checked by man from Public
Health Service.
Delegates in­
structed to prepare repaiir list.
One minute of silence for Broth­
ers lost at sea.

4 4 4
DEL ORO. Feb. 1 — Brimell.
Chairman; Hay, Secretary. Min­
utes of previous meeting read
and accepted unanimously. There
being no New Business, meeting
went into Good and Welfare.
Question of argument between
Chief Cook and Oiler was dis­
missed when it was found that
dispute was a private matter. All
Brothers were asked to cooperate
in keeping recreation room and
laundry clean. Brother Nickerson reported poor medical tnjatment he and two others received
ashore, and the beef was tabled
for 'Patrolman to handle. Noted
that repair list must be made up.
Minute of silence for departed

Brothers.

•Hi

CAPE RACE. Feb. 9 — E. B.
M c A u 1 e y, Chairman; Cyril
Wyche. Secretary. Delegates re­
ported small amounts of disputed
overtime in their departments.
Motion by McNall that a report
be made on men who missed
ship and men be fined $50. Mo­
tion by McNall that those men
who'did a little performing dur­
ing trip assess themselves a
voluntary fine for their mi.sconduct. Good and Welfare: One
minute of silence for Brothers
lost at sea.
4 4 4
HASTINGS. Jan. 9—Cf. Howell.
Chairman; C. J. Oliver. Secre­
tary. Delegates leported all in
order in their departments. Good
and Welfare: Suggestion made
that each member clean laundry
room after use. , Suggestion made
that mixer be put on all showers.
One minute of silence for Broth­
ers lost at sea.
4 4 4
RUSSELL A. ALGER. Jan. 9—
Charles Lee. Chairman; H. M.
Rosensiiel Secretary. Delegates
reported number of books and
permits in their departments.
New Business: Repair list to be
made up and turned in by each
department delegate at end of
voyage. Good and Welfare: Sug­
gestion made to see Patrolman
about permitmen being allowed
to stay aboard until ship hits
Savannah.

4 4 4
FAIRLAND. Dec. 26—M. Col­
lins. Chairman; B. J. Schmiiz.
Secretary. Under'New Business:
John Dixon. Chief Cook, was
elected Ship's Delegate by ac­
clamation. Motion by D. Diesei
Bosun, seconded, that slopchest
be checked before sign-one for
next trip. Motion passed. Diesei
also moved that a vote of thanks
be given the Stewai'ds Depart­
ment for the fine Christmas din­
ner the day before.
Motion
seconded and passed unani­
mously. Several suggestions con­
cerning water cooler, cigarettes,
and other matters made under
Good and Welfare. Minute of
silence for departed Brothers.
4 4 4
EDWIN MARKHAM. Jan. 30—
T. C. Walberg. Chairman; V. W.
Kun. Secretary. Voted to send
minutes of previous meeting to
New York. Ship's and depart­
mental delegates reported things
ging pretty well and said they
would refer what disputes there
were to Patrolman. One man
was recommended for probation.
A second was recommended for
a book, and a third for a permit.
A fourth was accused of being
topside stiff. Night Cook and
Baker given vote of thanks for
his good pastries. Repair list
drawn up. Minute of silence for
Brothera lost at sea.

WANDA. Jan. 9—F. Johnson.
Chairman; W. J. Karlarzynski.
Secretary.
Departmental dele­
gates x-eported all in order.
Brother Cowling, a permitman,
turned over delegate's job to
Bx'other Wade, a bookman. It
was noted that the Utility had
been dispatched from New Or­
leans with" a shipping card. Voted
to message Boston for a Patrol­
man to meet ship. Vote to v/rite
letter to Headquartei's about men
shipped without books.
4 4 4
STONEWALL JACKSON. Jan.
23^L. F. Linslead. Chairman; R.
Heija. Secretary. Minutes of pre­
vious meeting read and accepted.
Ship's Delegate said voyage had
been clear of major beefs and
congratulated stewai'ds depart­
ment for a job well done. He
asked that repair lists be made
up before ship hit Galveston. He
said new crew should have slop­
chest carefully checked. Engine
delegate reported some disputed
overtimq^.
Deck and stewai'ds
delegates reported minor beefs
to be I'eferied to Patrolman!
Brothel' Nicholson thanked ship­
mates for kindness while he was
in sick bay. Minute of silence
for departed Brothers.

0A^A
tfKVEYi
YOUR NEXT Tf^lP
CHECK THE BA^^S AhlO
CLUBS yoUFATf^OAJiZB
TO SEE IF THEY ARE
(SETTING^ B(ENDUES
OF THE SEAFARERS
LOG, ^^JD IF THETARE
SETTING EA/OUGM
IN EITHE/^ CASE
US KNOW ZA/lMeD/ATE/y
AA/P W£'LL F/XTMIINISS
UP ^ AND E/EATrmLLV
THE LOG WILL BE AVAILABLE TO THE^
ALL OVER THE WORLI?.

CUT and RUN
By HANK

4 4 4
STEEL KING. Jan. IS—E. L.
Eriksen. Chairman; V. A. Cover.
Secrelairy.
Ship's and depart­
mental delegates reported 100
peix;ent dissatisfaction with Sec­
ond Cook and Baker. Motion by
Kellog. seconded by Terry, that
Second Cook and Baker not be
allowed to register in that rating
because of incompetence. Motion
approved by entire crew and
signed by five bookmen.
4 4 4
BEAVER VICTORY. Jan. 23—
Jack Gridley. Chairman; John P.
Wade. Secretary. The Delegates
I'eported all departments ship­
shape. Under Good and Welfare
voted to take dirty cups to pantry
after coffee time. Last standby
on each watch shall clean and
straighten mess hall. Voted not
to use wash basins for laundi'y.
Voted two dollar fine
for any
man leaving litter in laundry.
Cleaning laundry room to be ro­
tated by departments. Educa­
tion talk given by Brother
Crosby.
Minute of silence for
departed Brothers.

Keep It Clean!
It is the proud boast of the
Seafarers International Un­
ion that an SIU ship is a clean
ship Let's keep it that way.
Although most of the crews
leave a ship in excellent con­
dition. it has come to the at­
tention of the membership
that a few crews have vio­
lated this rule. So they have
gone on record to have all
quarters inspected by the
Patrolman before the payoff,
and if the conditions are un­
satisfactory. he has the right
to hold up the payoff until
everything is spic and span.
Remember that the Patrol­
man can only have repairs
made if he knows what has
to be done. Cooperate by
making up a repair list be­
fore the ship docks. Give one
copy to the Skipper, and one
to the Patrolman. Then youH
see some action.

Some of you newspaper-reading Brothers in other ports may
have j'ead of the New York beer-joint selling nickel beer (we
lemember good old Phllly, it used to have nickel beer, too) and
about some clothing stoi'e up in Boston selling suits and overcoats
for Sll.OO each. Have you read about a lake in Massachusetts
called Lakh Chargoggacoggnanchauccagcaubunagungamaugg which
means in plain Indian language—"You fish on your side, I'll fish
on my .side and nobody fishes in the middle" ... Well, anyway,
here's this week's mention of Seafarers in town— Jack Kelly,
Antonio Schiavone. Frank Webb, Robert Lagasse, Alan MacDonald,
Henry Principe, William Traser, Donald Fisher, Wayne Wookey,
Ivan Whitney with his mustache, Edward Witko, Andy Hourilla.

Bosun Tommie "Beachie" Murray, wherever he's at right
now, probably will be happy to know his shipmate. Robert
Beliveau. Massachusetts citizen, is aboard the Steel Age. Say.
Bob, building any more model square-riggers? ... Brother Louis
Gooch. Kentucky citizen, says his shipmate of the SS Bull
Run. Robert Cronin. is coming in soon aboard the Robin Ket­
tering ... Brother Lew Meyers, who writes he's due to bend
and groan through some South African wrestling matches, is
now aboard the SS Marine Star which hit Beira. Portuguese
East Africa, recently. If any of you Brothers hit this port in
the future you should be able to pick up a few LOGS at the
American consul or the Swan's Tavern. Check anyway, and
let the LOG Editor know if these bundles reach these places
every week. Include the complete addresses, by the way.

The weekly LOG will be sailing free of cost to the homes of
the following Brothers—Marvin Geiser of Missouri, Richai'd McCormick of New York, Richard Miller of New Jersey, R. Pearsall
of Virginia, Vernon Wilson of Indiana, Wallace Lonergan of New
York, Gerard Junot of Louisiana, Edwin Mitchell of Alabama,
W.illiam Turner of South Carolina, J. Vaughn of Alabama, Ray
Eader of Maryland. James Davis of Ohio, Julius Taylor of North
Carolina... It's good to see Brother Bob Burton in town. He's
looking good and feeling kinda happy, too... "Red" Braunstein
came in from a long-shuttling tanker trip, and sailed out of town
again-—overland, this time... The Rudolf Kai'son Cafe down in
Baltimore is now on the mailing list for a weekly bundle of LOGs.
It's good to know that Waterman crews are picking up LOGs in
that Tampa cafe and that Georgetown, South Carolina, place.

News Hems—The French government expects 175,000 Am­
ericans to visit France this summer. Well, the steamship com­
panies and the Maritime Commission better get together and
get our own ships running to carry Americans, too... Of 50,000
seamen employed on Panamanian-registered ships only about
200 are Panamanians. A few more ships and Panama would
have a bigger fleet than our merchant marine... A few more
Seafarers in town are—Charles Shipman. Willie West. Bill
Doran. Dan Butts. Vic Sukenick. Charles Slanina... Brothers,
keep those ships happy and clean. Protect your agreements—
keep your jobs shipshape. Okay, fellas, coffeo. time—and peanutbutter sandwiches.

�Page Eight

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Monday, AprU 11, 1949

Ship Becomes 'Ghost Of Coast' Cleric Lauds Log Series,
Seeks Ship Chaplain Lnfo
In 21 Port Junket To Far East
To the Editor:
J. I. Fljmn's articles and your
editorial efforts to curb gashounds' performing are very
commendable.
Hope you lead the way for
other unions in this matter and
that Mr. Flynn presents the
good work of two friends of and
to the alcoholics: Alcoholics An­
onymous and the communion of
total abstainers and non-prpjlucers-or-dispensers of the "liquid
germs" which cause the sickness
of alcoholism.
Thank yofi or someone for the
LOG. I like your fair, demo­
cratic way of informing and giv­
ing voting privileges and voice
to each" member as well as to
the officers.
Could we non-Seafarers hear

To the Editor:
After many days and many
ports, the Steel Seafarer. is
finally homeward bound for the
Gulf and East coast. The specu­
lation and scuttlebutt of the past
months have died down and the
boys are finally right about our
idestination, I hope,
j No matter what the destination
marked on the cargo aboard
these ships, a man still has no
assurance whatsoever that the
ship will ever touch those ports.
When these ships leave the
States they invariably end up by
having their first port of call
changed two or three times.
Take for instance the case of
the Steel Seafarer. We sailed
Ray Tusing, DM, at extreme right, qualifies as the Steel
from New York on December 11
Seafarer's
violin virtuoso by scratching out a bit of mood music
for Penang, via the Suez Canal.
for
the
crew
as they relax at the Radio Bar in Batavia, Java.
After transiting the canal, the
Left
to
right,
Pete Bluhm, DM: Eddie Cantoral, OS; Paul
sailors were stowing the lines on
Goodman,
Wiper;
Duke Leger, AB, and Brother Tusing. Stand­
the foc'sle head when the Chief
ing
is
Curly
Duplantis,
FWT.
Mate came shouting up on deck
to tell the Bosun to pull the
lines out again, the ship was due Sailor once had them on bare­ 3 pesos to take you ashore. If To the Editor:
to stop at Aden, he had just boat charter.
you miss the launch while
Everything was fine and dandy.
ashore, they charge six pesos to The Cresap paid off in Houston
learned.
HEADS, TAILS
Well, that port out of the way
After that job, John Isthmian take you back to the ship. „
and added to the hot shipping
we continued on our merry way in his New York chartroom dip­
We noticed a terrible lack of now humming in the Galveston
toward Penang. One day before ped a coin again and sent us LOGs in the Far East and Pacific area. I'm now looking for that
our scheduled arrival, all the island hopping through the ports. I believe a system should European run. (This guyv is defi­
gear had been topped and the Philippines to pick up any old be devised whereby these Isth­ nitely a screwball, listen to the
lines were out. The crew was hemp, sugar or cocoanut we mian ships can get hold of some rest of his tale.)
looking forward to Saturday could find lying around. That's of the later editions. Our only
Well, I spent nine uneventful
night ashore with the lovely what happened anyway. So, with LOG came from the Steel Ven­
days in Galveston. (Notice that
ladies. Presto! We wake up Sat­ tears in our eyes we said fond dor, which we met in Honolulu
he doesn't say anything about
urday morning and scan the farewell to our Filipino babes as we were returning to the
the nights.) I was really en­
horizon for Penang—^the ship had and started across the Pacific, States. If anyone has some sug­
joying myself, as you can do if
been routed on to Singapore de­ stopping at Honolulu on the way gestions, why not write in to the
you know Galveston. (He means
spite a thousand tons of cargo to pick up a few pineapples and LOG and perhaps something can
the ginmills and women, as
for Penang. Wha hoppen? After whatever else would be picked be done.
usual.)
That's about all there is con­
that nothing surprised us,
up there, which wasn't much.
But anyway what happens is
This ship's activities serve as cerning this scow. To any­
AROUND AND AROUND
this:
After clearing Singapore, the a good example of a Far East one making the trip I wish you
The friendly voice of the
merry-go-round started. In and trip. When the ship pays off happy ferryboating in the Far
Union (Keith Alsop to you)
East.
Our
discharges
are
ex­
in
New
York
we
will
have
hit
out of ports in the Dutch East
phones my favorite ginmill
Indies so small that MacArthur twenty-one port, two of them pected to read: Foreign (Ferry­
around
six PM asking for an
couldnt find 'em. The schedule twice. Now after we get home boat).
Oiler,
so
this boy, being a good
In closing, the deck depart­
for three days was "in at sunrise, we have five or six ports along
union
man
(and low on cabbage),
ment
wishes
to
put
in
a,
plug
out at sunset." We were getting the U.S. coast.
jumps
up
and
volunteers for the
for
O.
W.
Holmes,
Chief
Mate,
to be known as "the galloping Here are a few tips about some
job.
(Got
it,
too.)
who
has
been
good
guy
to
work
ghost of the East Indies coast." of the FaC Eastern ports, just
with
throughout
the
trip.
You
Now
I'm
not
hard to get along
We once went up\ a river in case anyone is interested. In
can't
go
wrong
sailing
with
him.
with,
but
I
just
spent six months
through a jungle so thick that Malayan ports, which include
Pete
Bluhm
in
India
to
get
away from the
Penang
and
Singapore,
the
mone­
even Frank Buck wouldn't have
tary
exchange
is
2
dollars
and
come back alive. The name of
the place was Soengei Gerong, 12 cents in Malayan money to
and it was in Sumatra. A guy the dollar. In Singapore,
wouldn't be surprised to see you can't go far with it, everyDorothy Lamour waving at him'thing is pretty expensive; but in
from the river bank. When you'Penang, for the same money, at
get to a place like this all you the same rate of exchange, a guy
can say is "Here we is, but can go a long way.
If you are going to hit any
where is we?"
After discharging all our cargo number of Dutch East Indies
we headed back to Singapore to ports, you can't go wrong with
load. We loaded rubber and tin Singapore money or the good old
By S. OMAR BARKER
there and began the port jump­ Yankee dollar. The official ex­
ing again. We never knew what change is 2 guilders, 65 cents for Oh, I'd like to settle down in some quaint and quiet town
the next port was going to be a buck, but this stuff is Mickey Where the harbor fills with sails home from the sea;
until we were almost upon it. Mouse money. Two guilders There to watch with peaceful, eyes homely hills and friendly skies
Scuttlebutt was rife. One guy won't pay carfare. Certain chan­ And to hear the short waves lapping on the lea.
said he had heard we were going nels offer 12 guilders for the dol­ Just a little shanty there and a friend or two to share
to Russia to load hides. Even lar and for the Malayan dollar Memories of ventures when our hearts were young;
five guilders are offered.
that was a good guess.
Just to watch the ships come home, just to smell the tang of foam
STEP LIVELY
As it fibnally turned out, we
And sometimes to hear a seaman's chantey song.
Look out for your money in
got to Penang. From there we
went to a "far away place," and. Manila, that is probably the mosl Oh, I'm longing more and more for a little place ashore
Brother, I ain't kidding. I think expensive port in the Far East Now that time has turned my life ship toward the west;
they get one ship a year in outside of Indian ports. While There's adventure in the sea—ah, its voice is sweet to me.
there. It's a place called Phula in Manila beware of the launch But the harbor's calm is calling me to rest.
Phuket, Siam. If you never call service. These jokers have a Yet I know that some bright night, schooner sails will beckon white
there don't let it worry you. The bad habit of leaving the ship And the sea will whisper magic in its moan;
barges that brought out the rub- ahead of sfchedule and then re- Oh, it will break an old man down, biding there within the town.
ber looked as i| Sinbad the turning to the ship to charge you While his heart sets sail for seas he once had known.

about the chaplain service on
board ships? I would like to
know about the desire, need,
kind and quality of such- now
being done. Do shipping com­
panies make provision for same?
What is the Seafarers official
position on this matter? I seek
information because I am gen­
uinely interested.
Rev. Roy S. Buffat
(Ed. Note: The SIU feels
its role as a trade union is to
better the economic welfare of
its members. Social, cultural
and spiritual matters are left
to the individual to pursue as
he sees fit. So far as is known
no merchant ships carry chap­
lains.)

Wagner (Conscience, Too)
Can't Flee Old Man Winter

Magic Of The Sea

winter, and I was quite proud of
the fact. But when this baby
(the Nathaniel Palmer) shoves off
for her first port, it happens to
be Bucksport, Maine. This place
is so far north that when Perry
was on his way to the North
Pole, he dropped a marker here
so he could find his way back.
My blood is so thin that if I
cut myself I'll drown. But any­
way the only thing I can hope
for is that when we dump this
load we'll head back south. (We
can't go any farther north, un­
less we make a northwest pas­
sage.)
With good luck we
should be able to be way down
south to Boston soon.
Blackie Wagner

Three Lemons

The Bosun of the SS Evelyn
shakes hand with a one-armed
bandit in a ginmill in Port
Sulphur, La. Gil Parker who
took the picture didn't report
the outcome of the investment.

Send Those Minutes
Send in the minutes of
your ship's meeting to the
New York Hall. Only in that
way can the membership act
on your recommendations,
and then the minutes can be
printed in the LOG for the
benefit of all other SIU
crews.

�mamrn

Bsay?4'--

Monday, April 11. 1949

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Says Pro-SIU Tidal Wave Overwhelms CS
To the Editor:
The bitter opposition of Cities
Service to the bona fide trade
unionism of the SIU is doomed
to failure, even though-the antilabor octopus should be tempor­
arily successful in putting over
its company union plan.
At best there can be but a
short-lived victory. A victory

made possible by crooked means,
by chicanery and manipulation
behind the false mask of com­
pany unionism.
This company is attempting
the impossible 'feat of reestab­
lishing open shop conditions in
the industry. They are following
the non-union pattern set by
Isthmian in the pre-war years.

Member Will Swap GI Mop
For Berth On Robin Ship

They wish to drag the present
into the past. It cannot be done
anymore than we in 1949 can
revert to the conditions of 1776.
The proof of their inability to
return to an open anti-labor po­
sition is seen by their camouflage
of the company union, which
they were forced to erect. Their
company union front is an at­
tempt to bridge the condition
existing in the industry which
were created by the march of
bonafide trade unionism. Cities
Service has created a diversion
to channel the crews into a com­
pletely controlled company un­
ion. The end of the road they
travel Under the leadership of
CTMA is clear: Cities Service
headquarters.

Crew Calls Master's Bluff,
Wins Extra Month's Wages

FEAR OF SIU
Whatever gains are offered by
Cities Service arises from the
fear of the SIU. Whatever gains
are offered through CTMA can
only arise from the same fear.
The Mosoil's sudden switch to foreign operations caught
Remove the SIU from the scene
this
crewmember with his hair down. Trimming his locks is
and the CTMA would disappear,
Leo
Lasoya, while Blackie, the Bosun, looks on. Another
the slave driving tactics of the
trimming took place at the payoff when the Skipper's attempt
company would then come out
to pull a fast one was checked with the award of an extra
into the open.
month's
wages to the crew.
It is up to seamen to under­
stand that now. Any pretense by To the Editor:
None of the men had been al­
the company that it does not I signed on the Mosoil in the lowed to make out allotments be­
hate unions, even the masked Gulf, and when the Skipper cause of the narby-foreign ar­
CTMA (which they created as came aboard he decided to get ticles. Our delegates immediately
a straw man for NLRB election underway immediately. It didn't conferred with the American
purposes to defeat the SIU), can matter to him that the Radio Op­ Consul about the articles which
be seen from the company's ap­ erator, the Chief and Third the Skipper was now trying to
proach to the problems in the Mates and a couple of crewmem- pass off as foreign, although no
industry.
bers were ashore. We left for one had signed on in the pres­
ence of a shipping commissioner.
Any company with balanced the fair land of Cuba.
The consul took a neutral posi­
judgment would understand that The old rustbucket was 30
they cannot revert to the past, years old and not so fast, so the tion in the matter but refused to
that eventually the conditions missing men chartered a tug and stamp the articles, stating that
and wages set by the SIU must caught the ship as it was leav­ they were not in order. He ad­
vised the crew to make the trip
be met. Sanity would counsel ing the harbor.
Fresh from a soogee mission in the barracks, former Sea­ that a union solid in its ranks We made Cuba okay, then and refer the matter to the ship­
farer Ira Myers (extreme right) and buddies pose with their and able to man the ships with went on to Tampico, Mexico, and ping commissioner upon arrival
award as the best platoon in the company. Myers says he'll trained personnel is good enough back - to Cuba. We were on in the States.
swap that broom he's carrying at left shoulder arms for a to warrant the confidence of nearby-foreign articles and were In the course of an evening's
chipping hammer on a Robin Line scow.
any company.
supposed to go back to the outing in Curacao, the Radio Op­
What prompts" their present States—but no such luck. The erator, who had acted as Purser
To the Editor:
We must keep these huts clean campaign to delay elections orders read Curacao. The cig­ and signed us on, was bragging
while they drive union men from arettes were low and the Skip­ about how he had signed us on
just like a ship.
Since I have been sent to Fort
I'm -sending you a few pictures their ships? The answer lies in per sold most of what were left knowing that the articles were
Bliss, Texas I thought it a good
phony and there was nothing we
of the men who kept our bar­ the wages paid on Cities Service
idea to drop you a few lines let­ racks clpan at Camp Pickett,.Vir­ ships as compared to union con­ so we received a half carton could do about it. He quieted
ting you know that _^Army life ginia. The sign displayed in the tracted ships. The difference apiece.
We arrived in Curacao without down.
doesn't go good with seamen,
The Skipper took on several
picture is our award for being amounts to hundreds of thous- mishap. From there were sup­
I will say that the Army is the best platoon. I must say the! ands of dollars per year in the posed to go to^Lands End, Eng­ cases of his favorite beverage
similar to the SIU in one respect: fellows you see in this picture company's fleet.
land, for further orders. That and felt that he could get away
kept the place clean. We kept
was when we raised our howl. with anything, so before sailing
Wandering Seafarer
time he posted the Third Mate
COLGATE STUDENT, that sign for a month.
on
the wing of the bridge with a
the only SIU seaman in
MEMBER OF MM&amp;P, ourI was
shiny .45. The Third Mate had
company. With the other
SEEKS LABOR AWARD ex-seamen we have been talking
more than a little undei^'his belt.
The Second Mate took the gun
about'the
bill
before
Congress
to
To the Editor:
away and everything quieted
discharge seamen from the serv­
down again.
I recently read in the New ices.
He will learn that it does not
York Herald Tribune that the
I would like to get out and get To the Editor:
MILD IDEA
matter who gets the credit as
Seafarers International Union, a ship to Africa. The Robin
I am fouled up in my legs as long as it is a Seafarer.
We left for England with three
Atlantic and Gulf District, urged Line appeals to me. If anyone
the result of an accident in
English woi-kaways. About six
its members to try for the labor has any news about -the bill to
He will learn and i-ealize that days out of Curacao, the Captain
Egypt, while a crewmember of
scholarships being offered by the discharge seamen, drop me a
of the M. T. Radketch enroute to ships will run perfectly well was feeling pretty good (with the
British Transatlantic Foundation, line.
the Persian Gulf. While recuper­ without him so don't think that help of his beverage) and de­
which are open to all members
If anyone sees Kirk Nelson, ating I came up with the follow­ you can't be replaced.
cided to hold boat drill although
of tiade unions.
tell him to drop me a line. Please ing thoughts:
He will learn that Messmen, it was pretty rough at the time.
I am very interested in trying continue to send me the LOG
Sooner or later a seaman, if he Ordinarys, and Wipers are hu­ We had been gone from the
to receive one of the mentioned and change my address to this is wise, will discover that a sea­ man and it does not do any harm States about a month and hadn't
scholarships to Oxford Univer­ camp. Pals interested in con­ man's life is a mixture of good to smile and .say good morning rolled the boats out before. I
sity, and although I am not a tacting me can reach me at Hq. days and bad, victory and defeat, even though it is raining.
guess it was always too calm.
member of the SIU, I do happen and' Hq Battery, 75th AAA Gun give and take.
He will learn that Seafarers The crew, as.. a whole, came
to be a member of the Masters, En., Fort Bliss, Texas. .
He will learn that it does not are ambitious, that they have away lucky. We only had one
Mates and Pilots. I surmise,
Ret. Ira W. Myers
pay to be a sensitive soul, that brains, that are good or better serious accident. A messman re­
therefore, that I would be eli­
he should let some things go than the average; and hard work ceived a fractured skull. He's in
gible since the article mentions
over his head, like water off a and not cleverness is the secret the Baltimore hospital now.
that ^members of AFL. unions
of success of the Seafarers Inter­
The Captain's beverage supply
duck's back.
may submit applications.
held out and we arrived in Balti­
He will learn that he who national Union.
He will learn to sympathize more and paid off. ShipfSing
Would you please send me a
loses his temper usually loses.
Membership - rules require
copy of the March issue of the every man entering the
He will learn that all men with the youngsters who are per­ Commissioner Hendrix ruled that
SEAFARERS LOG containing
have burnt toast for breakfast mit men in the Seafarers Inter­ the company would have to pay
Union Halls to show his
the announcement and details of
now and then—he shouldn't take national . Union. Don't forget us an extra months' pay. The
Union Book. Pro-Book, per­
the scholarships. Alsc I would
the other grouches too seriously. how bewildered you were on ship was in the process of being
mit or whitecard to the door­
appreciate any information you
transferred to a foreign flag, so
He will learn that by cari'ying your first ship.
man. This is for the mem­
He will leqrn that Seafarers we got a lawyer and he slapped
could add concerning the pro­ bership's protection. Don't
a chip on his shoulder is the
are not any harder to get along a lien on the ship.
cedure in applying for - the
waste the Doorman's — or
easiest way to get into a fight.
scholai-ship.
your own—time by arguing
I've just hit the high spots or
He will learn that the quickest with in one place than another
John W. Snyder
this point. Observe the rules way to become uppopular is to and getting along depends about I'd fill the LOG. One happy day
Colgate University
you make.
be a -stool pigeon and gossip 98 percent on your own behavior. for the crew was payoff day.
Hamilton. N. Y.
Jack Kelly
about others.
" James R. Porter

Recovering From Accident,
Porter Offers Do's, Don't's

Membership Rules

ill

Page Nine

llil

i-l

�Page Ten

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Polio Group
Lists Five
Precautions

CitiesService
Experiencing
SlU 'Horrors'
Cities Service h^s the jitters—
but bad. As the end of the col­
lective bargaining election in its
fleet nears, the company is
swing the firing-axe more
wildly than ever. What's more,
this axe, is falling on company
men who have passed the "loy­
alty test" as well as on those
suspected of pro-Union senti­
ment.
Instances have recently been
reported of Cities Service tanker
personnel being dismissed for
reading the SEAFARERS LOG.
The nervousness permeating the
CS Marine Division becomes
even more apparent from the
fact that a considerable number
of tankermen were .fired sud­
denly after their ships had been
voted, even though for years the
company found them acceptable
by its standards.
Cities Service's mad drive to
eliminate union sympathizers
from among its crews has taken
on comic opera proportions, too.
The company has even fired sev­
eral CTMA organizers, men who
have given their all for the
company "union."
But the company's stepped up
anti-union drive is futile, de­
velopments clearly indicate. Just
as rapidly as pro-union men are
dismissed, new ones come up to
take their place since it doesn't
take replarcements long to get
wise to the inferior conditions
aboard Cities Service tankers—
conditions which more and more
tankermen realize can only be
improved by the winning of an
SIU contract.
Meanwhile, the election period
ends on April 17. Eight ships
have already voted. The ninth
and last remaining eligible ves­
sel, the Government Camp, was
expected to be in Montevideo,
Uruguay, this week when her
crew would ballot and mail their
In an attempt to halt deser­
votes to the National Labor Re­
tions
of seamen from Polish pas­
lations Board in New York.
senger
ships, New .York immi­
Counting for the ballots by the
gration
authorities refused to
NLRB is expected to begin about
a week after the voting period grant shore leave to 119 of the
329 man crew of the Gdyniaends.
American liner Batory this week.
In the past month approximately
100 seamen have jumped ship
when in New York. The de­
tained crewmembers are all pro­
fessed members of the Polish
Despite uncertainty in the Communist Party.
trade, the Robin Line has an­
•
•
•
nounced that it will resume A requiromont by the Neth­
weekly sailings to South Africa erlands that at least fifty percent
on June 1.
of the EGA cargo purchased un­
Robin had cut its sailings to der Holland allotments must
one every two weeks since the move in ships of the HollandUnion of South Africa imposed America Line, if they were
stringent restrictions on dollar available, has been withdrawn
imports and on dollar expendi­ by that government. The EGA
tures for ocean freight.
objected to the requirement and
The company's increased op­ the Netherlands EGA mission in
erations are timed to coincide this country had the clause re­
with the beginning of an import moved. None of the. other Mar­
permit system which will place shall Plan nations has such a re­
all lines in the African trades quirement in its administration
on an equal competitive footing, of aid shipments.
so far as exchange is concerned.
* * *
The reduction in Robin Line A representative of the Na­
operations began on April 1 tional GIO has been reported as
when exchange and import prac­ suggesting that Harry Bridges
tices gave favor to Soutl^ Afri­ take his union out of the GIO if
can flag ships.
he doesn't like the way the or­
Farrell Lines another heavy ganization works.
The blast
shipper in the trade, will in­ came after Bridges announced
crease the tempo of its opera­ his continued opposition to cer­
tions in July, but the other two tain national GIO policies in his
U.S. carriers in the South Afri­ keynote address at the ILWU
can trade, Lykes Brothers and convention now meeting in San
States Marine, have not an­ Francisco. Bridges has frequently
nounced any change as yet.
clashed with the national or­

Robin Line Goes Back
To Weekly Sailings

Monday, AprU 11. 1949

ganization over such matters as
ERP, adherence to the World
Federation of Trade Unions and
support of President Truman in
the late campaign.
* • •
The Maritime Commission
will discontinue training new
men for unlicensed positions
aboard ships, and sharply reduce

its training of officers, because
of the "increased unemployment
among qualified seamen already
in the industry." Indications are
that pressure was brought to
bear on the Commission to cut
down. Its original appeal for
funds for 1950 was $6,586,000,
but has now been reduced to
$3,329,000.

Unkm Wrecked Are Warned
The SIU is on record that charges will be placed against
men guilty of being the following:
PILFERERS: Men who walk off ships with crew's equip­
ment or ship's gear, such as sheets, towels, ship's stores, cargo,
etc., for sale ashore.
WEEDHOUNDS: Men who are in the possession of or
who use xnarijuana or other narcotics on board an SIU ship
or in the vicinity of an SIU Hall.
GASHOUND PERFORMERS: Men who jeopardize the
safety of their shipmates by drinking while at work on a ship
or who turn to in a drunken condition. Those who disrupt the
operation of a ship, the pay-off or sign-on by being gassed up.
This Union was built of, by and for seamen. Seafarers
fought many long and bloody fights to obtain the wages and
conditions we now enjoy. For the first tiihe in the history of
the maritime industry a seaman can support himself and his
family 'in a decent and independent manner. The SIU does
not tolerate the jeopardizing of these conditions by the actions
of irresponsibles.
In any occupation there is a small group of foulballs.
While the Union has been fortunate in keeping such characters
to a minimum, we must eliminate them altogether from the
SIU.
All Seafarers, members and official^ alike,, are under
obligation to place charges against these types of characters.
Any man, upon being convicted by a Union Trial Com­
mittee of actions such as outlined here, faces Union (discipline
up to and including complete expulsion from the Seafarers.

Warning that the 1949 polio
season is "just around the cor­
ner," the National Foundation
for Infantile Paralysis today is­
sued a list of precautionary
measures to be observed by those
in charge of children during the
epidemic danger period which
usually runs from May through
October, reaching its peak dur­
ing the hot, mid-summer months.
The five
easy-to-follow health
rules for children are:
1. Avoid crowds and places
where close contact with other
persons is likely.
2. Avoid over-fatigue caused
by too active play or exercise,
or irregular hours.
3. Avoid swimming in polluted
water. Use only beaches or pub­
lic pools declued safe by local
health authorities.
4. Avoid sudden chilling. Re­
move wet shoes and clothing at
once and keep extra blankets
and heavier clothing handy for
sudden weather changes.
5. Observe the golden rule of
personal cleanliness. Keep food
tightly covered and safe from
ilies or other insects. Garbage
should be tightly covered and,
if other disposal facilities are
lacking, it should be buried or
burned.
The National Foundation also
listed the following symptoms
of infantile paralysis: headache,
nausea or upset stomach, muscle
soreness or ' stiffness, and unex­
plained fever. Should polio strike
in your family, call a doctor im­
mediately. Early diagnosis and
prompt treatment by qualified
medical personnel often prevent
serious crippling, the National
Foundation pointed out.
The organization emphasized
that fear and anxiety should be
held to a minimum. A calm, con­
fident attitude is conducive to
health and recovery. Parents, it
said, should remember that of
all those stricken, 50 percent or
more recover completely, while
another 25 percent are left with
only slight after effects.
If polio is actually diagnosed,
contact the chapter of the Na­
tional Foundation for Infantile
Paralysis serving your commun­
ity. The chapter will pay that
part of the cost of care and
treatment which patient or fam­
ily cannot meet.

Port Baltimore Faces
Huge Losses Unless
Policy Is Changed
(Continued from Page 3)
American ships from the foreign
aid program.
"Hoffman claimed that he
would save money by using for­
eign ships. The Seafarers Inter­
national Union has demolished
that argument on several occa­
sions. Perhaps the real reason
for laying up the American mer­
chant fleet was to trade 10,000
or 15,000 seamen's jobs for the
Atlantic Pact. If so, it's quite
a price, considering the merchant
marine's role in national defense,
not to mention those thousands
of seamen thrown out of work.
"We seamen are not demand­
ing any special privileges. We
are just fightings for the very
existence of our industry and
our jobs."

�ii|ond«7' April 11, 1949

P«ge Eleven

THE SEAFARERS LOG

NLRB Charges Six Bakeries
With Looking Out Workers
The National Labor Relations Union. According to the union's
Board ruled this week that the attorney, if the union wins the
layoff of 1,500 driver-salesmen case it would get back pay for
by six major New York baking the 1,500 drivers, based on aver­
companies constituted a "lock­ age earnings of $100 weekly.
out" and therefore an unfair This would amount to $150,000
for each week of the strike.
labor practice.
In setting the date for the
A hearing on the charges, filed
hearing,
the NLRB said that the
by Local 550 of the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters companies, with the exception of
against the Grennan, General, Continental, had "failed, refused
Ward, Continental, Purity and and continued to refuse to rein­
Drake bakeries, will be held on state said employes to the for­
mer, or substantially equivalent,
May 3.
positions of employment."
The union originally called a
A damage action has also been
strike against Continental, pull­ filed in Federal Court in behalf
ing its 250 drivers out after ne- of the locked-out inside produc­
gotions failed to produce agree­ tion workers in the Ward, Drake,
ment.
Immediately, the five Purity, Grennan and General
other bakeries, who with Con­ bakeries. The bakery workers
tinental are members of the New are asking for $100,000 weekly
York City Bakery "Employers as lost wages.
Labor Council, locked out all
The Continental drivers' strike
their employees, bakers as well developed when the company
as drivers.
denied the union's request for an
A complaint was then filed increase in the basic weekly
with the NLRB by the Teamsters guarantee of $55.

cloth, $2.00; A. T. Cabrera, $5.00; M Econnov. $1.00; E. C. Biedzycki, $1.00;
S. Sospina, $1.00; R. Barnes. $1.00; H, P. J. Colonna. $1.00.
INDIVIDUAL DONATIONS
SS SUZANNE
A, Jeffrey. $1.00;- C. T. Scott. $1.00;
Julius E. Parks. $5.00; J. K. Weekes
R. Serrano. $1.00.
G. Redch, $2.00; J. Smith. $2.00; H.
$5.00; F. L. Bose. $8.00; F. X. McGlone
SS STEEL VOYAGER
Durham. $2.00; T. W. Smith. $2.00; J.
$1.18; A. H. Williams, $1.00; Wm. MeeN. J. Boyle, $2.00; H. V. Benner,
Malinowski. $2.00; F. Hill. $3.00; P. F,
han. $1.00; A. W. Forbes, $5.00; Re
Kiauber.
$3.00;
Deck
Departmenr, $7.00; B. Gardoza. $5.00; D. P, Wilson.
ceipt No. 77093, $7.00; H. L. Parrott $10.00; D. R. Brodeur. $1.00;. P. V. $3.00; C. Warren. $2.00; V. A. Hebert.
$1.00; J. T. Bennett. $2.00; L. A. Marsh. $3.00; E. Rivera. $1.00; J, P. $2.00; V. L. Barfield. $4.00; R. E.
C.ardner. $1.00; Allen R. Prime. $25.00;
Lagerstrom. $2.00; J. T. Bush. $2.00;
Taboada. $2.00.
W. irvin, $5.00.
R. J. Nicholas. $1.00; J. R. Duckworth.
SS
SUZANNE
J. S. Dimas. $1.00; V. G. Colas,
$1.00;
N. Buckley, $1.00; M. E. Coon,
R. Serrano. $i.OO; M. Santiago. $3.00;
$5.00; R. R. Brown. $1.00; R. C. Miz$3.00; J, W. McCaslin, $2.00; R. L,
J.
Morales,
$1,00,
ers. $2.00; R. Lipari. $2.00; A. N.
Wilkerson, $1.00; J. Guy, $2.00; J. V.
« SS JULESBERG
Wert. $5.00; A. N. Fernandez. $5.00; C.
Johnson, $3.00; J. E. Pewitt, $3.00; F.
W. J, Fogarty, $1.00; H. D, Rodgcrs, Fagan, $1.00; J. Weems, $2.00; L.
E. Harper. $5.00; C. Misak. $5.00; J. J.
Martus. $5.00; S. Foscolos. $5.00; Wm. $).00,
Watts, $2.00; S. Conner, $5.00; F. W.
Abercrombie. $1.00; John Holoboski.
SS STEEL WORKER
Brown, $2.00; H. K. Shellenberger,
$2.00; Edwasd Schultz. $5.00; J. A.
L. C. Long. $3.00; J. J, Gillen. $3.00; $3.00; J. C. Johnson, $1.00; W. W.
Vernboe. $1.00; George Davis. $1.00; J. Rodriguez, $3.00; E. Mathisen. $5.00; Wright, $5.00; H. D. Dunn, $1.00; R.
Frank
Prezalar, $i.OO; M. Medina, G. E. Pettipas. $1.00; N. B. Cabahug. P. Herald, $2.00; P. J. R. Gausey,
$2.00.
$2.00; S, Vastakis. $2.00; G. F. Hazen. $^.00; S. Stockmarr, $2.00; J. A.
E. R. Brown, $5.00; Otto P. Preus- $2.00; A. 1, Durante. $3.00; J. Tutwilr, Thomas, $2.00.
.slcr. $2.00; Andreaw Massick. $5.00; $1.00; W. M. H. Donaldson. $2,00: O.
.SS TOPA TOPA
J. A. Jones. $2,00; S. Yodis, $4,00; Wm. McEnaney. $2,00; A. N, Swanson. $1,00;
H. D. Stebbins, $10.00.
Norris, $5.00; O. O. Ames, $5.00; L. E. W. Petrowski, $2.00; T. McNee. $2.00;
Taylor. $1.00; Mario Garcia, $2.00; H. W, J. Smolinski, $1.00; N, Maness,
J. Bligard, $1.00; Hubert A. Landry, $1.00; G. Gabling. $1.00; R. Ratcliff,
$5.00; Wm. A. Padgett, $5.00; J. C. $2.00.
Torrefiel, $6.00; J. C. Bernard, $1.00;
SS SEATRAIN NEW YORK
J. D. Andretcisk, $2.00; S. Henon,
J. R. Miller. $1.00; J. C. Steeber,
$15.00; V. J. Zeman, $2.00; W. R. $10.00; K. H. Baldwin. $2.00; Juan
Serpe, $5.00.
Medina, $1.00.
SS OBERLIN VICTORY
SS CAROLYN
R. J. Boles. $1.00; S. H. Mills. $3.00;
1. Garcia. $1.00; R. L. Perry. $1.00;
J. Buzalewski. $2.00; J. Rudolph. $3.00;
r. E. Cizewski. $1.00; E. P. Connor. A, Albe, $1.00; R. P. Maldonato, $1.00;
W. Stansky. $1.00; A. Melendez, $1.00;
$3.00; F. X. Phelps, $3.00; G. FairF. A. Bartolomei, $1.00; L, Cepeda.
May 23-30, 1947 is asked to con­
DONALD HARTMAN
J. J. de YOUNG
$1.00; C. Gonzales. $1,00; T. Gonzales,
tact
Frank
Dalan,
AB,
care
of
$1.00; T. Roman, $1.00.
Max Moore says that you
Please get touch with your
SS SEATRAIN TEXAS
should get in touch with Ethel, Seafarers Int. Union, 51 Beaver mother immediately.
C. A. Mosley,. $1,00; S. E, Farquhar, care of the Punchy and Judy, Street, New York.
4 4 4
$3,00; G. £, Ekelund, $2,00: W. F.
i, 4. i.
JOSEPH D. BLANCHARD
345 Dauphin St., New Orleans,
Panewicz, $1,00: R. Teets, $1.00.
DESMOND L. J. SMITH A
La.
Get in touch immediately with
SS GOV. GRAVES
BALTIMORE
14 North Gay St.
Get
in touch with L. .W. Smith, Ben Sterling's office, 42 Broad­
it
S.
C. A. Moss. $1.00: C, Haun. $3.00.
William Rentz, Agent
Mulberry 4540
DANIEL ROSE
28 Albro Lake Road, Darts- way, New York City, concerning
SS ROBIN LOCKSLEY
BOSTON
276 State St.
mouth,
Nova Scotia, Canada,
W.
A.
Kemmerer.
$1.00;
S.
Monardo.
Pick up your watch at Duke's
collection of back wages.
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Richmond 2-0140
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141 $1.00; R. B. Ranney. $1.00; J. M. Pro- Tavern, below the SIU Hall in
t.
4.
GALVESTON
.308'/g—23rd St. hownik, $1.00; F. W. Fyock, $2.00; A.
ROBERT B. KEARNS
CLEATIS ^H.\YERS
Baltimore, or write to .Gary GarKeith AIsop, Agent
Phone 2-8448 Gzerwinski. $1.00; A. L. Hinde. $1.00;
Howard
V. Tanker has an im­
rigues,
14
North
Gay
St.,
Balti­
Communicate
with
your
MOBILE
1 South Lawrence St. J. M. Bang. $2.00; N, Collstrug, $37.00;
Gal Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-1754 J. W. Altstatt. $37,00; J. Robillard, more, Md., giving him your mother, Mrs. Helen Tranelbee, portant communication for you.
NEW ORLEANS
523 Bienville St. $1,00; J. Lewis. $1.00; M. Condino, mailing address.
1706 Brown St., Philadelphia, Pa. Communicate with him at 1500
E. Sheppard, Agent
Magnolia 6112-6113 $1.00; J. Przelecki. $1.00; A, Irizarry.
W. Chase Street, Chicago 26,
4 4 4
NEW YORK
51 Beaver St. $5.00; S. F. Bogucki. $3.00; C. Burgio,
JEFFERSON
CITY
VICTORY
Illinois.
JOHN
PATRICK
HALL
$2,00;
H,
J.
Moore,
$73.00.
Joe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784
Your parents are anxious to
SS ROBIN GOOD FELLOW
NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St.
The Deck Delegate of the
E. Beldre. $1.00; R. Armests. $1.00; Jefferson City Victory between hear from you. Write to them
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
PHILADELPHIA
337 Market St. C. G. Mantzakos. $1.00; A. H. Perez.
HUGH D. McWILLIAMS
at their ^ Melbourne, Australia,
J. Sheehan, Agent
Poplar 5-1217 $1.00; V. Pipinen. $1.00; A. E, Witmpr.
Contact
your sister, Edith, at
address.
SAN FRANCISCO
85 Third St. $1.00; F. Baker. $1.00; E. Fancher.
812 Pryor Street S.W., Atlanta,
Frenchy Michelet, Agent Douglas 2-5475 $1.00; F. SRvik. $1.00; B. Carroll.
SAN JUAN, P.R
252 Ponce de Leon $2.DO; L. Mannaugh. $1.00; C, Olson,
Ga.
DENNI^ O^ULLIVAN
L. Craddock, Agent
San Juan 2-5996 $1.00; C. Karas, $1.00; S. F. Bogucki,
Contact George G. Hunter,
4 4 4 '
SAVANNAH
2 Afaercorn St. $37,00.
JOSEPH
C. MIKRONIS
Committee
on
Grievances,
Bar
SS LEGION VICTORY
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728
Your
mother
asks you to write
Association
of
New
York,
43
M. Stheiffer. $2.00; F. Chiavetta,
TACOMA
1519 Pacific St.
Broadway 0484 $1,00; J. O. Roy. $1.00: E. A. Guidroz,
West 43rd Street, New "York, tier at 408 Saquaro Avenue,
TAMPA
1809-1811 N. Franklin St. $1,004 R. L. Plude. $1,00,
Baton Rouge, La.
N. .Y.
EDGAR W. DODDS
SS COLABEE
Ray White, Agent
Phone M-1323
A, Rivera. $1.00.
WILMINGTON, Calif., 227'/, Avalon Blvd.
Your baggage, which was lost
SS Z. PIKE
Terminal 4-2874
in the B&amp;O Railroad, has been
HEADQUARTERS. . 51 Beaver St, N.Y.C.
A. Simoneaux. $2.00: J, Eanes, $1.00;
forwarded to the SIU Baltimore
D. Condoy. $1.00: C. Bairstow, $1.00;
SECRETARY-TREASURER
M. Ellis. $2.00; E. Zetterquist. $2.00; Hall, 14 North Gay Street."
Paul Hall
The SEAFARERS LOG as the official publication of the Sea­
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
R. Clark. $1,00; D. Schmidt. Jr., $1.00;
i
t
farers
International Union is available to all members who wish
'
Lindsey Williams
R. E. Taylor, $1.00; W. Anderson,
SS LaSALLE
to have it sent to their home free of charge for the enjoyment at
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURER
$1.00; H, Peters, $1.00; J. Griswold,
Crewmembers, of
the SS their families and themselves when ashore. If you desire to have
Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
$2,00; R, Jones. $1.00; C. Barnes, $2.00:
LaSalle, which made a recent the LOG sent to you each week address cards are on hand at every
Joseph Volpian
H. Stivers, $1.00: O. Beltran. $1.00.
SS W. MARVIN
trip to China, can pick up their SIU branch for this purpose.
R. E. Paraky. $3.00; E. H. .Poe, mail in the Mobile SIU Hall.
However, for those who are at sea or at a distance from a SIU
$2.00; W. Russell, $5,00; H. Lissemore,
HONOLULU
16 Merchant St. $4.00; M. Davila, $1.00.
hall, the LOG reproduces below the form used to request the LOG,
Holders of the following re­
Phone S-8777
SS CAROLYN
which you can fill out, detach and send to: SEAFARERS LOG, 51
PORTLAND
Ill W. Bumside St.
P. R. Galbaugh, $1.00.
ceipt numbers should get in
Beaver
Street, New York 4, N. Y.
Beacon 4336
SS ALAWAI
touch with Headquarters im­
RICHMOND, CaUf.
257 6th St.
O. Seara, $3,00; H. Bank, $2.00; J,
Phone 2599 Demuth, $1,00; A, Morales. $1.00; V. J. mediately, because "Headquarters
SAN FRANCISCO
59 Clay St. Helms, $2,00; R. H, Daniels, $5.00; does not have the book numl^rs
%
Douglas 2-8363 J. J. Flynn, $1.00; E. C. Arroyo, $1.00; of the men concerned and so
SEATTLE
86 Seneca St. H. Hillion, $1.00.
cannot credit the payments prop­
Main 0290
SS BULL RUN
erly. When you write in give
WILMINGTON
440 Avalon Blvd.
S. E, Boggan. $1.00; J. F. Byrd.
Terminal 4-3131 $i.OO; C. Polish. $1.00; J. Mehlov. the receipt number, your name
$2.00; E, L. Meyer. $1.00; F. Z. Alcain, and the number of your book or
$1.00; J. A. Krepps, $1,00; J. ReW, permit. The receipt numbers;
Name
$1.00; C. Ramsey. $1.00; H, A. Vaughn,
C.94619 (collected in San
MONTREAL
1227 Philips Square $1.00; L. M. Mitchell, $1,00; J. Hals,
Plateau 6700—Marquette 6909 $1.00; R. Harris, $1.00; O. J. Marden. Juan).
Street Address
PORT ARTHUR
63 Cumberland St. $1.00; O. L. Sartin. $1.00; R. W.
C.90573 (collected in New
Phone North 1229 Taylor. $1.00; H. W. Willett. $2.00. •
York).
PORT COLBORNE
103 Durham St.
SS CANTON VICTORY
State
ZoneCity
C.82859 (collected in New
Phone: 5591
F. W. Kenfield. ,$1.00.
York).
TORONTO
Ill A Jarvis St.
SS EVELYN
Elgin 5719
P. J. Coponlti, $1.00.
C.73953 (collected in New
Signed
VICTORIA, B.C
602 Boughton St.
SS AMEUA
Orleans).
Empire 4831
H. Yoting, $1.00.
.C.91913 (collected in New
VANCOUVER
565 Hamilton St.
SS J. MARION
Book No.
York).
Pacific 7824
G. H. Renstrom, $3.00; R. O-Nelll,
C.78156 (collected in Tampa).
' $1.00; D. F. Mastropaylos, $1.00; M.

NEW YORK

Ter«oiiafe

SlU HRLLS

SIU, A&amp;G District

FLOYD\I^ILLIAMS

Notice To All SIU Menbers

SUP

PLEASE PRINT INFORMATION

To the Editor:
I would like the SEAFARERS LOG mailed to tliQ
address below:

Canadian District

T

i.'-.

.V

�Page Twelve

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Monday. April 11. 1949

SEAFARERS INT'L UNION OF NA
jf

International And District Seamen's Policy

I; i

It 'i

The assembled delegates at the Fourth Bien­
nial Convention in Baltimore, representing, all
Districts of the seamen's groups in the Sea­
farers International Union of North America,
have met and discussed the various problems
concerning each of our individual Organizations,
as well as the relationship between Districts.
It must be noted that in spite of our internal
differences, we unanimously agree on one thing
—that is, the continued growth of each of our
Districts, as well as our International..
There is no necessity for going into great
detail and background of some of the interdistrict problems, particularly pertaining to
inter-district shipping, as that is now a part of
the official record of this Union and its various
Districts.
It is necessary that we Delegates report to the
membership some of our findings on some of the
essential facts that led up to the present condi­
tion existing between the Seamen's Districts of
the International.
In various ports in all. Districts, we find there
exists a condition which - is not healthy and
which, most certainly, cannot be considered as
beneficial to our Organization's welfare.
We find that without exception in each Dis­
trict, some officials, as well as members, have
been guilty of violating not only the actual rules
as laid by previous Joint Conferences,^, but have
actively contributed towards the deterioration of
good relations between our various Districts.
It is not the intention of this Delegation to
attempt to fix and place the responsibility for
these matters. Indeed it is bad enough that they
have even occurred.
As responsible representatives of our member­
ship from each District, we do realize that for
the good of our International there are several
rules of conduct which must be followed. Un­
less they are followed, then it will certainly fur­
ther strain the relationship between each District.
Eventually, it would also affect our economic
way of life, i.e., jobs, security, etc., through*
internal dissension. Therefore, this Committee
recommends the following:
1. SHIPPING POLICY:
We reaffirm the policy of District Preferential
Shipping, which was adopted and announced
September 1, 1948, wherein a policy was agreed
to that the members of a particular District have
preference for jobs on that particular District's
vessels, regardless of the area of operation where
the vessel may happen to be lying.
This we feel to be necessary to safeguard the
Job security of a particular District's member­
ship. It is to be pointed out that the reaffirma­
tion of this policy was necessary due to the
fact that under the SIU Constitution, each Dis­
trict, has autonomy rights which allow it in turn
to control its membership admission, job control,
shipping rights, etc.
2. DISTRICT MANPOWER SHORTAGES;
All Districts recognize the necessity for the
prevention of further overloading of the Mari­
time Industry with manpower. It is to be under­
stood that whenever a particular District's mem­

bership is not available for that particular recommended by this Delegation that any matter
District's contracted vessels, then members of arising in any District involving these points be
other Districts are to be shipped.
immediately referred to the International Office,
This not only is based on the proposition' of which, in turn, can then notify the affected
the prevention of overloading of membership in Districts.
the Maritime Industry, but also to allow the
We have found from experience in our Inter­
membership of the affiliated Districts the first
national that such cooperation between the Sea­
opportunity of employment before such oppor­ men's Districts is highly beneficial. Such co­
tunity is offered to anyone else who doesn't come operation, for example, was the decisive factor
within the framework of the Seafarers Inter- that led to the victory of the world-famous 1946
nationai Union of North America.
General Strike which tied up all ships in all
It is further understood that when one District ports.
requires members of another District to fulfill 6. REGISTRATION AND SHIPPING OF GREAT
its contracts, as outlined herein, that such
LAKES AND CANADIAN DISTRICT MEM
replacements shall be cleared through official
ON EAST. GULF AND WEST COAST:
channels.
#
To prevent misunderstandings of the manner
3. CLOSER ASSOCIATION . WITH OTHER in which our members of the Great Lakes and
DISTRICTS:
Canadian District are to be shipped while in off­
shore
ports, the following is the policy covering
It is agreed that there is a necessity for
acquainting various members and officials of this matter:
each District with the problems and affairs of
a. Great Lakes and Canadian District mem.members and officials of all other Districts. It
bers, when shipping from West Coast
is our expressed opinion that to further this
Ports, shall register and ship from SUP
thought, all members and officials in every port
Halls.
in every District should encourage cooperation
b. Great Lakes and Canadian District mem­
and understanding through attendance of meet­
bers, when shipping from E^t Coast
ings and associations with other Districts'
Ports, shall register and ship from Atlantic
members.
and Gulf District Halls.
In the past, the various Districts have been
brought together in strikes and beefs of an CONCLUSION:
industry-wide nature. It is a proven fact that
In adopting this policy, we urge every official,
when such events do happen, that they can be and every member of each District in our Inter­
handled much better and be of far greater benefit national, to comply with this position.
to members of all Districts, providing there is in
It is our considered opinion that there are
existence a feeling of mutual trust, friendship, many problems facing American seamen which,
and respect between all members and officials cannot be ignored. In order to find solutions to
of each District.
these many problems, we must not only continue
4. FURTHERING BETTER INTER-DISTRICT to present a solid front towards our common
enemies, but must, above all, intensify the co­
RELATIONS:
operation within the framework of our Interna­
All Districts recognize the necessity for the
tional. We must strive for a greater understand­
prevention of any attempts on the part of any
ing of each other's problems.
individual, individuals, members or officials from
The record of the Maritime Industry clearly
attempting to cause dissension between the vari­
shows that all seamen sailing in American bot­
ous Districts of our International.
toms have made greater economic and social
It is this Delegation's observation that in the
gains since the inception of the Seafarers Inter­
past when any difficulty arose in our Organiza­
tion between Districts, there were characters national Union of North America than in any
given period in the history of the Maritime
who attempted to step into this misunderstand­
ing and cause permanent disruption to the Labor movement.
Because of our International, it is possible for
International and its Districts.
seamen
today to live as free men. For the first
Each member and official should be on guard
against actions of this type. Immediate and time seamen can not only support themselves,
drastic steps are recommended to prevent either but their families as well, in a comfortable
the beginning or the continuing of actions which manner.
For these and other reasons this International
are detrimental to the mutual interests of the
must
not only hold the gains it has made for the
Districts and the International.
seamen, but must move forward in a solid United
5. JOINT ACTION ON MARITIME PROBLEMS: grouf) to accomplish even more.
/
This Delegation recognizes that our IntertjaWe must dedicate ourselves to the proposition
tional and its affiliated Districts face many seri­ that the only way in which our welfare can be
ous problems in the immediate future. Among protected is for the strengthening and enlarging
them are problems of legislative, organizational of the Seafarers International Union of North
and economic nature. We can also understand America.
,
that many these problems will affect either one
Seamens Section of the S.I.U. of N.A.:
or more of our Districts and can arise in such a
Atlantic and Gulf District
manner so as to require quick and decisive
action.
Sailors Union of the Pacific
To take such actions as necessary, it is
Great Lakes District

An Injiii7 To One Is An Injury To All!

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9904">
                <text>April  11, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9978">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
CONVENTION SETS SIU COURSE&#13;
SENATE PASSES COMPROMISES ECA CARGO BILL&#13;
SIU SEAMEN'S DISTRICT RALLY TO AID CANADIAN  SEAFARERS&#13;
LONDON MEETINS TO SET PANAMANIAN BOYCOTT&#13;
CONVENTION CHARTS FUTURE COUSE FOR SIU&#13;
BALTIMORE FACES LOSSES UNDER PRESENT POLICY&#13;
CANNERY WORKERS' OFFICAL VISITS THE NEW YORL HALL&#13;
COURT REFUSES LIFETIMES AID TO INJURED SEAMAN&#13;
SENATE ECA CARGO VOTE IS A COMPROMISE&#13;
FRISCO SHIPPING LEVELLING OFF AFTER SPLURGE&#13;
PORT MOBILE SHOWS IMPROVEMENT&#13;
SEAFARERS HAVE GOOD WORD FOR SAVANNAH HOSPITAL STAFF&#13;
PORT MOBILE SHOWS IMPROVMENT&#13;
BOSTON MANAGES TO KEEP MOVING&#13;
BULL TAKES DELIVERY OF SS BORINQUEN&#13;
YARMOUNTH TO RESUME HET OLD SUMMER RUN&#13;
ALCOHOLICS CAN ALWAYS PRESENT FULL JUSTIFICATION FOR DRINKING&#13;
NORWEGIAN TRADE UNIONIST REPORTS ON LOW LIVING STANDING IN 'WORKER' PARADISE&#13;
NEW YORK HAS  A BUSTLING WEEK&#13;
ROBIN LOCKSLEY CARGO SHIFT SPURS WARNING FOR LOADING PRECAUTIONS&#13;
BROTHER TAKES LOG HINT QUERY BRINGS CASH REPLY&#13;
CITIES SERVICE EXPERIENCING SIU'HORRORS&#13;
POLIO GROUP LISTS FIVE PRECAUTIONS&#13;
ROBIN LINE GOES BACK TO WEEKLY SAILING&#13;
PORT BALTIMORE FACES HUGE LOSSES UNLESS POLICY IS CHANGED&#13;
NRLB CHAGES SIX BAKERIES WITH LOCKING OUT WORKERS&#13;
SEAFARERS INT'L UNION OF NA INTERNATIONAL AND DISTRICT SEAMEN'S POLICY&#13;
&#13;
</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9979">
                <text>04/11/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10121">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10122">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10123">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10124">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10125">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10143">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 14</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="955" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="959">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/734bf474a54f4569dae62220c14c23a2.PDF</src>
        <authentication>348291434b3c83279b344f3778ec20aa</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47435">
                    <text>SEAMEN FLOCKING
CANADIAN DISTRICT

'Canada, Too, Will Be SlU,'
Say Seamen, Glad To Get Rid
Of Commie-Dominated CSU

HALIFAX, April 19—As the phony "strike" of
Official OrgaUf Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA the Canadian Seamen's Union against the 100-odd
SIU contracted deep sea ships operating from the
NEW YORK, N. Tft. FRIDAY. APRIL 22. 1949
No. 15 eastern ports of Canada neared the end of its third
VOL. XI
week, the Canadian District of the SIU was in a
stronger position in the area than ever before. In
tjhe past^week, hundreds of CSU members, express­
ing disgust with communist control of their union,
have come into the SIU Canadian District.
SIU international officers from the United
States, who are now in Canada, reported that crew

CSU Goons Fail To Halt Canadian Seafarers

after crew of CSU men were^swinging to the SIU in recogni­ and Douglas Kirk, were chosen
tion of its traditional insistence to act as spokesmen and to an­
that the principal concern of a nounce that they were brewing
trade union is wages and condi­ away from the CSU. They also
tions—not communist politicking. denounced the leadership" as be­
Paraphrasing the slogan used ing communist.
in the successful Isthmian or­ The Chandler crewmen said
ganizing campaign of two years they had decided to breakway
ago, Canadian seamen are now from the CSU several days be­
jubilantly proclaiming: "Canada, fore the ship hit port.
The following morning, seven
too, will be SIU!"
Violence, the only weapon the CSU goons entered the boarding
communist leaders of the CSU house room of Paul Klapper, one
have found to combat the rising
^he Chandler crew's spoketide of SIU sentiment, has flared man, and "laid into me with a
frequently, with bloody struggles club.' Klapper is now in the
occurring in Montreal, Halifax
and elsewhere. But the commu­
nist-directed" violence has not
been successful in stopping what
The Canadian District. like
is now shaping up as a definite
all
other Districts in the Intrend to the SIUI
f^maiional.
is completely au­
As it became more convincing­
tonomous.
The
District nego­
ly evident that members of the
tiates
its
own
contracts,
has
CSU welcomed the emergence
its
own
halls,
and
ships
its
of the SIU Canadian District,
own
members
to
its
con­
CSU violence was stepped up.
tracted vessels.
Early Sunday morning the SS
The District, as per the
Chandler, Elder-Dempster lines,
International
constitution,
docked in Montreal, with a CSU
has
a
Secretary-Treasures.'
crew aboard. Five of the crew,
Robert Klapper, Alfred Mailey, port Agents in each port and
Oscar Sorensen, Kenneth Morton Patrolmen, all of whom are
elected annually in District
wide elections. Matters affect­
ing the Canadian member­
ship — strikes, assessments,
rule changes—are determined
by the Canadian Seafuers
only, through a 60-day refer­
endum ballot.
The' District works with
the International on prob­
lems necessitating joint ac­
tion by the entire organiza­
tion.
(SEE PAGES 7-10 FOR
THE TEXT OF FOUR
BROADCASTS BY
THE
CANADIAN DISTRICT OF
THE SIU. WHICH CLEAR­
LY AND EFFECTIVELY
EXPLAINS THE ISSUES
INVOLVED.) .

Canadian Autonomy

Members of the Canadian District. Saafarers International Union, wave from
the deck of the Canadian Steamship Line's Lady Rodney in Halifax after fighting off
attack of communist-led Canadian Seamen's Union. Violence flared frequently as
communists fought to maintain control of Canada's waterfront by attempting to
prevent Canadian Seafarers from sailing ships under contract to SIU's Canadian
District.
!

—

Canadian Seamen Act
The communist machine is presently conducting an
all-oift, last-ditch fight to control—or ruin—the import­
ant North American waterfronts. It is using the two sea­
going unions—one in the US, the other in Canada—in
which it has most successfully implemented the policies of
the world communist program.
In Canada, which the communists regard as one of
their principal strongholds, the CP is directing a tooth and
nail struggle to keep the destinies of the Canadian seamen
and the Canadian merchant marine in the hands of the
organization which it dominates lock, stock and barrel—
the Canadian Seamen's Union.
That considerable alarm over the outcome of their
mission" for Moscow is felt by the commies operating in
Canada, is demonstrated by the violent effort that is
being made to prevent Canadian seamen from winning a
new era of economic freedom under the banner of the
Canadian District of the SIU. No stone has been left
unturned—either literally or figuratively—by
the com­
munists to keep Canada's seamen boxed inj^ so they may
continue to be- used as political pawns in the game for
world domination, master-minded by the tacticians of the
Kremlin.
Waterfronts are strategic spots and the communists
have for a long time marked them as number one ob^
(Continued on Page 2)

31

t.

The degree to which the communist party has pene­
trated the Canadian Seamen's Union is demonstrated in
above photo taken by Acme News Photo Service. The
two men. defiantly giving the communist clenched-fist
salute, are members of the CSU who presumably slipped
or fell in tussle with police during futile attempt to
halt Canadian District Seafarers from boarding a con­
tracted vessel in Halifax. Hundreds of non-communist
CSU members, disgusted with their politically-minded
leadership, have switched membership to the SIU's
Canadian District in the past few days.

A

Western Division of the Montreal
General Hospital.
Chandler crewmen said that at
the present time 98 percent of
CSU members are anti-com­
munist," but are led by "about
two percent who have com­
munist tendencies and obviously
receive Instructions from behind
the iron curtain,"
Before he was beaten, Klapper
expressed the sentiment of the
(Continued on Page })

�•
l-fr.-

,

Page Tw.o

t^ E SB dF Alt ]E^ R&amp; I Q €^

' - Fridttir.-April 22. mt

SEAFARERS LOG
Published Three Times a Month by the

SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
^ OF NORTH AMERICA
"Atlantic and Gulf District

. %•

Affiliated with the Americem Federaiion of Labor

At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-27«4

Entered as second class matter Jime 15, 1945, at the Post Office
in New York, N.Y., under the Act of Augusf 24, 1912.
267

Canadian Seamen Act
o

(Continued from Page I)

jectives. Courageous Canadian seamen, like Paul KJapper
of Stoney Point, Altoona, and others who have dared
voice disgust with the CSU and its leaders taking orders
"from influential persons behind the iron curtain," and
who have welcomed the SIU's Canadian District as an
organization that can steer Canadian seamen on a . true
union course, know the commies mean business.
Klapper and the others have bashed heads and battered
bodies—souvenirs of communist disapproval—to prove it.
The communists must be violent, for the Kremlin doesn't
tolerate failure on the part of its flunkeys..
On a less violent scale, but similar in pattern, is the
battle now brewing in the US, where a commimist min­
ority is once again spreading confusion" in the ranks of
the, CIO National Maritime Union, which it long con­
trolled. The CP's role in the NMU was set forth in the
April 19 issue of the Daily Worker, official mouthpiece
for Moscow in the US. In a full -page call to arms, Howard
McKcnzic, former NMU vice-president and party wheelhorse, hurls the standard CP epithets at those who oppose
red rule. "Warmongers," "company unionists," and "un­
democratic," screams McKenzie.
Because the NMU, still limping after its belated fight
to kick out commie leaders, is out to bar CP'members,
the commies are hollering "company unionism." The line
of attack is the same in Canada, where CSU commie
stooges are shouting "scab" at Canadian seamen inter­
ested in union principles and economic issues and not* in
political skullduggery.
All kinds of phony -issues are being injected to con­
fuse the seamen so the CP minority—like the two percent
in the CSU—can walk in and take control of a bewildered
and disunited membership, in line with the "rule or ruin"
program. As in Canada, the US commies are. pulling an­
other of the stock stunts^ employed whenever they find
the going rough. They are calling on "all trade unions
These are Ihe Union Brothers currently in the marine hospitals,
as
reported
by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging
anj| progressive organizations (to) speak up and let seaheavily
en
their
haads. Do what you can to cheer them up by
know of their support." This party order means
writing them.
th^ CP hacks in-controlled unions and "front" organi­
MOBILE HOSPITAL
O. O. MILLAN
.
zations have already been wiset' up. They'll butt in as
R.
L.
GRESHAN
J.
JONES
th^ have in Canada, with a flurry of protests and pro­
H. F. BEEKER
GARRIZ
posals for "solidarity" prepared by the commie propaganda R.
J.
F. THOMSON
E. JARRETT
mj^hines.
S.
RIVERA
H. DOUGLAS
G.
STEPANCHUK
J.
W.
LITTLE
,
—;
I The world communist hierarchy wants control of the
F. MAZET
J.
B.
BERRIER
.
Ndrtk American waterfronts badly. In Canada, at least,
T. ROZUM
C. LOWERY
it is beginning to look as though they've finally run smack F. HIGGA^ON
A. EWING
intb a stone wall.
^
M. J. OLSEN
J. BUCKELEW
J. TURNER
The SIU has been keenly aware of the composition of T. WILKINS
W. J. MEEHAN
4.
t
th^ CSU's leadership for a long time. In 1944 an SIU
D. LALLAVE
MARINE HOSP.
int(|rnational convention voted to expel the CSU when G.BOSTON
4 4 4
E. GALLANT
its lleaders refused to disavow allegiance to communism VIC MILAZZO
NEW ORLEANS HOSP.
an4 to adhere to strict trade -union principles and econ- F. ALASAVICK
PETE SADAWSKI
WM. R. GARDNER on^c issues. That ended, at least, the attempt of conv G. MIKE
H.
FAZAKERLEY
R.
MARTINEZ
jmlniist-directed CSU officials to operate under the re­
C. SAUNDERS
ROBT.
RUTLEDGE'
spected AFL banner of a strong anti-communist water- E. FOLISE
WM. N. BRICE
fropt union. Now the rank and file of the CSU is-openly L. L. GORDON (City Hospital) M. FERNANDEZ
jpifiing in the fight.
J. H. DANIEL, JR.
4 4 4

Mea Mow k The Mtwme HospHak

I Canadian seamen have had a bellyful of red slogans
and party-serving phrases. They've indicated that .they're
interested in wages and working conditions and the way
to a deservedly respected place in the organized lajjor
community through a union that is a union, not the tool
of a power-hungry political party. That's why they're
now flocking to the Canadian District of the SIU—a
.union of, by and forY^anadian seamen.

STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
J. McNEELY
A. TRA"VINO .
,C. F. GOODWIN
M. J. LUCAS
Jl. A. ROBERTS
D. P. GELINAS
D. HERON
W. J. MAHONEY
N. V. ERIKSEN
•

JAMES BRANUM
GEO. WM. MEANEY
E. E. GROSS
CHAS. A. BROWN
C. C. RAYFUSE M. C. BARLOW
H. J. HEISCH
JAMES HIBBO
JAMES LAFFIN '
G. M. GREY

Hospital Patients
When entering the hospital
notify the delegates by post­
card, giving your name and
the number of your weurd. .
Mimeographed Postcards
can be obtained free at the
Social Service desk..

Staten Island Hospital
You can contact your Hos­
pital delegate at the Staten
Island Hospital at the follow­
ing titnes:
Tuesday
1:30 to SkaO pan.
(on 5th and 6th floors.)
Thursday
1;3Q fo 3:30 p.m.
(en 3rd and 4th fleers.)
Saturday — 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
(on 1st and 2nd floors.)

-1

BALTIMORE HOSPITAL
C. SIMMONS
R. SOUZA

L. J. MCMILLAN
H. MILLION
L. McCUNE
G. CARROLL
P. ADKINS
F. KORVATIN .
G. P. REAGAN
V. HOLTON.
J. SCHUMSKY
J..TOWNSEND
P. PAINTER
R. TOLER
F. HIGGINS
G. CRABTREE

•
' i

GALVESTON HOSPITAL
J. D. JACKSON
L. R. WILLIAMSON
J. HAVERTY. '
4 4^4
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL
C. BUTLER
' G. LASS
W.STEWART.
,
L. C. COLE
rWYCHE

.

1

••'isl

iTS"

�Friday. April 22, 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Three

Canadian Seamen Turning To Seafarers
commended an agreement, after commie bunch who gave us situation communist CSU lead­ type weapons. Nothing was found
hearings and discussions were nothing but trouble for years," ers were even ordering their at SIU headquarters. Two CSU
members to hang up ships in j officials have been arrested for
conducted over a ten-week peri­ they said.
od. The Conciliation Board's
Reports from all over Canada Europe and South America—or­ j possession of deadly weapons in
recommendations were unani­ indicate that as the desperate ders which no responsible mari- I the course of the commie man­
mous, with the CSU's represen­ 1 CSU's commie officials realize ' time union would issue, since euver.
tative also approving.
their hold on the Canadian East ' crewmembers thereby would be
As it became more and more
In a typical commuliist move, Coast seamen is weakening, vio­ left holding the bag.
evident to the CSU officials that
CSU leaders, without even con­ lence may play an even larger
Again on April 8 violence the members of their union were
sulting the membership, rejected part in the situation.
fiared in Halifax. When the SIU taking advantage of the situa­
the proposals of the Conciliation
Canadian District crewed three tion to get out from under com­
EARLY VIOLENCE
Board they had requested. CSU
ships, the CSU fomented a riot munist control and were swing­
officials lied to the membership
Among the earlier instances of on the waterfront in which sev­ ing to the SIU, the CSU's nation­
by telling them that the Board violence was the April 4 occur­ eral seamen were injured. CSU
al secretary announced in Toron­
had recommended a wage reduc­ ence in Halifax, where the crews charges that some of its rioters
to last week that the CSU was
tion. No such recommendation of three idle vessels were forced had been injured by buckshot
willing to accept the original
was made. By this irresponsible off by commie goon squads. Many were subsequently proved false
formula proposed by the Con­
and deceitful maneuver, CSU of the men who had been forced in the Canadian press.
ciliation Board and which was
leaders threw the largely non- off the vessels turned to the
Other incidents have occurred embodied in the contract signed
communist rank and file of the SIU.
in British, French and other for­ by the SIU Canadian District.
deep sea shipping industry of
Large-scale violence broke out eign ports, thoroughly demon­
Canada into complete confusion, on April 5, when a communist
CSU SEES DEFEAT
with no place to turn for the goon squad entered a railway strating what SIU Canadian Dis­
This announcement was rec­
decent trade union principles hotel in Macadam, N.B., and at­ trict Secretary-Trea.surer Joyce
ognized
by Canadian seamen as
terms the "irresponsibility" of
they have wanted for so long.
tacked sleeping members of the the CSU's commie leaders, whose i an admission of defeat and since
Originally, the CSU 'was an SIU's Canadian District with
1 it was issued the SIU's position
affiliate of the SIU. It was blackjacks and baseball bats. only aim Joyce said was disrup­ ; has become increasingly stronger.
CREW GOES SIU
tossed out of the SIU, however, This CSU roving goon squad was tion. In fact, the whole conduct
In Halifax, the SIU Canadian
Immediately after the docking, when its officials refused to dis­ apprehended in a truck by au­ of the "strike" clearly indicates ' District has been operating from
that
the
communist
party
is
the crew of the Nelson held a avow communism or sympathy thorities, but beyond a small fine
primarily interested in creating ' temporary offices. The District
shipboard meeting and 95 per­ I with communism at the SIU's imposed on one of 'the CSU offi­
is shortly .scheduled to open a
cent of the 165 crewmembers convention in New Orleans in cials nothing came of the inci­ chaos on the waterfront and con­ permanent Halifax Branch at
fusion among the seamen.
1944. Since then, the SIU's dent.
voted to join the SIU.
128Hollis Street, despite
SIU headquarters here in Hali­ Canadian District has gradually
CSU ARSENAL
On April 6, when eleven ships
threats by CSU officials to pre­
fax and in Montreal are being moved in eastward from the had been tied up, 20 goons, fol­
Another indication of the vent it.
swamped with applications for West Coast, defeating the CSU lowing communist orders, board­
CSU's intent was clearly demon- The opening of the, Halifax
membership fi'om former CSU in the Great Lakes last fall. The ed the SS Sun Prince at a Hali­
j strated on April 12, when Hali- Branch in the middle of a city
SIU
Canadian
District
already
members, all of whom declared
fax pier and severely beat two I fax and Federal police searched which is one - of the hotbeds of
they welcomed the" chance to possessed wide contacts among licensed Engineers who later
CSU and SIU Canadian District communism in North America,
join a union founded on strict the non-communist rank and file were hospitalized.
headquarters. Uncovered at CSU and thus supposed to be solidly
trade union principles and which of the CSU—in fact, the SIU
Meanwhile,
the
strike
had
headquarters and other CSU CSU should demonstrate once
would serve the membership's has found it now has more
spread
to
Canadian
West
Coast
points
were blackjacks, pick and for all that the SIU in East­
economic interests, without using friends in that organization than ports, and at this stage in the
.handles,
meat hooks and similar ern Canada is there to stay.
it realized.
them for political purposes.
Meanwhile, the SIU Canadian
CSU STEPPED OUT
District has been crewing con­
tracted ships with Canadian Sea­ Because the CSU had virtually
farers right along in Halifax, eliminated itself from the field
Montreal, New York, British when its officials ignored the
NEW YORK—A 600-man dele­ "Don't take orders from your things for" the seamen, the com­
Columbia, British Guiana and in wishes of its membership and re­
commie leaders—they're work­ mies are fighting to hold their
other ports. In all respects the jected the ConciliaUon Board's gation from the Seafarers Inter­ ing for Joe Stalin, not you."
power on Canada's waterfront,
SIU's position has been improv­ proposals, the SIU Canadian Dis­ national Union staged a protest
The
SIU
representative
added
he
added.
trict, organizing as it went, demonstration Monday, April 11,
ing daily.
"We're
telling you this.because
that
the
Canadian
seamen,
"like
In Halifax yesterday, the SIU signed the same contract which before the local headquarters of the men of the Marine Cooks you're seamen like us—you're
Canadian District dispatched a the commies ducked out on. De­ the Marine Cooks and Stewards and Stewards are interested in Union mfembers like us Sea­
crew of Canadian Seafarers to velopments have since demon­ Union, CIO, and demanded that better wages and working con­ farers. We think you're en­
the freighter Sun Prince, Sague- strated that it is the contract MCS communist leaders keep ditions," but which they never titled to know the score."
nay Terminal Steamship Com­ which the CSU rank and file hands off in the qurrent struggle received because the CSU used
The SIU demonstrators pointed
pany, and the vessel sailed last wanted badly.
between the SIU's Canadian Dis­ its membership for political pur­ up the fact that the MCS was
Meanwhile, commie punks, act­ trict and the Canadian Seamen's
night. Dave Joyce, Canadian
poses.
the "last communist-dominated
District Secretary-Treasurer, ing as CSU agitators, began stir­ Union.
Now
that
the
SIU
Canadian
seamen's
union on the US water­
hailed the crewing of the Sun ring up trouble aboard ships just Similar demonstrations were District has achieved 'these front."
Prince as symbolic of the SIU's before the SIU Canadian District held simultaneously in the ports
surge toward the top of maritime signed the contracts and by the of Baltimore and New Orleans.
in Halifax, Montreal and other time signatures had been affixed The delegations in the three
to the agreements, several ships
eastern ports of Canada.
ports were composed of mem­
had been hung up.
CANADIAN CREWS
Evidence collected later by the bers of the SIU's Atlantic and
All crewmembers shipped,^ to SIU Canadian District from CSU Gulf District and. the Sailor's
the Canadian vessels since they men revealed that the majority Union of the Pacific.
came under SIU contract are of crews had been "induced" to
COMMUNIST MANEUVER
Canadians and have been dis­ walk off by lies and threats.
The demonstrations were
With the signing of the onepatched from SIU Canadian Dis­
touched off by the disclosure
trict Union hiring halls. State­ year agreement between the op­
that officials of the communistments to the contrary made by erators and the SIU, the CSU
led Canadian Seamen's Union
CSU officials to confuse the is­ officials attempted to call an allwere using MCS halls in this
sue have been proven false by out strike, which has now turned
country as command posts in an
the ,facts. Crews who have gone Out to be a complete fiasco.
attempt to prevent Seafarers
In fact, the whole maneuver,
aboard Canadian vessels in ports
from boarding vessels contracted
outside of Canada have been fi'om rejection of the contract to
to the Canadian District of the
Canadians from the Canadian the calling of the "strike," has
SIU.
District headquarters in Mon­ proved to be a boomerang to
Advices from SIU interna­
CSU officials. The situation has
treal.
tional
officers in Canada re­
The phony "strike," which provided the CSU rank and file
vealed
that
the. communist party
CSU officials maneuvered with­ with an opportunity to throw off
had
ordered
the MCS to give allout allowing a vote by the mem­ the yoke of communist domina­
out
support
to
the CSU.
tion,
as
the
mass
movement
to
bership, was called by the com­
While
the
New
York group
join
their
brother
Canadian
sea­
munist-controlled union after the
SIU Canadian District signed a men in the ranks of the SIU's demonstrated, an A&amp;G Dis­
contract with the companies late Canadian District has estab­ trict Headquarters Representa­
tive, speaking through a mega­
in March. The CSU, began ne­ lished.
Never in favor of the strike phone from the sidewalk, asked
gotiations for a contract renewal
on August 31, 1948. When the and not having been consulted the MCS rank and file "to keep
parleys broke down, the CSU re­ except to be warned by CSU out of the fight that isn't theirs.
quested of the Federal Depart­ good squads, the rank and file
STALIN GIVES ORDBRS
The announcement that the Marine Cooks and Stewards
ment of Labour that a concilia­ CSU men are showing less and
Union
was supporting and representing the Canadian Sea­
tion board be appointed to settle less interest as the days go by. "We can win our beef, "the
men's
Union
touched off protests in several ports against US
SIU
spokesman
said,
"but
we
do
Many CSU men have stated that
the dispute.
communists'
interference
in the Canadian beef. Here is a partial
ask
you
men
of
the
MCS
to
A three-man board, represent-, this "strike" gave them a new
view
of
the
New
Orieans
demonstration, in which 400 Seafarers
stand
aside,
to
ston
stooging
for
ihg industry, the CSU and the, lease on life. "It was the one
participated.
the
commies.
chance
we
had
to
get
rid
of
the
Canadian government finally re-1
(Continued from Page I)
vast majority of CSU seamen
this way:
"If the officers of the CSU
were elected by secret ballot, the
officers who are there now
would not be in office. They
are communists and the rank
and file of the union membership
do not want them. There is no
way to break the communists
without breaking the union.
Most of the rneri realize this and
are leaving the union.
"We joined the SIU, not be­
cause it is an issue between rival
unions but because we cannot
be loyal to the union and be
loyal Canadians."
Shortly after the Chandler
crew swung over to the SIU, the
CSU-crewed Lady Nelson, Cana­
dian National Steamships, docked
in Montreal directly behind the
Canadian Constructor, with an
SIU creW aboard.

Keep Hands Off Beef, SIU Tells Commies

�THE SEAFARERS LOG

Page Four

Shipping Spurt And Strike ftid
Keep 'Em Busy In New Orleans

Fridar, April 22, I94S

R. D. Thompson Dies On Coast Mobile Shipping

Picks Up After
A Poor Start

Veteran seafarer and SUP of­
ficial R. E. (Tommy) Thompson
By EARL SHEPPARD
was stricken with a heart attack
NEW ORLEANS"— Business tional office thanking us for the at his desk in SUP headquarters
in San Francisco on April 8.
and shipping took a turn for the help we have given here.
By CAL TANNER
better for a few days but, from
Thompson had returned to his
Two of our Brothers, Arthur
MOBILE — Shipping over the
all indications, this won't last Moulton and Pete Perterson, desk "from lunch a few minutes
period since the last report went
long. The payoff schedule for passed away last week. Neither previously, and was attending to
from poor to fair with 12 pay­
the next couple of weeks is not had any known surviving rela­ his duties as Secretary of the
offs and 8 sign-ons.
heavy.
tives and the Union, therefore, SUP Building Corporation, when
One of the payoffs was of a
The recent fourth biennial provided burial for the two Sea­ he suddenly slumped ta the floor.
crew without a ship. The RadSIU convention, which I attend­ farers.
Rushed to nearby Harbor Em­
ketch, Radocean Steamship Com­
ed, went off in fine fashion.
pany, had been sold to the
Close to 500 New Orleans Sea­ ergency Hospital he was pro­
Among the decisions reached farers staged a protest demon­ nounced dead on arrival. He was
French in Cherbourg and the
by the convention was one on stration on April 11 before the 59 years old.
crew flown back here for the
shipping policy of the Districts. local office of the Marine Cooks
payoff.
The well-known and wellIt was agreed to maintain the and Stewards Union, whose liked Seafarer had been a mem­
The ships still with us for
status quo, but in the event the leaders have followed commun­ ber of the SUP since 1927 and
payoffs were the Yaka, Clai­
A&amp;G District or the SUP should ist party orders to support the had been active in Union affairs
borne, Antinous, Fairport, Morn­
need men to man their contract­ commie-led Canadian Seamen's throughout his career. A few
ing Light, Mobilian, DeSoto,
ed ships, they are to call on Union. The CSU, which for years days prior to his death he re­
Monarch of the "Seas, all Water­
R. D. THOMPSON
other Districts to fill out crews has been using Canadian seamen turned from Baltimore, where
man; the Runner, Clipper and
before taking in new members as tools of the party, is attempt­ he had served as a member of
from labor organizations and Pointer, Alcoa.
from the outside.
Outgoing vessels were the Ya­
ing to prevent SIU Canadian the Sailors Union delegation to from former shipmates.
ka,
headed for Greece, Italy and
District
men
from
sailing
con­
the
Fourth
Biennial
Convention
Funeral services were held on
BOYCOTT
Turkey; the Claiborne, headed
tracted ships.
of the SIU.
Tuesday,
April
12
and
were
at­
Something definite on the pro­
The MCS stepped into the pic­
Messages of condolences to his tended by hundreds of his for Puerto Rico; the Antinous,
posed Panamanian boycott may
headed coastwise; the Fairport,
be expected soon, as the conven­ ture by supporting and repre­ bereaved widow and the Union friends and Union Brrfthers. headed for Korea; Mobilian, des­
tion went on record to take ac­ senting CSU in this and other were received at SUP headquar­ Burial was in the Sailors Union tined for England and Europe;
ters from ships' crews at sea. plot at Olivet Memorial Park.
tion against vessels under Pan­ US ports.
DeSoto, coastwise; the Clipper,
ama registry.
down to the Islands, and the
The Meat Cutters and Retail
Pointer, headed for the West
Clerks unions are picketing the
Indies.
Capitol Stores here in New Or­
We , also shipped men to tug­
leans and we have volunteered
boat and deep sea relief jobs.
By JOE ALGINA
other made jobs for three full getting beefs" from crews con­
to help them in their beef.
The roster of ships hitting this
crews. . Seven other ships held cerning Mates, who are inter­
There are over 10,000 unor­
port was joined by the Steel
NEW YORK—Shipping in this regular sign-ons following , pay­
ganized retail clerks and butch­
preting the agi-eement to suit Maker, Steel Flyer and Steel
ers in this area and they really port held good during the period offs.
themselves. The crewmen have Surveyor, Isthmian, and the Al­
since the last report, and indi­ The John B. Marion and Cor­ told Patrolmen that the Mates
need our support.
coa Pennant, all in-transit here
Any help we give these people cations are that the coming week nelia came out of lay-up for have fired men without just rea­ long enough to take replace­
will pay dividends in the future, will be equally as heartening.
crews, and the Ann Marie, for­ sons and after the Patrolman ments.
for the more organized people
had reinstated the men, the
We are still dickering with a
The tempo of shipping in this merly the Cinch Knot, recently Mates wait Until the last min­
there are in this area who are
purchased from Agwilines by
new company for a contract, but
our friends, the more support we port is better than it has been Bull, took a full gang of men. ute before sailing and try to un­ a tangle of odds and'ends has
will get in our future beefs. We in" some time, though hardly as The other ships Were the Robin load the guys off the ship again. kept us from signing. .We should
have already received a com­ good as the lush days of a year Trent, Robin Kettering, Kyska,
have something concrete to re­
DEADLINE NEARS
munication from the union's na­
Sanford
Dole,
Sea
Trader,
Bea­
port on this outfit in the near
or so ago.
In closing, a word to the alien future.
trice and Kathryn.
PAYOFF PARADE
members. A resolution has been
Other than routine beefs on
OWN 'CONTRACT'
adopted
by
the
membership
in
the
ships, this port seems to be
In the payoff paddock we
all ports stdting that, after July in good shape. We aren't as
Some
Mates,
for
reasons
un­
handled the following ships: The
known, do not seem to realize 1, members who are eligible for happy as we'd like to be over
Fairland,
Waterman; Steel that the contract is between the American citizenship, and who the number of ships hitting here,
Worker and Zane Grey, Isth­ company and the Union, and are not in the process of being but we'll take what we can get
mian; Hilton (she's laying up for was not written to their likes naturalized, will not be al­ for the time being—and in our
lowed to ship.
v
spare time go out and get what
awhile), the Beatrice and Kath- or dislikes.
By JIM DRAWDY
is left unorganized.
Those
Brothers
who
haven't
ryn. Bull; Chrysanthystar, Inter­ All the Mates have to do is
done
so
already
are
urged
to
Among the Brothers currently
SAVANNAH—The unexpected continental—^she's going to
live by the rule and see to it
take
steps
toward
securing
their
on
the beach here are: R. Hut­
arrival of the SS Topa Topa,
that the crew does the same. If papers. There hsK been plenty
shipyard
for
conversion
from
chinson,
J. C. Glisson, L. Court­
a Waterman scow, caused a spurt
they don't like the agreement of warning on this, so there
tanker
to
freighter;
Sanford
B.
ney,
J.
Jordan,
H. Kuppersmith,
in shipping activity here this
they can look for a ship where
should be no weeping and wail­ W, WUson, F. B. Neeley, H.
past week. We put a total of 31 Dole, Metro Petroleum; Sea the officers make the rules.
ing when the rule goes into Rouglas, T. C. Johnson, L. An­
men aboard when she signed for­ Trader, Mar-Trade; Robin DonIn recent weeks we've been effect.
derson, L. Doty and J. Curtis.
eign articles again.
caster, Robin, and Cape Mohi­
In addition to this shot in the can, Mar-Ancha.
arm, we had the SS Cape Race, On the Cape Mohican we ran
WHEN ANDrS ASHES WERE SCATTERED AT SEA
South Atlantic, in from Europe. into a beef worth commenting
She signed on again, and four on here. It seems that a Mate
new men went aboard for the tried to flre an AB for not turn­
next voyage.
ing to for overtime work.
At the moment, the only ship
The man, 4 to- 8 watch, was
expected in here during the tired and wanted to get some
coming week is the A. H. Bull sleep, but that didn't suit the of­
Company's SS Dorothy, which is ficer. The Patrolman squared
now on a steady run from this the beef away and the man
port.
stayed aboard.
It is quite possible that we
will have a few jobs on this
UP TO YOU
vessel when she arrives, and jobs
While the man was perfectly
are always good news.
within his rights in turning
QUIET OTHERWISE
down the OT work, we recom­
Outside of these shipping de­ mend that men turn to for over­
velopments, things are moving time whenever possible. How­
along here pretty much as usual. ever, if a man is not feeling
There is a complement of old- well, or is tired, turn the job
timers on the Savannah beach, down and hit the sack.
Situations like this wouldn't
among them the following:
come
up, if Mates would use a
A. C. McAlpin, J. Littleton, L.
little
better
judgment when call­
E. Hodges, T. C. Musgrove, W.
ing
men
out.
Some Mates, it
W. Allred, W. Stall and R. C.
seems,
never
think
of overtime
Shedd.
work
imtil
a
rainy
day,
or a time
The up-to-date list of Seafar­
This rare photo shows crewmembers aboard the SS Schoharie attending memorial services
ers in the local Marine Hospital when the ship is riding heavy
for Andrew Furuseth, longtime relentless fighter for seamen's welfare,, shortly before his ashes
contains these names: C, Butler, seas.
were cast into the sea on March 21, 1938, in accord with his wishes.
G. Lass, W. Stewart, L. C. Cole The number of sign-ons was
Photo was submitted by Port Captain Van Wout of the South Atlantic Steamship Com­
and Wyche.
not much larger than past weeks,
pany in Savannah. Van Wout, who is fifth from left in group, was Third Mate aboard the
See you next week, with more but the return to service of two
Schoharie at the time of the ceremony in honor of the man who dedicated his life to the
ships and the acquirement of an­
news—we hope.
improvement of conditions for men who follow the sea.

New York Shipping At Best Mark In Weeks

Uaexpetted Ship
Cives Savannah
Shipping Boost

- II

�Til'

April 22, 1949

Page Five

THE SEAFARERS LOG

11

11

WHAT

i

ttmwc..
QUESTION: What do you think of the decisions made at the international convention of
the Seafarers, held recently in Baltimore?

JOSEPH P. JULIANQ. AB:

ANTHONY OLIVA. Wiper:

RUDOLPH GROSS. UiiUly:

DALLAH BEN, Bosun:

FRED BRUGGNER. Oiler:

The convention had the right
idea when it decided to draw
up plans for having all the DisIricts working closer together
and with other American Federa­
tion of Labor unions. I like to
see ' all seamen affiliated with
our international pulling to­
gether for the good of all hands.
As the convention report stated,
seamen cannot get anywhere by
trying to fight everything out
alone became the odds against
us are terrific. We have seen
how cooperating with other un­
ions has helped them win what
they were after, and who in
turn helped us out.

I agree wholeheartedly with
plan for dealing with District
manpower shortages, because I
believe the various Districts
should rely on each other to
help fill jobs rather than go out­
side for now men. The conven­
tion showed foresight in not
wanting to overload the industry.
The statement on shipping policy
is good. too. On the mailer of
shipping and registration, how­
ever. I feel that, once the Can­
adian District attains strength, it
should maintain its own branches
in the US. father than ship its
men through other District Halls
in offshore shipping.

I am strongly for that part of
the report about lots of coopera­
tion among the Districts. The
Districts of SIU have to work
together, because when things
happen on the waterfront, they
are apt to happen everywhere at
once. That's only one reason
why the Districts should work
together. There are plenty of
others. After sill, we are the
Brotherhood of the Sea. The
same goes for working with the
rest of the AFL. We are part of
the AFLr- and what's the me of
having an American Federation
of Labor, if all the unions don't
back each other up!

I think that the programs call-** I like the decision to plan for
ing for greater unity of all Dis­ joint action on maritime prob­
tricts and for increased partici­ lems. We already have the AF1»
pation within the American Fed­ Maritime Trades Department,
eration of Labor are the most which has shown that it is a
important decisions agreed upon good thing many times, and by
at the convention. These will strengthening this department, as
bring us more prestige and or­ the convention recommended, all
ganizational strength. I favor waterfront unions will benefit;
helping other trade unions, which By cooperating, we have a much
has been of much benefit to our better chance of winning our
own District. The convention's beefs. In this way. we can all
recommendation that we coop­ help to win better wages and
erate with the AFL Labor League working conditions for the mari­
for Political Education will help time worker. I think the con­
us get a better picture of Labor's vention tackled the problems in
position and be a source of en­ the right way, by calling for
creased activity in the AFL- .
lightenment.

iiii

FRANK ARANA, Oiler:

DANIEL FITZGERALD. FWT:

PHILIP JORDAN, Messman:

ANTONIO SCHIAVONE. Stvd.: EDWARD LEWIS. AB:

I think the overall report is
fine, and that all the delegates
to the SIU convention did a fine
job for the membership. Persoaally, I am specially interested
to see the inter-District shipping
policy confirmed and clarified the
way it is in this report. Now the
men of any District know just
where they stand. Another thing.
I like the part that says all the
SIU Districts 'should work to­
gether closely on all maritime
problems. And the part that the
SIU should cooperate with the
Maritime Trades Department and
other AFL organisations is good,
loo.

The preferential shipping sys­
tem, District by District, is what
I like in this report. Men should
be entitled to preference on ships
contracted to their own Districts,
but should not expect preference
on ships of other Districts. Why
should a Lakes man expect to
ship ahead of an A&amp;G man on
an A&amp;G ship? And why should
an A&amp;G man expect to go ahead
of a Lakes man on a Lakes ship?
It's not reasonable. But it's Cor­
rect that when one District can't
supply a man, the Dispatcher
should take a man from another
District, rather than issue a new
permit.

One of the more important de­
cisions made by the convention
is the one dealing with closer
cooperation with other maritime
unions of the AFL. Joint action
will not only strengthen the
Maritime Trades Department as
a whole, it will also make each
union belonging to it much more
effective in a beef. Because of
joint action, beefs will be ended
quicker and more successfully.
You'd have more resources avail­
able. than if you acted alone.
The progr^ for cooperation
with the AFL's Labor League
for Political Education and other
bodies is also important.

I think the convention hand­
led the problems facing it very
well. The convention seemed to
have set as its goal the building
of a stronger international or­
ganization. Specifically, I think
the convention's decision to
bring about closer cooperation
between the various Districts was
a good one. All Districts should
know what the others are do­
ing. I am in favor of the idea
of calling frequent joint meet­
ings. so that we can get a deep­
er understanding of each other's
problems.

I especially like the policy on
District shortages. We certainly
have enough men now for the
jobs. There's no point in over­
crowding the industry. So xvhen
one District doesn't have a man
for a job. another District is the
place to go to get a man. We
have a job for every book. More
books probably shouldn't be is­
sued. except to match the re­
tirement rate. I doubt that even,
if the A&amp;G District gets thes»
passenger ships there would have
to be many new bocks issued.

�Page Six

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, AprU 22, 1949

Congress Passes 50 Percent EGA Bill
Congress has approved the
foreign aid bill, which contains
among its shipping provisions a
requirement that 50 percent of
EGA-financed
cargoes "trans­
ported to and from United States
ports" move in American ships
at US flag rates.
Under terms of the new EGA
legislation, passed on Thursday,
April 14 and now bearing Presi­
dent Truman's signature, the 50
percent division will be figured
on a geographical area basis,
rather than on a country-bycountry basis, which would have
more effectively guaranteed US
flag ship participation.
The bill also provides that the
50 percent formula is to be com­
puted separately for three classes
of shipments: dry bulk cargo,
dry-cargo liner and tanker ser­
vices.
15-MONTH PERIOD

Ma^nuson Bill would have com- goes "to or from" the United
puted the cargoes on a country-estates,
by-country basis.
Nevertheless, the newly-enacted
measure
may
prove
SHIPPING SECTION
Specifically, the EGA legisla­ stronger than the shipping regu­
tion provides that the agency's lations of last year's EGA law,
Administrator shall "take such despite the fact that a loophole
steps as shall be necessary to as­ exists.
A&amp;G Disti'ict officials pointed
sure, as far as is practicable, that
at least 50 percent of the gross out that EGA Administrator has
tonnage of commodities procured learned that he cannot sidestep
out of funds made available un- the law without provoking a
der Jhis title and transported to 'formidable array of opposition in
or from the United States on maritime labor and industry.
ocean vessels, computed separ­
BEARS WATCHING
ately for dry-bulk carriers, dryIn view of the Administrator's
cargo liner and tanker services, eye for loopholes, A&amp;G officials
is so transported on United said that administration of the
States flag vessels; and, in the law will be ' watched carefully
administration of" this provision, to protect the American mer­
the Administrator shall, insofar chant marine.
as practicable and' consistent,
Any attempt by -Hoffman to
with^ the purposes of this title. ignore the intent and purpose of
endeavor to secure a fair and the bill as was the case on Dec.
reason £^b 1 e participation by . 1 last, when the EGA chief anUnited States flagships
in bar- nounced he was going to ignore
goes by geographical area^."
the 50-50 provision and switch
The * Bland-Magnuson
Bill all cargoes to foreign bottoms,
would have made the 50 percent will be a signal for immediate
rule mandatory—not "as far as steps to win tightening of the
practicable"—and it would not measure, A&amp;G men stated.
have restricted the rule to carThe SIU - was instrumental in

blocking Hoffman's blow at the ^ A&amp;G District officials sumn^'d
American merchant marine by up the .developments by stating
rallying mass opposition from that the important thing is how
the ranks of organized labor EGA will enforce the law. They
throughout the nation. In face added that, although there apof the wide-spread criticism of'pears to be littleroom for adhis plan, Hoffman several times ministrative discretion, a lack of
postponed putting it into prac­ good faith and observation of
tice until Congress could act.
congressional ^intent on the part
The stipulation in the present of EGA officials could result in
EGA bill that American ships! abuse of the American merchant
are. to be used 'at market rates ' marine.
for United States flag vessels" is
CLOSE WATCH
a victory for maritime labor and
However, they pointed to the
shipping interests.
fact that Chairman Bland of the
The conference committees ac- House Merchant Marine Gommitcepted this Senate provision over tee is setting up a "watchdog
the House proposal—sought by | committee" to"follow EGA's perAdministrator Hoffrrian—that the form'ance. Senator Magnuson has
50 percent requirement be im-' gjgQ indicated that if the law is
posed only if there were no more ^^t observed by Hoffman, he
thah a reasonable differential' would propose stronger regulabetween American flag
and tions.
world shipping rates.
.
"
^ was made clear by A&amp;G
GAVE ECA OPENING
officials that the Union, too.
Last year's legislation did not would continue to keep a weaco.ntain the "U. S. market rates" Jther eye on the administration of
specification, and gave Hoffmail EGA shipping provisions to prothe opportunity to announce his tect American seamen and ships
ill-fated'plan to. shift bulk car-'from being sacrificed in favor
goes to low standard foreign of low co'st foreign flag
opertramp ships.
' atorsr

The provisions which will gov­
ern the shipment of EGA cargoes
for the next 15 months were in­
corporated in the bill authoriz­
ing continuation of European re­
covery program after a com­
promise was workeji out by
House and Senate conference
committees.
These shipping rules fall short
of the guarantees to the Ameri­
Preparatory to formulating a
Payments are 60 francs a day works and the number of chil­ weeks. The amount of the bene­
can merchant marine that ap­
welfare
plan
that
would
provide
for
boys and juniors, 100 francs dren.
peared in the Bland Bill, which
fits depends on normal eainings
additional
security
for
its
memfpr
"adult ratings" and 125
was withheld from action.
In case of hospital treatment of an unemployed man, and on
due tq'lllness or accident aboard hia, family responsibilities.
Essentially, 'the bill just en­ bership, the SIU Atlantic and francs for officers. ,
Dutch seamen do not come
acted is practically the same as Gulf District conducted a com-| sickness and accident benefits ship, the shipowner pays costs
the Senate version, with one prejiensive survey of the whole vary with the seamen's ratings, and full wages for four months. under any general health insur­
change. ' Senator Warren Magnu- subject of welfare systems. Plans marital status and whether they After four months, the Seafar­ ance plan, but under Dutch
ers' Provident Fund pays the commercial law a sick seaman
son's stricture, aimed at barring in operation in many industries are hospitalized,
participation by Panamanian and and in many nations were in­
Belgian seamen are entitled to costs, plus two thirds of wages draws 80 percent of his- wages
Honduran flag ships, was knocked vestigated.
"statutory" pensions on reaching in case of an accident and half for 26 weeks.
attention
was
deParticular
If a seaman is not aboard a
out by the conference commit­
, ^
,
; 60 years of age. Rated seamen of the wages in case of illness.
voted to the welfare plans cov^
of 18,000 francs
ship
when he is taken ill, he is
tees.
The- Provident Fund is jointly
enng seamen of European na- ^
eligible
for sick benefits im­
financed by the seamen and the
Speculation in some quarters
tions. The kinds of benefits, eli­ 15 years of service. Officers'
mediately.
If he' is on board,
companies, with the companies
was that the major oil companies
gibility requirements and how pensions are somewhat higher.
paying about two thirds of the the benefits start when he is
had pressed for elimination of
payments are made provided in­ Everybody who sailed in the war
left ashore or reaches home port.
whole.
the provision curbing Panaman­
teresting background material ! gets a supplement.
Like other wage-eai'ners in
ian participation in the shipment
despite the ^ fact that available
the
Netherlands, the Dutch sea­
Netherlands
of EGA cargoes.
Seamen's widows are pension­
information on the manner in
men are entitled to family allow­
Although the principal EGA which the plans are administer­ ed at the rate of 50 percent of
Dutch seamen enjoy no gen­ ances, which vary with the num­
what their husbands would have eral pension plan. A number of
commodity carried by Panaman- ed was sketchy.
ber of children in the family.
iaij vessels is oil, SIU Atlantic
Some of the more important cqllected, plus 15 percent for the shipping companies have de­
and Gulf District officials indi­ features of the seamen's welfare each child. Widows also draw vised pension plans for their
Norway
cated that Gongress' rejection of plans adopted abroad are cov­ other funds, provided they do own personnel, but unions have
Norwegian
seamen
became
not work.
a curb on ships under the ered in the following report.
no ^voice in their administration.
eligible
for
pensions
under
a -law
Panama flag
makes the forth­
Seamen's orphans are also
However, there is a temporary
which
went
into
effect
on
Janu­
coming boycott all the more
supported
until
the
age
of
16.
Belgium
plan for seamen, applying to
ary^ 1 of this year.
necessary.
those who sailed during the war.
In Belgium, seamen are en­
All seanien 60 years old or
France
Representatives of the Sea­
A man must be 60 years old
titled
to
family
allowances,
un­
more
are entitled to benefits,
farers and dockers unions of the
Under a plan in force since and have 10 years of sea service provided they have spent at least
employment benefits, pensions
International
Transportworkers
1938, French seamen can draw to be eligible for it. Widow^i and
Federation will meet soon to and sickness and accident bene­ statutory pensions at the age of orphans of eligible seamen are 150 months at sea. Maximum
seatime allowed for pension pur­
work out final
details of a fits.
50. The maximum, arrived at by also eligible. This apparently is poses is-350 months. The
family
allowances,
de­
world-wide boycott of Panaman­
scribed as* "statutory allow­ a formula bksed oh earnings and hot a union plan, because it is
A single man may draw a
ian ships.
•
ances," are based on the number length of time at sea, is 75 per­ based on a Ministry of Transport pension in an amount up to
Vessels under Panama registry of children a seaman has. They cent of the last earned wage.
order.
2,100 Norwegian crowns per
are carrying EGA dry-cargoes, in range from 200 Belgian francs
Annual walue qf the pensions year. The full pension for a
In case a man is invalided,
addition to oil.
a month for one child, to 500 he can" claim the same pension are keyed to ratings, and in the married man is 2,800 crowns and,
For purposes of administering francs a month for five children —even if he is younger than 50 case of officers also to tonnage., jf
has children, an additional
the "geographical basis" clause or more.
—if he has sailed 15 years or A Bosuns annual receipts total 210 crowns is allowed for each
of the law, it is expected that
To qualify for a full allow­ more.
1,Q50 guilders, an AB's 975 guid- child under 18 years of age.
EGA will divide Europe into ap­ ance, however, a seaman must
The pension fund is jointly ers, a Fireman's 1,000 guiders, a
In computing a man's pension
proximately five areas, with the work 23 days a month. Other­ financed by the employers and Ghief Steward's 1,220 guiders.
entitlement, double credit i s
50-50 division to be computed wise it is pro-rated.
the French seamen themselves.
Pensions .for other ratings fall given for months spent at sea
separately for each. The BlandAdditional allowances include
The French shipping industry, into line. However, if a man during the war period.
monthly payments for seamen's in principle at least, guarantees has income from another source
Norway also has a statutory
orphans and for families of sick continued employment to 70 his pension is reduced.
! pension for widows of seamen.
seamen. These latter, apparently, percent of the personnel in work­
Undqr a joint plan agreed in, amounting to as much as 60
are in addition to sickness bene­ ing the first of each year.
1946 by the Dutch seamen's un- percent of the payments which
No SIU Crew is to pay off
fits for the seamen themselves.
Men so employed are "estab­ ions and the Dutch Shipping j would have been paid to the
any ship until the crew's
Lump sum payments are made lished," and during periods of Federation, there is now provi- seamen.
quarters and equipment are
on the birth of children, 1,800 joblessness are supposed to draw sion for unemployment pay.
| Norway's pension plan for sea-'
as clean as any Seafarer likes
francs for the first
child, 900 maintenance motley equal to
Seamen with three years of men is financed by contributions
to find a ship when he first
francs for others.
half of their gross pay, as well service with one shipowner are from the seameh^ who contribute
goes aboard. Patrolmen have
Belgian seamen on the beach as subsistence and family allow- entitled to full wages for three five percent of their wages; the
been instructed that the
join a pool run by an equal anCes.
weeks, and a healthy percen-' employers, who match the sea- ,
crew's quarters miist be ab­
number of representatives of
A seaman, in common with tage of wages for, a period of rnen's payments, and the State, '
solutely clean before a pay­
workers and employers and' pre­ other French workers, is entitled six months, thb percentage being: which makes up whatever other
off will be allowed. Please
sided over by a government of­ to family allowances based on calculated by an elaborate for- funds are required.
cooperate with your officials
ficial'. Until he gets a ship, a a calculated average for the dis­
The. base for the pension fund
in carrying out this member­
beached seaman gets maintenance trict he resides in. The exact
In addition, a temporaiy na- consists of capital created by
ship order.
pay, provided he reports daily amount, which is paid monthly, tional unemployment insurance j earnings of th.. Norwegian meri' to the hiring office.
depends on whether the wife plan provides benefits for 13, chant fleet during Jhe war.

Foreign Welfare Plans Provide Many Benefits

h

Notice To Crews

�radBT' April 22/ 1M9

T HE

AT ARERS LOG

Page Setisa

SlU CANADIAN DISTRICT AIRS
THE FACTS TO SEAMEN. PUDLIC
CSU Sought To Disrupt Canadian Shipping
In view of the vicious lies the communist leader­
ship of the CSU have told recently about the develop­
ments which led up to the present situation in Canad­
ian ports and aboard the vessels sailing under the
Canadian Flag, it is necessary, at this time, that we
briefly review the entire situation so as to set the
record straight.
You know that the communist officials of the CSU
recently negotiated with the shipping Federation for
contract changes and renewals. Those negotiations
finally ended in a deadlock. In accordance with the
normal and legal procedure followed in such cases
in Canada, the entire matter was thereupon referred
to an arbitration board—a board which, incidently,
included the CSU's own representative, Mr. John
Kerry, K.C. •
UNANIMOUS ACCEPTANCE
The finding of this joint board, representing the
union, the shipowners and the government was un­
animous. They came out with a report and a recom­
mendation providing for a settlement. It is extremely
important to remember, too, that these findings and
this report's recommendations were endorsed by the
CSU's very own representative on the arbitration
board. Did the CSU communist leadership accept the find­
ings of the board? Did they accept the opinion and
decision of their own representative on the Board?
THEY DID NOT!
In their usual lying and deceitful manner—aimed
at confusing their own members as to the real issues—
the communist leaders ^immediately told their mis­
guided members that the board findings recommended
a wage cut. THIS WAS AN OUTRIGHT LIE!
The board's findings did nothing of the sort. They
also started the lying prbpaganda to the effect that
the findings would completely destroy the Union con­
trolled hiring hall. THIS TOO WAS AN OUTRIGHT
LIE.
These lies were told to confuse their own member­
ship. That these were lies is proven by the fact that
the SIU is now shipping all crew replacements
through SIU Hiring Halls and at no reduced wages.
What then motivated the communist leaders of the
CSU to make such mis-statements of fact concerning
these vital issues?
^
Their purpose was clear to those of us who know
communist tactics. "They wanted to continue their
campaign of disruption and chaos in the merchant
marine of Canada: They want to do this so as to
assist the imperialist policies of Soviet Russia.
CAMPAIGN OF CHAOS
Soviet Russia has ordered all of their stooges in
all countries of the world to carry out campaigns of
disorder and confusion, whether or not it be to the
detriment of the workers of those particular countries.
Once again, then, the CSU officials, in%rejecting the
board's findings, were slavishly- carrying out the or­
ders of the Kremlin. Completely ignoring the welfare
of their own membership, they ordered them to tie
up all Canadian vessels.
The communist leadership of the CSU did this
because they thought that they could get by with
it, in the same manner as they had done so many
times in the past.
But they had not considered two things—two things
which subsequently have clearly shqwn that the com­
mies not only could not continue their campaign of
disruption in Canada — but even more important —
showed that the communist party had completely lost
its control of the Canadian seamen.
The first one of these things which have proven so
decisive was the Canadian District of the SIU. The
second was a large number of CSU members -who
wanted no further part in the continuance of a

The Canadian District of the SIU is spon­
soring a series of nightly broadcasts, bring­
ing to the people of Halifax the facts }n the
current strife fomented by the Canadian
Seamen's Union, which has been making
violent efforts to prevent Canadian Seafarers
from sailing District-contracted vessels. The
15-minute program, presented as "The Voice
of the Canadian District of the Seafarers
International Union." "^has evoked consider­
able response from residents of the Nova
Scotia port city. On this and the three sub­
sequent pages are reprinted the first four of
the broadcast series.
In addition to keeping its listeners up to
date on . developments, the program has
%
thrown the spotlight on the corrupt adminis­
tration of the CSU. and the manner in which
its communist leaders have used the mem­
bership to advance the communist cause.
The structure, functions, and purposes of
the SIU's Canadian District as a trade union
are also * explained to the radio audience.
Apparently because many of the facts re­
vealed here have not been publicized before,
the conclusion of each broadcast has been
followed by sqores of favorable comments
and requests for further information from
Halifax residents and Canadian seamen.
program from which they could only expect extreme
hardship and no security whatsover.
Those CSU members waited only for the opportunity
to tell the CSU commie leaders that they were through
with their tactics of confusion and Stalinism. Those
CSU members found this opportunity when they
found the SIU.

creased. They have increased their lies. They have
resorted to the tactics of beating men, to name calling.
They have put armed goon squads into the streets
of all ports of Canada. They have told their remaining
members that they were to fight to the last drop of
their blood. They have been careful, however, that
the blood they have referred to was not the blood
of the communist leadership, but the blood of young
and innocent members instead. ,
CONTROL AT ANY COST
They have encouraged young and misinformed sea­
men to take actions which have resulted not only in
bodily harm to those young seamen, but in hardships
to their families as well. They are now doing all this
to cover up for their own ghastly and costly mistakes.
They have done this to keep the control of the com­
munist party in the Canadian Merchant Marine, re­
gardless of the cost to their own misled members.
They have beaten up their own members who have
dared to question their actions, and have called all
those who have opposed them "red baiters."
This, then, is the background of the real situation
in Canada.
Now that we have seen and understand the back­
ground of this problem, we offer for the benefit of
all Canadian seamen the following news flashes from
various ports:
INTERNAL SPLITTING
MONTREAL: The internal dissension among top
leaders of the CSU flared into the open last night in
Montreal, when at a caucus of CSU leaders a fist
fight, broke out between Jerry McManus and Danny
Danie'is, Editor of the Searchlight. The fight started
when McManus accused Daniels of paying too much
money to members doing picket duty in Montreal,
which has resulted in the stripping bf the CSU of
its treasury.

MONTREAL: The SIU in Montreal, yesterday, was
forced to move to larger quarters. This was necessary
due to the fact that a large number of CSU members
have, within the last 24 hours, applied to the SIU for'
membership. SIU officials attribute this sudden swing
-to the SIU to the battles now raging between the
STRONG ALLIANCE
officials of the CSU as to the responsibility for that
Together they have made a formidable force in union's funds having been squandered.
Canada.
FUND LOSS QUESTIONED
The SIU has now signed contracts with the operators
containing all features as recommended by the arbi­
HALIFAX: The SIU in the port of Halifax tonight
tration board. They signed these contracts determined answered the question raised by a local CSU official
to deliver the members of the CSU from the hands
of an opportunist communist leadership who have to debate so-called strike issues. Secretary Dave Joyce
of the SIU stated that no SIU official would dignify
lied continually to them on all important issues.
They • signed those contracts determined to protect any discredited CSU official by appearing on the
the shipboard and economic security of all Canadian same platform with him. Joyce fvurther stated that
seamen, not only from the shipowners but from the rather than debate issues with officials of a defunct
communist party as well.
organization, that the SIU would instead devote its
The shock and surprise of the commie leaders upon time to the fulfilling of its contract obligations. Joyce
seeing the developments of the situation since the
did suggest, however, that, if the Halifax official of
SIU has entered the picture and joined hands, with
the CSU wishes to debate with anyone, he felt it
CSU members has indeed been pathetic.
would be more beneficial for what is left of the CSU
They now realize that for them the game is up.
Because of their many grievods errors and their bej membership if the CSU official in Halifax would
instead go to Montreal and debate with other CSU
trayal of the Canadian seamen, they are finished.
They "knew that their own membership was begin­ officials as to just what has happened to the member­
ning to realize that they had been forced into action ship's money.
in which they could not possibly win.
VANCOUVER: The SIU position in this port is
So what then have these commie leaders done as rapidly being strengthened by the failure of the CSU
a result? First of all they attempted to amalgamate leaders in stopping the SIU from living up to its.
with the SIU. When this attempt failed they then
contracts and sailing its contracted vessels. SIU offi­
tried to crawl in the back door- of the shipowners,
cials
reported tonight from Vancouver that an increas­
and accept the very same contract for which they
ingly large, num.ber of CSU men are now coming to
were supposed to be striking against.
When both of these moves failed, their panic in­ the Hall seeking membership.

�TEE

Page Eight

SEAFARERS

LO G

Frfd&amp;7, AprU 22, 1949

Of Commie GSU Officials Prove End's Near
After last evening's program, we received hundreds
of messages from appreciative citizens and -seamen,
who stated they were glad to find that at last some­
one would fight
the Communist party in this area.
Many listeners offered constructive suggestions as to
what they would like to hear on our future programs.
A large number of GSU seamen called up to thank
the SIU for explaining the real issues in the Canadian
marine industries, and asked us to continue our work.
To all of you—citizens and seamen—thanks again.
"We assure you we will continue our W9rk. The SIU
is here to stay. •
GSU STATEMENTS CONFUSING
Tonight marks the 15th day of what originally was
called the "CSU Strike." During these 15 days, we
have had much excitement. We have heard and
read plenty of wild and confusing statements from
the Communist CSU leaders. However, we have
heard very little of the truth about certain issuesissues which are important to CSU members.
At this time, we want to review some things which
have happened to date—things about the so-called
strike and, far more important, things which have
happened to some of the seamen of Canada.
When the leaders of the CSU led their members into
this ill-conceived adventure, they promised many
things.
First off, they promised they could successfully pre­
vent the SIU from sailing SlU-contracted ships. Have
they been able^to do this? The answer of course is
NO. SlU-contracted ships are safiing from ports all
over the world, sailing under ,SIU agreements and
fully manned by men of the SIU's Canadian District.
MORE SHIPS SAILING
Here'are a few of tho.se ships: The SS Riverside,
Lady Rodney, Challenger, Constructer, Sun Dial, Sun
Mount,'^Angus Glen and Lakeside. There will be
more each day.
Secondly, over the past few years the CSU leaders
have assessed their members a surprisingly large
number of times for possible strike action. Whenever
they called for these assessments they told the mem­
bers that this money was to be used at some later
date, to take care of the rank and file through any
strike period.
Has this been done?
Judge for
yqjirself.
At this moment, the CSU is desperately trying to
borrow money—money which up to now has not been
forthcoming. This in itself is a crymg indictment of
the manner in which the leaders of the CSU have
handled their members' funds.
The whole thing amounts, then, to this: The young
membership of the CSU were promised that they
would be taken care of during strikes—financially and
otherwise. Have they been taken care of? That, of
course, is a matter of opinion—depending on whether
you are one of the Communist leaders or a member
of the rank and file.
The fact is that the leaders of the CSU are now
engaging in bitter quarrels among themselves about
who is responsible for leading the membership into
the present wreck, and who is to blame for the CSU's
being broke tonight.
CSU MEMBERS HOLD BAG
As a natural result of all that has happened, the
members of the CSU find themselves in the position
where they no longer can look to their union for
further financial-support.
The large amounts of money
they gave their leaders for strike funds are non­
existent.
When they question those leaders about the handling
of the funds, the rank-and-file are accused of being
"quitters."
When members of the CSU ask their leaders to
reply to the charges that have been made by the SIU,
they are told: "We are laughing at the charges."
It is well that the commie leaders have something
to laugh about. Certainly it is no laughing matter
to the CSU membership, who now not only have no
fimds left but have no jobs.
When CSU members point, out to their leadership
that they ar® losing their jobs and their livelihood, the
CSU leaders answer: "Look, we have just signed a
number of companies on the Great Lakes to contracts.
We are doing well there."
However, the CSU leaders are very clqse-mouthed

on four important points regarding the Great Lakes. f teeth in a desperate attempt to hold their. ranks.
These points are: "
Their acti9ns are the actions of defeated men. They
are
the actions of men who know they are finished.
1) The contracts the CSU signed on the Lakes are
with some of the same companies with which the
CSU held contracts last year, covering ships CSU men
manned all last season. In other words, the CSU has
no new companies on the Great Lakes—or, what is
more important, no contracts with the companies the
CSU leaders lost last, year to the SIU.

But the story of the CSU leaders does not end here.
There are a few more things we have to say. For
instance, CSU leaders also failed to tell the CSU
members in offshore ports that a large majority of the
rank and file of the CSU men on the Lakes who were
told to oppose the SIU are no longer going to sea.

2) The few contracts signed on the Lakes this sea­
son by the CSU are for a wage scale which is thirty
dollars a month less than the SIU signed for this
season. We repeat that—Ihirty dollars a month less
than the SIU signed for. The CSU leaders did this
while they accused the SIU of signing inferior agree­
ments. Who, then, did sign "inferior agreements"?
The answer is simple—the CSU.

They have failed to tell their offshore members that
the same things can and will happen to those CSU
men who oppose the SIU men now in the offshore
ports. CSU men should know this now—know it be­
fore it is too late for them.
ROOM IN SIU FOR EX-CSU MEN
The SIU will not discriminate
members who now denounce the
of the CSU. There is plenty of
for ex-CSU members—and plenty
those CSU men work for the SIU

against any CSU
Communist leaders
room in the SIU*
of , jobs—providing
and not against it.

3) The CSU contracts on the lakes were signed with
a written 'guarantee by the CSU leaders in Montreal
that, if the longshoremen on the American side of the
lakes refused to handle the CSU vessels, the con­
tracts become null and void—immediately.
, . The CSU leaders have failed to tell their members
that the Great Lakes was only the beginning of the
LONGSHORE AID
end for the CSU. Those very same young members
The American longshoremen, through their Presi­ on the Great LakeSs whom the Communist' leaders of
dent Joseph Ryan, have alreadj' officially notified the the CSU encouraged to oppose the police, for in­
SIU. Canadian District that, at any time the SIU. re­ stance, are, in some cases, in jails, while the Com­
quests it, the longshoremen will refuse to work CSU munist leaders of the CSU who instigated the entire
vessels. American longshoremen, in other words, will matter are still free and living well.
cooperate with the SlU 100 pei-cent. The phony con­
They failed to tell^ their membership that they threw
tracts signed on the Lakes by - the CSU are good
only as long as the SIU allows them to be—and not one hundred thousand dollars or more of the mem­
bership's money down the drain in a losing fight—one
a minute longer.
hundred thousand dollars or more of the membership's
The SIU does not wish to appear ready to cause money in their futile attempt to save themselves on
further hardships among the already hard-pressed the Lakes.
*
^
rank and file of the CSU. But very shortly, unless
And now let us expose some of the lies of the
those CSU membei-s on the Great Lakes go SIU, we
shall be forced to ask the American longshoi-emen to phony CSU leadership.
refuse to work CSU ships, and that will keep the
CSU LIES EXPOSED
ships tied up until SIU ci-ews replace the CSU.
Lie Number 1; The communists told the people of
4) The CSU leaders, wherever they have boasted Canada that American seamen were being flown in to
to their members of what they call "CStl gains" on sail Canadian ships and take the jobs away from
the Lakes, have failed to confess that every company Canadian seamen, to whom those jobs rightfully be­
that signed with the, SIU last season signed again this long. This has been shown tp be a lie, by a report
year with the SIU. And they have failed to point given yesterday by the Immigation Department of
out that the SIU is contracted with the overwhelm­ Canada when they said, "such charges are without
ing majority of Great Lakes companies.
foundation."
- '
CSU WRONG AGA'IN
It did not really take the immigration report to
The important thing to remember is that when the
SIU originally signed the Great Lakes companies last
year, the CSU leaders t(^d their members that the
SIU could not hold these contracts. The CSU leaders
were wrong. Not only did' the SIU hold the con­
tracts it gained last year, but we have renewed those
same contracts this year—and with an increase in
wages \^and improvement in conditions.
It isn't as thopgh the leaders of the CSU have
only failed to tell the truth about the Great Lakes.
Right now they are telling their members the same
type of lies about other operators who were not in
the original grgup of companies which signed offshore
contracts with the SIU.
They have told their members that they are now
negotiating with all the unsigned offshore companies
for a contract. What they have not told their mem­
bers about these companies, is that,' no later than
yesterday, the SIU signed one of them to a full
SIU contract. This was the Elder Dempster Steamship
Company.
Why do the communist leaders of the CSU refuse
to give all the truth on these matters to their
members? The answer is simple. The communists are reeling
under a terrific beating, the same kind of beating that
very nearly completely wiped out the CSU on the
Great Lakes last sumrfier.
They now realize that tfieir rank and file members
\^ent some constructive action and, most of all, want
to be told the truth. They know that their members
are discouraged. They know that the CSU men on
the offshore ships see their jobs disappearing from
under them for all time, even as they did on the
Lakes.
So—to give their members a shot in the "arm for
morale—they teU them, "The CSU has accomplished
great gains on the Lakes, we are going to get all the
West Coast companies,"'knowing all the time that
they are lying in the face of defeat. They lie in their

brand this as the obvious lie that it was, however.
Why should the SIU bring American seamen to sail
Canadian ships while there was plenty of competent
non-communist Canadian seamen ready, willing and
able to take those jobs,?
Lie Number 2: The CSH officials brayed to the
world that they were the victims of the SIU men
armed with clubs and blackjacks. They made these
charges in leaflets addressed to "The Citizens of Hali­
fax" and demanded that the police investigate their
charges. This the police did, and what did the police
find?
They searched the SIU offices and the SIU'
men and failed to find a" single weapon. The police
also searched the CSU offices and men. What did
they find?
They found enough weapons to beat half
the people of Halifax to death.
HITLER-STALIN TACTICS
Did this faze the communist leaders? It did not!
Using the same tactics of Hitler and Stalin they
screamed "frameup." They demanded the local papers
publish "itemized lists"-of "all" the weapons found.
Why publish such a list, we ask, when one of the
local papers Mas already run a picture of just part of.,
the weapons which were CSU property—and an ugly
looking lot they were, too.
'
When the members of the CSU ask their officials for.
regular reports on finances they are told, "the books
are open." Yes, the books are open—but woe to the
man who gets caught 'with his head in them.
Why does not the CSU have weeklv detailed finan­
cial reports, accounting for all incomes and expenses
in all ports in the same manner as does the SIU?
Why are they told that the quarterly and annual re­
ports are "sufficient." '
Is it true, too, that no detailed financial accounts are
available to CSU membei-s, regardms their so-called
strike? Will the funds, if any. collected by the CSU
members on "tag day" be handled in the same man­
ner? Forgive us if we soi
soun't nes^imitstic—but we
have the feeling that Such *^111 bp the rase.

�Friday, April 22. 1949

T. HE SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Nine

CSU Treasury Empty AfteMwo Weeks;
Question: What Became Of Strike Funds?
This is the 16th day of the CSU's so-called strike—
and the CSU is broke, flat broke. We raise the question
—Why is the CSU broke? Certainly, a union, which
has made so much fuss about piling up a strike fund
in the last few years, ought to be able to go through
a two-week period without being absolutely broke.
The CSU has been collecting strike assessments on
a voyage basis, not on an annual basis or any other
fair basis. The assessments have not been equally
distributed through the membership. Recently, of each
voyage a CSU man has made, he has had to cough up
anywhere from two dollars up to—well, we have seen
records where each man- paid five dollars at the end
of the voyage. Whether the voyage took a week or
two or several months has made no difference.
What is more, the rank, and file had no voice at all
-&lt;in setting these assessments. The blood and money
leeching communist leaders of the CSU have simply
said "Pay up or else."
FUNDS FOR FRONTS
To. those CSU members who have questioned those
tactics, the communist leaders have told them that
it was "necessary" so as to help the union. It's funny,
however, that the only unions where such actions are
necessary, are in the communist controlled unions,
such as the "CSU. Communist controlled unions grab
all the money they can possibly milk from their mem­
bers — not for their own welfare, however — but
instead to put into communist party front organiza­
tions, as well as to pay commie lawyers for so-called
"legal" fees.
We do not have to wonder, then, what has really
happened to all the money the CSU leaders have
forced their members to pay in assessments and socalled "back dues."
Something else too, CSU men: How many of the
CSU raises in dues did you get an opportunity to vote
on? Not many—if any—we bet! What does all this
have to do with "Tag Day?" Well, we just wonder
whether "Tag Day" really is for the families of CSU
seamen. Perhaps it is—but then we wonder what
happened to all those assessments that seem to have
disappeared in thin air and there's still plenty of
thin air left, you know.
As a matter of fact, there is a far better way than
"Tag Day" for the CSU rank and file to meet the
present situation. The CSU rank and file can always
take out membership in the SlU, which has jobs under
contract on nearly 100 ships that sail out of ports
in Eastern Canada.
There is one question that we would like to clear
up for the benefit of the CSU rank and file.
The communist leaders of tjie CSU have been whin­
ing about the contract the SlU signed with . the
•companies. Let's get this contract business straight: •
The" contract the SlU signed is the same contract
the CSU communist leaders turned down — turned
down for their own political purposes—after their own
representative on the Conciliation Board approved it.
HIRING HALL CONTINUES
It provides for the same wage scale—a scale based
on $170.00 a month for an Able Seaman. It provides
for the same working rules, plus improvements which
the SlU won through negotiation. It calls for the same
Union-cotilrolled Hiring HaH procedure, worded ex­
actly as it was in the other contract. .
Not only are the ,communist leaders of the CSU
willing, at this time, to take this same contract but,
as shown recently on the Great Lakes, at a reduced
wage.
So, CSU men, the next time your communist lead­
ership tries to mislead you by telling you that the
SlU signed an inferior contract, call them liars—for
they most certainly are.
Tell them that the SlU now has the same contract
that you, the rank and file of the CSU, wanted so
badly—but which the red fascists of the communist
party would not Jet you have.
This ought to clear up any question about the con­
tract, but there is still' another question that people
are asking "'What are the chances," they want to
know, "that the SlU can continue its fight to hold
its contracts and eliminate the communist leaders of
the CSU from the picture?"
Well, we will give it to you bluntly. The SIU is a
sure bet to eliminate the CSU- entirely, not only

from offshore ships but from the Great Lakes—what's
left of the CSU on the Great Lakes, that is.

their stooges, who have been guilty of violence against
the SIU, cannot be accepted as SIU members.

REVIEW OF LAKES

We want no communists or communist hatchetmen
in the SIU. The SIU has fought the communists for
years on every waterfront in the world. We will keep
fighting them until they quit or disappear.

Now, let's get back to the Lakes for a bit. We told
j'ou some things about the Lakes last night, but the
CSU boasts so much about the Lakes that the entire
subject is worth a quick review.
The CSU just about finished
itself on the Lakes
when its communist leaders signed a contract for this
season with a few of the companies they didn't lose
to the SlU a year ago.
As we pointed out last night, the communist leaders
not only cut their own throats when they took thirty
dollars less a month than. the SlU is getting on the
Lakes but—even worse—agreed in writing that, if the
longshoremen on the American side of the Lakes re­
fused to work CSU ships, the CSU contract would be­
come null and void automatically and immediately.
Incidentally, the CSU has only 6 companies left
on the Lakes, compared with the overwhelming ma­
jority of the Lakes companies whose seamen are
represented by the SlU. The low wage scale in the
CSU agreement, not to mention the clause nullifying
the agreement if American longshoremen refuse to
work the ships, make it extremely doubtful that the
CSU will even have 6 companies on the Lakes- for
very much longer.
The CSU's prosfciects on the offshore ships are about
the same as the outlook on the Lakes. It is only a
question of time before the CSU will draw its last
breath as an organization. One big reason is that the
communist leaders can't explain why the outfit is
broke—or, more important, don't dare to explain!
They simply try to by-pass the entire matter off
by saying "Well, boys, we've had lots of troubles,
you know."
POOR LOAN RISK
Nobody seems very anxious to advance them any
more moneyj either. Possibly nobody considers the
communist leadership much of a risk, or their cause
worth supporting. So, after being turned down by most
of the legitimate trade unions in Canada, they are re­
sorting to a "Tag Day." Fact is that this "Tag Day"
is a bit prophetic—for the CSU is now being rapidly
"tagged out."
If you .want further demonstration w'hy the CSU
leaders will be tagged out—look at today's news from
Monti-eal. There the SS Chandler, a ship belonging to
the Elder Dempster SS Company, ^-Coted almost un­
animously to join the SlU. This is what more and
more CSU rank and file seamen can be expected to
do as the days pass. Furthermore, CSU men, in the
event the communist leaders try and tell you that the
Chandler didn't go SlU, then i-ead today's- IMontreal
papers.
Before we go any further, there is another question
we want to answer here and now." Will CSU men be
discriminated against if they attempt to join the
SlU?"
The question has already been answeied by the
case of the SS Chandler we just told you about. All
those on the Chandler who went SlU signed right
back on the vessel. That means that all but a "Viandful
of the original crew are still aboard.
In other words, there will be no discrimination on
SlU ships against former CSU members, with one
exception. Those, communist leader's of the CSU and

Canadian SIU Halls
The SIU. Canadian District, maintains Halls in the
following Canadian Ports:
HEADQUARTERS. 512 McGill St.. Montreal.
MONTREAL. 1227 Philips Square. Tels. Plateau 67D0
and Marquette 5909.
PORT ARTHUR. 63 Cumberland St.. Tel. North 1229.
PORT COLBORNE. 103 Durham St.. Tel. 559L
TORONTO. 11lA Jarvis St.. Tel. Elgin 5917.
VICTORIA. B, C.. 602 Boughlon St.. Tel. Empire 4531.
VANCOUVER. 565 Hamilton St.. Tel. Pacific 7824.
Permanent headquarters will be opened very shortly
in Halifax. Meanwhile, the SIU in that city can be
reached by calling the following number: 3-7231. Ex­
tension 403.

We know that the communist leaders of the CSU
do not represent the rank and file. Communist leaders
never do.
The record of communist leadership in trade unions
the world over is the same. The communists of the
CSU fit the pattern perfectly. Their aims are the aims
of the communist party, which are the aims of the
Soviet Union.
If there is any conflict between 'communist aims
and trade union aims, the trade union aims, are ruth­
lessly set aside. We have seen it happen time and
again. We are seeing it happen now in Canada. The
perfect example is on the Great Lakes where CSU
communist leaders, on orders from the communist in-^
ternational to keep a toe hold at any cost, have signed
the scab contract we told you about—the contract
calling for 30 dollars less than SIU men receive.
We are beginning to wonder what kind of answers
the CSU leaders are giving to things like what the
crew of the SS Chandler did in Montreal? Are they
denying it, or are they just sputtering?
NO ANSWER TO FACTS
At any rate, they don't seem to' be doing much
about it! Perhaps they can't do much. In fact', that
is the answer. The CSU membership is calling their
bluff. The only replies the bankrupt CSU leaders
have thought out yet are violence against the SIU and
a Tag Day for CSU members.
Incidentally, a word of advice to CSU men in
Halifax. Do hot go to Montreal for jobs. Between the
SIU men already in Montreal, and the former CSU
men who have swung to the SIU, there are plenty
of men in Montreal to man all Canadian ships in
that port.
The communist leaders will tell you anything thai
serves their purpose, as we showed you last night.
We could go on and on regarding the lies they have
told, while betraying the Canadian seamen.
But what's the use? The whole world now knows
the story of communist tactics, lies and persecutions.
We all know what the communists have done in
Europe.
We all know what the communists of Hungary have
done to Cardinal Mindzenty. We know what the conv
munists have done to churchmen in Bulgaria, and
elsewhere behind the Iron Curtain. However we have
heard not a single word from the CSU leaders in the
denunciation of these atrocities.
And why haven't the CSU leaders denounced these
persecutions? You know the answer to this question
just as well as we do. The CSU leaders cannot de­
nounce the treatment of Cardinal Mindzenty and the
others, because their own communist sympathies are
an endorsement of su«h persecutions.
They cannot adopt the views of the civilized worlds,
communists and communist sympathizers live in m
world of their own—a world of terrorism, conspiracy
and exploitation of fellow human beings.
RANK AND FILE TAKES RAP
We have seen what the communists have done te
the seamen in Canada. We have seen them use sea­
men as pawns. As a result, seamen have been left
without jobs and have, in many cases, been flung
into jail for following the dictates of communist
leaders. Yet those communist leaders have managed
to save their own skins, so that they could continue
their dirty work.
We have heard only in the past few hours where
the communist leaders are demanding so-called "in­
vestigations" of the fact that the SlU-contracted ves=^
sels are sailing. This is another typical commie trick
—by screaming for "investigations" they hope to take
their hungrj' and badly treated members' thoughts
away from their own terrible situation—a situation
that sees the CSU rank and file with no jobs, no
contracts arid, in many instances, no food.
Yes, indeed, the communist leadership would love
very much to have their members forget these all
important things, forget them while the communists
continue to yell for "investigations" — investigations
which they know will not come.

�Page Ten

TBB SEAFARERS LOG

Seven Major CSU

Friday. AptU 22. IW®

Spell Failure

trust between raidt and file and leaders based on a
They knew, too,-of the SIU's very large cash'assets^
common viewpoint and a common grievance.
—ca^ assets which ran into ihillions of dollars, accu­
mulated over the" years—cash assets which Were ieatThis did not exist in the CSU.
The CSU leaders, by having to admit that the CSU • marked for just such actions as^ this^ In addition, they
had no money left after only 2 weeks of action, placed knew that the SIU was a member of the Intemational
themselves and their members in an impossible posi­ Transportworkers Federation, which is strong through­
out the world in all countries except the 'Iron Cur­
tion.
Once more we can only wonder whether they were tain.' Not only this, but they must have known-the
really trying to improve the wages and conditions of SIU's record of never having lost a waterfront actiort
the CSU members or deliberately bent on destroying or strike during its entire history. They knew, too,
of the SIU's rigid adherence to all contracts.
the Canadian merchant marine!
OBVIOUS RESULT
The fifth mistake the CSU leaders committed was in
calling |or action without so much as making even a
Certainly those CSU leaders must have known that,
slight pretense of obtaining a secret membership vote
if
they did not destroy the Canadian merchant marine,
on the question. This was dictatorship pure and
they
would find their members fed-up with CSU be­
simple.
trayals, switching to the' SIU by the hundreds. *
Even worse, it meant that the rank-and-file could
But apparently the CSU leaders preferred to forget
not feel themselves to be a part of the action. They
the SIU's strength and record. The only conclusion
were deliberately forced into an action about which
is- that the leaders of the CSU were blindly carrying
they knew nothing of the vital issues.
out dictated communist policy—^the least concern of
In other words, the CSU leaders called out the men which was the welfare of the Canadian seamen or 'the *
after giving them a completely false account of the Canadian merchant marine.
issue, namely the contract which their own handNaturally, the SIU moved swiftly and surely to
picked representative on the Conciliation Board had
take advantage of every mistake the CSU leaders
approved. They deliberately neglected to explain to
made. After all, the SIU is a seasoned union. Its
the rank and file the dangerous weaknesses of their
members
do not get hysterical. The Union itself
FIRST ERROR
position.
weighs its actions and does not go in for irrespon­
The first mistake was failure on the part of the
They did not tell the CSU membership that the CSU sibility. Most of all, it is wise in the ways of men
CSU leaders to line up the kind of support that would not be able to tie up rail terminals, trucks and like the CSU leaders, who are more interested in
means the difference between defeat and victory in docks along with the ships. The CSU officials did phony politicking than in straight trade unionsm.
labor actions. CSU members might well ask their not tell the rank and file that, within a little more However,, we of the SIU are ready to admit our
officials why they did not obtain out-and-out com­ than two weeks after their so-called strike began, Union's Canadian District faces two very serious
mitments from the imions whose support is absolutely they would to resort to a Tag Day in a pathetic effort problems.
to get up enough money to keep going. They didn't
necessary in any waterfront action.
The first of these problems is that of fulfilling the
For example, to go on strike, they must have the even tell them about the strength of the opposition, contracts we have made with the Canadian shipowners.
cooperation of longshoremen, teamsters, railway work­ the Seafarers International Union of North America. Right now we are solving this problem with a very
ers and ship's officers, if they really want to be sure But let's treat this whole point separately.
high percentage of effectiveness. "What is more, that
that the ships they are striking will be tied up. This
What we want to emphasize right now is that there effectiveness is increasing almost by the hour. And it
is a lesson which seamen in many parts of the world* is absolutely no comparison between the situation of won't be many days before we will be able to say
have learned the hard way. We find it difficult to the CSU and that of seamen ' who have walked that we are operating at 100 percent efficiency. One
believe that the CSU officials had not themselves legitimate picketlines for weeks or even months on thing you can surely stake your last penny on—the
iMrned this lesson before. Yet, the cold fact remains end without a penny to jangle in their jeans, and SIU is in Canada to stick.
-i^hey did not have the docks and the approaches to who won their objectives in the end.
The second problem facing the SIU is that of edu­
the docks tied up along with the ships.
cating
the seamen who constitute the non-communist
CSU LACKED KNOW-HOW
We can only wonder, then, whether they were not
element of the CSU to the dangers of fooling around
simply more interested in disruption than in the wel­
These men knew exactly what they were doing. with any aspect of what we call "politicalism."
They had voted to do what they were doing. They
fare of their membership.
Politicalism doesn't mix with unionism—^regardless
The second mistake which the CSU leaders made trusted their leaders. Of course, they could keep go­ of how a man votes.
•^as in timing their action at the worst possible ing through a tough siege: they had unity of purpose.
We believe that a great majority of the CSU is
moment. A union should take economic action when But the CSU rank and file had none of these advan­
included
in this group. We are judging by the re­
it is strong, not when it is weak. Yet just consider tages. Their leaders saw to that.
sponse
we
have gotten to these programs, and by
The sixth mistake the CSU leaders made was allow­
what the CSU leaders did.
other
responses.
We tell those CSU members who
They called this so-called strike after they suffered ing their entire action to be marred by acts of sheer are interested in the SIU to drop in and see us. Mean­
a: tremendous setback on the Great Lakes last fall— irresponsibility. They have allowed hundreds of rank while continue with your normal CSU imion duties.
a [setback from which they had not yet recovered. and file members to become the victims, the CSU If they include picketing, go ahead and picket as we
Ii^tead of taking time to build back their strength leaders never seem to be the ones who get it in the
have told you before. 'When we are ready for you
fiilanciaUy and physically, they acted again this spring neck, when their irresponsible of all the commands
to leave the CSU in the Port of Halifax—^we shall
which
the
CSU
leaders
handed
out
were
the
orders
to
wjien they still were extremely weak, with the result
tell you.
strike
Canadian
ships
in
European
and
South
Amer­
ydu all have seen—utter defeat!
SIU OBJECTIVES
jAgain, we can only wonder whether they were not ican ports. One of the elementary bits of international
more interested in disruption than in the welfare of maritime law that any seaman knows is that you
"When we have solved these two problems, and we
cannot tie up a ship in a foreign port. It makes no
thEir membership.
difference how liberal or how reactionary the labor expect to solve them swiftly, the Canadian District"
bheir third mistake was another tragid" instance of laws of the coimtry may be. You just can't strike a of the SIU will be ready to devise a progressive pro­
timing which was equally poor. As every maritime
ship in a foreign port without facing severe legal gram of its own.
tr^de imionist in the world well knows—in fact, as
reprisals.
That program will shape up something like this:
eyery trade union leader in any industry knows
Yet
these
CSU
leaders,
who
have
appointed
them­
The Canadian District will gradually work towards
a limion does not swing into action unless business is
selves
authorities
on
how
to
run
a
waterfront
strike,
raising
the wages and working conditions of Canadian
reasonably good in the particular industry.
just gave out the order. "Strike the ships, regardless seamen to the United States level. This will be the
I
SUICIDAL STRATEGY
first target.
of where the ships are."
As
a
result,
Canadian
seamen
in
British,
French,
However, there are other things, too. The Canadian
[An action when business is in a very bad state is
South
American
and
other
ports
are
in
serious
trouble.
District
will follow a policy of close cooperation with
alpost certainly suicidal. Yet, the CSU leaders called
They
are
face-to-face
with
big
fines
and
jail
sentences!
the
entire
American Federation of Labor, so that on.
oyt their members at a time when the Canadian mer­
Was
this
irresponsibility
on
the
part
of
CSU
officials,
either
side
of the border we can expect all-out sup­
chant marine was in a low state of postwar retrench­
or
wasn't
it?
Were
these
the
actions
of
sincere
union
port
at
all
times.
ment.
officials,
or
were
they
plays
to
the
grandstand?
The Canadian District of the SIU can be expected
They did not act when the ships were crjdng for
Is it any wonder that we ask again: were the CSU to take advantage of the SIU's' membership in the
men. They waited until there were hundreds of un­
employed men on the beach looking for jobs that officials seeking to improve the lot of CSU members, International Transportworkers Federation, that pow­
or were they seeking to destroy the Canadian mer­ erful world-wide organization to which belong trans­
did not exist.
port unions in the United States, Canada, England
' Again, we must wonder whether they were seeking chant marine and wreck the CSU in the process?
The
seventh,
and
perhaps
biggest,
mistake
the
CSU
and
most of Europe. The ITF is a vast bulwark against
" economic improvements for their men—or were they
leaders
made
was
their
failure
to
properly
estimate
the
the
spread
of Communism in trade unions everywhere,
seeking the disruption of a vital Canadian industry?
strength
of
the
Seafarers
Intemational
Union
of
North
and
it
has
made its strength felt on many fronts on
The fourth mistake the CSU leaders made was to
many
bccasions.
America.
Whatever
excuse
you
can
find
for
their
tall for large scale union action without any money
The Canadian District of the SIU faces a serious
in their treasury. We have been talking about this other mistakes, you can find no excuse for this one!
In
the
first
place,
they
had
as
recently
as
last
fall
unemployment
problem due to the shrinkage of the
i^int for the past few nights. On this occasion we
been
defeated
on
,the
Lakes
by
the
SIU's
Canadian
Canadian
fieet.
This problem, too, must be met in
Want to speak on it simply as a strategic problem,
many
ways.
District.
Why
they
should
think
that
the
same
Without raising the question of where all those assess­
ments collected from the CSU rank-and-file member­ Canadian District of the SIU would be any less
We, Canadian Seafarers most certainly can be ex­
resolute in Halifax, and other ports of eastern Canada, pected to be increasing the manning scales on the
ship—and there were plenty—went.
Canadian ships, as the SIU has already done ©n
Money in the bank is the reserve that a union than on the Lakes is a major mystery.
Certainly they knew that the Seafarers International American ships. But that is getting down to details
should have for successful action. It is true, that, in
Union
had 90,000 members in Canada and the United on matters that will come later.
the course of labor history, seamen and others have
Meanwhile the SIU Canadian District will welcome
States,
and that it had the immediate backing of
conducted long strikes and won them with nothing but
their hearts to go on. But on those occasions, there 250,000 members of the AFL's powerful Maritime those members of the CSU who are not identified
Was an indominitable spirit in the rank and file which Trades Department, plus the 8 miHion members of with the hatchetmen and fellow-travelers that stooge carried them on, and there was a feeling of mutual the American Federation of Labor in both countries. for the party hacks.
This quiet Easter night is a good tinae to review a
number of features of the CSU's so-called strike,
although just whom the CSU is striking against has
never been clear.
Specifically, it is a good time to review the mis­
takes the CSU leaders have made in the course of
their ill-conceived, ill-timed action.
We would like to examine these strategic and taci tical errors which the CSU leaders made, because
: their only answer to everything we have charged has
been to maintain that the SIU was "red-baiting" or
was using "Hitler-like propaganda methods." There­
fore we intend to show not only that the CSU leaders
have lost their action, but that they could never have
won by the strategy and tactics they have used.
We ask our radio audience to listen and pay par­
ticular attention to these mistakes. These mistakes,
we feel, are so obvious—that you will find that it is
almost unbelievable.
The CSU leaders committed seven major errors.
These seven errors, when considered together, prove
very conclusively that the CSU leaders are not the
smart trade unionists they pretend to be, ^or else they
never wanted to win in the first place. Let's analyze
these mistakes one at a time.

�Friday# April 22, 1949

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Eleven

SHIPS' MINUTES AND NEWS
Disabled Robin Kettering
Periled By Shift Of Cargo
During North Atlantic Gale

MESSROOM GATHERING ON THE STEEL AGE

Caught in the full fury of a 90-niile-an-hour
North Atlantic gale with her engines disabled the
SS Robin Kettering was in dfstress for 2 hours re­
cently when part of a*~
^

A nnn
.cargo when she was hit by the
4,000 ton cargo of man- gaig_ ghe took the storm in stride
ganese ore shifted, caus- until the engine gang heard
valves popping like firecrackers
^ ing a 20-degree list.
(The momentarily perilous state and the plant conked out.
of the Kettering off the Nova
With her steam gone the ship
Scotian coast was shared recent­ pitched and rolled in the troughs
ly by a sister Robin vessel, the causing the cargo to break loose.
Robin Locksley, LOG, April 11, The sudden turn of events threw
which sustained a 20 degree list the passengers into a panic and
when 150 tons of cargo broke moved the Skipper to send out
loose during a storm in mid-At­ a distress signfil which was pick­
lantic between New York and ed up by a Coast Guard ship
Capetown. Two days of steady 100 miles away.
work righted the Locksley)
BROUGHT TO LIFE
According to a Kettering crewThe
Kettering heaved about
member, the ship was in the
at
the
mercy of the storm for
North Atlantic headed for St.
two
hours
before the engines
steel Agers prepare to break up after their first shipboard meeting of the current trip.
Johns and Halifax to discharge
were repaired enough to squeeze , Reading left to right, the men are J. Veira. Wiper; T. Mungo. Saloon Messman; J. Malinowsky.
out a couple of knots of speed. Fireman; Roberts. Deck Maintenance; J. Oliver. AB; M. Sorvenssen, Stewards Delegate; J.
In the meantime, crewmembers
Kozerski, Chief Cook; J. Yoknas. Carpenter; S. Wise, AB.
pumped oil from starboard to
port tanks, bringing the list up
to 10 degrees. The distress call
was then rescinded.
Limping along the ship finally
The Isthmian C-3, Steel Age, a fine crew aboard, 95 percent Steel Age. The Kendricks letter
made
the Bay of Fundy, where
By SALTY DICK
cleared
New York a couple of being bookmen. He saw an to the LOG was posted in the
she took refuge from the storrfi.
messroom.
I know a seaman wHb is very After 24 hours of safe anchor­ weeks ago on the first leg of a enjoyable trip in prospect.
Before
the
meeting
was
ad­
Fully squared away, the
fond of Ava Gardner. He now age she continued to St. Johns. four months trip to the Far
journed
the
crew
was
told
of
the
Brothers
then turned their con­
East.
With
the
ship
secured
for
plans to go west to attempt an
No injury was suffered to the
difficulties
met
by
the
SS
Kentented
pusses
in the direction ck.
introduction ... R. Paul Hareld crew during the righting of thelff^
squaring dricks crew in Siam, a counti-y Brother Sipol's camera and the'
themselves
away—union
style.
recently married a girl who ship, although a couple of men
works in a sugar refinery. Does suffered minor injuries while se­ Enroute to Wilmington they scheduled to be visited by the event was recorded for posterity.
he call her "Sugar?" ... Swords curing starboard lifeboats that held their first shipboard meet­
Walters loves the sea so much he broke loose during the storm.
ing. On hand for the event was
can't stay on the beach long.
crewmember
Z. Sipols, whose
The Kettering had loaded ore
You- may have seen him around in Capetown along with general camera recorded the event as
as a watchman on ships ... The cargo. Following stops at St. shown on this page. With the
fellow who carries the hammer Johns and Halifax the ship paid election of delegates out of the
and nails on the Del Sud is off in Baltimore.
way, the crew began laying the
Rocky Cox. He picked the run
groundwork for insuring a har­
because he has something spe­
monious trip.
cial at the end of the run: Buenos
CHECK 'EM. BOYS
Aires.
R. C. Bass claims bank­
The newly elected delegates
ruptcy — therefore, back to
j were instructed to check the
sea... There was a mad
' slopchest and penicillin supply
scramble in the dining room
' and the ship's delegate was voted
of the Del Mar when the ship
I to inform the Wilmington Patrolhit bottom and the screw on
If your shirt needs laundering man of the lack of seating space
rudder went out of commis­ or your suit needs cleaning, don't in the messroom.
sion.
The stampede was take either one to the S. Rice
The Ship's Delegate, Clifford
. caused by the waiters all try­ laundry at 921 Washington Ave­
Thompson,
announced that the
ing to get out at the ^me nue, Brooklyn, say nine mem- shipboard educational program
lime. Clancy Cooper is now j bers of the crew of the SS Rob­ would begin' at the following
working in Hotel Ponchartrain. in Trent in a letter to the LOG.
They maintain that the S. Rice meeting—the subject: "The'SlU imaixmKi:
Joe Martello, Dispatcher here
Organizing System."
in the NO Hall, is kept busy Jaundry, which once was called
Preparing the dinner meal. Chief Cook J. Kozerski tests
putting jobs on the board and the Half Moon Valet, promises In the-minutes received in the
his meat saw on a slab • of beef, while 2nd Cook D. Wilson,
answering* questions ... Bill good workmanship and one day LOG office this week. Delegate
left,
and 3rd Cook J. Bergstrom look on.
Champlin just returned from service on the basis that you Thompson noted that there was
West Africa with dengue fever. [ don't have to pay for it if you
He's at the marine hospital un- j don't like it. What actually hap­
der observation. I spend a day, pens is something else again, .the
there as a patient and my bed ' Seafarers stoutly claim.
They say that the dry clean­
Crewmen of the SS Kathryn,f the crew available 1o study man in New York and presented
was dii-ectly across from his. He
ing
was terrible. They cite a Bull Lines, came up with an whether the man has been fired at a membership meeting.
may be sick, but he eats like a
light topcoat which one of them idea at a recent shipboard meet­ for just cause.
Then, the Kathryn men rea­
horse.
gave
to
be
cleaned.
When
he
soned,
there wouldn't be a lot
After a Wednesday meeting
Those present at this first
ing they thought might prevent
went
to
get
it
he
had
to
pay
of
rumors
and whisperirigs and
I saw John Picou sweeping the
meeting -^nll then report t(;j,^ the
a
lot
of
misunderstandings
if
it
$1.75
and
the
coat
looked
worse
ginmill
talk
about unfair firings.
Hall. I saw other Brothers
entire crew at the earliest op­
were
adopted.
thap
it
had
before.
If
a
man
was
fired, the crew
helping out. but Johnnie stayed
portunity.
After
three
members
of
the
The
nine
Brothers
signing
the
would
know
the
whole story.
to t|e end. Good work. John­
Deck
Department
were
fired
in
letter
to
the
LOG
were:
The
idea
'seemed
such
a
good
,
If
the
man
was
treated unfair­
nie ... Pete Garza is at the
San
Juan,
it
was
moved
and
George
Leidemann,
Warren
ly,
steps
could
be
taken to cor­
one
to
the
K-athryn's
men
that
Hall, so I presume he's ready
to ship out... James Collins, Hodges, Earl L. Morris, John O. passed in the shipboard meet­ they voted to have the Ship's rect the Situation.
If the man deserved what he
the SIU's Michelangelo.' is Davis, 'D. C. Gilmore, J. B. ing that in the future, whenever Delegate draw up a resolution
painting scenes on the bayous. Schutte, A. E. Carlson, Daniel a man is firfed, the delegates similar to the one passed aboard got, everybody would have (a
shall call together members of ship to be given to the Patrol­ full knowledge of the facts, •
He loves to paint and read. .*. O'Rourke and Mike Sovich.

The Voice

Of The Sea

Steel Agers Square Away For Smooth Trip

Blackball Given
Brooklyn Laundry
By Trent Seamen

Kathryn Men Vote Crew Inquiries In Ship Firings

�Page Twelve

Tills SE4FAUEHS LQG
•

'

,

' '

-

FgUnft ApirD ii, 1948

1^'-a

Digested Minutes Of Sill Ship Meetings
gine Delegate could attend. Good
KENYON VICTORY. Jan. 23—
and Welfare: Request made that
Freuik J. Mandler. Chairman; J.
no water be wasted owing to
J. Monahan, Secretary. Ship's
shortage.
Suggestion made that
delegate reported that trouble
the _ members of the Stewards
over Wiper had been squared
Department dunip garbage in
away with Chief Engineer.
cans provided in port. Several
Everything okay otherwise in
Brothers expressed appreciation
three departments. Second Cook
for the excellent food provided
elected unanimously to ship's
by the Chief Cook. One minute
delegate post. Motions carried:
of
silence for Brothers lost at
that Steward order cots to be
sea.
delivered on West Coast; that
Steward see to it that fumigation
XXX
EVISTAR. Feb. IS—G. Rourke.
is attended to when ship arrives
Chairman: J. H. Sheerer, Secre­
on West Coast. Discussed oil
leak in galley range. One min­ juices being served regulariy; tary. Delegates reported _ no
ute of silence _for departed cleaning of laimdry and cleaning beefs in their departments. New
Business: Agreed that men tak­
Brothers.
of quarters. Gordon Finlay. AB, ing off in port will have other
X, X t
complimented Stewards Depart­
ROBIN GRAY. Jan. 23^E. J. ment on their excellent job in men stand their watches and pay
Kelly. Chairman; H. J. Murran- keeping messhall neat and clean. the men for the work. Men
failing to do this will be fined.
ka.,Secretary." Three department Crew supported his view.
Men taking time off in port are
delegates and ship's delegate re­
XXX
to
notify departmental delegate,
vealed that there were no beefs HASTINGS. Jan. 30—C.
the delegafe to notify the officer
pending. Under Education,
/vviAN^y MEMBERS MAKE IT A PRACTICE,WWEN
Howell. Chairman; C. J. Oliver,
Brother C. Coates discussed the Secretary. Ship's delegate an­ on watch. Good and Welfare:
THEY PAYOFF A SHIP, TO PAY THEIRPUESfiDR
Request that buttermilk be put
importance of shipboard meet­
nounced that everything was in aboard ship. Suggestion that
A
YEAR . THEY THE/SJ KXOW THAT
MATTER
ings. Ship's delegate is to se^.
order with exception of repair lifeline be put up from midship
WHAT MAY HAPPEN! THEY ARE IN SCXJDSTAIJD- ^
Captain about painting mess- list; Suggestion made to draw
to aft end. Steward asked men
room deck. ' Delegates agreed
INS
AMP CAM -THROW IM FOR. A0OE&gt;.
up recommendation for permitthat one rrfan from each depart­ men with sufficient time for a to be more careful with linen.
ment would be assigned , to keep book. One minute of silence for One minute of silence for Broth­
ers lost at sea.
ihe laundry clean.
Brothers lost at sea.
XXX
DEL ORG. Jan. 2 — Carroll.
Chairman; Haynes. Secretary. No
By HANK
beefs pending in any of the tiiree
It's easy enough to recognize Brother Bob High—even witji
departments, according to dele­
his hardly recognizable mustache and his terrific sense of humor.
gates. Brother Brunell elected
,
X X X
ship's delegate. Discussion on
ROBIN KIRK, Feb. 27— Bob must be watching Milton Berle on television and studying
XXX
matter of man missing ship, re­ Joseph Carriveau, Chairman; Leo witch-craft, too. There's always spirits involved in his humorous
SOUTHLAND. Jan. 23—W. G. joining it and being signed on Allen, Secretary. Crew elected conversations— Another Brother with a slight smudge of a
Morris. Chairman; Alexander again. Suggested that beef in­ J. Sampson as Ship's Delegate. mustache is,Percy Boyer—^recently sailing tankers—who finally
Janes. Secretary. Minutes of volving Oilers be referred to Delegates reported departments shadow-boxed -himself out of New York on a train for New Orleans.
previous meeting to be posted New Orleans Hall when vessel constituted all bookmembers in Percy has been missing so many trains trying to leave coffeeon bulletin board for the benefit returns to that port. Also sug­ good standing. New Business: smelling Beaver Street that the believes he could have walked
of new crewmembers. No beefs gested that recreation room be Motion carried that ship's laun­ through all those trains to New Orleans
Brother Cy Magnan
pending in any of the depart­ used during coffee time so that dry be cleaned weekly by one writes that the Plaza in Trinidad is doing a swell job handing
ments. Nominations were opened messhall can be kept clean more man from each department. Cof­ out the LOG to SlU members. The Lido Hotel's reading room has
for ship's delegate. Kennedj' easily. Cots are to be checked fee to be made by pantryman it, too. In Barbados the Zanzi-Bar handles "our little treasure"
was elected. Motions carried: To before sailing on next voyage.
every morning for 10 o'clock cof­ (as Cy writes it) which all of the SlU "island hoppers" read
have ship's delegate discuss with
fee time. Ship's Delegate to from first page to last.
Captain screen doors' for galley
XXX
see Chief Engineer about pres­
and messhall.
Discussion onBrothers William Bunker, Edward Vail, George Dacken and
sure in water fountain.
laundry, recreation room and
Frank Liliie are a few of the newly-arrived in town... Brother
X X X
sink.
Antonio Blais, of Connecticut, sailed... Feeling good about
ROBIN SHERWOOD. Feb. 25—
scraping
off some of this stuff called barnacled beacheritis
X' X X
(Chairman and Secretary not
STEEL FABRICATOR. Jan. 9
(or
what
may be called a "doingrnothing-at-all-fever" which
given.) Special meeting called
-r-Suska. Chairman; C. Burgio.
can
mcdre
a sailor trusty in parts and lazy). Brother George
for Steward to clarify why there
Secretary. Minutes of last meet­
Fiance
shipped
for a shorty of a sugar-island run... We hope
is insufficient amount of fresh
ing read and accepted. Smooth
Brother
Reece
OUver
(who has a mustache, by the way) is
food aboard. Steward stated
sailing reported in all depart­
feeling
better
nowadays...
Brother Helms shipped. So has
that Captain had an order from
XXX
ments. General discussion of
Roger
Teets..,
Brother
Jurkowski
shipped—^wishing he could
company stating that no fresh
BALTORE. Feb. 7 ^ Mitchie. stores are to be obtained in
the things crewmen think should
have received some last-minute mail.
be taken care of on this trip. It Chairman; Hildrelh. Secretary. Tanganyika territory. Ship's
X
t
X
was also pointed' out that men Delegates reported number of delegate requested to procure
Steward Sylvester "Ziggy" Zygarowski writes he's hitting
should do their jobs in good books and permits in their de­ letter from Captain and read it many ports aboard the SS Gadsden... Jerry De Meo sailed in
Union fashion and keep from partments. No beefs reported. to the membership.
Captain recently from a South African voyage... Brothers D. Dixon, Emil
fouling up. Brother Bat^ was New Business: Patrolman to be promised to make a duplicate Wagner, James Kelly and Lepnard Rhino (an oldtimer) send word
elected ship's delegate. Several asked ' why dumping garbage is copy of letter for crew. Discus­ they're on long voyage aboard Isthmian's Steel Travelej:, now in
men spoke on matters of Union not overtime on ship. Motion sion of food situation ended with Manila... Bosun Bob Hillman is doing the best an oldtimer can
interest and Union literature was carried to secure needed equip­ understanding that ship wiU ob­ with or without the tools he has, while he's shipping out of
distributed.
Other discussions ment in galley. Motion carried tain fresh stores in next port. Baltimore with his familiar cigars... Steward John Jellette (with
dealt with improving shower to • have Patrolman check on Delegates to approve requisition. his mustache,, of course) is happy. He's keeping everybody happy
facilities, messhall appliances MciteJ'who cl.e:ig-es meal hour
and everything shipshape aboard one of the Seatrain scows...
and general cleanliness through­ frequently and without notify­
Brother Oswald Smith is in town.
out the vessel. All hands were ing Steward. Good and Welfare:
XXX
cautioned to obtain authorization Motion carried not to leave laun­
Bosun Bill Champlin sailed into town stating he sure
from their department heads be­ dry soaking in tubs. One min­
wished a place in the Belgian Congo would get LOGs so that
ute of silence for Brothers lost
fore taking time off.
the crews of many Mississippi ships hitting there could keep
XXX
at sea.
informed of latest Union news... The weekly LOG will be
STEEL APPRENTICE. Feb. 21
XXX
sailing free of cost to the homes of the following Brothers-&gt;—
—G. Mdirley, Chairman; B.
CAPE MOHICAN. Feb. 20— Payne, Secretary. Discussion on
Waller Borreson of New Jersey. John Bragg of Georgia, Theodor
Armand Stepanian, Chairman; R. heat of dishwater. Found that
Humal of New York, Gus Janavaris of New York, Leon SizeSireis. Secretary. Delegates re­ water was at 110 degrees while
more of Florida, Teddy Ostaszeski of New Jersey. Lawson
ported departments functioning tap water came out at 180 de­
Rynes of Florida... Brothers, keep those ships clean and
smoothly. New Business: James
XXX
happy. Protect your agreements—keep your jobs shipshape,
grees. Motion carried that Pan­
MOBILIAN. Jan. 9—Lee Snod- Dawson elected Ship's and Deck tryman failing to keep tempera­
Protect your health. Brothers. If you have a physical ailment
grass. Chairman; W. L. Busch. Delegate; H. Tomlin elected Ste-, ture up will be brought up on
—check into the marine hospital. Don't sail if there's something
Secretary. Engine and deck de­ wards Department delegate. Dis­ charges^ ^
wrong with you, far out at sea sometimes is too late.
partment delegates reported all cussion held on repairs left un­
X
X
X
XXX
proceeding satisfactorily. Ste­ done from last trip.
Former Seafarer Clayton O. Whitley, now answering roll
GATEWAY CITY, Feb. 13—
wards delegate reported only a
4- S" S"
Jack Hartley, Chairman; W. E. call in the Army, has taken a berth in the station hospital apd
nimor beef registered by MessJAMES JACKSpN.- Feb. 6— Coutani, Secretary. Delegates re­ will honor communiques from his old pals. Ret. Whitley's ad­
mgn, who requested that all F. Buhl, Chairman; J. Gillis, ported little disputed overtime in dress is: Station Hospital, Ward A-9, Camp Pickett, Va
In the
hands keep, out of messroom Secretary. Frank Buhl elected their departments. New Busi­ morning mail: A picture postcard from Sir Charles telling ^us of
after meal hours until place has ship's delegate. Delegates re­ ness: S. P. Drury elected ship's the interesting places being hit by the Sea Trader. View on the
been cleaned up. Motion car­ ported number of books and per­ delegate. Motion by Drury that card shows the maritime terminal in Barranquilla, Colombia... A
ried calling for use of the PC mits in their departments. New linen should be cheeked by port note from^'W. A. McKinney telling how the Madaket lost a blade
messroom as a recreation room. Business: Motion by Burnstine. steward for proper bunk size. from her propellor between Honolulu and Kobu, Japan. Brother
-Under Good and Welfare, crew carried, that future meetinjs be One minute of silence for Broth­ McKinney says the Madaket boasts of a hotshot Stewards De- '
discussed possibility of frdit held on Sunday at 6:30 so En- ers lost at sea.
partment.
^
•
,

CVT and RUN

�mm
Friday, April 22, 1949

THE SEAFARERS LOG

Page Thirteen

THE MEMBERSHIP SPEAKS
News Account Of Panamanian Ship
ShowsHeavy Menu—10 TonsOf Rice

DISPLAYING HIS PRIZE

which has been and will be fore­ the cooks could not understand
most in the battle for improving English.
Enclosed is a clipping taken the welfare of seamen, I would "On the stove cooking was a
from the February 18 issue of like to see the SIU adopt a large pan of chopped pork. Af­
the Mobile Press Register. The more vigorous policy on the ter the pork was browned, the
item is of vital importance to all subject and publicize it more cook put several pans of celery,
American seamen.
thoroughly in Washington and to onions, potatoes and other vege­
All members of the SIU. are the general public.
tables into the same pan and
aware of the unscrupulous meth­
started stirring away.
ASKS PUBLICITY
ods practiced by some" American
In the meantime the Union "In another pot were a num­
ship operators who put their
should work toward ways and ber of pieces of fish, already
ships under Panamanian registry
means of curtailing this out­ cooked and floating in what ap­
to escape high U.S. taxes, hire
peared to be a tomato sauce.
rageous practice.
non-union seamen of other coun­
"The third and final pot con­
The newspaper item, written
tries at coolie wages, break mar­
by Ed Lee, a staff writer of that tained steamed rice.
itime unions, ignore safety reg""At each place setting on the
newspaper, is as follows:
ulations, and so on.
table,
there were a small china
"A T-2 type tanker, register­
Outside of the maritime in­
bowl,
a china spoon and two
ed in Panama, operated by a
dustry the general public as a
chopsticks.
U.S. company, skippered by a
Displaying the lightweight skate are Juan Rodriguez,
whole is totally unaware that
"On the table were two wood­
Norwegian and manned by a
Bsdcer
and captor of the fish; Joseph Wahletz, AB; Frank
these shameful conditions exist.
en buckets, each filled with rice.
Chinese crew is in port.
Morciglio,
AB, and Louis Carbone, AB. Picture by Luis Ramirez.
As a member of this union,
"Also aboard the vessel are A bucket was passed to the
officers who hold the following Chinese who were to eat. Each
citizenships: Estonian, Canadian, took his-private spoon and dish­
American, Danish, Swedish and ed out a helping of rice into his
bowl. The seamen then took the
Norwegian.
"The ship, the SS Pipe Spring, two chopsticks in his left hand,
is in Mobile for routine inspec­ lifted the bowl to his mouth and To the Editor:
The devilfish itself grows to
tion and necessary repairs,* It is began eating away.
about 400 pounds and is a mon­
operated by the Overseas Tank- "After the rice was gone, the While in the Caribbean area strous thing to see. The skate,
To the Editor:
ship Corporation of New York. other, dishes were brought out. aboard the Suzanne I'm trying like all of its relatives, is very
While browsing through the The Master of the ship reported
"The ship's captain said the to do my best to provide others dangerous. Its aggressiveness is
bound volumes of the LOG in that the ' seven nationalities men praise their food and al­ and myself with knowledge mostly retained in its tail. They
about that fascinating subject—
the New York Hall tpday I came aboard the ship 'get along fine ways seem to enjoy it..."
use their tails as a whip against
sharks.
across a story dated August 6, and work in perfect harmony.'
other
fishes and humans.
Alexander Sokolowski
In the enclosed picture (see
"At present, the vessel is en­
1948 which concerned the skip­
WHIPPING BgY
(Ed. Note: With the ' Pana­ cut) is a bit of marine life
per of the Steel Fabricator. The gaged in hauling oil from Bah­
Many
people say that if you
manian
boycott
approaching,
caught
by
our
baker
aboard
the
story was not very complimen­ rein to all parts of the world.
are
whipped
by one of these
.
the
SIU
is
publicizing
the
Suzanne
while
we
were
in
Maytary to the Old Man, and accord­ The Overseas Tankship Corpora­
marine
characters
there is al­
menace
to
seamen's
conditions
aguez.
This
specimen
belongs
in
ing to the crew he was giving tion is operating 42 ships in the
most
100
percent
certainty
that
constituted
by
ships
like
the
the
devilfish
family
and
is
trade and all vessels carry a
them a rough road to travel.
the
affected
part
of
the
body
will
Pipe
Spring.
It
was
greatly
known
as
a
skate.
I
learned
According to the crew the mixed crew.
become
dry
and
stay
dry
for
through
the
efforts
of
the
SIU
that
it
is
the
smallest
member
"The Master, when asked to
Skipper was loose on loggings
many
years.
In
some
instances
in
Washington
that
a
Congres­
in
the
devilfish
family
and
never
and tight on cigarettes, plus just describe how the Chinese work,
serious medical treatment is
about every other sin in the pointed out that there is a Chin­ sional investigation will soon grows larger than 40 pounds.
necessary.
book. This Skipper, K. O. Born- ese in each department known . be launched into the practice The one in the picture weighs 15
The Baker used a small hook
of
Panamanian
transfers.)
pounds.
son, had a reputation for being as the 'number one boy.' This
and
cheap line, but catching a
a tough man to talk to and fellow speaks English, while the
fish
of
this kind with a hook
rest of the department speak
seemed to be anti-union.
requires
a great deal of luck and
The Skipper of the Fabricator only Chinese. Officers give the
some
technique.
is'-now Master of the Steel Sea­ boy any orders for the respective
Luis Ramirez
farer. As ship's delegate on that departments and the 'number
vessel, I would like to say that one' is responsible for seeing
my experiences with Captain these orders are carried out.
"The Chinese have a separate
Bornson during voyage No. 5
By JAMES P. CONROY
m
were mostly smooth throughout kitchen and will eat only Chin­
Lights of San Francisco
the trip. I found that he was ese dishes. Their choice meats
always ready to listen to any are fish and pork and in the
-7-Golden lights—
beefs or ar^ments I had, and vegetable line they eat lettuce,
Glistening on the moodY bay.
due to him they were always celery, onions and tomatoes, but,
To the Editor:
Will your sparkle go as we go
like the story books say, rice is
ironed out immediately.
A good thing for all SIU men
When our ship sails on its way?
the main dish for all Chinese.
NO TROUBLE
to
keep in mind is that no mat­
NO BEANS HERE
Concerning the trouble he had
Lights
that
pass
at
sea
ter
how much money you have
"The port steward here re­
with the Fabricator crew about
in
the
bank or in your pocket,
—Lonely
lights—
cigarettes, I do not know what ported that 10 tons of rice go
the
most
valuable possession you
You
appear
then
join
the
night.
the score was there, but all on each ship when supplies are
have
is
your
SIU book or permit.
Unknown you'll ever be
through this past trip the crew put aboard. The crew eats about
Never
let
it run into bad
could always get cigarettes when '400 pounds of rice a week and
To a mariner's true sight.
standing.
Always
manage some­
they wanted them. When I asked the 10 tons lasts about nine
how
to
pay
your
dues. A good
Lights of China's rivers
the Old Man for extra smokes a months.
Union
man
always
supports his
"Friday, when newsmen went
couple of times • we got them
—^Ancient lights—
union
to
keep
it
strong
for his
through the tanker, 'number one
right away.
You've burned a thousand years.
own
benefit.
When Captain Bornson came boy' was not in the galley. He
On the junks your radiance shivers
If you are going to quit ship­
aboard the ship at the start of had gone ashore for awhile and
ping, it only takes a three cent
More
wise
than
it
appears.
the trip we heard tales of him
stamp to send your book in for
that would make most any man
The
path
of
lights
retirement. Don't put your book
pack up and leave, but I believe
on
the bottom shelf, you may
—Guiding
lights—
I speak for the majority of the
need
it again sometime. It can
From cape to cape, Hatteras to Cod;
Send in the minutes of
crew when I say that he was a
again
be your livelihood.
your ship's meeting to the
good Skipper and very easy to
Through the nights our road you shape
I
was
one of those who let his
New York Hall. Only in that
get along with. - More than once
As through your charge we plod.
book
run
out, and take it from
way
can
the
membership
act
he went out of his way for us.
me, it's no picnic to sail a ship
on
your
recommendationsj
So, anybody who sails with
Will the lights
that is non-union. Think about it,
Captain Bronson in the future and then the minutes can be
—Guides of the Argonaut—
fellows,
and take good care of
Will probably not have to worry printed in the LOG for the
From
their
duty
ever
sever?
that
book
or permit — it's your
about sailing with a bucko. He benefit of all other SIU
bread
and
butter.
Ah,
the
lights
—
they've
read
my
thought;
crews.
appears to be an OK guy.
(Name Withheld)
They wink back: "Never, never."
P*i« Bluhm
To Ihe Editor:

Ramirez' Comment On Skate:
'Look Out For That Tail!'

Pete Gives OK
To K.O. Bomson,
Ship's Skipper

Log-A - Rhythms

Lights

Send Those Minutes

fi'

Keep Book Up,
Urges Brother
Who Fell Back

�Page Fourteen

Holds Cockroach
To Be Inferior
To Man — Maybe

TEE SEAFARERS

LOG

GALVANI FUNERAL RITES

Friday. AprU 22. 1943

Seafarer Warns Of Sharpie
Who Bilked Parents Of $30
To the Editor:

anything about me except that
I lived in Detroit.
I made a $75 draw in Miami
and wanted to send $50 home to
my folks. I went into a West­
ern Union office and he waited
outside for me. Well, as you
know, I had to give my mother's
address and name and telephone
number.

While I was on the SS-Noon­
To the Editor:
day we stopped in Miami, Flori­
Man prides himself on his in­
telligence. Our professors have
da and a supposedly SIU. seaman
peered into every phase of exist­
came aboard ship and hung
ence on this earth and into the
around for awlule. When I went
heavens beyond. The ant and the
down the gangway he shouted to
milky way have been studies by
me to wait, saying he would
brain trusters par excellence, all
walk to town with me.
of whom sport a string of let­
While walking along the street
ters after their names. Their
DOUBLE CROSS
he told me that he was trying^to
learned tomes gather dust in
get to New Orleans to get his
Later I told him that I had to
archives around the world.
pay, but he didn't know how he get some radio tubes, so I had
I maintain that the lowly
would get there. He asked me if to go back to the ship and get
cockroach — seagoing; variety i—
I \Vould stow him away on the them. He said he would wait
has as great an IQ as the sav­
Noonday, and I told him I for me in some coffee shop and
ants. Seamen know them well
Zebulon Pike crewmembers stand beside the body of
wouldn't take any chance like we would go swimming after­
from long experience, but have
crewmember Louis Galvani who fell overboard from the ship that, as there was a stiff fine for wards. I felt that he wouldn't
neglected to write books about
on December 21. The report of Galvani's death was carried such activity.
wait for me, and sure enough he
them.
in the LOG of January 21.
wasn't there. Right away I
I
didn't
know
Miami
very
Cockroaches have been known
wrote
a letter to my mother ex­
well,
and
he
said
he
didn't
have
to study charts and plot the voy­
plaining
what had happened and
any
place
to
go
so
we
walked
age from day to day to deter­
not
to
pay
any attention to let­
around
and
I
bought
him
some­
mine when they were heading
ters
or
phone
calls that come
thing
to
eat
and
took
him
to
a
into colder or warmer latitudes.
movie. He started asking me from anyone in Florida.
One old seaman swears that they
questions about my home in De­
It got to Detroit too late, the
pulled the blankets from his
aboard. We have Jackie (Kid) troit and my parents and rel­ damage had, been done. The
bunk after studying the charts. To the Editor:
Beig. former world's junior wel­ atives. I got suspicious of him same day I was in Miami he
They saw the ship was headed
This scow—the Irvin S. Cobb terweight champion in the crew. and gave him phony names. He had called home and talked to
to colder weather.
Edward Robinson said he would likq to write me my father on the phone. He dis­
When the oldtimer swore that —is an old rusty Liberty that we
took
out
of
New
York
in
Decem(Ed. Note: Due to anti-Com­ in Detroit, so I gave him a guised his voice to sound like
they had returned the blankets
her
with
a
load
of
coal
for
mine. He asked for $20, telling
munist precautions in Manila, phony address.
when we reached warmer climmy
father that he'd missed the
ates two weeks later, I was in- Japan. It was supposed to be the LOG distributor has been
I was still suspicious of him.
about
a
three
months
trip,
but
ship
and needed money to get
unable to contact SIU ships.)
clined to believe that he had
Up to that time he didn't know
we
are
now
running
between
to
Tampa.
&gt;
stretched the truth a bit.
Cockroaches are good sailors Manila and Yokohoma with
He also sent three collect tele­
and stick with the ship. They ^ Army cargo
grams asking for the money.
are not fond of union ships The Army is supposed to be
Naturally my father thought I
where fumigation is rigidly en­ out of the Philippines by June
needed the money and sent it
15, so there is quite a number
along. He hadn't as yet received
forced.
Old seamen vow that they of Liberties on this run.
my letter of warning.
nal reguarly. I cannot presume The way I figure it this char­
knew America was at war as We had a bad accident while To the Editor:
soon as we mortals did. How? in Manila. One of the crew- I wish to thank you ^.for the upon you kindness for regular acter got the information from
He could not tell.
Western Union about my name,
members, a Wiper, fell off a two copies of the SEAFARERS free copies.
I am official representative of address and phone number.
RIGHT FLANK. HUT!
stage while painting the engine LOG you forwarded me re­
I was lying in my bunk one room overhead. He landed on cently. I have with interest the French Government, Mer­
I can describe him: He is
night thinking of the mess we his back on the floor plates, in­ perused both copies, but have chant Marine Department, offi­ about 24 years old, 5 feet 10
sailors wft-e in and our chances juring himself quite seriously. been unable to find any specific cer of the maritime administra­ inches, blue eyes, blond hair
of coming out of it alive when I It looks like, he will spend a mention of subscription rates to tion, and your journal offers par­ and claims to know quite a bit
ticular interest to m'e as a about radio and television. He
heard 'a squeaking noise. I long time in the hospital in your journal.
switched on the light, and there Manila. His name is Esalan, but
Perhaps it is intended for maritime officer because it deals knows New Orleans pretty well.
was a platoon of cockroaches do­ the fellows know him as Tony members of the SIU only. In not only with US policy on all
This took place on March 26.
ing close order drill on the bulk- Karabo.
that case I do .not know how I mairtime affairs but also has a and I want to warn all Seafarers
head. West Pointers couldn't We laid eighteen days in will be able to obtain this jour- personal policy upholding sea­ to watch out for this character.
men's privileges and-rights.
have marched better. Naturally Manila but were unable to pick
He got about $30 out of my
the light broke up the parade. up any LOGs. We would ap­
Inasmuch as I am an adminis­ folks, but he might get more out
In late years, the roaches have preciate receiving LOGs for Jan.,
trator of the French professional of the next fellow.
grown to great size, but are not Feb. and March. All the boys
seamen, I take this policy very
Harry D. French
as fast on their feet as they are wondering about the elec­
much to heart.
were in the square-rigged days. tions and about the develop­
Captain J. J. Audigou
They are well fed now and are ments of late.
Washington. D. C.
apt to become lazy. Salt horse Incidentally, I believe this is
and hard tack made them tough the only ship afloat with a for­ To the Editor:
(Ed. Note: Although the gen­
Check the slop chest be­
Just a few lines to inform you eral practice is to send the
and active.
mer woidd champion " boxer
fore
your boat sails. Make
Long study has convinced me
that we have a radio speaker in
LOG
only
to
members
of
the
sure that the slop chest con­
that sailing ship crews and seaour midst: Baltimore Port Agent
Hold It, Please
Union,
persons
directly
con­
tains an adequate supply of
boots running about had much
Curly Rent?. Curly spoke over
to do with the speed developed
radio: station WITH on the sub­ nected with the maHtime in­
all the things you are liable
by seagoing cockroaches. Latv of
ject- of the Bland bill now before dustry are invited to sub­
to need. If it doew't, call the
scribe. The LOG—free of cost
survival, according to Darwin.
Congress.
Union Hall immeSiately.
But, with all their . .ntelligence
He did a fine job and helped —^will be mailed to you
weekly.)
and agility, by which ihey have
to spread the word to the gen­
survived, they have been unable
Biiiili eral public on the importance of
•to invent the atom bomb. Al­
CHRISTMAS AT SEA
this legislation.
though they are leaders of the
It's a darn shame that the
insect world, they are definitely
voters and taxpayers of our in­
secondary to man.
land states do not get to hear
Maybe they know too much to
and understand the meaning of
go ahead with the project from
this bill in regards to the wel­
the. point of view of cockroach
fare of all working people. The
survival. TJiey may be one step
people of these inland states
ahead of man after all.
grow and mill the grain that is
Wandering Seafarer
shipped in foreign bottoms. If
these people were told the score,
maybe their Congressmen would
.HUSBAND AT SEA,
have the pressure put on them
WIFE REQUESTS
to our -benefit.
LOG FOR HOME
How about the Great Lakes
agents writing up some articles
To the Editor:
for the midwest press?
- My husband and I would ap­
' Anyway, Curly gave a good
preciate it very much if you
The Steward of the Irvin talk and my family and friends
would put us on the mailing
list of the SEAFARERS LOG. S. Cobb is caught snapping enjoyed it. We could' do with a
My husband is-at sea now, and pictures of local scenery in lot more of these talks, they are
I can't get a copy of the LOG. Kamaschi, Japan, a stop made all educational.
Well, Brothers, here's hoping
I am too far from the. Hall to by the Cobb during a recent
steward A. Schiavone, right, submitted this picture of the
jaunt to the Far East. Pic the Bland bill will pass so that
pick up a copy each week.
Zebulon Pike's yuletide decore. Ship this week completed a
submitted by Edward Robin­ we may continue sailing.
Mrs. L. F. Waller
Jack Diamond round-the-world trip. Seafarer at left is Jerry Maher, ^B.
son. ship's delegate.
Brooklyn. N. Y.

SS Cobb Shuttling To Japan
For Army; Crewman Injured

Policies Of Log Interest
French Maritime Official

Praises Rentz'
Radio Address
On Bland Bill

Check It— But Good

�JME S E Af 4RE RS 19 C

Fridarr Apxil 22, 1349

Page Fifteen

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings In Brief
GALVESTON — Chairman.
Keith Alsep, 7311:: Recording
SecretEury. Jeff Morrison, 34213;
Reading Clerk, R. Wilburn,
34379.
Minutes of meetings in other
Branches read and accepted. Ag­
ent reported that shipping has
been fair in past two weeks,-but
that a slight dip was expected
in the coming week. Negotia­
tions with the G&amp;H Towing
Company, he,said, are proceed­
ing favorably. The Union has
already been successf;U_ in ob­
taining a change in some of the
working rules, which was the
principal demand made this year.

other Branch minutes read and
approved. Agent, Patrolman and
Dispatcher reported on state of
shipping, which continues to be
poor. One ship paid off, men
SHIPPED SHIPPED SHIPPED TOTAL
STWDS. SHIPPED supplied to three ships in all,
ENG.
; DECK
officials reported. Under Good
6
29 and Welfare there was a 303
20
351 minute discussion of Union af­
94
119
138
26 fairs.
10
8
8
Adjourned
with
160
204 present.
73
74
57
16
3
9
4
X % %
30
14
6
10
SAN JUAN—Cfaairman, T. E.
20 Banning, 3038; Reading Clerk, J.
7
6
7
111 Lincoln. 35046; Recording Secre­
35
32
44
280 tary, G. Litchfield, 44794.
132
71
77 .
132
35
47
50
New Business from minutes of
40
10
14
16
33 other Branches read and ap­
_ 6
8
19
proved. Agent made verbal re1,272
381
424
467

A&amp;6 Shaping from Manh 23 To Apnf 6
REG.
STWDS.

TOTAL
REG.

10
17
92
108
21
28
118
102
36
22
14
22 ,
10
11
36
42
59
102
81
70
-48
49
' 15
25

16
103
20
107
25
21
12
42
111
3750
11

43
303
69
327
83
5733
*120
272
183
147
51

638

555

1,693

KEa
DECK

Boston
Philadelphia..
Baltimore
Norfolk
Savannah—
Tampa
Mobile
New Orleans
Galveston
San Juan....
West Coast
GRAND TOTAL

,
...

REG.
ENa

480

was urged to stay sober on the ports read and accepted. Com­
job at all times and perform his munication referred to Dispatch­
job in the prescribed manner. er. Voted to allow one Brother
Motion carried to refer all writ­ The Union Will benefit consider­ to shift from Stewards Depart­
ten requests from members seek­ ably from such conduct, it was ment to Deck. Secretary- Treas­
ing to be excused from meeting pointed out. Meeting adjourned urer's report read and accepted.
to Dispatcher. Trial committee's at 7:55 P.M., with 112 members Patrolman - Dispatcher reported
on shipping rate. Under Good
report read and accepted. In in attendance.
and
Welfare there was ^extensive
% i.
view of fact that Teamsters are
discussion
on the transportation
BALTIMORE—Chairman, Wil­
having some trouble with fink
clause
and
the importance of
cabs in Texas City, membership liam Renfz, 26445; Recording
voting
on
the
transportation is­
was advised to refuse to patron­ Secretary, G. A. Masterson, 20297;
sue.
Minute
of
silence for de­
ize them. Motion carried that Reading Clerk, A1 Stansbury,
parted
Brothers.
Meeting ad­
any man caught riding a fink 4683.
journed
with
63
present.
cab in Texas City should be
Four men took the Oath of
i. X X
brought up on charges- Under
Obligation. Charges read. Pre­ SAVANNAH — Chairman, W.
Good and Welfare, every one
vious Baltimore meeting's min­ V. GUck, 48741; Reading Clerk,
utes read and accepted. Secre- M. C. Wells, 100893; Recording
Secretary, J. Dxawdy. 28523.

formed membership of a dispute
in which the AFL Meat Cutters
Union is involved and he urged
all hands to help these people
out in any way they can, partic­
ularly by volunteering for picket
duty. The Meat Cutter's inter­
national office lias already ex­
pressed appreciation for the aid
given by Seafarers so far. Three
men took the Oath of Obligation.
One minute of silence in mem-

port which was accepted. Agent
thanked members for coopera­
tion, and complimented the crew
of the SS Frances for bringing
in a clean ship with no beefs of
any kind. He said that only
major beef was on a Waterman
ship, which was to be settled in
New York. Shipping reported to
be very good. Also pointed out
that Hall had been painted.
Minute of silence for departed
Brothers. Possible ways to im­
prove the San Juan Hall were
discussed under Good and Wel­
fare. Adjoui-ned with 86 mem­
bers present.
Previous Savannah minutes ory of departed Brothers. Meet­
iCr
4. 4.
read and accepted. Accepted Sec­ ing adjourned at 8:10 PM, with
SIU, A&amp;G District
NEW
YORK
— Chairman, A.
253
members
present.
retary-Treasurer's financial
re­
Michelet,
21184;
Recording SecBALTIMORE
14 North Gay St.
4* 4- i"
ports and voted to post them on
letary
F.
Stewart,
4035; Reading
William Rentz, Asant
Mulberry 4540
MOBILE — Chairman, L.
board. Headquarters report read
BOSTON
276 State St.
Clerk,
R.
Matthews,
154.
Neira;
Recording
Secretary,
H.
and accepted. Agent reported
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Richmond 2-0140
»
Fischer,
59;
Reading
Clerk,
shipping
fairly
slow,
but
said
Dispatcher
Ri&lt;5imond 2-0141
Motion carried to accept re­
report that there might be an upturn James CarrolL 14,.
GALVESTON
306'/,—23rd St. tary-Treasuror's financial
port
of delegation to SIU's
Keith AIMP. A«mt
Phone 2-8448 read and accepted. Minutes of as three ships were due to pay­
fourth
biennial convention.
MOBU-E
L South Lawrence St. other Branch meetings read and
off. Agent's report accepted. Min­ Minutes of meeting in other Agent reported improved ship­
Cal Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-1754
accepted. Reports of the follow­ utes of other Branches were read Branches accepted as read. Mo­
NEW ORLEANS
523 Bienville St.
tion carried to accept Agent's re­ ping and expressed hope that it
E. Shappard, Agent
Magnolia 6112-6113 ing were accepted: Port Agent; and all were accepted. One min­
would continue. He cited the
NEW YORK
51 Beaver St. Deck, Engine and Steward Pa­ ute of sUenee for departed Bro­ port. Communications read and
Robin
Trent as the port's "ship
Joa Algijia, Agent
HAnover 2-2784 trolmen; Dispatcher, and Hospi­
thers. Two men were Obligated. acted upon. Trial committee re­ of the week," which came in
NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St.
tal Committee. Motion carried to Adjourned at 7:35 with 121 pres­ ported. Secretary-Treasurer's re­
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
ports were approved after they with a tip-top crew. SecretaryPHtLAOELPHIA
337 Market St, table proposal calling for piosting ent.
were
i-ead to- the membership. Treasurer's and Headquarters re­
Ji. Sheehan, Agent
Market 7-1635 of registration shipping list. Un­
s.
t
Meeting
voted to adjourn at 8:10 ports read and accepted. Minutes
SAN FRANCISCO
85 Third St. der Good and Welfare several
BOSTON—Chairman, T. Flem­
Frenchy Michelet, Agent Douglas 2-5475 members took deck to discuss
with
250
members in attendance. of previous meetings in other
ing. 30821; Recording Secretary,
SAN jyAN, P.R
252 Ponce de Leon
ports read and accepted. Patrol­
4 4.
L. Craddock, Agent
San Juan 2-8996 Union-won conditions. They urg­ J. Sweeney, 1530; Reading Clerk,
men's
and Dispatcher's reports
NORFOLK — Chairman, J. S.
SAVANNAH
2 Abcraorai St. ed wider acceptance of jobs on E. B. Tilley, 75.
accepted.
One minute of silence
White, 56; Recording Secretary,
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728 Ore ships. Meeting adjourned at
in
memory
of departed Brothers.
TACOMA
1519 Paciftc St. 8:15 P.M., with 225 members
New Business of all Branch Ben Rees, 95; Reading Clerk, J.
Charges
read.
Oath of Obliga­
Broadway 0484
minutes were read and accepted. A. Bullock. 4747.
present.
TAMPA
1809-1811 N. Franklin St.
tion
administered
to two mem­
Headquarters and Secretary;
ir Ik
Ray White, Agent
Phone M-1323
Norfolk
minutes
heard
and
ap­
bers.
Meeting
adjourned
at 7:45
WILMINGTON, CaUL, 227 4 Avalon Blvd.
PHILADELPHIA — Chairman. Treasurer's reports were read proved. New Business only of PM, with 917 members present.
Terminal 4i.2874
D. C. HaU, 43372; Recording and accepted. Agent made verbal
HEADQUARTERS. . 51 Beaver St., N.Y.C.
Secretary, W. Gardner, 42941; report which was accepted, as
SECRETARY-TREASURER
Reading Clerk. Larry While,
Paul Hair
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
2716.

SIfl HflUS

Lindsey WilUanu
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURER
Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
Jose|A Volpian

Get To Branch Meetings On Time

Minutes of previous meetings
By PAUL GONSORCHIK
on other Branches read and ac­
As often as it has been stress­ on time. Ninety-nine percent of
cepted. Port Agent stated that were the reports of the Patrol­
ed,
it is necessary to point out the membership gets there on
job of getting new quarters in man and the Dispatcher. M.
again to the membership the im­ the hour, and those who arrive
SUP
shape would be completed by Buckley, V. Carlson and G. Rus­
portance of arriving at member­ late should be penalized for in­
HONOLULU
16 Msrchant St. Tuesday or Wednesday. Painting sell were elected from the floor
ship
meetings on time. Regular conveniencing the others.
Phone 5-8777 of the two floors is being done to serve as a Ballotting Commit­
PORTLAND........Ill W. Burnsida St.
meetings
are held in New York
To be on the safe side start
Beacon 4336 by a contractor, who is doing a tee. The committee later report­ «very other Wednesday at the early and get there a few min­
fine
job
of
it,
Agent
reported.
ed,
and
their
report
was
approv­
RICHMOND. CaUt
257 5th St.
Roosevelt Auditorium, 100 East utes ahead of time, instead of
Phone 2599 Second floor will house offices ed. Minute of silence for depart­
showing up just before the meet­
SAN FRANCISCO.
59 Clay St. and Dispatcher's room. Recrea­ ed Brothers. Extensive discussion 17th Street at 7 P.M.
Douglas 2-8363
In
order
to
get
under
way
and
ing adjourns. A sad story of a
tion room will cover entire third under Good and Welfare. Meet­
SEATTLE..
66 Seneca St.
dispose
of
the
multitude
of
busi­
subway
breakdown or a flat tire
Main 0290 floor. Communications read and ing adjourned with 85 present.
ness
which
needs
membership
won't
do
you much good.
WILMINGTON
440 Avalon Blvd. acted upon. Motion carried to
4. 4 4.
attention, a rule has been adopt­
While on the subject of co­
Terminal 4-3131 donate $10 to aid crippled chil­
NEW ORLEANS—-Chairman,
dren. Secretary-Treasurer's fin­ Jack Parker, 27S33; Recording ed whereby registration cards operation with the Union, all
Canadian District
ancial report read and accepted. Secretary, Bill Fredericks, 94; will not be stamped after 7:30. Brothers are urged to lend a
Members who arrive after that hand when asked to volunteer
Headquarters. .512 McGill St., Montreal Building Committee's report ac­ Reading Clerk, Back Stephens,
hour will be out of Idck.
for a Union project or beef.
MONTREAL... ^.1227 PhUips Square cepted. Motion carried to refer 78.
These matters that come before
Plateau 6700—Marquette 5909 excuses for not attending meet­
At every meeting several late­
PORT ARTHUR. .'...63 Cumberland St.
The following were accepted comers ask the Dispatcher to the membership require the full
ing
to
Dispatcher.
Phone North 1229
as read: New Orleans financial stamp their cards, but the only participation of the members on
4&gt; 4&gt; 4&gt;
PORT COLBORNE
103 Durham St.
the beach. If the Union is to
'
Phone: 8591
TAMPA — Chairman, R, H. report, Secretary-Treasurer's re­ (XMJU-se available to these Bro­ continue to be successful in its
TORONTO
.IHA-Jarvie St.
Hall, 26080; Reading Clerk, S. port, and minutes of other thers is to show up at the Hall battles for better conditions and
Elgin 57ie
BraiKih meetings. Agent reported the next morning for a new
VICTORIA, B.C
602 Boughton St. Kasmirsky, 23589: Recording Sec­
job security, every member must
on
high spots of SIU's fourth shipping card.
Empire 4631 retary, N. Ellis, 16.
do
his part.
biennial convention. He also re­
With meetings coming only
VANCOUVER
565 Hamilton St.
The
job cannot be thrown on
ported
on
the
status
of
shipping
No
minutes
of
previous
meet­
every
two
weeks,
it
is
not
ask­
Pacific 7824
the
backs
of a few Brothers.
ing.
New
Business
only
of
.other
in
this
port.
The
Agent
ining
too
much
that
the
men
be
»..n
—;

�T H E S E A^F A k E R S 16 ^

Page Sixteen

CTMA Attempt To Halt
Count Of CS.Ballots
Thrown Out Of Court
NEW. YORK, April 22—As
the LOG went to press, word
was received that counting
of the ballots cast in the
Cities Service collective bar­
gaining election will begin
at 1 P.M. today in the
NLRB's regional office here.
A temporary injunction against
New^ York NLRB Director
Charles T. Douds, halting the
counting of ballots in the Cities
Service election, was set aside
this week by Federal Judge
Simon Rifkin and the way clear­
ed for immediate tallying of the
votes cast by crewmembers of
nine Cities Service ships. Count­
ing of the ballots is expected to
begin shortly.
The injunction—one more in a
long series of delaying actions
against the SIU—^was granted by
Federal Judge Samuel Kaufman
en April 15, upon the petition
of 12 Cities Service Tankermen's
Association members, who claim­
ed they had received no notice
of the election and that balloting
bad been improperly conducted.
The CTMA men, in addition to
the injunction, also asked the
court to throw out the entire
election.
• In dismissing the writ Judge
Rifkin stated that Federal Dis­
trict courts had no jurisdiction
in such matters and the .com­
plaints of the men should prop­
erly be addressed to the NLRB.
SUPPPORTS DECISIONS
The decision was in line with
the position taken by Federal
Judge John W. Clancy in djsmissing an injunction granted to
the Cities Service Company in
February.
Judge Clancy stated at that
time that the counting of the
ballots involved no damage to
the company and that they
should rely on NLRB machinery
for presentation of grievances.
The twist employed in gaining
ttie injunction dismissed this
week was to make it appear that
CS employees and not the com­
pany were taking action against
the NLRB. Judge Rifkin, how­
ever, ruled that regardless «who
was bringing the action about
the Federal District court had
no jui'isdiction in the matter.
The list of twelve men who
brought about the temporary in­
junction was headed by David
Furman, exposed in the SEA­
FARERS LOG as a Cities Serv­
ice front man and principal or­
ganizer for CTMA.
PAST MANEUVERS
After exhausting its string of
delaying tactics before the NLRB
without success. Cities Service
took resort to the Q^ourts on Feb­
ruary 22, where it obtained an
injunction which halted the vot­
ing and called for impounding
Of the ballots. The ban on vot­
ing was lifted a few days later
and the ballots were freed from
impounding on March 7 by Judge
Clancy's order.
Outside of the coiurts the com­
pany resorted to harrassing tac­
tics during the conduct of the
election.
Attempts by the NLRB to poll

rricifvy. April 22, 1949

TMs is tiieonly thijib
Keepiti^ymi alive/'

the ci-ews aboard the ships—a
custpmary procedure — were de­
nied by the company, making
necessary the voting of all crews
outside the pier gates.
The first ship to be balloted
was the Fort Hoskins, tied up
at Port Socony, Staten Island,
New Yoi-k. Men seeking to vote
had to leave the confines of the
dock and cast their ballots in
the pouring rain.
On the Winter Hill, Bents Fort,
Royal Oak, Bradford Island, and
Archers Hope the crews were
forced to leave their ships to
vote.

Stay Aboard Ship
All pro-Union men aboard
Cities Service Oil Company
ships are urged to remain
on their vessels until they
win the protection of an SIU
contract. The company is
making every effort to re­
place men with known prounion leanings. The count­
ing of the Cities Service sea­
men's ballots, soon to take
place, is a step nearer the day
when Cities Service seamen
can throw off the yoke of
company domination.
Stay on the ships until the
fight is won.

Aki^lks Are Found h All Groups
By JOSEPH I. FLYNN
Any discussion as to whether
seamen are the worst drinkers,
would lead us nowhere and, to
save time and come right to
the point, the answer is no.
This dubious honor has been
claimed by lumberjacks, paint­
ers, railroad-workers, newspaper­
men, oil workers, engineers (The
Rambling Wreck from Georgia
Tech"), and naturally, seamen.
And, believe it or not, a bar­
ber told me that there are more
drunks in his profession than any
other.
The reasons, in all probability,
that a particular group claims
such a negative honor—and it's
usually claimed by the alcoholic
of the group—are first, as a com­
pensation. If we can't do like
the rest, it's because we're dif­
ferent and here you will get
the various reasons.
With painters, it would be that
the lead in the paint effects their^
lungs and whiskey helps avoid
these effects.
With newspapermen, the hours
they keep and pressure they're
under keeps them tense. With
the lumberjack and the seamen,
it could be they're making up
for lost time, once back in a
social stratum.
So with all groups, reasons
can always be found by the in­
dividuals of said groups. It'« a
matter of blaming the group as
a whole for the behavior of the
person concerned.
Secondly, drinking customs are
over-glamorized—many associate
drinking with good fellowship,
sportsmanship, freedom, matur­
ity, and goodwill.

Thirdly, is the idea that a
strong man—a he-man, a real
guy—drinks and holds his liq­
uor, and that a person's virility
is the measure of the quantity
he can take.
Although such generalizations
give us food for thought, they
are wrong, and serve as excuses
for the problem drinker to con­
tinue his down-hill path.
The first
is a compensation
for an inferiority, a weakness
and, as mentioned, it's the al­
coholic who is blaming the
group for his predicament in so­
ciety and trying to gain sup­
port for his inability to control
his drinking.
The second is a misunderstand­
ing of the drinking gustoms pass­
ed down to us. For, although
they can be traced back and are
based on such ideas as those
mentioned, these customs were
always controlled by tribal ta­
boos which set aside certain
times and occasions for drinking.
Today there are no restraining
taboos. Each individual is free
tb cho-ose his own rules, and the
alcoholic generally takes advan­
tage of the ones that best serve
his own convenience and ego.
The third, the amount an in­
dividual can drink has nothing
to do with .his manhood or
strength. The alcoholic in his
early stages is usually the one
who drinks others under the
table, . for his ' experience and
practice have built up a toler­
ance to large quantities. While
the infrequent drinker, having
no such tolerance, soon feels the
effects that alcohol has on his
system.
If we have now decided that

no one occupation has a mon­ It was further found that, in
opoly on drinking, the questiorr the Indian culture, the tribes had
of nationality may come up. The many taboos pointed at restric­
Irish are noted for their wild tion of hostility to set times. In
drinking. It's forbidden by law the wars between tribes^ the
to sell liquor to the American capturing of enemy tribesmen
Indians, while among the Jews was a time when the tribe as a
we find a very low percentage whole took part in ceremonies
of torture venting pent-up hos­
of alcoholism.
tility
on their unfortunate vic­
There has been found no dif­
ference in the physical make­ tims.
up of any nationality or race, so These occasions were control­
it's not that one has a weaker led affairs, involving many ta­
physical resistance to alcohol boos and customs. Alcohol ef­
than another. But, in studying fects the control centers of the
the social and cultural patterns brain and here we see the In­
of various groups, sorhe helpful dian, with no restrictions on his
behavior, letting himself go, re­
information was gathered.
With the Irish, drink played | verting to venting his emotions
a very irnportant part in all their and hostilities on those about
social relationships. Also it was him.
/
The Jewish people have- very
found that horseplay and fight­
ing was an accepted part of strong religious customs in which
drink plays an important part.
these customs.
The
attachment the Jew has to
Here drink acted as an out­
let for the pgnt-up emotions of his religious ideals holds him'
an imaginative , and sensitive back from abusing the privilege
people, whose lives were re­ on other occasions.
The Jewish people, as a group,
stricted by religious views and
have always been strongly cen­
repressed by England.
The Irish, like most other im­ sored and any abnormal behav­
migrants, on first coming to this ior wouW make the precarious,
country stuck.close together dnd position they hold that much.
,
kept their customs. The second more misunderstood.
It can be agreed that environ­
and third generation, although
not keeping the customs, still mental factors play an import­
have the attributes. It's believed ant part in, the making of an
by many that there is something alcoholic, but to continue to pre­
queer about the Irishman who sume that environment or na­
tionality or any other one factor
does not drink.
is
the determining one, is false.
The studies made of the Am­
Alcoholics can be found among
erican Indian found that certain
tribal laws restricted the drink­ all groups—rich, poor, plumbers,
ing of spirits—probably ferment­ priests, lawyers, salesmen and
ed fruits or vegetables, discover­ seamen.
Alcoholism is a sickness and
ed by them to release a spirit
within them and free them for as such is not a respecter of
Class, color, creed or racg.
a time from fear.

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9906">
                <text>April 22, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9981">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 15</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10002">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10043">
                <text>HEADLINES&#13;
CANADIAN SEAMEN FLOCKING TO SIU CANADIAN DISTRICT&#13;
'CANADA,TOO,WILL BE SIU SAY SEAMEN,GLAD TO GER RID OF COMMIE-DOMINATED CSU&#13;
CSU GOONS FAIL TO HALT CANADIAN SEAFARERS&#13;
CANADIAN SEAMEN TURNING TO SEAFARERS&#13;
KEEP HANDS OFF BEEF,SIU TELLS COMMIES&#13;
SHIPPING SPURT AND STRIKE AID KEEP 'EM BUSY IN NEW ORLEANS&#13;
MOBILLE SHIPPING PICKS UP A POOR START&#13;
NEW YORK SHIPPING AT BEST MARK IN WEEKS&#13;
UNEXPECTED SHIPPING  BOOST&#13;
CONGRESS PASSES 50 PERCENT ECA BILL&#13;
FOREIGN WELFARE PLANS PROVIDE MANY BENEFITS&#13;
SIU CANADIAN DISTRICT AIRS THE FACTD TO SEAMEN,PUBLIC&#13;
CSU SOUGHT TO DISRUPT CANADIANSHIPPING&#13;
LIES TO OWN MEMBERSHIP AND GOON TACTICS OF COMMIE CSU OFFICALS PROVE END'S NEAR&#13;
CSU TRESURY EMPTY AFTER TWO WEEKS;QUESTION;WHAT BECAME OF STRIKE FUNDS?&#13;
SEVEN MAJOR CSU ERRORS SPELL FAILURE&#13;
DISABLED ROBIN KETTERING PERILED BY SHIFT OF CARGO DURING NORTH ATLANTIC GALE&#13;
STEEL AGERS SQUARE AWAY FOR SMOOTH TRIP&#13;
BLACKBALL GIVEN BROOKLYN LAUNDRY BY TRENT SEAMEN&#13;
KATHRYN MEN VOTE CREW INQUIRIES IN SHIP FIRINGS&#13;
CTMA ATTEMPT TO HALT COUNT OF CS BALLOTS THROWN OUT OF COURT&#13;
ALCOHOLICS ARE FOUND IN ALL GROUPS&#13;
</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10044">
                <text>04/22/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10055">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10073">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10082">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13053">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="956" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="960">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/2efc56ab20c098b9de4c86a65c3f8948.PDF</src>
        <authentication>6b75636a7a0bf9927bb10c7f417aee70</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47436">
                    <text>RANK AND FILE HELPING
CANADIAN SID TO CREW SHIPS

HALIFAX, April 28—The communist leaders of
the discredited Canadian Seamen's Union were reel­
ing here today after a series of devastating blows
from the SIU Canadian District, which a month ago
signed a contract covering the 100-odd deep se^
ships operating from ports in eastern Canada.
In this stategic port, the SIU opened its own
permanent headquarters and Hiring Hall, crewed
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA two ships and accepted scores of membership appli"cations from ex-members of the CSU, who said
they were fed up with the CSU's communist leadNEW YORK. N. Y.. MONDAY. MAY 2. 1949
No. 16
VOL. XI

Cities Service Seamen Make Choice:
Its Ihe Seafarers By 89 Percent
NEW YORK —The At­
lantic and Gulf District of
the Seafarers International
Union scored a landslide vic­
tory in the recently conclud­
ed collective "bargaining el­
ection on nine Cities Service
ships, with the company's unli­
censed personnel casting 89 per­
cent of the valid ballots in fa­
vor of the Union.
The Cities Service tankermen's
overwhelming preference for the
SIU as their bargaining agent
was announced by the National
Labor Relations Board's regional
office here, shortly after the bal­
lot count was completed on Fri­
day, April 15.
This marked the second time
that Cities Service seamen have
decisively" chosen the SIU in an

New Halifax Hall
Seafarers, when in the port
of Halifax be sure to visit
the new SIU Hall. Registra­
tion. shipping and beefhandling facilities are avail­
able to the membership—and
you can meet your old ship­
mates. The new Hall's tele­
phone number is 3-8911.
(SEE PAGES 6-7 FOR
THE TEXT OF TWO
BROADCASTS BY THE
CANADIAN DISTRICT OF
THE SIU WHICH CLEAR­
LY AND EFFECTIVELY
"EXPLAINS THE ISSUES
INVOLVED.)

OS Tries Again
As the LOG went t.o press,
the Cities Service Company
was making a typieal lastminute effort to delay certi­
fication of the SIU. and keep
CS seamen from the pro­
tection of an A8EG contract.
The company, has filed 19
objections with the NLRB.
in support of its contention
that the election should be
invalidated. The regional
NLRB office will now in­
vestigate the claims, and
submit a report to Washing­
ton for final ruling.
NLRB collective bargaining el­
ection.
Last year the company's un­
licensed personnel gave the SIU
an 83 percent majority in bal­
loting aboard seven Cities Serv­
ice tankers. An eighth ship, the
Lone Jack, was to have been
voted but arrived in port too
late.
SECOND ELECTION
The battle to write a new
After being duly certified, the labor law opened in Washington
SIU took steps to negotiate a this week when the House of
contract for the eight ships and Representatives began debate
eight more acquired by the com­ on the administration-sponsored
pany subsequent to the election. Thomas-Lesinski bill, which calls
In an unprecedented ruling, how­ for repeal of the Taft-Hartley
ever, the NLRB ruled that a and reinstatement of the Wagner
second election for the nine un­ Act with minor changes.
voted ships was necessary before
The labor-backed measure is
the Union could be certified as expected to meet its severest
test early in debate, as oppo­
(Continued on Page 3)

'ers. Meanwhile, the commie
hatchetmen continued their
campaign of violence against
the SIU in Halifax and Mon­
treal, and vainly tried to
pretend that their four-week old
phony walkout was a genuine
strike.
The communists indicated their
readiness to engineer any kind
of a sell-out deal to tighten their
waning grip on Canadian sea­
men. •
The SIU Canadian District's
Halifax Hall was opened in the
face of threats by CSU Party
stooges to wreck it and burn it
down with the SIU inside.
However, the hall opened on
Monday, April 25, without in­
cident beyond the appearance be-

fore the door of an illegitimate
commie picketline, which was
bluntly ignored by a couple of
hundred Haligonian seamen anx­
ious to ship under SIU contract..
Seafarer Roy (Frenchy) La
Pierre, an Haligonian and a vet­
eran of eight years in the SIU,
was named Port Agent, with
Alan Macdonald as assistant.
Communist attempts at terror­
ism began the next day. A gang
of commie goons sent ofut by the
CSU leaders assaulted a young
Haligonian with a semi-paralyz­
ed leg, whose only offense was
that he had been seen entering
the SIU Hall, and had been
(Continued on Page 3)

Battle For T-H Repeal Opens In Congress
sition forces have offered as a
substitute the Wood bill, a meas­
ure described by labor leaders as
being more severe than the TaftHartley Act. (See page 16 for the
AFL analysis of the Wood bill.)
Despite a note of cautious op­
timism among administration
leaders concerning the ThomasLesinski bill's passage, few Con­
gressmen and labor figures ex­
pect the bill to pass, without

amendments, to win over the
"middle-of-the-road" votes.
Amendments expected to be
added to the Thomas-Lesinski
bill call for:
1. Strengthening of the na­
tional emergency strike section
by permitting Government seiz­
ure of plants for a limited period
while an emergency board
studied the dispute.
2. More explicit free-speech

guarantees for employers.
3. Loyalty oaths by union offi­
cers and employers alike.
4. Require unions to file finan­
cial reports.
If
the
measure squeezes
through the House, it is ex­
pected that treatment will be
much the same in the Senate
where the line-up of forces
closely paraUels that of the
House.

�Page Two

TBB SEAF ABB kS

SEAFARERS LOG
I '

Published Three Times a Month by the .

SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
/

BOG

Bibadfoy, Mig 2, 1^49^

. HOW ABOUT THIS EASY.
FtTTlNS

WITH STRAPS ALL

w WAYboww//

•

Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor
At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
—
HAnover 2-2784
Entered as second class matter June 15, 1945, at the Post Office
in New York, N. Y.," under the* Act of August 24, 1912.
267

New Shackles For - Old
The eyes of organized labor throughout the nation
will be focused sharply on Washington for the next few
days as one of the most important current legislative
battles is fought to a conclusion. At this moment, the
House is backing this bill, which would repeal the TaftHartley law and replace it with an amended form of the
Wagner Act.
Normally there should be nothing to it. Organized
labor, representing a block of 16 million of the nation's
working men and women,, has voiced its solid objection
to the Taft-Hartley law. Also opposed to the anti-labor
measure are multitudes of others, from progressive, fairminded representatives of industry—who recognize that
labor restrictions are not conducive to harmonious labormanagement relations—to housewives, who know more
than anyone else that the sta^ards of the American
home are the result of a free trade union movement.
Taft-Hartley law proponents hate to admit it, but they
realize that sentiment is against the present law. So they've
cooked up a substitute and they hope to put it over on
the American people. They call this new labor-shackling
measure the Wood Bill. But call it what they will, it's
nothing more than Taft-Hartley—and worse.
The legislative battle between the Thomas-Lesinski
labor forces and the Taft-Hartley-Wood reactionaries
might be a tough one. Every trade union member should
let his representative know how he feels .about this issue.
You can help in this fight by writing to the members
of Congress from your state and district. Tell them you
want the Thomas-Lesinski Bill passed. It's our fight. Let's
get into it!

Hospital Patients
When entering the hospital
notify the delegates by post&lt;
card, giving your name and
the number of your ward.
Mimeographed Postcards
can be obtained free at the
Social Service desk.

Staten Island Hospital

Men Now In The Mtn-ine Hospitals

Cities Service Victory

You can contact your Hos­
pital delegate at the Staten
Island Hospital at the follow­
ing times:
Tuesday — 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
(on 5th and 6th floors.)
Thursday — 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
(on 3rd and 4th floors.)
Saturday — 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
(on 1st and 2nd floors.)

These are the Union Brothers currently in the marine hospitals,
as reported by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging
heavily on their hiuids. Do. what you can to cheer them up by
For the second time in a year, the Cities Service writing them.
Company has been kayoed in a collective bargaining
NEPONSET HOSPITAL
M. J. LUCAS
election and the arm of the Seafarers has been raised high
H. F. BEEKER
R. A. BLAKE
in victory. The 89 percent majority rolled up for the L. BALLESTERO
V.' E. GROVES
SIU in the recent balloting shows that CS tankermen J. S. CAMPBELL
O. O. MILLAN
H. MILLION
F. CHRISTNER
are even more convinced of the need for SIU represen­ V. W. CHESNER
L. McCUNE
A. J. JANELLO
G. CARROLL
tation than they were a year ago, when the Union emerged J. T. EDWARDS
N. VRYDENBERGER
I,
H.
FRENCH
P. ADKINS
from the first election with an 83 percent majority on
E. FERRER
F. KORVATIN
Se Se A
the seven ships voted.
NEW ORLEANS HOSPITAL
V. JIMINEZ
G. P. REAGAN
J,
T.
KEMPT
•
V.
HOLTON
PETE
SADAWSKI
Specifically, the results prove once again that when­
K.
G.
LUNDBERG
J.
SCHUMSKY
WM.
R.
GARDNER
ever unorganized seamen get the chance. they will over­
C. L. MOATS
J. TOWNSEND
E. MASSEY
whelmingly choose the Union that brings the maximum W.^SEARS
J. DENNIS
P. PAINTER
in Wages, working conditions and security—which is an­ H. SELBY
R. TOLER
WM. N. PRICE
other way of saying -that they'll vote for the SIU every- J. SILLAK
F. HIGGINS
J. JI. DANIEL JR:
Q. TULL
- G. CRABTREE
A. J. McAVOY
time.
L. TORRES
GEO. W. MEANEY
% X ^
T. WADSWORTH
MOBILE HOSPITAL
CHAS. A. BROWN
G. WOODS
C. LOCIGNO
J. B. BERRIER
F. ZESIGER
C. ELLZEY
F. C. HIGGASON
C.
C.
RAYFUSE
t
ft
J.
P. BUCKELEW
The discerning reader will have noticed that the
STEPHEN CONNER
STATEK ISLA1W5 HOSPITAL
TOMMIE WILKINS
SEAFARERS LOG has changed its frequency of publi­
M. C. BARLOW
ERNEST JARRETT
J. TURNER
cation, and now publishes three times a month—roughly, C. W. GOODWIN
JAMES LAFFIN
XXX
O. M. GREY
the 1st, 10th and 20th of each month—instead of weekly. J. A. MARCOUX
SAVANNAH HOSMTAL
K. J. NICHOLLS
Xhis move is in line with the Union's economy program, T. M.'BROyjN
C. BUTLER
J.
E. STICKER
G. LASS
which every part of the Union's apparatus is conforming D. HERON
K L. GUNDERSON
M. LACO JR.
W. STEWART
with.
ROTZ
R. A. BARRETT
L. C. COLE
.
LANDRY
WYCHE
While We would prefer to publish weekly—and in­ W. MEEHAN
Sr S. t
XXX
crease the LOG to 20 or 24 pages—we feel that the lag W. J. MAHONEY
-BALTIMORE HOSPITAL
M.
J.
OLSON
GALVESTON
HOSPITAI.
between issues is slight (about 3 days) and that the LOG D. P. GELINAS •
r
C. SIMMONS
J.
D.
JACKSON
win continue to supply the coverage that it did in the V. DACO
,
R. SOUZA *
L. R. WILLIAMSON
past.
C. P. ALVARES , .S'"
L. J. MCMILLAN
J. HAVERTY

•zj,

V i

New Log Schedule

•* ,1 ..

i
:
?

^

�THE SEAFARERS LOG

Monday. May 2, 1949

Page Three

CSU Rank And File Repudiate CP Leaders
(Continued from Page 1)
heard to say that he thought the
SIU was an allright union.
The two ships crewed by Can­
adian Seafarers in Halifax were
the Mount Sandra and the Dufferin Bell. In the opinion of
many the crewing of the Dufferin Bell broke the commies'
back.
The call to man the Mount
Sandra'came in before the Hali­
fax Hall could be opened. A
crew was brought by rail from
the SIU Hall in Montreal, clear­
ed by the Halifax Port Agent
and dispatched to the ship the
night of April 24. The .ship left
for Galveston the following day.
The Dufferin Bell, a coal burn­
er, was the first ship manned
from the shipping list of the
new Hall in Halifax.
CREWED QUICKLY
The call for a crew came at
noon on Wednesday, April 27,
and by two o'clock the 30-man
crew was on the way. Eighteen
of the 30 were ex-CSU members.
Agent La Pierre said.
Three other former CSU ships
sailed-with full SIU crews from
Montreal. These were the Pictou
County, the Mount Alta, both
freighters, and the Lady Nelson,
a passenger ship.
The phony strike called by the
CSU's communist leaders at the
end of Mabch was put over on
the CSU membership without a
strike vote, after the SIU Can­
adian District signed contracts
with the companies late in
March.
The CSU had been negotiating
with the companies fT5r a con­
tract renewal since mid-October.
Talks broke down, and the dis­
pute was referred to a Board
of Conciliation.
,
Sitting'on the thrjee-man Board
were a representative of the in­
dustry, a representative of the
CSU and a representative of the
Canadian government. The Board
recommended
an
agreement
which had the unanimous ap­
proval of the three members, in­
cluding the CSU's own spokes­
man.
Normally, in such a situation,
the recommendations of the
Board would have been accepted
by both parties to the dispute.
However, the communist leaders
of CSU, without disclosing the
facts of the agreement to their
membership, called a strike.

strength promoting communist
causes.
This was when the CSU lead­
ers called thejr strike, having to
send goon squads to remove some
of the disgruntled Canadian sea­
men from the ships the latter
did not wish to leave.
However, communist agitators
whipped up phony enthusiasm
for the strike on other ships or
induced the men to walk off by
using intimidatory tactics.
They even managed to hang
up ships in foreign ports, a
move which Dave Joyce, Secre­
tary-Treasurer of the SIU's Can­
adian District, denounced as evi­
dence of outright irresponsibil­
ity on the part of the CSU's com­
munist leaders. ,
However, despite the CSU's
claim of support from maritime
workers in foreign ports, most
of the ships tied up abroad were
being worked this week, and be­
ing sailed by SIU crews flown
out to man them. The CSU

crews of these vessels were fac­
ing severe legal reprisals at home
or abroad, and many were lan­
guishing in foreign jails. '
Meanwhile, the CSU's commu­
nist leaders showed their com­
plete willingness to make any
kind of a sell-out deal they could
find, in order to keep their hold
on the waterfronts of Montreal,
Halifax and other ports of East­
ern Canada.
RENEWED PACT
First they renewed their last
year's West Coast contract with­
out change. This agreement cov­
ered 19 ships in an area where
the SIU Canadian District, al­
ready had 31-«hips.
The CSU leaders had been ex­
pected to strike the West Coast
ships in an effort to bring pres­
sure on the East Coast, and the
move left the East Coast CSU
rank and file with their faith
in their leaders shaken.
Then, the CSU's leaders offer­
ed to make a deal on the East

Coast based on the West Coast
renewal.
In effect, this amounted to
telling those CSU members who
still were following their lead­
ers, that the whole "strike" ac­
tion was a joke in the first place.
SIU Canadian District officials
reported that this proposal was
not sitting very well with CSU
rank and filers who had been on
the beach for a month, sleeping
on the dirty floors of CSU halls,
or having the book thrown at
them in foreign courts.
Accordingly, the SIU officials
said that there would be more
CSU men applying for member­
ship in the SIU Canadian Dis­
trict, a prediction that was be­
ing borne out at this writing.
Actually, as Dave Joyce em­
phasized in a series of radio
broadcasts from Halifax over
station CJCH, the original aim
of the CSU's communist leaders
was not to win their so-called
strike, but to completely disrupt

and discredit the Canadian mer­
chant marine.
The evidence of this rested in
the fact that the CSU leaders
failed to make the elementary
plans that a seamen's strike re­
quires for success.
They failed to line up the
ships' officers, the longshoremen,
the teamsters or anybody else.
They struck when there was
no money in the CSU treasury.
They struck when the Canadian
merchant marine was at a low
point in the postwar readjust­
ment process.
It was obvious to the SIU
Canadian District that the com­
munists' real scheme was to im­
pair the Marshall Plan and the
Atlantic Pact, and create so acute
an unemployment problem in
Eastern Canadian ports that they
would find
fertile ground for
sowing more seeds of commun­
ism.
It was the timely arrival of
the SIU which prevented this
from happening.

Cities Service Seamen Say: We Want Seafarers'
(Continued from Page 1)
bargaining agent for personnel
in the entire fleet.
Of the 110 valid votes tabu­
lated in the latest election 98
were tallied for the SIU. Only
12 votes were cast against the
union. In all, 176 valid votes
were counted by the NLRB. Of
these, 66 were challenged by the
company and the board.
However, because of the over­
whelming number of ballots in
favor of the SIU, these challeng­
ed votes could not affect the
results of the election, the NLRB
said, and therefore will not be
investigated.
Under NLRB procedure the
company has a period of five

Stay Aboard Ship
All pro-Union men aboard
Cities Service Oil Company
ships are urged to remain
on their vessels until they
win the protection of an SIU
contract. The company is
making every effort to re­
place men with known prounion leanings. The over­
whelming NLRB election vic­
tory brings nearer the day
when Cities Service seamen
can throw off the yoke of
company domination.
Stay on the ships until the
fight is won.

DISTORTED FACTS
In fact, the communist lead­
ers lied abouf the agreement, in­
forming the CSU rank and file
that they faced a 25 percent
wage cut and loss of the hiring
hall. Actually, the agreement
was pretty much what the rank
and file wanted and expected to working days in which to file
accept.
objections to the election results.
By rejecting the Conciliation
Board's proposal, the CSU, which If the company submitted ob­
never had been certified as bar­ jections before the deadline date
gaining agent for the ships, le­ of Friday, Api'il 22, the Regional
gally eliminated itself from the Board will conduct an investiga­
field, unless it could hold on by tion and then forward a report
main strength. But the CSU did to the Board in Washington for
not have the strength, so dissat­ final ruling.
If the objections are thrown
isfied were the rank and file
with their communist leaders. out, an order, duly certifying the
When the SIU Canadian Dis­ SIU as collective bargaining
trict, which already possessed agent for the Cities Service
many friends and contacts among fleet's unlicensed personnel, will
the CSU rank and file, signed be issued at that point.
It is expected that the mach­
what was essentially the Board
of Conciliation's contract, CSU inery of the Board will be
members began flocking to SIU speeded up to 'permit a ruling
as soon as possible, should the
halls.
Obviously, they had been wait­ company step in with last-min­
ing for the chance to have a ute arguments on the election
union which did not waste its outcome.

Ships involved in the ballot into port, in order to reduce the NLRB. The ninth ship, the Gov­
tally just concluded were the number of men eligible to vote. ernment Camp, was polled by
Archers Hope, Bents Fort, Brad­
But as fast as Union sym­ mail ballots.
ford Island, Fort Hoskins, Lone pathizers were fired, new ones A last ditch attempt by the
Jack, Royal Oak, Salem Mari­ came up to take their places. company to halt counting of the
Conditions were such on Cities ballots ' failed, when Federal
time and Winter Hill.
Service
ships, that it didn't take Judge Simon Rifkind set aside
COMPANY STALLED
long for men to realize that the on April 20 a temporary injunc­
.Throughout both elections, the only sound way to improve them tion obtained by 12 CTMA men
company made desperate efforts was through representation by on the grounds that they had re­
to stall the procedure and to in­ a genuine trade union of sea­ ceived no notice of the election.
timidate the crews.
men.
Among the petitioners was
In short. Cities Service men David Furman, principal orCities Service's viciously anti­
union practices reached a high- refused to waver from their posi­ organizer for CTMA who was ex­
point during the campaign pre­ tion that the SIU was the answer posed in the SEAFARERS LOG
to their problems.
ceding the second election.
as a Cities Service front man.
When the NLRB finally set the
The company lawyer came up
STUNT FAILED
with a new stunt, a company date for the second election and
In this maneuver the company
union, apparently with the established the mechanics by
thcTught in mind that, if Cities which voting would be con­ tried to make it appear that CS
Service seamen could be lured ducted, the company steadfastly employees, and not the company,
by extravagant" promises into refused to cooperate and at­ were taking the action. However,.
supporting a company union, tempted to impede the procedure. Judge Rifkind ruled that the
Beginning with the balloting Federal District court had no
they would reject the SIU.
of
the first ship, the Winter Hill, jurisdiction in the matter.
But, at every turn, the Cities
on
Feb. 20, NLRB officials had
Counting of the ballots was
Service men overwhelmingly re­
to
conduct
the poll at dockside then begun on April 15, in the
pudiated the company-conceived
NLRB regional office here, and
and dominated Cities Service points, off company px-operty.
the SIU victory was annoimced
DELAY GAINED
Tanker Men's Association
(CTMA).
The company went into Fed­ shortly thereafter.
Meanwhile, the SIU strongly
Despite the company's rigidly eral Court on Feb. 22 and ob­
pursued plan of wholesale firings tained a temporary injunction advised all pro-Union men
of men even slightly suspected halting the election after six aboard Cities Service vessels to
of pro-Union sentiment, the ships had been voted. At a rerhain on their ships until the
Cities Service men's determina­ hearing two days later, the in­ Union is certified and a union
tion to be represented by the junction was modified, and vot­ contract is negotiated.
SIU became stronger than ever. ing was resumed.
Union organizers pointed out
that
the company is making vig­
For the remainder of the bal­
RUSE RECOGNIZED
orous
efforts to replace men with
CS crewmen saw clearly that loting the company demonstrated known pra-Union leanings.
the company union was only an a more cooperative attitude, inas­
The era of company abuse and
attempt to keep them from much ns it had failed to dis­
intimidation of its unlicensed
courage
men
from
voting
by
its
realizing the improved wages,
personnel is rapidly appi-oaching
working conditions and security policy of non-coopei-ation.
the end and union sympathizers
The
voting
of
the
Salem
Mari­
benefits that would come with an
time and the Lone Jack was should stay on the ships until
SIU contract.
thei-efore conducted aboard ship the fight is completely won, the
In fact, • CTMA eventually in the manner prescribed by the SIU organizers said.
ppoved to be a boomerang. This
was demonstrated on innumer­
able occasions. On board one
Cities Service ship, a CTMAsponsored meeting suddenly
Any crewmember found pilfering ship's gear is subject to
turned into an SIU rally, so con­
charges by the membership of the SIU.
vinced were the men that CTMA
was a nothing more than a trick
Crews of all SlU-contracted ships are reminded that in
to delude the crews and imple­
line with SIU policy, anyone caught walking off a vessel with
ment the company's abusive
ship's
gear, such as linen, food and equipment, is to have
practices.
charges placed against him by the ship's delegates and crew.
When the'company saw that
the CTMA hogwash was turned
The SIU fought too hard for the high quality of equip­
back by the crews, it stepped up
ment and food aboard ships to allow any irresponsible char­
its attempts at intimidation. Fir­
acters to jeopardize the union's gains. Although the amount of
ings and blackballing reached
gear disappearing from SIU ships is the lowest in the industry,
wholesale propositions. Whole
pilfering on SIU ships must be wiped out completely.
crews were discharged every
time Cities Sei-vice ships came

WARNING TO PILFERERS

�TMB S RAF AH ERS LOG

Page Four

Port Wiliiiiiigtoii

Monday, May SL IMS

AFL BUTCHERS THANK SIU FOR'OUTSTANDING SUPPORT'

Shipping Good

11

Mobile Expects
Shipping Rise

By ERNEST TILLEY
By CAL TANNER
WILMINGTON — With one
WITH A.r. or L.
MOBILE — The pace of ship«
week behind me as the new ag­
ping in this port continued slow
ent in this Branch, I'll try to
during the period since the last
2QI N.WCLLA &amp;TRe£T
give the lowdown on this area,
report, with but six ships paid
CKtCAGO 6, (LLIHOIS
aided " by Max Byers, former
CARL W. JIMCRSON
tNTCfmATIONAC pnzsiQttft
off and five signed on during the
agent.
PATRICK e.OORHAN
April
4,
1949
IHTeRNATfOHA^ SCCr-rnCAR.
past week.
Since the last report shipping
We paid off the Wild Ranger^
has continued to be excellent.
Noonday, Iberville, Waterman;
We are finding ourselves short
the Corsair and Pointer, Alcoa,
of green ticket ABs and rated
Mr. C. J. Stevens
*
^
'
and the Steel Ranger, Isthmian.
men in the Stewards Depart­
Assistant Business Agent
ment. Six ships were contacted
Sign-ons were the Corsair,
Seafarers Union
^
during the past week and re­
523 Bienville Avenue
Wild Ranger and Iberville, all
Nevr Orleans, Louisiana
placements put aboard them all.
on continuous articles; the Steel
We can use men holding the
Ranger, headed for the InterDear Brother Stevens:
tickets listed above, but that
coastal trade, and the Alcoa
does not constitute an invitation
Pointer, headed for the bauxite
Our Vice President Sam Twedell advised us by letter that
to gashounds and performers.
I'un.
your Organization has given him outstanding support in
Birds of this type will find the
In-transit ships were the Pa­
our campaign to organize meat store employees in New
climate warm, but the reception
triot, over from Nfew Orleans in
Orleans. ^He advised also that your local union furnished
cool.
good shape, and the Kyska, in
George'H.'McFall
as a Picket Captain.
Not only is the SIU cracking
from the Texas coast.
down on the gashounds, but the
We've heard a rumor—there's
I want to thank you very warmly for this fine support
police here are running in every­
no
telling how accurate it is—
and I wish you wohld extend our deep appreciation to
one they see staggering around
that Waterman intends to put
Brother McFall for the fine work he did for us. We hope
the streets, as a couple of Broth­
three additional ships into serv­
at some time in the future to be able to return the favor
ers have found out.
ice carrying coal.
to some of your looal unions who may need help.
The Steel Chemist is in dryIf it's true, we figure it is be­
dock here following a stint on
With kind personal regards, I remai^
cause of the battle the SIU and
the rocks of San Nicholas Is­
organized labor waged against
FratpYnally yours,
land. It'll be a little while be­
Hoffman to see that at least 50
fore she'll be back in operation.
percent of the ECA cargoes were
Until recently this port was
carried in American ships.
* operated through the San Fran­
According to newspaper re­
cisco Branch, but now • it has
ports, the amount of cargo being
PEG:el
S e cretary-Trea sure r
been accorded full status as a
carried in American ships has
Branch in itself. We'll try to
increased greatly in recent weeks.
In line with the SIU Atlantic and Gulf District's traditional policv of giving aid to other It looks like our battle for more
keep the membership abreast of
trade unions whenever possible, the Union's New Orleans Branch has been backing the Amal­ American shipping in ECA may
the shipping and news of im­
portance coming out of the Los gamated Meat Cutters and Butcher Workmen, AFL, in its drive to organize that city's meal store
pay off in more jobs for the
employees. In the letter reproduced above, fatrick E. Gorman, Secretary-Treasurer of the Meat membership.
Angeles-Wilmington area.
Workers Union, expresses his organization's appreciation to SIU.
CHIN SPROUTS
At the Marine Hospital here
One bit of local color is the
the following Brothers are now
fiesta being held in San Pedro
tied up for major and minor re­
now. The local males are re­
pairs: J. g. Berrier, F. C. Higgaquired to raise beards for the
son,-~J. P. Buckelew, Tommie
occasion, or go to the hoosegow
By JOE ALGINA
while be awaited subsidy ap­ like the man for some petty Wilkins and Ernest Jkrrett.
for a couple of hours.
Before • signing off for the
proval of his plans to operate reason, and decided he'd make
I hadn't intended to enter the NEW YORK — Joy is mixed two P-2s—which he would buy— the trip short a man in the black week, a quick rundown of the
festivities, but I could easily with gloom this week in New in the trans-Atlantic service.
gang. The beef was settled with oldtimers ~^on the beach shows
qualify with this. crop of chin York.
fhe
company footing a bill for the foUowingr' D. Dougherty, W.
While there is stiE a good pos­
wool I'm sporting. It wasn't in­ While the membership is cele­ sibility that he'll receive ap­ one month's wages for the man. Aplin, F; St. Mary, D. Mitchell,
tentional, I just haven't had time brating the SIU's victory in the proval of his subsidy and even­ This same Engineer pulled a E. Lamb, J. L. Webb, L. F. Dav­
Uities Service election, they're
to exercise my razor.
tually run passenger ships to similar caper on an earlier trip, is, G. A. Oberry, G. Stroecker,
The only oldtimers to be found bitter over the' rejection of Bern­ Europe, our hopes of putting one when he demoted an engine room E. A. Wright, S. Luttrell and
here in this period of somewhat stein Steamship Line's bid to into operation this spring have man. That time it cost the com­ J. Parks.
Itish shipping are the following: charter a passenger ship. On top been dashed.
pany the ^iffei'ence in wages,
Johnny Gallagher, Red Kirk, of this, shipping has lost its zip
The reason given for turning plus overtime. This Engineer is
Shorty Odom and Bob McCul- and is moving at a slow pace.
proving to be an expensive lux­
loch. We don't expect to have Bernstein had intended to down Bernstein's charter appEca- ury for the company to main­
tion
was
a
r^ort
by
the
Coast
them on hand either by the charter the P-2 General Meigs to
tain.
time the next report is written. put into trans-Atlantic service Guard that the Meigs "*would
OTHER SIGN-ONS
need extensive repairs.
By WILLIAM McKAY
The
other
sign-ons
were:
Steel
No date has been set for the
TACOMA—^It'U be a long time
Maritime Commission to rule on Executive, Steel Surveyor,- Isth­ before the people around here
Bernstein's subsidy bid, so we mian; Raphael Semmes and will forget the rumpus of two
don't look to any help in ship­ Afoundria, Waterman; Robin weeks ago when we were hit by
By BENNIE GONZALES
ping from that source beforo Grey and Robin Doncaster; the an earthquake. Here at the Hall
John B. Marion; New London;
BALTIMORE — For the past Navigation; Carabulle, Cuba Dis­ early autumn.
Coral
Sea; Seatrain Texas; Inez, the Brothers- were beating their
two weeks we've been enjoying tilling; Chilore, Feltore and Ven­ On the payoff front we handled
Bull.
The Inez, formerly the gums about conditions in gen­
the following ships during the
excellent shipping, so good that ore, Ore Line,
eral, when suddenly the deck
Agwicomet,
took a full crew.
last period: Helen, Suzanne^
heaved up and the building be­
at the moment there are many We had hoped to sign-on the
Despite
the
fact
that
a
gang­
Marine Arrow for another voy­ Edith, Frances, Emilia, Elizabeth
gan
to shake like -it had the
jobs on the board with no takers. age, but she is being turned over and Kathryn, Bull; Steel Sur­ way watch is put on a ship for
DTs.
This most • enjoyable state of to a non-SIU company. She is a veyor, Isthmian; Oshkosh Vic­ only two reasons—to keep peo­
Some guy hollered, "Earth­
shipping is expected to continue hard ship tq give up, as the crew tory, Loyola Victory, Bessemer ple from walking off with ship's quake," and we lit out of here
gear and to keep unauthorized
into the coming week. Beyond was tops and always brought Victory and Afoundria, Water­ persons from the vessel—a lot of on the double. Everyone abanman;
New
London,
Arctic
Tankthe ship in clean.
dojned ship in two seconds flat
that we'll make no prediction.
drs;
Strathmore,
Strathmore men on gangway watch let any­
and lit out for the wide open
LONG
VOYAGE
one
and
everyoneon
the
ship.
We paid off the following ships,
Shipping Company (destined to
spaces.
When
a
crew
finds
the
gang­
all of which were in good shape: The final trip of the Arrow lay up for awhile); Colabee, AnpiWhile speeding down the street
Marquette Victory, Steel Sea­ was supposed to be a short one, erican-Hawaiian; Evistar, Inter­ way watch picking his teeth
I
happened
to look up and saw
instead
of
picking
out
the
farer, Steel Fabricator, Isthmian; but the crew was out several continental; Seatrains New York
the
top
of
an
old hotel start to
Firmore, Venore, Chilore, Felt- months. She hit port with a load and Havana; Coral Sea, Coral phonies, they should crack down
come
down.
When
I saw that
ore, Ore Line; Mae and Evelyn, of disputed overtime, all of Sea Steamship Company, and on the offender. The job was
I
shifted
gears
and
turned
on the
Bull; Seamar and Marymar, Cal- which was settled right on the John Gillis, Smith &amp; Johnson. created for the protection of
supercharger,
v
ship's
and
personal
gear.
mar; Telfair Stockton, Oro Navi­ ship.
The Gillis was the first Smith &amp;
After tremors of over 30 sec­
Before, signing off, it wouldn't
gation; CarabuUe, Cuba Distill­ The only flurry of activity took Johnson ship to hit this port in
onds,
the quake ended. Oldtim­
be
right
not
to
give
a
word
of
ing; Daniel Lownsdale, Water­ place two weeks ago, when we over a year.
ers
around
here have told me it
thanks
for
the
fine
job
of
or­
man; Algonquin Victory, St. put on a demonstration before
BUCKO ENGINEER
was
the
roughest
ever experi­
ganizing
done
by
the
Seafarers
Lawrence Navigation; Marine the MCS Hall here against the
enced. i hope it is the last.
We
signed
on
an
almost
equal
aboard
the
ships
of
Cities
Serv­
Arrow, Robin.
participation of the MCS in the number of vessels, all without ice.
As a precaution we have both
The signon list isn't as long, SIU's beef in Canada.
hitch, though a beef came up The first
election showed a doors of the Hall wide open for
We put 350 SIU and 50 SUP after one of them left port.
but it is still an impressive par­
clear-cut win, when the SIU quick exits. Except for a little
ade. We cleared the Maiden men in the show and it was The Chief Engineer of the Sea picked off over 80 percent of the plaster that fell from the ceiling,
Victory, Fairland, Daniel Lowns­ quite impressive — I'm sure it Trader booted an Oiler off the votes.
This recent election the Hall came out okay. The
dale, "Waterman; Steel Maker, impressed the MCS that we want ship a few minutes before sail­ showed it was "no fiuke, when men around here are now ask­
Steel Worker, Steel Seafarer, them to keep hands off a matter ing thne. It was learned that almost 90 percent went in favor ing if we qualify for risk bonus
Isthmian; Telfair Stodcton, Oro that concerns only the SIU.
I the the Chief Engineer didn't of the SIU. .
in this area.

Cities Service Victory Cheers New York

Tacoma Seafarers
Get The Real Shakes

Baltimore Reports Jobs Aplenty

�Monday, May 2, 1949

The remarkable growth in the shipping under
the Panamanian flag has been viewed with un­
easiness ever since the economic depressions of
the inter-war period.
Before 1924, Panama had a merchant navy too
insignificant to be separately listed in int^national shipping statistics. In that year'it makes
its first appearance in the statistical tables of
Lloyd's Register,, with only 15 ships of 85,593 tons
gross.
But by 1939, before the outbreak of the last
war, Panamanian shipping had already increased
tenfold: 159^ ships totalling 717,525 tons gross.
When figures became available again after the
second world war, Panama was seen to rank, in
terms of registered tonnage, among the sizeable
maritime nations.
It is true that the postwar statistics still give
but an incomplefe picture, and that the lack of
data for the intervening years makes compari­
sons difficult, but the growth of Panamanian
shipping is clearly revealed.
According to Lloyd's Register, the number of
ships registered in Panama was 369, totalling
1,720,260 tons gross at July 1, 1947.
The United Kingdom Chamber of Shipping
puts the figure at 446 ships totalling 2,458,000
tons gross at December 1947, of which 291 were
dry cargo ships totalling 1,274,000 tons gross and
155 tankers totalling 1,184,000 tons gross. (Ed.
Note: Some recent estimates give Panama a
total close to 4,000,000 gross tons.)
It will be observed that tankers account for a
high proportion of the Panamanian tonnage.

TUE

SEAFARERS

LOQ

This study of the Panamanian shipping situa­
tion was released by the London headquarters of
the International Traniq&gt;ortworkers Federation,
the international body organizing the scheduled
boycott of Panamanian ships. The boycott, which
was unanimously endorsed by the Fourth Bien­
nial Convention of the Seafarers, will be world­
wide in extent. Final plans are to be drafted at
a London meeting now in progress. The members
of the American Boycott Committee, formed on
April 5, are: Joseph P. Ryan, President of the
International Longshoremen's Association; John
Owens, Secretary of the ILA; Paul Hall, Secre­
tary-Treasurer of the SIU, A&amp;G District; Morris
Weisberger, East Coast Representative of the
SUP; Captain Tommy Atkins, President of Local
88 of the MM&amp;P; and Fred Howe, General Secre­
tary-Treasurer of the Radio Officers Union.

Pago FIT*

The American Neutrality Act forbade U.S.
ships to enter the ports of belligerent countries,
and ships were. transferred to the Panamanian
flag in order that shipping operations with the
countries at war might continue.
Then, when after the war American began to
sell surplus tonnage, a number of these ships
were acquired by Greek owners, who did hot
wish to return to their own country because of
the uncertain pohtical situation in Greece at the
end of the war, and the fear of confiscation in
the event of a Communist revolution, and pro­
ceeded- to place their ships on the Panamanian
register.
Connected with this position is the fact that
American ships have been sold abroad on condi­
tion that they are placed on the Panamanian
register until the price has been paid in Amer­
ican currency, a condition which is linked up
with the question of trade balances. Such ex­
planations, however, if valid at all, cannot justify
the 'permanent retention of tonnage on the
Panamanian register.

cently the . figure was 10 percent—but an excep­
tion clause permits the hiring of seamen of other
nationalities if ao Panamanians are available.
In practice it therefore matters little whether
the law prescribes 10 or 25 percent.
INJURIOUS TO CREWS
The beginnings of the drift of ships of various
Little weight, also, can be attached to other
nationalities towards the Panamanian flag date
explanations offered to justify the growing prac­
back to the shipping slumps of the inter-war
tice of tonnage transfers. In a number of cases,
period.
notably of British, Norwegian and Swedish
The volume of shipping space had outstripped owned ships, it has been urged that the crews
the volume of trade to be carried, the competi­ enjoy full safeguards in respect of social pro­
tion for freights became more and more acute, visions and the settlement of disputes, but it is
and the transfer of ships to certain flags was hard to see how such safeguards can operate in
one of the expedients devised for gaining an practice.
advantage in the" struggle.
Actually cases can -be cited by seafarers'
The reasons are not far to seek. In the tradi­ unions of members who have been discharged
Their presence on the Panamanian register .is
tional maritime countries, protective legislation from Panamanian ships on account of illness
indirectly due to the stipulation, which was
had been progressively developed, and the sur­ without any claim to qompensation of any kind.
made by some oil-important countries, that the^
vey requirements to which shipowners had to
Employment contracts, further, contain a
oil they purchased should be carried in ships
conform were of an exacting nature and pro­ clause which permits of dismissal of men for
under their own flag, and which resulted in. the
vided safeguards to seafarers, shippers and the "neglect of duty."
oil companies registering their fleets in different travelling public.
This clause is supposed to be based on Article
countries.
In these countries, taxation also was a heavy 1223 of the Panamanian Maritime Law, but
charge on the shipowners. Seafarers had or­ unions claim that it has not been possible to
TONNAGE GROUPING
ganized themselves in trade unions, and were ascertain what the Article provides.
During the war, however, many of these
no longer at the mercy of the shipowners as far
In effect under the employment contracts men
tankers were re-registered in Panama, where
as the fixing of working and social conditions have been dismissed at the whim of Master or
they have since remained, apparently joined by
was cncerned.
owner without there being any means of
others.
redress.
REASONS FOR SWITCH
The tonnage grouping of 347 Panamanian ships
In this connection mention may be made of
listed in Lloyd's Register 1947-48 was as follows:
Ships which could .be registered under a flag
other complaints made about Panamanian ships
Gross Tonnage
Number of ships where the owners were free from restrictions
and obnoxious practices to which they lend
clearly had an advantage over others.
500-1,000
30
themselves.
Generally speaking, they could accept lower
.1-3,000
^
66
Information in our possession points to the
freight rates where the struggle for cargoes was use of these ships for the smuggling of arms and
3-4,000
:
:
44
keen.
4-5,000 .!
26
men into areas of unrest such as Palestine and
Besides, the benefits of such registry have in Albania.
5-10,000
160 •
recent years included the earning of higher
Over 10,000
21
DEFENSE IS WEAK
freight rates in trades in which owners subject
That Panama's present merchant navy is dis­ to strict control have not been able to engage.
These reports also speak of owners who accept
proportionate is evident. The external trade of
Panama was a suitable country for the pur­ bribes from men who, for some reason or other,
this Central American Republic, with a popula­ poses of shipowners concerned with immediate
are prepared to pay to obtain employmt nt in
tion of not much more than half a' million, is advantage rather than long-term effects.
Panamanian
ships.
negligible.
As a country practically without any external . Sometimes it is claimed that the tonnage trans­
1940 imports amounted to $24,000,000 and ex­ trade of its own, and without any background of
ports to $4,000,000. The heavy adverse trade maritime practice and tradition, there was no ferred to Panamanian registry is old. 'Presum­
balance,. which seems to have been a regular question of its ratifying or enforcing the various ably it is implied that this in some way justifies
the measure.
feature for the past ten years, is mainly witlj the international conventions.
But seafarers do not agree. Either a ship is
United States, and is due to the import of con­
Such maritime legislation as was to be found
fit
to operate at sea or she is not.
sumers' goods for sale to the Canal Zone per­ on its statute book was ineffective. By register­
If not, then she should be scrapped in the
sonnel and to the big transient population.
ing ships in Panama, or by creating straw com­
In 1942, for instance, of . the total imports of panies which ostensibly bought them, as well interests of all concerned; in the other e\ ent, the
$38,000,000 about 75 percent came from the as by other devices, owners could reap the objections formulated are equally as valid in the
case of obsolete tonnage as .they are in that of
United States, which also took 98 percent of the advantages of an unscrupulous practice
ships
built more recently.
$2,250,000 of exports.
The advantage of the -transactions to Panama
So much for the motives behind the startling
itself is probably mainly financial—for the serv­
LAW VIOLATED
ice of placing ships on a largely fictitious register growth of the merchant shipping of a tiny
Nor is Panama a nation with any seafaring it collects a registration fee (at present an initial Central American republic, which in the past
tradition to speak of, for the ships sailing under tax of $1 per ton plus an annual tax of $0.10 per was a negligible quantity as far as maritime
the Panamanian flag are almost entirely manned ton)— and possibly to exaggerate the importance enterprise was concerned.
by crews of other nationalities.
Although it has been said above that the
of Panama as a maritime country at Interna­
avoidance of higher wages and better conditions
-It is true that the Panamanian law stipulates tional Maritime Conferences.
The second world war brought a development of employment for the crews is one of the main
that 25 percent of the crews of Panamanian ships
shall be of Panamanian nationality—until re- of a different character to complicate the position.
{Continued on Page li)

�Page Six

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Monday, May-2, 1949

CSU Action Was 'Strike For Strike's Sake'

Tonight we bring you^the story of a strike that is
not.a strike, called by a dying outfit which calls itself
The Canadian District has been sponsoring
a "union." Picketlines have been established and
a series of nightly broadcasts aimed at keep­
gangs of armed hoodlums roam the streets. No ques­
ing the seamen and citizens of Halifax in­
tion of wages or conditions is involved, yet hundreds
formed
of the strike fomented by the Can­
of men are faced with the permanent loss of their
adian Seamen's Union. Last week's LOG
jobs, just to satisfy the communist few who pull
the strings.
carried the texts of the first four radio talks;
This, we believe, is a story without parallel—the
this week the two succeeding talks are
strange picture of a strike for strike's sake, a foul
printed on this and the following page.
political demonstration such as only the communist
The broadcasts have been highly success­
party is capable of. Such niisconceived action can end
ful
in throwing the spotlight on.the corrupt
only in disaster and, unfortunate though it may be,
administration, of the CSU, and the manner
the real sufferers will be the misguided CSU seamen
and .Canadian shipping. Then, when all is lost, the
in which its communist leaders have used
communist leaders like the proverbial Arab, will "fold
the membership to advance the communist
their tents and silently steal away."
cause.
Every development in the so-called strike by the
CSU, against the deep sea ships contracted to the
Yet their terroristic campaign has had no effect.
SIU Canadian District, has borne out what has been
The
SIU sailed every ship that has called for a crew.
the SIU's contention regarding the CSU ever since
the CSU first came under the influence of the com­ This morning as you all know, the SIU Canadian
District, sent a full crew to the Sun Prince in. Halifax
munist party.
Everything the CSU has said or done since they harbor. This afternoon, word was flashed from Mon­
commenced their phony action has raised the question: treal that the overwhelming majority of the crew of
Are the CSU leaders interested in the welfare of the thf Lady Nelson has chosen the SIU over the CSU.
In an effort to offset the surging^ tide of the SIU
Canadian seamen, or are they out to destroy the
Canadian merchant marine, to advance the aims of sentiment, the CSU leaders are using lies and still
more lies in addition to terrorism. Both techniques
the communist party on the world's waterfronts?
are old communist techniques.
DELIBERATE ERRORS?
When the crew of the Chandler voted overwhelm­
Last night, you will recall, we reviewed the seven ingly in favor of the SIU over the CSU a few days
basic strategic and tactical errors the CSU officials ago, the best the CSU officials in Halifax would admit
made. Or were they errors? The mistakes were too was that maybe 3 or 4 men had voted the SIU way.
elementary to have been accidental on the part of
We wonder how these CSU officials v/ill explain
supposedly smart union officials, as we clearly showed. away the great majority of men aboard the Lady
All through the strike, all through the events lead­ Nelson who expressed their preference for the SIU.
ing up to the strike and, in fact, all through the years, Will they say, "Well, there were three or four men
the communist officials of the CSU have practiced a who voted for the SIU?"
consistent policy of misleading and lying to the rank
The SIU has charged that the CSU has been in­
and file for their own purposes.
efficiently administered in every manner. The SIU
Take the so-called issue en which the "strike" was has pointed out that a "Tag Day" is a pretty pathetic
called. The fact is, there was no strike issue. There way for the leaders of the CSU to propose fo raise
is no strike. After a Conciliation Board had proposed the kind of money that is required for a long, costly
a contract to which even the CSU's hand-picked rep­ strike.
resentative had agreed, those CSU leaders solemnly
PHONY LIBEL SUIT
thereupon threatened to call a strike because the
We have charges that, if the funds and affairs- of
contract included a "wage reduction" and would "des­
troy the union hiring hall." The membership naturally the CSU had been praperly handled, there would be
no need for Tag Day.
became steamed up by the prospect of a wage cut.
The only answer the communist leaders of the CSU
Who wouldn't be?
have
found is a fake libel suit. They used libel suits
The only trouble was that no wage cut ever was
last
year,
as well as when they were losing out on
proposed.
the
Lakes.
All the suits were later ruled out.
The only trouble was that there never was a pro­
All
they
can
hope to accomplish through a libel suit,
posal to destroy the union hiring hall.
is
to
be
able
to
say to those fast-dwindling few in
The SIU Canadian District signed the very con­
the
CSU
who
still
believe what their leaders tell
tracts, so far as wages and the hiring hall were con­
them,
"Everything
you
hear about us is a lie. To
cerned, as the Conciliation Board proposed and the
prove
it
we
are
to
bring
suit..."
CSU rejected. That wage scale is based on 170 dollars
As
a
matter
of
fact,
the
SIU Canadian District has
a month for Able Seamen, and it is not a reduction.
the communists for a long time, as
CSU officials brag to their members that they have been fighting
signed a tanker contract, calling for $185 a month have the other Districts of our Union. On the basis
for Wheelsmen on the Great Lakes. But they neglected of experience, we can, we believe, come pretty close
to mention that this contract covers only 4 ships. to predicting what the CSU will do next. We draw our
These four ships compare poorly with the Canada conclusions from what we have seen of communist
" Steamship's 61 ships, Sarnia Steamship's 11 ships and tactics in general, and CSU tactics in particular, in
Colonial Steahiship's 11 vessels, which the. CSU lost the past. '
The first thing they will do now^ is embark on a
on the Lakes to the SIU Canadian District.
face-saving
campaign. They will do this in a number
The SIU has well over a total of 100 contracted
of
ways.
vessels at this moment—and on all those vessels the
, First, they will try to disarm the internal opposition
Wheelsmen's wages are $200 per month.
with
their phony libel suits and similar tricks to
Quite a bit of difference, don't you think?
"prove
their virtue."
But why did the CSU call its phony strike? There
Second,
they will try to stir up sympathy for
is only one possible answer. The CSU men wanted
disruption. The only trouble is that they are the themselves.
Third, they will kick dead horses.
ones who have been disrupted.
The dead, horse technique is one we can expect
NO ANSWERS TO QUERIES
to see used widely. One of their favorite whipping
For the past week, the SIU has been putting it up boys will be the late and unlamented Adolf Hitler.
to the CSU leaders to answer a few questions for the
They have already started this. CSU members, who
benefit of the rank and file.
have inquired of their leaders about the charges
Apparently ^e CSU rank and file are now putting leveled by the SIU, have been told, "Don't pay any
these questions to their leaders. Judging by the way attention to the SIU, they're just using Hitler's propa­
• the rank and file CSU members have been contacting ganda methods."
the SIU Canadian District's temporary headquarters,
Now Adolf Hitler was a monster and a scourge, and
they haven't cared much for the answers they have the SIU hates everything he ever did or stood for.
been receiving from the CSU leadership.
In fact, several thousand members from Canada and
Actually they have agreed with the Seafarers' an­ the States went to their deaths in the war against
swers. The swing to the SIU is now on—and what is Adolf Hitler.
the answer from CSU officials to this pro-SIU swing?
But we wonder why it is that Hitler is dragged in,
The answer is terror.
to the exclusion of Joseph Stalin—rthe man who made
Yes—the communist leaders of the CSU have ac­ the treaty with Hitler, that was the "go ahead" signal
knowledged by their actions that there is nothing that allowed Hitler to start the war in 1939. Hitler
they can do to answer the SIU, except to use violence. never used a propaganda technique tnat the commu­
Last night we heard of the beating of SIU mem­ nists have not used at one time or another, for pur­
bers who were asleep in their bunks aboard a ship poses just as foul as Hitler's.
in Montreal. Before that, it was the vicious beating
•The communist officials of the CSU can be expected
at McAdam. This is the only answer that the com­ to whip up sympathy for themselves with a variety of
munist leaders of the CSU can think of. Any wonder, tricks, all of which are transparent to those who
then,^ that these same leaders have proven themselves have been going up against them for years, as the
xinfit to lead a Union?
SlUhas.
V

- •

They will make the martyrs of themselves. They
will dream up parallels between their own position,
and that of persons for whom the general public has
legitimate sympathy. In other words, "First we are
beaten, then all trade unions are beaten." Don't you
recognize the line?
Thmy will accuse officials in Ottawa and elsewhere
of bias. They will claim that foreign powers are ex­
erting their influence against them.
Certainly the communist officials of the CSU will
do their utmost to minimize every loss they have
suffered.
They will say that every shiF|, including the Sun
Prince which has just obtained a Canadian crew, is
unimportant. That was what they said last j^ear when
we defeated them on the Great Lakes. They kept
saying • it until the end. And then there was nothing
at all for them to say.
They will expand at great length on' their libel
suit, which is also what they did on the. Lakes last
year. But what they won't say is that the libel suits
on the Lakes came to nothing.
They wiU cry for protection ]py the policej forgetting
that their habit of taking the law into their own
hands resulted in the atrocity at McAdam, where a .
communist directed CSU goon squad broke into a
hotel to beat up sleeping members of the SIU.
Why do we make these predictions? Because we
have fought the communists since 1938 and have
learned their ways. What they don't do tonight, they
will do tomorrow.
Let's get away from the present situation for a
moment, and go back through the past 10 years, and
see how the communist leaders of the CSU have
acted in the past.
Originally, the CSU was a part of the SIU. But in
the early forties the CSU fell completely into the
control of men whose first allegiance was to the
commpnist party, not to the Canadian seamen. Since
one of the pillars of the SIU policy, from the begin­
ning of 1938 to the present day, was opposition to
the communist party, the next event was inevitable.
At the SIU's convention in New Orleans in 1944, the
CSU was ousted from the SIU, when the CSU leaders
who were present at the convention refused to disavow
their sympathies with tl;ie communist party.
It was then that CSU officials began to step up
their^ pro-communist activities, which in its .present
stage is clearly directed at disruption, if not des­
truction, of the Canadian Merchant Marine.
They began an all-out campaign to eliminate the
anti-communists from their ranks. They did not suc­
ceed entirely but they forced many a Canadian seaman
across the border into the United States. 6thers they
kept silent by brutal beatings, such as we have seen
in Halifax and Montreal in recent days, and by
threats to wives and children.
So active in promoting the., interests of the commu­
nist party in Canada did the CSU leaders and their
henchmen become, that the CSU became the corrimunist party's most trusted union in Canada, and
served as a refuge for many top party members who
needed protection, transportation or some other service.
A NEW ERA OPENS
But all that is past and gone. The CSU is
now on its way out. The SIU Canadian District is
here. to stick.
We have the deep sea ships under contract, and
our Union not only has the reputation of having the
finest contracts in maritime, but it has the reputation
for living up to those contracts scrupulously.
Tag Days, libel suits and cries of red-baiting will
not keep us out. The record of the last two and a
half weeks is a demonstration of that.
The rank and file of the CSU. is flocking to our
temporary' headquarters and, when we establish our
permanent headquarters this week, we expect . that
many will come to register for jobs, and join a Union
which puts the welfare of seamen first and does not
tolerate politicalism of any kind.
Tlie rank and file of the CSU will flock to a Union
which does not ^collect assessments at every turn­
around of a ship, but on a basis fair to everybody
after the assessment has been approved by secret
ballot. Can the CSU match that?
&gt;
They will flock to a Union whose financial accounts
are posted in all Union Halls every week. Can the
CSU match that?
They will flock to a Union which does not spend
all its money on elusive legal fees. To a Union whose
officials do not order strikes in foreign ports, or
strikes that must be financed by Tag Days.
They will flock to a Union whose officials do not«
invent strike issues that do not exist.
The unity of United States and Canadian seamen
in the SIU, together with their British, Scandinavian
and other European affiliates of the International
Transportworkers Federation, is labor's own front
line pact against communism—a unity that in the full
sense of justice cannot and will not fail to triumph.

�Monday. May 2. 1949

THE SEAFARERS LOG

Page Sevea

SlU Canadian District Offers Program
Last night we told you something about communist
strategy and tactics that the CSU and other com­
munist controlled unions- normally employ, and we
also told you what we expected "^he CSU to do on
the basis of past experience.
Now we find that our predictions are being con­
firmed. Take this Tag Day business, for instance.
From the moment the Tag Day was announced, we
have maintained that, at this stage of the CSU's .strike^hich-is-not-a-strike, there should be m6ney enough
in the CSU's treasury to carry on for awhile.
If there isn't money enough, those communist offi­
cials never should have commenced their action in
the first place—that is, if they had any idea of playing
to win and not just to disrupt.
To go into a strike action—even a phony strike
action—without money enough in the bank to see you
past a period of less than three weeks is irresponsible
leadership, and in one way of-aelling out the rank and
file of any organization.
BECLOUDING MANEUVER
Actually the Tag Day is itself a maneuver to win
sympathy by clouding the issues. This, as we told you
last night, is a typical-communist trick.
This has been confirmed today. We even heard it
'over the radio. The CSU leaders have seized on the
completely false notion that the SIU Canadian District
will not ship Haligonian seamen. Of course we'll ship
Haligonian seamen. Why shouldn't we?
Actually, the SIU Canadian District has made it
clear all along that it welcomes any non-communist
seamen of the CSU to visit our new Halifax office
when it opens. Come on in and sign up, we have
said. If you come from Halifax, fine. Ship from your
own home town.
Something that the CSU oveiiboks, is the fact that
the crew lists of the ships we have supplied with
crews reveal that we have shipped 100 percent Can­
adian crews. The Department of Immigration has
confirmed this fact in a public statement.
At any rate, we repeat what we have said before.
There is a better way than Tag Day for jobless CSU
members to get up the money to support themselves
and their families. That is to join the SIU Canadian
District the Union that is interested in wages and con­
ditions—not politics. Don't let CSU spokesmen cloud
the issue!
,
The comniunist leaders of the CSU have attempted
to cloud other issues, tOo. Last night, they singled out
the Hiring Hall clause in the present contract between
the steamship companies and the SIU Canadian
District.
That is the same Hiring Hall clause which the CSU
leaders rejected. It is also the same Hiring Hall which
the CSU's national secretary announced, on April 12,
that he would like to accept.
Perhaps this fact is not generally known. But in
Toronto, on April 12, the national secretary of the CSU
suddenly announced that the CSU leadership was
ready to withdraw its objections to the contract the
Board of Conciliation hatL-recommended.
Apparently that news hasn't filtered through to the
Halifax branch of the CSU yet, or at least 'hadn't
filtered through as late as yesterday.
HIRIN.G HALL OUTLINED
For we heard the Hiring Hall in our contract de­
nounced as being virtually no contract at all. Then
we heard a great deal more that had nothing to do
with th6 Hiring Hall at all.
Now let's see what this Hiring Hall does.Actually it is a very strong Hiring Hall.
The Hiring Hall requires that a man be a member
of the Union before he can be sent to a job on a
ship. This is the closed shop, pure and simple.
What greater protection can a union ask for its
members?
The CSU complains that it does not provide any
protection for crews paying off in United States pprts.
This is no complaint at all so far as the SIU is
concerned.
Our reply is that the SIU's United States Districts
have branches in all United States ports. Our United
States Brothers always guarantee to force Canadian
shipowners to supply Canadian seamen to Canadian
ships. They always live up to their guarantee. They,
too, are SIU. This is a guarantee that the CSU is in
no position to naake.
Now let us speak to the seamen of Halifax. We are
in the process of opening permanent offices here in
Halifax. Its location'will be announced the day we
are rekdy for business. The location will be an­

nounced over this station—so keep your sets tuned to
this station at 9 PM, every evening and get the news.
Incidently we understand that the communist party
has ordered its hacks irj the CSU to go to any lengths
to prevent us from' opening and maintaining a permarient office here. Moreover, we understand that,
if we open the Hall, the communist party has ordered
its hacks and hatchet men to destroy it. That is the
tone of the -several anonymous telephone calls we have
received.
We call this to the attention of the citizens and
officials of Halifax, so that you may know where to
place the responsibility for any acts of violence com­
mitted, which- may be the result of the communist
party's orders.
We call this to your attention, because we have
served notice on the communist leadership of the CSU
that the Canadian District of the SIU is in Eastern
Canada to stick.
Wef call this to- your attention because it is the
policy of the communist leaders to prevent their own
misguided members from seeing how a democratic
union operates other than by violence—by terror, by
beating sleeping men with baseball bats, as they did
yesterday" in Montreal.
The SIU' Canadian District feels that the time has
come to lay down a program which it can offer to
the seamen of Halifax. Let's put it on a 1-2-3 basis.
Here is what the SIU Canadian District can give you:
First: A Union-controlled Hiring Hall with jobs for
those,Halifax seamen who are, members of the SIU,
or who wish to become members.
Second: Full time Union representation aimed solely
at gaining greater social and economic security for
seamen. In these matters we look to the future, not
just to the present.
Third: International support from powerful friends
whom the SIU possesses all over the world.
Fourlh: The SIU offers Canadian jobs for Canadian
seamen.
Fifth: The SIU Canadian District will offer a pro­
gram for Canadian seamen, aimed at creating more
employment for Canadian seamen by the following
steps:
A—By shipping^ responsible Union crews, who
will provide the efficient seamanship which will
make the Canadian Merchant Mai'ine itself a
more efficient body. This, in turn, will result in
more Canadian ships. It will, in effect, offer more
of an incentive to Canadian operators to invest in
greater operations.
• UNEMPLOYMENT PROBLEM
B—By demanding larger crews to take up the
slack in unemployment. One of the more tragic
aspects of the CSU's current strike action is that
it was taken at a time when unemployment was
becoming an acute problem in Canadian ports.
This unemployment problem must be solved. In­
creased manning scales will help a great deal.
C—By demanding better shipboard conditions.
For instance, the SIU Canadian District will insist
that larger quarters with better facilities be pro­
vided for Canadian seamen.
D--By insisting that the seamen of the SIU
Canadian District run their own Union, and not
- leave the running of their affairs to political hacks
and waterfront bums.
E—By insisting that the men of the SIU Can-

Canadian SIU Halls
The SIU, Canadian District, maintains Halls in
the following Canadian Ports:
HEADQUARTERS, 512 McGUl St., Montreal.
HALIFAX, 1281/2 Hollis St., Phone 3-8911
MONTREAL, 1227 Philips,Square. Tels. Plateau
8700 and Marquette 5909.
PORT ARTHUR, S3 Cumberland Street, Tel.
North 1229.
•
PORT COLBQRNE, 103 Durham St., Tel. 5591.
TORONTO, 1119 Jarvis St., Tel. Elgin 5917.
VICTORIA, B. C., 602 Boughton Street, Tel.
Empire 4531.
VANCOUVER, 565 Hamilton St., Tel. Pacific 7824.
Permanent headquarters will be opened very
shortly in Halifax. Meanwhile, the SIU in that
city can be reached by calling the following num^bers: 3-7231, Extension 403.

adian District press constantly for a better and
more stable living for seamen.
For instance', the practice of pulling Canadian
seamen off Canadian ships for imagined offenses
against the Union—a practice the CSU has made a
habit of^must be stopped. The CSU was not try­
ing to protect Canadian seamen. On the con­
trary, the CSU was trying to discipline anticommunist seamen, and to discipline any man who
tried to do his work in a neat and efficient
manner.
F—Maintaining a Union newspaper edited for
the benefit of seamen, a paper containing material
about the technical, legal and other problems _
seamen face, a paper stressing the experiences
seamen themselves undergo in the course of their
work.
Such a paper would necessarily eliminate phony
feature- articles about such people as Henry "Wal­
lace from the United States, who, whatever else
he may be, most certainly is not a maritime
personality.
G—By insisting that the Union be dedicated to
the proposition that going to sea is an honorable
and responsible occupation.
H—By insisting that the Union use its economic
power to improve the economic power of sea­
men, not to follow and promote the political aims
of schemers who frequently are not even bona fide
seamen, and have no legitimate right to serve as
officials of a seamen's Union.
RECORD OF SIU IN US
There is our program. That is what we offer the
seamen of Halifax.
You will ask—What are the chances that the SIU
Canadian District- can carry it through?
Let's take a look at the record. .
The situation in Canada today is not unlike the
situation in the United States merchant marine in the
middle thirties.
At that time, the so-called leaders of the American
merchant seamen's movement were the type of leaders
now running the CSU. ^ A number of them could not
even show one year's 'discharges from ships. They
just weren't seamen.
Yet they had confused and misled a great many
American seamen into believing that their disruptive
tactics were "necessary." They had perfected ways
of systematically eliminating all internal opposition.
This was the atmosphere in which the Seafarers
International Union of North America was born. The
SIU, composed of stalwart anti-communist men, im­
mediately- started a program aimed—even as the
Canadian SIU. is now aiming—at achieving full econ­
omic and social freedom for seamen.
Did they get it? Well, here are some of the things
they did get:
They raised the level from about $37 a month for
Able Seamen to the present American level of $225,
for base wages.
They also created the first Union-controlled Hiring
Hall in the history of seafaring people.
They increased all manning scales by 45%.
They achieved freedom from following all kinds of
dictated political twists.
They used their economic strength for the protection
of seamen, and in support of the legitimate economic
demands of other non-communist trade unions.
VICTORIOUS HISTORY
Through the years they fought the shipowners in
strikes that" are now milestones in the history of
maritime labor on this continent. And they won those
strikes—against the mighty P&amp;O Lines, against Seatrain Lines, against the great and arrogant Isthmian
Steamship Company. In 1946, they tied up the entire
shipping industry of the United States on all coasts,
when other unions meekly accepted a wage scale that
seemed inadequate to the SIU.
And while they were scoring these gx-eat victories,
they built internally along sound siamen's lines. As
an illustration, they established as their own rule
that to be an official^ a man must show a minimum of
three years of seatime.
That is the Seafarers International Union, of which
the SIU 'Canadian District is a part.
Is there any reason wh* the Canadian District can­
not do for the seamen of Halifax and the rest of
eastern Canada what the SIU has done for seanien
elsewhere?
There is no reason why not. The SIU Canadian
Distx'ict can do" what it what it sets out to do. We will
do what we set out to do. Now is the time to start.

�djce

as 3^%ahditide&amp;ttiie disareJihed
man rcsjjfcek, ihebdl (jMhvducedi^
is eveti' wor^ iliaitiie T-H
T
taiQt \\acve^cS:ori
13
biU,wh£(£.iocnddtssiiMie&gt;
Alabama
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9

House Of Representatives

Frank W. Boykin (D)
George M. Grant (D)
George W. Andrews (D)
Sam Hobbs (D)
Albert Rains (D)
Edward deGratfenreid (D)
Carl Elliott (D)
Robert E. Jones, Jr. (D)
Laurie C. Battle (D)

Georgia
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10

Arizona
1 John R. Murdock (D)
2 Harold A. Patten (D)

Arkansas
1
a
3
4
5
6
7

E. C. Gathings (D)
Wilbur D. Mills (D)
James W. Trimble (D)
Boyd Tackett (D)
Brooks Hays (D)
W. F. Norrell (D)
Oren Harris (D)

Idaho
• 1 Compton I. White (D)
2 John Sanborn (R)

Illinois
1 William L. Dawson (D)
2 Barratt O'Hara (D)
3 Neil J. Linehan (D)
4 James V. Buckley (D)
5 Martin Gorski (D)
6 Thomas J. O'Brien (D)
7 Adolph J. Sabath (D)
8 Thomas S. Gordon (D)
9 Sidney R. Yates (D)
10 Richard W. Hoffman (R)
11 Chester A. Chesney (D)
12 Edgar A. Jonas (R)
13 Ralph E. Church (R)
14 Chauncey W. Reed (R),
15 Noah M. Mason (R)
/
16 Leo E. Allen (R)
17 Leslie C. Arends (R)
18 Harold H. Velde (R)
19 Robert B. Chiperfield (R)
20 Sid Simpson (R)
21 Peter F. Mack. Jr. (D)
22 Rolla C. McMillen (R)
23 Edward H.-Jenison (R)
24 Charles W. Vursell (R)
25 Melvin Price (D)
26 C. W. (Runt) Bishop (R)

California
1 Hubert R. Scudder (R)

a Clair Engle (D)
3 Leroy Johnson (R)
4 Franck R. Havenner (D)
5 Richard J. Welch (R)
6 George P. Miller (D)
7 John J. Allen, Jr. (R)
8 Jack Z. Anderson (R)
9 CecU F. White (D)
10 Thomas H. Werdel (R)
11 Ernest K. Bramblett (R)
12 Richard W. Nixon (R)
13 Norris Poulson (R)
14 Helen Gahagan Douglas (D)
15 Gordon L. McDonough (R)
IS Donald L. Jackson (R)
17 Cecil R. King (D)
18 Clyde Doyle (D)
19 Chet Holifield (D)
20 Carl Hinshaw (R)
•
21 Harry R. Sheppard (D)
22 John Phillips (R)
23 Clinton D. McKinnon (D)
It
If ^

Indiana

Colorado
1
2
3
4

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11

John A. Carroll (D)
William S. Hill (R)
John H. Marsalis (D)
Wayne N. Aspinall (D)

Connecticut
1 Abraham A. Ribicoff (D)
2 Chase Going Woodhouse (D)
3 John A. McGuire (D) *
4 John Davis Lodge (R)
5 James T. Patterson (R) '
AL Antoni N. Sadlak (R)
AL J. Caleb Boggs (R)

'

1 J. Hardin Peterson (D)
2 Charles E. Bennett (D)
3 Robert L. F. Sikes (D)
4 George A. Smathers (D)
5 A. S. Herlong (D)
8 Dwight L. Rogers (D)

Ray J. Madden (D)
Charles A. Halleck (R)
Thurman C. Crook (D) •
Edward H. Kruse. Jr. (D)
John R. Walsh (D)
Mrs. Cecil M. Harden (R)
James E. Noland (D)
Winfield K. Denton (D)
Earl Wilson (R)
Ralph Harvey (R) «
Andrew Jacobs (D)

Iowa

Delaware
Florida

Prince H. Preston. Jr. (D)
E. E. Cox (D)
Stephen Pace (D)
A. Sidney Camp (D)
James C. Davis (D)
Carl Vinson (D)
Henderson Lanhan (D)
W. M. (Don) Wheeler (D)
John S. Wood (D)
Paul Brown (D)

i

1_ Thomas E. Martin (R)
2 Henry O. Talle (R)
3 H. R. Gross (R)
4 Karl M. LeCompte (R)
5 Paul Cunningham (R)
6 Jabies I. Dolliver (R)
7 Ben F. Jensen (R)
8 Charles B. Hoeven (R)

Kansas
^

1 Albert M. Cole (R)

2
3
4
5
6

Errett P. Scrivner (R)
Herbert A. Meyer (R)
Edward H. Rees (R)
Clifford R. Hope (R)
Wint Smitb (R)

Kentucky J
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9

Noble J. Gregory (D)
John A. Whitaker (D)
Thruston Ballard Mgrton (R)
Frank L. Chelf (D)
Brent Spence (D)
Thomas R. Underwood (D)
Carl D. Perkins (D)
Joe B. Bates (D) ,
James S. Golden (R)

Louisiana
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8

F. Edward Hebert (I»
Hale Boggs (D)
Edwin E. WilUs (D)
Overton Brooks (D)
Otto E. Passman (D)
James H. Morrison (D)
Henry D. Larcade. Jr. (D)
A. Leonard Allen (D)

Maine
1 Robert Hale (R)
2 Charles P. Nelsdn (R)
3 Frank FeUows (R) -

Maryland
1
2
3
4
5
6

Edward T. Miller (R)
WiUiam P. Bolton (D)
Edward A. Garmatz (D)
George H. Fallon (D)
Lansdale G. Sasscer (D)
J. Glenn BeaU (R)

Massachusetts
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14

John W. Heselton (R)
Foster Furcolo (D)
PhUip J. Philbin (D)
Harold D. Donohue (D)
Edith Nourse Rogers (R)
George J. Bates (R)
Thomas J. Lane (D)
Angler L. Goodwin (R)
Donald W. Nicholson (R)
Christian A. Herter (R)
John F. Kennedy (D)
John W. McCormack (D)
Richard B. Wigglesworth (R)
Joseph W. Martin, Jr. (R)

Michigan
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13

George G.. Sadowski (D)
Earl C. Michener (R)
Paul W. Shafer (R)
Clare E. Hoffman (R)
Gerald R. Ford, Jr. (R)
WUliam W. Blackney (R)
Jesse P. Wolcott (R)
Fred L. Crawford (R)
Albert J. Engel (R)
Roy O. Woodruff (R)
Charles E. Potter (R) '
John B. Bennett (R)
George D. O'Brien (D)

14
15
16
17

Louis C. Rabaut (D)
John D^^ingell (D)
John Lesinski (D)
George A. Dondero (R)

Minnesota
1 August H. Andresen (R)
2 Joseph P. O'Hara (R)
3 Roy W. Wier (D)
4 Eugene J. McCarthy (D)
5 Walter H. Judd (R)
6 Fred Marshall (D)
7.H. Carl Andersen jR)
8 John A. Blatnik (D)
9,Harold C. Hagen (R)

Mississippi
1
2
3
4
5
6
7

John E. Rankin (D)
Jamie L. Whitten (D)
William M. Whittington (D)
Thomas G. Abernethy (D)
Arthur Winstead (D)
William M. Colmer.(D)
John Bell Williams (D)

Missouri
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
' 10
11
12
13

Clare Magee (D)
Morgan Moulder (D)
Phil J. Welch (D)
Leonard Irving (D)
Richard Boiling (D)
George H. Christopher (D)
Dewey Short (R)
A. S. J. Carnahan (D)
Cla;^ence Cannon (D)
Paul C. Jones (D)
John B. Sullivan (D)
Raymond W. Karst (D)
Frank M. Karsten (D)

Montana
1 Mike Mansfield (D)
2 Wesley A. D'Ewart (R)

Nebraska
1
2
3
4

Carl T. Curtis (R)
Eugene D. O'Sullivan (D)
Karl Stefan (1?)
A. L. Miller (R)

Nevada
AL Walter S. Baring (D) -

New Hampshire
1 Chester E. Merrbw (R)
2 Norris Cotton (R)

New Jersey
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
&lt; 9
10
11

Charles A. Wolverton (R)
T. Millet Hand (R)
James C. Auchincioss (R)
Charles R. Howell (D)
Charles A. Eaton (R)
Clifford P. Case (R)
J. Parnell Thomas (R)
Gordon Canfield (R) '
Harry L. Towe (R) _
Peter W. Rodino, Jr. (D)
Hugh J. Addonizo (D)

12 Robert W. Kean (R)
13 Mary T. Norton (D)
14 Edward J. Hart (D)

New Mexico
AL Antonio M. Fernandez (D)
AL John E. Miles (D)

New York
1 W. Kingsland »^acy (R)
2 Leonard W. Hall (R)
3 Henry J. Latham (R)
4 L. Gary Clemente (D)
5 T. Vincent Quinn (D)
6 James J. Delaney (D)
7 LouU Heller (D)
8 Joseph L. Pfeifer (D)
9 Eugene J. Keogh (D) '
10 Andrew L. Somers (D)
11 James J. ^effernan (D)
12 iJohn J. Rooney (D)
13 Donald L. O'Toole (D)
14 Abraham J. Multer (D)
15 Emanuel Celler (D)
16 James J. Murphy (D)
17 Frederick R. Coudert, Jr. (R)
18 Vito Marcantonio (ALP)
19 Arthur G. Klein (D)
20 Vacant
21 Jacob K. Javits (R)
22 Adam C. Powell, Jr. (D)
23 Walter A. Lynch (D)
24 Isidore Dollinger (D)
25 Charles A. Buckley (D)
26 Christopher McGrath (D)
27 Ralph W. Gwinn (R)
28 Ralph A. Gamble (R)
29 Katharine St. George (R)
30 Jay LeFevre (R)
31 Bernard W. Kearney (R)
32 William T. Byrne (D)
33 Dean P. Taylor (R)
34 Clarence E. Kilburn (R)
35 John C. Davies (D)
36 Walter Riehlman (R)
37 Edwin Arthur Hall (R)
38, John Taber (R)
39 W. Sterling Cole (R)
40 Kenneth B. Keating (R)
41 James W. Wadsworth (R)
42 WUliam L. Pfeiffer (R)
43 Anthony F. Tauriello (D)
44 Chester C. Gorski (D)
45 Daniel A. Reed (R)

North Carolina
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12

Herbert C. Bonner (D)
John H. Kerr (D)
Graham A. Barden (D)
Harold D. Cooley (D)
Thurmond Chatham (D)
Carl T. Durham (D)
Ertel Carlyle (D)
Charles B. Deane (D)
Robert L. Dougton, (D)
HamUton C. Jones (D)
Alfred L. Bulwinkle (D)
Monroe M. Redden (D)-

North Dakota:
AL WUliam Lemke (R)
AL Usher L. Burdick (R)

-

�Ohio
AL Slephen M. Young (D&gt;
1 Charles H. Elston (R)
2 Earl T. Wagner (D)
3'Edward Breen (D)
4 WiUiam M. McCulloch (R)
5 Cliff Clevenger (R)
6 James G. Polk (D)
7 Clarence J. Brown (R)
8 Frederick C. Smith (R)
9 Thomas H. Burke (D)
10 -Thomas A, Jenkins (R)
11 Walter E. Brehm (R)
12 John M. Vorys (R)
13 Alvin F. Weichel (R)
14 Walter B. Huber (D)
15 Robert T. Secrest (D)
16 John McSweeney (D)
17 J. Harry McGregor (R)
18 Wayne L. Hays (D)
19 Michael J. Kirwan (D)
20 Michael A. Feighan (D)
21 Robert Grosser (D)
22 Frances P. Bolton (R)

Oklahoma
1
2
3
4
5
S
7
8

Dixie Gilmer (D)
WUliam G. Stigler (D)
Carl Albert (D)
Tom Steed (D)
A. S. Mike Monroney (D)
Tobey Morris (D)
Victor Wickersham (D)
George Howard Wilson (D)

Oregon
1
2
3
4

Walter Norblad (R)
Lowell Stockman (R)
Homer D. Angell (R)
Harris Ellsworth (R)

Pennsylvania
1 William A. Barrett (D)
2 William T. Granahan (D)
3 Hardie Scott (R)
4 Earl Chudoff (D)
5 William J. Green. Jr. (D)
8 Hugh D. Scott. Jr. (R) •
7 Benjamin F. James (R)
8 Franklin H. LichtenwalleT(R)
9 Paul B. Dague (R)
10 Harry P. O'Neill (D)
11 Daniel J. Flood (D)
12 Ivor D. Fenton (R)
13 George M. Rhodes (D)
14 Wilson D. GUlette (R)
15 Robert F. Rich (R)
16 Samuel K. McCornell. Jr. (R)
17 Richard M. Simpson (R)
18 John C. Kunkel (R)
19 Leon H. Gavin (R)
20 Francis E. Walter (D)
21 James F. Lind (D)
22 James E. Van Zandl (R)
23 Anthony Cavalcante r(D)
24 Thomas E. Morgan (D)
25 Louis E. Graham (R)
26 Vacant
27 Augustine B. Kelley (D)
28 Carroll D. Kearns (R)
29 Harry J. Davenport (D)

30
31
32
33

Robert J. Corbett (R)
James G. Fulton (R)
Herman P. Eberharter (D)
Frank Buchanan (D)

Rhode Island
1 Aime J. Forand (D)
2 John E. Fogaxty (D)

South Carolina
1
2
3
4
5
6

L. Mendel Olivers (D)
Hugo S. Sims. Jr. (D)
James B. Hare (D)
Joseph R. Bryson (D)
James P. Richards (D)
John L. McMillan (D)

South Dakota
1 Harold O. Lovre (R)
2 Francis Csute (R)

. Tennessee
1
'2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10

Dayton E. Phillips (R)
John Jennings. Jr. (R)
James B. Frazier (D)
Albert Gore (D)
Joe L. Evins (D)
J. Percy Priest (D)
Pat Sutton (D)
Tom Murray. (D)
Jere Cooper (D)
Clifford Davis (D)

Washington
1
2
3
4
5
6

Hugh B. Mitchell (D;
Henry M. Jackson (D)
RusseU V. Mack (R)
Hal Holmes. (R)
Wall Horan (R)
Thor C. Tollefson (R)

West Virginia
1 Robert L. Ramsay (D)

Alabama
Lister Hill (D)
John J. Sparkman (D)

Arizona

AL Frank A. Barrett (R)

Ohio
Robert A, Tafi (R)
John W. Bricker (R)
Elmer Thomas (D)
Robert S. Kerr (D)

Arkansas

Maryland

Oregon

J. William Fulbright (D)
John L. McClellan (D)

Millard E. Jydings (D)
Herbert R. O'Conor (D)

Guy Cordon (R)
Wayne Morse (R)

California

Massachusetts

Pennsylvania

Sheridan Downey (D)
William F. Knqwland (R)

Colorado
Edwin C. Johnson (D)
Eugene D. Millikin (R)

Delaware

Leverett Saltonstall (R)
Henry Cabot Lodge. Jr. (R)

Michigan
Arthur H. Vandenberg (R)
Homer Ferguson (R)

Minnesota
Edward J. Thye (R)
Hubert H. Humphrey (D)

Mississippi
James O. Eastland (D)
John C. Stennis (D)

John J. Williams (R)
J. Allen Frear (D)

Missouri

Florida

Forrest C. Donnell (R)
James P. Kem (R)

Francis J. Myers (D)
Edward Martin (R)

Rhode Island ^
Theodore Francis Green (D)
J. Howard McGrath (D)

South Carolina
Burnet R. Maybank (D)
Olin D. Johnston (D)

South Dakota
Chan Gurney (R)
Karl E. Mundt (R)

Tennessee

Montana

Kenneth B. McKellar (D)
Estes Kefauver (D)

Georgia

James E. Murray (D)
Zales N. Ecton (R)

Texas

Walter F. George (D)
Richard B. Russell (D)

Nebraska

Claude Pepper (D)
Spessard L. Holland (D)

Idaho
Glen H. Taylor (D) *
Bert H. Miller (D)

Illinois
Scott W. Lucas (D)
Paul H. Douglas (D)

Indiana
Homer E. Capehart (R)
William E. Jenner (R)

lown

t

•

AL Charles. AT^IPlumley (R)

Bourke B. Hickenlooper (R)
Guy M. Gillette (D)

Virginia

Kansas

Schuyler Otis Bland (D)
Porter Hardy. Jr. (D)
J. Vaughan Gary (D)
Watkins M. Abbitt (D)
Thomas B. Stanley (D)
Clarence G. Burton (D)
Burr P. Harrison (D)
Howard W. Steith (D)
Thomas B. Fugate (D)

Senate

Wyoming

Oklahoma

Brien McMahon (D)
Raymond E. Baldwin (R)

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9

1 Lawrence H. Smith (R)
2 Glenn R. Davis (R)
3 Gjurdner R. Withrow (R)

Clement J. Zablocki (D)
Andrew J. Biemiller (E)
Frank B. Keefe (R)
Reid F. Murray (R)
John W. Byrnes (R)
Merlin Hull (R)
Alvin E. O'Konski (R)

Maine

Connecticut

Vermont

Wisconsin

4
5
6
7
8
9
10

Owen Brewster (R)
Margaret Chase Smith (R)

1 Wright Patman (D)
2 J. M. Combs (D)
3 Lindley Beckworth (D)
4 Sam Rayburn (D)
5 J. Frank Wilson (D)
6 Olin E. Teague (D)
7 Tom Pickett (D)
8 Albert Thomas (D)
9 Clark W. Thompson (D)
10 Homer Thornberry &lt;D)
11 W. R. Poage (D&gt;
12 Wingate Lucas (D)
13 Ed Gossett (D)
14 John E. Lyle. Jr. (D)
15 Lloyd M. Bentsen. Jr. (D)
16 Ken Regan (D)
17 Omar Burleson (D)
18 Eugene Worley (D)
19 George H. Mahon (D)
20 Paul J. Kilday^ (D)
21 O. C. Fisher (D)
1 Walter K. Granger (D)
2 Reva Beck Bosone (D)

Harley O. Staggers (D)
Cleveland M. Bailey (D)
M. G. Bumside (D)
John Kee (D)
E. H. Hedrick (D)

Carl Hayden (D)
Ernest W. McFarland (D)

Texas

Utah

2
3
4
5
8

Clyde M. Reed (R)
Andrew F. Schoeppel (R)

Kentucky
Alben W. Berkley (D)
Virgil Chapman (D)

Louisiana
Allen:J. Ellender (D)
RusseU B. Long (D)

Hugh Butler (R)
Kenneth S. Wherry (R)

Nevada
Pat McCarran (D)
GeOrge W. Malone (R)

New Hampshire
Styles Bridges (R)
Charles W. Tobey (R)

New Jersey
H. Alexander Smith (R)
Robert C. Hendrickson (R)

New Mexico
Dennis Chavez (D)
Clinton P. Anderson (D)

New York

Tom Connally (D)
Lyndon B. Johnson (D)

Utah
Elbert D. Thomas (D)
Arthur V. Watkins (R)'

Vermont
George D. Aiken (R)
Ralph E. Flanders (R)

Virginia
Harry Flood Byrd (D)
A. Willis Robertson (D)

Washington
Warren G. Magnuson (D)
Harry P. Cain (R)

West Yirginia

Robert F. Wagner (D)
Irving M. Ives (R)

Harley M. Kilgore (D)
Matthew M. Neely (D)

North Carolina

Wisconsin

Clyde R. Hoey (D)
Frank Graham (D)

Alexander .Wiley (R)
Joseph R. McCarthy (R)

North Dakota

Wyoming

. William Langer (R)
MUton R. Young (R)

Joseph C. O'Mahoney (D)
Lester C. Hunt (D)

�T M E SEAFARER^ lO G

Page Ten

Monday, May 2, 1949

SHIPS' MINUTES AND NEWS
Bees To Meet Canadian
Crew Charges Coast Gu^d Refused Cola
Teams In Softball Tourney
lAid To Injured Seaman, Ai^s Probe
Charging neglect of duty, the crew of the SS Wild Ranger, Waterman,
ihas called for an investigation into the refusal of the Coast Guard to dispatch
medical aid to a crewmember injured in a shipboard fall while the vessel was
enroute to San Juan from'"broken ribs and possible internal "In the following hours the
Skipper sent three more radio
!!?»few Orleans on April 9. injuries.
"He was unconscious when
r According to a letter to the
carried
to the ship's hospital.
SEAFARERS LOG from the
"Immediately
the Captain sent
ship's three delegates, the Coast
an
emergency
radio
message to
Guard base in Miami refused to
the
Coast
Guard
station
in Miami
Send a plane to the ship to rerequesting
a
seaplane
to
remove
jnove Seafarer M. J. Smyly, who
Brother
Smyly
to
a
shoreside
had been seriously injured when
he fell from a bosun's chair to hospital.
'The Coast Guard's answer was
|he deck.
that landing conditions were not
The chain of events, as de­ too favorable. This despite the
scribed in the letter, was as fol­ fact that the seas were very
lows:
calm and an 18-mile-an-hour
"On Saturday, April 9, Brother wind blowing, perfect conditions
Smyly, while painting the king for a landing^
post on the starboard side for­ "The Coast Guard advised us
ward in a bosun's chair, was to keep the man comfortable and
pitched to the deck below when treat him for shock. This we
the gantline rope broke. Brother -had already done. The Chief
Smyly sustained a broken ankle, Mate did as much as possible to
'lacerations about the body, two keep the patient comfortable.

John Kealy Dies In Bangkok

messages without success. Des­
pairing of any assistance from
the Coast Guard, he ordered the
ship to full speed and caUed for
an ambulance to be waiting at
the dock in San Juan.
"It was more than 30 hours
later that the vessel arrived in
San Juan and Brother Smyly was
removed to a hpspital; 30 hours
in which he had been in severe
agony."
In concluding the report, the
delegates stated that seanaen do
not beef about trivial matters,
but the Ranger crew feels that
an "investigation should be made
to find out why the US Coast
Guard neglects service to US
ships in "home waters when they
are maintained to ^render such
service. It's a case of deplorable
negligence that might have cost
a seaman his life."
The delegates who submitted
the report are -J. D. Kennedy,
Deck; R. G. Long, Engine, and
J. P. Morton, Stewards.

As the ^een grass pushes up
through the soil at shore points
up and down the coast, the lads
of the SS Colabee are limbering
up for their annual whack at
Softball. Plans for putting a team
onto the field were formulated
at a recent shipboard meeting,
according to Tex Suit, who will
serve as co-manager for the
Colabee's 1949 Softball aggrega­
tion.
Most of the games on the
Cola Bees' schedule-will be play­
ed up in the softball conscious
town of Baie Comeau in the
province of Quebec. Each spring
the Colabee resumes her news­
print run between the Canadian
port and New York, approxi­
mately- a 14-day turnaround. .
Suit says that in the small
but modern paper mill town of
Baie Comeau, "the people go in
for sports in a big way." They
organize several' softball team^
into a local league," he added.
The Cola Bees, composed of
officers and unlicensed crewmen
aboard the Illinois-Atlantic pa­
per carrier, will meet as much
of the Baie Comeau softball op­
position as their stopovers will
permit.
It is expected that this year

the softballing Seafarers will lend
plfenty of color to the mill town
games. At the recent shipboard
meeting it was decided that the
Cola Bees' official uniform would
be a blue jersey, emblazoned by
the team name in gold lettering.
And, of course, a large bee will
serve as a background for the
team's name.
Suit, who in addition to his co- "
managerial functions will hold
down several of the season's
pitching assignments, says this
year's Cola Bee outfit will be in
there swinging hard to live up
to the reputation established" by
shipboard teams in previous
years.

Want Games
The "Seafarers," a softball out­
fit whose home grounds are in
Brooklyn, is looking for pitchers,
the LOG has been informed.
All the players are reported
to be SIU members. The team is
now making bookings for games
and the lads will play anywhere
in Brooklyn, our informant said.
He advised that anyone- inter­
ested in trying out for a position
on the "Seafarers" should see
Paul Gonsorchik, "owner" of the
club. He'll also book games.

Two SIU-Manned Ships Freed From Shoals
Two SlU-contracted vessels
which had run aground were .re­
floated last week with no in­
juries or loss of life among the
crews, and only slight damage
to one ship.
Isthmian's Steel Chemist ran
aground off Long Beach, Cali­
fornia on April 10^ and the Sanford B. Dole, Metro Petroleum
Company ship, ran onto a reef
off the north coast of Cuba on
April 18.
The Steel Chemist, entering
Wilmington harbor in a thick
fog, encountered a strong south­

erly current and struck the rocks
off San Nicholas Island.
On Friday, April 15, the ship
was freed from the rocks, and
taken to Wilmington harbor
where divers' reported the hull
cracked in several places mid­
ship. She'll enter' drydock there
for repairs.
The Chemist was enroute from
the Far East to Wilmington -with
her final
destination the East
Coast.
QUICKLY FREED
The Sanford B. Dole ran
aground during a storm and was

freed a few hours later without
sustaining a"y damage. She put
into a Cuban port. The cutter
Miaoma had rushed to her aid
from Miami.
The mishap suffered by the
Chemist was the third of the
year to befall Isthmian-owned
ships. Early in the year the Steel
Maker ran aground off Martha's
Vineyard, Massachusetts, and the
Steel Admiral was hung up in
Suez about the same time.
The Admiral, during the same
voyage, struck a mine in the
Saigon River, but sustained no
damage.

Seafarer John Keal^'s body about to be committed to the
sea southeast .of Bangkok on March 27, as bis grieved ship­
mates stand by.
Seafarer John J. Kealy died
aboard the SS Steel Navigator,
on March 21 in Bangkok, and
was buried at sea, the LOG
learned in a letter signed for the
crew by H. L. Thomas.
Thomas wrote that he made
his annoimcement "with great
regret and sad feeling," and
added that Kealy was "a good
Union man and a good ship­
mate." He sailed as Oiler.
"The ship was riding-the hook
in Bangkok, Siam,. at the time
of John Kealy's death, but due
:to all kinds of regulations and
^restrictions he could not be put

ashore to be buried by the laws
of that country," Thomas said. •
Accordingly, Kealy was buried
at sea below Bangkok on March
27 at longitude 106 degrees 56
minutes east. "All hands stood
at attention while Captain Mark
Suglien said prayers over the
body," Thomas declared in his
letter. "With deep respect all
hands said the Lord's Prayer to­
gether and Johnny Kealy's body
was committed to the sea."
Kealy was born in England in
1909 and joined the SIU in June
1947, receiving his book in July
1948.
He is survived by his mother,
Mrs, Emma Kealy of 5616 Wal­
ton Avenue, Philadelphia.

While cargo is removed from the beached Steel Chemist prior to refloating, the tug Viking;
laut lines to keep the^ Chemist from toppling over on the rocks.

�Monday, May 2. 1949

THE SEAFARERS LOG

Page Eleven

Digested Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings SeaSxrcrSam

ROBIN KIRK, Mar. 27—Joseph
Carriveau, Chairman; Leo Allen,
Secretary. Following discussion
held previous meeting, motion
carried that stowaways are not
to do any work on this ship.
Ship's delegate reported that if the
ship docks in the morning, payoff
would be held in the afternoon,
in which case there would be no
draw.
Departmental delegates
reported that everything is okay.
Motion by James While, sec­
onded by Michael Magal, that an
amendment be made to Section
8, which deals with sailing time
on weekend sailing, through a cussed new shipping rules and
referendum. Motion recom­ the method of registering in the
mended that sailing time be three groupings. It was sug­
posted before 5 PM Friday if gested that further clarification
ship is to sail before 8 AM Mon­ of the group registration«method
day. Under education, the value should be requested of Head­
of inter-depaftment cooperation quarters.
was stressed. Because all three
4
4
departments have been working
SANFORD
B.
DOLE,
Feb. 22—
together on this ship, there likve
B.
Higdon-,
Chairman;
L. F.
been no beefs. Deck and En­
Toland,
Secretary.
Delegates
re­
gine Departments thanked galley
ported
on
standing
of
men
in
men for their good work on this
their
departments.
Robert
High
trip, and Steward in turn, ex­
pressed appreciation of his de­ was elected ship's delegate. Mo­
partment for the cooperation tion carried urging department
heads to get messhalls, passage­
given them.
ways showers and heads cleaned
up, with job to get under way
immediately.
Suggested that
check be made into shortage of
soap.
One minute of silence
for departed Brothers.

, '
[1

4 4 4
JEAN,-Feb. 11—Felix Bonefonte. Chairman; Billy McCarthy.
Secretary.
Motion by Brother
Mateo that all escape hatches
and port holes be repaired be­
fore ship sails on next trip.
Delegates aie to investigate pos­
sibility of securing larger beds.
Engine delegate is to check radi­
ators aft and inspect blowers in
engine and fire rooms. Spigot
needed for, water cooler in en­
gine room. Vote of thanks ex­
tended to Stewards Department
for its fine job of feeding and
serving crew.
One minute of
silence for departed Brothers.

- 4 4, i
ROBIN SHERWOOD, Feb. 3—
Fred Miller, Chairman; Gerald
Sinkes, Secretary. Ship's dele­
gate read letter sent to Brother
Hall concerning death of one of
our shipmates. Also a report on
the man employed as his re­
placement.
Department delegates announced total number of
disputed hours of overtime.
After discussing case of three
men who missed ship in Durban,
crew decided that ship's delegate
should prepare a statement of
the incident and forward it to
the Headquarters. It was agreed
that an account of the difficul­
ties arising out of the Captain's
failure to be more definite in
posting sailing time should be in­
cluded in statement. Injui-ious
effect of performers aboard ship
4 4 4
was discussed under Education.
WARRIOR, Feb. 27—Nels Lar­
son, Chairman; William Brown,
4 4 4
STEEL INVENTOR — William Secretary. Ship's delegate re­
Roma. Chairman; V^liam Healy, ported that clothing, personal ef­
Secretary. Ship's delegate Jos­ fects and union papers of three
eph Slackowilz and department Brothers left , in Yokohama be
delegates reported. Crew wishes put under lock and key. Deck
fresh water in messhall for use delegate repoi'ted disputed over­
in making coffee instead of the time to be taken up with Mate.
water drawn from boilers as now Other delegates reported no
being done. Another sink is beefs. New Business: Motion by
needed in galley as present one Scott that delegates get together
is being used for washing and on repair lists. Good and Wel­
rinsing. Liquid soap dispensers fare: Suggestion made that
were recommended for installa­ foc'sles and recreation roohi be
tion in crew's head as a stricter sougeed before ship arrives in
sanitary measui-e.
port. One minute of silence for
Brothers lost at sea.
4 4 4
TELFAIR STOCKTON, Feb. 27
—L. E. McCune, Chairman; Peter
Piascik, Secretary. Delegates re­
4 4 4
ROBIN HOOD, Feb. 13—Don­ ported no beefs, gave the num­
ald Mease, ChaiHnan; William ber of bookmen and permits in
Moore, Secretary. No beefs in their depai'tments.
Good and
any of the three departments. Welfare: Agreed that no one
Motion carried to have ship's should tamper with refrigerator
delegate se^ Captain about pre­ and that it be defi&gt;osted only by
paring draw-list two days prior authoi'ized crewmember.
Cap­
to arrival in port, and to have tain assured Steward that neces­
Captain instruct company agent sary painting would be handled
to have money available at time during trip. Suggestion made
convenient to men off watch that stand by man clean up
when .ship arrives.
Motion messroom for his respective
amended to further request that watch. R. Ruttkay elected ship's
Captain put out draw every five delegate by, acclama^tion. One
days in port, as customary. minute of silence for Brothers
Ernest Metis, Electrician, dis- ,lost at sea.

WILLIAM TILGHMAN, Feb.
6—^Richard W. Simpkins, Chair­
man; Mike Streiffer, Secretary,
Election held for ship's delegate.
James W. Brake elected. Dele­
gates reported little disputed
overtime. Good and Welfare:
Recommended that cold drinks
be served twice^ daily in - warm
climate. Recommended that
noise be kept to minimum so
watch can sleep. One minute
of silence for Brothers lost at
sea.
4 4 4
PURDUE VICTORY, Feb. 27—
Arthur Werl, Chairman; Arthur
Thompson, Secretary. Delegates
reported no beefs pending. New
Business: Motion carried to dis­
cuss activities of Chief Cook.
Various members discussed his
overstaying shore leave. Sug­
gestion made that man make
donation to LOG in lieu of being
logged by the Skipper. Motion
carried for Cook to donate any
amount he sees fit. Good and
Welfare: Brother suggested that
all crewmembers turn in extra
linen.

ieitexs
\caH$

CUT and RUN
By HANK
4 4 4
AZALEA CITY, March 13—
Fred Roman, Chairman; Satirias
Foscolos, Secretary. Delegates re­
ported all working smoothly in
their departments. New Busi­
ness: Motion by Rothmier that
sufficient notice be given before
ship's meeting is held. Motion
by Amato that due to failure of
port steward at end of previous
trip to provide promised galley
gear and repairs that tl&gt;e ship's
delegate check with department
heads before ship's departure to
spe that all gear is aboard and
necessary repairs have been
made. Question on milk taken
aboard in Antwerp.
Belgianborn crewmember maintained
that milk is pasteurized and is
perfectly okay. Crew gave
wholehearted thanks to Stewards
Department for fine meals.

In all ports the Brothers have written letters to many Con­
gressmen and Senators urging them to vote for the ThomasLesinski bill which repeals the Taft-Hartley Act and allows. our
American labor unions to survive and progress. And, according to
reports, many Brothers have explained to their families back
home why they should immediately write letters to those home­
town Congrssmen urging them to vote for the bill. Write those
letters today. Brothers. It's up to us to win this beef. .
4
4
4
Steward Bill Durham,, who knows how to sell life insuranee, is in town after homesteading six months aboard the
Alcoa Clipper .out 'of New Orleans... Every time Brother
Walter Gardner sailed into town with his mustache we failed
to mention his visit. From now on we'll clean our "news"
sextant and announce he's in town — with or without the
romantic fuzz.
4
4
4
Tony Zalewski just anchored with his cigar, after a boneyard
job and some tanker sailing... Carl Wayne, the rolypoly Elec­
trician, was here after a long absence. Last week he sailed out
agaia... Paul Goodwin, who's always wearing dark glasses, was
wishing he would receive some mail to pass the time away. Any­
thing else, Paul? ... Eddie Ralko just made a ship this week ..
Bill Glick lost his voice last week and was given three different
medicines to take, which are making him feel worse than ever.

4 4 4
STEEL MAKER, March 12—
4
4
4
Ricky, Chairman; Ramon IrriArthur Camara was in-transit last week aboard a Bull
zarry. Secretary. Delegates all
Line wagon on the "sugar run." His shipmate Julius Thrasher
reported disputed overtime. New
must still be aboard his recent home, a Seatrain scow...
Business: Motion carried to draw
Steward Jose Quimera, the oldtimer, was in town last week
up new repair list. Motion car­
... Weaver Manning is in town doing some walking on the
ried for ship's delegate to check
shipping deck rather than any skillful cribbage-playing or
union books for Patrolman. Mo­
pinochling on the recreation deck.
tion carried that all three dele­
4
4
4
gates see about engine depart­
Norman "Ozzie" Okray, who's really making a home out of
ment ovei-time. Motion carried
to make report on Brother Jose the Algonquin Victory, navigated ashore this week for some mail
... If our memory isn't slipping we saw Brother "Three-finger"
Aquilania's death.
Morgan sail into town last week and grab'a job the same day...
It sure looks like there are American ships in New York harbor.

4 4 4
HASTINGS, Feb. 13—W.
Hamilton, Chairman; C. J. Oli­
ver, Secretary. Delegates re­
ported everything in order. M. C.
Wautlet elected ship's delegate.
Good and Welfare: Discussion on
insufficiency of nighf lunch. One
minute of silence observed for
Brothers lost at sea.
,•444
OREMAR, March 1 — Ferron,
Chairman; M. EsChenko, Secre­
tary. Delegates' reports accepted.
Discussion on repair of water
cooler. List of fines made up for
violations of messroom pro­
cedure. Moneys to go to hospi­
talized Seafarers. One minute of
silence for Brothers lost at sea.

4
4
4
Here are some other Brothers in town: Robert Harless,
• Archibald Volkerts, -Eddie Hallihan, Sal Volpi, Carl Lawson.
A few Brothers in-transit were: Pete De Pietro, William Traser,
Erwin Max, Charles Mazur. Those who recently arrived into
town were—Charles Jindra, Joe Clurman, Larry Key, Lawrence
Edwards, Raymond Grindle, Joseph Lapointe... The LOG will
be sailing free of cost to the homes of the following Brothers—
John Lefco of New York, H. Dickmeyer of Louisiana, Roy
Barker of Louisiana, Walter Prang of New York, John Paerels
of California, Gerald Gjerseth of Wisconsin, Alfred Ortega of
- Florida, George Lawrence of Alabama, Harold Hamilton of
Alabama, A. Gamzon of New York, Walter Matthews of Florida,
Charles Merritt of Florida, Donny Woods of Florida, Gibson
Coker of Alabama, James Nelson of California, Julian Lewis
of South Carolina.
4
4
4
Last minute news—Three SIU ships were in the news recently
from various parts of the world—Isthmian's William Tilghman and
the Steel Chemist, also there was the SS Sanford Dole... Brothers,
keep those jobs shipshape, the ships dean and happy. Your SIU
agreement is your responsibility at all times.

�Page Twelva

TBE SEAFARERS LOG

Monday, May ^ 1949

THE MEMBERSHIP SPEARS
Says Delegates Form Union's First Line
Of DMense, Asks For Better Cooperation

£

PALS MEET IN SOUTH AFRICA

•

To ihe Editor:
come acropper. Brief analyses of men an additional man. Despite
Although much stress has been some of these cases will amply this person's long years of Union
laid on the other component illustrate the bearing their solu­ membership, the delegates put
parts of our Union, no more tions have on the crew and the him off the ship.
Honest to goodness oldtimers
than passing reference has been membership at large.
made regarding ship delegaites. Here's one of the beefs: The who really helped build our un­
They are the difference between Sand Chief's officers apparently ion will commend this action,
making a contract a live docu- had adopted a manana attitude knowing that the building pro­
men or having a dead one. Cap­ toward the ship repairs in gen­ cess is a continuing one and that
able union representatives are eral, and installation of a wash­ only through the weeding out of
essential to the harmony of a ing machine in particular, be­ performers and Joul balls will
ship where factionalism and op­ cause they had allowed a long the SIU consistently grow and
portunism come so frequently to list of such items to pile up for ^pand.
Another kind of pest—the guy
the fore. A poor delegate creates longer than a rhonth.
Having more than a bellyful of with OT tentacles — was soon
more sores than he cures.
Most of us choose the line of promises, the delegate bee-lined found out and speedily taken
least resistance in administering around •to see the ship's three care of by the delegates. This
our contracts, but ship delegates lop ranking officers and demand­ cKaracter boasted that he, was
have got to go the whole way. ed action. Actjpn came with sur­ on the scow "solely to make a
They form SIU's front line of prising suddenness, for all next buck. That was all to the good
defense. It is their determina­ day the ship was bustling with until it was learned that his
tion to get for the crew what activity in a belated effort to methods included everything
from catering to the officers to
it is entitled to which certifies satisfy the crew's demands.
IV^eanwhile
the
officers,
figuring
brow-beating his fellow crewRobin Tuxford crewmember Joe Startwood, MM, right,
the standards that our Union
members.
to
get
in
the
last
lick,
needless­
poses with Afrikander friend visiting him aboard ship in
fought so hard to establish.
He had a curious back injury
Port Elizabeth. Picture by Rudolph (Gabby) Gross.., . ^
Daily they deal with human ly tied up the ship while re­
pairs
were
being
made,
obvious­
which
prevented fiim from per­
equations in shipboard relation­
ships. With an eye to the future ly with the intent to smear the forming many onerous tasks
contract they look around to see crew with the brush of irrespon­ while on watch, but once the
if more jobs can be created, more sibility. However, alertness on overtime period began his ailing
compensable work provided for the part of the delegates got us member effected a miraculous
the crew. They seek to eliminate good results. They notified Union cure. No job was too tough for
8 time more a seafaring people
red tape which only succeeds officials that every Seafarer was him then. He did more work To the Editor:
in increasing friction, decreas­ at his post and that if any quick­ than the rest of the deck gang Most Americans, who see the than, the Americans ai-e today.
ing efficiency. The ease and skill ie strike was in progress it was put together, that is overtime United States a rriaritime nation, Therefore, America, whose
with which they dispose of their being perpetrated by the officers work.. The payroll sheets show -believe that they are a great Government had just signed the
*
it. His total overtime pay ex­
problems will go far toward set­ and not the crew.
Atlantic Pact and had pledged
ceeded
the aggregate amount of people who live by the sea and its assistance to "Western Euro­
ting a pattern Union negotiators
PLOT SQUELCHED
prosper
by
the
ocean
trade.
To
will follow come bargaining This information was quickly the other nine ABs. .
be soberly i-ealistic, let us see pean Nations, must become
BLEW TOPS
time.
relayed to company officials and
how the United States, as a sea­ ocean-minded and call for ships
the day was saved for the crew. The lid this phony was sitting faring nation, compares today to be built and manned if the
GOOD NEGOTIATOR
The Union's record of honorably on blew off one day when he with little Latvia 40 years ago. American way of life is to be
preserved. We must have a
A good delegate will expedite holding intact its contractual ob­ tried to get one of the fomhours for taking on dry stores Riga, the capital, with popula­ strong merchant marine or else
problems himself rather than ligation was maintained.
tion of some 250,000, was then,
draw Union officials away from
In another case, a gashound by threatening his fellow crew- proportionately, a busier port suffer the consequence. And, if
big business thinks that his is
more pressing duties to handle proved costly to the Union to members with bodily harm. That
ship-level beefs. He knows how the tune of one job that could cooked. his goose, which made than New®York is today. For a the pleasure of chartering cheap
week in midsummer of 1908, a foreign bottoms, let him remem­
to cooperate intelligently when have been written into the con­ the officers very sad because he
Riga newspaper listed the num­ ber that he may find to his sorr
was
tabbed
their
best
worker.
the interests of the Union and tract, had he simply remained on
Before closing I'd like to make ber of arrivals and sailings as 80 row that he may have to pay
the company are in common, duty when he should have been.
a
plea to the membership for steamers and 120 sailing vessels. for the pleasure.
and how to compromise intelli­ Instead, his performing and abbetter
• understanding of their Forty years ago, the Latvians,
R. J. Peterson
gently when their interests are steeisni put an unduly heavy
who numbered 250,000 people,
in conflict.
burden on his fellow crewmem- delegates. Theirs is no. pleasant owned some 750 vessels, with 500
On this ship, the SS Sand bers, who covered up for him. task, acting as shock absorber
Chief, many problems have come By doing so the company was between the company and you. ships for deep-sea trade and 250
schooners sailing coastwise.
to harass the delegates, but, so given its most solid argument Be considerate in your judgment
far, those worthies have yet to, for refusing to grant the depart- of them. Nobody ever rendered It means to say that for each
the perfect decision. In human 3,000 Latvians there was one ves­
relations there has to be give sel sailing the seas and earning
LONGTIME SHUTTLERS TO FRANCE
money—as against one US ship
and take.
These men constitute the rank today to each 100,000 Americans To the Editor:
and file officialdom. They know who hug themselves ashore. •
I've been sent to the land of
your problems first
hand and As for the cargo tons, carried,
tea
and crumpees by Uncle Sam
have to live with the results of there were in Latvia 5 inhabi­
for
a 30 month stint and would
their settlements. They have the tants to one ton—against 20 in­
like
to have the LOG sent here
Union welfare at heart. And, habitants in the United States,
instead
of my home. I miss
therefore, yours, or they never or four times less. True~_fhe
reading
it
weekly.
would have accepted the' thank­ Latvian ve^els were small, but
Sometimes
when I walk to the
less job in the first place.
they provided jobs for some 10,John Cole 000 seamen, as against 80,000 PX here I get to thinking that
Americans employed on US ves­ maybe some former ship opera­
tor makes up &lt;the price list. This
sels today.
is. the only place I know of
FAST TURNOVER
where a 10 cent bottle of hair
Headers notifying the SEA­
No Latvian sailor had to stay tonic costs 45 cents. A $16 radio
FARERS DOG of a change in
ashore loiager. than two weeks to costs $30 in this place.
Somebody is making a nice
mailing '^ddressv are, re­
get his job aboard ship at pay
which, after 9 months of sailing, living and I hope he doesn't
quested to include their old
address along wjth ihe new. gave him enough money and the have to wait "too long before he
If you haven't seen one of your old shipmates in the past
chance to ^o for 3 months to can retire with a mansion and
In addition to making easier
year chances are that he's aboard the SlU-contracted Camas
navigation„,,school and pay his a few Cadillacs. Talk about
the switch-over it will also
Meadows, out thirteen months on eighteen months articles,, The
own way. The figures
show slopchest prices, this set-up
guarantee uninterrupted
US Petroleum Carriers, Incl, ship is running oil between the
that in the United Slates, which makes me think those days were
mailing service. .
Persian-Gulf and France. The Seafarers are, bottom row, left
'
has a population 73 times that of giveaways.
All notifications of change
to right—^Mike Klepeis, Alex Hersch, A1 Davis, Joe Eakin,
Latvia
in
.1908,
there
is
one
sea­
of address should be ad­
Well, the quicker this hitch
Steve Sloneski, Mario Simonetti, Jack McNulty and Joe Meyerman employed to each 1(875 is up the happier I'll be." Here's
dressed to the Editor, SEA­
chak. Top row—Lew Cantero, Bob Moroniney, John O'HannaAmericans ashore, as against one to better contracts and a quick
FARERS LOG, SI Beaver
sian, John McCarty with mascot "Dutch," and Ed Metcalf.
seaman to 225 Latvians. That is, victory over Cities Service.
Street, New York 4, N. Y.
Picture was submitted by Bill FeiL
40 years ago the Latvians were
Pfc David Arscolt

Compared To Tiny Latvia,
US Is Landlubbing Nation

Seafarer-Soldier
Rates Slopchest
Over Army's PX-

Ug Subscrtters

�" V

• • _' '

'• '

.'T-

• '.'

Page Eiflaen

— —•• .-•*• J n c 0 C ~-M-..n £1

TBE SRAlF ARE RS

Monday. Mky 2. 1949

•

I

\

The Wbifce

The Sea"

LOG

Thiidking It Over

By SALTY DICK

DIscMige (M 40-Year-Olds
Seen As Major US Profelent
To the Editor:

I's Tbwn House , and
I hear the Seamen's Club at
Matadi, Belgium Congo would ' reBommend'v iit higAl^ Fov 91.95
like to receive the LOG»... If ' per day I have m dean room
you go to Marshall, Liberia, go ' and:. 9. good' ntaSk to- serve, men.
up stream on a barge ^is the You&gt; can elwnys go- to the
guest of" Firestone Rubber Com­ ' lounge and read or meet a few
pany. At ITarbal, headquarters of. the boys. If you play pool,
of the company, you'll see the there's a table in the recrealargest airship ia Africa. You ' tion room.
can also visit the rubber planta­ Ramon Usera is an out-patient
tion-. It has 800,000 acres and ;in New Orleans. He •has- ear
10J500,600 trees. If you doubt it, trouble
Luis Ramirez wrote a
you can count them yourself. good article on tattooing. The
Harbel has 10,000 modern homes. seamen of today are not going:
The only ships hitting- this port for self-adornment like they
are the Delta scows.
once- did... Scotty Malvenan,
Patients in the New Otieans oldtimer from way back, is ready
marine hospital have told me to, take a Cook's job going south
that the SIU takes good care ... Jose Arceo from the West
Harry Benner, Bosun of the
of them.... A ' sign in- the Coast has been in the Gulf area Bull Run, is caught in a pen­
YMCA in New Orleans reads: for four years. He plans to get sive mood by a fellow crew"Only man under 3S can se­ hitched and live in Bayou La member. Ship returned, recent­
cure: rooms." I tried to get a Fouch
Being a married man ly from voyage to Curacao,
room there during the Mardi and. a Mobilian are the reasons England, and the Netherlands.
Gras. I'm now staying at the W. B. Yarbrough gives for sail­
ing on the Clipper
Tip Cole­
LOG ON MENU
man says the longer the trip the
better. At present he's on a 17 To the Editor:
AT GRILL IN
day cruise ship.
PORT ARANSAS
John Wunderlich wrote a let­
At last I've come across the
To the Editor:
ter some time ago picturing a
Numerous merchant seamen "star messman." He's John­
ship
at sea. He mentioned three
come in this grill when they nie Crews of the Clipper....
things:
the soul, immortality and
dock at Harbor Island across the Why do most Captains say
the
briefness
of life. These
channel. Several have asked if they want a chicken farm
three
matters
can
be pondered
we had copies of your news­ when they retire from the sea?
at
length
by
all
of
us,
young or
paper. We would sincerely ap­ V/hat are your plans for the
old,
ashore
or
afloat.
preciate receiving one or more future?
Retired member or young pro­
Nathan Robbins is an out-pa­
copies of the LOG weekly for
tient at the New Orleans marine bationary Seafarer — these three
distribution to SIU men.
hospital
Mississippi is going things we all face. In all parts
Mrs. A. A. Swanson
ahead with its plans for building of the world and. imder all con­
Douglass Grill
a large ship for its South Ameri­ ditions they are with us. We
Port Aransas, Texas
(Ed. Note: You can get a can run. It's now up to us to can't escape them, though we
side order of the LOG at prepare a good working agree­ may resort to wine and women
• for temporary freedom.
ment.
Douglass' now.)

J An. observer; of the American
SBsaene- todhy could wrfl say that
unemployment is more of a men­
ace to the safety and security
of our system than Joe Stalin.
If some of the all-powerful
men in the Kremlin suddenly
went crazy and gave out orders
to refuse work and a living to
all men and women over 40
years of age in the Soviet Un­
ion and all those who reach the
ripe old age of 35 because they
had only a few years more to
work before they reached the
deadline, we would be shocked.
Can any one visualize what
our government and big business
newspapers would say? I can
hear the speeches and read the
editorials now. I can hear charges
branding the totalitarian edict as
"inhuman," "unchristian," "un-

Ponders Writings Of Wunderlich
A seaman starts out to see the
world and earn his bread doing
it. Some of the Brothers I'm
sure have recognized themselves
in the writings of Wunderlich.
He is, it seems, what a poet once
termed "an artist of life." Many
seamen may disagree with life as
he sees it, but others of us see in
his words that which we have
often felt but have been unable
to express.
Keep writing, John. I'm sure
that many seamen, lonely as we
often are, find them worthy of
thought.
William A. Kennedy

Red Puts Squeeze On Isthmian—Result:- Pineapple Juice
of roller skates. One of their
Port Captains is 109 percent Am­
erican. He comes down to the
: payoff with a tomahawk. On
Sundays the stockholders take
their kids down to Beaver Street
to throw stones at the Union
Hall. Instead of getting up at
the usual 7:20, I.get up at 5:20.
That gives me two more hours
to hate the company.
This trip the Marquette Vic­
tory hit the Hawaiian-Intercoastal run; It. stinks!. However, the
islands have their usuaL points
of interest. There's the TigerInn—when yoa get the bill you
roar! At. the RoyalrHawaiian.
each- room has- hot and cold
running pineapple j,uice. Even
in the bathroom whea you. pull,
the chainr—pineapple juice! The
prices are so high they don!t
change the linen, anymore , —
they throw out the whole bed
At Wakaki beach I gpt quite
a sunburn. Everyday I used, to
go down to the beach to see
"Who's Cooking." My face peel­
ed so much I could brush my
teeth without opening my mouth.
Chief Cook Eddie Dunn got so
much sand in his stomach his
floating kidney was beached for
three days.
HEY, RUBE
Having finished with the Is­
lands we went to the West Coast.
In Washingtod we hit a town
so small they had midnight
shows at nine o'clock. Linton has
three traffic lights—^two more
than it has automobiles. Next,
Frisco and "Sunny California."
Sunny?—my foc'sle was as cold
as an Eskimo outhouse. "Chips"
Jacques had* so many bljuikets
Eddie Dunn—at the moment oh we had to use a bookmark
hk floating
kidney is in a to find him in the morning. Ih
Frisco we tied up at such a
good mooiL

If during the middle of last
January you noticed the flag
over 19 Rector Street at halfmast, it was because I had left
Waterman Steiamship Company.
But because my usual habit is
gping from. bad. to worse, I
wound up with. Isthmian.
Efficiency and precaution —
that's Isthmian. The anchors on
their ships are stamped, "Stolen
From The Isthmian SS Co." At
the top of the. gangway next to
the sailing board is a peach of
a. sign: "Put It . Back," One day
at a company pier I forgot to
clean my nails and was almost
pinched for taking, slushing
ashore. This outfit is so cheap
they christen their ships with
7TUP. Then they dispute some
poor sailor's overtime to cover
the expense of the broken bottle.
Isthmian's got the answer to
the transportation question. At
the payoff they propose to give
you a pocket compass and a pair

tough neighborhood they came
down, to the ship to roll us.
However, being fully loaded
and carrying a deck load. of.
lumber we hit out for Boston.
Such lumber—any self-respect­
ing termite wouldn't be caught
dead in this wood-pile. Now I
know what they make cornflakes
out of. You've heard new home
owners complaiit about unaged
wood. This' stuff we're carrying,
still has nests in it. There are
so many knots in these boards,
if a ball-club used them for a
fence they'd ga broke;

PageTUrieea

Among the crew we have
"Charlie" MacNeil, the great
lover. In every port there's a
girl .to see him off. She's the
one that lets the lines-go. Also
aboard is John Kuhley, and his
"mad-gic" violin. John is a true
musician. If he hears a girl sing­
ing in the bathtub he puts his
ear to the key-hole.
I thought I'd have to stay for
another trip with the big "I", but
the Governor came through with
a reprieve.
Red Campbell

civilized and a monstrosity of
the first magnitude." This coun­
try would look forward to the
overthrow of the Soviet govern­
ment in short order.
It is in America, however,
where all this is happening. The
insurance companies pass the
buck and try to wash their hands
of the matter. It is not our' do­
ing, they say. The employers
say this is done by decree of the
insurance companies which re­
fuse to insure workers over these
ages through prohibitive rates
and hidden restrictions.
/ WHO'S TO BLAME
It is not our fault, say big
businessmen. "America is still
the land of opportunity," shout
the Gabriel Heatters, not men­
tioning for whom. The govern­
ment of, by and for the people
is silent. It refuses to protect
the interests of aU the people
by ignoring the age deadline im­
posed upon its citizens.
Now the living dead are piling
up fast. Not only are the millions
of unemployed to be considered,
but the fact is that America as
a whole is getting older. The
birth rate is down and people
are living longer than they did
fifty years ago. Today a man
has fifteen years of life from
school to the finish line: 35-yearsold. In that period a man has
to make enough money to live
out the rest of his life. Not one
man in ten million living today
can perform that feat.
Consider the prospects facing
organized labor, the backbone of
American production. We, in the
ranks of labor, are tied up to
industry by contracts setting
wage scales. None of us is an
employer who uses the labor of
others to reap private gain. Not
one man covered by these con­
tracts has any chance of earning
more than a bare living. At
forty he is finished as a work­
er.
Labor must begin to see clear­
ly where the ruinous policies of
big business and government are
leading the nation.
Instead of a sane approach:
adequate pensions and a shorter
work week, there is only one
road which will bring the over40 worker back into favor; the
road to war.
Strange is it not that there
are no deadlines or age ques­
tions during a war? We are nev­
er too old to work then, and too
bad for us if we don't. The in­
surance rates are never mention­
ed and big business openly
boasts of the nation's production,
while the newspapers gloat and
howl about the freedom to work
and create, ad nauseum.
Do the blind fools of big busi­
ness believe that a man's pa­
triotism will glow like a shin­
ing star in the day of national
peril after he has been thrown
on industry's scrap heap? Even
a hero learns in time.
Wandering Seafarer

Note To Bosuns '

Red CampbelL Bosun, left, with Hunt, AB, and an unideniifled OS; while topping gear in Honolulu. Picture by Michael
Criitaldi, AB.

Men desiring to have Bo- ^
sun stomped in their Union '
books can have it done by '
appearing before the com­
mittee handling this matter r
on the 2nd deck of the New York Hall.
t
All discharges must be
presented at the time.

�THE SEAFARERS

Page Fourteen

LOG

Monday, May 2, 1949

inutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings in Brief
GALVESTON—Chairman, Jeff
lorrison, 34213; Recording Sec
|:etary, R. Wilburn, 37739; Readig Clerk. J. Byrd, 33459.
Minutes of meetings held in
Ijther SIU Branches read and ac­
cepted. Agent Keith AIsop re­
ported on the shipping picture,
/hich he termed as "slow." He
jilso gave the membership the
Icore on the Canadian District
l)eef, which the A&amp;G District
Iiad pledged to support. Trial
JyOmmittee elected from floor.
Irelegram from Assistant SecreI ary-Treasurer Matthews read,
jj/lessage reported the tie-up beI ween the CSU and the MCS in
J^he United States. One minute
j^f silence for departed Brothers,
leeting adjourned with 118
|)Ookmembers present.
4- . 4
TAMPA — Chairman, Ray
^hite, 57; Recording Secretary,
|a. H. Hall, 2600; Reading Clerk,
levin Ellis, 16.
Previous minutes of Tampa
Jranch read and accepted, along
/ith minutes of previous meet­
ings in other Branches. Motion
fcarried to accept Secretary[Freasurer's financial report. Port
|\gent reported on State Federa­

tion of Labor convention held at
[Lakeland. He said that it was
rioped that progress could be
i nade to remove some of" the reitrictions that have been holding
abor down in this state. The
•onvention decided that efforts
yould be redoubled to win for
Organized labor a more favori ble position than is possible uniler the present set-up.
The
Vgent also discussed the current
organizing drive of the AFL Reail Clerks, which is concentrathg on one of Tampa's larger de­
partment stores. . The campaign
3 proceeding smoothly, he said,
nd 'the clerks will soon call for
collective bargaining election,
.•"he Seafarers is aiding the
lerks in their drive, he reported,
jnder Good and Welfare, there
iwas considerable discussion of
l;he current situation in labor
^ind of the role being played by
•he SIU as an integral part of
•he labor movement. 55 mem)ers were present at the meeting.
4 4" 4"
PHILADELPHIA — Chairman,
Don C. Hall, 43372; Recording
Secretary, Larry White, 2716;
Reading Clerk, C. L. Cousins,
38685.

A&amp;G Shipping From April 6 To April 20
PORT

REG.
DECK

REG.
ENG.

REG.
STWDS.

TOTAL
REG.

Boston
New York
PhUadelphia
Baltimore
Norfolk
:
Savannah
Tampa
Mobile
New Orleans
Galveston.
West Coast
San Juan

13
15
10
38
167
144
140
451
26
21 '
28
75
132
,96
65
293
29
30
23
82
(Dept. figures not received) 37
11
9
8
2?
70
63
63
196
56
45
98
199
73
72
45
190
35
43
24
102 "
20
6
6
32

GRAND TOTAL

632

544

left. The Agent also discussed
the present shipping status of
the port. Motion carried to pro­
hibit loitering in front of the
building and for fines to be im­
posed on those whose conduct
directly outside the building re­
flects unfavorably on the Union
and the membership. SecretaryTreasurer's financial report read
and accepted. Trial Committee
was elected to hear case of
Brother who was accused of be­
ing drunk at a sign-on and who
then missed ship, causing the
ship to sail shorthanded. Two
other cases of a similar nature
were reviewed by the Trial Com­
mittee. It was agreed by all
hands to help keep the Hall in
ship-shape condition. Meeting
adjourned at 8:25 PM, with 125
members present.
4&gt; 41 4&gt;
BOSTON—Chairman, T. Flem­
ing, 30821; Recording Secretary,
R. Lee, 47958; Reading Clerk, B.
Lawson, 894.
Minutes of previous meetings
in other Branches read and ac­
cepted. Headquarters report to
the membership read and ac­
cepted. Following also were ap­
proved: Report of delegates to
fourth biennial convention; com­
munication from Assistant Secre-

tary-Treasurer, Agent's report
and Dispatcher's reports. One
minute of bilence in memory of
departed Brothers. Meeting ad­
journed at 7:45 PM, 85 members
present.
4 4 4
SAVANNAH — Chairman, C.
Rice, 407707; Recording Secre­
tary, J. Drawdy, 28523; Reading
Clerk, L. Hodges, 255.

Motion carried to accept pre­
vious Savannah minutes and
those of other Branch meetings.
Minutes of previous Philadel- Headquarters report to the mem­
I phia meeting and those of other bership read and accepted. Port
Jranches read and accepted. Agent discussed the shipping pic­
ture in Savannah, pointing out
that 39 men had been shipped
out in the past two weeks. It is
expected that plans under discus­
sion for expansion of the State
^ent reported that an SIU ban- docks will materially aid this
|;r had arrived from Headquar- port, the Agent said. However,
jvs and, as soon as a frame is even if the plans go through, he
j'.ade, the banner would be predicted that it would be sev­
aced in it and hung in a suit- eral months before the actual
le place in the Hall. He benefits would be forthcoming,
•'ited that the new Hall is being since it would take that time to
• lipped into shape and within line up cargoes and bring them
£week or two will be in proper into port. Motion carried that
li;t;ndition. The men are keeping Brother who forwarded com­
e new place much cleaner than munication in which he asked to
''ey did the Hall we recently be excused from the meeting

510

SHIPPED
DECK

SHIPPED SHIPPED TOTAL
ENG.
STWDS. SHIPPED

8
10
5
150
115
106
40
29
24
102
84
71
8
5
6
(Dept. figur^ not received)
7
6
8
^ 68
57
57
69
64
118
17
9
3
41
37
31
11
8
6

1,723

should be required to bring doc­
tor's statement attesting to ill­
ness he claimed. Under Good
and Welfare, many members hit
the deck to talk on matters con­
cerning the Union.
4 4' 4*
NORFOLK — Chairman, Ben
Rees, 95; Recording Secretary, P.
Livingston, 48950; Reading Clerk,
Charley Newman, 20981.
Previous Branch minutes.
Headquarters report read and ac­
cepted. Agent discussed fully
the present picture in the Can­
adian District, pointing out that
the current struggle is the same
battle the SIU has been fight­
ing against the commies all
through its existence. Dispatch-

er's report accepted. Motion car­
ried to check number of mem­
bers present from the shipping
cards turned in. Membership
discussed several matters of im­
portance to all hands.' Meeting
adjourned at 9:30 PM, --with 93
members present.
4 4 4
BALTIMORE—Chairman, F. A.
Stansbury, 4683, Recording Sec­
retary, M. Bumstine, 2257, Read­
ing Clerk, G. A. Masterson,
20297.

521

424

^35

,

23
371
93
257
19
39
21
182
251
29
109
25
1,419"

promised to put all possible pres­
sure on the Coast Guard for its
failure to send a plane to remove
the injured man to a hospital.
Minutes of meetings in other
ports accepted, except Galveston
New Busihess which was held
over to New Business. Agent
Tanner spoke on shipping situa­
tion and reported that Waterman
expects to bring out of the boneyard three ships for the coal
run. He also outlined the hap­
penings at the SIU Convention
and told of the Union's organiz­
ing program to organize every­
thing in the maritime industry.
New Business: After discussion,
motion carried to accept Galves­
ton minutes. Meeting adjourned
with 310 members present.
4 4 4
NEW YORK—Chairman. J. P.
Shuler, 101; Recording Secretary,
Freddie Stewart, 4035; Reading
Clerk, Robert Matthews, 154.

men showed in turning out for
demonstration before the MCS.
Hall. Communication from Seatrain New Orleans concerning
crewmember who knocked off
work in port before getting okay.
Matter referred to committee. Motion carried to accept and
Secretary-Treasurer's report read file minutes-of meetings held in
and accepted. Committee on bal­ other Branches. Headquarters
loting reported that 597 men had^ report delivered. A&amp;G assistance
cast their ballots to date in being given Canadian District
transportation rule referendum. outlined td membership. Disposi­
Eight men took the Union oath tion of Bernstein charter appli­
of Obligation. One minute of cation and status of Cities Serv­
silence observed for Brothers lost ice election outlined. Ageijt re­
at sea. Good and Welfare: Dis­ ported shipping as being slow,
cussion on ' keeping Hall clean.
Suggestion made that members
work off fines by cleaning and
sougeeing around the Hall. Meet­
ing adjourned with 326 members
present.
4 4 4
SAN JUAN—Chairman, J. 0.
Bernard, 42829; "Recording Secre­ and urged eligible aliens to ap­
tary, J. Garcia, 7152: Reading ply for their citizenship papers,
otherwise they will not be ship­
Clerk, R. Morgan, 10670.
ped after July 1 per membership
Motions carried to accept min­ resolution. Eleven men took the
utes of meetings held in other Union Oath of Obligation. One
Branches. Agent reported on Brother made appeal fior recon­
status of shipping in port. Patrol­ sideration of his case by Trial
man reported on problems met Committee. Matter referred to
and solved aboard the ships in Appeals Committee.
4 4 4
port. New Business: Motion by
M. Santiago that registration SAN FRANCISCO—Chairman,
A. Michelel, 21184; Recording
Secretary, R. W. Pohle, 46826;
Reading Clerk, V. J. Keller,
34557.
hours be from 9 AM to 5 PM.
Amendment by Lockwood that
registration be during the above
hours, whenever possible.
Amendment carried. Motion by
Dunphy to give Brother Banning
a vote of congratulations^ on his
recent marriage and thank him
for the hospitality extended to
Seafarers on his wedding day.
Motion by Santiago that ship­
ping list be placed in a visible
spot. Three men appointed to
inquire as to cost of paper
towels. One minute of silence
for Brothers lost at sea. Meeting
adjourned with 92 members
present.
4 4 4
MOBILE—Chairman, L. Neira,
26393; Recording Secretary,
James L. Carroll, 14; Reading
Clerk, H. J. Fischer, 59.

Baltimore minutes, minutes of
other Branch meetings and Sec­
retary-Treasurer's report read
and accepted. Nine men were
excused from the meeting. Trial
Committee, hearing case against
Brother charged with missing
ship, ruled that he is clear, and
that he missed ship through no
fault of his own. Recommended
Brother be cleared for im­
mediate shipping. Balloting Com­
mittee was elected and balloting
on transportation rule continued
until 8 PM. Agent, Patrolmen
and Dispatcher made their re­
ports. One minute of silence in
memory of drPparted Brothers.
Meeting adjourned at 8 PM with
250 members present.
4 4 4
NEW ORLEANS — Chairman,
Leroy Clarke, 23062; Recording
Secretary, Bill Frederick, 94; Motion carried to dispense
Reading Clerk, Buck Stephens, with regular order of business so
as to hear address by Moe Rosen,
78.
Vice-President of the Central
Trades
and Labor Council of
Minutes of meetings held In
Greater
New York.
Brother
other Branches read and ac­
cepted. Agent reported on ship­ Rosen addressed the membership
ping tempo and result of Cities and told them of a trip he had
Service election.
Membership made as a passenger on the Wild
He commended the
told that a showdown may be in Ranger.
order before SIU signs a con­ crew for their Union principles.
tract with the company. Mem­ He also mentioned an accident
bership thanked for cooperation he witnessed aboard the ship and

Minutes of previous meetings
in all Branches read and ac­
cepted. The Port Agent delivered
a report on the fourth interna­
tional convention of the SIU,
held recently in Baltimore. He
outlined what was accomplished
at the convention, and explained
the program that was formulated
by the delegates from the sev­
eral Districts of the SIU. He also
discussed the present state of
shipping in this area, pointing
out that, while shipping was ex­
pected to improve a little, the
picture as a whole was not too
good. He explained that some
of the shipping activity normally
confined to this port would shift
to the Wilmington area, as all
the piiseline-carrying ships were
due to payoff there. Several
communications were read and

acted upon. Patrolman's and
Dispatcher's reports were ap­
proved', along with Headquarters
and Secretary-Treasurer's finan­
cial reports. One minute of si­
lence was observed in memory
of our departed Brothers. Meet­
ing adjourned at 8 PM, with 138
members in attendance.

�THE SEAFARERS

Monday. May 2. 1949

(Continued from Page i)
motives behind tHe transfer of ships to the
Panamanian flag, it would
difficult, generally
speaking, to- maintain- that at present the condi­
tions offered in Panamanian ships are inferior to
those obtaining under other flags, with the ex­
ception of the American. But one or.tw^ points
may be noted.

THREAT TO LABOR STANDARDS .
The owners of these ships are completely free
from the restraint of social or maritime legisla­
tion or the* pressure of trade' union standards, so
that if the present boom in shipping came to an
end there would be nothing to keei) Panamanian
conditions at the present level.
Furthermore, the ships transferred to the
Panamanian flag,
for the most part, continue
their former practice as far as conditions of
service on board are concerned, with the result
that there prevails complete chaos in this respect.
In these circumstances it is not difficult to
foresee what would happen to labor and safety
standards in Panamanian ships, and 'v^at would
be the effects on the employment prospects of
seamen in other ships, in the event of intensi­
fication of the competition for freights.It is the freedom to manipulate seafarers' con­
ditions and other factors governing operating
costs which disquiets the seafarers, and which is
undoubtedly a major motive for the artificial
expansion of shipping under the Panamanian and
similar flags.
For the seafarers the Panamanian shipping
issue therefore constitutes a . direct danger, both

LOG

from the short and the long term point of view.
The ultimate consequence of a flight of ship­
ping; tn flags - under which there is no proper
regulation and control must be to undermine
the whole structure of standards in the shipping
industry, both as regards to safety of life at sea
and seafarers' working and living conditions.
It is clearly the duty of the seafarers' organi­
zations to check the process before it gets com­
pletely out of hand.
The question of the certification of officers
illustrates the detrimental, effect of the Pana­
manian position on maritime standards.
In Panama, an officer's certificate can be ob­
tained upon payment of a nominal fee and pre­
sentation of a foreign certificate and, there are
grounds to believe that little discrimiifiation is
exercised in this respect, the danger exists that
ships will carry officers holding ranks for which
they would not be qualified in ships of other
nationalities.

Fas^ Fifteen

stitutes 95 percent of the manpower in Pan­
amanian ships.
The bulk of the crews manning these ships
are unorganized, and a considerable proportion
of them are indifferent, if not hostile, to trade
unions.
The reason for this, in many cases, is that
they have either been discharged from the mer­
chant navy of -another country on account of
• bad conduct, or expelled from their trade unions
for accepting employment in Panama-flag ships.'
SHIPS WITHOUT HOMES

These ships, for the most part, do not visit
Panamanian ports. They have no home ports,
they are indeed veritable hoboes of the sea.
From a trade union point of view the position
on board Panamanian ships is therefore chaotic,
and there seems to be no solution for it.
We are dealing at some length with this trade
union problem, because it has been suggested at
times that a solution would be for Panamanian
EFFICIENCY RATE LOW
ships, the majority of which are today of Amer­
There is evidence that to some extent this ican origin, to pay American wages and gen­
position exists today. Similar considerations erally observe American conditions.
apply to the other departments on board and, . ,But the question immediately arises, who
generally speaking, it may be said that pro­ would ensure the observance of those conditions,
ficiency standards in Panamanian ships are be­ and who would organize the men concerned in
the strong union which would be needed?
low normal.
The number of seamen of Panamanian na­
Owing to the nature of Panamanian shipping,,
tionality is negligible, and this may be one of such a union would require to be represented in
the reasons why to our knowledge there exists many world ports, the more so seeing that a
no seamen's union-in Panama.
considerable proportion of the shipowners operat­
But, even if there was such a union, it could ing under the Panamanian flag are notorious for
not handle the multi-national crowd which con­ their sharp practices.

Frisco Shipping
Is Stabilized;
No Men Needed

SlU HULLS
SIU, A&amp;6 District

BALTIMORE
14 North Gay St.
William Rentz, Agent
Mulberry 4S40
BOSTON
276 State St.
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Richmond 2-0140
Dispatcher
Richmond !2-0141
GALVESTON
308 Vi—23rd St.
By FRENCHY MICHELET
Keith Alsop, Agent
Phono 2-8448
MOBILE
1 South Lawrence St.
RUSSELL E. LUND
EDWARD P, WERDA
P. J. THORNTON
SAN FRANCISCO — Shipping
Cal Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-1754
Your mother is anxious to hear has slowed down considerably on
Communicate
with
your
Get in touch with F. ZielasNEW ORLEANS
523 Bienville St.
E. Sheppard, Agent
Magnolia 6112-6113 kowski, 801 N. 2nd Ave., Alpena, daughter, Mrs. R. H. Stephens from you.
this coast. This development,
NEW YORK
51 Beaver St. Mich.
6933 Oakwood St., Jacksonville
*
XXX
coupled
with the continuing in­
Joe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784
6, Fla.
JOHN J. HARTY
3^ 4,
flux of men from the other coast,
NORFOLK
127-120 Bank St.
Miss Jessie G. Neal asks that is making for a bad situation.
JOHN LEYS
' t. X X
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
you
call or write. Her address:
Contact
Abraham
Berkowitz,
PHILADELPHIA
337 Market St.
HAROLD L. GILLAN.
J. Sheehan, Agent
Market 7-1635 Attorney, 1108-10-12 North Am­
30 Bellingham Ave., Revere, We advise all men who are
considering coming out here not
SAN FRANCISCO
85 Third St. erican Building, Broad
below. A seaman's wallet, containing Mass.
your
discharges
and
photographs
Frfinchy Michelet, Agent Douglas 2-5475
to do so. The runs from this
Chestnut Street, Philadelphia,
SAN JUAN, P.R
252 Ponce de Leon
has
been
turned
in
at
the
Newcoast
have stablized, and none of
- CLIFFORD NEWTON
L. Craddock, Agent
San Juan 2-5996 Pa.
York
Hall.
"CaU
for
it
at
the
the
companies
are contemplating
Contact V. L. Lyon, Four Leaf
SAVANNAH
2 Abercom St.
3^
baggage
room.
putiing
any
new
ships in service
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728
Clover Realty, 501 E. Walnut
CHARLfeS PETERS
TACOMA
1519 Paciac St.
from
here.
Street, or call SY 2-8288. Moved
Your mother is anxious to hear
Broadway 0484
and missed your communication. E'er some months now, we
from
you.
TAMPA
1809':^1811 N. Franklin St.
Ray White, Agent
Phone M-1323
have been following a policy of
XXX
WILMINGTON, Calif., 227 Vz Avalon Blvd.
DAVID MAXWELL
KILMER*^ E? PARSONS
letting permitmen remain on
Terminal 4-2874
Get in touch with Miss Bon­ ships as long as they wished.
Get in touch with your sister,
HEADQUARTERS. . 51 Beaver St., N.V.C.
nie
McCain, PC Box 313, Phone
Mrs.
Jennie
Lundrgen,
30
HawSECRETARY-TREASURER
The scarcity of jobs has forced
39332,
Galveston, Texas.
ley
St.,
New
Britain,
Conn.
Paul Hall
us
to discontinue this practice,
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
Si 3^ ft
XXX
and permitmen are consequently
Lindsey Williams
CARROLL E. HARPER
MALCOLM CROSS
SS COLABEE
beginning to find the sledding a
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURER
Your
wife, Florence, asks you little rough. It will probably be­
Get
in
touch
with
Ben
Sterl­
Rob'ert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
The following men have retro­
ing's office, 42 Broadway, New active wages due them, which to write her. Serious illness.
Joseph Volpian
come increasingly so as time goes

SUP

HONOLULU

.16 Merchant St.
Phone 5-8777
PORTLAND
Ill W. Burnside St.
Beacon 4336
RICHMOND, Calif.
257 Sth St.
Phone 2599
SAN FRANCISCO.
59 Clhy St.
Douglas 2-8363
SEATTLE
86 Seneca St.
Main 0290
WILMINGTON
440 Avalon Blvd.
Terminal 4-3131

Canadian District
Headquarters. .512 McGill St., Montreal
HALIFAX
128"/, Hollis St.
Phone 3-8911
MONTREAL-^
..1227 Philips Square
Plateau 6700—Marquette 5909
PORT ARTHUR
63 Cumberland St..
Phone North 1220
PORT COLBQRNE
103 Durham St.
Phone: SSOt
TORONTO
.lllA Jarvis St.
Elgin 5719
VICTORIA, B.C.
602 Boughton St.
Empire 4S3T
VANCOUVER.
56^ Hamilton St.
PaciAc 7824
viStifciiii

York City.

XXX
may be collected at the Pay­
on.
% %
masters office, 2nd floor, Ameri­ FREDERICK E. BROWNLOW
Most of the payoffs that are
ERLING MELLE
Communicate with Lora
can-Hawaiian Steamship Com­
scheduled
for this coast, in the
Your wife asks you to write pany, 90 Broad Street, New York Brownlow at 125 East 24th St.
forseeable
future,
will be in Wil­
her at 920 Eddy Street; San 4, N.Y.
mington.
Francisco.
DAVID B^ MORRIS
Capriano, Teodorico C.; JacobToni Ramirez asks you to get In the Seattle and Portland
S- X
sen, Edward N.; Herlihy, Donald in touch with her at 106 Con­
LARRY TEFFT
area very little activity is ex­
Get in touch with your old T.; Dugina, John J.; Kovamees, gress, Mobile, Alabama.
pected. There are a couple of.
shipmate from the SS Gateway Wasile; Pawel, Frederick; Jen­
ships
that wiU payoff there in
XXX
City and Arizpa, Edgar Kurz. sen, August; Gil, Jose B.; Richie,
FRANK BOYNE
the
near
future, and this will
His address: 225 East 85th Street, "Nieolh; Johnson, Rby 91; Scialpi,
Please write Slim Nelson, c/o help to relieve the situation in
New York, N. Y. He is anxious Ettore M.
General Delivery, Box 82, Lin­ San Francisco.
Reilly, James; Gerrick, Jr., den, New Jersey.
to hear from you.
However, we understand that
William; Teets, Rolland; Nagles,
XXX
both
South Atlantic and Smith
Jacobus;
Murphy,
James
E.;
CHARLES^ L l^RKELEY
ROBERT CALVERT
and
Johnson,
who are now oper­
Uolmvist,
Bengt
R.;
Klain,-KonsFormerly aboard SS Wanda.
You can contact John Wunating
out
of
there
on the grain
tant
M.;
Kelleher,
Daniel;
BenYour mother is very anxious to
derlich at Savannah Ship Chand­
run,
are
going
to
return their
have yotr commtinicate with "her son&gt; Edgar P.; Cil, Jose; Yudo- lery, 117 West Bay St., Savan­
ship's
to
the
east
coast
once the
at 20 Main St., Charlestown, vishes, William; Castelo, Andres nah, Ga.
present
grain
contracts
expire.
C.
Mass.
.XXX
To sum up: shipping is only
Nelson, Louis; Dingle, George
JOSEPH L. MILFORD
X
fair
now and, from all indica­
JAMES b. BRUSO
'H.; Bass, Melvin W.; Brown, Joe Contact B. G. S. Decker, Sal­
Get in touch with your wife. B.; Warren, Caswell E.; Childs, vation Army, 52 Ellis St., N.E., tions, it will not improve in the
imimediate future.
Urgent. ..
,
Samuel C.
—
Atlanta, Ga.

�Page Sixteen

r HE SEA FA RE RS LOG

*

Monday. May 2. 1949

A coalition of ^Congressmen
14. Restrictions on welfare
opposed to the Thomas-Lesinski
funds and. check-off — retained
Bill,- which would -repeal the
and strengthened by making
Taft-Hartley law, is sponsoring
»heck-off authorization automa­
a substitute measure known as
In a letter sent to all Senators and Representatives last week, the SIU Atlantic and tically non-effective at the ex­
the Wood Bill. The Wood BU
piration of one year from the
is in many respects worse than Gulf District urged enactment of the Thomas-Lesinski Bill, which would repeal the Taft date of its execution, thus eli­
the Taft-Hartley law and has Hartley Act and substitute a modified version of the Wagner Act. The A&amp;G communi­ minating automatic renewal and
.been denounced by the American cation also declared that the Union is vehemently opposed to the Wood Bill (which is making it necessary to procure
-Federation of Labor, which de analyzed on this page), sponsored by a reactionary coalition of Republicans and Democrats, new auHiorizatiohs each year. dared there is little to choose
15. Craft unit proviso — re­
which in many respects is worse than the Taft-Hartley law. Text of the letter follows:
between the two.
tained.
• Counsel for the AFL has pre­
The membership of the Atlantic and Gulf District of the Seafarers International 16. Provision for 00-day no­
pared a detailed analysis of the
tice of termination or modifica­
Union, American Federation'of Labor, respectfully urges that you support the Thomas^
Wood Bill as follows:
tion of existing agreement—re­
While the Wood bill does Lesinski Bill (HR 2032; S 249) in the interests of re-establishing an equitable labor- tained, except that an employeethrow several sops in labor's di­ management relationship.
striking in violation of the 60rection, in reality -the bill en­
day
clause does hot lose his
. Our reasons for favoring the repeal of the Taft-Hartley Law and the enactment of
larges and strengthens the most
status as an employee.
objectionable feature of the Taft- the Thomas-Lesinski Bill are the same as those outlined in the official position of the
17. Separate conciliation serv­
Hartley Act, namely, the use of American Federation of LaBor.
ice—retained.
injunctions against alleged union
We strongly feel that passage of the Thomas-Lesinski measure, without crippling 18. Provision' for enjoining
•unfair labor practices and in amendments, will provide the atmosphere for peaceful and harmonious labor-manage­ strikes in emergency situation,
connection with so-called "na­
80-day 'cooling-off' period and
ment relations.
tional emergency strikes."
'last "offer' election — strength­
Typical of the injurious effects of the Taft-Hartley Law is its ban on the closed ened by permitting injunction at
INJUNCTIONS
The new bill permits the gen­ shop. The situation in the maritime industry is a case in point. For years, the closed any time a dispute is threatened
eral counsel for the NLRB to shop—or Hiring Hall—has been of immeasurable value in maritime and its virtues have without investigation or fact­
finding by presidential board.
file suit for injunction in the time and again been acknowledged by management.
However,
the useless last offer
federal courts merely upon the
The
Wood
bill
is
nothing
more
than
the
Taft-Hartley
Law
under
another
name.
election
is
eliminated.
filing of charges alleging the
union has committed any unfair It would do nothing to correct the injustices of the Taft-Hartley Law.
ELIMINATES SAFEGUARDS
labor practice, and without fur­
Under the Wood bill, the safe­
Today, when the rights of laboring men and women in other parts of the world
ther investigation, and the courts are being wiped out by tyranny, it is more essential than ever for our nation to force­ guards inherent in an investiga­
are empowered to issue injunc­
tion by a boai-d appointed by the
tions in such cases in their com­ fully demonstrate that American organized labor enjoys equality and justice under the President, which makes an in­
plete discretion and without any law.
vestigation and issues findings of
standards to guide them or safe­
fact
prior to the iss^iance of an
It is our considered opinion that the tause of democracy and the rights of free
guards to protect against indis­ men and women to better their lot will be rendered a service by your support of the injunction, az-e entirely . elimin^
criminate or arbitrary orders.
ated. The boaz-d now functions
Under the Taft-Hartley Act, Thomas-Lesinski Bill.
only after the injunction is ob­
Sincerely, yours,
the general counsel can seek an
tained.
injunction merely upon filing
Thus,- the Wood bill makes it
PAUL HALL,
charges only where violations of
impossible
for the President even
Secreiary-Treasurer •
Section 8 (b) (4), relating to sec­
to attempt to settle the threat­
ondary boycotts, are charged,
ened national emergency by the
and then only after a full in­
appointment
of a Board of In­
2. Blanket prohibitions on re­ Under the Wood bill, all closed- benefit whatsoever which could
vestigation has shown the exist­
quiry
without
first obtaining an
straint or coercion by unions—re­ shop agreements requiring mem­ be dei-ived from this pi-ovision.
ence of facts rnaking it reason­ tained and strengthened by perinjimction.
bership in a union earlier than
In all other respects the pro­
ably certain that the charges are mittiog injunctions merely upon
Under the injimction the court
30 days after employment are hibitions on closed-shop agree­
can
order the parties to the dis­
true.
the filing of charges and without outlawed, and this even includes ment and the restrictions on
Furthermore, in respect to the.
pute
to use their best efforts to
investigation or issuance of com­ agreements which might have union-shop agi-eements are iden­
national emergency injunctions,
settle
it, under threat of con­
plaint as required under Taft- been valid under the Taft-Hart­ tical with those under Taftthe new bill permits the Presi­
tempt
of couz-t if they .fail to
Hartley.
ley Act, such as those entered Hai-tley, including the provision do so.
dent to apply for an injunction
3. Broad prohibitions on sec­ into prior to the passage of that making the Hfcdge-podge of state The Wood bill, therefore,
immediately upon the threat of
ondary
boycotting — retained act and made effective' for a anti-closed-shop laws paramount would arouse all the antagonisms
strike, and without the require­
completely,
with the very slight period of years.
to the federal law.
ment that a Board of Inquiry be
that are automatically induced
exception
that
union
employees
Whilev
the
Wood
bill
does
eli­
6. Exclusion of 'supervisors' by the issuance of any injunction
assembled to investigate the dis­
pute and make findings prior to engaged in a lawful primary minate the useless union-shop from all pz-6tection against em­ in a later dilute Before the
. the issuance of the injunction, as strike may induce other union election pre-requisite, it permits ployer discrimination and refusal' Pz-esident is empowered to even
is required under the Taft-Hart­ employees to assist them in the employes in a bargaining unit to to bargain—i-etained.
tz-y to bz-ing about conciliation or
following limited situation: rescind the authority of a union
ley Act.
7. Proviso permitting employer settlement of the issues. '
The few safeguards on the is­ where these other employees are to enter into a union-shop agree­ to use 'free' speech to abuse 19. Restrictions on political
suance of injunctions in cases in­ employed to work on products ment by majority vote!
unions with no threat of i-eprisal conti-ibutions by labor organiza­
volving jurisdictional strikes that ordinarily made at the struck
tions—retained.
ARMS EMPLOYER
—retained.
are contained in the Taft-Hartley plant, as in a case where such
20. Separation of powers as be­
The bill further permits the 8. Non-Communist affidavit
Act are eliminated under the products have been jobbed or employer to discharge an em­ and other filing i-equirements— tween boaz-d and general counsel
new Wood bill, and under that contracted out, but even then ployee under a union-shop agree­ i-etained as to unions and ex­ —retained, and powers of gen­
bill either the board or the court only if these other employees are ment for two reasons, in addi­ tended to include employers.
eral counsel greatly expanded by,
has complete discretion to issue members of the same local tion to failure'to pay dues and
giving him absolute discz-etion to
9. Restrictions on excessive seek injunction in ' any .case
orders respecting jurisdictional union as the employees on strike initiation fees, namely, whez-e the
sti-ikes, without even affording and have a contract with their employee was expelled from tije initiation fees—retained.
where charges may have been
10. Resti'ictions on 'featherbed- filed.
the parties to the dispute an op­ employer permitting them not to union for engaging in a wildcat
ding—retained.
portunity to settle the jurisdic­ work on struck goods.
stz'ike or for being a communist 11. Definition of good-faitjz^
CONCLUSION
tional dispute for themselves, as As can readily be seen, cases or for being affiliated with a
Fz-om the foregoing section-bybargaining—retained.
was permitted under Taft-Hart­ where the employer has agreed communist 6r similar organiza­
12. Employer petitions and de­ section comparison of the Wood
that his employees need not work tion.
ley.
certification provisions—I'etained. bill with the Taft-Hartley Act,
, The following is a provision- on struck goods, and where the
Further,
the
employer
is
per­
13. Opening of federal coui-ts it can be readily seen that, if
by-provision comparison of the employees engaged in the prim­
mitted
to
notify
a
union
'of
op­
to damage suits for bi'eaches of anything, the Wood bill is more
new Wood bill with the Taft- ary dispute are members of the
portunities
for
employment,'
but
contracts
and for violation of vicious .and more oppressive than
Hartley Act, showing what, if same local union as employees
since
the
prohibitions
on
the
secondai-y
boycott provisions— the Taft-Hartley Act and should
any, changes are made in i-espect making or working on products
making
and
use
of
union-shop
I-etained,
with
slight limitation be as strenuously opposed.
to each of the various provisions for the struck plant, will be very
Wherever the restrictions of
agreements
are
veiy
specific,
it
discussed
under
secondai-y boyin the Taft-Hartley Act. The •few and far between, so in prac­
the Taft-Hartley Act are lessen­
is
impossible
to
see
any
matei-ial
cott
paragraph
(No.
3)
above.
following provisions of the Taft- tical effect the so-called broad­
ed, it is for the most part in un­
Hartley .Act are* retained, ening provision is meaningless.
important respects, and, on the
strengthened or modified by the
4. Prohibition against jurisdic­
other hand, the most objection­
Wood bill as indicated:
tional disputes — retained and
able of the Taft-Hartley Act pro­
strengthened against unions by
OTHER PROVISIONS
visions — those dealing with in­
junctions against labor organi­
1. Disenfranchisement of econ­ eliminating opportunity for par­
Seafarers and members of their families are urged
omic strikers—^modified so as to ties to settle their own dispute
zations — are considerably
16 -write immediately to their Senators and Congress­
stz-engthened. - permit an economic stfiker to and by permitting court injunc­
of
If ttze
foregoing analysis is
vote in a representation election tion merely upon filing
men, telling them to vote for the Thomas-Lesinski Bill
compared
with the analysis of.
but only if he has not been per­ charges and without issuing of
to rhplace the T^ft-Hartley law. The Thomas-Lesinski
the Thomas-Lesinski bill, it can
manently replaced for a period complaint or other investigation.
Bill is now before the House. The complete list of
be seen that the Wood bill could
of 90 days prior to the election. 5. Ban on closed shdp and re­
Senators and Representatives, arranged according to
not, under any circumstances, be&gt;
In other words, if the economic striction on union shop—retained
considez-ed in any way an ade­
state and district, appears on pages § and 9 of this issue.
striker has'been replaced for 90 in most respects, strengthened
quate
substitute.
in
others,
and
modified
in
some.
days, he cannot vote.

SlU Endorses Thomasdesmki, Bill

Write Your Congressmen

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9908">
                <text>May  2, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9982">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 16</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10003">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10024">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10045">
                <text>HEADLINES&#13;
CSU RANK AND FILE HELPING CANADIAN SIU TO CREW SHIPS&#13;
CITIES SERVICE SEAMEN MAKE CHOICE:IT'S THE SEAFARERS BY 89 PERCENT&#13;
BATTLE FOR T-H REPEAL OPENS IN CONGRESS&#13;
CSU RANK AND FILE REPUDIATE CP LEADERS&#13;
CITIES SERVICE SEAMEN SAY: 'WE WANT SEAFARERS'&#13;
PORT WILMINGTON SHIPPING GOOD&#13;
MOBILE EXPECTS SHIPPIG RISE&#13;
CITIES SERVICE VICTORY CHEERS NEW YORK&#13;
BALTIMORE REPORTS JOB APLENTY&#13;
PANAMA FLAG SHIPS SHOW ABNORMAL GROWTH&#13;
CSU ACTION WAS 'STRIKE FOR STRIKE'S SAKE&#13;
SIU CANADIAN DISTRICT OFFERS PROGRAM&#13;
CREW CHARGES COAST GUAR REFUSED AID TO INJURES SEAMAN,ASKS PROBE&#13;
TWO SIU-MANNED SHIPS FREED FROM SHOALS&#13;
JOHN KEALY DIES IN BANGKOK&#13;
PANAMA FLAG SHIPS SHOW ABNORMAL GROWTH&#13;
ANALYSIS SHOWS WOOD BILL WORSE THAN T-H&#13;
</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10046">
                <text>5/01/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10074">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10083">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13054">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="957" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="961">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/cbcf74779e855ad9ca88f2691523096b.PDF</src>
        <authentication>acbebe5792da52a0bdabd663ed50f20d</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47437">
                    <text>SlU Canadian District
Fulfiiiing Contracts
With New Operators

I, ,

Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA
VOL. XI

NEW YORK. N. Y., TUESDAY, MAY 10. 1949

No. 17

By the end of last week, the SIU, Canadian
District, had manned more than half the 100-odd
ships of Canada^s east coast merchant fleet, and
was fulfilling to the letter the contract it signed
with the Canadian shipowners federation late in
March.
Meanwhile, close to 1,500 former members of
the communist-led Canadian Seamen's Union had
left their communist leaders and joined the SIU,
confident that from now on they would get real
trade representation and protection unmixed with

Canadian Situation
To all communists and
fellow-travelers:
The SIU Canadian District
signed a contract covering
the deep sea ships operating
from ports in Eeastern Can­
ada. The SIU Canadian Dis­
trict is sailing those ships.
Moreover, the SIU Canadian
District will continue to sail
. those ships, despite the phony
efforts of the communist
leaders of the Canadian Sea­
men's Union to stop the SIU
through their so-called strike
—which was not called until
after the SIU signed the
contract. The lies and distor­
tions of the reds will not
turn the pro-SIU tide. The
SIU is in Canada to stay.

To all A&amp;G crews:
The SIU. Atlantic &amp; Gulf
District, has gone on record
to support the Canadian Dis­
trict. The members of the
A&amp;G District will continue
to support their Canadian
Brothers as long as that sup­
port is needed.
Contact every Canadian
ship you meet. If you find
an SIU crew aboard, tell
them you are behind them
100 percent. If you find a
CSU crew, bring them
around to the SIU viewpoint.

OS Finds 19 'Objections' To SiU Cortification
NEW YORK—The Cities Serv­ charges that "alleged personnel
ice Company is making a des­ did not receive sufficient ad­
perate, elevrath-hour attempt to vance, notice of the elections, that
halt certification of the SIU At­ "no valid list of employees
lantic and Gulf District as collec­ eligible to vote was utilized" by
tive bargaining agent for the un­ the Board, that ,the company
licensed personnel of its tanker was not given a "reasonable op­
portunity to attend and challenge
fleet.
ineligible
voters," that "voting
. After the National Labor Rela­
was
conducted
in inappropriate
tions Board announced, on April
place,"
and
that
"aliens were al­
15, that the SIU had received 89
lowed
to
cast
ballots."
percent of the votes in the elec­
tion conducted aboard nine of
TECHNICALITIES
the company's vessels, company
The company's objection to the
attorneys filed
a voluminous
polling
of aliens was made des­
document listing 19 objections
pite
the
fact that Cities Service
"to the conduct of the election
hires
men
without respect to
and to conduct affecting the re­
their
origin.
sults of the election."
Under NLRB procedure, the
OLD STUFF
company had a period of five
Virtually all of the objections days after announcement of elec­
allege that the conduct of the tion results to file objections. It
election by the NLRB was "oth­ came through, as expected on the
erwise arbitrary, capricious, fifth day.
illegal and void."
The Company has never failed
The company's arguments to take advantage of any tech­
against the election are pretty nicality in an effort to forestall
much the same as those fre­ he day when it personnel could
quently, but futilely, presented freely exercise their choice of a
by its attorneys when they bargaining agent.
sought to block the balloting.
Even after every attempt to
Specifically, the petition prevent the election from taking

place ended in defeat, the com­
pany continued to employ stall­
ing and obstructive tactics.
When the NLRB announced
that the election would begin,
the company refused to cooper­
ate at every turn. In fact, it ac­
tively sought to snarl the pro-

Stay Aboard Ship
All pro-Union men aboard
Cities Service Oil Company
ships are urged to remain
on their vessels until they
win the protection of an SIU
contract. The company is
making every effort to re­
place men with known prounion leanings. The over­
whelming NLRB election vic­
tory brings nearer the day
when Cities Service seamen
can throw off the yoke of
company domination.
Stay on the ships until the
fight is won.

cedure by refusing to allow the
men to ballot aboard the ships.
NLRB officials were forced to
conduct the poll at dockside
points away from company prop­
erty.

communist party politics.
As a consequence, the CSU's
phony, five-week
old "strike"
against the SlU-contracted ships
was rapidly petering out, and
the CSU itself was a dying or­
ganization.
However, the CSU's' commun­
ist hatchetmen, desperately try­
ing to keep some kind of hold
in Canada's eastern ports, not­
ably strategic Halifax, continued
their campaign of vilification
and terrorism against the SIU.'
COMMIES RAVE
The communist press, including
the Canadian Tribune in Mon­
treal, the Daily Worker in New
York and the Daily Worker in
London,raved wildly in support
of the CSU's phony attempt to
oust the SIU and regain the
ships it lost through communist
maneuvering. But the commie
campaign, based on lies and
distortion, was proving fruitless.
The International Transportworkers Federation, to whose
leaders the CSU's communist of­
ficials had directed a plea for
help, flatly refused to give any
support.
The ITF's decision was made
at ITF headquarters in London,
and released in Ottawa by J. E.
McGuire, Secretary-Treasurer of
the Canadian Brotherhood of
Railway Employees and a mem­
ber of the ITF's executive Coun­
cil.
MISREPRESENTED
The phony strike called by the
CSU's leaders was put over on
thfi CSU rank-and-file without a
secret strike vote, and the al­
leged issues were thoroughly
misrepresented. The strike was
not called until after the SIU
signed its agreement.
The CSU, which had a con­
tract for the ships last year, be­
gan negotiating for a new agree­
ment in October.
When the union and the com­
panies failed to agree, the dis­
pute was handed to a three-man
Board of Conciliation, one of
whose members was the handpicked representative of the
CSU officials.

INVESTIGATION
Ships whose crews balloted in
the election are the Archers
Hope, Bents Fort, Bradford Is­
land, Fort Hoskins, Lone Jack,
Royal Oak, Salem Maritime and
Winter Hill.
PHONY ISSUES
The regional office of the
When this Board unanimously
NLRB is investigating the objec­
agreed
to a contract, it was ex­
tions submitted by the company.
pected
that the CSU would ac­
Upon completion of the study,
cept
it,
and the CSU rank and
the board will forward a report,
file
have
given ample proof
along with the company objec­
since
that
they
would have ac­
tions, to the national office of the
cepted
it
had
they
known the
NLRB in Washington for review
truth
about
it.
and a final ruling.
However, their communist of­
If the objections ai-e over­ ficials rejected it, claiming false­
ruled, the NLRB will issue the ly that the agreement called for
order duly certifying the SIU a 25 percent wage cut and loss of
as collective bargaining agent for the Hiring Hall.
the Cities Service fleet of
This rejection of the Concilia­
tankers.
tion Board proposals had the
The Union already holds one effect of eliminating the CSU,
certification by virtue of its over­ which never had been certified
whelming victory "last year on on the ships, from the field—unthq company's first six ships.
(CoHthmed on Page 3)

�jfege Two

T:H E SEAFARERS

LOG

Tuesday, May 10, 1949

SEAFAMERS
Published Three Times a Month by the
SEAFARERS INTERNATIONA^. UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
.
Atlantic and Gulf District
!

•

* Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor

At n Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784

Entered as second class matter June 15, 1945, at the Post Office
in New York, N. Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
. 267

Keen Competition
The cut-rate shipping business must be looking up.
Panama and Honduras have acquired a, partner, in- tl^e
seamy racket of registering ships under their flags so that
greedy owners can avoid taxes, engineering standards and
union crews. The partner is San Marino^.
Sure, there's such a country. It's up a mountain and
is surrounded on all sides by Italy. It has 3 8 square miles
in which the 14,000 inhabitants jump up and down on
grapes and milk cows. The only water flows down the
luountain in a couple of trout streams. The midget state
is listed as a republic and a communist government was
recently voted into power.
Apparently, the 14,000 San Marensians are tired of
the simple, mountain life, They want to branch out. They
want a merchant marine.
They want it so badly that they don't cape, how
they get it. They want it fast—perhaps, to. get ahead of
Liberia, Pakistan or Lower Slobdovia in the-race for a
fast buck.
So far there has been no rush to San Marino's bargain
counter. If one starts, the International Transport workers
F.ederation may make the San Marensians prefer the
mountain- to the sea.

There's Still Time

ARTHUR AVANTIS
T. LEE
For three days last week, labor-backed forces in the
JAMES LAFFIN
House of Representatives fought a running. battle against
L. KAY
a numerically superior coalition of anti-labor Democrats
ft ft ft
BALTIMORE MARINE HOSP.
and Republicans in an effort to knock the. Taft-Hartley
G. BEKKEN
' '
layr off the books. Shortly after the legislative fight got
R.
SOUZA
under way, it appeared that the reactionary elements had
C. HANDERSON
the situation well in hand. But when the smoke cleared,
R. SIGLER
things stood exactly as they were before the. fight began.
M. M. COTLER
F. KORVATIN
;
W. SATTERFIELD *
'
[i Hartley law and substituted a modified Wagnen Act.
The»e;a^B ib^ UnioyvBrotbers currently in the me,tinevhp«&gt;itals. H. MILLIRON
L. -McMILLIAN-.
i
organized labor was backing this measure- Bjut thiCi rajft^ «&lt;s. .reporJe4 by-the Port lAgente. ThM^ Bnotbees iind.rtime-h^ngingi P.
DOUGHERTYv
of'anti-labor Congressmen who escaped the House-cleaning heavily oiv Iheia--hands.. Do whBt.;yow.can;, to chees.:them-:^up by G. CARROLL
1
in the, elections of last fall came up with the Wood bil!, writing them.
W. CONNORS
J. J. O'NEILL
~
:
a monstrosity which the AFL had denounced as. "evciv
V. DACO
NEPONSBT: HOSPITAL
worse than the Taft-Hartley law."
ft. ft ft,^
;
C. P. ALVARES
R. A. BLAKE
U. S,. NAVY HOSPITAL
M. J. LUCAS
While the battle raged over the Wood Bill, a com­ L. BALLESTERO
LONG BEAPIL. CALXF.
H. F. BEEKER
promise in the form of the Sims bill was offered, and J. S. CAMPBELL
V.
E;
GROVES
J.
O. ROLING
' V. W. CHESNER.
defeated.
Q.
O.
MILLAN
WM.
L. PARKSOn Tuesday, the House voted on the Wood bill and J. T. EDWARDS
F, CHRISTNER
W. H. MILLISON
I. H. FRENCH
adi&gt;Pited-it by; a vote of -217 to 203. Things - looked bad, E. FERRER
A. J. JANELLO
MOBILE MARINE HOSPITAL
but the labor minded members of the House didn't give V. JIMINEZ
A._J. HOWARD
N. VRYDENBERGER
J, C. STEELE
ft ft ft
up. The following day—after all-night maneuvers by both J. T. KEMPT
NEW ORLEANS HOSP;
J. B. BERRIER
sides to swing votes—the House moved to recommit the K. G. LUNDBERG
J.
BUCKELEW
C.
L.
MOATS
PETE
SADAWSm.
Wood bill. When the tally was announced the anti-labor
E,
JARRETT
;•
WM. R. GARDNER
W. SEARS
forces were stunned.
ft ft ft.,
,
E. MASSEY
H. SELBY
The results showed the Wood bill had been defeapedj J. SILLAK
J. DENNIS
MOBILE HOSPITAL .
212 to 209, thanks to a last-minute switch by 10 Q. TULLROTZ
J..B(.BBBBIBR
LANDRY
L. TORRES'
Democrats.
Er G. HIGGASONELLARD
T; WA-DSWORTH
J.
P. BUCKELEM
But from the shape of things it appeared that anti- G. WOODS
N. R. CARMAZZI
TOMMIE WILKINS
labor people in the'House still had enough votes to beat F. ZESIGER.
WM. N. PRICE
ERNEST JAR'^TT
I
off the Lesinski bill; Representative Lesinski said he felt
JPHN
DAVIS
4. 4, ft
ft ft- ft
.'
that any new; measure would have to be along the lines STATEN ISLAND • HOSPITAL J. Fv MENDOZA,
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL
I
MeAVOY
of the Sims bill, which is a strongly modified Thomas-.- J. TURNER
C. BUTLER
KENNY
C. W. GOODWIN:
Lesinski bill.
G.
LASS
EUGENE SAUNDERS,
J. A. MARCOUX
W. STEWART
Hope for repeal of Taft-Hartley still exists, how­ T. M, BROWN
w. MCDONALD ,
L. G COLE
ever. The Senate is expected to consider the Thornas- . D. HERON
GEO,.W. MEANEY
WYGHE
1
S. C, ORTEGA
Lesinski bill very soon. A battle is likely there too. And M. LACO JR.
ft ft ft
,
&lt;
CHAS. BROWH
since- many of the legislators are, probably on the fence, R. A. BARRETTGALVESTON
HOSPITAL
C. LOCIGNO
MEEHANnow is "the right time for Seafarers to write to their W.
J. D. JACKSON
'
W. J. MAHONEY
C. ELLZEY •
Senators and tell them to repeal Taft-Hartley and enact M. J. OLSON
L. R. WILLIAMSON
j
J. DICKINSON
the Thomas-Lesinski bill.
J.
HAVERTY'.
D. P. GELINAS
V. LAWERENCE

^en Nom ln ne Matme^ Uospitak

Ill

i1

�Tuesday, May 10, 1049

T BE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Three

CSU Seamen Show Preference For SlU

P"

{Continued from Page 1)
*
IN NEW HALIFAX HALL
less it could hold on by main
Strength.
At this point, the SIU, whose
representatives had many friends
among the CSU rank and file,
signed the agreement and de­
clared itself ready and able to
man the ships.
The communist leadership of
the CSU called their alleged
Strike, only to discover that their
members were joining the SIU
With an eye on Panamanian uated on the slopes of Mount
in droves and sailing the ships
and Honduran profits, the little Titano, near Rimini, in Italy.
under SIU contract.
San Marino's bid for some of
republic of San Marino is open­
Events of the past month have
ing up another escape hatch for the spurious ship transfers is
ship operators seeking to evade contained in a circular recently
shown that the CSU rank and
taxes, currency regulations, in­ issued by Otto Danielson of 5,
file had long been anxious to
spection services and wages in Ny Todbodgade, Copenhagen,
get out from under their com­
force in legitimate maritime na­ who bears the euphemistic title
munist officials. In fact, com­
of "General Commissioner in
tions.
munist goon squads had to pull
some of the men off the ships
The latest addition to the bar­ Maritime Questions for the State
to give the strike a semblance
gain counter "maritime" nations of San Marino."
He "offers to" arrange the
of reality.
anxious to make a fast buck
transfer—from
any flag—of , ves­
FALSE ISSUES
doesn't have a seaport anywhere
sels
of
any
size,
any type and
in its 38 square miles of terri­
On other ships, communist agi­
any age to San Marino registry.
tory.
tators, by inventing false issues,
The advantages offered, says the
managed to whip up enthusiasm
Halifax Port Agent Roy La Pierre (left) tmd Dave Joyce,
The tiny nation, whose 14,000 circular, are these:
enough to get the men to strike. Secretary-Treasurer of the SIU Canadian District, celebrate inhabitants recently elected a
1. No changes necessary in the
They even induced men to opening of new Hall in Halifax on April 25 with smiles and
Communist Government, is sit- present management, crews, or
strike in foreign ports by telling
a handshake.
officers.
•&gt;
•,
them that they' faced pay cuts of
2. No restrictions.
40 dollars a month, which was
3. No state taxes.
a lie.
"Commissioner" Danielson says
SIU Canadian District spokes­
that the cost of transferring a
man denounced the actions in
ship of 3,425 tons to the San
foreign ports as deliberate irre­
Marino register is about $2,662.50.
sponsibility on the part of the
He breaks it down this way:
CSU leaders.
$100 for establishment of the
Many of the ships illegally
company; another, $100 .for juri­
tied up abroad have already been
dical assistance; $l,'7i2.50 for a
manned by SIU Canadian crews,
registration fee, .based'- on 50
and the SIU Canadian District
cents a ton; $400 for." registration
has announced repeatedly that
of bill of sale,- ahd ;'.$350 for
it stands ready to many any
registration of the company.
Contracted ship no matter where
The ship, doesn't even have to
it lies.
have a bottom' to fly the flag of
Meanwhile, the crews who
San Marino.
Struck overseas are already real­
Business men who are inter­
izing that they placed themselves
ested should get out their moun­
in serious legal difficulties by
tain boots and start climbing
their actions. The fines and the
Mount Titano. When you get
jail sentences both in Canada
to the top, just holler for the
end abroad have been piling up.
Shipping Commissar!
In a series of nightly broad­
How far San Marino will get
casts over radio station CJCH
in its attempt to muscle in on
in Halifax, spokesmen for the
the lucrative racket, of Panama
Slli Canadian District pointed
and
Honduras is as yet uncerBiBlliiiiiPi
out that the communist leaders
tain.
•
Of the CSU must have been
However, the International
Communisl leaders of the Canadian Seamen's Union said the SlU Canadian District couldn't
more interested in disrupting
Transportworkers
Federation
open a Hall in Halifax. However, the Hall opened on schedule and more than 200 Halifax
and destroying the merchant ma­ seamen, many of them ex-members of the CSU, applied for SIU membership and registered for
may have something to say
rine than in advancing the wel­
about all three chiselers.
jobs in the first two weeks.
' .
fare of Canadian seamen.
SCHEME EXPOSED
their 1948 contract, backing down
The communists literally had after threatening to strike.
ho strategy to win, as their mem­ Settling on the West Coast
bers discovered after they had basis would mean acceptance of
Mr. Shea served there during made to understand that there
Raymond A. Shea, United
been hoodwinked into striking. the Conciliation Board's propos­
the
war and postwar years when were such things as mitigating
States Shipping Commissioner
The SIU spokesmen stressed als, against which the members
more
American flag
merchant circumstances.
for the Port of New York, whose
the fact that, the CSU commun­ of the CSU have thought they
Among those representatives
deep understanding of seamen's ships sailed in and out of port
ist leaders had neglected to line were striking.
problems won him wide-spread than at any time in the nation's of seamen who came in contact
up the kind of backing that sea­ In other words, five weeks on respect, died May 3 of a heart history.
with Mr. Shea, it was generally
men should have for a success­ strike was just a joke the CSU
agreed that he had soundly in­
ailment at the home of his sis­
HAD HUMAN TOUCH
ful action on the waterfront.
leaders were pulling. This didn't ter, Mrs. H. M. Tovar, in Brook­
fluenced the thinking of many
They did not line up the long­ sit very well with the CSU lyn. He was 54 years old.
During Mr. Shea's tenure as hard-headed Skippers in their
shoremen, the teamsters, the rank and file when it was re­
Commissioner, a new concept treatment of the men who sailedA veteran of "World War I,
railway workers or the ships' vealed the other day.
of the human aspects of the mer­ under them.
)
Shea began his career in the
Officers. Moreover, they triad to
chant
marine
developed.
REAL GOAL
ANTAGONISMS FADED
Shipping Commission in 1921 as
Strike with no money in their
In sharp cSntrast to his preIt
was
obvious
to
SIU
observ­
a
clerk
in
the
New
Orleans
of­
Because of the many wise de­
treasury.
decessoi', who was a stern dis­
cisions
made by Mr. Shea, there
They had constantly milked ers that the communists real fice.
ciplinarian of the old school, Mr.
their members through special aim was impairment of the Mar­ He was transferred to the Shea recognized that many of resulted a sharp reduction in the
iBSsessments and "donations which shall Plan and the Atlantic Pact, New York bffice ih 1922 ahd, the old statutes severely penaliz­ antagonisms between the bridge
disappeared in thin air. And af­ and the creation of an unemploy­ after serving as deputy and ing seamen for minor offenses and the foc'sle.
"When it became known on the
ter they started their present ment situation which would be chief deputy, was appointed wei-e obsolete.
phony beef, they proved them­ fertile ground for the sowing of Commissioner for the port in
As a result, loggings became New York waterfront that Mr.
1944.
selves ready to sell their mem^ communist propaganda.
fewer. Men who missed ships Shea had died, all sections of the
The
appearance
of
the
SIU
bership out on a moment's no­
were no longer deprived of pay industry paid their respects to
Canadian
District
scotched
the
tice.
for the full voyage, when it was "a fine public servant."
•commie
scheme.
In
the
fifth
week
After -claiming that the Con­
evident that their actions were Surviving besides Mrs. Tovar,
of
their
phony
"strike,"
honare a daughter, Mrs. Elizabeth
ciliation Board's contract propos­
not intentional.
communist
CSU
men,
completely
"Vam
Esslestein; two other sis­
al meant a wage cut and loss of
Mr. Shea made it quite clear
If you don'l find linen
ters,
Mrs.
Eleanor McKee and
fed
up
with
their
leaders,
were
the hiring hall, they suddenly
that it was his function to see
when you go aboard your
Mrs.
Catherine
McAvinchy, and
joining
the
SIU
and
lining
up
in
that
justice
was
administered
in
said, in effect, that they would
ship, notify the Hall at once.
three
brothers,
Joseph, William
all
matters
within
his
jurisdic­
settle on the basis of their West the SIU Hall in Montreal and the
A telegram from Le Havre or
and Cornelous Shea.
new SIU Hall' in Halifax for Singapore won't do you any
Coast agreement.
tion.
Mr. Shea was buried last Sat­
Skippers who - previously had
On the West Coast, where they jobs.
good. It's your bed and you
been prone to invoke maximum urday in his home town of
have 19 ships to the SIU Can- And there were jobs on the
have to lie in it.
. !
penalties for all offenses were Brielle, N. J.
iadian District's 31, they renewed board.

iSliilB

LandlotkedSan Marino
Pats Her Bid In For
Fast Maritime Buck

Seamen Mourn Passing Of Raymond Shea

AHENTION!

.

�THE SEAFARERS

Page Four

Shipping Is Fair in New York
But it's Nothing to Brag About

LOG

SIU SUPPORTS FOOD WORKERS* DRIVE

Tuesday, May 10, 1949

San Juan Awaits
Shipping
By L. CRADDOCK

By JOE ALGINA

SAN JUAN—It's been several
NEW YORK —We're holding previous trip, not a month later
weeks since this port reported
our heads above water, and when another petty reason came
the happenings down here in the
that's about all. Shipping con­ along. The Electrician stayed
Islands, so here's an attempt to
tinues to hold its own, which aboard the ship.
bring the situation up to date.
is nothing to brag about in this
We handled another beef this
port, considering the tempo. week which might be of inter­
We've been busy getting to
Anyway, here's the way things est to the membership. When
know the many Seafarers who
shaped up during the past ten the Steel Apprentice came in
sail out of this port, and learn­
days.
ing the ropes of contacting the
this week we found that, when
many ships spread around in the
We paid off the Steel Appren­ the vessel had left port three
ports of the Island.
tice, Steel Admiral and Queens months ago, a FWT had piled off
Victory, Isthmian; Colabee, Am­ five days before the ship sailed.
In addition, we've been giving
erican-Hawaiian; Cornelia, Su­
the Hall a general house celanThe Chief 'Engineer, instead
zanne, Beatrice and Jean, Bull; of calling the Hall for another
ing. A little sougee action and'
Seatrain New, Jersey; Carruth, man put the Engine Cadet in the
paint have made a big differ­
Trans-Fuel; John B. Waterman; FWT job and the ship sailed.
ence in the appearance of the
Gadsden, American Eastern, and
place.
This week we took the beef
Sanford B. Dole, Metro Petro­ to the company and laid it on
At the moment shipping is
leum.
slow,
but we expect a pick up
the table. The Engineer could
The Gadsden is going to lay- have had a FWT if he had called,
within a few days. The Inez,
up for ten days, and then go the Hall, so the wages of one
one of the Bull Line's newly
In New Orleans, where the AFL Retail t^lerks and Meat purchased ships, arrived here
back into the heavy lift trade to FWT were due.
Cutters unions are conducting a joint organizing campaign, this week with a fine
Turkey. The Dole is expected
crew
After a look at the facts the
members
of the SIU's local branch have been playing a tradi­
to lay up indefinitely.
aboard.
company admitted that the
tional role. Seafarers have been marching side by side with
The sign-ons, a pitiful handful, wages were due the man and
their AFL brothers in the drive to extend the benefits'- of
WAITING
numbered but four: James Gillis,
union contracts to unorganized workers. In photo above, bearded
Smith &amp; Johnson; Steel Admiral
We're looking for the day
Seafarer Hurley is joined on picketline by International Or­
and Steel Apprentice, Isthmian,
when
the Puerto Rico, formerly
ganizer Crowell of the Meat Cutters union.
and the Hastings, Waterman.
the Borinquen, puts its nose in
Other than this quartet we han­
these waters. She's going to be
dled several vessels here ina sweet looking job when the
transit, each calling for a man
reconversion job is completed.
or two.
Brother J. N. Smyly, injured in
On one of the in-transits, the
an accident aboard the Wild
DeSoto, an Electrician was fired
Ranger, is in the hospital here
By EARL SHEPPARD
for being four minutes late in
and expects to be laid up for six
reporting back to the ship.
NEW ORLEANS—The drive of of North American, is conducting to eight weeks. All of his
friends are urged to drop him . a
We thought that was a pretty
the American Federation of a successful and vigorous strike line and make his lay-up period
petty reason for canning a man
Labor's Food Council of New Or­ against the.Capitol Food Stores. more enjoyable.
and went down to the ship tp
Picketing of this chain con­ Cupid, I understand, has been
leans to organize the city's retail
square things away.
tinues
on a daily basis, with Sea- pretty busy in these parts lately.
clerks and meat cutters is con- j
There we were told the man
-farers.
marching side by si'de with Two Brothers tied the knot here
was fired for being drunk. When with great pains they put up tinuing full scale.
their Brother AFL unionists in in recent weeks, much to the
we said he looked pretty sober to the money. The Cadet had been This Branch of the SIU is the struggle to wipe out low
us, we were told "Oh, we meant paid FWT wages plus overtime, lending every possible means of standard non-union shop condi­ pleasure of all hands. From re­
ports the wedding parties were
he was drunk the last trip out." so the company was out an support to the unions involved, tions.
Good luck.
equal amount of cabbage— in line with our organization's The Seafarers ' is aiding the great successes.
WRONG TIME
Brothers.
roughly a thousand dollars.
traditional policy.
AFL Food Council because there
With that flimsy excuse they
The agreement was made that
As part of the drive, the AFL are more than 10,000 unorganized
tried to boot the man off the the money will be split evenly Food Council, composed of Local retail clerks and butchfers in this
ship, but they were set straight. among the entire Engine Depart­ 1608 of the Retail Clerks Inter­ area who badly "need the protec­
If they wanted to can the man ment. That was a voyage with national Association and Local [ tion of union contracts.
for being drunk, they should a happy ending—at least for the 407 of the Amalgamated Meat
In acknowledgment of the role
have done it at the end of the men of the Engine Department. Cutters and Butcher Workmen
our members are playing in this
By JIMMY SHEEHAN
important
organizing
effort,
PHILADELPHIA — Despite a
James Suffredge, secretary-treas­
good
number of payoffs and inurer of the Food Council, and
transit
ships, shipping has in­
Patrick Gorman, international
sisted
on
remaining slow in this
secretary-treasurer,
of
the
Meat
By CAL TANNER
displeasure to the Patrolmen, twelve hundred letters. Members
port.
There
were sign-ons, but
Cutters
Union
have
sent
letters
who chewed the dispute with have enlisted their families and
MOBILE — The past period's
they
were
few
and far between.
of
appreciation
to
the
SIU.
shipping was fair, and the fore­ the Engineers for a couple of friends in the fight, too.
The
Hall
here
is taking on a
The communication from Gor­
cast is continued fair for the hours and got them to promise , No Congressman wiU be able
new
look
and
will
be ready for
to say he didn't hear from his man commending the SIU for its exhibition soon, the renovation
coming week. We had five pay­ to be good boys.
However, the crew, not trust­ constituents on this matter. .We "outstanding support" appeared
offs and four sign-ons during
ing
them from their record, re­ sure let them know how we felt in the previous issue of the LOG. process being almost completed.
the past week, and expect Wat­
While our job is to see to it
Brother Suffredges' letter to that conditions are kept at top
erman and Alcoa to send us sev­ fused to sign-on foreign articles, about the Taft-Hartley Act and
but agreed to sign coastwise ar­ the Wood bill.
the Union said that the New
eral ships apiece.
ticles, thereby keeping the two Some of the Brothers in the Orleans Branch "has provided leV61 on our contracted ships, we
had the opportunity to settle a
In addition to these, Waterman officers in check.
Mobile Marine Hospital this immeasurable assistance to in­ beef on a Dutch ship this week.
is bringing a ship out of the
BONEYARD CONGRESS
week are A. J. Howard, J. C. sure the ultimate success of this
A crowd of Dutch seamen
boneyard for operation in the
strike."
Steele,
J.
B.
Berrier,
J.
P.
Buckecame
into the Hall the other
Here
in
the
Hall
members
have
Mediterranean. We should have
He emphasized the importance day with a beef concerning the
something definite on this by the been busy the past week getting lew, E. Jarrett.
Also in these parts, riding the of the role of individual Sea­ food aboard, their ships, and we
letters and wires off to their
first part of next week.
The payoffs we handled—all respective Congressmen urging beach, are the following Broth­ farer "in picketing this chain of told them we would do what we
of them in good shape—^were thfem to support the Lesinski ers: W. A. Brown, J. Moore, C. stores on a daily basis," and could to fix matters.
Bobbins, B. P. McNulty, C. H. added that the Food Council had
the Choctaw, Chickasaw, Clai­ Bill.
SIU ACTION
borne, Waterman; Cavalier, Indicative of *the sweat the Foster, J. Carter, F. Jarocinski, been receiving "a maximum
fellows have worked up is the H. Myers, H, Andrews, J. Bus- amount of cooperation" from the
Puritan, Alcoa.
We got in touch with the
Branch.
The sign-ons were the Cava­ fact that they sent out over sionett, J. Zoubil, C Tyler.
Dutch consul in this port and he
Hailing the "splendid and ef­ talked to the ship's Skipper. The
lier,- in from a regular passenger
fective jobs" of the Seafarers, up-shot of th^ whole matter was
"run; Monarch of the Seas, work­
Suffredge said'further:
ing the Puerto Rico trade; the
that the Captain ordered more
"I wish at this time to ex­ stores.
Chickasaw running coastwise,
press my sincere appreciation to The crewmembers were very
and the Noonday, on coastwise
Any crewmember found pilfering ship's gear is subject to
you for the action your mem­ happy to learn that they were
articles now but due to go to
charges by the membership of the SIU.
bers and local officials have able to walk into our Hall, and
Europe.
Crews of all SlU-contracted ships are reminded that in taken in behalf of the Food get our help when they needed
The Noonday provided us with
line with SIU policy, anyone caught walking off a vessel with Council and the retail workers it. We, by the same token, were
our only major beef of the week.
The crew decided to trim the
glad to find that we were able
ship's gear, such as linen, food and equipment, is to have of New Orleans.
wings of the Chief Engineer and
to lend ^ them a hand. Inciden-"Such
unity
of
purpose,
as
has
charges placed against him by the ship's delegates and crew.
First Assistant before they had
tally the seamen were members
been
displayed,
is
destined
to
The SIU fought too hard for the high quality of equip­
a chance to flap them.
guarantee to the workers of this of the Netherlands Seamen's
ment
and food aboard ships to allow any irresponsible char­ community for the first time the Union, and an affiliate of oui's
It seems that these two officers
acters to jeopardize the union's gains. Although the amount of
had promised the crew that they
genuine and tangible benefits of through the ITF.
gear disappearing from SIU ships is the lowest in the industry, militant trade unionism. I am
would be hard-timed on the out­
I guess that's why we are'
pilfering on SIU ships must be wiped out completely.
bound leg of the trip.
grateful to your organization called an International Union—
The crew made known their
and your local representatives." we handle everything.

New (kktttts Seafarers tfelping
Campt^n Of AFL Food COWKU

Pliilly Squares Beef
For Dutch Seafarers

Mobile Foresees Continued Fair Shipping

WARNING TO PILFERERS

�facoma Calls
Cobli Crewmen
Credit To SlU

WHEN THE DATS WORK IS ENDED

11

i\

fngineers Stili After
Jobs Of Electricians
By JIMMY PURCELL

By WILLIAM McKAY

|j''

Page Five

TEE SEAFARERS LOG

Tuetday. May 10; li4S

Since publication of an article
waiting for the opin the Jan. 21 issue of the SEA­ portunity to drop' the axe on
FARERS LOG exposing the at­ somebody's neck to bolster their
tempt by Engineers to muscle in claims that the Electricians are
on Electrician's jobs aboard SIU irresponsible.
I think it should be pointed
ships, things have improved
somewhat. I .should like to in­ out at this time that there is a
form the membership of my ob­ considerable amount of jealousy
servations on this score to date. on the Engineers' part, because
For the benefit of those who the Electrician's pay is high and
may not recall, or who did not because Electricians work day
read the article, this is the nub work, while Engineers, bel6w
of it: With things getting a bit First, have to stand watches.
tough for the Engineers, they "What leads this writer to be­
lieve that the Engineers haven't
set their sights on Electricians'
given
up their objective is that
jobs.
several instances have cropped
They already have made con­
Claiborne crewmembers Jaines. FWT, and Blythe, MM, siderable progress in this direc­ up, wherein Electricians have
been dropped to lower ratings
relax in their foc'sle following a day of labor. The Waterman
tion aboard NMU-contracted Uni­
and
Engineers have taken over
ship is currently in the trade between Gulf ports and
ted States Lines' vessels, where
for
the
remainder of the voy­
Puerto Rico.
they control the majority of El­
ages.
ectricians' jobs.
STRAIGHT TALK
In their campaign, these En­
gineers laid down a steady fire In one case that was brought
of criticism at SIU Electricians before the Coast Guard, repre­
as a softening up tactic in the sentatives of your Union stated
the issues very simply. Special
drive for the jobs.
By JIMMY DRAWDY
The previous article pointed Services Representative Joe 'VolSAVANNAH—We paid host to out that to effectively counter­ pian and myself pointed out at
the Southport up on Charleston act such ambitions, SIU Electri­ the hearing that the Engineers
and put a good number of men cians must perform their ship­ involved were never certified as
aboard, one of the first real board duties to the letter of the Electricians and had never sailed
breaks we've had around here contract, in additipn to cooperat­ in that capacity.
in a couple of weeks. Other than ing fully with all hands aboard
Therefore, we argued, these
the usual routine beefs we ship.
men had no practical experience
squared her away in short time.
as Electricians and operated sole­
EASED UP
The in-transit vessels were the
ly on theory.
In the period since Jan. 21 the
Steel King of Jsthmian and the
Nevertheless, these hombres
Robin Doncaster of Robin, both Engineers have toned down. continued to make it as unpleas­
They've eased up on the hard- ant as possible for every Electri­
of them being in good shape.
For next week we have sched­ timing of Electricians, because cian who saUed under them.
uled the Southland and the Dor­ of the SIU's repeated warnings It might be of some satisfac­
^break. These fellows aren't new­
othy; both will payoff and take to the companies and the En­ tion for the readers to know
comers to the Order of Barley­
gineers that the practice would that I don't think we'll have any
crews.
corn Boosters, most of them hav­
Something
good
must
be
Other than that short resume have to - stop. They were told more trouble from these particu­
ing been up on the same beef
scheduled
for
tomorrow's
din­
of
shipping, this port has ,had that if the practice didn't cease, lar Engineers, as they are no
before. Anyway, they got what
little
activity. All of the spring the companies would have to ac­ longer with the company whose
• they've been courting a long time. ner. judging by the smile of
festivals
and flower shows are cept responsibility for any con­ ship was involved.
These fellows, and the other Steward H. G. Ridgeway as
over.
The
next big bust around sequences.
gashounds, .
should realize he types out the menu the
This, however, does not mean
Nevertheless, it is this writer's that Union members—or, in par­
these
parts
is Memorial Day. Un­
that the war is over and jobs
are scarce. Performing can't be Claiborne crew will scan on til then, we'll take things easy opinion that the Engineers' new ticular, the Electricians—can af­
and let life go. on its merry way. tactic is to play possum. They ford to become lax in living up
the morrow.
tolerated.
to the terms of the contract.
Otherwise, the Electricians
would be leaving themselves op­
en to the Engineers' sniping. An­
other example of the tactics the
possessing magic powers. They not imderstand that temperance very severe opposition. We have Engineers are employing is il­
By "JOSEPH I. FLYNN
used it in times of need to help meant, in those days, modera­ to conclude from this that some lustrated by situation I encoun­
A problem is the result of a nature. They strove for a solu­ tion and not abstinence from important human value is in­ tered aboard a ship recently.
situation that people have been tion of problems as a unit, they drinking.
volved here that makes alcohol
SLICK TRICK
unsuccessful in dealing with. Al- worried together. While we in
It was not until the 18th Cen­ hard to abolish.
• coholism is a situation that so­ a complex society are independ­ tury that full realization came
On
this
vessel, the Engineers
THE NEW APPROACH
cieties of people throughout the ent, our anxieties are individual, that one had to quit altogether,
played
the
Chief Electrician
In its infancy is the beginning
ages have had to deal with. we worry singly.
against
the
Second
Electrician, or
or not at all.
of a new attack on the problem
Some were partially successful, Teutonic tribes drank for in­
vice-versa.
As
a
result,
they suc­
Americans always liked to of alcoholism. It's not concerned
but the greater proportion were spiration and cementing of clan
ceeded
in
getting
the
boys to
drink, especially in public places. alone with the drinking of al­
unsuccessful.
bonds. The same with the Welsh In colonial days taverns were coholic beverages. It holds no fight among themselves, while
Drinking has been a part of tribes in the 12th century. There
pro or con views toward the to­ the Engineers sat back and en­
almost every society or culture. were no taverns, no inns, no in­ set up near churches, so that
joyed the proceedings. Mean­
tal situation.
In 3000 BC the Egyptians had dividual drinking. A breakdown thirsty sinners • might be re­
while,
they didn't forget to keep
It's an educational approach
wine presses, and trained mon­ began in the 13th century and freshed.
a
log
of the developments and
Today is not by any means backed by psychiatric, psychol­ "n^lect of work."
keys to gather the grapes. The mass alcoholism began in the
the heaviest drinking era in Am­ ogical, historical, economic and
•Eskimos, Australian bushmen, 16th Century.
The Engineers' game was quite
erican
history. In 1864 they sociological research, such as of­
people of Siberia, Polynesia of
obvious
and I. immediately in­
ALWAYS TROUBLE
drank more heavily .(2.71 gal­ fered by Yale, promulgated by
the Solomon Islands, Melanesformed
all
hands as to what they
It is not to be surmised that lons per capita) than in any the National Committee and Yale
ians—which includes Hawaii and
were
trying
to accomplish.
Summer
School
of
Alcoholic
Samoa — and nomadiq Indian no problem existed before this other recorded year.
All
of
this
proves that vigil- |
Studies—this
plus
the
success
tribes were about the only early time. Drinking and trouble al­ Temperance organizations dur­
ance
is
absolutely
necessary to
of
Alcoholic
Anonymous.
ways went together. The wo­ ing the 19th Century were as
peoples without alcohol.
avoid
the
trap
that
has been set |
They
endeavor
to
show
people
men in the primitive tribes were popular as our YMCAs, Rotary
for
the
Electricians.
DIVINE DRAFTS
that
excessive
drinking
leads
not
the first controllers. They hid clubs, American Legion Posts,
In the previous LOG article
to reward but punishment. To
The use of alcphol by the the spears and watered the wine. etc.
dealing
with this problem, we
set up a new stimuli within cer­
primitive man was undoubtedly
The Hindus decree death for
laid
down
some suggestions
l^RK ERA
tain individuals, to teach groups
considered a divine gift. It en­ any one making or using alcohol.
which,
if
followed,
would pre­
abled^ him to rise above his en­ Early societies recognized the It was the work of temperance to be discriminating in the use
vent
the
Engineers
from
achiev­
vironment, he forgot sickness, bad as well as the good effects and prohibitionists that, in 1920, of alcoholic beverages and to
ing
their
purpose.
It
might
be
famine, cold and tribal wars.
of alcohol, and very, carefully passed the Volstead act. But, bring to the public the facts, so
well
to
repeat
them:
The use of alcohol in religion regulated communal affairs. In­ like all attempts to restrict drink­ they can judge and act for them­
On every SIU ship a Kardex
goes away back. But here the dividually intoxication was taboo ing, it did not succeed. We still selves.
Megagraph
system should be in­
have very fresh in our minds For alcoholism can be called
drinker was not doing it nega­ between such affairs.
stalled
to
record
the motor data,
tively. To these people it was It was in Germany in the the speakeasy era, bootlegging, a habit, a learned thing, and
greasing
record,
brush
sizes and
a mystical sort of thing, it was 16th Century that the first tem­ racketeers, gangsters, rum-run­ proper knowledge will bring co­
numbers
and
the
location
of the
operation
between
all
groups
of
symbolic, a token.
perance groups started. There's ners that it brought with it.
spare
parts
box.
people
that
will
result
in
great
Not only has the custom of
In primitive societies all drink­ a story that the president of the
This record will aid the new
ing was on a communal or tribal temperance - movement died of drinking b e e. n suocessful i-n gains, in this social problem, by
man
coming aboard to locate
inaugurating
a
common
sense
basis. There was no organized chronic alcoholism.
terms of sheer survival, but it
(Continued on Page 11)
supply. They thought of wine as This is humorous, if we should has been successful in the face of practical program of prevention.
TACOMA — This past week
saw a bit of activity here in the
arrival and payoff of the Irvin
S. Cobb, South Atlantic. She
paid off all hands and took a
full jcrew. The paying off crew
was a fine bunch of fellows, a
real credit to the Union. They
Were sober and gave us a clean
. payoff. We'll be looking for this
crew out this way again.
Not so pleasant have been the
. 'gashounds and performers that
have blossomed forth here as of
late. We had to take action
against several of them, in order
to keep them from tearing the
roof off the joint. A few of
them, however, thought the
membership was cockeyed in its
action, and went around get­
ting up petitions attesting to
their sterling eharacter.
Well, they impressed no one.
They had their chance before
the trial committee, and I'm sure
they were given every possible

U-'riU.

Shipping Continues
Siow In Savannah

�Page Six

T H E S EAF ARE RS

LOG

Tucsdayt May IG. 184S

SHIPS' MINUTES AND NEWS
Union Strength Made US Conditions Tops, SIU Crew Thwarts Illegal
Says Veteran Of Decade On British Ships Customs Raid In Venezuela
Customs men in the port of La
The two Seafarers immediately
Guaira, Venezuela, will probably complied, but when they arrived
think twice before they raid at the customs house, they were
another SlU-manned ship in placed under arrest. This illegal
maneuver touched off a full-scale
guest of booty. An ill-starred protest, with the vessel's Skip­
expedition aboard the MV Sea per joining crewmembers in
Trader last month taught them seeking release of the victims.
Lewis, who first went to sea ion, which made little attempt
a much-needed lesson.
Finally, with the aid of the
aboard English ships when he to build a solid membership.
American
consul, the two Sea
The incident was brought to
was fifteen and spent almost ten
Trader crewmen were released.
Lewis recalls that men going
light in the minutes of the Sea Besides giving up the men, the
years with the Castle and Can­ to sea had to join the union,
ard lines, made the big switch but there was no hiring hall, no
Trader's April 10 shipboard Venezuelan customs men were
to American flag ships in 1943 Patrolmen to check sign-ons or
meeting. According to the min­ forced to return the articles they
and has never had the desire payoffs, no contract specifying
had attempted to confiscate.
utes, this is what happened:
to go back to his old haunts, working conditions and overtime
The Sea Trader arrived in La In the p^st few months, re­
. which he describes as "a rough work and little union spirit
Guaira after calling at Colombia ports of similar activities of
Ji - way to make a living."
among the crews. In fact, Lewis
ports where several members of Venezuelan customs men over­
An American by birth, Lewis stated that even today the en­
the crew purchased gifts. Shortly stepping the limits of their au-'
was taken to England while an tire Stewards Department is free
after the Sea Trader tied up, a thority have reached the LOG.
infant by his British parents. from union membership.
EDWARD LEWIS
raiding party of customs men The Sea Trader crew, however,
Shortly after his fifteenth birth­ Other weaknesses that still
is the first to report success in
day he was presented to the plague the union are the ban than those of any other country swooped down on the vessel and fighting the high-handed prac­
Gravesend Sea School in Lon­ against union activity on the —and only because of strong un­ picked up articles belonging to tices prevailing in the South
don for initiation into the mys­ ships and the continuous dis­ ions and wide-awake members. two of the crew.
American poi't.
PROMISED RETURN
teries of seamenship.
charge book that every seaman Nobody gives the -seamen any­
With three months of train­ carries.
thing unless they fight for it." After heated arguments and
ing behind him he went aboard
Displaying a well thumbed copy protests by the Seafarers, the
OFF TO US
the Amadale Castle as deck boy.
of the SIU agreement, he noted:|customs men invited the two
"In those days," Lewis stated, With a bellyful of conditions "The Union fought to win this, men involved to accompany
"conditions were really rugged. on English ships, Lewis, who I help the fight to keep it by see- tHem to the custom house, where
We worked'four on and four off had his choice upon reaching 21, ing that the companies live up they said the' articles would be
for $10 a month. We slept ten decided to remain ah American to their end of the bargain." |returned. •
men in a room, which wasnit citizen. He tried to get a berth
too bad considering that in some on an American ship, but because
parts of the ship 16 to 20 men of US neutrality there wei-e none
slept in a room that served as to be found in England. In 1943
Lux toilet soap may be a
combination foc'sle and mess- he tried again and was given
beauty aid to the movie queens
room.
but for the tender skin of sea­
permission to leave the country.'
men,
it's just so much horse­
He to-ok a berth on the tanker,
SLIM PICKINGS
Despite a setback in his first Seafarers International Union radish, at least that's the note
"The food was poor and sparse. O. M. Burneth, an NMU-con- attempt at politics, retired Sea­ and the Construction Employers
sounded in the niinutes of ship­
We were rationed one egg twice tracted ship.
Council, a body whose policy is board meeting held recently
farer
Ira
E.
Bishop,
recently
a
a week for breakfast, and des­ • After a couple of years of sail­
to hire only union labor.
aboard Bull Line's Beatrice, cur­
sert was served once during the ing NMU ships he returned to candidate for alderman in his
In his letter to the LOG, rently on the Puerto Rico run.
week and once on Sunday," he England to visit his mother,"and hometown of Alton, Illinois, is Bishop noted that he 'had no
in 1947 he returned to the Uni­ far from discouraged. Brother intention of bowing out follow­ The lather over the merits of
noted.
As bad as the passenger ships ted States aboard the South At­ Bishop has decided to stick in ing his debut, as "there are other the highly touted skin shampoo
were, Lewis remembers the lantic ship, August Belmont. The the political arena and shoot, for d^ys coming and higher elected was whipped up by the unsoli­
cited testimonial offered by a
freight ships, as being worse. crew recommended him for a higher elective offices.
offices to run for. Someday, who crewmember at the April 3
"In 1936 the passenger ships be­ permit in the SIU and he's been
A typical example of the grow­ can tell..."
meeting when he noted: "I have
gan giving out soap, matches sailing SIU ships ever since.
ing participation of Labor in
Upon his retirement from the been using Lux for two weeks
and bed linen, but on the Though conditions on English politics. Brother Bishop waged sea Bishop entered the construc­
freighters men had to bring their ships improved during and fol­ his campaign with the full en­ tion business in Alton, a city of now and my skin has a rosy
own bedding and eating utensils lowing the war, Lewis summed dorsement of his county's Non­ 31,000 population, 20 miles north­ hue—rosy with an itchy rash."
until 1937." The tramp freighters, up his feeling for American ships partisan Labor League. In his east of St. Louis. He has been A rush of brothers endorsing
"ropers," as Lewis calls them, when he said, "Conditions on campaign literature Bishop list­ a frequent contributor of letters rival soap products attempted to
gain the floor but were shonted
were the worst of the lot. A American ships are far better ed himself as a member of the to the LOG.
down by a crewmember who •
man had to be hard up for a
rose to add his cpmments on the
job before he signed on one of
THE CORSAIR IN PEACEFUL WATERS
Lux question: "Although movie
the "floating coffins" out of Car­
stars might groom themselves
diff.
and
derive much satisfaction and
Following his apprenticeship
beauty
from using Lux soap, this
as deck boy, Lewis worked his
soap
has
caused me to lose my
way up to AB. With the war
schoolgirl
complexion," he said.
Hearing there was a big demand
Shouts
of
"hear, hear" greeted
for seamen but only slight imthe Brother as he returned to
his seat. An immediate, move­
ment was afoot by_ the Camay
crowd in the Stewards Depart­
ment to offer their product as
a substitute, but the Lava , boost­
The following is a recap of
ers in the Engine department
monies donated by crews toward
held a quick caucus and squash­
the burial fund for Seafarer Mar­
ed the movement. The Palmolive
ion 'Ackerman, Mobile Seafarer
Party tried to rally its forces, but
v/ho died recently: Noonday, $43;
couldn't be heard over the fog­
Jean Lafitte, $20.76; Hurricane,
horn call to arms of the Life­
$42; Seafarers Gregg and Wages,
buoy gang.
$2; Governor Comer, $35; Total:
After ten minutes of demon­
$142.76, for which a check was
stration during which forces
sent to Mobile Agent Cal Tan­
were split, reorganized and
ner on March 23. A check for
cleaved again, the Chair finally
$100, from the Alcoa Clipper
restored order and recognized
crew, was sent to Tanner on
the Steward, who promised ah
April 8, and the Union burial
impartial investigation of the
Shot submitted to the LOG by Seafaxer Barney Krieg shows the Alcoa luxury cruiser tied charges. The chair then washed
benefit ' of $150 was sent on
up in an Island port during a recent run to louthem waters. Name of port was not given.
March 28.
its hands of the matter.

Seafarer Edward M. Lewis at 29 can look back
on almost 15 years of going to sea, but it is only
the last five years that he recalls with fond memo­
ries—the five years he's«
been sailing
American sibility for this Lewis attributes
"
ships.
to the loose structure of the un­

Crew Stews
As Brother
Bucks Lux

Bishop, Former Seafarer,
Enters Illinois Politics

Crew Donations
To Late Member

�Tuesday. May 10. 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Seven

Digested Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings

!

ti

OREMAR, Mar. 1 — Ferron.
Chairman; M. Eschenko. Secrelary. Reports of the department
delegates read and okayed. Dis­
cussion on the repairing of the
water fountain in port side pas­
sageway. Attention called to the
fact that crew was slack in tak­
ing cups back to pantry, keep­
ing laundry clean. A system of
fines was agreed on for various
offenses against general ship­
board welfare. Money collected
from these fines is to be donated
to Brothers in the hospitals. One
minute of silent prayer in mem­
Union's slogan that an "SIU ship
ory of our departed Brothers.
is a clean ship." Despite this
S'
and
the time devoted to ship­
MANGORE. Mar. 18 —C. D.
board
cleanliness at meetings,
Solloway. Chairman; W. Rogowthere
are
still some who have
ski. Secretary. Delegates report­
failed
to
pitch
in and cooperate
ed everything in order in their
in
the
Stewards
'Department, he
respective departments. After
added.
He
suggested
that all
general discussion, charges were
hands
quit
the
backbiting
• and
filed against a crewmember for
knuckle
down
to
their
jobs.
It
conducting fiimself
in manner
was
agreed
that
a
letter
of
con­
unbecoming a Union man. All
repairs to foc'sles and messrooms dolence be sent to Paul Cook's
are to be referred to Patrolmen mother and that a suitable mem­
for action as soon as possible. orial be purchased and presented
Members stood in silence for to her wheq we arrive in the
one minute in memory of de­ states.
parted Brothers.
BESSEMER VICTORY, Mar. 1
—Ed Delaney. Chairman; R. F.
Wendl. Secretary. General dis­
cussion on previous repair list,
with reports from all depart­
ments on how repairs have been
made or are to be made. Dele­
gates reported. Several members
stated that men having beefs are
i i S.
SEATRAIN TEXAS. Mar. 21— to take them to their delegates
W. J. Brady. Chairman; M. and , not. to-, topside. Books pre-

in washing cups and saucers fol­
lowing coffee time. One minute
of silence for Brothers lost at
sea.
4. 4. 4
STEEL TRAVELER. Mar. 1—
George Everell. Chairman; Hemsley Guinier. Secretary. Delegates
reported all okay in their de­
partments. Good and Welfare:
Suggestion made that shelves be
installed in 8-12 foc'sle for books;
that library be cleaned; that
minutes of meetings be sent to
LOG; that ship's delegate contact
Chief Mate for purpose of having
wind scoops placed in all port
holes. Committee of three elect­
ed to shop around for a. ship
washing machine.
t 4. 4,
STEEL AGE. Mar. 30—J. H.
Fisher. Chairman; G. J. Kelly.
Secretary. Delegates elected. New
Business: Report on hand from
previous trip read and all old
beefs checked. Educational talk
postponed until next meeting.
Four delegates agreed to check
the slopchest and medicine chest.
Wilmington Patrolman to be con­
tacted concerning lack of seating
space in messroom.

4 4. 4
LAKE GEORGE. Mar. 20 —
George Dunn, Chairman; William
Beckwilh. Secretary. Ship's dele­
Lynch. Secretary. Delegates regate
reported two week's supply
ported on membership standing to be turned in for a new set of cigarettes aboard. Deck dele­
in their respective departments. upon arrival in New York.
gate reported overtime situation
Motion by Tennant that crew go
in his department has been iron­
on record in wholehearted sup­
ed out. Engine delegate reported
port of the opinions expressed
37 hours of disputed overtime in
in letter written by William Da­
Ws department. Good and Wel­
vie crewmembers on questions
fare: Decision to pay $2 for cig­
of income tax for seamen and
arettes in Port Said accepted, but
published in the Mar.-4 issue of
crew is to sign for them under
the SEAFARERS LOG. Motion
protest. Decision made to hold
by Morris that any man failing
another meeting to discuss cig­
to report aboard ship is to be
arette situation in the event
. S. 4. 4.
reported to the Union immediate­
MARORE, Mar. 21—H. R. Hol- bonded stores are not available.
ly by the ^Ship's Delegate. Dis­ den. Chairman; E. Bobinski, Sec­
4 4 4
cussion on meal hours. It was de­ retary. Delegates reported on the
ALCOA PENNANT. Mar. 12—
cided to get in touch with the number of books and permits in McKennie. Chairman; McCulUnion and to seek a change or their departments. Motion car­ loch. Secretary.
Delegates re­
clarification of
the schedule ried that Steward contact Port ported no beefs, the number of
called for in present agreement. Steward for new washing ma­ books and permits in their de­
chine wringer. Motion carried partments. Ship's delegate asked
ALCOA PARTNER. Mar. 7— for Steward to get regular coffee all men who had not donated
Leroy Williams, Chairman; Rob­ pitcher. Good and Welfare: Sug­ their $2 toward washing ma­
ert Brennan, Secretary. All okay gestion made that crew clean chine to do so as soon. as pos­
in the three departments. Ship's wash tubs following use and not sible.
Topside has agreed to
Delegate suggested that Steward soak clothes for more than four kick in toward purchase of ma­
lock pantry door and that all hours. New library to be secured chine. Motion carried to have
hands be given keys to the doors when ship hits port.
ship's delegate contact Chief En­
of their rooms. Steward prom­
gineer, concerning sign-in fidley
i 4. 4.
ised a change in menu and said
EVELYN. Mar. 20—J. T. Allen. forbidding the hanging of clothing
that with help of messman he Chairman; C. Mitchell. Secretary. there. Ship's delegate reported
would cooperate with crew in Delegates reported everything in that Port Steward signified that
serving suitable chow. One min­ order. New Business: Brother company would put innerspring
ute of silence in memory of Bro­ Wood elected as ship's delegate. mattresses on its ships if it
thers lost at sea.
All delegates instructed to make thought it would get the same
out a repair list for presentation satisfactory wear, that it gets
to captain. Crew agreed that food from cotton mattresses. One
is very good and Messmen are minute of silence for departed
doing a good job. Crew agreed Brothers.
to keep messroom and recreation
J, S, Sroom clean at all times. One
BRET HARTE. Mar. 13—^H. R. minute of silence for departed
Herman. Chairman; Frank S. Brothers.
Mitchell, Sr.. Secretary. Reports
4. 4- 4of Deck, Engine and Stewards
ZANE GREY. Feb. 20 — Gib4 4 4
Delegates accepted. Motion car- bons. Chairman; Carraway. SecKATHRYN. Feb. 23 — J. C.
ried calling on all hands to be retary. Delegates reported all Bernpjrd. Chairman: W. Fontan.
present for meeting at time spe-jokay, except deck delegate, who Secretary. Delegates' reports ac­
cified in posted notices. It was reported a passenger doing work cepted. New Business: Brother
agreed that the constant beefing on deck. Delegate reported a rec­ Lopez elected deck delegate. Mo­
at meal times is to be stopped ord of his "work is being kept for tion carried that Steward be in­
and that any complaints are to collection . of overtime money. structed to secure another coffee
be brought up at the regular | New Business: Motion carried to percolator. Motion by Rico, car­
meetings. Steward stated that; have work bench removed from ried, that bulletin board be put
Union had put out Vast quantities j beside the 12-4 foc'sle. Good and up in messroom. Good and Wel­
of educational literature designed i Welfare: Chief Cook asked to fare: Matters of interest to the
to fiid book and permit men in.prepare soup differently. Sugges- crew discussed. One minute of
maintaining the validity"-of the'tion made that crew cooperate silence for Brothers lost at sea.

BACM WEEK/THE LOG PRINTS THB hltWS
OF THE BROTHERS IN THE VARIOUS

HOSPITALS . THOSE IM A EG PORTS ARB
VISITED BY PAJROLMBA/, WHO KEEP THEM
UP-TD-'DATF CW UNION ACTIVITIES.
•HOU/Ei/ER, lUey WOUUO AIL LIKE TO HGAR
FROM THEIR SHIPMATES. SO wm'NOJ
DROP THEM A LINE OR, IP iN RDRTTAV
T-IEM A VISIT, AAJD HELPIRELlEv/E THEMOA/OTDAITOP THEIR STAY.

CUT and RUN
By HANK

-

Brothers, you have the right to write Congressmen and
Senators urging them to remove the ridiculous Taft-Hartley Act
from the backs of labor unions. You and your families back home
should keep sending those letters to the Washington people who
were elected to rpresent the people and understand their protests.
Write today, write tomorrow. Every letter protects the labor move­
ment ... Steward Harold Peeler sailed in recently from a voyage
on the Marine Arrow with Blackie Mancino and Jessie Wood as
shipmates. We're told that Blackie had his hands full of "overtime"
blisters. And Brother Wood is no doubt catching up on some of
his favorite golf-playing in between voyages... Brothers John
Dugino and Tex Suit aboard the Colabee are so anxious to start
using their baseball gear and play ball that they are hoping the
rest of the crew gets on the ball too.
4

4

4

Although New York shipping hasn't been terrific it has
been good enough in the past three weeks to move a lot of
men out. Two pieces of good news were the progress of
Arnold Bernstein's application to operate two ships and our
victory in the recent counting of the ballots of the Cities
Service ships... A few Brothers here in-transit were—Roger
Trottier. James Hand, Steve Carr. Skippy Gusczynsky...
Aboard the Robin Kirk in Genoa, Italy, Brothers Lester Young.
Pete Duffy and Samuel Parker wrote in to have LOGs sent to
a good bar called the Cafe De Paris which is operated by an
American •.. Brothers, the Cosmopolita Bar in Havana, Cuba,
is now on the list to receive a bundle of LOGs. Grab those
LOGs, Brothers—and keep up with your Union's affairs.

The SK.A.FARERS LOG will be sailing free of cost to the
homes of the following Brothers—Ralph Yarborough of North
Carolina, Herman Kemp of Florida, Richard McCamy of Alabama,
Martin Pyk of Pennsylvania, Philip Zamenski of Maryland, M. J.
Akins of Georgia, Thad Coveleski of Pennsylvania ... You Brothers
in other ports may be wondering where some of your shipmates
are. Well, here are thos who have been in town recently—Walter
Migaud, Joseph Lapointe, Maynard Lind. Russell Lund, T. Joseph,
Luis Ramirez with his mustache, Frank Throp, Edward Vail, Steve
Clurman, W. Szostak, Raymond Davis, Lawrence Edwards, Martin
Gross, Charles Jindra, Alan MacDonald, Alfred Emery, George
Fargo, William Porter.
4

4

4

Brother Jack Williams, the Electrician, is voyaging aboard
the Alcoa Pointer ... Steve Laszlo has been plenty happy since
he's been receiving a little mail... "Red" Braunstein may still
be aboard the Steel Age as Carpenter... William West sailed
for a Far East Isthmian trip... Brother Cyril Loades just sailed
in from a long trip. He's got a sense of humor, too. He said,
"Now I'm good for three weeks on the beach"... Now that we
'have baseball in season the Brothers are sure appreciating the
television set on the third deck... There's a musical play on
Broadway called "South Pacific." Well, how about some playwriter putting" out a play called North Atlantic — about a
freighter during war-time?

�Page EigHt

•j

!l'

r H E S E A F A R E tt S LOG

Tuesday. May 10. 1949

TBE MEMBEBSmP SPEAKS
Member Draws Bead On Edit
Blasting Union Hiring Hall
tem, but proposes a single hall
To the Editor:
for
each port, controlled by the
The enclosed editorial appear­
port
authority, through which
ed in the Dallas Morning News
men
would
be hired regardless
On April 22. .Aside from the ob­
of
union
affiliation.
vious mis-information upon
NO ENFORCEMENT
which the author bases his "dis­
May
I ask him just where in
crimination" argument, I am cur­
such
a
set-up the unions would
ious to know why the subject
fit
in?
How
does he propose to
has been treated editorially. Be­
negotiate
and
enforce contracts
fore commenting on the edit,
with
the
resulting
amalgamous
here's what the newspaper said:
crews?
Is
he
unaware
of the dif­
"It is not difficult to under­
stand the insistence of union ference between the skilled and
seamen on the use of hiring halls. semi-skilled qualifications of un­
On "the other hand, it is just as ion seamen and the besotted
easy to see how the hiring hall scabs, most of whom are tramp­
tneans the closed shop for sea­ ing from dock to dock for jobs
because of expulsion from the
faring men.
unions
for irresponsibility or
"The hiring hall is an arrange­
communist
monkeyshines?
ment under which idle seamen
It's
curious,
I repeat, that this
belonging to the union get num­
should
appear
in a Dallas news­
bers in accordance to their date
paper
where
it
is not likely to
of last employment or date of
be
opposed
editorially.
I wonder
the application for a job. Jobs
if
any
of
you
have
seen
or heard
.offered are then submitted for
'acceptance by the holders of the of similar propaganda in other
"senior number 6n the 'board.' inland cities. If so, I believe we
'-If the holdfer wants the job, he should call on other unions to
•-takes it. If he doesn't the next watch for it and help us fight it
man in number of seniority gets with our best weapon: facts.
John B. Freexhan
a chance at it.
"Since these hiring halls are
•-run by the unions, there is no
'^chance for a non-union man to
get in line for employment, of
-'course. The convenience of the
'hiring hall for a class of skilled
"or semi-skilled 'worker Who is
-in one port today and perhaps
seeking work on the other side
• of the world three months from
now, is clear. Its discrimination
against the unorganized seaman
: is equally clear.

A BIT OF SUN IN THE ATLANTIC

To the Editor:

Pari of Ihe Beauregard deck gaiig catches a bit of sun
while returning from a vecent trip to England. Forrest Nelson
who submitted the picture stated that the crew is tops and
the officers very cooperative. The Beauregard is now on a
steady run to Genoa, Italy. Lots of siin in the Med for the boys.

The Lf&gt;ng Road

ONE BIG HALL
"The convenience of the hir­
ing hall, maintained without
charge by the port authority at
each port, might be offered as a
compromise. It seems better that
the shipping men should go to
one central place to hire men
than that the unemployed should
be tramping from dock to dock
in search of work. It also seems
good that a man not a member
of a union should be able to get
a job if he can find somebody
who wants to hire him."
So much for the editorial.
The legality of the hiring hall
under T-H has received some
attention in the national news
during the past week. One might
expect, therefore, to read such
criticism in publications located
at shipping centers, but its ap­
pearance in Dallas would seem
to be the result of pressure being
•applied in behalf of political
&lt; supporters of the current move
to change only the name of the
T-H Law.
The strategy, obvious to a
seaman, is not so obvious to
those in this locality who are
likely to read the editorial page
of the Dallas Morning News.
Only the very naive could be
so ill-advised as to base an ob­
jection to the hiring hall on
"closed shop discrimination." Af­
ter aU, that portion of the mari­
time industry which remains un­
organized today- is rather small.
The author of the "editorial cdnr,
cedes the convenience and de­
sirability of the hiring hall sys­

Wagner Thanks
CS Organizers
For Good Job

By C. A. NESLCIN

My road stretches ever onward,
From sea to sea to sea.
I'm a cursed son of wanderlust
And there is no home for me.
My eyes have seen countless countries,
And my feet trod many miles.
And there is no heart within me
For having touched the dreamy isles.
And on nights when stars are bright.
And there's a calm and windless sea.
The memory of an island maid
Comes drifting back to me.
I see her in my mind's eye view.
On the sands neath coral head.
And the morning wind is in her hair,
And the sea is sun-blood red.

Her jade-green eyes smile at me,
They leave me but one choice:
To give my heart and soul to her
Of the laughter-silvered voice.
Maybe a fool I was and a fool I am
To have left my heart with her
When my ship sailed on the evening's tide
To only God knows where.
And now I live with memories
Of laughter, love and smiles.
For my heart is kept by a waiting maid
In the distant dreamy isles.
My road stretches ever onward.
From sea to sea to sea.
A lovelost son of wanderlust
And there is no heart within me.

TAKING UP THE WAIST SLACK

4" i i

Allegheny Viclory crewmembers dig info Ihe offerings
of Sleward Otto Preussler's
dOpariment during a recent run
to Europe. The Allegheny is
Uncle Otto's 115th ship since
going to sea in 1904.

4 i 4

I have just returned fi-om the
Middle East on the Thomas
Cresap. I hit port just in time
to see the finishing touches be­
ing put on the Cities Service
election. When that is done and
we have proved our point as
bargaining agents, then we
should really go * to work on
them.
An organizer must be a subtle,
but persuasive diplomat, and as
I see it, we really owe the Cities
Service organizers the heartiest
thanks we have. Their job is
almost done and the real work
begins. We must now stuff that
company so full of unionism
that evei-ytime the board of di­
rectors meets they'll bow in the
direction of the SIU Hall.
We gained our standing in
Isthmian through a long and
hard road and we can do the
same thing with Cities Service.
In fact, with the Isthmian ex­
perience behind us we should
be able to do the job here in
double quick time.
So here's to seeing lots of you
oldtimers and permitmen aboard
those Cities Service tankers. Let's
give them the business the SIU
way: good men and clean ships.
Blackie Wagner

The Brooklyn Kid
Returns To Roost
In Crescent City
To Ihe Editor:
After a ten day coastwise trip
to Texas, the Brooklyn Kid is
once more comfortably riding
the beach in the Crescent City.
Last week here saw many live
ones in this port, including
Jimmy Battles and Morgan Car­
roll, off the Alcoa Patriot. Jack
Rankin and Dago Red Burke
were also in town.
Henry Agusta and Hawthorne
Frazier made the Alcoa Patriot
and headed for bauxite country.
I can hardly wait for the lucky
day when I'll catch a scow
headed for that country.
Freddie Parsons is in town,
and had been seen around the
Astoria looking like he stepped
out of an Esquire ad. Norman
Jfickson was also here, but left
on the Jean LaFitte along with
Thomas Scott and Lamont Lott.
Jack Parker and Salty Dick
have both been seen around
Bienville Street recently. Muff
Johnson was caught looking in­
to a maritime cook book for a
recipe for consomme, so reports
Steward Lott,
Freddie, Walter and quite a
few other permitmen in this port
are suffering beach fever. There
is no known cure for that ail­
ment except a good card and a
book to back it up. Well, until
next time, I'll return to the tales
the boys are spinning at the
next table.
Dennis Saunders

�Tuesday, May 10, 1949

THE SEAFARERS

"Wotta Tpwn"

Veteran Hub ILA Man Hits
Use Of Foreign Ships By US
To the Editor:
Last week I wrote a letter to
the Boston Post in regard to
our merchant marine. I was a
longshoreman in Boston for 49
years and a member- of Local
800, ILA.
I told the Post that most of
the sugar coming into the Port
of Boston was arriving in alien
ships to be sold to American
housewives. No wonder our sea­
men are on the beaclr. I also
told of the bulk of cocoa beans
arriving in foreign ships.
A couple of weeks ago in the
waterfront column of the Post
they had listed four ships with
cocoa bean cargoes. Three were
Swedish and the other was Nor­
wegian. I pointed out that the
sugar refinery calls itself the
American Sugar Company. I said
it was American in name only,
but the Post did not seem in­
terested enough to print it, so
I stopped buying the paper.
The sugar refinery had a strike
a few months ago and the poor
men who worked there for years
lost pension and seniority be­
cause they lost the strike.
There are a lot of people buy­
ing this sugar who don't know
these facts. I know that the SEA­
FARERS LOG is a paper that is
good and has the interest of the

Chest Out

people at heart. I have boys in
the SIU and I receive the LOG
every week.
I hope the LOG will be in cir­
culation for a long time to
come, as it is a real paper.
Myles Kane
South Boston, Mass,

Suggests Meetings
Slow Down Under
Good And Welfare
To the Editors
As a permit member of • the
SIU for nearly three years
have attended the membership
meetings as much as possible
when ashore. But, I. am sorry
to say, there seems a desire on
part of the members to try to
get the meetings over as quickly
as possible.
I feel that our meetings should
go along at a slower pace so
that members and , permitmen
can give their viewpoints once
in awhile under Good and Wel­
fare. I do believe there are many
of us permits who could give
new ideas on things for the good
of our Union, but as I see it not
much time is given for many of
us, especially the timid ones who
need a little time-., to work up
their courage, to go before the
meeting.
If meetings would go a little
sluwer, who can tell, maybe
something constructive would
come from the members present.
John Lavin

LOG

'Bama U. Seafarer Says Log
is Effective Union Medium

To the Editor:
It has been several years since
I left the SIU, but I have been
fortunate in being able to keep
up with the SIU news and Un­
ion activities through the SEA­
FARERS LOG. At the present
time I am studying labor and
international relations at the Un­
iversity of Alabama.
I would like at this time to
commend the staff of the SEA­
FARERS LOG for the fine job
it does as a laboring man's pa­
per. The comments that I shall
make are shared by many of my
friends and professors who wait
in line each week for their turn
That devilishly coy look on
to read the LOG.
Seafarer Ray Slangle's puss
It is the opinion of all of us
stems from the rollicking good that the LOG, as an instrument
time he had ashore in San of the men of the SIU, works
Juan during a recent slop made diligently for the principles of
by the Morning Light. Looks democracy that are so dear to
us all. The' active fight for dem­
like the poor boy doesn't know ocratic action carried on by the
yet what hit him.
SIU through the medium of the

Illness Beaches Filipponl
In Army's Trieste Hospital
To the Editor:

here who agree with me on that.
That's all for now. Regards
Here I am back in the hospital
to
my old shipmates. I hope to
again after one year to the day.
see a LOG real soon—even an
Last year it was in Germany, old one.
this time it's Italy.
W. Filipponl
It seems that here in Trieste
there is quite a bit of yellow
jaundice.
I was unfortunate
enough to come down with it and
thus miss my ship, the SS Wil­
liam R. Davie, a South Atlantic
ship with a good crew.

Manhattan Eatery
Gets Seafarer's
Full Endorsement
While on the ship I took sev­

Seafarer's Sister eral rolls of pictures but I will To Ihe Editor:
have to wait until I leave the
There is-a guy who owns a
Looks Forward To hospital
to have them developed
little -beer joint at 220 W. 35th
and forwarded to the LOG. I
Street,
Manhattan, called the
Each Issue Of Log know that the crew is waiting to "Srtack Bar
and Grill," who I
To the Editor:

Seafarer Julio Bernard shows
"what a good SIU Bosun looks
like," according to his note
accompanying the photo. Bro­
ther Bernard is currently tak­
ing it easy on the Leach in
San Juan.

I want to thank you for the
LOG, made possible by my bro­
ther, Archie Wright. At present
he is somewhere in the Pacific,
heading to New York aboard
the Zane Grey trf Isthmian.
I wish to join all families of
SIU members iu letting you
know that I look forward to
receiving the LOG and 'enjoy
reading its every page. I hope
every member of the Union con­
tinues his good work.
Mrs. G. C. Turman
New Smyrna Beach
Florida

m BiEF BOX
SPLIT ENGINE OVERTIME?
To the Editor:
Since 1943 I have been told by Patrolmen that the Firemen
do not split their overtime; that is, whoever stands the watch
gets the OT. I've always worked that way and consider it a good
method. If I am right • or wrong, please explain the set-up in
the LOG.
Lloyd Short
Answer: The Brother is correct in that Firemen do
not split their overtime and whoever stands the watch gets
the overtime. However, if the Firemen want to share the
overtime work they can do so by agreement, among themselves
to rotate their watches, thus giving each man a crack at th«
two overtime watches. This is strictly up to the Firemen to
work out. Under no conditions, however, do Firemen split
overtime money earned.

Page Nine

see the pictures and I'll speed
them on to you for publication
as soon as possible.
In these foreign ports, we sea­
men have our ups and downs
with the Army but let's give
credit where its due. This Army
hospital — 7th Station Hospital,
Trieste—is one of the- best and
seamen are treated like human
beings, not like outcasts. There
are six or seven other seamen

LOG makes the Union and the
paper a crdit to organized labor
in the United States.
The active and vigilant fight
that you are waging against
communist activities on the wa­
terfront and wherever else they
may be found supports this view.
Your many articles pertaining
to those men who can seriously
damage the future of any union
leads me and my friends to be­
lieve that the SIU shall be as
strong as the character of the
men who make up the organi­
zation. From my experience
while sailing on SIU ships I feel
that the union shall continue its
progress because of the good
character it demands of its mem •
bership. The articles I referred
to above were those on "gashounds,' "scab"?" and "pilferers."
I feel that your constant ef­
fort to organize the non-union
shipping companies, the coopera­
tive work the SIU is doing in
aiding other unions are further
tributes to your organization.
Your consistent fight to maintain
the best possible working condi­
tions and wages in the maritime
field is certainly an inspiration
to working men in America.
Before I close, there is another
comment that should be made.
There are few, if any, weekly
newspapers that so fully cover
the many congressional bills, in­
ternational maritime happenings
and news of its membership as
the SEAFARERS LOG. In every
issue I find some item about a
former shipmate of mine.
Here's hoping for further suc­
cess for the SEAFARERS LOG
and the men it represents.
Bob Pribbenow
. Univ. of Alabama

Here's A Moon
Percy Didn't
Find Romantic

can honestly recommend as tops.
Any time you are in that neigh­
borhood I would like to Suggest
that you drop by and lodk it
over.
He is a good Union man, and
has good food—ten cent beers, To the Editor:
Speaking of exciting and dan­
hot dog5 and sauerkraut, etc. I
gerous
trips to sea—
think the membership will do
Well,
my scariest trip took
well to give him their business.
place in the latter part of 1944.
William V. Click
It all happened one night as we
were drifting along in foreign
waters.
Now hold on and behold. Bro­
thers— the war didn't have a
thing to do with it. As I tossed
and wriggled in my bunk (due
to the heat) I decided to take a
walk back to the chill room
(poop deck) and cool off awhile.
While sitting there I noticed
a big, fat, ugly-looking shadow,
like some kind of a sea monster,
staring at me. I was hoping it
was only a dream because it
was so dark that I couldn't find
the right side of the ship from
which to jump overboard.
As the shadow neared me I
noticed it was the Moon. Not
the Moon from way up above,
but the Moon from the SIU—
Moon Kouns. He suggested get­
ting a cup of coffee, which I
quickly accepted. I was so glad
to still be alive that I drank
three cups of the stuff, then hit
the sack and slept like a new­
born babe.
Percy Eoyer
(Ed.
Note:
We'd
like to hear
The quartet of Steel Voyagers lines the rail for a quick
the Moon's version of this. By
snapshot during a break in the day's work. Ship was in Has
the way. Brothers, got any
Tanura at the time. Left to right—Fireman, Wallace, Earl
scary experiences in your seaand Rudy Profozich. The pic was submitted by Profozich.
bags?)

BUDDIES ON THE VOYAGER

__

J

�Pag» Ten

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Tuesday, May 10, 1949

Good Union Crew Makes Cape Race Click
Wherever there is a capable crew working together
to produce shipboard eflSciency, you'll find a bunch of
Seafarers who are alert Union men. Such a crew is the
one recently aboard the SS Cape Race, two of whose
members — E. B. McAuley and Bill Nicholson — have
found that the atmosphere of cooperation aboard the
ship provides the proper setting for their hobby of
photography. Brother McAuley submitted the photos on
this page to show LOG readers just what makes the
Cape Race click.

i* J*
Bill Nicholson strums Guitar in his room.

A crewmember is usually
easier to get along with when
he's well-fed. Cape Race Stew­
ards men, in photo above, do
their darndest to see that
their shipmates leave the messroom happy. Front row (left
So right): Candy Creech. Ralph
Smith, Hughes Thomas, Hank
Donnelly, O. Lorey; back row:
Joe Faircloth, Bill Warmack,
Carl Lowery, J. B. Davis and
Bob Pierce.

Here are Black Gang men who keep the Cape Race running
smoothly. In front row (left to right): "Doc" Croker, Wiper;
Manuel Rial. FWT; E. B. McAuley, Oiler, and "Rags" Reinholdt, FWT. Rear row: N. Barbour, FWT; "Sleepy" Holloway,
Second Electrician; L. Anderson, Wiper; C. B. Moose, Oiler;
"Hed" McCorkle, Oiler, and Bill Nicholson.

Brother McAuley says the
lad Wielding the brush in photo
above is "Charleston's gift to
the SIU" — none other than
"Bobo" Murray, OS. "Mac"
pays there were plenty of op­
portunities for action photo­
graphs on the Cape Race.
4&gt;

4&gt;

4" 4&lt;

Photographed at one of the
Cape Race shipboard meetings,
W. J. McNall gives his Broth­
ers i few pointers on SIU
Unionism. Among his listeners
are Jimmie Davis (facing cam­
era), Second Cook and Stew­
ards Delegate.

Subject of McAuley's "Por­
trait of a Bosun" at right is
Ray Kitchens of Savannah.
The six-foot-three Seafarer is
a popular guy, "Mac" says.
Kitchens was formerly Bosun
on the Mosoil on &gt; which he
'had some pretty rugged exper-'
fences. The scow ran aground
twice and Was rammed once.
Ray came'out of it unruffled.

�Tue^ay, May 10. 1949

Page Eleven

TiBE S BA^PiARE RS hO.Q

Tryii^ Ta' Take
Frtm The SIU

hi) ^

i

bear in mind is that, when Elec- 1 beneficial if the retiring Elec­
(Continued from Page 5)
tricians
tea? down equipment for trician would show the relief
spare parts immediately, elimin
repair
and;
parts have been or­ man around the plant and ac­
ate •a lot of griping and reveal
dered,
theyshould
tag.the,equip­ quaint,. him with the gear that
at- a glance, when the the motors
ment
with
all
necessary
data, so has been acting up.
and equipment were last ser­
that
it
will
'be.
easier
for the
SS JEAN
As most Electricians know,
SS STEEL SCIENTIST
viced,
succeeding Electricians to square equipment is not standard on all
J. Malone. $4.00; A. Rivera, $1.00;
W. Hallett, $2.09; C. W. Frge, $2.00;
F. Stephens, $1.00.
KEEP COPY
W. A., Ryan, $2.00; J. R. Chaker, $1.00;
away thp job.
ships. That is why it is sug­
T. Martinez, $2.00; J. Yianatos, $2.00;
SS STEEL TRAVELER
Furthermore,
a
duplicate
copy
gested that Electricians cooperate
Coils
should
not
be
left
around
O. A. Hess, $2.00; R. J. Zumkley,
J. Walker. $3.00; S. Shack, $2.00; J.
of
requisitions
should,
be
kept
with- tags removed and num­ with one another by extending
$2.00; P. G. Hellebrand, $2.00; J. W.
L. Palmer, Jr., $1.00; I. Gorgas, $2.00;
Broad, $3'00; V. J. Tamulis, $1.00; E. on board at all times to prevent bers missing. Otherwise, the re­ the courtesies that will make
C. J. Randazzo, $1.00; M. D. Faircloth,
J. H. Huebner, $1.00; I. Brose, $1.00; 'duplication of orders. When spare lief
man will lose a lot of their jobs easier.
$5.00; E. W. oSdds, $3.00; G. Bond,
A. D. Guida, $2.00i D, DeLaCruz, $1.00 parts
In fact, it seems that a little
are used, replacements time trying to find the proper
Jr., $1.00; J. Ortieguerra, $2.00; N.
SS SUZANNE
Marovich, $3.00; D. B. Moon, $S.OO; G.
should be ordered upon comple­ coil for equipment under repair. more cooperation on the part of
D. A. Ortiz, $2.00; V. Y. Remolas tion of the voyage.
G. Williams, $3.00; M. C. Smith, $1.00;
Keep, all tools and equipment the Electricians will go far to­
D. 5. Chirichella, $2.00; L. E. Cooke, $1.00.
A
complete
set
of
tools
and
in­
in their proper places and an ward eliminating a good numb^
$1.00; C. L. Starling, $2.00.
MV GADSDEN
struments,
such
as
meggers,
up-tordate log account of work of beefs, gripes and petty jeal­
SS TRINITY
L. Makowka, $5.00; M, Sierra, $1.00;
W. M, H. Lewis, $3.00: W, L. Gibson, G. C., Register, . $2,004 T. W. King, should be supplied by the com­ completed.
Failure to do this ousies that may now exist.
It will certainly help to defeat
$5.00; P. Gorden, $3.00; F. T. An­ $5.00: C. C. Lawson, $1.00; A. K. pany. and kept on board.
will mean that, if an Electrician
drews, $2,00; F. J. Sullivan, $3.00; E. Jockel, $3.00; R. L. CuthreU, $1.00;
Since Electricians are not com'- has to pile- off in a. hurry, the the aims of the Engineers in try­
Molieri, $2.00; S. B. Marshall, $2.00; A. Vidal, $1.00; O. N. Peltomea, $2.00.
pensated for the. use of their own new man will be faced with a ing to hardtime all Electricians.
J. Tito, $1.00; J. W. N. Baumann,
SS STEEL ARTISAN
Reports from many ships, and
topis on the same basis as Car­ jig-saw puzzle.
$2.00.
J. Beresfordj. $3.00.
the instances elaborated on in
penters, all tools are to be left
SS STEEL VENDOR
SS ROBIN SHERWOOD
COOPERATE
J. A. Aramburu, $5.00; F. T. Osetek,
this article, indicate a need for
aboard ship so that the. next
H. C. Henry. $10.00; J. Winley,, Jr.,
$5.00; A. L. M. Diaz, $5.00; M. Deconstant
vigilance.
manwill.
be
able
to
do
his
•
job
If
at
the
end
of
a
voyage,
the
Cunhh, $5.00; H. Duarte, $5^.00; L. $2.00; C. Preclaro, $2.00; R. E. BUss,
All
of
the cases referred to
efficiently.
relief
Electrician
shows
up
be­
.$2.00;
L.
Bailey,
$2.00;
R,
R.
HighFook, $5.00; H. E. Long, $5.00; I.
Another valuable thing. to fore the payoff, it would be very are based on actual fact. Names
Quanico. $5.00; V. G. Orenicio, $5.00; tower, $2.00; E. Rosa, $2.00; M- E.
L. J. White, $5.00; A. Hanstvedt, $2.00; B'rown, $2.00; A. Aran,cibia, $1,00; D.
of ships, and companies have
Chow Ging Song, $5,00; A. Princen, E. Aunspack, $2.00; M, R. Beavers,
been omitted purposely. How:$3.00; J. Wm. Corcoran, $3.00; G. $2.00; J. E. Bpnd, $3.00; E. N. King,
ever,
they will be revealed when
Mealis, $1.00; E. Vieco, $2.00; A.^ L. $2.00; H. A.. Manchester; $5,00; R.
and
if
needed.
Sadowski,
$2.00;
O,
C.
Bourne,
$2.0Q;
Copeland, $27.00; J. P. Banchard, $2.00;
One final word of advice to
S. S. Gar^^n, $5.00; R. Henningsen, W. J. Brady,. $2,00; R, M. Guild,
By WM. (Curly) RENTZ.
$5.00; Julius F. Bolz, $3.00; F. Krgabac, $2.00; M. Kramer, $1.00; C. Meyers,
the Electricians: These are your
BALTIMORE — Shipping has of weeks, things are in first class jobs that are involved. You$2.00; B-. gpicer, $4.00i R..E^ James, $2.00; C. Achoy, $2.00; E, Rose, $1.00;
J. J. Flaherty, $3.00; E. Leasgang, been pretty slow here again for shape in this port. However, if
$3.00. '
must discharge your duties in a
$25.00.; F« Schumacher, $1.00.
a week, and we think it will stay you plan to come here, make responsible manner. Gashoundg,
SS STRATHMORE.
slow for another week at least. sure you have enough of what and incompetents haye no place,
J. C. Loffler, $1.00; G. S.. Lynch,
When there is a change, we'll it takes to carry you through.
in these positions.
$2,00; E. Sextpn, $1.00; S. Daynoras,
$1.00; J. S. Lewis, $2.00; S. F- let you know through the LOG.
If you have a few bucks, you
The SIU is going to retain jobs.,
Schuyler, $2.00; W. Verbo, $2.00; Crew For the time being, Baltimore is can enjoy the horse racing and
SIU, A&amp;G District
for
its membership, and it will^
of SS Strathmore, $5.00.
a.
good
place
to
stay
away
from.
the
baseball
while
you
wait
for
not
allow irresponsible members,
BALTIMORE
14 North Gay St.
We did have some payoffs, the ship. You know the ship to jeopardize the jobs of others,
Wiiiiam Rentz, Agent
Mulberry 4540.
BOSTON
276 State St.
in the Electricians' ratings. .
seven in fact,, but. we had. only will be here eventually.
Ben Lawson, Agent
Richmond 2-0140
five
sign-ons,
which
weren't
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141
enough for this port.
GALVESTON
308Vi—23rd, St.
Keith Alsop, Agent
Phone 2-8448
The. payoffsvjncludqd -three Ore.
MOBILE
1 South . Lawrence St.
Line ships and the sign-ons in­
Cal Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-1754
cluded two. As usual, when
E. Sheppard, Agent
Magnolia 6112-6113
things. ai-e a little tight here, it
NEW YORK
51 Beaver St.
Jpe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784
was the Ore ships that kept us
ERLING.MELLE
NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St.
Get in touch with Rose M^lle going. That's something to re­
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
member. about those- Ore Line
PHILADELPHIA
337 Market St. at 33 Alexander Avenue, DalyJ. Sheehan, Agent
Market 7-1635 City, San Francisco, California. scows, they keep a big. port op­
erating.
SAN FRANCISCO
85 Third St.
i* 4- 4Frenchy Michelet, Agent Douglas 2-5475
We didn't have much in the
ALBERT J. McHUGH
SAN JUAN, P.R
.252 Ponce de Leon
way of beefs, except for some
L.-Craddock, Agent
San Juan 2-5996
Your sister, Mrs. Charles overtime complaints,, on the Ore
SAVANNAH
2 Ahercorn St.
Jim Drawdy. Agent
Phone 3-17^8 O'Donnel, wants you, to contact ships. Those. Ore ships keep us
TACOMA
1519. Pacific St. her.
busy all; thq. w.ay. But we got THE. SNAKE PIT; by Mary Jane mind itself. For instance, in the
Wai^; Signet Books.. 192 pages; final analysis is mathematics .an
Broadway 0484
everything - settled.
4. 4. 4...
TAMPA
1809-1811 N, Franklin St.
accurate tool for measuring the
25
cents,
THOMAS G. GAIrVlN
Ray White. Agent
Phone. M-1323
VOTE OF THANKS.V
universe* or is mathematics a
Intei-est
in
this
unusual
semiWILMINGTON, Calif., 227ya Avalon Blvd.
Your brother Matthew is an­
Naturally
everyone
here
was
quirk
of the human mind which
autobiographical
novel
has
been
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Terminal 4-2874 xious to hear from you. His ad­
glad
to.
learn
the
results
of
the
leads
to
conclusions quite impeyHEADQUARTERS - . 51 Benver St., NrY.C.
dress: 50 Ellery Street,. South Cities Service election. Actually, heightened by the startling fectiy related to reality?
SECRETARY-TREASURER
moyie.. ma,de from it. Briefly, it
Boston, Massachusetts..
Paul Hall
nine to one was just about the is a subjective account- of the Sullivan can't give the anf»
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
4-4-4,
way we figured
things would experiences of a young- woman swers, but he poses the ques­
Lindsey Williams
A.
K.
POWERSv
go.
We'll,
get
those
Cities Serv­ who suflfei's a mental breakdown, tions expertly and writes well.
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURER
Get in touch with Riith, She's ice ships in line nowu
Robert Matthews
J. P. Shu.ler
goes insane if you like,, and is This is an excellent book fOp
Joseph Volpian
at 357 Ward Avenue*. Norfolk, We owe the lads who've, been sent to a mental institution for those who enjoy- exploring the
riding those Cities Service ships treatment.
Virginia.
fundamentals.
SUP
a big .vote of thahks. They stuck
4-4-4i. 4",
The story is told in the first
through thick and thin. They
HONOLULU
16 Merchant, St.
RICHARD L.. TOLBHv
THE GILDED HEARSE, bp
person,
in
flashes
of
comparative
Phone 5-8777
^
The radio from the SS John B, took all the company non^tensp
Charlefr
Gqtham, Signiit
PORTLAND.
Ill W.- Burpsida St.
horror. However, the
Bpokfti, I6qi-pp.g 29.. cent?..
Beac,on 4336 Waterman should be.turned in to and got the sh.^ throu^, the
vote. Now, if they'll just stay
L
-&gt;
RICHMOND. Calif,.
257 5th St, Headquarters at. 51 Beaver St.j
This, ia B; rathw pointless.- bvit
aboard
a
couple
more
trips,
we'll
Phone 2599 New York.
At least, the lady seems cured highly entertainingj novel abputi..
SAN FRANQISCO.
S» -Clay St,
get them the ;SIU contract.
and is reunited with her hus­ a day in the life of the highi 4- 4Douglas 2-8363
The SIU earned a compliment
BOYD. DAVIS
powered, press agent for a multiSEATTLE,
86,.Seneca .St.
for itself in Italy. To be more band.
Main 0290
i,
if
i.
million
dollar New York pUblishr^
Helen
Zahar
of:.'3728.
West
30th
precise, the SIN crew of the SS
WILMINGTON
440 Avalon Blvd.
ing
house—and
about a day iHy
THEi
HMITATION5
OF
SCI­
Street,
Vancouver,
British
Cor
Irenestar, a tanker - belonging to
Terminal 4-3131
lunibia, wants to hear from you. the Triton Steamship company, ENCE#. byr Jr W. N» Sullivan; the life of his wife, whom- h^t
Mo.ntor: Books. 192 pages; 35 knocks sprawling in a ginmiU&gt;
Canadian District
got a big compliment from Cap­
in one scene.
HARRY Dr DED^AIaCHOW
tain -Salvatore- Lizzio of Ignazio cents*
MONTREAL
404 Le Moyne St.
Your sister Mae wants .you. to Lizzio &amp;• Company of Catania, The burden of Mr. Sullivan's
Both principals enjoy a spot o£.7
Marquette 5909
HALIFAX;.
128'/, Hollis St. get' in touch with, her at. 6 All- agent for Triton.
argument, is. that the more we adultery, and endless quantitieRj
Phone . 3-8911 ston. Place; Boston 14,; Mass.
Captain Lizzio sent a - letter to. learn about the physical and of liquor are consumed by the*
PORT ARTHUR
63 Cumberland St.
if
if
ifs
Triton,
in whi^, he, said that the structural nature of the imiverse hero and others who flit in and?
Phone North 1229
PHILIP- SWDERcrew of the Irenestar was the the -less we know'. Every new out of the story. Finally the, pub-.,
PORT COLBORNE
103 Durham St.
Contact your cousin, Mary A.-. best American crew he ever had discovery discloses, new, mys­ licity chap and his wife make?
Phone: 5591
TORONTO
lllA Jarvis St. Brown,. 37 Trotting Road Pack,- met as an agent.
teries, and ultimate truth re­ up, without quite forgiving eacha
Elgin. 5719
Lowell,
Mass..
She
is
anxious
to
The-chief;of customs for Cata­ mains. unfathomable; As a re­ other.
VICTORIA,. B.C
602 Boughton St.
Anyone who starts the books
hear
from
you;
nia: and--the, Cap^JnrsOil-:. the&gt; poTji- sult, a survey of the limitations
' Empire 4531
will
finish it. Things move fast^
of
science
becomes
a
restatement
endorsed
CaptainLjzzio's
.
note.
VANCOUVER
565 Hamilton St.
Pacific . 7824
KAlaJO ^P0PP
The . crew of the Irenestar must of; basic problems of philosophy. and the brittle make-believes
See Joe Volpian at Headquar­ have made a real impression.
Naturally^ the author must philosophizing in the conversa?,;
HEADQUARTERS.
512 MeGill St.
Despite the unfortfinate fact give emphatic attention to the tion is eminently readable if not?
Montreal
Plateau. 670 ters, 51. Beaver St.j New York'
that we are having a-slow-couple possible limits of the human very enriching.
-City, about, your, passport;

RMmme S^mg Shws Dom

SlU HRLLS

�l"&lt;

Page Twelve

THE SEAFARERS LOG

Tuesday, May lu,'

WHAT

irmnK.,

• CT-• ,y

•

-J-

^ rV'J "f "Si
'• &gt;o

,'

''

QUESTION: Within recent weeks the SIU Canadian District has regained from the com­
munists junsdiction over Eastern Canadian shipping. What effect do you think this develop­
ment will have on the over-all picture in maritime-

JOE CAMBLOR. Utility:

BUDDY LIST, DM:

GEORGE W. THAYER, BR:

LOUIS GOOCH, AB:

RALPH C. MILLS, Stajvard:
I think that this development
The stronger a union is, the
When any group of seamen I feel that a good job was done
The more strength we gain,
means that genuine unity be­ more it can do for itself in bet­ makes advances, seamen every­ in Canada. Seamen and water­
the better off the Union is when*
tween the seamen of the two tering conditions and wages. "The where ultimately benefit. With front workers everywhere are
countries, Canada and the Unit­ SIU Canadian District has now the communists out, and replaced probably glad that the SIU ever a beef comes our way. The
ed States, will now become a been greatly strengthened by an organization of seamen in­ cleared up a muddy situation. communists in control in Canada
fact. They both now have a through the work of the Inter­ terested primarily in strict trade Everybody, the seamen of Can­ were a weak link in the solidar*
single purpose — to win better national, which in turn will ben­ union objectives, the Canadian ada and the United States, and ity of seamen in North America
wages, working conditions and efit from that District's strength seamen are now on the road to the maritime industry of Canada — they weakened labor every­
improved job security. Canadian should a beef come up caUing a new deaL For them it means will benefit by the move. When where. I'm in full accord with
any move that combats commu­
seamen will no longer have to for the entire Union and all its decent wages and conditions. the International expelled the
nism,
and I'm sure that the sea­
battle constantly over things Districts to put all power into They will have the protection communist-led CMU five years
men
of
Canada will find that
which never benefit them. They the fight. The SIU was' wise to of a Union that places their in­ ago, it began the clean-up camconditions will begin to improve
will not have to fight the com­ go into Canada to clarify the terests first. Under the control of pmgn; now it has been com­
munists' political battles, as they situation. I'm sure that with the the communists this was never pleted and the SIU has another now that they have only their
economic betterment to worry
had been doing when the party- SIU being much stronger now,
victory to its credit. The entire about. The move by the Canad­
possible,
because
the
party's
po­
domihated Canadian Seamen's the operators here will listen
eastern, seaboard is now free ian District has solidified the en­
Union was in control. For the more closely during contract ne­ litical goals were always given from commie control and the
first time they now have a real gotiations and the operators in first consideration. That's all SIU is stronger than ever. All tire east coast of North America,
and has made stronger the seaUnion.
Canada will do the same.
over, now.
seamen will profit by the move. men^s movement.

CHARLES SCHERHANS, AB:

B. PRITKEN, Wiper:

DON SELKIRK, OS:

FRANK THROP. AB:
WILLIAM ZARKAS, DM:
The difficult job done in Can­
The victory of the SIU over Among other things, the Can­
At one time I .was a member In my opinion the strengthen­
ada by the SIU Canadian District the communists in Canada is a adian District's victory over the of the Canadian Seamen's Un­
will pay off in great benefits for step toward driving the commu­ communists solidifies the posi­ ion, so I know from personal ex­ ed position of the SIU Canadian
Ihe seamen who are now under nists out of maritime and all tion of the Seafarers Interna­ perience that Canadian seamen District means that the Canad­
Ihe banner of the Seafarers In- other industries, where they have tional Unioii on the east coast. are much better off under SIU ian Seamen's Union finally went
lernational Union. In the recent done nothing for the workers, But the most important thii^, I contracts than they ever were too far in trying to shove com­
campaign we not only brought except to cause confusion. The think, is that the Canadian Sea­ under CSU. There is a vast dif­ munist party policy down the
great benefits to the Canadian strengthening of the Canadian men will now find that they'll ference between the two unions. throats of its membership. As a
seaman I'm against the commu­
seamen, but also benefitted the District will in turn strengthen
I feel that the SIU is one hund­ nist party, and I'm sure most of
be
working
for
better
wages,
un­
whole International. Events in the entire SIU. The victory of
red percent ahead of the CSU
ihe future will undoubtedly the SIU means better conditions der better conditions. Under the in conditions, wages and security the Canadian seamen are, too.
prove that the recapture of the for Canadian seamen, who have CSU they never had any pro- for seamen. As Canadian ship­ Up to now they couldn't say so.
The way they have gone for the
situation in Canada by the SIU had a rough go of it until the lection. They were always be­ owners learn to abide by SIU
SIU Canadian District proves
will be the opening wedge in present. They are far behind ing called out to fight for the contracts, the Canadian seamen
that they want good Union prin­
cleaning all unions of commie American conditions and wages,
schemes cooked up by the com­ will more and more realize the ciples. I believe that Canadian
domination. The sooner this is but with Canadian seamen now
advantages of these contracts. seamen will fully support the
done, the better off will be the a strong part of our organization, munists. Now if they have any It's a good thing to see that we SIU Candian District, which is
men of the unions involved. The they will go ahead with the rest beefs to fight, they'll be over the have so many brother seamen a Union for their protection and
seamen in Canada have a great of us toward a better way of things all seamen are interested in Canada who don't go for benefit only. And they'll enjoy
future before them.
living.
in—wages and conditions.
conunie strong-arm stuff.
the belter pay and conditions.

i f
' V
t 'L

' 'i 1

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9910">
                <text>May 10, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9983">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 17</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10004">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10025">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10047">
                <text>HEADLINES&#13;
SIU CANADIAN FULFILLING CONTRACTS WITH NEW OPERATORS&#13;
CS FINDS 19'OBJECTIONS'TO SIU CERTIFACATION&#13;
CSU SEAMEN SHOW PREFERENCE FOR  SIU&#13;
LANDLOCKED SAN MARINO PUTS HER BID IN FOR FAST MARITIME BUCK&#13;
SEAMEN MOURN PASSING OF RAYMOND SHEA&#13;
SHIPPING IS FAIR IN NEW YORK BUT ITS NOTHING TO BRAG ABOUT&#13;
SAN JUAN AWAITS SHIPPING RISE&#13;
NEW ORLEANS SEAFARERE HELPING CAMPAIGN OF AFL FOOD COUNCIL&#13;
MOBILE FORESEES CONTINUED FAIR SHIPPING&#13;
TACOMA CALLS COBB CREWMAN CREDIT TO SIU&#13;
ENGINEERS STILL AFTER JOBS OF ELECTRICIANS&#13;
ALCOHOLISM HAS BEEN PROBLEM OF MANY CULTURES&#13;
UNION STRENGTH MADE US CONDITIONS TOPS,SAYS VETERAN OF DECADE ON BRITISH SHIPS&#13;
SIU CREW THWARTS ILLEGAL CUSTOMS RAID IN VENEZUELA&#13;
BISHOP,FORMER SEAFARERS ENTERS IIIINOIS POLITICS&#13;
GOOD UNION CREW MAKES CAPE RACE CLICK&#13;
ENGINEERS STILL TRYING TO TAKE ELECTRICIAN'JOBS FROM THE SIU&#13;
BALTIIMORE SHIPPING SLOWS DOWN&#13;
&#13;
&#13;
</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10048">
                <text>05/10/1947</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10075">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10084">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13055">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="958" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="962">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/d7cc0d2a6c73cdce04c2798527f30582.PDF</src>
        <authentication>9126a6ad910ff56ac970da2b9e7aca6f</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47438">
                    <text>TRANSPORTATION VOTE OKAYED

Announcement was made this week by the Head­
quarters Tallying Committee that Seafarers in fhe
Atlantic &amp; Gulf District had adopted transportation
rule proposal No. 2 by better than a 3 to 2 margin
in the recently concluded 60-day referendum. The
Tallying Committee's recommendation that the new
rule go into effect immediately was concurred in
by the membership in reg'ular biweekly meetings
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA held in all Branches on May 18. Proposal No. 2 was
carried by a vote of 2680 to 1616.
The newly adopted rule directs that, when a
YORK, N. Y.. FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1949
No. 19
VOL. XI

i'crew is due transportation, those
men who desire to stay on board
ship can do so, providing they
do not collect transportation
money. Those desiring transpor­
tation must leave the ship.
Proposal No. 1, the rule form­
erly in effect, directed that men
due transportation money must
First signs that the SIU rep­ accept it and leave the ship. The
The Seafarers International
W. D. Henderson, international representative of the Sea­
resentatives' meetings with Bri­ deposed rule was first put into
Union is extending its fight to
farers
International Union, is now in London conferring with
tish marine union officials was effect on August 20, 1948, when
smash communist plans for
British maritime workers, whom the conununists have Been' clearing the air of communist it was imanimously accepted at
throwing the world's important
violently propagandizing in an effort to win support for the somanufactured confusion came on membership meetings in all
waterfronts into confusion anc
called
strike
of
the
Canadian
Seaman's
Union.
The
SIU
repre­
May
7, when 700 dockers in Branches.
chaos.
sentative
has
provided
British
unions
with
the
first
clear
Newport,
Monmouthshire, who
SIU representatives are now
HOTLY DEBATED
picture
of
the
situation
on
the
Canadian
waterfront.
Since
his
had
been
unofficially
supporting
in Great Britain exposing the
At
that
time the rule was put
arrival, several dockers' wildcat stoppages have ended and the
the CSU, voted to return to
phony "strike" called by the
before
the
membership along
work.
men have voted not to support the CSU.^ in accord with the
communist dominated Canadian
with
the
balance
of a new con­
official policy of the Transport and General Workers Union of
Seamen's Union, which is inten­
COMMIES PANICKED
tract
being
submitted
for ratifi­
Great Britain. On page 12 is one of the statements issued in
sifying its struggle to involve
The
arrival
of
SIU
represen­
cation.
London by the SIU.
British dockworkers because
tatives in Britain, the announce­ The adoption of the now de­
Canadian seamen have doomec
ment in London of AFL Presi­ feated rule touched off one of
the plot on the homefront.
few SlU-contracted Canadian not refuse to handle cargoes of dent William Green's statement
the hottest controversies ever
The British seamen's and dock ships in scattered British ports Canadian ships manned by the and the action of the Newport
waged
over a Union rule within
SIU Canadian District.
ers' unions are following the notably Bristol.
dockers to ignore the CSU in an the A&amp;G District, and was the
Until the SIU representatives'
The Transport Union told the area which the communists
policy of the International Trans
recent
arrival
in
London,
com
British
dockers not to become thought they had wrapped up subject of debate for months at
portworkers Federation, by re
ship and shoreside meetings. The
fusing to support the "strike.'" munists, led by a CSU organ pawns of the communists by aid­ immediately threw the leaders
SEAFARERS LOG for over two
However, communist propa izer, had been quietly pouring ing the disruptive commie effort of the rapidly disintegrating CSU months devoted space to memgandists have succeeded- i»- halt­ their propaganda all over the to immobilize Canadian vessels in Canada into panic.
in British popts.
Harry Davis, CSU president,
ing loading and unloading on a British waterfront.
The London Daily Worker, of­
flew to England in an effort to
GREEN ACTS
ficial paper of the British com­
William Green, president of stave off complete collapse of
munist party, and party front the Anierican Federation of La­ his "strike."
The Iransporlation rule
organizations bombarded marine bor, in a telegram to the Trans­ SIU representative^ Henderson
now
in effect reads:
v/orkers with false and mislead­ port and General Workers' Un­ told, British maritime workers
"When
transportation is
ing stories of the "strike."
was
ion, . also urged the members of that Davis' frantic flight
Throughout the propaganda that organization not to support proof that the CSU was desper­ due a crew iinder the terms
campaign, the communists kept the communist inspired CSU ate and had been almost com- of the contract, those men
who desire to stay on board
up a vicious attack on the SIU, "strike."
(Continned on Page 11)
the ship can do so. provid­
because of its traditional, unre­
ing they do not collect trans­
lenting fight
against commun­
portation. Those men desir­
The Seafarers International ists political chicanery on the
ing transportation can collect
Union of North America, AFL, US waterfront.
same and upon receipt of
has granted a charter to the
WORKED UNOPPOSED
the
money shall get off the
Marine Allied Workers of the
SIU
representatives
found
that
ship
and replacements for
Atlantic &amp; Gulf, in response to
the
communist
propaganda
ma­
those
vacancies
shall be ship­
pleas for union protection from
The telegram below was sent* to the American
chine
was
working
without
op­
ped
from
the
Union
Hiring
thousands of workers in fields
Federation
of
Labor's
Executive
Board
by
Paul
Hall.
position.
No
source
of
factual
in­
Hall."
close to the maritime industry,
First Vice-President of the Seafarers International Union
it was announced this week. formation was available to the
and Secretary-Treasurer of the Union's Atlantic and
The charter was effective from British maritime workers.
bership comments, both pro and
Thus the communist strateg­
May 11.
Gulf
District,
requesting
a
ban
on
the
use
of
the
AFL
con.
The new SIU affiliate will ists succeeded in stirring up
label by the Canadian Seamen's Union. SIU Interna­
In the several dozen letters
maintain its headquarters in New few port locals into taking un­
published
in the LOG the bulk
tional
Representative
Harold
C.
Banks
was
scheduled
to
official,
wildcat
stoppages
in
sup­
York with offices in the SIU
of
the
arguments
fell into two
port
of
the
so-called
strike.
appear
before
the
Executive
Board,
now
in
session
in
A&amp;G Hall at 51 Beaver Street.
categories:
W.
D.
Henderson,
spokesman
Branches will be established in
Cleveland, to present a detailed report of the SIU's
1. Those who favored the rule
major port cities on the Atlantic for the SIU representatives in
position.
Britain,
reports
that
consider­
requiring
all men to take trans­
and Gulf coasts as need for them
The text of the telegram was as follows:
able
progress
has
already
been
portation
and
pile off, and
arises.
made
in
counteracting
the
com­
2.
Those
who
favored allow­
May 18, 1949
Lindsey Williams, Director of
ing men to stay aboard, as in
Organization for the SIU, A&amp;G munists' attempt^ to plunge Bri­
Seafarers Internatidnal Union of North some instances men were being
District, has been nominated to tish ports into confusion.
America
respectfully requests that the executive forced to pile off after only a
Henderson
has
presented
the
be Secretary-Treasurer pro-tem
other
side
of
the
story
to
the
board of the American Federation of Labor give few weeks of employment.
of the MAW.
Williams participated in the officials of the British maritime
full consideration tosour affiliate, the Seafarers
PUT TO VOTE
preliminai-y organizing drive, and unions, giving them for the first
International
Union
of
North
America,
Can­
Discussion on possible changes
reported that groups of marine time • complete details of the
adian
District,
in
its
struggle
against
the
com­
in
the rule was. climaxed at
Canadian
situation.
allied workers in New York, Nor­
coastwise
membership meetings
munist
party
masquerading
as
the
Canadian
The
picture
began
to
change
folk, Tampa, Mobile, New Or­
on
February
9, when the two al­
as
the
facts
were
unfolded
be­
Seamen's
Union
in
Canada.
The
Seafarers
In­
leans and Galveston had ap­
ternate
proposals
adopted
fore
Britain's
maritime
workers.
plied for membership.
ternational Union of North America and its and placed on a were
ballot
for a
After conferring with the SIU
"The Marine Allied Workers
Canadian
affiliate
have
been
discriminated
secret
referendum
vote
to
begin
will give many non-seamen in representative, Arthur Bird, na­
against
in
Canada
by
persons
masquerading
un­
on
March
1.
various unorganized sections of tional secretary of the docks
der the AFL banner. We earnestly request that
Balloting on the referendum
the maritime industry the kind group of Britain's powerful
this masquerade by communist fellow travelers was concluded on April 30 and
of Union protection you^ can only Transport and General Workers'
get from the most powerful mari­ IJnion, called upon members of
be turned aside. Further that steps be taken a Tallying Committee elected
the' floor at the May 4
time Union in. the world, the hiis organization to ignore the
that the AFL's name not be used by the com­ from
communists'
plea
for
support.
meeting.
The committee consist­
Seafarers International Union,"
munist
party
in
Canada
in
the
future
as
it
has
He
declared
that
his
union
ed
of
Walter
Gardner, 4294,
Williams said.
been
in
the
past.
Our
International
representa­
supported
the
policy
laid
down
Chairman;
Ferdinand
Hart, 488;
He also said that announce­
by
the
International
Transporttive,
Harold
C.
Banks,
will
present
the
SIU's
Sal
Colls,
21085;
Edward
Mooney,
ments concerning fTie new Union
46671;
Lars
Hillertz,
48392;
W.
would be issued through the workers Federation,' which \iad
position in detail in person.
J. Brady, 6829.
ruled that British dockers should
LOG at, frequent intervals.

Seafarers Thwarts Commie Attempt To Snare
Support Of British Dockers For CSU Strike'

The New Rule

MAW Given
Charter By
intematlenal

Cmadim Commies Misasiag AFL,
SIU Telk AFL executive Board

�Page Two

THE S E IF ARE RS

LO G

Fridayv May 20. 1949

SEAFARERS LOG
Published Three Times a Month by the
SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor

At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
* - HAnover 2-2784
Entered as second class matter June 15, 1945, at the Post Office
in New York, N. Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

The Greatest Enemy
By their own admission, one of the top objectives
of the communists in every maritime nation is control o:
the waterfront. Their motives are obvious enough: through
control of the waterfront they hope to be able to cripple
inter-continental trade and travel whenever they wish.
•

Naturally they have sought to infiltrate the maritime
unions. In the United States, disciplined communist blocs
have repeatedly used waterfront workers as pawns to
carry out their aims, which have nothing to do with
trade union progress. Similar blocs have done the same in
other lands, and are trying to do it now in Canada and in
Britain. But the anti-communist unions, like the Seafarers,
have done their work well, and the commies are on the run.
Throughout its nearly eleven years of life, the Sea­
farers International Union has fought to block the com­
mies' attempts to bring the trade unions under the
control of Soviet Russia.
Naturally, most of the SIU's strength has been used
against the communists on the North American continent,
where our US and Canadian components are at home.
However, Seafarers ashore in the far corners of the world
have never made any bones about their opposition to the
communists. Their belief, founded in experience, that
the communists are the most dangerous of the enemies
the workingman possessed was too deep for them to keep
quiet, with the commies on the prowl everywhere.
The SIU will continue to fight the communists, and
to fight them wherever they raise their heads on the
world's waterfronts. Seafarers will continue to rally to
the side of anti-communist maritime workers anywhere.
They will not be halted by communist slander or by
communist terrorism. They will fight until the com­
munists are beaten once and for all.

A New District
The news that the Seafarers International Union o
North America has chartered the Marine Allied Workers
comes as welcome tidings to thousands of unorganizec
workers in industries linked closely to maritime on the
Atlantic and Gulf coasts.
The charter was granted in response to urgent pleas
from these workers for union benefits and protection
They are turning to the SIU because we have demon­
strated clearly that we are the most powerful and pro­
gressive Union in the field. If we may say so, we believe
that these unorganized workers have chosen wisely.
The workers who come into the Marine Allied
iWorkers gain not only the protection afforded by the
established strength of the SIU, but they obtain the sup­
port of the powerful AFL Maritime Trades Department.
They will also be part of the 8,000,000-strong AmericanFederation of Labor.
Moreover, this development works both ways. With
workers in allied industries joined to -us in a single inter­
national Union, our own strength as seamen will be far
greater. The result will be greater protection all around.
We salute the Marine Allied Workers of the Atlantic
&amp; Gulf, and we bid them "Fair weather."
Their entrance into the SIU family brightens the
future for all of us.

Hospital Patients
When entering the hospital
notify the delegates hy post­
card, giving your name and
the number of your ward.
Mimeographed
Postcards,
can be obtained free at the
Social - Service desk.

Men Now h The Marine Hespita/s

FORT STANTON
J. LIGHTFOOT
A. McGUIGAN

These are the Union Brolhers currently in the marine hospitals,
as reported by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging
heavily on their hands. Do what you can to cheer them up by
writing them.

J. SUPINSKI
W. H. ROBERTS
J. ASHURST

NEPONSET HOSPITAL
H. A. BLAKE
L. BALLESTERO
J. S. CAMPBELL
V. W. CHESNER
J.T.EDWARDS .
I. H. FRENCH
E. FERRER
V. JIMINEZ
J. T. KEMPT
K. G. LUNDBERG
C. L. MOATS
W. SEARS
H. SELBY J. SILLAK
Q. TULL
...
' :
L. TORREST. WADSWORTH
G. WOODS
F. ZESIGER

t 1. t

^

NAVY HOSPITAL
Long Beach, Calif.
J. ROLING
WM. L. PARKS
M. J. FOLAN
J. MARTINEZ
&amp; » t
BALTIMORE MARINE HOSP.
P. G. DAUGHERTY
P. E. WALSH
W. VAUGHN
H. G. BROWN

J. JOHNS
D. T. YIAKAS
L. McMILLIAN
J. R. TILLEY
G. A. CARROLL
F. KORVATIN
J. SCHALLER

4 t t
NEW ORLEANS" HOSPITAL
E. MASSEY
J. DENNIS
ROTZ
LANDRY
ELLARD
- .

w: MCDONALD
G. W, MEANEY
CHARLES BROWN,
' J. DICKINSON
V. LAWRENCE
A. ARVANTIS
LOUIS WILLIS
N. L. WEST
CLAUDE RAYFUSE
JAMES PATTERSON
B. C. RESKO .
F. L. ROCHON. E. E. GROSS
E. R. MESSINA
W. H. LEWIS
J. BALLMAN
Kt L. GUNDERSON
J. C. GARLAZA
G. H. COLAR

D. MCDONALD

if

%

if

STATEN ISLAND
J. TURNER
T. M. BROWN
M. J. LUCAS
N. NORPMANS
C. W. GOODWIN
J. SMITH
D. GELINAS
V. D'ACO
R. E. QUINN
S. RIVERA
V. GROVER
A. KING
D. HERON
J. J. DEVINE
X X i,
MOBILE HOSPITAL
J. P. BUCKELEW
J. B. BERRIER
J. STEELE
E. JARRETT
if X X
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL
C. BUTLER .
G. LASS
W. STEWART
L. C. COLE
WYCHE
XXX
GALVESTON HOSPITAL
J. D. JACKSON
L. R. WILLIAMSON
J. HAVERTY ^

.1

�May 20; lSf40

THE SEAFARERS LOG

RECHECKING THE REFERENDUM RESULTS

Paga Hiree

Crew Stranded In BA
Gets Back Pay Award
The former crew of the SS
J. M. Davis, stranded high and
dry in Buenos Aires when their
ship was sold from under them
in January, 1948, have been
awarded an average of $2,500
each by an Argentine court, to
cover unpaid wages and extras
due the men.
The money, now in the hands
of the United States consul in
Buenos Aires, was awarded the
men following their suit against
the Pratt Steamship Gompany,
former owners of the ship, who
went into bankruptcy while the
ship was at sea.
NEW PROBLEM

change is 9 to a dollar, the offi­
cial rate is 4.8 to a dollar.
The communication also re­
ported that the seamen, difficult
as their problem is in recover­
ing money due them, are lucky
in that the money realized' from
sale of the ship did not cover
all of the claims against the
company, but that the claims by
seamen for wages had preference
and thus were the first monies
paid out.
DOLLARS RARE
Several claimants, the report
noted, lost out entirely.
Detailing the situation con­
fronting the seamen in claiming
the money, the report stated:
"Application has been made to
remit the J. M. Davis funds to
the States, but when the applica­
tion will be granted is another
question. At least six months
wait can be expected.
"In the meantime one must
consider that the Argentine debt
to the States is around $400 mil­
lion, and exchange is scarce and
is getting scarcer every day.

The former officers and crew,
all of whom faced a host of
difficulties in getting b^ck to
the States without funds, now
face the problems of getting
their money out of Argentina
and converted from pesos to dol­
lars.
A communication received at
- Here is how some of the Mar­ Of six shipments to the Neth­ ships and four in other foreign A&amp;G headquarters, summarizing
shall Plan shipments hgve laeen erlands, one went in an Ameri­ ships.
the case, noted that the men
distributed since Congress, on can ship, three in Dutch ships Two additional bulk cargoes have three choices for gaining
April 3, tightened up the *50 and two in other foreign ships. AVent to Bizonia in American the money awarded them:
percent provision in the legisla­ Of 67 shipments to Italy, 46 ships during April.
1. Gollect the money from the "To wait involves the risk of
tion governing EGA. There's not went in American ships, 18 in
Of the 195 cargoes reported Gonsul in pesos,
much change yet, Washington Italian ships and three in other for April, 118 or about 55 per­ 2. Wait for the funds to go decline in the value of the peso
and thus fewer dollars."
pbservers point out.
foreign ships.
cent went in American ships.
through a government transfer
Under the law as it now
On 18 grain cargoes in April
However, figures made public to the US Treasury, where the The communication, in touch­
stands, a minimum of 50 percent to the United Kingdom, Eire, cover only certain bulk cargoes. money will be paid in dollars, ing on the conversion of peso?
into dollars through the black
of all cargoes moved from United France, Netherlands and Norway, Whether there were other bulk
3. Exchange the pesos fdr dol­
States ports- must be sent in American ships fared-as follows: cargoes, or how dry-cargo and lars in the Argentine black mar­ market, stated: •
American flag ships. In addi­ Of five to the United Kingdom, tanker shipments were distribut­ ket.
"Sources here advise getting
tion, American ships are sup­ two went in American-ships, one ed is not known. Accordingly, the
the
money out as quickly as pos­
posed -^o get an appreciable in a British ship and two in percentages cannot be taken as The communication noted sev­ sible. That means getting dollars
eral hitches to each possibility.
share of EGA goods shipped be­ other foreign ships.
a completely true picture.
on the 'unofficial' market at 9
The first choice means the sea­ to 1, thus losing about 40 per­
tween foreign countries. There
Of five to Eire, four went in
man will have to spend his cent of the money. It is a ques­
- is no" ban. on including Army American ships, one in a for­
money in Argentina.
eign ship.
Ships in the computation.
tion every seaman must deeide
The second choice is a remote for himself."
Of four to France, three went
During the first 10 days of
one, in that the Argentine gov­
May, 23 cargoes of coal were in American ships,&gt;- one in a for­
No SIU Crew- is to pay off
MOVE FAST
eign
ship.
ernment may not approve the
sent from the United States to
any ship until the crew's
transfer
of
pesos
into
dollars
be­
Italy, 19 to France and three to
quarters and equipment are The communication concluded
BULK ONLY
cause of that country's acute dol­ by stating that, unless crewmemthe Netherlands.
as clean as any Seafarer likes
lar shortage, and if it does, the bers wish to wait indefinitely
Of the 23 cargoes going to However, two grain shipments to find a ship when he first
plunging value of the peso will until an exchange in currency
to
-the
Netherlands
and
two
to
goes aboard. Patrolmen have
Italy, 11 went in American ships,
greatly
reduce the amount of is made through the US Treas­
Norway
went
"in
Dutch
and
Norbeen
instructed
that
the
nine in Italian ships, and three
dollars
finally
received.
we^an
ships
respectively.
crew's
quarters
must
be
ab­
in other foreign ships.
ury, they should make arrange­
Other
areas
receiving
grain
solutely
clean
before
a
pay­
ments for disposition of the funds
Of the 19 cargoes going to
BIG LOSS
at once.
France including French' North shipments were: Bizonia, 14 in off will be allowed. Please
The third possibility—the black
Africa," eight went in American American ships; Austria, one in cooperate with your officials
The unlicensed crewmembers
market — means accepting less
ships, five in French ships and an American ship; Greece, three in carrying out this member­
and
the amounts involved are:
in American ships; Italy, four in ship order.
than half the amount in dollars,
six in other foreign ships.
American ships, five in Italian
as the black market rate of ex­
Timothy G. Kelly, Bosun,
GRAIN TOO
$2947.4^; Edward E. Nordlund,
DM, $3089: Gharles J. Garlstead,
SEAFARERS AID ISRAELI LABOR MOVEMENT
All three of the coal cargoes
AB, $2537.96; Robert B. Franks,
going to the Netherlands went
AB,
$2486.18; Johannes B. Jen­
in Dutgh ships.
sen, AB, $2898.86; Harry W.
In the same 10-day period,
Brown, acting AB, $2225.09.
there were seventeen cargoes of
Garl J. Smithy, acting AB,
bulk grain moved to Europe.
$2246.55; Harold H. Moody, AB,
Five went to the United King­
$2463.92; Donald E. Akridge, OS, .
dom, three in British ships, two
$2353.25; Robert R. Lord, OS,
in other foreign ships.
$2231.95.
Six went to Italy, four in Am­
erican ships, one in an Italian
Ramon Sequeria, OS, $2246.25;
ship and one in another foreign
Robert Gist, FWT, $1785; Luis
ship.
E. Torres, Oiler, $2232.76; Her­
American ships did manage to
nandez Diaz, Oiler, $2209.06.
get three grain cargoes to Greece,
Andy
Satkowski,
Oiler,
two to Bizonia (Anglo-American
$2596.20:
Donald
F.
Orlicki,
act­
Germany) and one to Eire.
ing FWT, $2457.03; Terry J. RotSo in 10 days of May, of 63
tanzi, FWT, $1928.66; Martel W.
shiploads of grain and coal 29
Huitt, FWT, $2546.99.
went in American ships. This
Teddy
R. Weber, Wiper;
was 46 percent.
$2581.60; Jack Matchniff, Wiper,
On 144 cargoes of doal sent
$2126.90; John E. Gorrin, Ghief
during 'April, American ships
Steward,
$3480.87; - Fred Good­
fared pretty well, however, al­
man,
Ghief
Gopk, $2919.82.
though it is easy to see that
Stanley Budzinski, Second
some of the maritime nations are
Gook, $2718.25; Man\iel Dorman,
jealously guarding cargoes con­
Third Gook, $2948.98; Harold.J.
signed to their^own ports.
Of 81 coal shipments to Frdnce
Shown above is a group of Seafarers who participated in the annual Tag Day for Histadrut. Gilliam, Utility, $2484.75; Daniel
and French'' North Africa, 38
the Israeli labor federation. Occasion was also the observance of the first anniversary of the P. Van Tiel, Messman, $2655.73;
Gloyd E. Mclntyre, Messman,
Declaration of Independence of the State of Israel on "May 1. This expression of solidarity be­
went in American shiiss, seven
$2519.59;
Francisco W. Grijalva,
in French ships and 36 in other
tween American and Israeli workers is in keeping with the resolution adopted by the SIU at
Messman,
$2751.48.
foreign ships.
its recent national convention in Baltimore.
Rechecking their figures, before announcing the result of the 60-day referendum to deter­
mine the A&amp;G transportation rule, are the members of the Headquarters Tallying Committee.
Left to right: Lars Hillertz, Ferdinand Hart, Edward Mooney, Walter Gardner, W. J. Brady and
Sal Colls.
/

Not Muih Change In CCA Shipping

Notice to Crews

�TEE SEAFARERS LOG

Page Four

Port Tacoma Busy With Payoffs,
Visits To SiU Canadian Ships
By WILLIAM McKAY

Friday. May 20. 1949

LAUDS SIU ROLE 11^ AFL DRIVE
_

V

Port Savannah
Keeps Moving
At A Slow Pace

IKTCRNATIONAt. •KCRCTAIIV.TfllAtUltKfl
TACOMA—The heaviest rush destroyed the electric percolators,
April 8, 1949
By JIMMY DRAWDY
of business around here in a long toasters, and smashed the dishes.
The
Canadian
SIU
crew
that
time came this week, when we
SAVANNAH — Payoffs and
Mr. P»ul H«ll, Secretary
paid off three ships in from fair­ went aboard had its work cut
sign-ons
of the Southport and
Seafarers' International' Union of N. A. .
ly long voyages. We handled out for it, but in short order they
(Atlantic and Gulf Oieiaion)
Southland,
plus four in-transit
51
Beaver
Street
them in short order and sent had patched things up.
Now fork, New York
ships
helped
keep shipping mov­
All the damaged or broken
new crews from the Hall.
Dear Brother Hall:
ing
in
this
port,
though at a not
This sudden rush of business equipment was replaced with
At the present tine, the A. F. L. Food Council
too
ragid
clip.
The Southport
of Greater New Orieane, which, is coaposed of Local Union
shouldn't cause any great trek new stuff and extra gear put
was
handled
in
Charleston
and
1608
of
the
Retail
Clerks
International
Association
%nd
to this country by Seafarers ex­ aboard, so the crew heading but
Local Union AO? of the Aoalgaaated Heat Cutters and
the
Southland
tied
up,
here
in
Butcher
Workmen
of
North
America,
is
conductinga
suc­
pecting to find hot shipping, as found itself with better equip­
cessful and vigorous strike against the Capiaol Food
our
backyard.
Store Chain in this City. Your local organization has
there may not be a week -such ment, and more of it than when
provided immeasurable,assistance to insure the ultimate
The in-transits were the Doro­
success of this strike, for your members are aiding ua
as this for a good while to come. the ship hit port.
in picketing this chain of,stores on a daily basis.
thy,
Robin'Doncaster, Steel Re­
^
Stay where you are. Brothers.
Your local representatives, Brothers Earl Shepherd and
C. J. Stevens, have given us the maximum of cooperation.
corder
and Steel Worker. All
If an act of God comes our way,
We needed their support and have received it without any
reservations.
One
of
your
Local's
assistant
agents.
were
found
to be in good shape,
and we're hard hit for men,
Brother George H. I4cFall, has supervised the picketing
and
s
o
rri
e
replacements were
of
the
Seafarers
and
has
done
a
splendid
and
effective
we'll pass the word along in due
Job for us in.this regard. I wish at this time to exsent
out
to
jobs.
preoe my sincere appreciation to you for the action your
time.
members and local officials have taken in behalf of the
In addition to the regular SIUFood Council and the retail workers of New OrleAna. Such
The picture looks about tJie
unity of purpose, as has been displayed, is destined fo
contracted ships, we've been busy
same' for the next couple of
guarantee to the workers of this oommunity for- the first
time the genuine and tangible benefits of militant trade
visiting the Canadian District
weeks. The Monroe is due inunionism. I am grateful to your organization and to your
local representatives.
ships in this port. Several of
transit and the Southwind will
them hit this port with CSU
With kindest regards, I am
By GAL TANNER
follow her by a few days. The
crews aboard. I went aboard the
Dorothy, we've been told, will
Lakeside and had a heart to MOBILE — Shipping zoomed
start paying off every third trip
heart talk with some of the upward for a week here and
from now on, so that will help
then plunged downward toward
crewmembers.
us a bit.
The crewmembers were okay, the end, with the result that the
With that- skimpy outline of
but kind of confused by all the first period saw us handle four
the
happenings around this part
communist propaganda. Most of payoffs and seven sign-ons and
of
the
country, we'll close until
Secretary-Treasurer
James
Suffridge
of
AFL
Retail
Clerks
the crew were good law-abiding the final week three payoffs and
next
time.
thanks
Seafarers
for
aid
given
by
New
Orleans
Branch.
Canadians, who resented the in­ four sign-ons.
terference by the commies in The ships paid off since the
PIPING IT TO THE PERSIAN GULF
last report were the Morning
their affairs.
Thy were worried how their Light, Wacosta, Antinous, Jean
families would make out: if they La Fitte, Wild Ranger, DeSotb,
lost their jobs. I explained the all Waterman; and the Corsair,
? I
situation to them, and helped Alcoa.
^ clear the air of a lot of confus­ The sign-ons were the Wa­
ion. I think they will make very costa, Morning Light, Choctaw,
Antinous, John W. Cullen, Wild
good SIU Brothers.
Ranger, Claiborne, DeSoto, all
SCORCHED EARTH
On the Federal Voyager 1 Waterman; the Corsair, Puritan
found thie situation somewhat and Pilgrim, Alcoa.
different. There the crew paying During this time we handled
off adopted the scorched earth but one in-transit ship, the Al­
policy. They.cut up the leather coa Ranger,"over from New Or­
settees, mattresses and pillows, leans.
All payoffs and sign-ons were
smooth, with all beefs settled
right on the ship, as per SIU
procedure.
We received a copy of a letter
written to Triton Steamship
Company by its Catania, Sicily,
agent, who heaped great praise
upon the crew and officers of
By FRENCHY MICHELET
the Irenestar. The agent. Cap­
SAN FRANCISCO — Shipping tain S. Lizzio, stated in part:
Zane Grey Seafarers pose for a formal portrait before shoving off for the Persian Gulf with
remains only fair in this once- "As your agent at Catania for
a
load
of oil pipe and supplies. Front row, left to right, the crewmembers are; E. A. Ducousin,
booming port, because of the your vessel, the Irenestar, we
Chief
Cook;
E. Melle, AB; Gus Boni, Wiper; P. J. Scanlon. AB; Barney Speegle, Oiler; Grey,
shift to Wilmington of the Isth­ have been in contact with the
Chief Mate; F. I. Givvon, Bosun; I. Ostrofsky, Messman; unidentified visitor; J. Doletin, Messcrew and officers of the above
mian pipeline ships.
man; lils Beck, Carpenter.
That port's gain is our loss, but vessel, and we wish to present
Standing: Louis Rawippo, Wiper; D. Waters, AB; A. Cairns, Utility; D. Fisher, AB; J. Drisas long as they are ships and to you our congratulations.
kell. Oiler; C. Jones, Messman; Francisco Alcain; E. Brondelsbo, AB; J. Bove, 2nd Cook; F.
BEST YET
.jobs for SIU men we're not
Arona, FWT; Constantina Contrones. Chief Steward; A. Olson. AB; H. BabcockJ 1st Engineer;
crabbing.
"The crew of the Irenestar is
F. Gilbert, 3rd Engineer; R. Burrill, 2nd Engineer; R. Long, OS.
Otherwise, most of our activity the best of the American crews
Photo was contributed by Ship's Photographers of San Pedro.
has been confined to the settle­ with which we have been in
ment of routine beefs on in- contact as agents in this .port.
transit ships and the paying off (The agent had been representa­
of two Waterman ships, both tive for WSA during the war.)"
. squared away and paid off with­ With that kind of praise the
Sign-ons were Cape Mohican, dorsements. There's no sense in
By JOE ALGINA
out incident.
crew of the Irenestar can well
NEW YORK—Shipping here Colabee, Kathryn, Helen, Emilia, this.' The men will not be al­
The only prospects for better stand up and take a bow. We're has been a little better than Suzanne, Inez; the Bloomquist, lowed to sign aboard the ship
shipping on this coast lie in the proud, too, as the men were usual, which means we're ship­ Triton's new ship; Steel king-. and also stand the possibility of
stabilizing of the present mess sent from the Mobile Hall.
ping out some of the men backed Isthmian; Dickinson, Smith &amp; having charges placed against
in China and the other Far East­ Mobile has been selected as up here on the beach, but we're Johnson; Robin Sherwood, Robin,
them.
ern countries.
We've been running into cases
the site of the State Federation ^jiowhere near having to call outIf you don't have the ticket,
If trade could get back on its of Labor convention to be held 'ports for men.
recently of men accepting jobs
feet, we would have a genuine this weekend, and the SIU is' During the period since the for which they do not have en­ don't throw in for the job.
boom for shipping,- however, the going to be well represented. last report, we paid off 16 ships
prospects don't seem too good This is the first time in many .and signed ,on li. All of the
at thfe present.
years that the convention has ships handled were in good shape
Up Tacoma way the Demostar been held in this city.
and were cleared in short order.
and Pontus Ross, which are on Some of the Brothers now on Payoffs were: City of Alma,
The recent change in the LOQ's publication schedule caused
the grain run to the Far East, the beach here include: H.. Bessemer Victory, Raphael Sema couple of minor inconsistencies. One^ of these has proved
have been paying off and crew- Sgdgeway, C. Montgomery, A. mes and Chicasaw, Waterman;
rather embarrassing to Bennie Gonzalez, Patrolman !n the
ing up with regularity, thus giv­ Tremer, N. Breedin, W. Chris-' Marymar, the first Calmar ship
Port of Baltimore, who recently forwarded a report to the
ing a hearty spurt in activity up tian, T. Ballard, J. Smit, C. here in two years; ^Cape MoliiLOG stating that shipping was good there. By the time the
there.
LOG came off the press and was distributed in Baltimore,
Morse, H. Smith, A. Nelson, C. can, Mar-Ancha; Steel Rover
With that as the picture out Rollins and T. Porter.
and Steel Navigator, Isthmian; . shipping had taken a nose dive.
here at the present, it should be To finish-off the report, here's'Sea Trader, Mar-Trade; Colabee,
To- set the record straight and to avoid further embarrass­
evident that permitmen are bet­ the roster of SIU men currently! Illinois-Atlantic, and kathryn,
ment to Brother Gonzalez, whose reports of shipping are
ter off where they" are. Any jobs bedded down in the Mobile Ma- Helen, Emilia, Suzanne^ Inez , and
always accurate, the LOG advises its readers to bear in mind
that may arise will be handled rine Hospital: J. p. Buckelew,' Jedn, BuH. The Jean was a port
thai the time spread between the filing of shipping reports
by the good number of book- J. B. Berrier, J. Steele, E. Jar- payoff prior to her laying up for
and publication date may occasionally result in discrepancies.
members on the beach.
rett.
'awhile.
' •

Mobile Shipping
Completes Cycle:
Ify — Then Down

Isthmian Shift
To Wilmington
Coois Frisco

Shipping In New York Cuts In (h Beach Bockiog

It's Not His Fault

�Trida?, Ma^ 20. 1949

THE SEAPARERS LOG

Page Five

ILG Orgaaizer Murdered
•

I

By Open-Slop ^rngsters
NEW YORK—William Lurye,
40-year-old special organizer for
the AFL International Ladies
Garment Workers Union, was
fatally _stabbed by three un­
identified thugs on Monday, May
10, in a phone booth of a build­
ing in which the union had
called four strikes.
UNION POSTS REWARD
The ILGWU immediately of­
fered a reward of $25,000 for
information leading to the arrest
and conviction of the murderers
who, the union charges, are
"gangsters obviously in the hire
of non-union sweatship em­
ployers."
The building in which Lurye
was attacked—224 West 35th
Street — and several othei-s on
the same street house a number
of dress manufacturers who have

employed gangsters to resist the ices were held. Loudspeakers
brought the services to the vast
ILGWU's organizing drives.
crowds
in the streets.
In a drive last Septemger
against these open shops, the
HAD GUTS
ILGWU enlisted the aid of sev­
Lurye, who quit a well-paying
eral Seafarers, who routed the
hoodlums in several attempts to presser's job to become a spe­
cial organizer, was held in high
smash union picketlines.
esteem by Seafarers who worked
Chai-ies Zimmerman, ILGWU with him during the drive last
vice-president in charge of the fall. Said one; "Lurye was a
special organizing drive, said 100 percent good union man.
that a non-union manufacturer He had plenty of guts. Nobody
had told Lui-ye that he was "out who knew him could say any­
to get him" in retaliation for his thing but good about Willie
effort to organize the company's Lurye."
workers.
Another Seafarer said that
The slain organizer was hon­ Lurye "was a man you could al­
ored in a mass tribute on Wed­ ways approach with a problem
nesday, when 65,000 workers in and get results."
the garment district quit work
Despite the fact that 100 de­
for four hours to join 35,000 tectives have been assigned to
others in the vicinity of Manhat­ the case, the police have not de­
tan Center, where funeral serv­ veloped any leads on the killers.

Top oifficials of the ILGWU flank hearse as it leads funeral procession north on Eighth
Avenue. Several thousand garment workers marched in solemn tribute to the martyred organiser,
whose murder the Union vowed to avenge.
'V.

The late William Lurye

Banked by wreaths, the bier of the slain ILGWU organizer
lies in Manhattan Center, where 4,000 unionists, including
representatives of the SIU, attended funeral services.

�T BE SEAFARERS LOG

Page Six

Friday. May 20. 1949

SaSPS' MINUTES AND NEWS
• i

1'I

Tilghman In Singapore For Repairs steei Agers Get Fair shake

lAfter Collision With British Ship

At Kirby's Manila Bistro

A Manila bar and hotel that "treats seamen right"
The Isthmian Liberty William Tilghman is in Singapore undergoing re­ has received the unanimous praise of the Steel Age qrew,
now enroute to Middle Eastern ports on a four-months
pairs for damages sustained in a collision with the British freighter Rich­ voyage.
mond Hill in the Malacca Straits last month. There were no casualties among The crew of the Isthmian ship go on watch get back to their
paid a visit to Kirby's Bar and ship in time, and those who may
either crew.
Hotel during a stop in the Philip­ have celebrated a bit too much
The ships crashed in pitch
pine port and met the Kirby are either put Op in a room at
darkness at about 4 A.M., April
brothers, two former American the hotel or are accompanied
19, approximately 20 miles from
seamen who went out of their back to the ship. Advice on the
Singapore, as a driving rain
way to give the crewmembers local sights — and prices 4- are
poured down on the heavy seas.
their money's worth and help given to the crews before they
The vessels were locked for
them avoid the pitfalls that often start sight-seeing.
ne'arly two hours until daybreak,
befall seamen in foreign ports.
One of the brothers, W. H.
when the Tilghman pulled her­
The crew reported that the Kirby, in commenting on the
self free.
Kirbys met the boys at the door bar's policy, noted that "being
Both ships made Singapore un­
and checked with the cabbie to formers sailors we know how to
der their own power, the Rich­
see that they were not over­ treat our brother sailors."
mond Hill with a gaping hole
charged. With that hospitable
Located at Buendia Road and
in her port side, and the Tilgh­
reception the boys agreed that Finlandia Street, Makati Rizel,
man with her bow stove in above
they had found the hangout for the Bar and Hotel is now on the
the water line.
them.
mailing list of the LOG—one
The Kirbys, the crew reported, more service oTered Seafarer
READY JUNE 3
also see to it that seamen due to patrons.
According to a statement re­
ceived from the Tilghman's del­
egates, repairs; on the Isthmian
ship should be completed some­
time around June 3, when she
will resume her voyage to the
By SALTY DICK
Persian Gulf. The Tilghman was
enroute from Long Beach with
In 1945 I sailed with an OS of Europe, was badly injured at
a load of pipe, when the crash
named
James Jones, from Wash that time. Now he's a patient
The William Tilghman damaged bow is being repaired in
occurred.
ington,' D. C. The last time
at the Schuylkill Haven Hospital,
a Singapore yard. SlU-manned Isthmian ship and Brilish heard from him he was planning Schuylkill Haven, Pennsylvania.
Signatures on the Tilghman
statement were those of James freighter crashed in Malacca Straits last month. ^
to enter politics
Don't you He wants to hear from his
Brake, Ship's Delegate; Roy Lee,
thank Frisco is the foggiest city friends. His address is Box 29 at
Engine Delegate; Arvel Bear den. really appreciated by all hands." Because a goodly number of in the U.S.?
the hospital.
Deck Delegate, and David Max­ Relations between the foc'sle the crew are newer members of
I know a fellow in New Jimmy Sheehan, Port Agent in
well, Stewards, Delegate.
and topside are exceptionally the Union, quite a few educa­ Orleans who is working* in a
Aside from, the mishap at sea, smooth, the delegates reported. tional and safety meetings are downtown cafeteria 12 hours a Philadelphia, is doing his best to
conditions aboard the Tilghman "The Skipper, Chief Mate and being held during the Tilgh­ day, six days a week for $35. No. make a good hall of what he has
... Sloane House in New York
are good, the delegates said. The Chief Engineer have cooperated man's ourrent voyage.
This place is not unionized
Stewards Department drew spe­ with us in every respect and we "Oh the whole, we delegates Larry Allen is driving a Crescent will give extensions to service
men. But merchant seamen are
cial mention for being "on the feel we are indeed fortunate in feel these men are really conl- •Cab near the Alcoa dock.
allowed
to stay only seven days.
ball with the chow and that is that respect," they added.
ing around," the delegates said.
I met Pat Donahue who says
Who's the seaman who wants
Of their approximately, one- he's going to school to learn
to
ship on the Staten Island
mixing
drinks.
When
I
said
month stay in the Far East port
Ferry? Maybe things are that
for repairs, the Tilghman dele­ he was learning to be a bar­
tough, though. A certain water­
tender he blew his cork. Seems
gates- declared:
Seafarer Jack (Aussie) Shrimpfront
union has more than
that
he's
learning
to
become
a
"As
far
as
Singapore
is
con­
ton, veteran passenger and freight
1,000
men
on the beach and no
cerned, it may not be the best mixogist.... Felix Amoura has
ship steward, has found a better
prospects
for the future... It
port in the world for going switched to the rum and coke
way to beat the horses than
won't
be
long
before you'll be
&gt;
ashore but under the circum­ run.
betting on them — although we
buying
apples
at
the corner.
stances we sure are not com­ Joseph Koslusky, Oiler on the
don't know that he doesn't risk
plaining."
Black Rock during the invasion
an occasional shilling anyway.
"Kingpost" Krieg is on an Al­
Jack joined the staff of The
coa scow and recruiting ball
Thoroughbred Record, a 74-year
players for the "Seafarers" softDROP THAT HOOK!
old weekly magazine devoted to
ball team. He has a post for you
horse racing and breeding.
—if you're good ... Frank Vivero
is stopping in New, York for a
The Record, which is published
short
visit after which he plans
in Lexington, Kentucky, sent
to
choo-choo
back to his home­
Jack to England this spring to do
town,
New
Orleans
... We read
a series of' articles on blood
that
most
of
,the
seamen
going to
lilies.
hospitals
are
suffering
frorn
heart
Jack's researches led him to
trouble.
And
we
thought;
the
Liverpool on March 29 where he
sea
was
an
easy
life!
took in the running at Aintree
JACK SHRIMPTON
of the Grand "National, one of
England's great traditional races.
^lis first dispatch published on ing periodicals ... Editorial, ma­
April 2, was an account of the terial by Mr. Shrimpton on Eng
Grand National and its history. lish topics that might be of in­
Members who forward
"Whether he had a couple of quid terest to American horsemen wil
their membership books to
down on Russian Hero, the 66-to- begin appearing shortly in this
the New York Hall for retire­
1 winner of the rugged steeple- magazine. He also will report
ment are ugred to mark the
the 1949 Grand National, Epsom
jchase. Jack failed to mention.
envelope with the notation
Derby and other notable events
•""Aitentions: 6.*h floor," in or­
Announcing his appointment
of
the
racing
year."
der to insure quicker bandtwo weeks earlier, the Record's
ling
of the matter.
editor identified Jack as a "Com­
Jack, a frequent contributor to
mentator, Consultant," and said: the LOG, never touted his knowl­
Marking of the envelope in
"Mr. Shrimpton, although edu­ edge of horseflesh to the readers,
the
manner advised above
Steel Chemist cre,wmember Leon LaBitt scored a bullseye
will save time and will result
cated in England, has spent a
when he dropped the anchor in Batavia. Java« ^he Chemist
in prompt return pf the book
large part of his life in Australia but confined himself to union
topics,
with
an
occasional
fling
a
hit real trouble later when she went on. the rocks off the.
to the sender.
where he is recognized as a
leading writer for various rac- salty humor.
California Coast.

'The Voice Of The Sea'

Writes For Racing Monthly

RETIRING BOOKS

�Friday, May 20. 1949

THE SEAFARERS LOG

Page Seven

Digested Minutes Of SiU Shipi Meetings
STEEL DESIGNER. Jan. 9 —
decided to re-arrange Stewards
V. Szymanski, Chairmen; V. SuDepartment for smoother servic^.
benick. Secretary. Reports of
Slopchest beef tabled. Minute of
delegates read and accepted. New
silence for Brothers lost at sea.
Business; Motion carried that
4- 4 4'
crew not sign on until all repair
SEATRAIN
HAVANA. Mar. 17
work had been completed. Dis­
—T.
Bolton,
Chairman;
L. Phil­
cussion on ship's washing Ma­
lips,
Secretary.
C.
Shvant
re­
chine. Motion carried to follow
signed
as
ship's
delegate,
James
posted instructions concerning
Oliver elected.
R. Fithen re­
washing machine and care of
signed as engine delegate, O. C.
facilities. One minute of silence
Benningiield elected. No beefs
for departed Brothers.
reported
by any department.
t' J. J.
ST. AUGUSTINE VICTORY.
4 4 4
Mar. 5 — I. B. Middlebrooks,
Chairman; M. Cross, Secretary. noted that fans had been placed, CAPE MOHICAN. Mar. 20—
in the pantry, recreation room John Tuezkowski, Chairman; ArShip's delegate reported that all
and hospitdl. Delegates reported. mand Stepanian. Secretary. Pre­
beefs had been straightened out
Motion carried that periods be vious minutes read and accepted.
in New York. There was no dis­
set aside for education meetings, All departments reported in good
puted overtime in any of the de­
but that educational talk are not order. Voted that ship's dele­
partments. Motion carried to in­
to be discontinued at regular gate should tell Captain crew ex­
vestigate various shoreside laun­
sessions. Union problems and pected to be paid for launch in
dries and 'to give letters of rec­
objectives were discussed during Hamburg.
Patrolman to be
ommendation to these mei'iting
a question and answer period asked to act on overtime carried
it, and the LOG is to be so in­
devoted to Union education, with over from last trip. Minute of
formed. All delegates are to
many members participating. silence for lost Brothers.
serve as members of the investi­
Suggested that new literature on
gating committee for this pur­
4 4 4
Union educational subjects be ob­
pose when the vessel reaches the
STEEL
SEAFARER.
Mar. 27—
tained from the Hall. A list of
West Coast. Also carried were
John
Shaffer.
Chairman;
Pet§
permit men eligible for books
motions to, lock the library while
Bluhm.
Secretary.
Moved,
sec­
was drawn up. Suggested that
in port, and to lock the pantry
onded
and
carried
that
all
books belonging to library be
dnd give keys to the watchman
foc'sles
be
cleaned
and
left
clean
collected and exchanged this trip.
on duty. Discussion pro and con
Crew messman was compli­ for the payoff. Voted that depart­
on the use of the new toaster
mented for his improved han­ ment delegates make up repair
while in port. Cross i-eminded
lists and hand them to ship's
By HANK
dling of his job.
the book men*" to vote on the
delegate as soon as possible. Un­
4. 4. 4.
transportation referendum. One
HASTINGS. Mar. 6—W. Hamil­ der Good and Welfare, ship's
Keep writing those letters, Brothers. Those Congressmen and
minute of silence for Brothers
ton. Chairman; C. J. Oliver. delegate agreed to see Captain Senators must know that the Taft-Hartley Act should be repealed.
lost at sea.
Secretary. Ship's delegate dis­ for vouchers before payoff so Your letters, and the letters your families back home write, mean
cussed death of the Bosun. De­ that men could clieck deduc­ a lot—to you and your Union ... For some time we have wanted
partment delegates reported that tions. Voted to split remainder to mention for .the good and welfare of the membership that im­
evei-ything was in order, except of washing machine bill among mediately on receiving discharges members should write the name
for few hours disputed overtime all hands. Decided to ask Gal­ of the steamship company on the back. Later on this information
in Black Gang. Motion carried veston Patrolman to straighten is always impor-tant and saves you time and effort... It shouldn't
asking that longer and better out confused situation in galley. have happened to a sea dog. Seafarers all over the world, "are
mattresses and sheets be brought Minute of silence for departed hearing about the dog waiting on the Linden waterfront in New
aboard before signing the articles Brothers.
4- 4"
Jersey for his ship-home to come back. The dog missed the ship,
W. E. DOWNING. Mar. 5— for the next voyage. Discussion
Norw^egian tanker, the SS Thorunn and has been beachcombing
John P. Synotl, Chairman; Ed­ on ship's welfare. One minute
for several months now waiting for her to come,in again.^
ward Mandaras. Secretary. De­ of silence for Brothers lost at
partment delegates reported that sea.
4
4
4
4- 4. 4.
there were no beefs except dis­
Steward "Ziggy" Zygarowski sailed in after a voyage on
MALDEN VICTORY. Mar. 27—
puted overtime. Discussion on
the SS Gadsden... "Blackie" Nolan Flowers sailed in from his
transportation clause in agree­ Howard Hutcherson. Chairman;
F.
M.^
Collins,
Secretary.
Engine
trip and has a story of the voyage. Write it up for the LOG.
ment. Letter to be ,drawn up
4 4 4
and sent to Union Hall and copy delegate reported Chief was dor
Blackie... We're wondering if Brother Vick D'India is still
ANDREW JACKSON. Mar. 13
posted on bulletin board. Sug­ ing work of unlicensed men.
aboard the SS Bret Harte. Furthermore, we'd like to know if
—John
Ward, Chairman; Walter
gested that Steward take on Deck delegate reported some dis­
Newberg,
Secretary.
Delegates
the crew has been receiving those bundles of LOGs they re­
three months' stores 'since trip is puted hours on painting. Ste­
reported
that
all
was
in
order,
quested while they keep transiting the Panama Canal? Let's
expected to last that much ward department okay. Voted to
longer; stores are to be taken have Patrolman settle beef on with exception of few hours dis­
hear from you. Brothers,.. Two Seafarers. Brothers Luther
on in Montevideo. All hands are topside doing work.. Voted that puted overtime in Deck and En­
Hammond and J. A. Hammond, are out there in California re­
to keep heads clean. Vote of galley and other spots needed gine departments. Chairman dis­
questing
the LOG to be sent to them so they can keep up with
Also cussed reasons why it is neces­
thanks given to Brother Scara- chipping and painting.
the Union's affairs. Okay, fellas, you are logged for the LOG.
mulz for his excellent job as voted to get slopchest opened sary for ship to have a ship's
delegate
and
the
duties
of
the
more
often.
Minute
of
silence
ship's delegate.
job. Chief Cook yas elected
for departed Brothers.
t 4. 4.
ship's delegate by acclamation.
Here are some of the Brothers who are in town — Charles
. WILLIAM TILGHMAN. Mar.
Repairs needed in various de­ Dasha, Joe Walsh, Franklyn Webb, Allan Emery, Riley Carey,
5 — L. Trent. Chairman; Tiny
partments discussed and Brother Adam Hauke, Fred Paul, Frank Throp ... The SEAFARERS LOG
Simpkins. Secretary. Ship's dele­
Ward
offered motion calling up­ will be sailing free of cost to the homes of the following Brothers;
gate J. W. Brake reported all is
on
delegates
to see department Walter Smith of Louisiana, Carroll Brown of Massachusetts, Lee
okay, as did department dele­
heads
about
these
repairs and re­ Eckhoff of Alabama, Patrick Lundrigan, William Rogers .of Con­
gates. Suggestion to find
out
port
on
progress
to next meet­ necticut, Arthur Mclntire of California, John Opalenik of New
what transportation is to Mobile.
ing.
Motion
carried.
One minute Jersey, F. Clawson of Maryland, Augustin Tapp of New York,
Repair list to be posted for on­
of
silence
in
memory
of Brothers Carl Ainsworth of Washington.
coming crew. Vote of thanks
lost
at
sea.
given to galley force for fine job.
4. 4, 4.
4 4 4
BULL RUN, Mar. 22 — John
4 4 4
If you Brothers wish to read about news and views of
W. E. DOWNING (No date
SUZANNE. Mar. 27—Rich- given)—E. Mandras, , Chairman;
Byrd. Chairman; J. P. Forget.
the labor movement in our nation then grab yourselves the
Secretary. Ship's delegate Ed­ ard Diaz, Chairman; Peter Ser- John P. Synnolt, Secretary. No
only magazine of its kind. It's called "Labor and Nation" pub­
ward Kitts reported that every­ ano. Secretary. Under education, departmental beefs. -Discussion
lished bi-monthly here in New York and a few newsstands
thing was running smoothly. His chair led discussion of additions Of feeding beef. Vote of thanks
sell it... If we remember correctly. Brother Pete "Sunnyside"
Com­ to delegates.
report and those of department t6 the Bull Line's fleet.
See Patrolman
Latorre is° still aboard the Azalea City... Steward Thomas
delegates approved. Under Edu­ plaint about Patrolman to be about Chief Mate's refusing med­
"Pop" Foster has been up there on the Lakes for some time
cation ship's delegate putlined referred to Headquartei's. Vote ical aid to men. Minute of si­
now... We're informed that Brother Pete King, the Steward,
the structure of the Union and of thanks for good meals being lence for departed Brothers.
is due in town soon from a trip..; That oldtimer of a Bosun,
its functions for the benefit of served, especially the cold sup­
Brother Roderick Smith, has been out for a long voyage. He's
4 4 4
the newer members. Resolution pers in the hot weather. Minute
tankering on the SS Michael.
CAPE MOHICAN. Mar. 2B—
adopted calling on all hands to of silence for Brothers lost at sea.
James
Dawson. Chairman; John
go to recreation hall after meals
4 4 4
Department
GOLDEN CITY. Mar. II— Halpin. Secretary.
to allow messmen to get things
Brothers, keep those ships clean and happy. Hold those meet­
cleaned up. Discussion on high Joseph James, Chairman; J. H. delegates reported no overtime
ings
regularly. Keeping those jobs running in SIU style—which
cost of certain items in slopchest. Darce, Seoaetary. Elected T. A. beefs. Moved- seconded and car­
means
according to the agreement—makes for a good trip...
One minute of silence in memory Scanlon to ship's delegate; F. B. ried not sail ship unless she was
Brother
James Crowley sailed into town recently from a voyage.
Williams to be engine delegate; fully stored for a thi-ee-month
of Brothers lost-at sea.
^
A
rathbr
short one, at that, if we're correct about it... Brothers,
voyage.
Moved
and
carried
to
Morris Berlowitz to be stewards
as
soon
as
you get drydocked in a hospital, here in the States, ar
turn
in
detailed
report
to
Patrol­
WILLIAM H. CARRUTH. Mar. delegate; E. B. Sanders to be
in
foreign
ports—and you know you'll be there for some time,
man
on
feeding.
Minute
of
si­
deck
delegate.
Under
Good
and
27—Gill HoIIoway, Chairman; AI
write
a
letter
to Headquarters. Protect yourself at all times.
lence
for
Brothers
lost
at
sea.
Welfare
after
discussion
it
was
DaForest, Secretary.
It was

A neuj rale ori imnsporhdionh^S

gou. It is aJso apood ideato re­
read the shippi&amp; rales,
lion rules, and tSe As^G Constitu­
tion, so that ^ocLzvili knouj whir
the linion^s rtdes and
-prvcedarcs arfc-T&amp;u
I) ii\
goar6cl&amp;'
a misujider^iandi ^

CUT and RUN

|i

•I
I

�Page Eight

THE SEAFAHERS LOG

THE

SPEJIKS r-

Venezuelan Customs Of Courtship
Bewilder Seafarer WorMng Ashore
To the Editor:
. Here is a line to let everybody
know that I am still living down
here in the boiling tropics, in
Venezuela to be exact.
, At present, the weather is nice
and cool—if you consider 95 to
be cool, for it does warm up a
bit in the middle of the day.
I must forewai-n you: I just
completed two months studying
Espanol very successfully and
now find it difficult to think
straight in English.
• I had to bear down while at­
tending school in Caracas, but
It's paying off. I can read Hem­
ingway and savvy the Spanish
phrases he uses as punch lines.
, Within three more months I
will have my year in and be en­
titled to three weeks off. I may
return to the U. S. and ship out
again.
Thought the Brothers might
be interested in the customs of
this country concerning court­
ship.
On Saturday and Sunday even­
ings, and on the hundred and
one holidays, the girls go to the
local park and walk in a circle,
the guys form a larger circle
around the girls and walk in the
opposite direction. When one of
the girls puts the whammy on
you, it's up to you to nod your
head and make another trip
around.
AROUND AGAIN
While • making another trip
around you decide whether or
not you like her, and, if so, when
you pas^ again you shout,
"Adios." You take another walk,
as the custom goSs, to see if any
more girls give you the whammy.
If none of the other girls are
satisfactory or give no encourage­
ment, you wait until the girl ap­
proaches again and say for the
final time, "Adios." Then, if you
can still bear it, you make an­
other trip around. The girl then
must speak. If she wants to go
with you she will say, "Adios,

By The Numbers
A number of readers, un. dersianctebly confused by the
LOG'S shift from weekly to
10-day publication intervals,
have written the Editor that
'. they are certain that one or
two issues have failed to
' arrive in their maiL '
v While, occasionally there
are mishaps in the post of­
fice, it is suggested that before you write in it might
pay to check the numbers
of the issues you have re­
ceived. Chances are that you
have not been overlooked.
For instance, the present
LOG is Vol. XI. No. 18. The
LOG of May 10 was No. 17;
that of May 2 was No. 16.
Just look for the number at
the top of page one.
Also, readers' wishing to
change their subscription, ad­
dress are requested to en­
close the old address as well
• as the ndw,
*,; •

I

Friday. May 20. 1949

Senor. Esta bora nosotros vamos."
(Goodbye, Mister. This hour we
go.)
Aha! Now you think you have
her. That's just the beginning of
trouble. Brother. She leads you
away from the crowd, but not to
a quiet and secluded bench. In­
stead you are taken to a large
group of characters sitting under
the trees. You wonder who these
idiots are. Well, Rose starts by
introducing you to papa, mama,
brother, sister, uncle, aunt, etc.
It looks like old home week.
Little Rose sits down between
mama and papa and the male
relatives put you through a third
degree that would make the New
York cops look like pikers.
CONVOY CONTROL
If the report is favorable, you
are then allowed to take her out.
Oh joy — victory. But wait—
who's that following you as you
promenade down the street: no
one less that the whole family.
You go to a movie and all the
relatives sit between you and
around you. They love to stay
for two or three showings if the
feature is a western.

After the show you all return
to the living room of Rose's par­
ents, where all the relatives
hover nearby like vultures. It's
hopeless, so you say goodnight
and head home.
Hope springs eternal, how­
ever, so back you go the next
night. You knock at the door
and it's opened a crack. A voice
tells you to go around to the
window, a window with bars,
where Rose is sitting. You shoot
the breeze and asks if she can
come out. She says this is the
date and you are courting her.
Why didn't you bring a musical
instrument and some fiowers, she
says.
You tell her Americans do not
court in that fashion, but if she
could take a walk you might
round up some commercial musi­
cians. To this proposal you hear
a voice from the other room
boom out, ""No." Mama has
spoken.
Well, Brothers that's life down
here. I'll take a shot of native
rum and- sleep off the nightmare.
Ed Larkin

SIPPING SUDS IN SCHUBERrS

Schubert's Bar, a favorite rendezvous for the crewmembers
of the Nathaniel Currier in Bremen, gets the patronage of
crewmembers Red, Hipp and Dick Roberts, during a recent
stop by the Waterman ship. Shot by Shelly White.

CTMA Cartoon Figure Draws Query
To the Editor:

I wish to protest against the
type of cartoon in which trol­
lops are pictured in the LOG.
Undoubtedly the LOG comes in­
to the homes of some' of our
Brothers and such cartoons in
the LOG are offensive to the
women folks.
There are unlimited types of
cartoons the LOG could use to
get its ideas across without using
-the offensive type mentioned
above.
I sincerely hope you will act
upon this.
Edwin C. Roop
(Ed. Note: Brother Eoop ap­
parently is referring to the
character used to portray the
Cities Service Men's Tanker
Association (CTMA). The CT­
MA character is illustrative of
... •-&gt;' the things Cities Service sea­

men found offensive in that or­
ganization. Unfortunately, there
are organizationSr like CTMA,.
which are constantly attempt­
ing to underlie the security
of American seamen and their
families. Naturally, a true pic­
ture of these organizations
could not be conveyed as any­
thing but unsavory, and the
LOG feels that the families
of the Union members will un­
derstand. Although Brother
Roop's is the only objecticm
received by the LOG - in re­
gard to the CTMA cartoon,
it does appreciate hiu com­
ment. The LOG is conscious
of the fact that the Union
newspaper is widely read by
Seafarers' families and it
strives' to conform to all the
standards of good taste in the
presentation of items affecting
the welfare of its readers.)

EMILIA REPAIR CREW

The engine gang of the sugar-toting Bull Line ship, take
a crack at repairing the winch before heading south for more
cargo. Left to right, Louis Avilea, Oiler; William Vaughan,
Wiper; Bob Meeks, Wiper; Frank Canas, 3rd Assistant. Shot
was by Charles Horvath, Fireman.

Baltimore Paper Backed SIU
Position On 50-50 EGA Bill
To the Editor:

Foreign sailors, therefore, go
in and out while Americans stay
here, sleeping in cheap hotels,,
wandering between barrooms,
idling time away. Many have
used most, if not all, of the
money earned on their last trip.
Every now and then men come
in from a trip and the piece-off
system operates. The newcomers,
hand out their money to their
friends who are on the beach
here. Fortunately ^ for the men,
saloonkeepers and storekeepers
whom they have Ipng patronized
know that when a sailor gets
money he will pay his bills. JSo
most of them buy on tick. But
it's not like having cash in your
pocket.
There's much less action, color,,
and gusto on the Baltimore beach
than usual, and the,only thing,
that can change it, sailors say,
is Congressional action to force '
the use of American ships on
owners who can use foreign
ships more cheaply.

Attached is a copy of the edi­
torial page clipped from a recent
issue of the Baltimore Sun, ex­
plaining the hardships forced up­
on American seamen as a result
of loose administration of the
EGA shipping regulations.
I thought Seafarers might find
it interesting and hope, there­
fore, that you will'find it pos­
sible to reprint it.
- Joe Grimes
(Ed. Note: The editorial re­
ferred to was published before
Consrress passed the ECA bill
which requires that 50 percent
of government-financed cargoes
moving to and from US ports
be shipped in American vessels
at domestic rates. The Balti­
more Sun's viewpoint is re­
printed here because it sub­
stantiates one of the argu­
ments advanced by the SIU
in its fight to keep American
seamen from being made vic­
tims of foreign flag low stand­
ard operators.)
Around south Broadway,
Thames Street, east Baltimore
Street and other streets where
merchant sailors roam in Balti­
more, things are dull.
Men from many lands are
there between sailings: Norse­
men, Greeks, Lascars, Italians, To the Editor:
etc., and .many Americans, of
May I express my apprecia-"
course—but, nobody spends much tion for your - great courtesy in
money. ^
printing a notice in the LOG.
The fbm^ers have little to "personals" column requesting"
spend h|cause their wages are my son' Cyril J. Magnan to com- ;
low an(^ the-exchange is against municate with us?
them. T^e
have little You have rendered a great
to spend J^cause they aren't service to my wife and me., We
workin^^/v^
^
heard from him yesterday
Over
Amefican merchant through a letter written from
seamen
the beach in Bal­ Halifax, Nova Scotia. He is
timore, u^a^le to get jobs. Large­ aboard the Alcoa Pioneer.
ly, that'i|i|)ecause of a phony
in the ad^!|^istration of the Mar­ I do not know how the SIU
could function without the SEA­
shall Pla^»
At first^ the rule was at least FARERS LOG. It keeps one in
half the Ships carrying Marshall touch with the entire member­
Plan aid' to Europe 'Should be ship. The information given keeps
under the American flag. That the boys alert and ready to cope
rule is now abolished, and ship with any situation.
operators find it cheaper to use I wish you continued success
ships that fly foreign flags be­ in what you are doing and will
cause on these it isn't necessary continue to perform for the SIU.
to pay the wage scale set by
Joseph R. Magnan
American unions.
Grand Rapids, Mich.

Contacted Son
Through Log
Personal Note

�Friday. May 20, 1949

THE SEAFARERS

DECKED OUT AND WAITING

LOG

Page Nine

Colabee's Run Through F^g Banks
Calls Up Perils Facing Seafarers
To the Editor:

fog all year round, due to the might not seem so much, but our
Gulf Stream meeting the colder
One of the foggiest runs on the air over shallow water in the radar was out of order.
North Atlantic made by the Hog North; also the southerly winds The memory of the collision
Islander Colabee„ ended when hitting the cold' water of the between the Coast Guard ice­
breaker Eastwind and a tanker
she docked yesterday at a Brook­
Labrador Current. Then there last January is still strong in
lyn pier. The second trip of the are the shipping routes from
my mind. It's all in the record
new season to the port of Baie
Boston, Halifax, Montreal, etc., now and the blame affixed, but
Corpeau, on the shore of northern coupled with numerous fishing
the lesson I drew from that in­
Quebec, presented an interesting
boats, which present the mates cident was that in a moment
assortment of weather conditions, with vexing navigational prob­
ranging from mild and sunny lems. It is because of their fraught with danger somebody
skies to snow, hall and fog. We skill and the luck of a thirty didn't think and, as a result,
about a dozen lives were lost.
first sighted a field of ice two
year old ship that survived a
Thirty-eight years ago, the
days from Baie Comeau—fog was torpedoing in the late war, that
greatest
liner ever built, the
quite dense, and would lift and we came through without nrfsTitanic,
sailed
from Southamp­
descend willy-nilly.
hap.
ton on her maiden voyage.
The route we travel runs The ship gets its position from Staffed with the cream of the
through the Georges, Brown's shore radio station. In foggy British Merchant Marine, in­
and Roseway Banks, areas of weather, bearing can be made stilled with the belief that the
prevailing fog and hazards like anytime, but usually in clear Titanic was unsinkable, her of­
Waiting to greet the passengers as they enter the Robin White Ledge, off the Nova Scotia weather compass adjustments, if ficers relaxed their customary
Tuxford lounge are Seafarers Jo^ Zuba, Messman. left, and coast where the ship struck a any, are made at two ten-minute caution. The lifeboats were se­
, Rudolph (Gabby) Gross, Passenger Waiter, right. Purser is in submerged object in 1946, but periods each hour.
cured and covered in such a way
the center. Gross submitted the picture to the LOG.
was able to proceed on her way
After picking up our cargo of that gave no thought that they
with.little delay and minor dam­ paper roll from Baie Comeau, would ever be used.
age to her keel.
Sparks received a number of
and heading home, we were only
messages
from other ships that
Another dread to mariners is twelve hours out when we ran
To the Editor:
ship was the Russell Alger.
there
were
icebergs in the
into
a
snowfall.
The
day
was
Dead Man's island, a towering
I have been here at Fort
I left the Alger in March rock, 160 feet high, enshrouded Sunday and bitter cold. I shiv­ vicinity of the Titanic's course.
Bragg for the past eight months 1948, and would like to hear in mist, with only a 100-watt ered in my parka as the snow The message was given to the
and in that space of time I have from some of my old ship mates. lamp on its summit to warn and fog blanked out the sea and captain. It was ignored. Captain
met about 25 former seamen, all Here in the Army, as you may ships of its danger. Also, to be­ sky.
E. J. Smith wanted to distin­
of whom sailed during the war, have guessed, I am cooking. devil the mariner are the alter­
Suddenly, gliding qut of the guish the ship's first crossing. It
only to be drafted into the What a difference in cooking ations in the compass bearing fog appeared a tanker, she was was full speed ahead. The ship
peacetime Army.
here and on a ship. At least on caused by mineral deposits from 200 yards off our port bow with collided with an iceberg and sank
I wonder what the country a ship the Union made sure the Quebec mainland and the full way on her. Since we were with the loss of over 1,500 hun­
would have done- without us. I the crew had the necessary Gaspe Peninsula.
blowing our whistle at minute dred lives.
sailed from 1942 to 1948, out of things to work with. Here we
intervals I wondered why the
UNAWARE
FOG AREA
Boston, New Orleans and so on. get by with what we can get by
tanker wasn't blowing too. Not
Reading an account of that
I sailed in all positions in the hook or crook.
The area from Cape Cod to till she came abeam of us did tragedy, one can picture the
Steward Department and my last
Cpl. George Stanton our port of call has a prevalent her whistle sound. Now this warm comfortable interior of the
ship, the rich and famous re­
laxed, dining and chatting, while
outside their illusory world the
ominous iceberg passes their
portholes. Some see it and won­
der, but they are not frightened.
A seamen can appreciate the
irony of this, as he drinks his
coffee, in the messroom then
dons his heavy clothes or oil­
skins and stands lookout, the sea
raging and the salt spray stinging
his face. He knows how real the
sea is, but he is confident — he
knows his ship too: he has com­
By JOSEPH E. SHANER
plete trust in the man on the
bridge, and when he turns in,
(Reprinted by permission of Esquire magazine)
it would take a hurricane to
I. Seafarer's Choice
III. The Tides
make him lose his sleep.
LIVES AT STAKE
Farewell, dear lass, weep not that I (depart.
Miss you, yes, as moon would miss the sun.
I
don't
doubt that many sea­
The boatswain's call in fretful haste commands
The old man his sextant, the ship her chart;
men remember experiences in
The sailo£ to his far-flung seas. Oh, heart,,
v
As roses,, their beauty and scent undone,
which boners have proved costly
How can I tell you that exotic lands
"^Would miss their sister rain, I miss you. Heart!
to ship and men. Sometime,
Stir the young blood in me, while in your eyes,
The tides within me must forever run
somewhere, somehow, errors are
made. The best of men make
I see you bravely damming back a tear?
Far from the beaches to the fairway's blue.
mistakes and worse, blunders.
What words would ease your aching night, when cries
And still I'm pinioned, though the landfall's won.
But a ship is the last place to
Escape the throat and fall where none may hear?
For the selfsame tides call me back to you.
make the wron^ decision when
two-score
or more lives depend
This is my choice. My wanderer's soul longs
-Ah, lass, how I miss you, your gentle way.
on the man who makes them.
For spun jade seas and cobalt, foaming wet;
Touch of your hand, caressing eyes, your face;
In conclusion I want to say
For the prop's sibilant tune, for wind songs.
Lips that curve to smile, the sweet disarray
that this is a happy ship with,
For gulls calling in distant ports, and yet...
Of one bright "lock that only adds to grace.
harmony in all departments. The
Steward, B. Bailey, gives us vei-y
Heartbreaking kiss! I turn to go, my cheek
Miss you, yes, as stars would miss the night.
appetizing menus; H. Jaynes has
Burns wet, and throat throbs so, I cannot speak!
As the seamew his cry, my eyes their sight!
the right psychology of what a
Bosun should do. Other old-timers
II. I Speak On The Wind
IV. The Cost
who are probably fami^ar to
many are: E. Benson, Fireman: J.
I must come home again. Haunting sweet smells
At sundown from the flying bridge I see
j
Gorman, AB; J. Dugina, AB; A
Rise in the coral strand, sweep the lagoon
Your lithe form dance among the cherry clouds
Diamond, Oiler; J. Drummond,
And slash my heart for want of you. Up swells
Night cook and baker; Tex Suit,
And in grey jungle mist; or it may be
AB,
and J. Reilly, Deck Engi­
The
pearled
green
spume
singing
flies
and
its
tune
I see your lovely face among dawn crowds
neer.
Echoes your low-voiced laughter. Ah, the cost
Of parakeets and pigeons, cockatoos.
John J. Flynn

Seafarer Joins Army Galley Force

A Sea Sonnet Sequence

And birds of paradise, their wings a'flame.
I find your radiance among rich hues '
Of rainbows arching green lagoons. Your name
I speak on the wind, and whispering sej(s
Float it to the landward from where the birds
Sing it to flowers and gossiping trees
Epehanted on the beach. Dearest of words!'

It's ever with me, to what seas I go, ,
Wherever the stars shine, or winds do blow!

Of wandering is much too dear afar.
With the miles between and fleet years lost.
And youth and beauty being what they are.
Ah, lips and eyes and ears shall have surcease.
Lonely breasts, empty arms, shall ache no more!
Oh, joy, to have my heart and blood increase
Their pounding when I see you at the door.
And still, ah, lass, I could not long remain!
.The sea will call, and I'll needs go again!

ATTENTION!
The slop chesl is your cornei store while you are at
sea. You can't take your
trade someplace else if the
slop chest doesn't have what
you need.

�Pago Tea

TAMPA — Chairman, Hay
White, 57; Recording Secretary,
J. T. Kern, 50323; Reading Clerk,
R. C. Keller,' 50323.
Motion carried to excuse mem­
bers presenting valid reasons for
not attending meeting.
New
business of previous Branch
meetings read and accepted. Sec­
retary-Treasurer's financial
re­
port accepted as read. Agent
gave report. Patrolman and Dis­
patcher were in Miami paying
off the Florida. Under Good and
Welfare, Agent spoke on the co­
operation the SIU is giving vari­
ous unions in their local organiz­
ing drives, and of the active part
we are taking in the labor move­
ment as a whole. Several mem­
bers took the deck and discussed
shipping generally.
4*
4"
MOBILE—Chairman, C. Kim­
ball, 52; Recording Secretary, M.­
Reading Clerk, Harold J. Fischer,
59.
New business in minutes of
previous meetings' in other
Branches read and accepted.
Port Agent discussed at length
the stand taken by the SIU and
the rest of the labor movement
in regard to the present national
labor law. He pointed out that

members in Mobile had written
to their Congressmen urging
them to vote for the ThomasLesinski bill to replace the TaftHartley law. He urged all mem­
bers to encourage their families
and friends to help in this matter.
He also gave the final results of
the voting in the Cities Service
tanker election. The Agent con­
cluded with a picture of the cur­
rent shipping situation in Mobile
and the possibilities for the next
couple of weeks. Motion carried
to accept communication from
the Alabama State Federation of
Labor. A Tally Committee was
elected to count ballots cast in
this port in recent transportation
rule referendum. Motion carried
to accept Secretary-Treasurer!s
financial
report as read. Dis­
patcher and Patrolmen discussed
activity in their • departments.
250 members present when meet-t
ing adjourned at 7:45 PM.
i 4. 4.
NEW ORLEANS — Chairman,
Herb Knowles, 3725; Recording
Secretary, Johnny Johnston, 53;
Reading Clerk, Buck Stephens,
&lt;376.

T3B SSAPj^RSttS LOG

Friday, May 20. 194i9

ian, W. Fraser and D. Hodge.
One minute of silence, in memory
of deceased members. Meeting
adjourned. pt 7:30 PM, with 90
SHIPPED SHIPPED TOTAL members in attendance.
ENG^
- 4 4 4
STWDS. SHIPPED
NEW YORK — Chairman, L.
15
30 Williamsj 21550; Recording Sec­
259 retary, L. Goffin, 4526; Reading
81"
70
20
71 Clerk, R. Matthews, 154.

A&amp;G Shipping From April 21 To May 4
PORT

REG.
DECK

Boston
New York
Philadelphia...
Baltimore
Norfolk
Savannah
Tampa
Mobile....^
New Orleans.,
Galveston.
West Coast
San Juan

17
144
32

GRAND TOTAL..

492

37
14
14
51
69
55
45
14

the port, the Agent said, all hav­
ing been settled at the payoffs and
sign-ons.
Balloting Committee
reported on number of ballots
cast in transportation rule refer­
endum. Oath of Obligation ad­
ministered to four men. One
minute of silence in memory' of
departed Brothers. Excuses for
absence from meeting referred to
the Dispatcher. Motion carried
recommending that Agent con­
tact Headquarters and attempt to
have UFR^ strike film, and other
educational films
obtainable,
placed aboard those ships having
movie projectors. Motion
amended to read that cost of
films to be paid for out of ships'
funds.
Meeting adjourned at
8:10 PM, with 326 bookmembers
present.
4 4. 4.
NORFOLK — Chairman, J. S.
While, 57; Recording Secretary,
Ben Rees, 95; Reading Clerk,
James Bullock, 4747.
Membership approved minutes
of previous meetings in other
Branches, and accepted Headquarter's Reinstatement Commit­
tee report. Agent reported that
two Smith and Johnson ships
are due to arrive in Norfolk.
Company states that it intends
to run these ships regularly be­
tween this port and Italy with
coal as cargo. Blue ticket men
were advised to compute their

REG.
ENG.

REG.
STWDS.

TOTAL
REG.

SHIPPED
DECK

13
17
47
97
133
374
27
30
89
Figures Not Received .
28
17
- 82
16
20
50
17
9
40
45
52
148
75
106
250
45
20
120
48
39
132
12
9
35

8
108
20
64
19
11
11
53
89
37
49
8

423

427

452

1,367

other Branches read and ac­
cepted. Motion carried requiring
man seeking to be excused from
meeting to show documentary
proof that he •was unable to at­
tend. Following elected to serve
as Tallying Committee:* G. Velie,

C. Rice, W. Armstrong, R.
Brown, C. Moss and W. W. Allred. Agent reported on status of
shipping-in port. No change ex­
pected for next couple of weeks.
108 members present when meet­
ing adjourned at 7:32 PM.
4. 4. 4.
PHILADELPHIA — Chairman,
D. Hall, 43372; Recording Secre­
tary, George Seeberger, 6932;
Reading Clerk, J. Davis, 23177.
All business of previous meet­
ings in other ports accepted, with
exception of Norfolk motion of­
fering change in requirements
for union office. Agents said
that shipping had been some­
what slow, although several ships
had paid off her.e in the past two
weeks. He also reported on the
progress made in improving the
Hall. Members of the Nether­
lands seamen's union thanked
the SIU for this port's aid in
squaring a food beef for the
crew aboard a Dutch ship in this
port. The Coast Guard is con­
ducting a survey to determine
how many ABs are eligible for
green tickets and have asked
the Port Agent to discuss the
matter with them. Motion car­
ried to recommend that "Dis­
patcher specify whether man is
book or permit member when
jobs are being called. A fiveman Committee was elected to
count ballots in transportation
refer^dum. Two men took the
oath of obligation. Meeting ad­
journed at 8 PM.
^
4' 4* 4'
BALTINIORE —— Chairman, ]M.
Burnstine, 2257; Recording Secr^ary, G., A. Masterson, 20297;
Reading Clerk, A1 Slansbury,
4883.

seatime and to apply for green
tickets as soon as they have
1,080 days on deck. Agent's re­
port accepted. Dispatcher re­
ported on shipping and registra­
tion. Motion carried to with­
draw motion made at previous
meeting, calling for change in re­
Motions carried to accept Sec­ quirements for Union office.
retary-Treasurer's •'and New Or­ Reason for withdrawal is that
leans' financial reports. Minutes original motion ignored constitu­
of previous meetings in other tional procedure. Motion car­
Branches read and accepted, with ried to elect Building* Repair
Committee to inspect Hall, draw,
up list of needed repairs and ar­
range for work to be done.
Elected to serve on committee
were: J. W. Pulliam, Jimmy
Branch minutes of previous
Ackres, Vernon Porter, I. A.
meetings
read and approved.
Thomas and. Jack Helms. Under
Secretary-Treasurer's
financial re­
Good and Welfare desirability of
port
approved.
Several
men
exception of motion to non-con­ men with sufficient seatime ap­ were excused from the meeting
cur with Norfolk minutes sug­ plying for green tickets was after presenting valid excuses.
gesting change in election re­ stressed. Meeting adjourned at Agent's, Patrolmen's and Dis­
quirement rules. Agent reported 8:30 PM; 101 member present.
patcher's reports read and ac­
^ i ' 4*
on business of port, saying that
cepted.
Motion carried to buy
SAVANNAH —Chairman, Jim
things had picked up since the
an
exhaust
fan for the Union
last meeting, and looked fair for Drawdy, 28523; Recording Secre­ Hall. Elections held for dele­
tary and Reading Clerk, C. Rice,
the coming two weeks. He angates to Maryland and District of
40707.
noimced the results of the Cities
Columbia AFL convention.
Service
collective
bargaining
Previous Branch minutes read. Elected delegates are: William
election, which the SIU won by Members approved Secretary- Rentz, - F. A. Stansbury, and
an 89 percent majority vote. Treasurer's financial
report, and Leon Johnson. Alternates are
There are no beefs pending in Headquarters' report. Minutes of G. A. Masterson, John. Hatgimi-

C

64

. l4 .
'6
11
49
91
46
46
6
452

53
24
10
8
50
128 •
34
41
5

458

181
57
27
30
152
308
117
136
19

1,387

sios and B. Gonzalez. A six-man
tallying committee to count ^al­
lots in recent transportation
referendum elected. Meeting ad­
journed at '8:30 PM; 225 mem­
bers present.
4' 4- 4&gt;
•. SAN FRANCISCO—Chairman,
W. Otic, 34661; (Recording Secre­
tary and Reading Clerk not
named).
Minutes previous meetings in
other ports read. Port Agent re­
vealed that shipping in Frisco
area is poor, with most payoffs
taking place in the Wilmington
and Tacoma areas. He advised
men that shipping opportunities
are greater in those two ports.
Two of the vessels taking men
from the beach here were the
Citrus Packer and the Beaver
Victory. Patrolmen's and Dis­
patcher's reports read and ac­
cepted, as was Secretary-Treas­
urer's report. , Membership con­
curred in Headquarters' r^brt.
One minute of silence in memory
of our departed Brothers. Meet­
ing adjourned at 7:50 PM ^with
93 members present.
4. 4. 4
BOSTON—Chairman, T. Flem­
ing, 30821; Recdrdtng Secretary,
A. Melanson, 44406; Heading
Clerk, 894.
Minutes of previous minutes in
other Branches read.
Motion
carried to non-concur with Nor-

folk motion on requirements for
Union office. Headquarters' and
Secretary-Treasurer's reports ap­
proved. Agent's and. Dispatch­
er's reports accepted. Following
men elected to serve as Tallying
Committee: F. Johnson, L. Garabedian, E. Cotreau, J. Chermes-

Committee, Headquarters' and
financial reports accepted as read.
Agent reported that port was just
about holding its own on the
shipping front. He discussed sev­
eral beefs that came up aboard
shfps paying off, including one
in which a man had been fired
for allegedly being four minutes
late. The man stayed aboard ship
as a' result of Union representa­
tion. During reading of minutes
of other Branch meetings, a mo­
tion carried to non-concur with
Norfolk recommendation , for a
change in qualifications for Un­
ion officeholders. It was pointed
out that the Norfolk motion was
out of order, as the Constitution
provides the procedure for such
changes. Dispatcher's and Pa­
trolmen's reports read and ac­
cepted. Communications from
men seeking to be excused from
meeting referred to Dispatcher.

Charges read. Stx-man Commit­
tee elected to ^ount ballots ill
transportation rule referendum.
Meeting adjourned at 7:50 P.M.,
with 903 members present.
4 4 4
SAN JUAN - Chairman, '!.
Garcia,. 7152; Recording Secre­
tary, P. Dunphy, 46214; Reading
Clerk, T.. Banning, 3038.
Motion to non-concur with sec­
tion of Norfolk New Business
recommending change in re­
quirement for. election to Union
office; other minutes of other
Branches accepted as read. Agent
reported that shipping had been
slow for past two weeks. He
asked Brothers to visit the sick
members in Marine Hospital.
Patrolman reported that payoff
on Ponce had been smooth. Both
reports approved by membership.
Motion carried calling for small
flag to be placed in front of Hall.
Under Good and Welfare, Broth­
ers discussed the transportation
rule. Charges pending against
two members read and accepted.
One minute of silence in memory
of deceased members. Meeting
adjourned at 7:40 PM, with 87
members prbseht.

Shipping Is Slow In Wilmington
By E. B. TILLEY
WILMINGTON — Shipping is
slow in this port and we don't
anticipate any payoffs for the
next two weeks.
However, during the last two
weeks we have paid off three
ships and put full crews aboard
two of them.
The .payoffs were on the SB
Thomas Cresap, Steel Ranger
and Steel Chemist, all Isthmian.
We didn't have a chance to
send a crew to the Chemist,
however.
The fact is that the Chemist is
undergoing, a plastic surgery op­
eration at the Todd Shipyard.
She'll be in the yard' until .the
end qf June.

When the Chemist comes out
next month' we'll get to crew
her, and we expect to have
plenty of bookmen around to
take care, of her. &lt; In fact, we are
about ready to hold our first
meeting in this port.
Of course, there has been a
little more activity here than the
payoff rate indicates. The SS
Oshkosh Victory is here now."
But she will payoff in Frisco.
The Zane Grey is taking off
on the "pipeline run"i and will
be out for a good five months.
If anybody up around Boston is
wondering what became of Gus
Callahanj he is on a very SIOT,!^.
boat to the Persian Gulf."

�Friday, Mey 80, IMS

TEE SEAFARERS LOG

Pagar Elavea

Seafarers Bleck Cemniie Attempt
To Snare Aid Of British Beckers
V i

li';. :

.: I

forward presentation of the facts.' representative explained. "These
(Continued from Page I)
pletely repudiated by its mem­ "Contrary^ to propaganda," he desperate CSU leaders, who had
told British marine workers, "the ] lost support of, as well as con­
bership.
CSU
men have been offered trol of, the membership at home
"In Canada there are no ships
in Canada, gambled that the
tied up by the so-carierstrik^"^t'"^®"hip in the SIU."
He cited the fact that more plight of ships crews on 'strike'
today," he said.
than 1,500 CSU men had joined in British ports would arouse the
THE CRIMSON QUIRT, by Wil- sional contributions • to the LOG
"In Canada the CSU is out, the SIU in the past few weeks.
sympathy of the very strong
liam Colt MacDonald: Signet search out the aloneness in men. finished, done with," the SIU
He also pointed out that the trade union movement in Bri­
Those who -have enjoyed his ap­ spokesman explained. "That's
Books; 192 pages; 25 cents.
proach to a story-will certainly why Davis is able to come' over CSU had been expelled from the tain and elsewhere."
Gun-play and the love o^ a delight in Capote's gossamer fan­ here. He would not have been SIU at the 1944 convention be­ It has also been pointed out
strong man for a good woman tasy, overlaid with color and able to leave Canada, if 90 ships cause they refused to disavow to the British workers that the
are the stuff this fast-paced West­ atmosphere, heavily applied.
communists, in line with the in­
had -been tied up there, as he communism.
ern is made of.
ternational
policy emanating
"This so-called strike was call­
A contemporary New Orleans claims they are."
The hero and his pals manage boy of thirteen is thrown into
from
Moscow,
are utilizing their
ed withqut regard for the legi­
BLASTS COMMIE LIES
'to outride and outshoot the rust­ the enervating isolation of a
contacts
on
the
waterfront to
timate economic interests of the
lers and the bank robbers al­ crumbling plantation and its de­
halt
the
flow
of
Marshall
Plan
Canadian
seamen,"
the
SIU
though things are touch and go cadent and perverted household. In meetings with the British spokesman declared. "It was a goods wherever possible.
maritime workers, the SIU
on almost every page. In the The resulting madness is devious
spokesman blasted the lies plant­ desperate effort to maintain per­ Throughout its history, the
•end cowboy Pete Piper wins the and involved reading, but fas­
SIU has fought communist at­
sonal leadership and power.
hand of Cressy, daughter of the cinating — if you can take it — ed by the communist propagand­ "Without regard for hardships tempts to win control of the US
ists and detailed the facts in the
-owner of the C-Bar-A.
especially so, if you enjoy dream­ Canadian situation from the this would impose on their mem­ waterfront. The SIU has con­
This story follows the pattern like sequences without much
time the communist leaders of bership in foreign ports, and tinually told waterfront -workers
of all good Westerns, and West­ plot action that are held to­
the CSU first began their ill- knowing most of them would everywhere that the communists
ern fans will eat it up. It will gether with vivid imagery and
join the SIU if they returned to are nothing more than traitors
fated maneuver.
Tje good in the flickers too.
to the working classes of all
a fresh and effective handling of
The CSU "strike" was called Canada and found out the true countries.
words.
i. t
by its communist leaders with­ conditions, they wired crews of
SIU officials have declared that
'OTHER VOICES, OTHER
out a secret strike vote by the these former CSU ships in for­ communist slander and terror­
ROOMS, by Truman Capote.
membership, after the SIU had eign ports to strike there.
ism wiil not halt the union's un­
Penguin Signet, 144 pages,
signed agreements with Canad­
EXPOSES TACTICS
relenting fight against these ene­
25 cents.
ian operators.
"Now here is where the Bri­ mies of genuine trade union men
The CSU began negotiating for tish dockers come in," the SIU '• and women.
This book is recommended to
a new agreement last August,
John Wunderlich, whose occabut talks were stalemated after
months of discussion. In October,
the. CSU leaders requested that
RICHARD T. WRIGHT
a Conciliation Board settle the
Contact your mother at 2709 dispute.
SIU, A&amp;G District
N. Avers Ave., Chicago 47, HI.
A three-man board, one of
Now available to unions, ships' The whole organization of the
BALTIMORE...
14 North Cay St.
X %
whose
members "was the hand- crews and other organizations is strike including the close co­
William Rentz, Agent
Mulberry 4540
HAROLD ARTHUR NELSON picked representative of the
BOSTON
276 State St.
"The Battle of Wall Street," a operation between the SIU and
Your family asks that you get CSU, made a unanimous recom­ 20-minute moving picture based the striking United Financial
Ben Lawson, Agent
Richmond 2-0140
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141 in touch with them. There has mendation for a contract, but
on the Wall Street Strike of Employes, AFL, is clearly shown
GALVESTON
308'/2—23rd St. been a death.
CSU officials immediately re­ 1948.
by scenes from the picketlines
Keith Alsop, Agent
Phone 2-8448
jected the contract without re­ The price of the film is $40, and SIU Headquarters, which
% % ^
MOBILE
1 South Lawrence' St.
CLIFTON W. GUYETTE
ferring it to the membership.
Cal Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-1754
which is the actual cost price also served as Strike Headquar­
E. Sheppard, Agent
Magnolia 6112-6113
plus
postage charges.
ters.
P.O.
Box
1229,
MoWrite
to
The
recommended
contract
NEW YORK
:
51 Beaver St.
Any
organization wishing to Strategy meetings, picket brief­
contained the wages and condi­
Joe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784 bile, Ala.
NORFOLK ."
127-129 Bank St.
tions acceptable to the CSU buy the film should write the ings and other activities includ­
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
RUDOLPH R. PASCHAL.
membership, but CSU leaders Seafarers International Union, ing the SIU stewpot are de­
PHILADELPHIA
337 Market St.
concealed
this fact by falsely an­ Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, AFL, picted.
Get in touch with your local
J. SKhehan, Agent
Market 7-1635
nouncing
that
it called for a 25 51 Beaver Street, New York 4,
SAN FRANCISCO
85 Third St. draft board and your father. It
High point of the film is the
Frenchy Michelet, Agent Douglas 2-5475
'percent
wage
cut and loss of N. Y.
sequence showing the severe
is
urgent.
SAN JUAN, P.R.
252 Ponce de Leon
The picture consists of actual clubbing being meted out by
the hiring hall.
^ ^
L. Craddock, Agent
San Juan 2-5996
scenes photographed during the
CLIFFORD NEWTON
SAVANNAH
2 Abercorn St.
Rejection of the Conciliation strike in which 1,100 employees New York policemen to Sea­
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728
workers,
Board's
proposals indicated that of the New York Stock and farers and financial
Get in touch with V. L. Lyon,
TACOMA
1519 Pacific St.
who
lay
down
before
the
main
CSU
leaders
were
working
for
Broadway 0484 Four Leaf Clover Realty, 501
Curb Exchanges tied up the
door
of
the
Stocky
Exchange
on
the
communist
objectives
and
TAMPA
1809-1811 N. Franklin St. E. Walnut St., Pasadena, Calif.,
world's top security markets for
the membership's 32 days, and were joined on the the second morning. This was
Ray White, Agent
Phone M-1323 or write to P.O. Box 317, Pasa­ disregarding
WILMINGTON, Calif., 227y2 Avalon Blvd.
described by those who saw it
wishes.
picketlines by hundreds of white£. B. Tilley, Agent
Terminal 4-2874 dena, Calif. Phone SYcamore 2It was at this point that the caped Seafarers. The film was as one of the most savage dis­
HEADQUARTERS. . 51 Beaver St., N.Y.C. 8288 and reverse charges.
SECRETARY-TREASURER
SIU, which had many friends produced by the SIU, A&amp;G Dis­ plays of policy brutality in labor
Paul Hall
history.
and sympathizers among CSU trict.
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
rank and file, signed the agree­
Lindsey Williams
ments and declared itself ready
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURER
Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
and willing to man the ships.
Joseph Volpian
Only then did the CSU leader­
The SEAFARERS LOG as the official publication of the Sea­
ship
call the "strike." They dis­
SUP
By BEN LAWSON
farers International Union is available to all members who wish
covered, however, ^that their
to have it seint to their home free of charge for the enjoyment ot
HONOLULU
16 Merchant St.
BOSTON—Beantown is com­ members, anxious to get out
. Phone 5-8777
their families and themselves when ashore. If you desire to havB
PORTLAND...... Ill W. Burnside St. ing into its own on the ship­ from under communist domina­ the LOG sent to you each week address cards are on hand at every
Beacon 4336 ping front, and all hands are tion, were joining the SlU by
SIU branch for this purpose.
RICHMOND, Calif.
257 5th St. looking forward to some wel­ the hundreds and sailing the
However, for those who are at sea or at a distance from a SIU
Phone 2599 come activity within the next ships under SIU contract.
SAN FRANCISCO
59 Clay St.
hall,
the LOG reproduces below the form used to request the LOG,
few weeks.
Douglas 2-8363
SEE DEFEAT
which you can fill out; detach and send to: SEAFARERS LOG, 51
SEATTLE
86 Seneca St.
The calls for jobs during the
Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
Main 0290 past week exceeded the number
CSU leaders, sensing disaster,
WILMINGTON
...440 Avalon Blvd.
of men on tap, and we" had to desperately sought to maintain
PLEASE PRINT INFORMATION
Terminal 4-3131
call New York for 15 men.
their grip by inducing CSU men
^
And it looks- good for next in foreign ports, to strike, telling To the Editor:
Canadian District
them they faced pay cuts of 40
month,
too.
We
have
the
Yar­
I would like the SEAFARERS LCXJ mailed to the.
MONTREAL
404 Le Moyne St.
Marquette 5909 mouth coming in to take a full dollars a month and other out­ address below:
HALIFAX
128 Ms Hollls St. crew on June 6, prior to begin­ rageous lies. On the Canadian
Phone 3-8911 ning her "overnight runs between front, however, the ships were
FORT ARTHUR
63 Cumberland St. Boston
and Yarmouth, Nova sailing.
Phone North 1229
Scotia.
PORT COLBORNE
103 Durham St.
It was then that the CSU
All the • other summer excur­ communist leaders began their Street Address
Phone: 6591
TORONTO
lllA Jarvis St. sion boats will begin crewing
Elgin 5719 up on June 1. They'll be taking open campaign to draw British
Zone
State
waterfront workers into their City
VICTORIA, B.C
602 Boughton St.
full
crews.
Empire 4531
fight to maintain hold over Can­
Anyone who is looking for- a adian seamen.
Signed
VANCOUVER
565 Hamilton St.
Pacific 7824 ship in the next month will
SIU representative Henderson
have a pretty good chance of
Book No.
HEADQUARTERS
512 McGilt St.
knocked
the props from undeV
getting
one,
if
he
comes
up
to
Montreal
Plateau 670
the communists with a straightthe port pf Boston.

Wall St Strike Film Available
To SIU Crews And Trade Ikloas

SIU HRLLS

Boston Shipping
Goes To Town

Notice To All SIU Members

�Pags Twelvs

THE -S E A F A R E n S

LOG

Fziday. May 30. 1949

British Unionists Get Straight
To Their Questions On Canadian Situation
In reply to the questions which have been ad­
dressed to me, regarding the so-called "strike"
of members of the Canadian Seamen's Union
in British ports and elsewherq, I should like to
bring the following facts to your attention:
First, you ask whether wages and working
conditions on the Canadian ships in question are
protected by a legal contract and, if so, whether
this contract is up to the standard of wages and
working conditions that previously prevailed.
The answer is emphatically, "Yesl" The Sea­
farers International Union of North America,
Canadian District, has bona Ade legal contracts
for the same wages and working conditions that
prevailed under the former CSU contracts with
the following Canadian steamship companies:
HAVE SIU CONTRACTS
Acadia Overseas Freighters Ltd.; Argonaut
Navigation Co. Ltd.; Atlantic Shipping Agencies
Ltd.; Bristol City Line (Canada) Ltd.; Canadian
National (West Indies) Ltd.; Pickford and Black
Ltd.; Saguenay Terminals Ltd.; Triton Steamship
Ltd., and others.
Second, as to whether or not the trade union
movement in Canada is supporting the SIU in
Canadian portsv where the SIU are manning and
sailing these ships.
The Seafarers' International Union of North
America, Canadian District, has the support of
the American and Canadian trade union move­
ment.
'
Specifically, if is being supported in Canada by
the International Longshoremen's Association—
the dockers in practically every instance are
working the ships in all Canadian ports—Rail­
way Workers of Canada, the Licensed Officers'
Unions, and many others.
Third, as to whether members of the CSU are
actually being thrown out of their jobs, 'as a
^result of these ships being contracted by the
^Seafarers International Union of North America,
Canadian District.
The answer is emphatically, "No!" Insofar as"
SlU-contracted ships which return to Canadian
ports still have CSU members aboard, these men
are offered membership in the SIU.
Four or five former CSU crews have'in this
.way changed over almost 100 percent to the SIU
upon arrival and continued on their jobs, thank•ful to regain membership in a genuinely demo•cratic trade union that has the support of the
rest of the trade union movement in America
and Canada.^
In all, over 1,200 former CSU men have joined
the SIU in the past few weeks. One of the
crews to change over en masse was that of
SS Lady Nelson, a large passenger ship operated
by the Canadian National SS Company, Ltd.
REJOINED
After all, in doing this, they are merely re­
joining the parent SIU Union.
As it now stands, well over one-half of the
ships operated by these companies have already
returned to Canadian ports, have been" dis­
charged and loaded by Canadian dockers, and
are now 'manned by SIU, Canadian District,
crews.
Fourth, you ask about the relations of the
Canadian Seamen's Union and the Seafarers
International Union in the past:
The CSU was affiliated with the SIU until
1944. 'At that time the power-hungry leaders
of the CSU refused to accept the majority-rul­
ings of the International on the issue of com- •
munism and were dropped froni the SIU. They

With the phony "strike" of the conixnunist-dominafed CSU nearing collapse on
-the Canadian waterfront, the communists
have been , concentrating on winding sup;
port from British maritime workers. They
have spread falsehoods and distortions in
calling upon the British dockers not to„
handle Canadian ships. Although the Trans­
port and General Workers Union refused to
support the CSU, the communists had been
pouring propaganda into the British water­
fronts entirely unopposed until the arrival ii]i
Lopdon recently of the SIU representative,
W. D. Henderson. He has exposed the
strategy to employ British waterfront
workers to regain communist control of
Canadian shipping. The following statement
on SIU position and the issues involved in
the Canadian situation was written to answer
the question put to the Seafarers by British
unionists.

There is one point I want to make clear at
once—there is no strike. It is not recognized as
such by the waterfront trade unions of Canada,
who are actively supporting the SIU Canadian
District".
(
However, the leaders of the CSU, knowing
themselves to be thoroughly discredited in the
eyes of the majority of their own membership
and of the rest of the trade union movement of
Canadian seamen. It was a desperate effort to
maintain their own prestige and control.
So they declared a strike on these ships,' a
strike for which they gave two different reasons:
on the one hand, they said they were opposing
a 20 percent wage reduction (which has been
averted by the SIU), on the other hand that
they were fighting for a 15 percent wage increase.
This so-called strike was declared without re­
gard for the legitimate economic interests of the
Canadian seamen. It was a resperate effort to
maintain personal leadership and power;
IGNORED MEMBERSHIP

never even informed their own CSU members of
the issue involved.
Fifth, you ask the circumstances under which
the parent organization—the Seafarers Interna­
tional Union of North America, Canadian District
—signed contracts with steamship operators who
had previously had contracts with the CSU:
The conditions of Canadian seamen were in
great danger, owing to the failure of the CSU
leaders to sign contracts with their former oper­
ators. after long negotiations.
A Conciliation Board was set up, including one
member appointed by the CSU, and this Board
issued a unanimous award.
POLITICAL SCHEME
Not for industrial, but for political reasons the
CSU leaders withheld the contents.of the award
from the membership; they wanted a strike for
the strike's sake, and expected misinformed mem­
bers abroad to follow the strike call.
Under these circumstances, the maintenance of
their wages and working conditions was threat­
ened.
Therefore, in the interest of all Canadian sea­
men as well as of the CSU membership (who,
you must remember, were affiliated with the
SJU until 1944), and in the interest of the entire
trade union movement of Canada (and with the
support of the trade unions of Canada) the SIU
Canadian District, Which is of course a much
ihore powerful organization than the discredited
CSU, signed contracts with these'operators at the
prevailing wages and conditions.
TAis action provided ffor the protection of the
conditions of all Canadian seamen.
The officials of the CSU then approached the
SIU Canadian District for re-affiliation, in order
to preserve their" own power and jobs as officials.
This was fiatly refused by the SIU; since the
CSU leaders had proven themselves incompetent.
However, the SIU offered—and still offers—SIU
membership to CSU members who, by and large
are very anxious to regain the protection of the
SIU and the trade union movement of Canada.
Following the rejection of their plea for reaffiliation, the CSU leadership then approached
the operators with a request to renew their
former contracts at reduced wages.
But the operators were by then already legally
under contract with the SIU Canadian District.
Sixth, you ask why the CSU officials claim
that there is a strike:

I

Without regard for the hardships this would
impose on their membership in foreign ports, and
knowing that most of these crews would rejoin
the SIU if they returned to Canada and found
out the true conditions, they wired the crews
of these former CSU ships in foreign ports to
strike the ships there.
Now, here is whei® the British dockers come
in. These desperate CSU labor leaders, who had
lost the support of the entire trade union move­
ment, as well as control of their membership at
home in Canada, gambled that the plight of shipS
crews on "strike" in British ports would arouse
the sympathy of the very strong- trade union
movement in Britain and elsewhere.
I am certain that you and your members will
not be misled by this subterfuge now that the
facts are before you.
'
There need be no Canadian seamen out of
wprk here, except by their own choice.
'
And no question of wages or working condi­
tions, or other legitimate trade union considera­
tion, is involved. The SIU Canadian District
directs all the crews of "struck" ships to go back
aboard their ships and honor the legal contracts
which protect their wages and conditions on
tlmse ships.
CSU MEN WELCOME
The SIU Canadian District assures these men,
who have been misled by false and discredited
CSU leaders, th^t after they have brought their
ships back to Canada they will have the oppor­
tunity of rejoining the parent union, the Sea­
farers International Union of North America,
Canadian District, and of joining forces once
more' with the most powerful and progressive
trade union movement in the waterfronts of
North America.
V
The International Transport Workers' Federa­
tion investigated this situation on April 25, and
refused to support this unjustified strike in other
countries, when it was not recognized by the
trade union movement on the waterfronts of
Canada.
!
The SIU wishes to thank the individual dock­
ers of Britain who, by th^ir ready sympathy for
w)iat appeared to them, to be trade union issues,
have again shown their own high union quality
and standards.
But I know that as trade union men they
will support the trade union movement in Can­
ada, and thus assist the Seafarers International
Union in fulfilling these contracts providing for
top Canadian wages and conditions on the ships,'
'•'.••"•I

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9912">
                <text>May 20, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9984">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 18</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10005">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10026">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10086">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10104">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10155">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
SEAFARERS THWARTS COMMIE ATTEMPT TO SNARE SUPPORT OF BRITISH DOCKERS FOR CSU STRIKE&#13;
MAW GIVEN CHARTER BY INTERNATIONAL CANADIAN COMMIES MISUING ALF, SIU TELLS AFL EXECUTIVE BOARD&#13;
THE GREATEST ENEMY&#13;
A NEW DISTRICT&#13;
CREW STRANDED IN BA GETS BACK PAY AWARD&#13;
NOT MUCH CHANGE IN ECA SHIPPING&#13;
PORT TACOMA BUSY WITH PAYOFFS, VISITS TO SIU CANADIAN SHIPS&#13;
PORT SAVANNAH KEEPS MOVING AT A SLOW PACE&#13;
MOBILE SHIPPING COMPLETES CYCLE: UP - THEN DOWN&#13;
ISTHMIAN SHIFT TO WILMINGTON COOLS FRISCO&#13;
SHIPPING IN NEW YORK CUTS IN ON BEACH BACKLOG&#13;
IT'S NOT HIS FAULT&#13;
ILG ORGANIZER MURDERED BY OPEN-SHOP GANGSTERS&#13;
TILGHMAN IN SINGAPORE FOR REPAIRS AFTER COLLISION WITH BRITISH SHIP&#13;
STEEL AGERS GET FAIR SHAKE AT KIRBY'S MANILA BISTRO&#13;
WRITES FOR RACING MONTHLY&#13;
MINUTES OF A&amp;G BRANCH MEETINGS IN BRIEF&#13;
SHIPPING IS SLOW IN WILMINGTON&#13;
WALL ST. STRIKE FILMS AVAILABLE TO SIU CREWS AND TRADE UNIONS&#13;
BOSTON SHIPPING GOES TO TOWN&#13;
BRITISH UNIONISTS GET STRAIGHT ANSWERS TO THEIR QUESTIONS ON CANADIAN SITUATION</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10156">
                <text>5/20/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13056">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="959" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="963">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/07ac5880febb4064174c1542beecc50c.PDF</src>
        <authentication>dadd8c1e7cf89b8aa9dc9c2b8fee512d</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47439">
                    <text>SEAFARERS WARNS BRITISH
AF L WILL BOYCOn SHIPPING

The Seafarers International Union of North'
America will tie-up every British ship that enters,
an Atlantic or Gulf coast American port, unless
the misguided, communist-inspired strike action by,
British dock workers against Canadian ships man­
ned by members of the SIU, Canadian District, is,
brought to a halt.
To make certain that there would be no misun­
derstanding of the situation in London, Paul Hall
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA and Morris Weisberger, speaking as Vice-Presidents
of the SIU and co-chairmen of the AFL Maritime
No. 19
NEW YORK. N. Y.. WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1. 1949
VOL. XI
^Trades Council of New
York, cabled the threat of
counter-action to the Prime
Minister of Britain's Labor Gov­
ernment, Clement H. Attlee, and
called upon him to stop the il­
legal, commie-led, wildcat walk­
out in British ports.
The SIU officials told Mr.
Attlee that they would give him
In response to requests from hundreds of rank-and-file licensed engineers, seeking economic protection and time to reply before instituting
membership control of union affairs, the Seafarers International Union granted a charter to the Brotherhood of the boycott. The full text of the
Marine Engineers, AFL, on May 12. The newly-formed Brotherhood has already become active in behalf of its cablegram was released to Am­
erican and British newspapers
membership, and has notified 51 steamship companies that the BME represents a majority of the licensed engineers and wire services.
aboard their ships. The BME also called upon the companies to set an early date for contract negotiations. The
CITE FACTS
charter granted to the BME was the second one given this month to a maritime group of workers by the SIU. Hall and Weisberger said that
they had been requested by
Previously, the Marine Alliedt
their Canadian affiliate "to take
Workers, with jurisdiction over with communist run uniqns for
steps to tie up all British ship­
workers in Atlantic and Gulf years.
ping in the Atlantic and Gulf
coast ports, came into the In­ In the letter requesting im­
mediate negotiations, the steam­
ports, unless the British dockers,
ternational.
1. Creation of a strong Brotherhood of Marine
ship companies were told, "in
now misled into wildcat action
Under terms of its charter, the the event you make any agree­
Engineers, utilizing the great strength and fraternal
b y communist propagandists,
BME wiU be completely autono­ ment with the MEBA beyond
agree
to handle ships contracted
bonds
possessed
by
the
American
Federation
of
Labor
mous and, if its membership so June 15, 1949, the date your
to
the
SIU, Canadian District."
through
the
powerful
AFL
Maritime
Trade
Department.
desires, may withdraw from the present contract expires, you will
The two AFL officials told
SIU and affiliate directly with do so at your peril and contrary
2. Increasing the wages and improving the working
Mr. Attlee that they had no de­
the AFL.
to the wishes of the majority of
conditions of all Marine Engineers to levels commen­
sire
to take such action unless
Announcement of the charter­ the licensed marine engineers
it
became
absolutely necessary.
surate
with
the
skill,
responsibility
and
dignity
of
their
ing of the new affiliate was made employed by you;"
They
pointed
out that the SIU,
profession.
by Paul Hall, First International At the time of the petitioning,
Canadian
District,
was under le­
Vice President of the SIU and John Owens, Executive Secre­
3. Maintenance of a democratic organization of. by
gal
contract
to
man
the ships.
Secretary-Treasurer of the SIU tary of the AFL's Maritime
and
ioT
Marine
Engineers
which
is
completely
free
of
The
cablegram
said
that it was
Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, who Trades Department, officially
the aim of the communists to
any and all political influences, especially the influence
stated ' that the charters were welcomed the BME as the water­
sabotage the Marshall Plan and
granted in response to pleas for front trade union group's newest
of the shysters and "fellow-travelers" of the Communist
that the AFL Maritime Unions
union protection from thousands member.
Party.
would not permit "a political
of workers in these fields.
Owens declared that the Bro­
maneuver by fifth column dis4. Building an' organization of Marine Engineers
TEMPORARY HEADQUARTERS therhood of Marine Engineers
ruptors" to prevent the SIU, Can­
would
have
the
full
backing
of
which
will
service
its
members
by
assuring
them
the
The Brotherhood of Marine
adian District, from fulfilling its
full protection of tkeir contracts, issuing regular reports
Engineers now maintains temp­ the AFL Maritime Trades De­
contract.
partment
in
its
negotiations
with
and publications, and acting as a responsible body at
orary headquarters in New York
Weisberger and, Hall cited a
the shipowners.
at the SIU Headquarters.
all
limes.
circular
from the International
The complete text of the
In serving notice on the halfTransportworkers
Federation in
5. Negotiations of contracts for Marine Engineers
hundred steamship companies BME's letter follows:
which
the
situation
was described
"The large majority of the li­
by Marine Engineers—not by laywers and other out­
for contract negotiations, the
as
part
of
a
political
campaign
Brotherhood of Marine Engin- censed marine engineers actually
siders.
to
which
the
ITF
was
opposed
(Contimted on Page 16)
* eers stated that a large majority
and that it was in no way an
of licensed engineers aboard the
industrial issue. They emphasized
companies' vessels have "become
their belief that the British dock­
fed up with the anti-union ac­
ers who have tied up Canadian
tions and political policies of
ships were acting on false in­
the Marine Engineers Beneficial The Economic Cooperation Ad­ have three months, ending June siderable debate during Congres­ formation given them by com­
Association, CIO. As a direct re­ ministration is taking steps to 30, to meet the 50-50 tonnage sional hearings and discussions munist propagandists.
sult they have formed a union enforce the recently enacted law requirement.
on the ECA law.
COMMIE INSPIRED
within the framework of the Am­ that at least half of all Marshall
The law which the ECA regu­ The 50-50 division, as it now The tying up of several Can­
erican Federation of Labor Plan-financed recovery cargoes be
lation will now enforce was appears in the law, was given adian ships in British ports is
known as the Brotherhood of carried in' United States ships.
passed by Congress on April 14, guarded approval by the SIU, the result of propaganda issued
Marine Engineers."
Under terms of a regulation and governs the shipment of which put up a vigorous fight for
by the communist-led Canadian
In making public the letter to effective immediately, 50 percent
cargoes financed from funds pro­ protection of American ships and Seamen's Union whose leaders
the steamship companies, the of foreign aid materials must
vided for continuation of the jobs as the measure was being attempted to halt the sailing of
BME declared that announce- be shipped on American ships,
shaped up.
Canadian ships after the SIU,
of the Brotherhood's formation otherwise the EGA will not pay Eui-opean Recovery Program un­
Canadian District, signed an
resulted in a flood of applications for the goods or the shipping til July, 1950.
A "watch-dog committee" has
agreement with the owners of
for membership. Consequently, it costs.
been
set
up
by
Representative
Canada's
east coast merchant
said, the Brotherhood is acting
Schuyler
Otis
Bland,
Chairman
JUNE
30
DEADLINE
marine.
quickly to obtain the kind of
All Seafarers now paying
The action was unsuccessful
union protection the licensed en­ Arthur Syran, ECA's transpor­ of the House Merchant Marine
dues
on tripcards are re­ except in a few foreign ports.
gineers are demanding.
tation director, has recently re­ Committee, to see that the 50-50
The Executive Council of the
, It also stated that marine en­ turned from Europe, where he shipping provisions of the ECA quested to forward their
gineers in general wish a chance explained the new rules to ship­ law are fully observed, to pro­ cards to SIU Headquarters. AFL, meeting in Cleveland re­
to negotiate their own contracts ping interests and officials of the tect American seamen and ships 6th Floor. 51 Beaver Street, cently, recommended that the
Canadian Seamen's Union be
for a change. In the past they Organization for European Ec- from being sacrificed in favor of
New York for exchange to ousted from the Trades and La­
have had to put up with con­ ,onomic Cooperation. The latter low cost foreign flag operators.
tracts worked out by such well- organization acts as agent for The percentage of AYnerican permits. Seafarers may call bor Congress of Canada. Earlier*
flag ship participation in tlte in persoh or communicate President William Green, of the
known partyliae.lawyers andr-ec- the ECA abroad.
• onomists, as attorney fLee. Press­ Nations receiving benefits un­ trimspoFtation of Marshall Plan with; Headquarters by mail. AFL, cabled a request to the
man, who has been associated der the : ' European - aid - program cargoes was the cause of con­
(Conthmei &lt;w» Fage 16)

Brotherhood Of Marine Engineers
Gets AFL Charter From Seafarers
Program Of BME

I-

ECA Moves To Enforce Cargo Law

A&amp;G Tripcards

�•li; v'Vtjr •

Page Tw»

THE

SEAFARERS

Wednesday. June 1. 1S49

LOG

SEAFARERS LOG
J .f

Vublished Three Times a Month by the

(i'i

SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Afiiliated with the American Federation of Labor
At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
*
Entered as second class matter June 15, 1945, at the Post Office
in New York, N. Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

Welcome, BME
For the second time within the past few weeks, we
are privileged to welcome into the Seafarers International
Union a group of maritime workers vitally interested in
improving its economic status through the medium of
sound trade unionism.
Less than two weeks ago, the granting of an AFL
charter to the Marine Allied Workers opened the way to
union benefits and protection to vast numbers of un­
organized workers linked closely to maritime on the
Atlantic and Gulf coasts.
The MAW has now been joined by the Brotherhood
of Marine Engineers, which has also received an AFL
charter in response to demands from licensed rank-andfile engineers, who have long been dissatisfied wifh the
kind of union protection available to them.
These highly significant developments point up the
fact that workers in maritime and related industries now
recognize that trade union success in maritime can only
be scored under the banner of the AFL.
The licensed engineers have learned that the political
objectives of a small, dominating communist clique al­
ways rate priority over the economic needs of the rankand-file. This has been the case wherever communists have
controlled union affairs. For the engineers this unsavory
situation now becomes part of their past history.

ofMAffiNe eNsut&amp;ss
Hospital Patients

In the AFL Brotherhood of Marine Engineers, these
men will now go forward on a program dedicated to
their economic betterment and free of the vicious in­
fluence of anti-democratic and self-serving politicallyminded leadership.

When entering the hospital
notify the delegates by post­
card, giving your name and
the number of your ward.
Mimeographed Postcards
can be obtained free at the
Social Service desk. .

To our newly-affiliated Brotherhood, we offer a hearty
welcome.

Show Of Violence

Mea Now h The Mwhe Hospitqk

These are the Union Brothers currently in the marine hospitals,
Victor Reuther, educational director of the United as reported by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging
•Automobile Workers Union, was shotgunned in the living heavily on their hands. Do what you can to cheer them up by
room of his Detroit home during the evening of May 25, writing them.
1949. As a result of the attack his right eye has been
J. SCHALLER
NEPONSET HOSPITAL
removed by surgeons. The gunman is still at large.
G. P. BUSH
R. A. BLAKE
C. G. SCHUNK
Walter Reuther, president of the United Automobile ' L. BALLESTERO
L. WILLIAMS
.Workers Union, was the victim of a shotgun blast in J. S. CAMPBELL
H. R. MATHISEN
the kitchen of his Detroit home on the evening of April V. W. CHESNER
J.
R. TILLEY
20, 1948; The blast shattered his right arm. The would-be J. T. EDWARDS
W.
G. ALSTON
I. H. FRElSlCH
murderer has not been caught.
F.
KORVATIN
E. FERRER
K. L. ROBERTS
•
- ,
William Lurye, organizer for the International Ladies V. JIMINEZ _
F.
J. DEALIVERIA
, Garment Workers Union, was mortally wounded on May J. T. KEMPT
S.
RUZYSKI
K. G. LUNDBERG
10, 1949, when killers ganged up on him in a telephone C. L. MOATS
t i i
booth in the lobby of a busy New York office building. W. SEARS
NEW ORLEANS HOSPITAL
Lurye died a few hours after the attack. The murderers are H. SELBY
E. E. GROSS
still free.
J. SILLAK
E. R. MESSINA
Q. TULL
E. MASSEY
In each instance,. sizeable rewards were offered for L. TORRES
J. DENNIS
information leading to apprehension of the assassins. So T. WADSWORTH
ROTZ
G. WOODS
far none has been claimed.
LANDRY "
I
"ELLARD
.
F. ZESIGER
The tactics of union haters have changed. They don't
L. WILLIS
tit
scare off the unions with clubs and phony ordinances,
N. L. WEST
NAVY HOSPITAL
w. MCDONALD
Long Beach. Calif.
murder is now the order of the day. But are the murderers
THILMONGE
J. ROLING
of union men to be above the law?
G. W. MEANEY
WM.
L.
PARKS
Three times assassins have crept up on their victims M. J. FOLAN
C. RAYFUSE with intent to murder and three times they have escaped J. MARTINEZ
J. PATTERSON
C. BRGfWN
apprehension. Despite a k&gt;t of shadow boxing by the
% X
DICKINSON
police departments of Detroit and New York nothing BALTIMORE IdAHlNE HOSP.
J.
BALLMAN
•
L. OWENS
has happened.
.
'
V.
LAWERENCE
•
G. BEKKEN
&lt;
Murderers of union leaders, it appears, are strangely W. VAUGHAN
A. ARVANTIS
K. L. GUNDERSON
lielusive persons.
G. A. CARROLL
.

J.
B.
F.
J.

C. GALARZA
C. RESKO
L. ROCHON
J. KEYS
iii

' FORT STANTON
J. LIGHTFOOT
A. McGUIGAN
D. MCDONALD
J. SUPINSKI
W. H. ROBERTS
J. ASHURST
X X SSTATEN ISLAND
J. TURNER
T. M. BROWN
M. J. LUCAS
N. NORPMANS ,
C. W^ GOODWIN
J. SMITH
D. GELINAS
V. D'ACO
R. E. QUINIT
S. RIVERA
V. GROVER
A, KING
D. HERON
J. J. DEVINE
XXX
MOBILE HOSPITAL
J. P. BUCKELEW
J. B. BERRIER
J. STEELE
E. JARRETT _
XX X'
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL
G. BUTLER
G. LASS
t
W. STEWART
• tL. C. COLE
,T
WYCHE
1

�.Wednesday. June 1, 1949

THE SEAFARERS LOG

SEAFARERS HAILED AS 'CREDIT TO THEIR UNION'

Page Three

Asks Discussion On
Compuisory Vacations
By RICHARD MARTINEZ

These SIU members aboard the SS Ireneslar drew glowing praise from their Skipper, Capt.
Alexander Roth, and government officials in Catania, Sicily, for their sterling performance as
seamen. Capt. Roth said they were "by far the best group of rhen" he had ever sailed with.

Skipper Praises Men Of Irenestar
As Best Crew He Ever Sailed With

In view of the fact that ship­ have more trained men avail­
ping has leveled off and will able for the luxury liners of the
probably stay at the present lev­ future.
el for some time, I am in favor
I am against cliques on ships.
of the resofution passed recently A united crew makes a ship
at a Mobile membership meet­ work smoothly, but a clique will
ing. This resolution calls for ev­ keep the men divided. This is
eryone on board ship, who has not good unionism.
been a member of the crew for Some of those who are against
one year, to take his vacation. the compulsory vacation after
Anyone who has been on a one year say such a rule would
ship for a year should have a relieve them of job security.
few dollars saved and should be But what about the men on
able to take a vacation, and thus the beach? They want jobs, too.
allow someone else to take a And they are also entitled to
berth.
job security.
It is true that on freighters
I would suggest that this ques­
you won't find many who have
tion
of compulsory vacations af­
been aboard for a year, but on
ter
one
year be taken up at
passenger ships it is different.
shipboard
meetings and discussed
It is a practice among many to
thoroughly
by all hands, so that
stay aboard for that length of
every
member
will know the
time, or longer.
score.
FOR EVER AND EVER
Remember, our contracts pro­
In fact, there are some who vide for one week's paid vaca­
have been crewmembers on pas­ tion for a man after he's been
senger ships since they first came aboard a company's ship for one
out of the yards.
year. Those who are staying
Many of these men are good aboard for longer than a year
Union men in every sense of are taking the vacation pay and
the world, but I do know of holding the job as well.
some who have actually become
RULES CHANGE
company-minded as a result of
their long stay aboard.
Also to be remembered is the
Under these circumstances, it fact that a rule for making va­
has become apparent that cliques cations compulsory after a year
have developed on some of the of employment aboard one ves­
lines. They take no part in un­ sel, as recommended by the Mo­
ion activity, they do not vote, bile resolution, would necessitate
nor do they aid on the picket- a change in the shipping rules.
lines.
Under the Union constitution,"
It is for these reasons that I changes in shipping rules can
recommend study of the prob­ only be effected by a referendum
lem by the membership. I have vote in all ports.
My viewpoint on this question
discussed the Mobile resolution
with many of the Brothers, and is based on my experience
I learned that many of them are aboard one of our passenger
ships. It is my opinion, and that
in favor of it.
I mention this because we of others who jagree with me,
must give some thought to the that jobs should be for every­
future. It is possible that some one and that cliques should not
time later in the year the Ar­ dominate any ship.
I would also like to suggest
nold Bernstein Steamship Com­
pany may have a passenger ship that in addition to the discussions
at the shipboard meetings, mem­
or two in operation.
By having compulsory vaca­ bers interested in either side of
tions, the job turnover will be this question should write their
greater and, of course, we'U opinions to the LOG.

Seafarers manning the 88 to make the following com­
All forward looking men in
Irenestar are "not only a credit ments: I have been Master of a the marine industry, both on
to their Union," but they are number of vessels, and had labor's and capital's side, know
numerous crews of the various that one of the ways of regain­
also helping the United States Unions sailing with me. Of all
ing our position as the number
to regain its position as the these groups of seamen, this one maritime nation is by rais­
number one maritime nation by ci-ew has been by far the best ing quality of the men operating
the quality of their shipboard group of men, both personally the ships. If the crew of the SS
work, declared Captain Alex­ and professionally. These men Irenestar on her first voyage are
ander Roth, the vessels' master, were not only a credit to the an example, the SIU is certaily
at the completion of Voyage Union to which they belong, but doing its share towards attain­
No. 1 in Baltimore last week. also to the ship they sailed on ing that object. In conclusion,
Hailing the Irenestar crew- and the fiag that flew over them. I hope I have the pleasure of
members as "by far the best I was told by various City and
sailing with men of this calibre
group of men, both personally State Officials in Catania, that
and professionally," he had ever this was the finest
American many more times.
Yours Most- Sincerely,
sailed with, Captain Roth, in a ship that had been into their
letter to the SIU, added that he port in many years.
Capt. Alexander Roth. Jr.
had been told by government
officials in Catania, Sicily, "that
this was the finest
American
ship that had been in their port
in years."
Captain Roth's letter follows:
By JOSEPH I. FLYNN
non-productive time of those not by insurance companies, work­ figures, and it's true that a com­
regularly employed, lower effi­ men's compensation, law suits prehensive study of this particu­
Enclosed please find pictures
With an estimated 65 percent ciency due to hangovers, poor and welfare organizations.
lar problem is lacking, the
that were taken at the request
of
all alcoholic addicts—skilled examples for fellow workers thus
The alcoholic as a skilled, ex­ knowledge thus far gained proves
of the ship's delegate aboard the
SS Irenestar, Voyage 1, on a pas­ and unskilled — regularly em weakening morale, and accidents. perienced worker or executive that alcoholism costs industry
sage frorh Mobile, via Houston, ployed, management and business It is estimated that this costs is another cost and a great loss billions of dollars—not to men­
to Catania, Sicily, and back to are awakening to the problem business over a billion dollars to industiy. Analysis of 338 em­ tion the cost in unhappiness, ac­
ployees disciplined for drinking cidents, death, misery, broken
a year.
Baltimore in April and May of alcohol presents to them.
showed
the following years of homes and heartache.
In
the
City
of
Chicago,
there
this year.
Education on this subject wiU
service:
125 had from 1 to 4
In
Chicago,
recently,
a
con­
are
an
estimated
26,000
alcohol­
There are two group pictures
bring
the realization clearly
years;
84,
5
to
9
years;
55,
10
ference
was
held
on
the
signi­
ics
costing
the
taxpayers
of
that
of the entire unlicensed crew;
home
to
management that fac­
to
14
years;
31,
15
to
19
years;
20
town
$3,160,000,
ninety
percent
ficance
of
Alcoholism
in
Indus­
the eleven members of the deck
ing
an
issue
is much less expen­
had
over
25
years
of
service.
of
which
is
spent
by
the
police,
try.
A
great
deal
of
interest
was
crew; the eight members of the
sive
than
remaining
apathetic.
It
is
impossible
to
put
a
dollar
shown
by
business
when
the
fol­
house
o
f
correction
and
the
stewai'ds dept.the ei^ht mem­
Interest
in
turn
will
bring bet­
and
cent
value
on
the
knowledge
courts.
lowing
figures
were
brought
to
bers of the black gang; and one
ter
treatment
methods,
more vig­
and
experience
these
men
repre­
Each
alcoholic
costs
employers
light.
stowaway. If you print any of
orous
research,
saving
not only
sent
to
their
respective
compan­
of
this
city
$555.56
a
year.
In
Of
the
estimated
3,000,000
al­
these pictures, I would appreci­
money
but
workers,
experience,
ies.
any
city
in
the
US
the
cost
per
coholics
in
an
adult
population
ate a copy of the "LOG" in
And so the alcoholic, his at­ knowledge and brain power.
of 87,000,000—2,060,000 are regu­ alcoholic to his employer aver­
which it appears.
tendance
at work undependable, Like all welfare approaches to
larly
employed.
ages
$500.00.
Relative to the above un­
The alcoholic is annually re­ work poorly done, is fired. No management, the problem of al­
licensed personnel, I would like . Of these, 1,370,000 are males
employed
in
manufacturing sponsible for 1,500 fatal accidents business can be run with this coholism in industry is up against
plants, by construction compan­ at work, and 2,850 fatal acci­ type of help. He joins the great obstacles. In the final
ies and public utilities. The dents at home, in public places throngs of others on skid tow. analysis, it will be the workers
This group of fallen employees themselves who will demand
amount of women alcoholics is and in traffic—an accident rate
represents
a consumer lost, for adequate studies and proper
of 321 per 100,000, twice that of
15 percent of the total figure.
The slop chest is your cor­
none
buys
clothes and food. He treatment. ?
The alcoholic in industry loses the non-alcoholic.
ner store while you are at
is
a
liability
to the entire com­ Science in approaching this
The
life
span
of
the
alcoholic
an average of 22 working days
sea. You can't take your
munity,
his
productive
power is problem in industrial manage­
is
reduced
approximately
12
a year — a total of 29,700,000
trade someplace else if the
wasted.
This
is
an
additional
cost ment is not appealing to humani­
years
in
comparison
with
the
ab­
working
day
lost
from
the
ef­
slop chest doesn't have what
tarian feelings; it is pointing
of
a
billion
dollars
to
business.
stainer
or
ordinary
drinker.
fects
of
alcohol
alone.
you need.
Although these are estimated out good business sense.
Imagine here the money spent
These figures do not include

Alcoholism Is Great Problem For Industry

ATTENTION!

�THE SEAFAHERS

Page Four

Ship With A Million
Readers - Celabee
Sails Newsprint Run

LOG

Widn«adaY«

1&lt; 1349

A HAPPY GANG OF SEAFARERiS ON THE COLABEE

By JOHN BUNKER

&gt;
apDespite the fact that quarters
(The following article ap­
peared in the Christian Sci­ on the Colabee are tiny com­
ence Monitor of April 4. The pared to ships like the Willis
author, John Bunker, now on Vickery, the officers of this "oldthe staff of the Monitor, is a timer," such as chief engineer
retired member of the SIU. and James Rehr and third mate
formerly was on the staff of Fred Johnson bf Haverhill,
the SEAFARERS LOG. The Mass., have been aboard her for
article is reprinted with the the past thi-ee years.
Part of their reason for liking
Monitor's permission.)
the
ship is chief cook "Kingfish"
More than 1,000,000 newspaper
Nelson
of Richmond, Va,
readers depend for their daily
"I
don't
remember how many
editions on the SS Colabee, "the
ships
I've
been on," says the
newsprint express."
"Kingfish,"
"It
sure has been an
New England built and skip­
awful
lot."
pered by a master mariner from
His specialty is southern fried
Ayer, Mass., this 29-year-old vet­
pork
chops. Captain Millington
eran of the seas holds a unique
claims
the "Kingfish" is one of
place in the American merchant
Crewmembers of the newsprint-toting Illinois-Atlantic ship gather on deck for picture after
the
best
cook afloat... Maybe
marine, freighting huge rolls of
docking in Boston, following a run to Baie Comeau in Canada. Picture was submitted to the
the
best."
paper that keep the presses run­
LOG by Johnny Bunker, former Seafarer, now waterfront reporter for the Christian Science
ning for one of the world's big­
CONTINUOUS CAREER
Monitor.
gest circulation tabloids, the New
Built at Portsmouth, N. H., for,
York Daily News.
but too late to participate in,
The Colabee is now on her World War I, the Colabee has
way from Boston to Baie Comeau had a continuous career in the
in the Gulf of St. Lawrence for sugar, coal sulphur, paper, and
The recently-concluded coastwise referendum
the first newsprint run of the bauxite trades, operating year
season. Capt. W. R. Millington after year partly because her
resulted in the adoption of a new transportation
of Ayer, Mass., hopes that the old-fashioned, "up-and-down" re­
rule effective immediately in all Atlantic and Gulf
last drift ice will be slogging its ciprocating steam engine is econ­
District ports. The new ruling, which the member­
way down the gulf by the time omical and never breaks down. Good Example
he crosses the 45th parallel and
The Daily News and .Chicago
ship favored by a vote that ran three to two, pro­
NEW YORK—It's a far cry
heads up the windy Cabot Strait Tribune, owners of the Colabee
past the Magdalens today or to­ as well as the huge Baie Comeau from the old days aboard Isth­ vides as follows:
paper mills in Canada, could mian ships, especially aboard one
morrow.
"When transportation is due a crew under
After carrying sulphur all have traded the ship in for a that paid off in New York last
the terms of the contract, those men who desire
winter, the Colabee laid at Com­ much newer vessel, but they week. The ship was the Steel
to stay on board the ship can do so, providing
monwealth Pier, South Boston, say "no thanks. They cost too Advocate, and the payoff amazed
all the men who had sailed in
last week, being cleaned out and much to operate."
they do not collect transportation. Those men
dolled up in a bright dress of
The Colabee'svcrew, all mem­ the fleet before.
desiring transportation can collect same and
white, buff, and black.
bers of the Seafarers" Interna­
The vessel came in after a
'
upon receipt of the money shall get off the ship
"Just like a dainty old lady," tional Union, is composed mainly month's voyage without a single
and replacements for those vacancies shall be
said Bos'n Harry Jaynes of Bos­ of men who have been going to beef or a minute of disputed ov­
ton, big-chested sailor who sea for five to 20 years.
ertime. We realize that this is
shipped from the Union Hiring Hall."
thinks "old-timers" like the "One of the best crews I've almost unbelievable, but it is an
Colabee are worth any two of ever sailed with," says the skip­ unvarnished fact nevertheless.
the "fancy" ships they've been per.
It actually happened.
bulging during the past decade "But then," he adds, "this is
COOPERATION
or so.
one of the best ships, too. She
deserves a good crew."
According to the Ship's Dele­ With members of the Canadian
NO JIVE HERE
gate,
J. McKenzie, this smooth Seamen's Union switching in
His view is shared by second
state
of
affairs was the result of droves to the SIU Canadian
mate Glen Hawkins who says
the
excellent
relationship and District, CSU communist leaders
the Colabee rides the waves just
high
degree
of
cooperation be­ are stepping up their campaign
as daintily as she looks. "Not
tween
topside
and
the delegates. of terrorism in a vain attempt to
like these new ships," says Haw­
The
example
set
by the men stem certain defeat.
The
Mississippi
Shipping
Com­
kins. "They act like they're full
of
the
Steel
Advocate
should In one recent week, four
pany's
Delta
Line
has
been
of 'jive'... bounce all over the
spur
crewmembers
in
the
rest members of the SIU Canadian
granted
a
construction
subsidy
place in a heavy sea."
Compared to the SS Willis for a $14,000,000 combination of the Isthmian fleet to work District and one Atlantic and
Vickery, a big C-4 freighter that passenger-cargo vessel. Invita­ according to the terms of the Gulf District member were vic­
also lay at Commonwealth Pier tions for bids will be sent out by agreement. In this way they tims of communist goon squads
last week, the Colabee looked the Maritime Commission in the will eliminate many of the petty in Sanada.
beefs that have been plaguing Two Canadian District men off
- very modest and plain, like a near future.
The new 14,000 gross ton ship, these ships.
simple country lass alongside a
the SS Seaside, Jimmie Robin­
A salute and a tip of the cap son of Winnipeg and Gordon
sophisticated debutante from the with accommodations for 234 pas­
sengers, will operate between to the crew and the officers of MacDonald of Moose Jaw, were
city.
Small though she is compared US Gulf coast ports and the the SS Steel. Advocate.
attacked in the Vancouver home
James Purcell
with newer ships, the Colabee East coast of South America.
of a friend at one o'clock in the
Blackie Cardullo morning by four CSU men
still is running, long after other She will carry a crew of 190T
-vessels of her type and vintage
armed with clubs.
have either gone to the wreckers
At Lapointe pier, Ovide
or been "sold foreign," because
Schmidt and Morris Adler were
she's economical to operate and
beaten by CSU goons as they
tough to sink.
left the Seaside.
The membership of the Seafarers International Union has
The Germans thought they
Both were treated at Van­
consistently reaffirmed its position thtit gear-grabbers can't be couver General Hospital for
had sunk her during the war,
good Union men. Any individual who stoops to pilfering gear chest and face injuries. Two
A submarine torpedoed her
EDWARD CRELAN
such
as coffee percolators, linens, etc., which are placed aboard CSU men are being held by
off Nuevitas, Cuba, in 1942,
SlU-contracted ships, for the convenience of all hands, is, above
gnawing a hole in her side big
police in connection with the at: hands, smashing bones in his
all,
guilty
of
a
malicious
disregard
of
his
shipmates'
welfare.
left hand.
enough to drive a street car
tacks.
^Crew
conveniences
on
most
SIU
ships
today
are
not
there
The pattern of violence was
through.
In Montreal, Seafarer Edward
by accident. They are there because of the Union's successfullyestablished
by the communists
Many of the crew were killed
Crelan of the SS Steel Admiral,
fought struggles to bring greater benefits and comforts and to was assaulted by six CSU goons early in the strike, as they be­
but the Colabee, though she was
provide decent conditions for the membership while out at sea. with lead pipes as he left a gan a campaign of sneak at­
loaded with sugar, jtj^t wouldn't
These hard-won conveniences are for the benefit of ALL waterfront tavern to return to tacks on Canadian seamen. The
sink,
—
HANDS. They ARE NOT to be 'appropriated by any Individual the ship.
beating of Crelan was the first
Two days later, a salvage tug
for his own personal use. Violators of the membership's wel­
Attacked from behind, Crelan time an American Seafarer has
came by and towed her into
fare will be dealt with in accordance with the firm stand taken was knocked down by blows on been attacked, and shows how
Tampa, Fla, After having been
repeatedly by Seafarers in all ports.
the head. As he lost conscious­ desperate the commie goon
repaired, she carried bauxite for
ness, his attackers jumped on his squads have become.
the rest of the war.

The
Patrolmen
Say—

New Transportation Nalo

CSU Goons Running Wild

Delta Line To Build
Combination Liner

Gear-Grabbers Hurt Union

�THE SEAFARERS

We^csdayt June 1&gt; 1343

;v

P«g» Fir*

LOG

WHAT
ttWIlK

H'

; $0
• •' •--* m

m

QUESTION: The recent announcement that charters had been granted to the Marine
Allied Workers and the Brotherhood of Marine Engineers by the Seafarers International Un­
ion was received with considerable enthusiasm by workers within their jurisdiction. What do
you think of this development?
mmmmmm

CARL LAWSON. Bosun;

STEFAN TRZCINSKI. Ch. Ck.:

A. T. ARNOLD. Bosun:

EMIL NORDSTROM. DE:

ED. W. ADAMKO. Ch. Stwd.:

In ihe near future the expaniBion of the SIU, through the
chartering of affiliates, will make
US one of the strongest maritime
bodies in the world. We will
extend to other workers the con­
ditions we in the SIU enjoy and
our program of straight trade
unionism will drive the com­
munists and fellow-travelers out
of the maritime industry. The
chartering of these two new un­
ions is one of the best things
ihat has ever happened within
ihe SIU. I feel that the majority
of engineers and allied workers
Will welcome the chance to hel­
ler their conditions and wages
in the SIU.

I think this is an important
development and a step forward
for all concerned. The American
Federation of Labor's Maritime
Trades Department is gradually
strengthening its position and
becoming the most important la­
bor group on the waterfront. As
a result, all who are members
of organizations affiliated with
it will tind it to their benefit.
This development will have a
stabilizing effect upon the indus­
try. because with more and more
unions hound together for the
common good, activities can be
coordinated very successfully.

I wish that we in the SIU had
had the opportunity to join a
strong, democratic established
union when we were first form­
ing our organization years ago.
I am an oldtimer. and I know
that the fight would have been
much easier and shorter had we
been given strong maritime back­
ing. With the Marine Allied
Workers and the Brotherhood of
Marine Engineers, it's an oppor­
tunity for these organizations to
join with a strong union and re­
ceive the protection and prestige
that the SIU has earned from
everyone it has ever dealt with.
I'm sure these fellows will wel­
come the organizing drive of the
SIU.

I believe it is a good move to
bring other affiliates into our or­
ganization to give them the con­
ditions and representation we en­
joy. At the same time their
numbers make us that much
stronger. Brotherhood is our mot­
to. and we are making a real
brotherhood of seamen and mari­
time workers by bringing the
men into our union. I believe
that these fellows will be happy
to see the SIU enter their fields
to organize. Joining hands with
the engineers will probably elim­
inate some of the thorny prob­
lems that arise over different
contract dates. I'm happy to see
the SIU continue to grow.

My opinion is that the more
maritime workers there are unit'ed under one roof, the beffev
will our chances of winning befter conditions and protecting the
gains we have already made. I
think it is a very fine thing thai
a great many licensed engineers
have decided that the Brother­
hood of Marine Engineers is the
organization for fhem. They've
probably have seen that the Am­
erican Federation of Labor mari­
time unions have made the great­
est advances. All of us should
be glad that the engineers want
to come into our group.

ALVIN (Salty) SEE, AB:

JACK DIETRICH. FWT:

MITCHELL MILEFSKI. Ch. Ck.: L. KRAWEZYK. Waiter:

I'm all for it. I think it bears
out the fad that the American
federation of Labor is widely
tecognized and appreciated for
fts ideals in behalf of its organi­
sations' members. The granting
of these charters means that the
maritime section of the AFL and
ihe SIU will be stronger and
command more prestige. With
more allied affiliates, the AFL
maritime unions can cooperate
oven more closely for the bene­
fit of alL For our own member­
ship, and those of the newlyaffiliated unions, a stronger
brotherhood in maritime is very
desirable.

The Marine Allied Workers
and the Brotherhood of Marine
Engineers are one hundred per­
cent welcome in the SIU. AFL.
Those are my sentiments and I
think it's the view of the ma­
jority. I am glad to see that the
engineers have at last decided
to get away from the leadership
that wrapped them up in poli­
tical stuff and got them nothing.
I think this development proves
that the AFL is the kind of or­
ganization. with a sound founda­
tion and non-political leadership,
that can provide the union bene­
fits these men have needed for
so long..

I think this news is very good.
For one thing, it helps strengthen
our own Union. It also strength­
ens the position .of the members
in the newly-affiliated groups.
The more maritime workers
there are in one strong group,
the better everything will be for
all hands concerned. It's a very
good thing to have all workers—
or as many as possible—in our
trade organized and cooperating
under one banner. We can all
be working together that way,
and accomplishing more. We
should welcome these people in­
to our group and wish them the
best of luck.

Coming into our organization,
these new affiliates will start off
with the advantage of being a
part of the SIU. a name that is
well respected on the waterfront
of the world. They will better be
able to work for better wages
and conditions, if the operators
know they have the backing of
the SIU and the Maritime Trades
Department. I feel that the one
union that can rid the maritime
industry of the communists is the
SIU. and the Brotherliood of
Marine Engineers will find they
have a. strong ally in the SIU
when they tackle any job to
better their way of living.

C. V/. PALMER. OS:
In our line of work it is im­
portant that as many maritime
workers as possible get under
one banner, thereby forming a
strong organization and receiv­
ing the respect they deserve. I
hope for the day when seamen
will form a union of all maritime
workers. The step of the SIU in
giving charters to two new affili­
ates is a step in this direction.
The engineers will be glad to
be rid of the communist strength
in their ranks and enter a bona
fide organization. Many engineersare former SIU men and will
welcome the chance to get back
into a militant organization.

�T H E S E AF A R E RS

Page Si*

Wednesday, June 1. 1949

LOG

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings in Brief
WILMINGTON ^ No meeting
because of lack of 25 bookmembers for quorum.

A&amp;G Shipping From May 4 To May 18

SAN JUAN — Chairman. T.
,
PORT
Lockwood, 24564; Recording Sec­
retary, T. Banning, 3039; Read­ Boston
New York
ing Clerk, P. Dunphy, 46214.
Philadelphia
Motions carried to accept New Baltimore
Business of meetings held in Norfolk
other ports. T. Banning, Port Savannah
Representative, reported that Tampa
Agent Craddock had requested Mobile
a leave of absence, which has New Orleans
been approved by the Secretary- Galveston.
Treasurer. Banning will be Port West Coast
San Juan
GRAND TOTAL

Representative during his ab­
sence. Banning reported all ships
in port in good shape with the
only beef on the Elizabeth. Mem­
bers urged to continue to write
their Congressmen in Washing­
ton. Good and Welfare: P. Dun­
phy volunteered to make up the
shipping list. A discussion was
held on port rules and general
Union matters. One minute of
silence for departed Brothers.
$1

SAN FRANCISCO—Chairman.
A. Michelet, 21164; Recording
Secretary, W. D. Otto, 34661;
Reading Clerk, A. Bailey, 7410.
Motions carried to accept min­
utes of meetings held in other
ports. Agent reported shipping
as poor. Reported that several
men went north to Tacoma,
where the Pontus Ross and Irvin Cobb paid off. Prospects for
immediate future do not appear
bright. Agent reported. Motions
carried to accept and file Sec­
retary-Treasurer's report and Tal­
lying Committee's report on
transportation rule voting. One
minute of silence observed for
departed Brothers. Good and
Welfare: General discussion on
various Union topics. Meeting
adjourned with 65 members pres­
ent.
ii&gt; % a.
GALVESTON—No meeting be­
cause of lack of 25 bookmembers for quorum.
4.
NORFOLK —Chairman, J. S.
White, 57; Recording Secretary,
Clyde Garner, 49929; Reading
Clerk, James Bullock, 4747.
Minutes of meetings held in
other Branches read, accepted
and filed. Headquarters' report
accepted and filed.
Agent re­

ported that, although shipping
has been slow, he expects it to
pick up, as several companies
are bringing ships out of the
boneyard to enter into the coal
trade to Europe. General topics
of interest to the membership
were discussed under Good and
Welfare. Meeting adjourned with
80 members present.
4. 4.
BALTIMORE — Chairman, W.
Reniz, 26445; Recording Secreiazy, D. Stone, 1996; Reading
Clwk, A. Stansbury, 4683.
New Business section of^ min­
utes of meetings held in other

REG.
DECK

REG.
ENG.

REG.
STWDS.

28
125
36
134
38

14
121
30
92
25

19
124
37
70
14

69
72
44
57
11
&gt; 614

ports read and accepted. Motion
carried to post and file all West
Coast and Great Lakes minutes.
Motion carried to forward all
ships' minutes to SEAFARERS
LOG for publication. Eighteen
men excused from meeting for
various reasons. Motions carried
to accept Headquarters' and Tal­
lying Committee's report on
transportation referendum. No
New Business and no Good and
Welfare. Meeting adjourned with
352 members present.
4. 4 4
PHILADELPHIA — Chairman,
Donald Hall, 43372; Recording
Secretary, J. Sheehan, 306; Read­
ing Clerk, J. McPhauL 289.

(No Reg. Figures
53
55
72
149
33
25
48
29
13
11
501

533

TOTAL
REG.

SHIPPED
DECK

61 '
14
370
105 '
103
35
?96
97
77
8
.
(No Figures Available)
Available)
6
"" 177
67
293
95
102
81
134
43
35
8
1,648

NEW YORK—Chairman.'^J. Algina, 1320; Recording Secretary,
F. Stewart, 4935; Reading Clerk,
R. Matthews, 154.
Motion carried to accept Head­
quarters' report and concur in
recommendations. Motions car­
ried to accept minutes of regular
and special meetings held in
other Branches. Agent' reported
better than average shipping, and
issued warning against men
throwing in for jobs for which
they do not have endorsements.
Communications from several
members asking to be excused
were read and referred to Dis­
patcher. One minute of silence
observed for departed Brothers.
Charges against two Brothers
read and referred to a Trial Com­
mittee. No New Business and* no
Good and Welfare. Meeting ad­
journed with 991 members pres­
ent.

Motions carried to accept min­
utes of previous meetings held
in SIU Branches. Communica­
tion from Mrs. Nowery enclosing
a note of thanks to the SIU read
and accepted. New Business. W.
Peerpenski to be changed from
4 4 4
Deck to- Stewards Department.
NEW ORLEANS — Chairman,
Motions carried to accept Head­
quarters* report to membership Warren Wyman, 200; Recording
Secretary, Bill Fredericks, 94;
Reading Clerk, Buck Stephens,
76.

and financial report. Good and
Welfare: Membership went on
record to accept donations for
new television set for Hall. One
minute of silence for departed
Brothers.
.444
BOSTON—Chairman, M. Mor­
ris, 5725; Recording Secretary,
E. Dakin, 180; Reading Clerk, B.
Lawson, 894.
Motions carried to accept and
file minutes of meetings held in
other SIU Branches. Motion car­
ried to post and file all West
Coast and Great Lakes minutes.
Motion carried to accept Agent's
report. New Business: Motion by
Greenridge, 1863, to non-concur
with that part of Headquarters'
report seeking to take money
from the Building Fund until
membership has been told the
amount. Motion carried to ac­
cept the balance of the Head­
quarters' report. Motion carried
to have a delegate attend the
Massachusetts Federation of La­
bor Convention. Ben Lawson el­
ected. Motion carried to have
the Agent buy and have install­
ed seven new window glasses
and a new front door, plus ten
fire extinguishers. One minute of
silence for Brothers lost at sea.
Good and Welfare: Discussion on
permitmen having permits for
long periods of time without
being able to get books. Meeting
adjourned with 120 members
present.

SHIPPED SHIPPED
ENG.
STWDS.

New Orleans' previous miputes
read and accepted. Charges read
against two Brothers and refer­
red to a Trial Committee. Min­
utes of meetings held in other
SIU Branches read and filed.
Agent Sheppard reported that
business of port was in good
shape and no beefs were pend­
ing in the port. Agent reported
that UFE film was available to

559

TOTAL
SHIPPED

16
90
29
78
7

10
90
28
45
6

40
285
92
220
21

6
58
81
58
26
10

8
51
138
41
30
6

20
176
314
180
99
24

459

453

1,471

ships* crews for $40 per print;
Agent reported thaf; inasmuch
as supreme quorum was present,
members should act on recom­
mendation regarding the port of
San Juan. Upon instructions of
Secretary-Treasurer, Buck Steph­
ens is to go to San ^ Juan to
work in conjunction with Crad­
dock and return with recommen­
dations dealing with the port.
Craddock reported that San
Juan could be run by only one
man,- a Port Representative.
Tommy Banning to act as Port
Representative. Motion carried
to accept and concur in Brother
Sheppard's report and the rec­
ommendation regarding the port
of San Juan. Patrolmen reported
on payoffs, sign-ons and beefs
aboard ships contacted. New
Business: Communication from
25 bookmembers of Drl Sud read,
requesting that Ernest Sauls be
reinstated in SIU as a permitmember. Q h a r g e s expelling
Brother were erroneous, crew re­
ported. Motion carried to con­
cur in crew's request. Motion

carried to refer to a committee
the Headquarters' request for
reopening the case of Joseph
Kozlowski. Motion carried that
24 hours after a member ships
his number be scratched from
the shipping list. Good and Wel­
fare: Discussion on compulsory
vacations. Meeting adjourned
with 397 bookmembers present.

MOBILE—Chairman, L. Neira.
26393;
Recording
Secretary,
James L. Carroll, 14; Reading
Clerk, H. J. Fischer, 59.
New Business of meetings held
in other ports accepted and filed.
Agent reported that shipping
would continue slow during com­
ing week. He also reported that
several contractors have submit­
ted bids for renovating building
and he hoped to have definite
plans for the next meeting. "Tan­
ner stated that SIU would be
represented at Alabama State
Federation convention, and if

any members would like to at­
tend as visitors they were wel­
come. Resolution concurred in on
Electricians. Motion carried that
jobs be shipped on the hour.
Tallying Committee's report ac­
cepted. (3ood and Welfare: Sug­
gestion made to move drinking
fountain. Meeting adjourned with
250 members present.
4 4 4
SAVANNAH — Chairman, J.
Drawdy, 28523; Recording Secre­
tary, C. Rice, 40707; Reading
Clerk, E. Bryant, 25806.
Secretary-Treasurer's report
read and accepted. Agent re­
ported activity in port during
past two weeks. Minutes of meet­
ings held in other ports read and
accepted. Tallying Committee's
report accepted. One minute of
silence observed for departed
Brothrs. New Business: Motion
by C. Moss, carried, to repaii
water fountain in Union HalL
Motion by Bryant, carried, to
donate $50 to the Savannah local
of the Retail CSerks Union, AFL.
Discussion on motion revealed
that SIU had been working with
Retail Clerks in Savannah, who
have been organizing the city's
large department stores. Several
men and women, parents of
small children, have been fired
and need aid. Good and Welfare:
Members discussed what could
be done to help the clerks get
organized. Meeting adjourned
with 120 members present.

Lay-Ups, Drydocks Cut New York Shipping
By JOE ALGINA
NEW YORK — Shipping was
fair in this port during the past
ten days, and would have been
better had all of the ships that
hit port taken crews. Some of
the arrivals paid off here and
then went into lay-up or the
shipyard.
Our second Calmar ship in
this port in over a year^ the
Pennmar, paid off and went into
the shipyard. The William Carruth, Trans-fuel, paid off and
laid up for awhile.
Regular payoffs were the
Frances, Kathryn and Marina,
Bull; Seatrain Texas and Seatrain Havana; Algonquin Vic­
tory, St. Lawrence Navigation;
Evistar, Triton; Steel Advocate
and Steel Voyager, Isthmian;
Fairland and Bret Harte, Water­
man, and the Robin Hood, Rob­
in. "The Bret Harte, in from a
;six months trip, is now headed
for the Gulf lay up fleet.

Sign ons were the following:
Raphael Semmes, Bret Harte,
Waterman; Chrysanthystar, Tri­
ton, a tanker reconverted to a
freighter; Robin Kirk, Robin;
Marina, Frances, Kathryn, Bull;
Seatrains Texas ' and Havana,
Steel Voyager, Isthmian.
SHIP PROBLEMS
A couple of points concerning
transportation need commenting
on, to clear up some of the mis­
understandings that have come
up on ships recently.
On a ship that is laying-up,
and the crew is due subsistence
and transportation, the crew is
eligible to collect the money
right at the payoff. They do not
have to wait 30 days, as is the
requirement following a regular
payoff where transportation is
due.
Also if a man is due transpor­
tation money at the end of a
trip, and chooses instead to

waive the money and stay
aboard, that man can continue
sailing on board the ship until
he wishes to payoff.
If at the final payoff the man
is eligible for transportation
money, the fact 4hat he waived
it on an earlier voyage has noth­
ing to do with his later claim.
For example, if a man joins
a ship in the Gulf and it pays
off in New York, the man can
waive
transportation
money.
Then later if the ship returns
to New York for a payoff, the
crewmember can accept trans­
portation money and * pile off,
if the ship is not returning to
its original area within ten days!
This should clear up this matter.
The waiver allowing aliens to
constitute 25 percent of a crew
has been extended for anothe^
year. However, aliens with five
years seatime should make every
attempt to get their citizenship
as soon as possible.:

�THE SEAFARERS lO^G

Pag« Se?en

orrm
s. The Seafarers Intl Union
Recently, the Seafarers International Union of North
America chartered two new affiliates, the Marine Allied
Workers and the Brotherhood of Marine Engineers.
These two unions, formed in response to a demand for
AFL protection by the engineers an^ the workers in allied
marine trades, join an expanding SIU family. Accordingly,
it is appropriate at this time to outline again the structure
of the SIU and its affiliates. This section of the LOG is
devoted to a description of how the SIU and its affiliates are
organized,
,
One thing comes clear: The various units. Districts and
Local unions, which compose the SIU family are completely
self-governing, Each imit elects its own officials. The
International organization does not exist to rule the several
member unions but to serve them.
The communist elements on the waterfront have been
doing their sorry best the past few years to create the
impression that our International Union has dictatorial
powers over the affiliates. As usual, the communists have
been lying, as if that could be much of a surprise to anyone.
Of course,, the communists know they are lying, but
that is their way of operating. In addition, the communists
know that the SIU is their No. 1 enemy on the waterfront.
It was the SIU which stopped the communists during
the days of their greatest powers from taking over the
waterfront lock, stock and barrel. Naturally, the com­
munists are ever ready to spread any slander their hatchetmen can think up to smear the SIU. They don't get away
with much, however, as the steady expansion of the SIU
demonstrates.
It should be remembered that the Seafarers Interna­
tional is dedicated to trade unionism—not political unionism.
The cornerstone of trade unionism is democracy, or rule by
the membership.
Not only do the Districts and Locals of the SIU retain
complete autonomy, but in each unit it is the rank-and-file
who have the final say-so on all District and Local affairs.
This is something the communists never can under­
stand. They can't understand why it works.
But if they need anjr proof that it does work, let them
take another look at the growing strength represented by
all the units of the SIU family. In fact, they'd better get
that look in fast because it's going to be just about their
last one. The communists aren't going to be around much
longer. ~

History Of fnternational

Strufture Of fnternationaf

The Seafarers International Union of North America was born in
November of" 1938, when the AFL presented a charter to the Sailors
Union of the Pacific for the purpose of organizing seamen and maritime
workers on all coasts into one body. The Sailors Union, originally
founded in 1885, formed the SIU when it refused to go along with the
communist-dominated National Maritime Union.
The Atlantic &amp; Gulf District became a part of the International,
evolving from the AFL Seamen's Union. At the same time the Great
Lakes District was chartered by the International. Within a year a
charter had been granted to the Canadian Seamen's Union. The CSU
was subsequently expelled when it refused to repiidiate its communist
leanings. The Canadian District was reformed a year later with its
nucleus in the British Columbia Seamen's Union.
During this period, local, state and regional groups of fishermen
and cannery workers came into the International and were united under
the SIU banner. In 1948, the Inland Boatmen's Union, affiliated with the
CIO, broke the hold of the communists and affiliated directly with the SIU.
Within the past few weeks the SIU has granted charters to two
new affiliates, the Marine Allied Workers and the Brotherhood of Marine
Engineers.
At the end of nearly eleven years of action, the SIU has, grown
from a union of several small Districts and independent groups into a
powerful body embracing over 90,000 marine, fishery and cannery workers
in the United States, Canada and Alaska.

The Seafarers International Union of North America is simple but
compact in structure.
The SIU is composed of a number of separate units, some of them
having the status of Districts, others the status of Local Unions.
Each District or Local is an autonomous organization in its own
right. But all are linked together through the International Union,
because seamen, fishermen and other workers in the maritime industry
know that they can obtain and maintain high wages and conditions only
if they have a strong, well-coordinated Organization behind them.
The chief executive officer of the International is the president. In
addition, there are eight vice-presidents and a secretary-treasurer. The
president, the vice-presidents and the secretary-treasurer sit as the Union's
executive committee. The secretary-treasurer is the only paid officer.
The International constitution specifies that the International officers
be elected by the convention which the president must call at least
every two years. The Districts and Locals send delegates to the conven­
tion on a per-capita basis. The convention itself acts as a legislative
body on matters affecting all the member unions.
The present officers were elected by the Fourth Biennial Convention
held in Baltimore at the end of March. They are:
President, Harry Lundeberg; Secretary-Treasurer, John Hawk; First
Vice-President, Paul Hall; and Vice-Presidents, Leslie Ballinger, Mrs.
Andrea Gomez, Patrick McHugh, Lester Caveny, Morris Weisberger, John
Fox and Cal Tanner.

�Page Elghft

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Wedosidap June 1. 1949

UxternxiSouil Vnicm-at JhigthAtaexicA.

•. •»,
.V

.r : ...

• • .f •'

• li;:
I

ATLANTIC^ ^ULE
DISTRICT
- &gt;

CANADIAN
DISTRICT

•&gt;-,

•K

y"i'

WORKERS,ETC.

•/
fr

!

\r

MARINE,
ALLIED V

SAILORS
fUNlONof-Hiel
PACIFIC

WORKERS'

INLAND

BOATMEN'S
UNION
'i. V

6REAT LAKTES

DISTRICT

BROTMERHOOD
OF MARINE
ENGINEERS

'

--V

't;

.J

�WedlietdaT' Juti* 1. 1949

THE

S E AF A RER S

^Xh^teAyKs. Stana!«

Components Of International
In addition to local, statewide and regional units of cannery workers
and fishermen on all coasts of the United States and Alaska, the Seafarers
International Union of North America is composed of seven other com­
pletely autonomous maritime affiliates, which make up a forge of over
90,000 workers.
The units and their principal officers are:

-

Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Paul Hall, Secretary-Treasurer
Sailors Union of the Pacific, Harry Lundeberg, Secretary-Treasurer!
Great Lakes District, Fred Farnen, Secretary-Treasurer
Canadian District, David Joyce, Secretary-Treasurer
Inland Boatmen's Uhion, John M, Fox, Secretary-Treasurer
Marine Allied Workers, Lindsey Williams, Secretary-Treasurer
Brotherhood of Marine Engineers, Secretary-Treasurer, to be elected.

Two of the Districts of the SIU are recent additions: the Marine
Allied Workers and the Brotherhood of Marine Engineers, both expected
to shortly become strong pillars of the SIU family. A third unit, the
Canadian District, through a recent drive in Canada, has become the
most powerful maritime union in that country and has greatly added to
the strength of the International."
The various Distracts of the SIU cover the entire coasts of the
United States and Canada. Moreover, the SIU's strength is felt through­
out the United States' network of inland waterways and Great- Lakes.
Wherever workers are engaged in work connected with the maritime
industry, affiliates of the SIU are there helping to bring them better
conditions and wages.

How fnternational Operates

ill

The International Executive Board of the SIU, elected at the regular
biennial conventions, is composed of the President, Secretary-Treasurer
and eight vice-presidents, and is responsible for the handling of tasks
•which affect the International as a body.
When legislation is before Congress which affects the welfare of
any of its component organizations the SIU's Washington representative
is on hand to defend their interests. The SIU was strongly represented
in the recent fight to keep American ships hauling 50 percent of ECA
cargoes, and the SIU has contributed greatly to the never ending battle
to repeal the Taft-Hartley Act.
In other matters, the International works closely with member Dis­
tricts when they are involved in strikes or organizing campaigns. Often
the International sends organizers in to help a District, as was done in
Canada recently.
In conferences on affairs affecting the SIU on a world-wide basis, the
International is aiways represented. The SIU maintains a delegate with
the International Transportworkers Federation, and is working closely
•with that body on the proposed Panamanian boycott. An International
representative was in attendance at the Safety of Life at Sea Conference
held in London in 1947. At that meeting many steps were taken toward
making life at sea less hazardous.

Page Nine

LOG

Aatonomy Of Districts
Each component Union of the Seafarers International Union of North
America is a self-governing organization.
Each Union has its own constitution, its own elected officers, its own
shipping rules and its own committees.
Ih each Union, the members establish their own policies by demo­
cratic procedures, without intereference from other districts or locals, and
without interference from the International. In fact, the constitution of
the International nowhere binds the member Unions to definite policies
of any kind.
Members of the various imits of the Seafarers International Union
of North America recognize that each Union has its own problems, prob­
lems which are characteristic of the particular maritime trade in which
tlje Union holds jurisdiction.
For instance, fish cannery workers do not sail 'round-the-world
freighters, and do not possess intimate knowledge of seamen's problems.
At the same time, few seamen know much about the problems faced by
fishermen or fish cannery employees. Obviously, it would be presumptu­
ous for workers in one section of the maritime industry to tell those in
another exactly how to carry out their day-to-day routines.
However, there are many problems common to all maritime workers
—whether they sail deepsea ships, sail fishing boats, work in fish process­
ing plants or in other sections of the industry. This is where the Inter- '
- national enters in the picture.
Moreover, the International stands ready at any time to come to
the aid of a member Union in organizing, negotiating contracts or any­
thing else when the membei^ Union asks assistance. In fact, all Districts
and all Locals of the Seafarers International Union, as well as the
International itself, are always ready to help each other.

Benefits To Districts
Over and above the representation the International gives the
Districts in national and international matters affecting the various Dis­
tricts, the International also benefits the Districts in specific cases where
called upon for assistance. In no case, however, does the International
step into a District's activities unless specifically requested.
In the recent campaign by the Canadian District the International,
at that District's request,. assisted in planning the organizing campaign
and advanced money to carry out its work and establish new halls.
The International also lent money to the Cannery Workers of San Diego,
when that affiliate underwent expansion last year. Almost all Districts
have benefitted from the International's financial
aid at some time
or another.
The International was responsible for sending an International officer
into the field to investigate the possibilities of organizing workers in
trades allied to maritime. The success of this move is shown by the
recent affiliation to the International of the Maritime Allied Workers, a
thriving waterfront organization along the Atlantic and Gulf coasts.
Not so readily seen, but equally as important, the International
constantly strives to carry out a program for a better merchant marine
for the United States. Specifically, the International has for the past
few years devoted great effort toward the revitalization of coastwise
and intercoastal shipping, both which suffered greatly as a result of the
war.
*

fnternationaTs Affiliations
The Seafarers International Union, which in ^ itself is made up of
affiliations of districts and local unions, is also an affiliate of three mighty
national and international organizations.
First, the SIU is a member of the AFL Maritime Trades Depart­
ment, an organization representing 200,000 organized workers in all
branches of maritime. With the SIU in the Maritime Trades Depart­
ment are the International Longshoremen's Association, the Masters,
Mates &amp; Pilots, the Radio Officers Union, and locals of the International
Brotherhood of Teamsters. Through the MTD the SIU has received
direct backing in many waterfront disputes.
The SIU is also affiliated with the American Federation of Labor,
which represents almost 8,000,000 organized workers in the United
States and Canada. Other member unions of the AFL demonstrated
their solidarity with the SIU on many occasions when they gave support
to the SIU. Their aid was strongly shown recently when they united
with the SIU to battle the proposal which would have seriously cur­
tailed American ship participation in ECA shipping.
Third, the SIU is a member of the International Transportworkers
Federation, a worldwide organization of millions of maritime workers.
At present the ITF is cooperating with the SIU in its battle to rid the
merchant marine of Canada of communis Is.
In addition to these far-flung organizations the SIU maintains
membership in central and state labor bodies, where labor problems
of a local nature are dealt with jointly.

�Page Ten

THE SEAFARERS tOG

WeAieiday, June 1. 1949

:-L--

y

p/S7K/cr'^opavo/ny

y.

yy

y.

PLED&amp;ED AGA/Z^sr
VfCTAT^S^/PS

0W^Aft71Eei&gt;

m? t&gt;BAioc^AcrJ

.."irAfSfiSfl,

• •

shai)

y

Lowssr

liATtSXONl,

f&amp;^-CAP/TA
TAKOFANY
UNION'

'o hti

aiid

mh Per

'Petti.

Ott

•ct oi

FUNDS OF
DiSTPfOTS
CONmoU£DB/^
DfSTN'CrS/

' ^&gt;V59 ASSeSSNSNTS
UNIBSSPASSGD
sy
RefSNSNDONI
y^Yiic^

VlOP®' oUinKj®^^

PRBAMBlS PiBDQ&amp;S
MUTOALA'Di

m:

Wu /'.

Vow/

oVre'nB^^"

vorH^. landing our ®^gani®a.^^°7aud bringevds at ^^vtbcriug « |^y exists ^^^j^poneTit
poseo.. uereitn ••„*.:on tbe. —tivuuit"

»

*

7////

V

vmisvmiwsw
:S

5" '•.

• •

•

'•• /
•v.: -

"t, .j,;'.'
•:r

f,

�Wednesday, June 1, 1949

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Elf^en

i

SHIPS' MINUTES AND NEWS
Wacpsta Crewmember
Presumed Lost At Sea
Louis E. Tipps, Deck Engineer aboard the SS
Wacosta, has been reported missing and is pre­
sumed lost, according to word received recently
from the Ship's Delegate.* 'I relieved the other Wiper at
Tipps disappeared from 4 A.M. About 4:05, Brother Tipps
the vessel the morning got out of bed and went to the
of April 20 in the vicinity hospital head. He then came outwalked passed me, saying
of Gibraltar after he and
'excuse me,' and went out the
complained of "pains in hospital door.
the head." The Wacosta "I waited perhaps two minutes
was US-bound from Ital­ and then went looking for him.
ian ports, having stopped

I had been given strict or^

ders to maintain close -supervi­
—sion over him. I found his show­
The Ship's Delegate said Tipps
er clogs outside the passageway,
presumably jumped over the
but no sign of Brother Tipps,"
Seafarer-arlist Norman Maffie depicts the remains of a Japanese coaatwise tanker lying side.
Mc Peters added.
A thorough search of the Wa­ "After a quick look around I\
on the bottom of shallow harbor anchorage in Singapore. Sketch was made during a recent trek
costa
was made by all hands as , reported his absence to the
to the Far East aboeurd an Isthmian ship.
soon as a crewmember reported bridge."
•.
to the Master at 4:10 A.M. that
Brother Tipps is survived by
Tipps had disappeared. A ten­ his wife and two children of
minute search, led by Ship's 359 Baldwin Ave., Chickasaw,
Delegate Red Darley, proved Ala. He sailed on ATS ships durfruitless. The Master then or-1
been a
dered
that
the
Wacosta
be
turned
member
of
the
SIU
for
past
two
'
Statements from three South African dairies attesting to the purity of the
around and her course retraced. years.
milk sold to Robin Line crews were submitted to the LOG this week in answer to a All hands were alerted and Darley reports that "Tipps was
story in the "Capetown Argus" claiming that the milk in South Africa was not pas­ lookouts were posted on the bow, a good Union man and was well
teurized and the cows tuber-*„„.„.
TT ; T"
; ^ ;;
;
T" stern and cross tree. Two crew- liked by his shipmates."
SEAFARERS LOG on March 4. IS not one herd of cattle supply- members manned the search­
cular.
In the LOG story Stewards were ing milk for Capetown dairies lights on the fiying bridge, pain­
The statements were forward­ urged to forego fresh milk in that is entirely free of tubercu­ stakingly playing them on the
ed to the LOG by the crew of South Africa because of the "Ar­ losis." The situation was report­ darkened waters as the Wacosta
the Robin Goodfellow, which gus" story, which reported that ed as being worse on the East went back over her course.
paid off this week in Baltimore dairy men in South Africa do Coast of Africa.
For two hours the Wacosta
following a voyage to South and not want to go to the trouble
Though the Goodfellow crew maneuvered while her crew
Southeast Africa.
or expense of installing the pas­ did not obtain statements from searched the area for the miss­
The newspaper item came to teurizing equipment necessary to Capetown dairies, they obtained ing Deck Engineer but to no
the attention of the crew when render milk fit to drink. The notes claiming pasteurization of avail. The ship returned to Gi­ Steel Fabricator crewmembers,
it was reprinted in part in the clipping also leported that "there all milk sold by three dairies, braltar at 8:30 A.M. and reported recently returned from a voyage
two in Durban and one in Port Tipps' disappearance to the au­ to the Far East, promise a good
time to Seafarers hitting the port
WELL TOGGED TWOSOME
Elizabeth. All three dairies noted thorities there.
of
Soengeigerong, Sumatra,
that their milk is pasteurized and
According to Ship's Delegate Dutch East Indies, where^ they
inspected regularly by govern­ Darley, Tipps became ill on
say, the American residents
ment and corporation inspectors. April 16. He complained to the
show every courtesy to seamen.
The milk is claimed to meet the Master of "pains in the head."
In minutes of a shipboard
standards laid down by the lo­ The Master placed Tipps in the
meeting held recently at sea H.
cal health laws. No comment was hospital, Darley said, and or­
D. Higginbotham, recording sec­
made by the dairies on the "Ar­ dered a crewmember to stand by retary, reported that Americans
gus" report that tuberculosis was in case the ill crewman required in the port bearing the tpnguewidespread among dairy herds. aid.
twisting name are very court­
Chelsea Dairy Limited, of Nar­
A strict 24-hour watch was eous and hospitable and will ex­
rower Road, Port Elizabeth, not­ maintained at his quarters from tend the same hospitality to any
ed that only pasteurized milk is the moment Tipps became ill.' other crew that arrives in the
supplied to shipping concerns by Darley said that from the time' port.
that firm.
Baynesfield Dairies, of Tipps' entry into the ship's The Seafarer sounded one note
Sydney Road, Durban, and Royal hospital until he disappeared of caution, however. Crewmem­
and Regent Dairies, 65 Umbilo four days later, Tipps' never ap­ bers are expected to act like
Road, Durban, also vouched for peared violentlj: ill.
gentlemen. Higginbotham noted,
the quality of their milk.
Frank Peters, the standby as­ and not trj- to take over the
Robin Line maintains twelve signed-to Tipps' quarters at the place and run their bistro, the
ships in regular service to time of the incident, told Dele- Stumble Inn, the only place in
South African ports.
gate Darley:
{the port to drink.

at Gibraltar for bunkers.

Robin Line Vessels Receive Pure Milk,
Say Statements Of South African Dairies

Hosts In Sumatra;
Hospitable, Says
Fabricator Crew

'The Voice Of The Sea'
By SALTY DICK

Two of the Del Norte stalwarts. Leo"^ Morsette. left,
2nd Steward, and Joe Kotalik, Bellboy, prepare for a • day's
work. Both ere-staunch Seafarers.

The credit goes to the SS
Morning Light for being one of
the cleanest ships I ever laid
eyes on. The crew is on the
ball... Worth P i 11 m a n has
switched from Deck to Stewards
Department. Perhaps he wants
to be near food continually ...
Haven't seen Lou Fisher in a
long time. The last time was in
England,
For the roughest elevator
ride you' ever had, take the
one at SI wane House. The Dog-

house rates second ... Bosun
Crowley has tried many times
but has had no luck in pick­
ing horses. Why not try grey­
hounds for a change of luck?
... Every SIU member should
read the State Of The Union.
You'll learn more about your
Union.
Antonio Schiavone eats noth­
ing but baby food. And he look.^
like a medicine cabinet with all
the pills and herbs he carries
around ... Rosando Serrando and
•Y. .

Joe Juliano, with their white
caps, were seen helping out the
Isi-aeli movement. Histadrut, re­
cently ... Do you know the new
technique for sougeeing? You
should start at the bottom and
work up. This prevents streaks.
Honesty is the best policy—^
yeah! John Pisa, found a
wallet containing $750 belonging
to a passenger aboard ship. He
returned it to the owner and
at the end of the trip received a
$3 rewaird.

�-i-..

r-

Page Twdva

THE SEAT ARERS

LOG

Wedaeflday, June 1. 1949

Seafai^sr Saon sagss Digested Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings

KYSKA, Mar. 27—W. F. Paige.
standby when day off is given.
-Chairman; G. Byrne. Secretary.
Good and Welfare: Discussion
Stewards delegate to se about
on whether or not imitation
getting room change for Cooks.
flavored cold drinks should be
Crew voted to keep ship ^clean
served.
Suggestion made to
for payoff. Vote of thanks to
check port hole and door screens.
Cooks and Stewards. On repair
Suggestion made that Patrolman
list need to fix water fountains
ask company to be morc^ careful
stressed. Minute of silence for
with crew's mail.
Brothers lost at sea.
it
% % %
DEL RIO, April 4—Floyd CumSEATRAIN NEW YORK, Mar.
mings. Chairman; R. T. Whitley.
20—W. T. Dalton. Chairman;
Secretary.
Delegates reported
Charles Goldstein. Secretary.
small bit of disputed overtime.
Minutes of previous meeting ac­
Old Business: Crewmembers who
cepted. Steward delegate re­
had been performing during
ported two hours disputed and
early
part of voyage have
that one man missed ship in New ported number of books in their straightened out. Motion car-'
York. Bales elected ship's dele­ departments., Good gnd Wel­ ried to drop all charges against
gate. Department delegates to fare: Brother D. Ginn suggested these men. If they foul up
check books and permits and to that last stand-by man on each again charges to be automati­
settle number of minor beefs. watch clean up messroom. Crew cally reinstated. One minute of
Minute of silence for departed voted 18 to 7 in favor of plain silence for departed Bi'others.
milk over buttermilk. Discus­
Brothers.
sion on the disposition of the
washing machine and two elec­
tric irons should the ship lay
up. Decision made to turn items
in to nearest SIU Hall. Ship's
delegate suggested that all dele­
gates visit Captain on a beef in­
stead of just one, thereby having
4. 4. 4.
% % %
two witnesses to any statement
TWIN FALLS VICTORY,
PURDUE VICTORY, Mar. 13— the Captain may make.
April 2—S. L. Woodruff, Chair­
Richard Weaver, Chairman;
man; J. Kite, Secretary. Dele­
t. t- t.
Thomas
Williams, Secretary. DEL CAMPO, Mar. 10—Bill gates reported disputed overtime
Delegates reported no beefs Kavilf, Chairman; Bill Horsfall, and number of books and peipending. New Business: Motion Secretary. Report of number of mits in their departments. New
By HANK
carried to feed in two messrooms days ship had no hot water and Business: Sagarind elected ship's
for the dui-ation of the voyage to
All Seafarers in port and their families back in those home­ see how method works out. heat was tui-ned over to Purser. delegate. Motion by Bragg, car­
towns should still keep writing those letters to Congressmen and Thompson discussed the trans­ Delegates reported no disputed ried, that all card games be con­
Senators to have the Taft-Hartley Act repealed. The true labor portation rule. Good and Wel­ overtime. Good and Welfare: ducted in recreation room. Edu­
Steward to receive all linen be­ cation: Long discussion on ways
supporters in Washington have indicated they are anxious to fare: Discussion on greater co­
fore ship enters shipyard. Sug­ and means of keeping ship clean,
repeal this monstrous anti-labor law before July 31. Every Sea­ operation in crew's messroom.
gestion made that matti-ess cov­ (^ood and Welfare: Stewards De­
farer should realize that, in continuing to write those letters, he Steward thanked crew and dele­ ers be put on all new innerpartment members requested
will help stop the labor unions from getting a raw deal all over gates for fine cooperation re­ spring mattresses to protect them
greater cooperation from crew.
again. Every union man's letter helps... That's sure good news. ceived during trip. One minute while in the shipyard.
Con­ Crew asked for more milk. Ste­
Brothers, about the Maritime Commission approving Mississippi of silence for Brothers lost at gratulations voted the Stewards ward reported requisition had
Line's application for a subsidy to build a passenger-cargo vessel sea.
Department for doing a fine job. been cut from 200 to 160 quarts.
carrying 234 passengers.
4" ^ ^
Only beef to Steward was that
4. a? 4.
CAROLYN, Mar. 5 — Robert entire crew had gained weight.
FRANCES, AprU IG—Williams,
Godwin, Chairman; B. J. Schmitz
Chairman; B. Goodman. SecreSecretary.
Minutes of previous
Bob High, who hasn't homesteaded on any ship for too
lary. Delegates reported no
meeting read and accepted.
beefs, all in order. New Busi­
long a time (except for the Evangeline), sailed on the Robin Delegates reported on number
ness: Motion carried that three
Kirk for those South African ports he knows all about. With of books and permits in their
departmdhts take turns keeping
him are Paul Curze and "Put Them in the Pocket" Frank departments. New Business: Mo­
laundry cleaned. Motion carried
Brown—carrying a bundle of the latest LOGS. Smooth Cape- tion by Luis Cededa to have
to attempt to get fresh milk,
jury head installed on fan tail
fruit and fish in Puerto Rico. B.
tbwning, fellas... George Fiance is in town with his familiar
while in islands. Motion by R.
Goodman elected ship's delegate.
homburg. It is a homburg, isn't it, George?... That Cook with DeFretes that all permitrnen be
4. S, S&lt;
Good and Welfare: Crew aired
SEATRAIN
NEW
JERSEY,
a mustache, Mitchell Milefski, sailed in with his mustache paid off at the port of sign on.
April 25 — G. W. Champlin, complaints about food. Steward
after a trip. His shipmate of a Cook, Cliff Wilson, stayed E. Ham accepted as ship's dele­
Chairman; Ray Robertson, Sec­ not blamed as he had caught
gate. Good and Welfare:
aboard for a "refresher" of good voyaging... William Traser
retary. Delegates reported num­ ship at last minute. One , minute
sailed into town... Brother Albert Birt is one Brother who DeFretes suggested that each de­ ber of books and permits in their of silence for departed Brothers.
partment take turns in cleaning
New Business:
keeps on staying happy day after day. It could be called laundry room. Suggestion by departments.
Vote
of
thanks
to
3rd Cook for
southern comfort—and we don't mean the hard stuff, either.
Cededa that chairs in crewmessjob
well
done
and
vote
of thanks
room be repaired. One minute
to Ray Robertson, crew ^messof silence for departed Brothers.
man, for excellent work. Letter
Here are many of the Brothers in town, or were, recently:
of recommendation for book for
STEEL FABRICATOR, April
James Dunifer, Charles Dasha, Gerald De Meo, John Bender, Sal
Robertson to be signed by entire 10—Earl Foe, Chairman; H. D.
Scuderi, James Naylor, Chester Skakun, Walter Migaud, George
crew. Ship's delegate Bill Gray Higginbolham, Secretary. Dele­
Kosch, Richard Ferguson... Then there's Juan Rueda with his
thanked for fine job. Champlin gates reported things running
mustache... Lindell Morgan happy over getting that good old
suggested
that each man donate okay, except engine delegate
t it
stuff called "mail" ... Frank Throp with his mustache ... Richard
STEEL EXECUTIVE, Mar. 24 10 cents each toward ship fund. who reported 200 hours of dis­
Tate who sailed into town recently... Jess Garcia sailed for a —Edward V. Smith, Chairman; Discussion on having cocoa cola puted overtime. New Business:
long voyage... Frank Webb also sailed from this chilly and rainy Raymond Ulatowski, Secretary. machine put aboard. Majority Motion by Higginbolham that
town... The SEAFARERS LOG will be sailing free of cost to Delegates reported everything opposed.
letters of recommendation be
the homes of the following Brothers: Charles Moss of Georgia, okay, except in Stewards Depart­
given permitmon. Motion by
i 4- t
Harold Jaynes of Massachusetts, George Elhbracht of Missouri, Joe ment where there is five hours SEATRAIN HAVANA, April Bates that Patrolman contact
Justus of North Carolina, Walter Harris of Florida, E. M. Bryant of disputed overtime. New Busi­ 24 — Oliver, Chairman; L. L. port captain on repairs and get
of Georgia, Elliott Williams of Florida, H. D. Carney of North ness: Motion carried to have hot Phillips, Secrefary. Deck dele­ action before ship leaves Balti­
Carolina, Sago Hanks of Florida, E. Magboo of Maryland, John water line in PO mess connected gate reported one hour of dis­ more. Suggestion that money
Yuknas of Maryland... That Gulf oldtimer Brother Ernest Bright to line in galley. Motion carried puted overtime, other depart­ realized from fines be sent to
to leave all quarters shipshape ments okay. New Business: Mo­ Brothers in TB hospital. Steward
is in port. What port did you anchor in. Brother Bright?
when leaving ship at payoff. Re­ tion made to have Steward see Department thanked deck and
port made that charges placed about getting more milk and engine men for splendid co­
against
a Brother at last meeting fresh vegetables, and check on operation during trip. Deck and
Brother Charles Hurst probably is still aboard the Steel
have been dropped because of cots.
engine departments return e,d
Mariner... John Dugina writes that it's probably bad publicity his good behavior. Good and
thanks and ^expressed gi^atitude
to say that the "Colabees," baseball crew of the SS Colabee, Welfare: Warnmg made that
ELIZABETH, \pril 24—Rich­ for well prepared food.
lost their anxiously-awaited first game to the Canadians by the crewmembers are not to go over ard Barron, Chairman; Grady
t, S. t.
football score of 21 to 3. Well, John, next game will be better delegates' heads with their beefs Faircloth, Secretary. Delegates OREMAR, April 6—C. Parker.
reported everything okay, ex­ Chairman; M. N. Eschenko, Sec­
(or worse)... Several Brothers with a sense of humor are to topside. A vote of thanks was
given the Stewards Department cept deck delegate who reported retary.- Delegates reported no
plenty confused. They have asked us who was the dog they for their fine work. One min­ few beefs on overtime.
New beefs. Good and Welfare: Sug­
saw with Brother "Ziggy" Zygarowski recently. Well, fellas,
ute of silence for Brothers IdSt Business: Motion carried to let gestion made that the Uniori'atdelegates handle repair lists.- tempt to get more food aboard
that dog has four legs, it barks and it no doubt might keep at sea.
Motion
carried to have Steward for the next voyage. Suggestion
i
t
.
good old Ziggy, the bellyrobber, aboard ship for two trips...
LOYOLA VICTORY, Feb. 27— order more fresh fruit. Motion made that cookies be put out
Brothers, keep those ships clean and happy. Run your jobs G. H. Seeberger, Chairman; Red carried to go on record as being
for night lunch. One mihute of
in SIU style, according to the agreement.
Fisher, Secretary. Delegates re- opposed to calling Hall for silence for departed Brothers.

iWlS l?eejgexteaideddfora«ol3^

^ear, -those alicit i?inattier«
ojlto aJre/cH6il7JcJbrcit^2eJ^sHt
Are ari?c&lt;i &amp;
thetp
V^yoE^.
tMAA l^eilielAst
tittte iKe oraiv'eac arill l?e
extended — eodo/nofr
let ^oar5elvBs,l?e
cAxigiit s^hort 1

CUT and RUN

�W«ln«Bday. June 1. IfM

THE SEAFARERS LOG

Fmgm Thirieen

tHE MEMBERSHIP SPEAKS r1^

Charges CS Self-Glorifying
Campaign Ignores Crewmen

THAT MOMENT TO RELAX

Union Oldtimer
In Japan With
Occupation Army

does not believe that the laws
of the nation apply to them at
To the Editor:
The seamen of the Cities Serv­ all. The theory of the feudal
ice fleet have spoken, and the ages and robber barons is their
I was a member of the SIU
company does not like their only code—and it is not an hon­
for over six years when I was
word or language. They voted orable one.
drafted into the Army. I am now
for the SIU by an overvi^helming
in
Japan, and would like to
We can look for a dying at­
vote of almost 90 percent.
have
the LOG sent to me.
tempt by this notorious company
A law-abiding company would to throw their crews off the
Before my induction the LOG
have signed an SIU contract on ships once more and replace
was sent to my home, which is
,the spot in accordance with the them with company-minded zom­
in New Orleans, and is still be­
results of the vote. They would bies who will submit to the rope
ing sent there. My folks read it
have fired the company's legal placed about their necks by the
and I would like to have it
stooge behind their fictitious oil barons, and who are willing
continue to go there and also
company union.
have it sent to me here in
to toil under the eye of the
In preparation for the vote, company's espionage system. This
Japan.
I am stationed at Camp Sahai,
Cities Service fired all in the system exists. How else were
crews whom they suspected of they able to throw crew after
which is about 40 miles from
being pro-SIU. That in itself was crew of pro-SIU men off their
Kobe.
I would like to say hello to
a violation of all that is Ameri­ ships in the past?
my shipmates in good old New
can. They acted from their con­ The Cities Service oligarchy
Orleans and Mobile. I would also
cepts of tyranny and oppression. pretends neutrality to all sea­
They do not wish to grant se­ men who seek jobs, but don't
like to say hello to my ship­
mates who were with me on my
curity to the men who man their show your Union button or im­
Representatives of the three departments of the SS Joseph last voyage aboard the SS Clai­
vessels, and through whose toil ply that you are a member or
and efforts their huge profits believer in Unionism. You will
N. Teal, Waterman, appear content with life at coffee time. borne in October, 1948. If any­
were made.
find that you are not wanted. Left to right the Brothers are. Ores, FWT; Lucky, Oiler: Kitty one wishes to write me my ad­
dress is: Co. C, 27th Infantry
Cities
Service
corporation, Even the mere suspicion of Un­ Cheshire, AB, and Woody Perkins, Chief Cook.
Regt.,
APO 25, Unit 1, c/o Post­
however, has no hesitation in ionism is enough to bar you
master,
San Francisco.
publishing newspaper advertise­ from employment.
Ret. Salvator Candela
ments glorifying the American Is this the free America for
financial system of free enter­ which we fought in the past war
prise and initiative. Possibly to and for which thousands of sea­
attract investors who may be men died on the seven seas?
attracted by the high earnings of
A new innovation which found
The un-American concepts of To the Editor:
the corporation.
a
the Cities Service Oil barony is The SS George D. Prentice, lot of favor with the boys was
the "snackbar," an idea of Lou
SPEAK NOT FOR MEN
seemingly prepared to flout the Waterman liberty, finished
an­ Young's. After each meal all
government
itself.
Now what are they talking American
They
are
planning
to
throw
the other long one when she pulled the left-overs were put on the To the Editor:
about, and to whom? Certainly
galley serving table for every­
the ads of the Company do not pro-SJU crews off their ships, into Savannah, Gorgia, on Fri­ one to help himself. A couple I am writing in regard to John
day the Twentieth of May. She
apply to the men whom they in violation of the NLRB.
of nights each week Steward Goldsborough, III, a member of
pulled out of Baltimore on Feb­ Lou Young would be in the the SIU. John was injured in a
deny all that Americanism stands
PRESS CLAIMS
for: security of employment at
ruary Fifth with a load of phos­ galley keeping his hand in on head-on collision of automobiles
decent wages protected by Un­ In my opinion all men thrown phate for Inchon, Korea, and af­ making pies, doughnuts, cinna­ and suffered a compound frac­
ion contracts, the rights of free off their ships should sue the
company for wages lost up to ter bunkering at Sasebo, Japan, mon buns and tarts. From the ture of his left leg. He has been
speech, the right to choose their
way they disappeared from the hospitalized since March 27.
collective bargaining agent in a the time they return to the very made the run direct from there snackbar when finished it seems John would like a notice put
secret ballot supervised by the same jobs on the same vessel. to Savannah, with no stop-offs. that Lou's hand has lost none of in the SEAFARERS LOG to
NLRB,- the right to live as free The point of signing on should
notify his shipmates of his acci­
A long, dull trip was made its skill.
men aboard these vessels which be the measure of the travelling enjoyable by the excellent Stew­
dent,
for he was intending to
expenses from the port where
EARN THANKS
are in their care and control.
meet some Brothers in one of the
ards Department, headed by Lou
they were thrown off.
These are the elementary hu­
Young, and featuring Danny Lip- Any of the boys who have ports when he suffered the acci­
man rights guaranteed under the To force this corrupt corpora­ py and Dorsey Faugh in the worked up a good appetite on dent. He would like them to
American Constitution and Bill tion to sign a contract with the Chief Cook and Baker jobs res­ the beach and see Lou Young, know where he is and why he
of Rights. Obviously Cities Serv­ SIU is not enough. Divine retri­ pectively. After a long, hungry Danny Lippy and Dorsey Paugh was beached.
ice has never read them and bution calls for exact justice. session on the beach the boys heading a Stewards Department, He is at Corona Naval Hospi­
-They are invoking the primitive
take a tip and sign on, because tal, Corona, California. He is
law of might makes right, and thought they had tumbled into that trio stands for good grub,
now in traction and expects to
heaven
when
they
ran
into
Chesty Bosun
certainly merit the answer of an
well-cooked. Thanks Lou, Danny undergo surgery this week to
Danny's
cooking
and
Paugh's
eye for an eye and a tooth for
and Paugh from all the boys.
have his leg set.
a tooth in the interests of keep­ baking.
Carmen E. Goldsborough
Signed by 17 Crewmembers
ing the books straight. They de­
MAKE MINE RARE
serve this and have earned it
Tender steaks (as many as
by their record.
v'msmmm
mm&amp;m
The men on the vessels of the you could eat and actually cook­
Cities Service tanker fleet have ed to order), roast beef you
voted to end their slavery could cut with a fork, potatoes
through the assistance given cooked all nineteen ways pos­
them by the Seafarers Interna­ sible, fresh-frozen Birdseye veg­
etables, good rich gravies; in
tional Union, AFL.
fact,
just about the best cooking
We are ready to wager that
that
any of the boys had run
the men aboard these ships will
into
in
many a day, either on
resent further interference by the
ship or ashore.
Oil Barons.
. I have sailed on the CS ships With any other Baker than
and know the score. It is up to Paugh the baking might have
every seaman, on ship and shqre, seemed bad in contrast to such
union or non-union, to watch good cooking but Paugh came
the maneuvers of the oil barons through with a string of light
closely from now n. The vote cakes, flaky pies and delicious
Beauregard Bosun Tommy is in and has been counted. The buns, rolls and bread that had
Gould shows his chest expan­ men have expressed their choice. the boys ^coming back for thirds.
sion. He's not trying to im­ The barons have been routed Instead of the usual iceboxResponsible for the happy crew on the George D. Prentice.
press the crew with his hmr temporarily. Seamen can rejoice flavored bread, cold and heavy,
Waterman Liberty, which recently concluded a run to the Far
shirt, for the crew reports him for their brothers who have every other day saw a fresh
East, are Steward Lou Young, front D. Paugh. Baker, rear
as being a fine shipmate. Shot voted for freedom from company batch of bread coming out of
left, and D. Lippy, rear center. Rear right is L. Inwood, a
Paugh's ovens, and matching any
was by Forrest Nelson during bondage.
well-fed crewmember.
shoreside bread.
a return trip from England.
Wandering Seafarer
To the Editor:

Galley Trio's Fancy Chow
Pleases Prentice Crewmen

Two Car Pile-Up
Sends Seafarer
To Navy Hospital

�THE SEAFARERS

Page Foiixteea

Brother Proud Of Union's
Work In Behalf Of Seamen
To the Editor:
Conditions were bad for the
men aboard the old sailing ships
and the pay was hardly any­
thing. There was no improve­
ment when the sailing ships were
replaced by the steamships. Not
until late in the last century,
when a group of seamen got to­
gether and formed a union was
there anything like a square deal

Photo Problem
Vexes Crewman
Of Pontus Ross
To the Editor:
The following mepibers of the
Pontus H. Ross, who signed off
the ship, asked me to send them
copies of the pictures I took
abroad the ship. They gave me
their addresses in a small book
so that I could send them what
they wanted. On top of this
they paid me for all the pictures
they wanted.
I had bad luck two days ago
« a:?d lost the book. However, I
sent the pictures to the different
SIU Halls and expect them to
be, found there. The following
is a list of the Brothers and the
port where the pictures were
sent:
Joseph Pilutis, New York;
Georges Jensen, New York; Ed
, Leverne, Tacoma; John McNichols, New York; David Pon­
tes, Baltimore; LeRoy Schmidt,
Tacoma.
There are two other Brothers
that I am not sure where to
reach. They were going home
and I do not know through
which Hall they will ship from
eventually. If they see this
note, I would like to have them
write me. They are,' Alan Tigh
and James R. Young.
Marcel Jetle
SS Ponlus Ross
•Vancouver, Wash.

LOG

Sought By Parents

for a sailing man. Wages and
conditions improved very slowly,
but they improved.
But after the defeat suffered
by the seamen in the 1921 strike,
life became rugged again on the
waterfront. The shipowners had
the men at their mercy. Until
an organization calked the ISU
wa§ formed seamen were getting
nowhere.
The ISU was only a stai'ter.
When it broke up in the 1930s,
seamen were ripe for organiza­
tion. In 1936, severhl unions
were started and the strikes of
that year and 1937 ended in vic­
tory for the seamen.
The parents of Desmond L.
Seamen then began receiving
the benefit that came with a Smith are anxious that he get
Union contract. Some of the in touch with them at 28 Albro
greatest progress by union sea­ Lake Road, Dartmouth, Nova
men was made in 1945 when the Scotia.
SIU won unprecedented wages
and conditions. From that time
on, each new contract signed by
the SIU brought new increases
and benefits to the membership
and finally to men on the water­
To the'Editor:
front everywhere.
A big, shiny car disputed the
In 1946, the SIU won what is
probably the greatest waterfi'ont ground I stood upon and need­
victory of recent date. The fight less to say, I came off second
for wage increases ended after best when I hit the jackpot for
a ten-day strike against a gov­ a broken knee and a pair of
ernment order that wouldn't al­ broken legs. I am hobbling
low raises the Union negotiated around on crutches here at Statwith private companies. When en Island Marine Hospital, minus
our Union won that strike, it set a cast on the broken knee leg.
a pattern that was soon fol­ The other one was badly shat­
lowed by all maritime unions. tered.
Under the conditions I haven't
Now the SIU is bringing sim­
ilar advantages to the Canadian had much urge for poetry,
Seamen who are sailing under though I did manage to take a
the banner of the SIU Canadian whirl at a sonnet and used one
District. As a seamen I am of Shakespeare's as a pattern for
proud that the SIU is one union rhyme and meter (Edi note: See
in which the communist party Log-A-Rhythms, this page).
was never able to make any
I hope I am satirical and iron­
progress.
ical in the jingle. The few mil­
The SIU has proven that it lion men sailing billions of dol­
can fight—and win—for the sea­ lars in ships and cargoes, as
men, who are interested in going well as being responsible daily
to sea today to make an honest for thousands of passenger lives
living.
do it all without the need of a
William Zarkas
police force.

In October of 1948 I made a
trip on an Isthmian ship to the
Far East. One of our first stops
was in the Philippines, where I
found that the avei-age Philip­
pine citizen of good i-eputation
wertt around openly armed.
Open insurrection exists even in
Manila.
From there we called to sev­

Puerto Rico Beach Brigade
Succumbs To Call Of North
To the Editor:

always someone reporting that
someone is getting off. Inso­
Well, I guess the summer sea­
much as there are no AB's
son is officially on up north. All
wanting to ride to the Gulf,
the old-time beachcombers have
Bill is afraid that he will be
shipped out.
shanghaied. It is reported that
Although there are plenty of
Bill is asking the price of a one
new faces here in San Juan, we
way fare to St. Thomas, where
miss the old regulars. Among
there is no Union Hall. The lure
the boys here, just to name a
of the tropics has got Bill, he's
few, we have F. Bonefont, L.
set up housekeeping and wants
Santos, E. Ventreii-a, Paul Caleto stay a while—maybe five years
baugh, Eric Jensen, Jack "Rubor so.
berlegs" Mays, F. Rowland, Dave
Well, that cocky crew off the
Haskell, Bob Goodwin — and
Marina
sure got their ears pin­
many more.
ned back Sunday, May the 22nd.
HARASSED SOUL
Last trip the Marina's soft-ball
Poor Bill Hitt gets no rest team challenged the Beachcomb­
when the scow, Morning Light, ers to a game, but it rained
docks in San Juan, nor until she them out then. This trip the
leaves the island of enchantment weather was perfect So with
for this reason: Bill is top AB Bob Goodwin as umpire, the two
on the permit list, and there is teams took to the field.
The battery for the Beach­
combers was Bill Hitt, of Cul­
pepper High, pitching, and F.
Rowland, catching. After a fast
game, the Beachcombers won,
In fact, we- are the only class 11 to 7. Afterwards, it wasn't
in society that weU disciplined, hard to tell a Beachcomber from
or, to be more exact, self dis­ a Marina crewmember: the
Beachies were a happy lot; the
ciplined.
Arduous duties, in close asso­ Marina boys were crestfallen, not
ciation for long periods in the so cocky after all.
confined spaces of ships prove Met Charlie Palmer out of
very wearing at times. As a re­ Philly the other night. He is
lease the sailor is prone to let Fireman aboard a SUP liberty
himself go a bit once he is tanker carrying molasses between
ashore. And by that do shore- San Juan and Jacksonville. He
sure has grown a midriff since
folk judge us.
To be sure, you may say that his beachcombing days here in
argument is but another case of San Juan.
trying to rationalize alcoholism. Brother A. Colon, at present
You may be right. Most any in the marine hospital at San
crime that happens ashore also Juan, wishes to thank the crew
happens at sea, but to a much and officers aboard the Bull Line
lesser degree. When the world scow, Angelina, for their kind
produces saints in quantities $29 donation he received.
enough to man ships, instead of
Would like to apologize to
sending them from the Union Ralph V. Ortiz for not writing
Halls, they will be sooner need­ him while he was in the hospi­
ed to lift shorefolks up to the tal in New York. Hope he has
moral stability of seamen.
completely recovered.
There are enough of us under
There is a little black dog
all flags to populate a state like named "Blackie" here on the
Texas, and we are moving a beach. He is a great favorite of
wealth many that State's over the beachcombers. He tags along
areas a thousand times as large. with them to the movies, bar­
All without one policeman to rooms, and every place else a
help or hinder us.
beachcomber might go. Last
If Texas could get along one meeting night, he attended with
week without a policeman that the others, and when the per­
would be an item for the his­ mits were excused, Blackie, not
having a book, walked out with
tory books.
James (Pop) Martin
them.

No Police On Ships Shows
Self-Discipline, Says Martin

Feels Insurrections In Far East Imperil Seamen
To the Editor:

Wednesday. June 1, 1949

eral ports in the Dutch East
Indies, where complete open
warfare has existed for more
than two years, as recognized
by the United Nations. Our
next port of call was Saigon in
Indo China, where we had to
be given armed French guard
to enter the river. The same
river, incidentally, where in
September 1948 a Swedish ship
was fired
on from ashore by

SUN-BRONZED SIU QUARTET

rebels armed with 20 mm can­
non.
This is the same river where
in December 1948, per LOG ac­
count, an American ship struck
a mine. Upon going ashore in
Saigon, we found the city under
military control during the day,
but at night gunfire ruled, and
hand
grenades were being
thrown across the wall of the
police compound.
From there one of our next
ports was Singapore, British
Malaya, where the Karens,
rebels, are a recognized force
and control practically all areas
outside tlje city.
QUOTES CONTACT

Crewmexnbers of the former German freighter. Sea Trader,
pose for the camera of Charles Oppenheimer, while the ship
was in the Caribbean recently. Left to right: Teddy, Deck
Delegate; Curuso, AB; Johnny. Engine Utility, and "Hot Rolls"
Martin, Baker.

The rest is a matter of public
record. I quote section 11 of
the Isthmian agreement in sup­
port of the request that I make
that our Union seamen be bet­
ter protected in war zones:
"Section 11—War Zone: In case
any vessel of the company tra­
verses waters adjacent to or in
the proximity of a declared or
undeclared war or state of hos­
tilities, it is hereby agreed that
a petition on the part of the
Union for the opening of ne­
gotiations for added remunera­
tion, bonuses, and insurance
shall in no way be deenyed
cause for the termination of the
agreement."
Charles H. Johnston

Sonnet Of Glasshouses
By JAMES (Pop) MARTIN
When we read of maritime's feckless crews,
We who follow the calling of the seas,
We oftimes stop and ponder o'er this news,
Yet, wonder, genteel shorefolk, upon these:
Why village, city, nation need police?
The Army, Navy, top, police by force.
The town clown and the justice of the peace
Is every upright rustic's main recourse.
Millions of sailors under every flag
Sail seas, far flung to every port o' land,
Their liifetime's wage fits in an old seabag.
They serve in peaceful mind with willing hand.
On any of the seas—in ary ship—
Has never yet police force taken trip.
'
. (8

�Wedhesda^i June 1, 1949

THE SEAFARERS LVG

Page Fifteen

Jobless Pay
Claimants Must
List All Jobs

COS

Seamen filing
unemployment
ham Welfare Center, 1918 Arthur
EDWARD BLOOM
insurance claims in New York
Get in touch with your brother, Avenue, Bronx 57, N. Y.
state are now expected to list
4. 4 4
.Frank Bloom. His address: 48
the names and addresses of all
WILLIAM V. CLICK
Monument Walk, Brooklyn, N.Y.
employers
for whom they work­
Miss M. Adaui, 734 N. State
Majorie Muller, $2.00; L. T. Galusra,
NEW YORK
ed
in
1948.
MARIO CARRASCO, Jr.$1.00; Ed Polberg. $3.00; G. E. BjomsStreet, Chicago 10, is anxious to
INDIVIDUAL DONATIONS
In accord with a new ruling, E. Catmaitan, $2.00; Geo. Chea, son, $1.00; J. W. Overton, $2.00; J,
Get in touch with your bro­ get in touch with you.
which
became effective April 25, $1.00; H. C. King, $15.00; B. Taflewitz, A. Gent, $1.00.
ther, Robert Caurasco, 2907 Ne­
4 4 4
claimants
will also be required $1.00; E. ,D. Mannezen, $1,001 A. P. Richard Perrotti, $1.00; T. Cath­
braska Avenue, Tampa, Florida.
CARLOS GOMEZ
$4.00; R. W. Harless, $10.00; erine, $1.00; Wm. Stark, $15.00; A.
to list the beginning and end­ Guralnik,
Blues, $10.00; D. Scandon, $1.00; Remijn, $11.00; J. Enriquez, $1.0$;
4. it 4.
Communicate with your local ing dates of each period of em­ O.
L. Williams, $5.00; E. A. Gomez, $4'.ffO. Frank Borst, $4.00; E. K. DomboskI,
HARRY. L. FRANKLIN
draft board, 80 Lafayette Street, ployment.
J. R. Nelson, $5.00; W. Budzinski, $5.00; A. O. Aaron, $4.00; N. Reznich". Contact your wife at 553 Un- New York 13, N. Y.
The New York State Unem­ $7.00; J. M. Stiles, $1.00; E. F. Luth- enko, $1.00; J. A. Weiss, $2.00; H. E.
dercliff Avenue, Edgewater, N.J.
$1.00; A. F. Veto, $2.00; R. C. Miller, $5.00; L. Dwyer, $1.00; R, L.
4 4 4
ployment Division says that this mann,
Heins,
$1.00; R. H. Shaffner. $2.00; Gresham, $4.00; A. Friend, $2.00.
4. i
BASIL UNDERTAJLO
information is of utmost import­ Chester L. Ritter, $1.00; C, Frost, L. R. Carr, $1.00; D. J. Stilley, $5.00;
ALBERT SCHUBERT
E. J. McAskin, $2.00; H. Singleton,
Contact your local draft board ance to insure prompt handling $5.00; H. R. Lowman, $2,00.
You are asked to contact Ber­ at 80 Lafayette Street, New York of claims.
T. B. Hall, $1.00; R. D. Brown, $1.00; T. Nolesnik, $5.00; G. Stilley,
$1.00; W. E. Ward, $2.00; Wm. E. $5.00; J. Arabasz, $2.00; F. J. Shandl,
nard Simmons, SPG, State of 13, N. Y.
WITHHOLDING SLIPS. TOO Reed,
$1.00; M. Baez, $1.00; B. Under- $1.00; J. L. Millner, $2.00; Hermtm
New York, 80 Centre Street, New
As a further means of expedit­ tilo, $1.00; W. I. Roche, $5.00; J. G. Young, $2.00; J. S. Seiferth, $16.00;.
4 4 4
York 13, N. Y.
ing payments of unemployment Watt, $1.00; T. E. Foster, $3.00; W. C. Morgan, Jr., $2.00; C. Ramos, $1.00.
OLIVER LEWIS
4. t 4.
insurance benefits, the state ag­ W. Scudder, $5.00; F. D. Gosse, $5.00; A. A. DaCosta, $5.00; J. Arabasz,
Communicate with your wife
D. Aguila, $1.00; R. Noarisma, $1.00; $1.00; W. H. Stock, $5.00; R. L. MdROBERT BICKNELL RANNEY
ency advised all seamen to keep K.
S. Wong, $2.00; E, C. Atkins, $3.00; Grew, $1.00; R. E. Sparks, $2.00; M.
at
36
Graves
Street,
Staten
Is­
Communicate with M. Lee, Se­
their income tax withholding J. Fernandez, $2.00; C. Brewer, $3.00; A. Carouaz, $25.00; E. B. Harris, $5.00;
land
14,
N.
Y.
lective Service, Local Board No.
slips for 1948, issued by the C. Clark, $1.00; R. A. Yeager, $2.00; J. Gillet, $1.00; W. H. Mansfield $2.00;
4 4 4
1, 80 Lafayette Street, New York
companies, and bring them to R. Aldrich, $2.00; A. N. W. Larsen, P. Sabatinoa, $3.00; J. E. Duffy, $5.00;
$2.00; V. Delacruz, $4.00; H. J. Mar­ E. L. Pritchard, $2.00.
CLINTON A. MC MULLEN
the unemployment insurance of­ tinez,
13, N. Y.
J. J. Balser, $1.00; M. D.
SS BEATRICE
Contact your local draft board fice when they appear to file Taylor,$3.00;
&amp;
i.
$1.00; Samuel Howard, $1.00;
H. Morey, $1.00.
at 80 Lafayette Street, New York claims.
CHARLES ADAMS
Write your mother at 95 North 13, N. Y.
In filing
claims, unemployed
7th Street, Fall River, Mass.
seamen will be asked to list all
4 4 4
of their employers during 1948.
MITCHELL ZELACK
4. 4 4.
FRANK NUNN
Your mother is very anxious This listing "must be absolutely
You are asked to get in touch to hear from you.
accurate," the agency says, "in
"with Social Investigator, Fordorder
to prevent benefit delays."
4 4 4
Before
going to the unemploy­
JOHN L. O'ROURKE
ment insurance office, claimants
DETROIT — In a move de­ District, called upon all AFL
Please get in touch with your should be sure they know the signed to eliminate communist unions on' the American side of
brother. Bob, care of the SIU official names of the companies members of the crews of 60-odd the Lakes waterfront to deny
Hall, 85 Third Street, San Fran­ for which they worked and the Canadian ships plying the Great service to the vessels of three
SIU, A&amp;G District
cisco, as soon as possible.
proper addresses.
Lakes, the SIU, Great Lakes Canadian companies.
BALTIMORE
14 North Cay St.
4 4 4
The ships of a number of com­
Wiliiam Rentz, Agent
Mulberry 4540
, MELVIN E. RICE
panies have been manned in part
BOSTON
276 State St.
Please get in touch with your
Ben LaWson, Agent
Richmond 2-0140
by the commie-controled Cana­
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141 mother, Mrs. Laverne Rice, 208
dian Seamen's Union, which haS
GALVESTON
308VJ—23rd St. Penn St., Waxahachie, Texas.
been trying vainly to drive the
Keith Alsop, Agent
Phone 2-8448
Mrs. Rice will appreciate hear­
SIU off Canada's East Coast.
MOBILE
1 South Lawrence St.
Cal Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-1754 ing from anyone who has re­
Great Lakes officials of the
E. Sheppard, Agent
Magnolia 6112-6113 cently see her son.
SIU
said that the communists of
NEW YORK
51 Beaver St.
SS JAMES SMITH
D. J. LUKOWIAK
^444
the
CSU
were "a threat to the
Joe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784
The following men, who were The personal effects which you
great industries supplied by
NORFOLK ...;
127-120 Bank St. WALTER HENRY HOFFMAN
crewmembers 'aboard this vessel left aboard the SS Chickasaw Lake shipping."
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
Get in touch with your
on Aug. 16, 1946, when Frank are being held for you in the bag­
PHILADELPHIA
337 Market St.
mother. It is very important.
Affected by the move were 24
J. Shcchnn, Agent
Market 7-1635
Champ, OS, was badly injured, gage room of the SIU Hall, 51
ships and two barges belonging
SAN FRANCISCO
85 Third St. Your cousin Dot is getting mar­ are requested to get in touch
Beaver St., New York City.
Frenchy Michelet, Agent Douglas 2-5475 ried June 4.
to Paterson Steamships, Ltd., 20
with
Albert
Michelson,
attorney
SAN JUAN, P.R
252 Ponce de Leon
.
4
4
4
ships
and six barges of the Upper
4 4 4
for Champ, at 1650 Russ Bldg.,
L. Craddock, Agent
San Juan 2-5996
RICHARD H. SEVERSON
Will
John
Henry
Ponson,.
who
Lakes
&amp; St. Lawrence Company,
SAVANNAH
2 Abercorn St.
phone YUkon 6-6818, San Fran­
was employed aboard the SS six ships and six barges of the
Write to your brother: Pfc cisco, Calif.:
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728
TACOMA
1519 PaciRc St. Stanley Severson US—57586364,
Alfred E. Stout, AB; Carl N. Wild Ranger on or about 6th Quebec &amp; Ontario Transport
Broadway 0484 Bat. A, 2nd FA Bn, Fort Sill,
Bolton, AB; A1 Laborde, AB; day of May, 1947, as a galley- Company, plus the vessels of
TAMIPA
1809-1811 N. Franklin St.
Oklahoma.
William D. Austin, OS; Joe man, and witnessed an accident several smaller concerns.
Ray White, Agent
Phone M-1323
In Milwaukee, on Lake Mich­
WILMINGTON, Calif., 227'/i Avalon Blvd.
Caner, OS, and Ellis M. Eaton, where Durand Dewey Shaw was
injured
aboard
vessel,
please
igan,
ILA Local 815 has already
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Terminal 4-2874
OS.
HEADQUARTERS ..51 Beaver St., N.V.C.
communicate with Herman N. refused to unload any ship that
SECRETARY-TREASURER
Rabson or Benjamin B. Sterling, might have communists among
OTHA^ FRANKLIN
Paul Hall
42
Broadway, New York 4, N. Y. its crewmembers.
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
CRUTCHFIELD

Seafarers Continues Fight
Against Commies On Lakes

SlU HULLS

en

gr.

2

Lindsey Williams
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURER
' Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
Joseph Volpian

You are requested to get in
touch with Benjamin Sterling or
Herman N. Rabson, 42 Broadway,
New York City, regarding the
. ROY JENKINS
injury you sustained aboard the
SUP
A check is being held for you
SS T. J. Jackson on Sept. 19,
HONOLULU
16 Merchant St. at Mar-Trade Corporation, 44
1947.
Phone 5-8777 Whitehall Street, New York.
PORTLAND....... Ill W. Burnaide St.
4 4 4
4 4 4
Beacon 4336
RECEIPT NO. C-95636
SS DOROTHY
RICHMOND, Calif
257 Sth St.
, Will holder of this receipt is­
(Voyage No. 187)
Phone 2599
sued in Tampa, please get in
SAN FRANCISCO
59 Clay St.
The below named have un­ touch with Headquarters so that
Douglas 2-8363
SEATTLE
86 Seneca St. claimed wages due them in the payment made may be correctly
Main 0290 amounts specified for penalty posted.
WILMINGTON
440 Avalon Blvd. cargo
carried during voyage.
Terminal 4-313,1
These wages may be collected at
RECEIA N0.^C-95621
the Bull Line office, 115 Broad
WiU holder of this receipt, is­
Canadian District
St., New York City.
sued in Tampa, get in touch with
MONTREAL. .
404 Le Moyne St.
Robert
J. Morgan, $6.47; Headquarters so payment may
Marquette 5909
HALIFAX
128&lt;/i Hollis St. Thomas C. Lockwood, $5.07; Wil­ be properly posted.
Phone 3-8911 liam E. Thompson, $4.34; Manuel
4 4 4
PORT ARTHUR
63 Cumberland St. Vigo, $7.59; Genaro Bonefont,
SS YOUNG AMERICA
Phone North 1229 $7.59;
Frederick E. Kerfobt,
(Voyage W-1)
PORT COLBORNE....i.l03 Durham St.
Will crewmembers who were
Phone: 5591 45.69; Newell A. Keyes, $7.04;
TORONTO
11 lA JarvU St. Francisco Bartolomei, $8.40; aboard this vessel from Oct. 27.
Elgin 5719 Emilio Ramos, $8.40; Juan A. G. 1948 to Jan. 8, 1949, communi­
VICTORIA, B.C.
602 Boughton St. Nimez, $8.75,
cate with Henry Beckman, care
Empire 4531
Jose A. Morales, $8.75; Joseph of Christensen, 3245 N. Damen
VANCOUVER
565 Hamilton St.
PaciRc 7824 E. Henault, $3,16; Earl C. Jor- Ave., Chicago, 111., giving their
_ _ dan, $1,65; Patrick Dunphy, names and addresses. Beckman
HEADQUARTERS
512 McGill St.
Plateau 670"f^3.16; Paul R. Calebaugh, $2.00; paid off the ship in China be­
Montreal
cause of illness.
Felix Carrilo, $1.26.

Notice To Ail SIU Members
The SEAFARERS LOG as the official publication of the Sea­
farers International Union is available to all members who wish
to have it sent to their home free of charge for the enjoyment of
their families and themselves when ashore. If you desire to have
the LOG sent to you each week address cards are on hand at every
SIU branch for this purpose.
However, for those who are at sea or at a distance from a SIU
hall, the LOG reproduces below the form used to request the LOG,
which you can fill out, detach and send to: SEAFARERS LOG, 51
Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.

PLEASE PRINT INFORMATION
To the Editor:
I 'would like the SEAFARERS LOG mailed to th^
address belo'wr:
Name
Street Address
Zone..

City ...

Signed
Book No.

State

�Page Sixteen

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Wednesday. June'1, 1949

ITF Denounces CSU As Comniunist-led

If the communists who run the half, they would not have re­ ¥
Canadian Seamen's Union ex sponded to the strike call.
pected any sympathy from the
"4- Whereas in Canada, where
International Transport Workers the true facts are known, the
Federation in their phony and manning and loading of ships is
ineffective "strike" to oust the not interrupted, emissaries of the
SIU Canadian District from the CSU and others are trying, by
latterfe contracted ships, they misrepresenting the facts, to in­
must have been disappointed cite dockers and seafarers to
Vice-Presidents of the Seafarers Canadian Seamen's Union, but
(Continued from Page 1)
For the second time within £ support the strike in foreign British Transport and General International Union of North part of a political campaign t6
month, the ITF flatly and bliuit- ports.
Workei-s' Union not to support America and as Co-Chairmen of which the ITE* is opposed. The
ly rejected a commie plea for
"In these circumstances the the CSU. . After conferring with the Maritime Trades Council of unions affiliated with the ITi5
help.
General Council considers that an SIU representative now in Greater New "Vork, an organiza­ should therefore not let them&gt;
The ITF's General Council the conflict is not an industrial England, Arthur Bird,. National tion of all waterfront workers selves be drawn into the conflict
meeting in Antwerp on May 13 issued as alleged by the Canadian Secretary of the docks group of affiliated with the American and endanger the economy o£
and 14, denounced the CSU's so Seamen's Union, but part of a the Transport and General Work­ Federation of Labor, by our the European countries.'.
called strike and said that the political campaign to which the ers' Union, called upon his mem­ Canadian affiliate, the Canadian "In this country, the Executive
no member of the CSU would ITF is opposed. The unions af­ bers to reject the CSU's propa­ District of the Seafarers Inter­ Council of the American Federa­
have responded to the strike flicted with the ITF should there­ ganda and work the ships.
national Union, 4to take steps to tion of Labor called for the ex­
call, if he had been fully and fore not let themselves be drawn
The complete text of Hall and tie-up all British shipping in the pulsion of the Canadian Seamen's
correctly informed of the facts into the conflict and endanger Weisberger's cable to Mi-. Attlee Atlantic and Gulf ports, unless Union from the Canadian Trades
the British dockers, now misled and Labor Council.
There is no support for the the economy of the European follows:
"We have been requested as into wildcat action by commun­ "In Canada, where the Can­
phony strike in Canada where countries."
ist propagandists, agree to handle adian seamen are conversant
the facts are known, the Council
ships contracted to the SIU Can­ with the facts, none of the SIU
reported, and the communists
adian District.
are trying to get support in
Canadian District ships is tied
"We have no desire to take up. Only in a few foreign coun­
foreign ports, where they can
get away with misrepresenting
this action, as it would play into tries, where the communists hav^
CLEVELAND — The Seafar­ labor movement.
the hands of the communists, well organized propaganda ma­
the truth.
In the near future, the AFL whose sole aim is to sabotage
ers International Union should
chines, have these political dis­
CONFLICTING REPORTS
replace the communist-dominat­ will meet in Ottawa to take fur­ the Marshall Plan and disrupt ruptors -been able to gather sup­
The ITF Council also pointed ed Canadian Seamen's Union in ther action.
the communications systems of porting action, and then only by
out that the strike notices issued the Trades and Labor Council
GOOD RELATIONS ^
the western countries.
misrepresenting the facts to the
by the CSU leadership to crews Canada's national labor body af­
However, we will not allow trade unionists on the waterfront.
President
William
Green
of
on the high seas and in foreign filiated with the American Fed­
a political maneuver by fifth
We feel that most of these
ports were conflicting.
eration of Labor, the AFL Ex­ the AFL and President Percy column disruptors to prevent the
dockers
are well meaning, but
Bengough
of
the
Txtades
and
Consequently, the Council in­ ecutive Council, which met here
SIU
Canadian
District
from
ful­
acting
on
false information. We
Labor
Council
said
that
they
structed all of the unions affil­ recently, announced.
filling
its
legal
contracts
with
call
upon
you, as head of the
"were
well
pleased
with
their
iated with the ITF to ignore the
The AFL leaders further ex­ plans to oust the communists— the Canadian shipowners, and Labor Party and leader of the
CSU's phony beef.
pressed themselves as of the
The instruction and the Coun­ opinion that the CSU was "falling Green adding that he thought we shall take all and any steps Labor Government, to use your
highly cooperative relations be­ necessary to protect ourselves, influence and authority to. put a
cil's report were included in a
apart so rapidly, that it was no tween the AFL And the TLC our jobs and our Union.
stop to this wildcat, illegal ac­
letter to all the ITF's affiliated longer the communist menace it
"We
call
to
your
attention
the
would
result.
tion.
dockers' and seafarers' unions.
used to be.
following
facts:
President
David
Dubinsky
of
"Meanwhile, we shall not ask
The letter was signed by J.H.
"The
International
Transportthe
Intel-national
Ladies
Gar­
The
AFL
Executive
Council
the
waterfront unions of America
Oldenbroek, General Secretary
workei's
Federation,
in
Circular
ment
Workers
and
President
lad
a
day-long
session
with
the
to
take
economic action against
of the ITF.
'George
Harrison
of
the
Railway
No.
28
to
its
affiliates,
said
'...
Canadian
leaders
of
the
Trades
British
shipping
by boycotting
The complete text of the Coun­
Clerks
also
expressed
their
be­
and
Labor
Council
to
discuss
The
'General
Council
considers
all
British
flag
vessels
pending
cil's report follows:
"The General Council of the the AFL's campaign to drive the lief that the communists were that the conflict is not an in­ a reply from you within a few
dustrial issue as alleged by the days."
ITF, meeting in Antwerp on 13 communists from the Canadian on their way out in Canada.
and 14 May, 1949, has given con­
sideration to the dispute which
has taken place in the Canadian
shipping industry in recent
weeks, and in the light of the
present agreement expires, you
Atwacoal Transportation Com­ Eastern Steamship Lines, Inc.
(Continued from Page 1)
report furnished approves unan­
pany
Illinois-Atlantic Corp.
imously the decisions previously going to sea aboard your com­ will do so at your peril and con­
trary
to
the
wishes
of
a
majority
Alcoa
Steamship Company, Isthmian Steamship Co.
reached by the Management pany's vessels have become fed
Inc.
Maine Steamship Co.
Committee and Seafarers' Sec­ up with the anti-union actions of the licensed marine engineers
Baltimore-Insular Line
Mar Ancha Corp.
tional Committee of the ITF to and political policies of the Ma­ employed by you.
"A promp,t reply is requested." A. H.- Bull SS Co.
Mississippi Shipping Co., Inc.
withhold support from the strike rine Engineers Beneficial Asso­
Ore Steamship-Company
called by the Canadian Seamen's ciation, CIO. As a direct result, The letter was sent to the fol­ Calmar Steamship Corp.
Coral Steamship Corp.
Peninsular &amp; Occidental Steam*
Union. •
they have formed a union with­ lowing companies:
Actium
Shipping
Company
Dolphin
Steamship
Company
ship Co.
in
the
framework
of
the
Ameri­
ATTACK ON ITF
American Eastern Corporation
Dolphin Steamship Corp.
can
Federation
of
Labor,
known
Ponce
Cement Corp."
"In view of the misleading
as
the
Brotherhood
of
Marine
Seas
Shipping
Co.
statements published in the comEngineers.
Seatrade
Corp.
muriist press and the action spon­
. Seatrain Lines, Inc.
"A majority of your seagoing
sored by the Canadian Seamen's
Smith &amp; Johnson
marine
engineers
and
regular
Union and being carried on in
If
you
are
a
marine
engineer
and
have
not
signed
a
South
Atlantic Steamship Com­
night
relief
engineers
are
more
different ports , by communist
pledge
card
designating
the
Brotherhood
of
Marine
Engineers,
pany
interested
in
their
ships,
their
elements, who seem to see in
AFL, as your collective bargaining agent, do- so now. Just till
St. Lawrence Navigation
this strike a welcome opportunity jobs, and the conditions under
out
the
certificate
below
and
send
it
to
the
BME
at
51
'Beaver
which
they
work
than
they
are
Strathmore Shipping Co., Inc.
to attack the I'TF and its affil­
Waterman Steamship Corp.
iated dockers' and seamen's in a union known only for its Street. New York 4, N. Y.
White Range Steamship Co.
unions, the General Council communist activity. For this rea­
Standard Steamship Co. •
finds it necessary to publish the son, they have joined thb- Bro­
BROTHERHOOD OF MARINE ENGINEERS
therhood.
Victory Carriers, Inc.
following:
Arnold Bernstein Steamship
"1- The Canadian Seamen's
"You are hereby advi.sed that
affiliated xvitfj
Co.
Union, appealing at the 11th hour the Brothei'hood of Marine En­
SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION OF
for the support of the ITF, not­ gineers, AFL, represents a ma­
Oro Navigation Co., Inc.
withstanding a telegraphic re­ jority of the licensed engineers
NORTH AMERICA, A.F.L.
Epiphany Tankers Corp.
minder, failed to comply with the actually employed by you, and
Federal Motorship Corp.
rules which the constitution of that the National Marine Engin­
, Artie, Tankers, Inc.
the ITF lays down for such cases eers Beneficial Association is no
John M. Carras, Inc.
and to supply the required doc-- longer the proper collective bar­
Cuba Distilling Co.
I hereby designate, appoint and authorize the Brotherhood
lunented report on the nature gaining representative of your li­
Intercontinental Steamship Co.
of Marine Engineers, affiliated with the Seafarers International
and circumstances of the con­ censed engineers, even though
Metro Petroleum Shipping Coi.
Union of North America, AFL, to represent me in any and
flict.
they are for the time being re­
Petrol Tanker Industries, Inc..
all negotiations relative to collective bargaining with my
"2- The strike notices issued taining membership in that As­
Calmar Shipping Co.
present or any future employer.
by the Canadian Seamen's Union sociation.
Philadelphia
Marine Corp.
This authorization shall continue ir full force and effect
to crews Qf ships on the high
State
Fuel
Co.
"We are prepared to meet with
until I have revoked same by written revocation delivered
eeas or in foreign ports are of a you at any time you might sug­
U.S. Petroleum Carriers, Inc.
to
the Secretary-Treasurer of said Union.
conflicting nature.
Terminal
Tanker Industries,
gest for the purpose of discuss­
Inc.
ing
an
agreement
covering
wages
Name
!
:
MEN UNINFORMED
The Cabins Tanker Industries
"3- Had the members .of the and working conditions for your
Address
^....
Tanker Sag Harbor Corp.
Canadian Seamen's Union been licensed marine engineers, and
U.S. Waterways Corp,
i
Rating
Employer
properly and honestly informed we hereby put you on notice
•'•'f
that
in
the
event
you
make
any
United
States'Lines'
•
"
.I
about the matters at issue, and
License
No.
Signature
..........i....
Grace
l^nes
.
H
-•=«
agreement
•
with
the
MEBA
be­
about the negotiatons and con­
Unit^ Friiit Steamship Go. '
ciliation carried on in their be­ yond June 15, 1949, the date your

Seafarers Warns Great Britain
lliegal Tie-ups Mean AFL Beysett

AFL Demands CSU Ouster

Brotherhood Of Marine Engineers Gets Charter

Pledge Card For Engineers

PLEDGE CARD

&lt;

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9914">
                <text>June 1, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9985">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 19</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10006">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10027">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10087">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10105">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10157">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
SEAFARERS WARNS BRITISH AFL WILL BOYCOTT SHIPPING&#13;
BROTHERHOOD OF MARINE ENGINEERS GETS AFL CHARTER FROM SEAFARERS&#13;
PROGRAM OF BME&#13;
ECA MOVES TO ENFORCE CARGO LAW&#13;
WELCOME, BME&#13;
SHOW OF VIOLENCE&#13;
ASKS DISCUSSION ON COMPULSORY VACATIONS&#13;
SKIPPER PRAISES MEN OF IRENESTAR AS BEST CREW HE EVER SAILED WITH&#13;
ALCOHOLISM IS GREAT PROBLEM FOR INDUSTRY&#13;
SHIP WITH A MILLION READERS - COLABEE SAILS NEWSPRINT RUN&#13;
THE PATROLMEN SAY&#13;
NEW TRANSPORTATION RULE&#13;
CSU GOONS RUNNING WILD&#13;
DELTA LINE TO BUILD COMBINATION LINER&#13;
CSU GOONS RUNNING WILD&#13;
LAY-UPS, DRYDOCKS CUT NEW YORK SHIPPING&#13;
WACOSTA CREWMEMBER PRESUMED LOST AT SEA&#13;
ROBIN LINE VESSELS RECEIVE PURE MILK, SAY STATEMENTS OF SOUTH AFRICAN DAIRIES&#13;
JOBLESS PAY CLAIMANTS MUST LIST ALL JOBS&#13;
SEAFARERS CONTINUES FIGHT AGAINST COMMIES ON LAKES&#13;
ITF DENOUNCES CSU AS COMMUNIST-LED&#13;
AFL DEMANDS CSU OUSTER</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13057">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="960" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="964">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/2db0249fa89ff1945636f58a83944a8b.PDF</src>
        <authentication>f5fd19fbdaa3617d6f23ed7122bcacba</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47440">
                    <text>BRITISH ASK BOYCOTT BELAY
'1

Unless the Trades Union Congress, British
counterpart of the American Federation of Labor,
or the British Government itself, soon persuades
misguided British dockworkers to handle SIUmanned Canadian ships in England, the Seafarers
International Union will ask the AFL Maritime
Trades Department to boycott British ships in US
ports on the Atlantic and Gulf coasts.
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers Internationtd Union of NA
In reply to a cablegram sent to Britain's Prime
Minister, Clement R. Attlee, saying that a boycott
NEW YORK, N. Y.. FRIDAY, JUNE 10, 1949
No. 20
VOL. XI
might be necessary, TUC President Arthur D^kin

Canadian Labor Expels
GSU As Comniie-Led

BME On March
The newly-organized AFL
Brotherhood of Marine En­
gineers is making great
strides, BME Headquarters
announced today, and Engin­
eers who want trade union­
ism, not party-line politics,
are applying in droves.
Engineers
anxious
for
AFL imion representation,
with no political strings at­
tached, were urged to visit,
phone or write BME Head­
quarters at 51 Beaver Street,
New York 4, N.Y.

asked SIU Interntional Vice-t—
Presidents Paul Hall and Morris been patient long enough in this
Weisberger to hold off until the situation, which is ftrictly an
British unions could bring the inter-union dispute and does
present wildcat, commie-inspir­ not concern other organizations."
ed actions against Canadian
ILA SPEAKS
ships in British ports to an end.
Meanwhile, Atlan ic coast of­
The SIU officials indicated
ficials
of the International Long­
that the Se'afarers would com­
shoremen's
Associatio'-., AFL, a
ply with Deakin's request. How­
powerful
component
of the AFL
ever, they said that they expec­
Maritime
Trades
Department,
ted quick action on the matter
met in New York recently with
in Britain.
ILA
President Joseph P. Ryan
"We do not desire to see
presiding,
and voted unanimous­
British ships tied up in United
ly
to
support
the SIU if a boy­
States ports, but the New York
cott
became
necessary.
AFL Maritime Trades Council
will be asked to set in motion
The tying up of several Ca­
the boycott machinery, unless nadian ships in British ports is
swift action is forthcoming from the result of propaganda spread
the British dockworkers," Hall by the communist-led Canadian
and Weisberger said. "We've Seamen's Union.
Early in the spring, the CSU
talked some of their members
into attempting to strike ships
sailing from Canada's east coast
ports, after the SIU Canadian
District signed a contract cover­
ing the ships.
caUed Greenwich Village, but it But most of the CSU members
is not a farm any more. Instead it ffocked to the SIU, so fed up
is a complex of huge apartment ^gre they with years of com*
houses, hotels, single dwellings, mimist rule by political trickery
stores, a variety of buildings bestrong-arm'squads,
longing to New York University
The phony strike was unsuc­
and Washington Square.
cessful, except in a handful of
Much of it is leased out on a foreign portS; notably in Eng­
99-year basis.
land, where commie agitators
When the city of New York stirred up the waterfront with
engulfed Greenwich Village, the lies.
trustees moved Snug Harbor to
Harry Davis, CSU president,
Staten Island so that the Man­
who
is an open follower of the
hattan property could be used to
communist
party line, is now in
maintain the establishment.
England working with British
The whole institution is now communists in an effort to dis­
"conservatively" valued at 30 rupt British shipping. Davis flew
million dollars.
to England to continue his illThirty million would produce starred maneuver after plans to
an income of $1,200,000 at a con­ tie up shipping in Canada col­
lapsed completely.
servative four percent.

Acting swiftly after their re­ studying the problem said that
cent day-long conference in the CSU had:
(1) Violated the "spirit and
Cleveland with the Executive
Council of the'American Federa­ letter" of the TLC's constitution;
(2) Failed "to recognize and
tion of Labor, the Trades and
Labor Congress of Canada, affili­ accept its responsibilities;"
And (3) had issued literature
ated with the AFL, suspended
the Communist-dominated Cana­ "vilifying tried and trusted trade
dian Seamen's Union from the union leaders."
Committee members also point­
parent body on June 3.
The suspension followed five ed out that the CSU's so-called
days of closed meetings in Otta­ strike on the east coast was a
wa of a special committee of the source of great embarassment to
TLC, which recommended that the TLC and its affiliated unions.
the action be taken.
The AFL Executive Council
had urged that the TLC drop the
CSU from its ranks because of
the communist policies the CSU
continued to practice. Moreover,
14 AFL international unions
threatend to secede from the TLC
NEW YORK—The'trustees of ture have been "incomplete and
unless the CSU was ousted.
Sailors Snug Harbor have given unsatisfactory."
The vacancies on the board
While all details of the suspen­ up at last.
sion conditions are not known,
As the result of a suit filed in are those seats which are sup­
it is known that it will be ef­ the New York State Supreme posed tp be occupied by the
fective until the TLC convention Court by the State Attorney Gen­ Chancellor of New York State
in Calgary in September.
eral, the trustees have agreed to and the Recorder of New York,
If the convention upholds the abandon the -system, adopted two officers whose posts were
suspension, the CSU will be com­ last year, of charging aged sea­ done away with many years ago.
A third vacancy may be the
pletely expelled from the TLC, men for their maintenance at the
seat
now assigned to the Mayor
supposedly
free
institution.
and will lose what little backing
of
New
York City. The incum­
it retains among the TLC's 400,The State Attorney General
bent
Mayor
has indicated a per­
000 members.
brought his suit a month ago af­
sonal
distaste
for the job.
ter pressure from maritime
DEAD DUCK
Sailors
Snug
Harbor was set
unions forced the issue. Snug
In fact, many think that the Harbor's trustees didn't even up under the terms of a will
TLC will have to dissolve itself fight the case.
made by Captain Robert Richard
Randall in 1801. Randall left his
if it fails to oust the CSU once
CLIP JOINT
fa,rm on Manhattan Island to be
and for all in September.
In
addition
to
agreeing
to
used
as a home for elderly sea­
Canadian observers pointed out
abandon
charging
the
fees,
the
men.
a week before the CSU suspen­
The farm was in what is still
sion that many of the large AFL trustees agreed to pay back the
unions in TLC would withdraw money they have clipped from
unless the CSU were bounced—a elderly seamen in recent months,
speculation later confirmed—or to submit to an independent au­
unless the CSU leaders renounc­ dit of their accounts and to let a
competent court fill two vacan­
ed their communist ties.
WASHINGTON — Everything AFL said were acceptable under which the company would have
cies on the board.
Others pointed out that the
pointed to a showdown fight on the circumstances were as fol­ to accept.
The "property agreement," the floor of the Senate, as formal lows:
CSU had become a dead duck
Meanwhile, all profits earned
which
the trustees invented in debate opened on the new labor
anyway, since so many former
1.
A
"free
speech"
guarantee
to
during
the period of seizure
CSU men, fed up with the com­ 1948, required the 400-odd elder­ bill to replace the Taft-Hartley both employers and employees.
would
be
turned over to the
mie-line of their leaders, had ly seamen living at the Harbor to Act, which was passed two years
United
States
Treasury, as a mis­
2.
A
requirement
that
unions
joined the SIU Canadian District surrender all savings in their ago this month over the Presi­ as well as employers bargain in cellaneous receipt.
since the end of March, when possession and all income, in­ dent's veto.
good faith.
The way Senator Taft wants
,the., CSU officials called the cluding pensions from any source,
the
bill written is anotner story.
Specifically,
the
battle
seemed
3. A requirement that both
phony strike against SlU-con- in return for maintenance, which
destined
to
rage
around
the
crip­
employers
and
employees
sign
much as four
He has come down slightly
tracted ships on Canada's east amounted to
pling amendments Senator Taft non-comrhunist affidavits and from his haughty stand of two
bucks a day.
coast.
When this practice began, the wants to add to the Administra­ swear that they belong to no or­ years ago, but the change is al­
ANOTHER BLOW
ganization considered fascist.
most imperceptible when his
maritime unions rose in wrath. tion's bill.
amendments
are subjected to the
The labor committees of both
Another blow was suffered by Under the new dispensation, any
4. A provision allowing gov­
the poor commies who have been retired seaman, who left the Har­ Houses of Congress approved the ernment seizure of industrial cold light of analysis, as they
leading their members down the bor rather.than be clipped, may Administration's bill, commonly plants involved in labor disputes were the other day by AFL law­
path to destruction, and it was return without making formal known as the Thomas-Lesinski likely to lead to national emer­ yers in Washington.
Bill, in its original form was ac­ gencies.
delivered by M. J. Coldwell, application.
If Taft's notions get to be law,
cepted
by
both
the
AFL
and
the
leader of the Canadian Common­
In
this
connection,
it
is
neces­
the
attorneys said, "the result
The audit must be completed
wealth Federation, a strong, lib­ and recommended changes in ac­ CIO. The bill would repeal the sary to point out that there is a would be nothing but a slightly
eral and anti-communist force counting methods accepted by Taft-Hartley Act and restore the difference between the "seizure" watered Taft-Hartley Act."
old Wagner Act with a few that the AFL is willing to accept,
in Canadian politics.
In the House of Representa­
the trustees by December 15.
In a meeting at Sydney, Nova
Ilf will cover the Harbor's changes. This week, the AFL in­ and the "injunction" which la­ tives, the Lesinski Bill was sent
Scotia late in May, Mr. Coldwell books in exhaustive detail back dicated that it would be willing bor's sworn enemies, including back to Committee, after a com­
bination of Republicans and re­
roundly denounced the CSU to January 1, 1941. Accountants to accept further amendments as Senator Taft, want.
a
way
of
forestalling
the
Taft
actionary
Democrats came with­
The
"seizure"
clause
would
leaders as communists who were will have the right to interview
amendments.
The
Taft
proposals
permit
the
government
to
bar­
in
an
eyelash
of railroading
misleading their members and all employees of the institution.
woul4
mean
the
Taft-HarUey
Act
through
a
version
so amended
gain
collectively
with
the
union
had been for'years.
In his suit, the State Attorney
virtually
unchanged.
while
the
plant
is
imder
govern­
that
it
was
in
many
, ways worsa
In recommending-susj^nsioh of General claimed the accounts the
ment.
control,
and
reach
terms
than
the
Taft-Hartley
Act itselL
The
amendments
which
the
the CSU, the special committee Harbor submits to the Legisla­

Snug Harbor Ends 'Property Agreements'
Under Strong Union And State Pressure

Senate Debates Substitute For T-H Act

�THE

Page Two

SEAFARERS LOG

SITAFARERS

LOG

Frida}, June 10, 1949

BiodtiiiK UK riAiE

Published Three Times a Month by the
SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA

Atlantic and Gulf District
Affilialed with the American Federation of Labor
At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Reentered as second class matter May 27, 1949, at the Post Office
in New York, N.Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

T-H Repeal
Backed by organized labor. Congressional foes of the
.Taft-Hartley Act are again attempting to obtain passage
of a labor-management law under which organized work­
ers would receive more equitable treatment. Although the
people spoke clearly at the polls last fall, a bloc of diehards have refused to put their personal prejudices aside
in favor of the people they are supposed to represent.
Workingmen must hammer home
Taft-Hartley must go. With the fight
second round on Capitol HUl, Seafarers
representatives know what kind of labor

the point that
going into the
should let their
law they favor.

Write to your Senators and Representatives, Tell
them to repeal the Taft-Hartley Act. Tell them you want
the Thomas-Lesinski bill, which would restore the old
Wagner Act, with a few amendments. Write now, and
get your families to do likewise. Keep up the fight until
Taft-Hartley is defeated.

»The Bums Get Bum's Rush
Twenty-five hundred members of the AFL Interna­
tional Longshoremen's Association got sick and tired of
a political demonstration staged at the union's headquarters
by a group of communists the other day, and gave the
Kremlin puppets the old heave-ho once and for all.
For a long time the communists have been trying to
drive a wedge into the ILA, as part of their pattern to
gain control of key sections of the waterfront. That they
never made any progress didn't keep them from trying
to keep up the push. They used the flimsiest pretexts to
beat their political pots and pans, in the vain hope that
they could attract some attention among rank and file
members of the ILA.

Hospital Patients

WOipmL

-i

Mea Now to The Marine Hospitals
These are the Union Brothers currently in the marine hospitals,

Heading up the communist contingent which put as reported by the Port Agents. These Brothers find lime hanging
on the short-lived show at ILA headquarters the other heavily on their hands. Do what you can to cheer them up by
day, was an old party waterfront hack by the name of writing them.
Fer^nand Smith, who shortly will leave the US rather
MEPONSET HOSPITAL
H. ASHURST
than face trial for illegal entry.
F.
GOOSE
R. A. BLAKE
He was supported by an array of non-longshoremen,
including female members of commie front organizations
and party-line pushers from controlled unions, like- the
CIO United Electrical Workers and the CIO Furriers
Union. Here and there were a few commie longshoremen,
who, by the way, are scarcer on the East and Gulf coasts
than hen's teeth.
If the commies had hired a hall to entertain them­
selves, the ILA men might not have raised an eyebrow.
.What got them hopping sore was that the medicine men
from Moscow thought they could use the union's head­
quarters as a backdrop. When word spread along the
North and East River piers that 200 commies were run­
ning through their act in ILA territory, 2,500 members
from five locals quit work and headed for 14th Street.

When entering the hospital
notify the delegates by post­
card. giving your name and
the number of your ward.
Mimeographed
Postcards
can be obtained free at the
Social Service desk.

L. BALLESTERO
J. S. CAMPBELL
V. W. CHESNER
J. T. EDWARDS
I. H. FRENCH
E. FERRER
V. JIMINEZ
J. T. KEMPT
K. G. LUNDBERG
C. L. MOATS
W. SEARS
H. SELBY
J. SILLAK
Q. TULL
L. TORRES
T. WADSWORTH
G. WOODS
F. ZESIGER
» »

FORT STANTON

It was all over in a matter of minutes. And there
probably won't be any repeat performances by the com­
mies jFor a long time, if ever again. The commies, who are
seeing their dream of playing a leading role on the water­
front disappearing everywhere, suffered one of the most
smashing and humiliating defeats they ever have had at
the hands of a group of workers.

D. MCDONALD
J. SUPINSKI

If they have as much sense as they have gall, they'll
call it quits.

MOBILE HOSPITAt
J. B. BERREIER
E. COLLINS

J. LIGHTFOOT
A. McGUIGAN
W. H. ROBERTS
J. ASHURST

» » s

L. HOWARD
L. ATKINS.
J. NAYLOR
. J. L. WORLEY
S, X X
STATEN ISLAND
J. TURNER
T. M. BROWN
M. J. LUCAS
N. NORPMANS
C. W. GOODWIN
J. SMITH
D. GELINAS
V. D'ACO
R, E. QUINN
'S. RIVERA
V. GROVER
A. KING
D. HERON
J. J. DEVINE
X X t
BALTIMORE MARINE HOSP.
L. MCMILLIAN
W. VAUGHAN
G. A. CARROLL
H. G. REYNOLDS
F. KORVATIN
C. SHASTZER
J. M. FERNANDES
G. PAGANO

P. E. WALSH
W. G. ALSTON
A. L. MASTERS
J. G. BERRENKENFEN
B. MESSERALL
L. YARBOROUGH
S. RUZYSKI
XXX
GALVESTON HOSPITAL
BILLY BROWN
FRED P. LALLIER
XXX
NEW ORLEANS HOSPITAL,
E. E. GROSS
E. R. MESSINA
E. MASSEY
J. DENNIS
ROTZ
F. LANDRY
ELLARD
L. WILLIS
N. I. WEST

w. MCDONALD.
L. LA CHAPELL
G. PETEUSKY
G. H. NOLES
G. MEANEY
C. RAYFUSE
G. MIHALOUPOULOUS
J. PATTERSON
C.BROWN
E. G. PLAHN
DICKINSON
A. ARVANTIS
M. A. LIUZZA
B. C. RESKO
F. L. DROUANT
P.G.BEAUFORT
!
J.GALIANO
,

' • ••

, 1

!
,

r

'
-r
y

•
!
1

gfl
i;,; i'ifS

�Friday. June 10. 1949

THE SEAFARERS LOG

Page Three

CSU Goons Attack Sleeping Triland Crew
In the early morning of May
26, the SS Triland, a Canadian
ship, lay at the West Indies Dock
In - North Vancouver, British
Columbia.
Her SIU Canadian District crew
were sound asleep in their bunks.
Suddenly, out of the darkness,
appeared at least 15 armed goons
of the communist-led Canadian
Seamen's Union.
Once they were on the ship,
the strong-arm boys of the CSU
broke into quarters where six
men were sleeping, and attacked
the latter as they lay.
Bulkhead and deck were soon
covered with blood as the CSU
"representatives" swung carpen­
ters' mallets, monkey fists, twoby-fours and clubs that resem­
bled sawed-off chair legs. All six
Seafarers, although they fought
back, were injured, three of
them seriously.

back and chest.' The deck was ponditions the same on Canad­ "One CSU man had been to The fourth Seafarer's state­
covered with blood.
#
ian ships as on United States Russia, and came back to tell ment said:
"The weapons used on me were ships. We can do that through his fellow union men what he "I was in my bunk at the
blackjacks and two-by-fours,
the SIU. The SIU keeps ships saw. He was fined 25 dollars time of the attack. Three men
reported to the police, who ar­ clean, and cuts down on gas- and told to shut up. He refused came in. Two began hitting me
rived about_4:00 a.m., that it was hounds and performers who are to pay the fine and joined the on the head with clubs. The
attempted murder.
a menace, to their fellow crew­ SIU.
third worked on me with a car­
"Brutal attacks like this should men ... CSU crews keep their
"My uncles also told me how penter's mallet. The clubs were
not be tolerated in any civilized ships filthy. They have the com­ the CSU stuffed ballots by bring­ the size of the leg of a chair,
country. I fought the Germans munist idea of getting paid for ing in men from the East. So I I got a swollen ankle, lumps on
in two wars, and will fight this not working..."
joined the SIU.
the front and back of my head,
thing here. The government has 5'he third Seafarer to•make a "In 1945 I was getting $87.50 a bruised back and bruises on
taken a lukewarm attitude tow­ statement declared:
as a Fireman. On the same job arms and chest. I haven't beenard this and similar incidents. "I am 21 years old. I have on the same ship, two weeks bothered since the attack. I do
Presumably it wishes to remain been in the SIU since the sum­ before I joined the Triland, I not believe they know me. I was
on the fence for coming elec­ mer of 1945. When it came time was getting-$159.00—plus over­ hospitalized."
tions.
for me to join a union, I talked time, which was a practically
A 19-year-old Seafarer who
"The next day after the at­ it over with my father and unknown institution when I suffered cuts, sprains and bruises
tack, a CSU picket boat came uncles, all of whom have always started in 1945.
while asleep in the petty offi­
alongside of the Triland and been. interested in the trade un­ "At the time of the attack cer's cabin was hospitalized, but
CSU men shouted through loud­ ion movement and are union on the Triland, I was in the en­
speakers: ''What's the matter? men. They pointed out to me gine room... but later came up made no statement. Neither did
Can't you sleep? You better lock the communist influence in the and saw the remains of the the OS who was knocked un­
conscious.
your cabins. We'll be back to CSU.
battle."
finish .the job.'
"I am 49 years oldi I have
DISTRESS SIGNAL
been going to sea for 30 years
One Seafarer stumbled through and have 35 discharges from deep
the darkened ship to find the sea vessels. I have been a mem­
8hip-to-shore telephone, only to ber of the British Seamen's and
discover that the wire had been Firemen's Union and the Inter­
cut. He hastily fixed the severed national Longshoremen's Asso­
ciation. From 1939 to 1946 I was
line and called the SIU Hall.
Then he managed to sound in the Canadian Army.
the Triland's distress signal, "I have been in the SIU since
which had the effect of inducing 1946. Association with the SIU
the attackers to scramble off the is a great advantage for Canad­
ship and escape into the pre­ ian seamen, as it gives us great­
dawn. But by then the damage er bargaining power and the
finest contracts in the world as
had been done.
models."
The assault on the Triland
The second Seafarer to make
crew by CSU goons was reminis­
a statement about the affair
cent of earlier CSU assaults on
spoke as follows:
Seafarers asleep in a hotel jn
"I am a Canadian citizen, aged
McAdam, New Brunswick, and
22. I have been going to sea
aboard a ship in Montreal. It
was also typical of what CSU since 1944. In 1946 I joined the
thugs have been doing in recent SIU of which I am a bookmember. An agent of the CSU offer­
weeks in Vancouver.
ed me a CSU book with three
The small brother of one Sea­ months dueis paid. I refused.
farer was beaten up one day
ROCKS THROWN
while he was playing outdoors
"On the day before the big
with a ball. A Seafarer was fol­
lowed to his girl's house one- attack on the Triland I was with
night and both he and his girl a friend, when we were attacked
were worked over. Nor were by CSU men. My friend jumped
off the end of the pier. His at­
these incidents all.
In the attack aboard the Tri­ tackers .hurled huge rocks at
land, one of the goons was rec­ him. I threw one of my attack­
ognized. The man was described ers to the ground and began to
by a Seafarer as "a psycho- pummel him. A passing team­
pathological case who has fre­ ster came to my aid.
quently boasted of ambushing "At the. time of the attack on
German boys and beating^them the Triland I was sleeping peace­
up, and attacking and raping fully in my sack. I awoke to
German girls while in the occu­ find myself.being struck on the
head and shoulders with a mon­
pation army."
key fist soaked in white lead.
NINE GASHES
"Fortunately I was in the lower
Four of the men who were bunk so that my attacker could
aboard the Triland issued state­ not swing their weapon effec­
ments for the LOG. The names tively.
"Hence I was able to grab it,
of these men are omitted to pre­
vent reprisals on them—and their pull it away from him and use
families. The first of them said:- it in my own defense... My
"At 3:30 a.m.. May 26, 1949, I roommate, Steve, was knocked
was awakened by loud scream­ out and suffered a badly swollen
ing. I got out of my bunk and elbow. I was able to get away
stepped out into the alley. As I with light wounds on the head
"What's the latest on Cities Service?" a member &gt;vrites the LOG. Well, here is how
left my cabin I was struck on and arms. My groin also suffered
things
stand as of press time:
the head with a hard object. from blows with the monkey-fist.
The regional office of the National Labor Relations Board is still investigating the
"After I had beaten off my
Half stunned, I grappled with
my attacker, whereupon I was attackers I ran out on the boat 19 "objections" filed by the company after its unlicensed personnel overwhelmingly
again slugged on the head sev­ deck. It and the mess room were designated the SIU as their collective bargaining agent.
eral times from behind.
covered with blood. I tried the
As soon as the NLRB regional office concludes its investigation of the company
"Blows rained upon my body shore telephone, but it had been
and head from all .sides. I slipped cut. I repaired it and phoned charges, it will submit a report to the Washington office for a final ruling. If the ob­
and fell several times. Some­ the SIU International Represen­ jections are thrown out, an order duly certifying the SIU as collective bargaining agent
how I got hold of a fire axe. I tatives who notified SIU branches is expected to be issued at that point.
do not know whether I picked it of what had happened.
The Cities Service Tankermen's Association — CTMA — is dead and buried, but tho
up from the deck or took it
"After I phoned, I began blow­ old company lawyers are stirring her grave, trying to put the breath of life in her beatdown off the wall. It stands to ing the ship's whistle. Soon the
reason I was not struck on the dock watchman appeared. He up, fat — but very cold — carcass. But she's dead, all right, because you can smell her
head with the fire axe, as no told me to stop the racket as it even more strongly than when the Cities Service lawyers first tried to sell her to the
man could survive that.
was 'nothing serious.' The at­ CS seamen.
"I drove the attackers off with tackers had left the ship by
Meanwhile, all pro-Union men aboard Cities Service ships are urged to remain on
the axe and with help frbm way of the dock, presumably their vessels until they receive the protection of an SIU contract. If asked to sign a
Other members of the_^crew.
under tljie very nose of the
CTMA petition, do so, as the company is still making every attempt to rid its fleet of
"I have nine gashes on my watchman.
head and bruise? on my arms, "Our aim is to get wages and known pro-Union seamen.-

�Page Four

THE

Tampa SlU Active In AFL Drive
To Win Better Deal For Labor

SEAFARER S/EOG

TALKING THE MATTER OVER

By RAY WHITE
TAMPA—Shipping and busi­ of 125,000—affiliated with the
ness are on the slow side in this AFL.
port, but we are still managing Labor's League for Political
to ship replacements on the Education, the AFL educational
coastwise ships, which are com­ body with which we are coop­
erating, is making great strides
ing in here as usual.
We had the Canton Victory locally. A candidate for public
in for a payoff last Simday. office has a good chance of be­
There is a good crew aboard this ing elected if he has the back­
ship, so there wasn't any ing of this group.
trouble. We shipped several re­ However, before any support
placements to this vessel and al­ is given, a man must have con­
so to the Chickasaw, another crete proof that he is a staunch
supporter of organised labor and
caller.
There were a number of beefs that he will work in its behalf.
on the Chickasaw that were la­ Several oldtimers are around
belled "Skipper-made." It ap­ at this time, among them Jimpears that the Skipper doesn't mie Jones, Paul Brinson and old
like the way the Steward parts man Bill Scarlett, who just came
in from Mobile.
his hair.
Sonny Simmons, former Port
He cuts the Steward's orders Agent, paid off the Canton Vic­
for stores, then beefs because he tory last Tuesday, after having
doesn't get everything he wants. been aboard for several months.
The crew rates the Steward as He decided to hang around for
okay. We visited the ship sev­ a while and catch up on his
eral times while she was in port, fishing.
and lined' things up somewhat.
SIU HITS LABOR FOE

Friday, June 10, 1949

Port Galveston
Rides Wave Of
Good Shipping
By KEITH ALSOP

The Philadelphia Branch made a change for the better
when it moved recently to new quarters at 337 Market Street.
Here are Dispatcher Ray Oates^ (left) and Port Agent Jim
Sheehan as they discuss the benefits .of the move. Photo »was
submitted to the LOG by Seafarer RichaAl Martinez. The LOG
hopes to have a picture layout of the new Hall in a future
issue.

Put Photo In Union Book For Protection

GALVESTON — Shipping has
been good in the Port of Galves­
ton—so good, in fact, that there
haven't been enough men around:
here in the past six weeks to
constitute a quorum for a meet­
ing.
However, a sufficient number
of men has been coming in from
other ports to solve the problem.
Present indications poiint to
some pretty fair shipping for the
next couple of weeks. Scheduled
for possible payoffs here thus far
are an Isthmian scow, a Miss­
issippi ship and a couple of Wa­
terman jobs.
You can't count heavily on the
Waterman ships, however, as that
outfit can change its mind on
payoffs faster than a woman can
in buying a hat.
PAYOFFS
Vessels that paid off here in
the past two-week shipping pe­
riod were the SS Beauregard,
Waterman, in Galveston; SS Ed­
ward Markham, South Atlantic,
in Houston; SS Warrior, Water­
man, in Houston; SS T. Haywood,
Waterman, in Port Arthur, and
the SS John Hanson; White
Range, in Galveston.
Signing on again *were the
Beauregard, Edward Markham,
Warrior, T. Haywood and the
John Hanson. All beefs at the
payoffs and sign-ons were taken
care of in regular SIU fashion.
A couple of the Brothers are
iri the local Marine Hospital as
of this writing. They're Bill
Brown and Fred P. Lallier.
The announcement on the local
labor news front is that the AFL
State Federation of Labor will
hold its annual convention some­
time during the latter part of.
this month.
The Seafarers will be i-epresented. We'll keep you informed
on the proceedings of the con­
vention through this column.

The SIU here was highly in­
strumental in getting Tom Wat­
By JOE ALGINA
probably be settled soon. The for the job ahead of permitmen
son's anti-labor law sent back
Dowling
has finished her work if they have the rating.
for a State-wide referendum. We
NEW YORK—Before plunging for awhile and is heading for
Speaking of misunderstand­
had a representative at Tallahas­ into the breakdown of the ship­
ings,
a lot of squabbles come up
Baltimore
to
lay
up.
see, the state capital, during the ping situation in the New York
aboard
ship over who is supposed
The
sign
ons
were:
Steel
Re­
time the bill was under discus- area, here's a suggestion worthy
to
do
a
specific job not outlined
corder,
Elizabeth,
Suzanne,
Cor­
sion.
of consideration by book mem­ nelia, Beatrice, Kathryn, Sea- in the agreement.
The Committee on Labor Leg­ bers:
train New Jersey, Seatrain New
Several times Cooks have com­
islation voted ten-to-two to re­
A man's Union book is his York, Robin Goodfellow, Robin plained that they were doing
fer it to the people. This is a means of making his livelihood
victory for organized labor in and he usually protects it care­ Mowbray, Robin Trent, Colabee, work that was not their duty.
Bessemer Victory, Algonquin Unless the agreement says speci­
Florida.
fully, but sometimes a book is Victory and Gadsden.
fically that they are not to do
The Watson law is as bad, if lost and months later it turns up
The
Gadsden
was
in
lay-up
af­
the work, they should pitch in
not worse than the Taft-Hartley in the hands of some character
ter
carrying
grain
for
awhile
with the other Cooks and do the
law.
trying to pass himself off as a and is now going back to hauling work instead of bickering among
Labor's best friend in this Seafarer.
themselves.
state—Senator Claude Pepper- To combat this, Seafarers are locomotives to Turkey.
One
of
the
m.isunderstandings
PITCH IN
is up for re-election next year. urged to paste a passport picture
of
the
Union
shipping
rules
There is some talk of Tom Wat­ of themselves inside the book's
The work has to be done and
son opposing him. Senator Pep­ cover and write their name comes from permitmen who do a little teamwork makes the
per makes no bones abqut the across the picture, and onto the not understand the rights of work makes the work easier and
fact that he strongly supports margin in the book. This way an bookmen under group registra­ the crew relations a lot happier.
Before closing, it's worth re­
organized labor. Both Watson imposter would have a tough tion.
A bookmember has priority peating that men who get off a
and Governor Millard Caldwell, time rigging the book to suit
oyer a permitman at all times. If ship for medical reasons should
who is another possible candi­ himself.
a
bookman, for example, is reg­ apply for unemployment pay as
date, are opposed to labor.
A lot of men have made this
istered,
in group I and a job soon as they are released from
Florida already has one anti- move already and the SIU urges
comes
up
in another group for the hospital.
labor man in Washingt&lt;ki. He is that the entire membership do
which
he
has
the rating, he has
Regardless of the illness—den­
Senator Spessard Holland, a the same to protect themselves.
the
right
to
take
the job ahead tal work included—men should
All Saafarers now paying
staunch supporter of the T-H If Seafarers are in New York,
dues on tripcards are re­
law, who has stumped the state they can make the protection of a permitman, provided, how­ get a hospital slip from the Skip­
quested to forward their
praising this anti-labor legisla­ doubly safe by stopping at the ever, there is no bookman avail­ per and collect their unemploy­
cards to SIU Headquarters,
tion, Unfortunately, Holland still 6th Deck and having the official able who is registered in that ment insurance when they are
has three years to serve of his Union seal impressed on their group.
6th"Floor, 51 Beaver Street,.
recovered. They have a legiti­
current term.
New York for exchange to ^
In other words, if no bookmen mate right to the money and
photograph.
permits.
This business of using identi­ are around for a job, bookmen should make their claim as soon
AFL ORGANIZING DRIVES
fying photographs is only a sug­ from other groups can throw in as possible.
:
A drive is presently under gestion and is by no means a
way to organize Maas Brothers, Union rule. It just seems to be a
the c i t y's largest department good idea, and the protection it
gives is worth the few minutes
store.
Considerable progress has it takes to have the picture taken.
sels called here ih-transit: Alcoa
Word has been received from
By CAL TANNER
b^n made, despite the fact that
Roamer, Steel Mariner, Greeley, the Waterman Steamship ComFAIR
SAILING
innumerable obstacles have been
MOBILE — Although shipping Victory, Del Alba and Bull Run. pany that the body of Wayne J.
placed in the way of the AFL
Back to the shipping picture: has been somewhat slow during Only a few minor beefs pop­ Wookey, a bookmember who,
Retail Clerks Union, not only by This past period we paid off 20 the past two weeks, the pros­
was stabbed to death in Salon­
Maas Brothers but other em­ ships and signed on 15, for what pects for next week appear ped during the payoffs, but all ika, Greece, during a stopover
ployers as well. However, it we'll term a fair week across the much brighter. Scheduled so far were settled to the crews' satis­ of the Fairhope, was being re­
looks, as though this time the board.
for crewing are four Waterman faction. The in-transit ships were turned to Mobile on the same
in good shape.
Retail Clerks will win.
The payoffs were: Elizabeth, C-2s and an Alcoa C-1.
The Alabama State Federa­ vessel.
Our relations with the other Suzanne, Cornelia, Beatrice and
Ships paying off here included
The funeral will probably take
trade unions are tops. We have Kathryn, Bull; Steel Recorder, the Fairhope, Afoundria, Ponce tion of Labor held its annual
place
here. A complete story on
convention
in
Mobile
a
couple
given assistance to the Laundry Steel Vendor, Steel Scientist and de Leon, Wild Ranger, Antinous,
Workers, the Teamsters and the Allegheny Victory, Isthmian; Bret Harte, Yaka, Jeff Davis and of weeks ago. The Seafarers In­ this incident will be carried in
Retail Clerks during the past Seatrains New York and New the Morning Light, all Waterman, ternational was well-represent­ next week's report.
ed, with 31 delegates attending Brothers in the Marine Hos­
couple of weeks.
Jersey; Robin Mowbray and Rob­ and the Alcoa Clipper.
The Laundry Workers asked in Trent; Colabee, AmericanSigning on were the Clipper, in behalf of several affiliated or- pital during the past week in­
for aid during their organizing Hawaiian; Julesburg, Terminal bound for the British West In­ ganizationsr These SIU dele­ cluded J. B. Berreier, E. Collins,
drive and we responded readily. Tankers; Purdue Victory, Besse­ dies; the Morning Light, heading gates represented all branches H. Ashurst, F. Goose, L. How­
They were successful in obtain­ mer Victory and Azalea City, for Puerto Rico; the Jeff Davis, of the maritime industry, and ard, L. Atkins, J. Naylor and J;
ing a contract with the city's Waterman; Algonquin Victory, scheduled for stops at London, they were received with respect L. Worley.
largest laundries, the Latin-Am­ St. Lawrence Navigation, and Bremen, Antwerp, and Rotter­ by the convention. The meeting
Among those on the beach are
erican and Imperial outfits.
William Dowling, State Fuel.
dam. The Alawai, Waterman, lasted four days.
Lynaugh, H. C. Fields, Eyag-'
Once labor's forces are con­
All were in good shape and also signed on, for a run to The Marine Allied Workers' elos Stratis, J. Byers,' C. Sey­
organizing drive in .the Gulf is
solidated here, Tampa will be easy for "the Patrolmen to square Greece, Italy and Turkey.
mour, H. House, J. Crews, L,
the best organized city in the away. The only beef still hang­
The - Antinous and Wild Rang­ in full swing and it looks as
US. At this time, we have 50,- ing fire came up in the Steel er signed on continuous articles. though' this outfit , is really going Taylor, H. Wilson, F. James^
. _ I Andy George and- F. Jldwards.
C90 people—out cf a - population Scientist's black gang and will In addition, the following Ves­ places.

A&amp;6 Tripcards

Mobile Shipping Prospects Seem Brighter

�THE

Friday. June 10. 1949

SEAFARERS

Page Five

LOG

% WHAT

ttWMIC.,,

QUESTION: What incident gave you the greatest thrill of your seagoing career?.

JAMES E. WILSON. FOW;

D. E. MILLER. FWT:

JOHN C. JACKSON, MM:

BENNO ZIELINSKI, Deck Eng.: PABLO DEPAZ, MM:

In 1945 I made my first trip
to sea from the West Coast. I
Was dispatched to a C-4 headed
for India, to pick up and return
home 2500 American soldiers. In
addition . to the thrill of being
aboard my first ship. I found
interesting the way the voyage
was planned, right down to the
finest detail. I was amazed at
the efficiency that went into the
organizing of a ship for a big
Job. The storing, crewing, and
timing of the operation was top
notch. It was a line trip and
everything came off okay. Stores
were adequate and everybody
was happy to see that the affair
went off so well.

Seeing Rio de Janeiro for the
first time, back in 1945, gave me
one of the biggest thrills I've
had since going to sea. I was
only there a few days, but I
got around to see most of the
points of interest, among which
was Sugar Loaf Mountain, which
I ascended by cable car. On sec­
ond thought, though, I probably
got a bigger thrill than the Rio
visit. That was the time I learn­
ed we were leaving the Persian
Gulf after shuttling- out of there
for a period of nine months. The
heat had taken a terrific toll
among the crew, and I guess I
was almost stir crazy.

Outside of supporting other
unions, such as the ILGWU,
which 1 found interesting, an ex­
perience I had in 1947 gave me
the biggest thrill of my sea­
going career. While my ship was
in Bremen I took some time off
to fly to Berlin. When the Army
transport plane I was aboard
came over Berlin, I saw the
ruins of the German capitol
spread out under us. The sight
was awe-inspiring. It brought
home to me the full effects of
the war and the allied bombs.
Skeletons of buildings and debris
everywhere took my breath
away. It was my biggest thrill,
and also mute testimony to the
terrible toll of war.

Changing from a lifeboat to a
raft after my ship, the old Penmar, was torpedoed by a Nazi
sub off Iceland during the war.
Our lifeboat was overloaded and
we couldn't bail her out fast
enough. They asked for volun­
teers to go on a raft. I went,
then three others followed me.
All together we were on the
water 84 hours. As we were
abandoning ship, the Captain's
Steward tossed me a bottle of
gin, which I figured I'd Jpreak
out when spirits were low. When
I took the bottle out later and
passed it around, you should have
seen the Skipper's face as he
recognized the familiar label.

I was in Calcutta the day In­
dia got her independence from
the British. That was a great
day for the people of Calcutta
and for everybody else in India,
I guess. The people were all
dressed up and they danced and
shouted in the streets all day^
I guss that, when you wait for
a couple of hundred years or
so to get your freedom, it really
means something when the great
day comes. I went ashore to
watch the celebration, and I got
a thrill from seeing so many
people happy at once. Freedom
is something that makes any­
body happy. Maybe there isn't
enough of it in the world.

DOUGLAS O'NEILL. ABt

JOHN FEDESOVICH, Wiper:

JOE KOTALIK, Bellboy:

EDWARD GONSALVES, OS:

This isn't exactly in the na­
ture of a thrilling experience,
but it certainly gave me one of
the biggest laughs I've had at
sea. I was aboard the Morning
Zught at the time. We were down
in Mayaguez, P.R. Two of the
crew were painting the side of
the ship from a small boat on
the offshore side. They were us­
ing "man helpers," dipping them
into five gallon buckets of paint.
Suddenly those on deck lieard
some commotion. We looked
down. The water around the
small boat was covered with red
paint and our two painters were
swimming around in the stuff.
They got a big horse laugh.

On New Year's Day, 1949, we
were moving into Portland, Ore­
gon, in a storm. Suddenly we
came upon a fishing boat hove
to in the weather. She was ob­
viously in bad shape. There were
two men aboard her, one of
them a 19-year-old kid. We
brought them aboard our ship.
They were all-in, having gone
at least two days without sleep
and, I guess, without food. They
were just lost in the storm. We
tried to tow their boat, but the
line broke and a couple of days
later their boat was found
wrecked. They were lucky we
picked them up. To me it was a
lesson on how tough the sea can
be.

1 don't know. It depends on
what you mean. There are all
kinds Of thrills. I remember one
thing that gave me a bang. In
May 1947, I was Messman aboard
the Del Norte. We were coming
into Rio de Janeiro one day.
Suddenly overhead there ap­
peared three' American planes. I
think they were B-25s. Anyway,
they came in low and circled us.
Then they circled us^ again, and
a couple more times. Finally
they dipped their wings and flew
away. Whether it was a thrill
for anyone else or not, I don't
know, but it was exciting to me
to be greeted in a foreign port
by our own airplanes.

During the recent war I was
on an ATS ship, the State of
Virginia, which was en route to
Brazil from Trinidad. We were
traveling in convoy, of course. In
that period of the war, the Nazi
submarines
were
operating
around the clock in the South
Atlantic and they picked off ships
like clay pigeons. So, sure
enough, a pack of raiders showed
up when we were about half
way to Brazil. They let go with
the torpedoes and although we
didn't get hit, several ships in
the convoy were sent to the bot­
tom. There was plenty of ex­
citement on board our ship,
which was loaded with soldiers.

NORMAN EDWARDS, FWT:
Back in England in 1941, a
group of British seamen were as­
signed to man two ships, the
Pacific and the Messala, which
we were to pick up in the US.
I was about to sign for the Paci­
fic when a friend said the Mes­
sala would be in New Orleans
and, therefore, a better deal. The
Pacific was sailing from New
York. After innumerable com­
plications caused by the Messala's unseaworthiness, we were
forced to drop behind the con­
voy, which later was attacked
by the Nazis. 25 of the 77 ships
were lost. When I got to London,
I heard that the Pacific had
gone down and that only one
man survived. I sure was grate­
ful for mt friend's advice.

�Page Six

THE

SEAFARERS

Friday. June 10. 1949

LOG

AMD NEWS
DeSoto Crewman Urges
ShipmatesTo Back AFL
Typos In Miami Strike

*

SEAFARERS ABOARD THE ALCOA PIONEER
^
. •* ,

&gt; s

^

-i/,, '

/-

The 125 members of the International Typo­
graphical Union now on strike against the Daily
News and the Herald in Miami deserve the full
support of the SIU, Sea-*
farer Philip Reyes told meeting he chaired last
the crew of the SS De month.
He said that the newspaper
Soto, Waterman coast­ publishers
were trying to force
wise ship, at a shipboarc the open shop down the throats
of the Miami typos, and were
using Florida's own anti-closed
shop law as well as the TaftHartley Act to do it. Because
the SIU does not maintain a
Hall in Miami, Reyes suggested
that the crew of any ship touch­
ing that port go see the strikers
The men of the Waterman and give some tangible evidence
vessel, Antinous, are pressing a of support.
search for the former crewmemBITTER STRUGGLE
bers of the Marine Arrow. The
The Miami printers' strike has
reason: to thank them for the
washing machine given them been in progress for six months.
when the Marine Arrow was It began when the publishers
sold to another company.
tried to get an open shop con­
tract,
a contract which would
The matter came up recently
allow
non-union
printers to work
at a shipboard meeting, and a
alongside
union
printers for
suggestion was made that the
SEAFARERS LOG be employed wages and conditions the ITU
to convey the thanks of the An­ won. ITU officials say that the
publishers obviously are trying
tinous crew for the fine gift.
to
rim the typographical union
One of the crewmembers, in
out
of Miami.
commenting on the union-like
gesture, stated that the action Seafarer Reyes pointed out to
of the Marine Arrow men "spoke his crewmates that the Interna­
- louder than anything of real tional Typographical Union was
imity and brotherhood."
one of the oldest organizations
The crew bemoaned the fact in the American Federation of
that they did not have the Labor and was playing an im­
names of the crewmembers re­ portant role in the fight on the
sponsible for the gift, but hop­ Taft-Hartley Act and the "little
ed that they would leam some­ Taft-Hartleys" which a number
how of the Antinous crew's of state legislatures have adopt­
ed. "A boost for the type-setters
thanks.
from
Seafarers touching Miami
Appropriately enough, the top­
ic discussed during the meet­ would be a first class demon­
ing's education was: Unity of stration of inter-union solidar­
the SIU.
ity," Reyes declared.
The meeting was chairmaned
Recording the meeting's pro­
by Charles O. Lee and recorded
ceedings was Raffael Martini.
by Paul Carter.

Antinous Crew
Seeks To Thank
Arrow Brothers

Tail End Of A Fish Story
V. G. Colas, an AB aboard
Isthmian's Steel Chemist, got a
chance to display his skill as a
fisherman recently as the vessel
lay off Vizgapatam, in the Bay
of Bengal. Casting a line from
the ship's deck. Colas hooked a
five foot, 75 pound shark.
After he had subdued his
quarry, Colas went down over
the side of the Chemist and
posed for the customary picture,
taken by one of his shipmates.
He then turned his catch over to
several eager natives, who con­
sider the tiger shark something
of a table delicacy.

Passenger Crewman Is Rabid Hobbyist
Between trips the average
crewemember of a passenger ship
has hardly enough time to get
used to the feel of land afoot be­
fore heading out to sea again, but
Fred Schroeder, Plumber on Del­
ta Line's SS Del Norte, manages
in his few days ashore to squeeze
in flings at his half dozen or so
hobbies besides courting a New
Orleans girl.

A young man in a hurry, In the meantime; however, he'll
Schroeder usually wastes no time content - himself with sailing
getting ashore in his hometown aboard the Del Norte and getting
of New Orleans and out to the in a few licks at his hobbies be­
wide open spaces where he may tween trips.
take a spin in a plane, hunt rab­
What his girl friend thinks of
bits in the backwoods, troll for his many avocations isn't known,
big ones in the Gulf, or maybe but chances are that she's handy
take to the highway on his mo­ with a rifle and fishing rod. How
torcycle. In his less adventurous else could she keep up with the
moments he hobbies with horses. guy?
The 23-year-old Seafarer, a
member of the SIU since 1943,
can't explain his avid pursuit of
the many sports, other than to
say that he likes to get'around
and enjoy himself while doing it,
FLYING TIME
Most of his hobbies he picked
up as a youth in and around the
The ill-fated raid on the MV
big southern city. It was after a Sea Trader by Venezuelan cus­
long haul aboard the tug Watch toms men took place in the port
Hill in the Pacific during the of Maracaibo, and not in La
war that he turned his interest Guaira as originally reported in
to flying. He'll soon receive a the ship's minutes of April 10,
commercial pilot's license.
according to Charles OppenheimFor the future, when he gets er. Oppenheimer served as sec­
more than a few days off, he retary-treasurer of the shipboard
plans to team up with six other meeting at which the Maracaibo
fellows in a cabin cruiser and go incident was discussed.
on a long cruise fof- the bigger
The story of the Sea Trader
fish in the sea. Another long crew's experience in the Vene­
range desire is to get on the zuelan • port appeared in the
FRED SCHROEDER
African run and bag an elephant. SEAFARERS LOG of May 10. It
revealed that customs men had
illegally boarded the vessel and
seized the property of two crew
members. After the crew vigor­
ously protested the arbitrary ac­
tion, the customs officials told!
By SALTY DICK
the two men to report at the
Ray Flynn has finally left someone came to his rescue... customs house, where they said
a Delia scow after being on it Erasemo Arroyo dreams of the the property would be returned.
for over two years. The rea­ day when he can retire from Instead, they placed the claim­
son was illness... For those the sea and live in the hills of ants under arrest. The Sea Trad­
who do not know it„ the SIU. Puerto Rico with cows and er's Skipper and crew then ap­
Constitution reads you can be chickens.
pealed to the American consul.
fined $10 for the first offense
Men are still being trained As a result, the customs men
for being drunk and bring the in the U. &amp; Maritime School were forced to release the two
Union into ill repute. Read at St. Petersburg... While on men and return their property.
Article XX. Section 5... The the high seas suggest Sparks
Oppenheimer advised crew­
big fellow you see around the to get Station WPG in Nor­ members who might have sim­
HaU in New York looking like folk for maritime news. I un­ ilar experiences in the South
a million and smiling all the derstand that Wayne Miller is American port to be just as firm
time is Albert DeForrest. He's announcer... Mike Kolokik has as th^ Sea Trader men were in «
on the beach but receiving his finally gotten a slow boat to opposing the illegal raids. How­
pay every week.
China. He had a minor oper­ ever, the success of the Sea
Shorty Sanchez is the little
Trader crew in turning the
fellow who fell into a huge tank ation recently and the doctor tables on the raiders is expect­
on a ship and was not mi^ed told him "it won't be long ed to considerably reduce the
until he started yelling and now."
possibility of recurrences.

Seafarers Turned
Tables On Customs
In Port Maracaibo

'The Voice Of The Sea'

BIG CHOMPERS
Colas said that the shark had
some 150 teeth. Each row of
75, contained 50 saw teeth, he
swd.
The Steel Chemist paid off in
Baltimore on May 10, following
a five month voyage. •

Crewmember Paul Perez look Ihis photograph of some of his shipmates during a stopover at
Halifax recently. While in port, the pioneer men exchanged greetings with their Brothers of
the SIU Canadian District.

V. G. COLAS

�Friday. June 10, 1949

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Seven

Digested Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings
more careful in dumping refuse
ALGONQUIN
VICTORY.
April 17—Gene Flowers, Chair­
off the fantail. Minute of si­
lence for lost Brothers.
man: John W. Parker. Secretary.
«
it
«
Engine and stewards delegates
KATHRYN, April 5 — A.
reported all okay, deck delegate
Oquendo. Chairman: T. W. Blanreported disputed overtime for
ton. Secretary. Six men on es­
cleaning bilges. Motion carried
sential duty excused from meet­
that Steward order new mat­
ing.
No departmental beefs.
tresses and pillows and that
Ship's delegate i-eported that
Duvernoy's bread and Snow
foc'sle ventilation system was in­
Boy washing powder not be pur­
effective ^nd unhealthy and that
chased. -Motion carried to get
something should be done about
after 1st Assistant for not re­
it. Report accepted. Voted for
pairing' boom collars. Good and
new awning over poop deck and
Welfare: Suggestion made that
delegates contact Baltimore "gestion of 1st Assistant Engin­ for painting of mess hall. Also
TiTith./irwiyAgent concerning transportation eer that present Engine delegate voted that delegates should call
~
cr _
and new wage scale. Stewards be replaced. Bosun reported that meeting if and when a man is
Department given vote of thanks deck department would be given fired so that crew can decide
for fine food served during voy­ time off in port. Deck depart­ whether or not the firing was
age, especially the wonderful ment to draw for gangway justified. Decided to send this
resolution to Headquarters for
Easter dinner. One minute of watches.
possible
wider action. Repair
silence observed for departed
4 4 4
list
prepai-ed.
Various matters
Brothers.
ALCOA PIONEER. May 3 —
discussed
under
Good and Weir
Huff. Chairxnah: Drawdy, Secre­
fare.
tary. Reports of delegates ac­
cepted. Motion by Story that all
men desiring to pay off in Hali­
fax notify ship's delegate as soon
as possible. Motion by Bouland
4. S. 4.
4 4 4
STEEL MAKER, April 3 —A. that in future no shipboard
MARINA. April 7 — V. SwanWoodferd. Chairman: T. Con- meetings be held before 8 A.M.
cepcion. Secretary. Delegates re­ or after 5 P.M. Motion defeated. son. Chairman: E. Goulding.
ported no beefs. New Business: Motion by Rubinoff that after Secretar;i% Minutes of previous
Motion carried that the crew the first draw in Halifax only meeting accepted. Elected Rowe
pantry scullery be fixed for bet­ American money will be accept­ to post of ship's delegate. Repair
ter drainage. Also that coffee ed, where it does not conflict list to be turned over to Patrol­
urn be repaired. Good and Wel­ with existing currency laws. One man in States. Voted to repair
By HANK
fare: Suggestion made that old minute of silence for departed kitchen utensils. Minute of si­
lence in memory of departed
library be exchanged for new Brothers.
The average Seafarer has either a .mustache or. smokes cigars.
Brothers.
reading material when ship ar­
4 4 4,
We
haven't any statistics on all this, but we can't help noticing
4 4 4
rives in Honolulu.
STEEL APPRENTICE. Mar. 27
these things. By the way, we're wondering if cigar-smoking
CITRUS
PACKER.
April
10—
—C. Loesch, Chairman: B. Un4. 4.
Brothers have a choice, in several brands of cigars put of the shipSTEEL RECORDER. April 24 dertajlo. Secretary. Delegates re­ H. Gordon. Chairman: W. H. boai'd slop chests in these times? ... Flash News—Johnny Ward
Kumke.
Secretary.
No
beefs
in
Eddie Lessor, Chairman: J. ported everything running
sailed into this town with his mustache after a voyage... Brother
Taboada, Secretary. New Busi­ smoothly. No New Business. Good Deck Department, but engine Blackie Connoi's writes from Hawaii saying his ship SS Steel
ness: Motion carried that Patrol­ and Welfare: Suggestion made delegate i-eported two permits Maker is tied up by the longshoremen's strike. Okay, Jim, the
man be contacted about fumiga­ that a letter be sent to the SIU missed ship in Kobe and ste­ LOGs are on their way down to you • in Kahului, Maui... Brother
tion of the ship. Motion carried Hall complimenting the Stew­ wards delegate said there was
Ray Duhrkopp came in-transit last week, with his mustache. He's
that crew quarters be painted. ards Department on the good an overtime beef to be settled.
aboard
the SS Gadsden... Little Joe Kotalik must be a dapperMotion carried that a voluntary feeding and handling of food. Varied discussion under Good
looking
Seafarer when he's rigged up in that passenger ship bell­
donation be made for SIU sea­ One minute of silence for de­ and Welfare covering laundry,
boy's
uniform...
One of the Gulf oldtimers. Brother E. W. Mayo,
repair list and slopchest.
men at Fort Stanton TB hospi­ parted Brothers.
sailed
into
one
of
our ports. Where are you. Brother Mayo?...
4-4 4
tal. Good and Welfare: Suggest­
FYom a letter we learn that- another oldtimer, Brother Harold
DANIEL
H.
LOWNSDALE.
ed that delegates have books in
April 3—Duke Livingston. Chair­ Laurvik is taking a little vacation from the sea (as he calls it)
order for Patrolmen. All quar­
man: R. Guild. Secretary. Deck, out in Kansas. Smooth vacationing. Brother Laurvik... Artie King,
ters to be tidied up for the new
engine
and stewards delegates well-known cake Baker, shipped out on the Seatrain Havana along
crew.
reported no beefs beyond a few with the oldtime Bosun, M. Van Ryswyk.
4 4 4
^
4
JOHN B. WATERMAN, April STEEL ADMIRAL. Mar. 31— disputed hours. Under Good and
10—Luke Collins. Chairman: E. W. W. Weslbrook, Chairman: M. Welfare talked over the food sit­
Brother "Tiny" Mease sailed into town recently after a
Jones, Secretary. Delegates re­ L. McCarly. Secretary. Delegates uation, making suggestions for
benefit
of
the
Steward
and
voyage with Brother Pete King—who stayed on for another
ported beefs on overtime due for reported no beefs. Good and
not breaking sea watches. Mo­ Welfare: McMullen suggested Cooks. Repair list drawn up.
round
of good voyaging... Frank Waller sailed into town after
tion carried that a letter be sent that crew get together on clean­ Minute of silence for lost
three months of inter-coastal... Brother Ivan Whitney is in
to Union Hall concerning 2nd ing of passageways, heads, show­ Brothers.
town with his mustache after tripping on the IbervUle. If you're
4 4 4
Cook who missed the ship, caps- ers and pantry. Suggested that
FLORIDA. April 13—L. Shaw.
in the frame of mind to talk about wrestling, as a topic of
ing it to sail shorthanded. Good some arrangement be made to
Chairman: T. R. Hyde. Secretary.
conversation only, then Ivan is sure to bend a willing ear.
and Weilarc: Suggestion made prevent outsiders from raiding
Department delegates' reports
that punching bag be put up to night lunch. Suggestion made
He's done a bit of groaning and grimacing at one time, we've
accepted. Collection for Brother
give crew a work out. Suggestion that Patrolman see Chief Mate
learned... Bosun Mike Rossi is in town again after several
Herman Laundres totaled 196
made that New York' launch about requiring men to sign re­
months of shipping—with mustache and those "hearts" games
dollars. Under Good and Wel­
tickets be turned over to ship's ceipt for $1 in case of loss of
no
doubt... Here's an item we forgot to mention in our last
fare, various shipboard problems
delegate to see if money can foc'sle key. One minute of silence were discussed. Minute of si­
column. Brother "Red" Beers is in town a few weeks now from
be collected.
for departed Brothers.
the West Coast. Red, who is a bartender (sea-going, if we're
lence for Brothers lost at sea.
correct) hasn't been in this town for many years. We hope
4 '4 4
SANDCHIEF. AprU 9 — Ed
"Red" isn't talking into his beers about having enough of
Parr. Chairman: John Cole. Sec­
this expensive town already.
retary. Previous meeting min­
utes accepted. Deck and engine
duties and overtime problem dis­
The SEAFARERS LOG will be sailing free of cost to the
LOYOLA VICTORY. AprU 18 homes of the following Brothers—Leonard Kennedy of Alabama,
cussed in detail. Stewards De­
4 4 4
partment had no beefs. Voted —Seeburger. Chairman: Cairns.
EVISTAR, March 27 — Cox. to appropriate funds to purchase Secretary. Departmental re­ J. H. Martin of New York, Clifford Umfieet of Missouri, Curtis
Chairman; N a g 1 e. Secretary. games and other recreational ports accepted. Under Good and Ridge of California, Joseph Bierman of New Jersey, Archie Carter
Delegates reported on number of material for use of crew. Voted Welfare discussed making repairs of North Carolina, M. G. Batchelor of Alabama, Harold Witt of
books and permits in their de­ that any man leaving ship must of washing machine, painting^ Maryland, James Sellers of Georgia, E. P. Sahuque of Louisiana...
partments. New Business: Mo­ give 24 hours notice and wait deck gang foc'sles, pantry and A few' Seafarers in town right now are: Elmer Witzke, Andy
tion by Jarvis to send a repre­ for replacement from Union messhall as Mate had promised Hom-illa, Roy White and Bill Doran, Francis Sylvia, W. W. Reidy,
John Bednar, big George Whale, the Steward, with his familiar
sentative to Hall to see if it is Hall. Failure to follow this pro­ at begining of the trip.
cigars...
Since one of the well-known oldtimers sailed, there's
possible to pay off without Pa­ cedure to result in charges.
4 4 4
one
record
we don't hear in the music-boxes. It's called "The
trolman. Good and Welfare: Dis­ Broad discussion under Good
9TEEL AGE. April 13—R. LiStreets
of
Laredo."
cussion on performers, condi­ and Welfare.
pari. Chairman: B. B. Darley.
tions, welfare of crew and Union.
Secretary.
No beefs reported by
4 4 4
department
delegates. R. Lipari
SEATRAIN
NEW
JERSEY,
4 4 4
Brother Frank Gages is in town talking about the Liberty
BIENVILLE, April 6—Drozak, April 12—^Mclnlyre, Chairman: was elected ship's delegate.
tanker
he made last week... We heard from that talented
Chairman: John ~ Brady, Secre­ Roy Robertson, Secretary. No Voted to create a ship's fund,
Seafarer
artist. Norman Maffie. who keeps running down to the
tary. Deck and Engine delegates beefs reported by departmental the balance to be tuimed over to
Islands,
that
he hope.s to further develop that skill by going
reported disputed overtime. Ste­ delegates. Voted after discus­ hospital at end of trip. Deck
to
school.
Good
luck. Norman... Brothers, keep those ships
wards delegate reported every­ sion that all delegates were to delegate reported that men who
happy
by
running
those jobs according to the agreement.
thing okay in his department. post overtime totals before each didn't get hot night lunch on
Keeping
your
nose
clean
and the ship clean makes for happy
Brother Drozak elected ship's arrival in New York. Under sailing day would be compen­
voyages,
indeed.
delegate. Crew voted down sug- Good and Welfare decided to be sated.

If goit are a, poor
aiul
dc ndt
cdicm^oii arc at sisa,, tpa
ivili sa-vfe ijotur
and £ricnd&amp; a
lot ctf wovrt^ hy iioti£yia^ theitt wh^
yotL
out. &lt;3iv&amp;thott titenaatiecif
tlte ship, coittfaityfe address, attd

Wi

CUT and RUN

�THE SEAFARERS

Page Eighl

Copra And Far Eastern Cabarets
Highlight Harte's Round WorldTrip
To Ihe Edilor:
Articles were signed the morn­
ing of November 22, 1948 and
thus began the round-the-world
voyage of the Bret Harte. Each
man was punctured five times in
the left arm by a doctor. That
afternoon a one-armed crew
turned to. I escaped work that
day for awhile by having the
fellows call me AB when the
Engineers were around. This
worked until Red Owens, an
Oiler and former pal of mine,
came up and slapped me on the
back, saying, "I'm glad you made
the Oiler's job." "Aha," said the
Chief Engineer, and the echoes
of the mall-on-bearing wrench
told the story of his greeting.
During the outward run many
sea stories were exchanged, with
Brother Roundtree taking top
honors for his tall tales. His
exaggerating (\xceeded his cook-

Hardworking Deck Man

Staunch Seafarer Frank
Sylva, AB, poses aboard the
MV Seatrader after comple­
tion of a hard day of work
keeping the German vintage
ship in shape. Frank is a
booster of the LOG. seeing to
if that there are adequate
copies aboard at the beginning
of each trip.

14-Year-Old
Future Seaman
Asks For Log
To the Editor:
I would like it very much if
you would send me the SEA­
FARERS LOG each week. I re­
gret that I am not a member for
I am too young. I love ships
aiid I will belong to a union
some day. I am 14 years old
and I would like to get the SEA­
FARERS LOG so I will know
what it's like.
I found a copy of the LOG on
Delaware Avenue near pier 98
in Philadelphia and I thought I
might as well try to receive
it. That's why I am writing. I
• bc^e you will not turn me down.
Leslie Goldstein
(Ed. Note: .Please accept a
gift subscription to the LOG
from ihe Editors. We hope
you like it.)

ing by far. I also want Bosun
Carl Carlson to know that I
don't believe his yarn of meeting
his brother coming around the
Horn on a hatch board.
When stores began to get low,
partly because of bad stores re­
ceived in Norfolk, the Steward
shrugged and claimed that the
supply ship had struck a mine
and was sunk. During a squall,
Fireman Massey related the
story of a trip when the seas
were so rough they came down
the stack and water was knee
deep in the engine room.

Fridar. June 10, 1949

LOG

REYES* VIEW ON THE HAVANA-MIAMI RUN
V.

THC CHOW
IM THt S5. FLORID-^
ejfCCLLENT. •

came used to it.
We ate,
breathed, fought and slept with
hell's own plague of copra bugs.
The smeU alone was sickening.
There was little in the way of
pastimes, except in a couple of
ports which boasted a movie and
dance hall.
SING TO ME. TONI

On February 25 we departed
from the Islands. After stops at
Singapore, Aden and Suez we
headed for Trieste, our destined
port of discharge. It was here
that Junior Bryant fell in love
with Toni, the singer at the
QUICK LOAD
Sugar Bowl. Junior had been
Discussion of sudden weather composing songs all trip and
changes brought this one on. Toni sang one at the Club, there­
Robert King says the last time by winning Junior's heart. Now
he was in the South Seas, a Toni doesn't know what to do
typhoon blew the hatch covers with it. Theugh Trieste was
off, filled the hatches with cocoa- favorable to everyone, the crew
nuts, The sun came out and was glad to set sail for home.
dried them and they sailed away Two pups, the Third Cook and
with a full load of copra and Junior Bryant's heart were left
four monkeys up the mast. All behind.
After we were homeward
in 24 hours.
bound,
the nervous strain. that
The arrival of the Bret Harte
in Honolulu sent grass skirt sales j had existed during the long and
soaring, while pineapple juice, tedious trip soon passed away,
prices remained at par. The but enroute to Mobile we reonly nite stand in this port wak ceived orders to go to Canada.
bathed in typical California The crew's feelings turned, as
weather: rain. The Hawaiian cold as a welldiggers in the
gals are sure "full books" as far Klondike.
After a short stop in Halifax,
as we are' concerned, although
the only gals we saw in grass the ship pulled away from the
skirts were part of the nitery's dock with half the crew still
orchestra. Our patronage there ashore saying fareweir to the
was far the sole purpose of get­ local maidens. The Bosun, how­
ever, dropped the anchor to wait
ting out of the rain.
On January 10 we dropped for us. "It was alright, though,"
anchor off Kawasaki, Japan. I the Captain said, "I was just
know many home town girls are about to tell you to, anyway."
going to be pleased with the Some of the fellows say they're
silk garments and tricky gim­ coming back to this port on vaca­
micks the fellows bought -for tion. Can't say that I blame
them. We sailed for Manila, with them, either.
Favoring winds and seas
rumors rife that we would
shuttle Army equipment between brought us to New York, the
port of-pay off. All beefs and
Manila and Japan.
Manila proved to be another troubles are now in the capable
one night stand with fair hands of the Patrolmen. The
weather. All rumors of shutting gang is packing now, laughing
were stopped. We received de­ and joking, ready to go their
finite orders to load copra. Six separate ways. Some to vacation
of the loading ports were made spots, others to their homes to
in all. None of us had hauled wile away the weeks their pay
copra before, but .it's best not to will permit. Whichever way they
even mention the word around a travel, I'm sure ,some of us will
seaman who has made this run meet again To talk over - the
before.
voyage of the Bret Harte, when
The heat was just about un­ she took. the long way home.
bearable until finally
we beVincent Kuhl

"TtlEfte AWE MORG 'JEA6l/t.L$
«.
EflTlNS OUT OF THE FLORiPA,
IM HAVANA THAU OUT .'V
OF ANV OTHER SHIP. HNO
THE CREW SETS HO £*n?A
FOlf THIS- FXTRA
. WOPK.

Longtime crewmember of
P&amp;O's passenger ship. Florida,
Brother E. Reyes sketches his
impressions of the crew gained
during the shuttling back and
forth between Cuba and Flori­
da. Reyes took a vacation
ashore since making this
sketch, but late reports have it
that he's back aboard agun—
just can't stay away from her.

I remember one membership
meeting I attended where a re­
port was made stating that the
Union was seaching for a new
Hall in New York. That was
quite awhile ago and' I haven't
heard anymore about it.
I am a keen reader of the
LOG and have read the reports
of the agents in various ports
stating how their new Halls are
being rigged up. In the past
few months there have been re­
ports of new Halls in New Or­
leans, Philadelphia and Savan­
nah. I also believe Mobile will

shortly begin renovating their
present headquarters.
In the LOG in the near future
I would like to read where the
New York Agent extends an in­
vitation to all to come and visit
the new New York Hall.
PLEDGES HELP
I am only one member and
not long in the Union, but I am
100 percent for the betterment
of the organization. I would
like to know what we can do
to obtain a new building in New
York?
We are strong internally, we
fire respected by the shipown­
ers and by coimtless of organiza­
tions throughout the country. I

I j 61DRYHOLE

*

.1-

€.ReV65

Seafarer Still Says Tacoma
Is Way Up There As A City
To the Editor:

and all beefs were settled at the
spot.
Well boys, that is about all.
there is about Tacoma at the
moment. I would appreciate a
line from any of the fellow who
have sailed with me. Write to
me care of the Tacoma Hall.
Clyde L. Still 5

I thought I would drop a line
to the fellows and let them
know about the fair shipping
port of Tacoma.
This is one of the greatest
cities I have ever visited. If the
people would start wearing, top
hats and tail coats you would
swear the Pilgrims had just
landed here. I was walking up
a hill yesterday and lost 10
pounds during the first hundred
feet. To a country boy these
hills are like Mt. Fujiyama (Jap­
an's highest mountain, 12,395
To the Editor:
feet—Ed).
We had the Young America to
I read with interest the letter
pay off at the first of the week appearing in the Seafarers LOG
of May 2, and headlined "Dis­
charge of 40-Year-Olds Seen as
Major U. S. Problem."
feel that as such we need a
I have often devoted much
place of business to conform
thought to that serious subject
with our position.
I hope the members will come and I believe that if my thinking
through and give their views on is correct I could turn out an .
this matter.
interesting article on it. I agree
John Lavin
(Ed. Note: For some time a that it is a matter of serious
committee has been attempt­ concern. I wish I could find the
ing to find a new Hall for the time to do the necessary research
port of New York, but the into the whole business of how
group feels that .-^the Union .men
, 40 and over find it increas,
doe. not waoi jutf anolhe. 4™'5' "f ® diBicult to Bod emHalL but a set-up that wUl ployment.
Unfortunately, I must sail for
answer every need of the
a
living and compelled put my;
SIU. When that building is
found a full report will be wish aside. Maybe someday I
submitted to ihe membership will be able to tackle it, though.
for action.)
Victor E. Johnson

Asks New NY Hall To Fit Union Prestige
To the Editor:

T«£ \/C/VOP(9WC4 '
OF UNtbN .
RULFS /S

Johnson Agrees
40-Year-Olds
Pose Problem

�Htm

THE SEAFARERS

Friday. June 10, 1949

Home From Rough
Trip To Sicily,
Wants The Log
To ihe Editor:
While on ships I miss many
issues of the LOG. Inasmuch as
I am not able to pick up copies
when I come ashore, I wish you
would forward some to me at
my home here in Tampa. I'm
lost and so is my family without
the paper. My wife and three
oldest children always read it
. On my last trip I was taken
off the ship in Messina, Sicily.
I was removed from the Beaure­
gard with diptheria and hospital­
ized for 27 days. I returned to
the States on the SS Warrior
and arrived in Galveston last
week.
It was indeed a most trying
experience and one I never want
to go through again.
Later on I will have a very
interesting story for the LOG
concerning my experiences in
Sicily. At present I an? busy
with school winding up. My
oldest daughter js graduating
from Notre Dame Girls School
in Baltimore. With seven . chil­
dren, five of whom are going to
school, the old payoff doesn't
seem to last long.
Stanley M. Clark

Page Nine

LOG

DOCKSIDE CONFERENCE

Log's CTMA Cartoons Okay,
Says Wife Of CS Seafarer
To the Editor:

Three Arabs in deep discussion provide colorful subjects
for the sketch paid of Seafarer-artist Norman Maffie. Scene is
Alexandria. Egypt. Maffie was* a crewmember of the Isthmian
ship, Santa Clara Victory, which stopped .off at the Egyptian
port during its round-the-world voyage last fall.

Attention Members!

Porthole Navigation
Submitted by E. B. MacAuley
.With a pair of calipers and a twelve inch rule
.The Chief climbed up on his cabin stool;
He glanced out the port at a bit of land
As he shifted six pencils from hand ,to hand.
He toiok a two finger bearing on God-knows-what
And hurriedly grabbed his morning tot;
He jumped down below, the "revs" to take.
To see what knots he'd have to make.
He looked at the clock and yelled for steam
iThen wrote in the log, "Diamond Head's abeam;"
Righto, Chief, as the Aussies say—
Abeam twelve hundred miles away.
jpn an ancient chart of old Cathay
.
' . vr : .The course he marked with a corwt stay;
His calipers slipped as a wave made her roll.
But he marked his fix with a piece of coal.
He added, deducted, divided by three
And called to the Mate, "Dead ahead's Flattery!"
Navigation to him is mere child's play;
Tes, Flattery's, five hundred miles away.

All applications for unem­
ployment insurance in New
York City must be made
through the offices at 165
Joralemon
St.,
Brooklyn
(Third Floor), instead of the
District offices, as formerly.

Mr. Roop is going to have to
grin and bear the Cities Service
cartoons as long as the SIU con­
tinues its organizing drive on
the Cities Service Company.
I should think that since the
membership hasn't had any com­
plaint with these cartoons for
the past year, certainly none
should arise now. (The reference
here is to a letter published in
the LOG of May 20, in which
Brother Edwin C. Roop said
th^t the LOG'S cartoon character
of the Cities Service Tanker
Men's Association is offensive—
Ed.)
In answer to Mr. Roop's letter
pertaining to CTMA, I would
say that the character used is
the closest the SIU can come to
the real CTMA. Especially ap­
propriate was . the one in which
this CTMA •character went into
a beauty parlor for a clean-up.
My husband says that this car­
toon character is the cleai'est ex­
planation of what he was up
against while he sailed aboard
Cities Service ships.
I have found these cartoons
very interesting and not from a
fanatical point of view.
BOOSTS CS JOB
I sincerely hope that the SIU
gets the contract for which it
has been fighting so hard for the
past two and a half years.
I would like to close by saying
that the most tragic picture I
have yet seen which proves that
we must fight
to uphold our
democratic rights is the Union's
picture, "Battle of Wall Street."
In one scene the New York po-

Drydocked Members Ask News

lice are seen unmercifully beat­
ing several SIU pickets.
Mrs. Pauline Milton
(Ed. Note: Mrs. Milton is the
wife of Rocky Milton who well
knows the viciously antir
union {Practices employed by
the Cities Service Company.
Rocky Milton was fired from
the SS Fort Hoskins in^ New
York on Feb. 19 of this year
because of Union activity.)

Moon Rates Spot
In Ring History,
Says Old Percy
To the Editor:
This is to settle some disputes
that have been brewing for quite
a number of years concerning
what two pugilists fought the
last 20 round bout down yonder
in a southern ring, or for that
matter anywhere in the good old
USA.
Did you know that one of the
battlers was no one but the
popular Bing Crosby of the SIU,
Moon Kouns? The contestents
were Moon (christened Martin H.
Kouns) and K.O. Bear (chris­
tened Charles Domique).
This bout took place on the
west bank of the Mississippi at
the West Side Arena. Techni­
cally there were two other 20round bouts later, but they end­
ed early when all contestants
quit before too many roimds.
Anyway, heading back to the
big event, the gong ended the
20th round and the bloodied
scrappers headed back to their
corners. The announcement
came and our boy. Moon, was
hailed the winnah.
With that the lights went out
(to save juice, you know), and
Moon and the Bear jumped out
of the ring for the payoff. Moon's
purse whs $13, the Bear's, $1.50.
They made a quick look around
and learned that the promoters
had headed on the double for the
Canal Street ferry. There wasn't
much of a gate for them to lug
away. There were fifty people
at the fight and 35 of them were
deadheads.
Percy Beyer

Thomas Taylor
To the Editor:
Tripler General Hosp.
Greetings from Hawaii from
Ward 26
four news-starved Brothers in
Honolulu,
T. H.
the Tripler General Hospital,
Honolulu. We'i-e also requesting
(Ed. Note: Copies of the
some SIU news via the SEA­ SEAFARERS LOG are on the
FARERS LOG, as we haVe been
unable to get any since we have way to these four Brothers.
The LOG is happy to know
been here.
One or two copies would be that these men are anxious
ample. All four of us are in the to keep up with SIU news and
same ward and it looks as will see to it that each issue
though we will be here for some
time. It would be swell to be is forwarded to them as it
able to keep up with current comes off the press.)
SIU events.
A FANCY ANGLER'S PRIZE
Our best wishes to all for good
shipping.
Clinton L. Barb
Arthur J. Lomas
Alton Leach

Wife's Opinion
Of Labor Unions
Revised By SIU

To the Editor:
I would appreciate your chang­
ing the address on my coaies of
He took the bilge soundings and added the log.
the LOG.
I enjoy reading the LOG and
Deducted the draft, made allowance for fog,
my husband and his shipmates
Divided the tonnage by the pi;pssure of steam.
look to me upon their return
Added the length to the maximum beam.
from a voyage to be up-to-date
on all matters affecting them
By the sea temperature, her speed multiplied.
and their interests. This your
paper enables me to do.
Then threw all his figures over the side.
Since having seen the SIU in
Blew the whistle three times, set his watch back an hour. action,
I have greatly revised
Tied the safety valve down with a half sack of flour.
my opinions of unions in gen­
eral, for you really have the in^
"Another three days," he told the Chief Mate,
terests of your membership as
your main concern. Would that
I'Wilf bring her in sight of the Golden Gate!"
all other unions did as much for
Jitter grab sohiething. Chief, and take a round turn,
tlieir memberships.
JJP'e're inside the Bay and the Gate is astern!
Mrs. William A.- Ebanka

SIU Chief Cook, Claude R. West, displays the results of a
few hours
in Jacksonville. The Brother not only hooks
them, he also fHes them up for his guests. "Great eating."
says Brother West.

�Friday. June 10, 1949

THE SEAF A RE R S LOG

Page Ten

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings In Brief
PHILADELPHIA — Chairman,
E. Higdon, 182; Recording Sec­
retary, J. Sheehan, 306; Reading
Clerk, D. HalL 43372.
Minutes of previous meetings
read and accepted. Agent dis­
cussed shipping in this port. Re­
ports read and accepted included
the following: Secretary-Treas­
urer's financial statement, Head­
quarters' report to the member­
ship, Patrolman's and Dispatch-

er's report. Charles J. White,
Book No. 51191, took the Union
Oath of Obligation. Communica­
tions from members asking to be
excused from meeting were re­
ferred to the Dispatcher. Charges
read. One minute of silence was
observed in memory of departed
• Union members. Meeting ad­
journed at 8:30 P.M.
$
NEW YORK — Chairman. J.
Azabasz, 29836; Recording Secre­
tary, F. Stewart, 4935; Reading
Clerk, E. Mooney, 46671.
Minutes of previous meetings
in other Branches read and ap­
proved. Motion carried to non­
concur with that part of Boston
minutes regarding transferral of
money from Building Fund, and
to reaffirm Union's original pol­
icy .in lending money to the
Canadian District. Charges read
and motion carried to refer them
to Trial Committee. Motion car­
ried that action be withheld on
Mobile resolution on Chief El­
ectricians for at least three meet­
ings, to allow full discussion in

A St C Shipping Prom May 18 To June 1
PORT

REG.
DECK

Boston
New York
Philadelphia
Baltimore
Norfolk......
Savannah
Tampa
Mobile
New Orleans.
Galveston
West Coast
San Juan....;

35
186
31
87
32
22
21
49
64
51
23
7

GRAND TOTAL..

608

quarters' report. Agent discussed
shipping in this port during the
past two weeks, and' noted that
the situation ^had been very fa­
vorable. A five-man committee
was elected to review qualifica­
tions of men wishing to change
departments. Committee recom­
mended that one of the appli­
cants be allowed to change from
Engine to Deck Department.
Membership adopted committee's
recommendations. Meeting ad­
journed at 7:35 P.M., with 88
members present.
4.
t
TAMPA—Chairman, R. While,
57; Recording Secretary, R. H.
Hall, 26060; Reading Clerk, L.
White, 27165.

JtEG.
ENG.

17
133
24.
69
18
15 .
8
47
66
39
26
13

REa
STWDS.

TOTAL^
REG.

21
145
24
70
14
10
5
42
119
26
33
11

73
464
79
226
64
47
34
138
249
116
82
31

SHIPPED
DECK

30
178
33
49
27
29
11
29
93
49
13
16

SHIPPED SHIPPED TOTAL
STWDS. SHIPPED
ENG.

16
133
22
41
18
30
7
20
97
35
23
8

12
152
28
41
14
23
7
18
137
44
19
13

58
463
83
131
. 59
82
25
67
327
128
55
37

NEW ORLEANS — Chairman,
Leroy Clarke, 23082; Recording
Secretary, James Tucker, 2209;
Reading Clerk, Buck Stephens,
76.
After minutes of previous
meetings were read and ap­
proved, a committee was elected
to hear charges. Later in the
meeting committee announced
its. decisions, which were ap­
proved. Port Agent reported that
business of port was in good
shape and that shipping was

holding its own. Since last meet­
ing, there _ were seven payoffs,
eight sign-ons and 27 ships inpast two week period. A motion tions were excused from meet­ transit, he said. He expected that
carried to refer excuses to a ing. Headquarters' report to the activity for the next two weeks
committee. Motion carried rec­ membership was read and ac­ would about equal that of the
ommending that membership be cepted. Motion carried to take past two-week period. Agent also
kept informed about the func­ a hand vote on the Mobile reso­ discussed the chartering of the.
tioning and needs of the San lution affecting Electricians. Fin­ Brotherhood of Marine Engineers
Juan Branch. Under Good and al vote showed the membership and the ultimate effect of this,
Welfare there was discussion on unanimously opposed the resolu­ development upon all AFL mar­
the need for two men to super­ tion. Port Agent reported that itime' workers. Patrolmen made
vise the Hall when the Agent is he, along with Bennie Gonzalez their reports. Communications
out on the ships. Various other and Leon Johnson, had attended from Brothers asking to be ex­
matters, such as cleanliness of the recent Maryland State and cused from meetihg were re­
the Hall, were also topics of dis­ District of Columbia Federation ferred to the Dispatcher. Motion
cussion. Meeting adjourned at of Labor Convention. He an­ carried to table resolution on
7:45 P.M., with 82 members in nounced that they had been Electricians offered by Mobile.
successful in getting one man Membership concurred in Secreattendance.
from the AFL .^Maritime Trade 'tary-Treasurer's report. Two men
» 4^ »
Council—Jefferson
Davis, of the took the Union Oath of Obliga­
GALVESTON—Chairman,' Ray
International Longshoremen's As­ tion. One minute of silence in
Sweeney, 20; Recording- Secre­ sociation — elected as seventh memory of deceased Brothers.
tary Keith Alsop, 7311; Reading vice-president of the Federation. Under Good and Welfare, mem­
The Agent also discussed the bers were advised not to sit on
Clerk. R. Wilburn, 37739.
present state of shipping in the the window ledges. It was point­
Approved minutes of previous Port of Baltimore. Hospital Com­ ed out that more and more
meeting in Galveston and other mittee's report was accepted. One members are taking an active
Branches. Headquarters' and minute of silence was observed part in the Branch meetings.
Secretary - Treasurer's financial
in memory of iieparted Union This was hailed as a very good
reports read and accepted. Port Brothers. Meeting adjourned at indication of membership inter­
Agent stated that shipping had 8:30 P.M. 255 members were est in the general welfare.
been very good for the past two present
weeks, and that the immediate
^ X,
MOBILE—Chairman, W. Dic­
key, 95; Recording Secretary,
James L. Carroli, 50409; Reading
Clerk, Harold J. Fischer, 59.
475

520

1,603

New Business in minutes of
previous meetings in other ports
read and accepted. Motion car­
ried to concur in Mobile resolu­
tion on Electricians. SecretaryTreasurer's financial report ap­
proved. Agent reported on state
of shipping in the port. He point­
ed out that SIU had helped con­
siderably in beating down the
state anti-labor law proposed by
Tom Watson and succeeded in
having it placed on a referen­
dum ballot for decision by the
state's voters at next year's el­
ection. He also discussed the prospect was that it would con­
situation regarding the ten-year tinue that way. However, he
the SEAFARERS LOG, so that lease held by the second fioor
said that, at the rate men were
all members will fully under­ tenant of the Union's building
coming in here from other ports,
stand the issue. Port Agent dis­ here. Under terms of the lease,
it was likely that shipping op­
cussed the status of shipping in the only way the Union can
portunities would be slowed up
this port. Headquarters and Sec- gg^ ^jjg lessee out is by offering somewhat. Motions carried to ac­
reary- reasurers reports read financial inducement. A motion cept the reports from Head­
and accepted. Excuses for ab- was called for and carried, ask­
sence from meeting referred to ing the membership in all ports quarters Reinstatement Commit­
the Dispatcher. It was announced to authorize such arrangement. tee, Transportation Rule Tally­
that the lease on the Headquar­ Dispatcher's and Patrolman's re­ ing Committee and Quarterly
ters building had been extended port read and accepted. Under Finance Committee. Communica­
for one year. One minute of Good and Welfare, there was tion from Galveston Labor Coun­
cil was read and approved. Mo­
silence in memory of deceased considerable discussion on the
tions carried: to refer all com­
Union members.
local labor situation and the munications from members seek­
4 4, t
problems facing organized labor. ing to be excused from meeting
BOSTON—Chairman, T. Flem­
ing, 30821; Recording Secretary, SAN JUAN — tfiChairman, T. to the Dispatcher, to concur in
B. Lawson, 894; Reading Clerk, Banning, 3038; Recording Secre- Mobile resolution on seatime re­
quirements for Electricians. Jeff
A. Melanson, 44406.
lary, Julio Evans, 7573; Reading Morrison was elected by accla­
Minutes of previous meetings Clerk. T. Viera.
mation to represent Galveston
in other Branches read and ac­
SIU
at AFL State Convention.
cepted. Headquarters' and Sec­ Minutes of previous meetings
Ray
Sweeney
was elected alter­
retary-Treasurer's financial
re­ in other Branches read and ac­
nate
delegate.
One minute of
ports approved. Motion carried cepted. Port Agent said that
silence
in
memory
of departed
to accept Agent's verbal report. shipping had been slow, but was
Brothers.
Meeting
adjourned
at
Dispatcher reported shipping picking up a little in the past
7:50
P.M.,
with
45
members
figures for each of thfr depart­
present.
ments. One minute of silence in
%&gt; %
memory of departed Brothers.
BALTIMORE—Chairman, Wil­
Meeting adjourned at 8 P.M.
liam Rents, 26445; Recording
with 125 members present.
Secretary, G. A. Master^t^,
%
few days. The Ponce paid off in
SAVANNAH—Chairman, E. M. fine shape, with the exception 20297; Reading Clerk, A1 StknsBryant, 25806; Recording Secre­ of a beef or two in the Stew­ bury, 4683.
tary, and -Reading Clerk, C. M. ards Department. He said that Charges and decisions of Trial
lUce, 40707.
quite a few ships had been call­ Committee were read and ac­
Motions carried to approve ing at the port, most of them in cepted. Membership approved
minutes of previous meetings in pretty good shape. Dispatcher re­ minutes of previous meetings in
other Branches, Secretary-Treas- ported on number of men regis­ all Branches. Several members
uror's financial report and Head- tered and shipped during the who had forwarded communica­

557

450

508.

1,515

Minutes of previous meetings
in other ports read and acted
upon. Port Agent reported that
a- charter had been granted to
the Brotherhood of Marine En­
gineers and he read communica­
tions from Headquarters regard­
ing this development. He also
discussed the bids received from
several contractors on the re­
pairs needed for building occu­
pied by this Branch. A report on
the organizing drive being con­
ducted by the Marine Allied
Workers, affiliated with the SIU,
was also given. The Agent con­
cluded his report by stating the
prospects for shipping in this
port during the coming two
weeks. Motion carried to accept
communications received from
Headquarters. A motion carried
recommending that any man
carried on the shipping list for
90 days be placed at the bottom
of the list. Motion carried that

Branch give full support to Lindsey Williams in his job as Sec­
retary-Treasurer ot the Marine
Allied Workers. The following
reports were approved after
reading and discussion: Patrol­
man's, Dispatcher's and Secre­
tary-Treasurer's financial report.
Meeting adjourned at 7:55 P.M.,
with 290 members present.

Savannah Enjoys
Several Days Of
Goofi Shipping
,

By JIM DRAWDY

SAVANNAH — Shipping has
been pretty good here in Savan­
nah these past few days.
Among the ships paying off
was the George D. Prentice, the
entire crew of whichepaid off and
headed for Baltimore. The Pren­
tice has some disputed overtime
because of some indiscretions on
the part of the Skipper.
However, all the overtime was
cleaned up before the payoff was
over. The Prentice has since sail­
ed for Korea. '
The SS Dorothy, Bull, also
was in here for a payoff. She took
a few replacements. Several men
were shipped to each of the de­
partments of the SS Cape Race,
South Atlantic, another Savan­
nah payoff. The Robin Mowbray
came in^to load cargo and we
shipped four men to her.
MarAncha's SS Cape Mohican
is now in port and she will take
almost a full crew.
Despite the fiiirry of activity,
we don't want to encourage men
to come to this port because the.
prospects for the coming weeks
are not too bright. One of our
regular South Atlantic ships is
tied-up by a strike in Glasgow.
We have a new water cooler to
help wet down the gang here
during the hot days ahead. That's
about all from the fair city of
Savannah at the moment. We'll
have more next week.

�Friday, June 10. 1949

THE SEAFARERS

Page Eleven

LOG

Alcoholism And Maritime
By JOSEPH I. FLYNN
i

licensed personnel were not limited.
Such naive attitudes have undergone a great change since
that time.
The SIU, in recognizing the
problem, is doing something con­
structive about it. The US Pub­
lic Health Service which oper­
ates the Marine Hospitals, has
adopted a complete change of
policy toward the seaman who
drinks to excess.
In the old days, a seaman with
a drinking problem, and in a
very sick condition, received a
poor welcome, if any, at Marine
Hospitals. Today, the best treat­
ment in the country is given the
alcoholic seaman here in New
York at Ellis Island Marine Hos-

a sickness has been disseminated among seamen and others
in the maritime field,
The operation that is mainly
responsible for the progress now
shown is the AA Seamen's Club,
Inc., which has lately changed
its name to the Helmsmen Club,
Inc.

It was only five years ago that
an article in the New York World
Telegram on alcoholism among
HENRY B. DONAHO
MARTIN BLACKWELDER
seamen
caused some controversy.
Your grandfather is ill. Get
• Get in touch with Vincent
O'Reilly, 2427 9th Walk, Jackson in touch , with your aimt, Mrs. The head of what was then a
Heights, New York. He is hold­ Essie Jones, Route 2, Box 21, large organization for seamen's
welfare, protested furiously to
ing a suit for you.
Normangee^ Texas.
the
statement that alcoholism is
4 4 4
RESPECTED
prevalent among seamen.
LOUIS W. PEPPER
DIRK DEGRAZIA
Various newspapers gave his
. Please send your mailing ad­ Meredith B. Williams, SS FredIt's this group, which is rim
dress to your wife—^who, in turn, ricksburg. Keystone SS Com­ protests a write-up, as well as
by seamen and shoreside alco­
forwards Happy Father's Day pany, 1015 Chestnut Street, Phil­ those of one of the larger mari­
holics, that in the last five years
wishes from Butchie and Judy. adelphia, has your discharges and time unions.
has brought about the change in
He said in part that less than
papers.
hundreds of- heretofore hopeless
1
percent
of the 3,000,000 seamen
AXEL nf ROGHAMMAR
4 4 4
gashounds, performers and bot­
who visited clubs and hotels run
You are asked to contact Mrs.
IDELFONSO PEREZ
tle babies who are now sober
Frida Roghammar, 6 BollhusYour wife is anxious that you by this organization had a drink­
highly respected, efficient seaing problem.
.grand, Stockholm, Sweden.
men.
get in touch with her.
Yet
it
was
this
same
outfit
These men are better seamen,
4. 4 4
4 4 4
that had rules in their estab­
ARTHUR L. MATTHEWS
ROBERT E. HANEY
union members and citizens
Communicate with Herbert T. Contact local draft board No. lishments to the effect that un­ For the last three years this through the understanding of
Drew, ' U.S. Deputy Collector, 61, Crozier Building, Fifth and licensed seamen were allowed problem has been studied at this themselves that they have gained
only three bottles of beer, while hospital, with the result that since sobering up. The informed
Bureau of Internal Revenue, Market Streets, Chester, Pa.
Box 1278, Savannah,. Georgia. .
conditions and treatment have I alcoholic seamen—and I mean
steadily improved throughout informed, not reformed—are the
4 4 4
ERNEST DRASHER
the country.
proof that something can and is
You are requested to get in
being done about what was once
ALL RATINGS
•touch with Herman N. Rabson
Mississippi ShippiQg Company has begun the pay­
a hopeless problem in the mari­
or Benjamin Sterling, 42 Broad­
It is estimated that an aver­ time field.
ment of unclaimed wages and over-deductions of Fed­
way, New York 4, N- Y.
age of 135 seamen per month
In the past the steamship com­
eral Old Age Benefits accumulated as of December 31,
4 4 4
are admitted to the alcoholic panies would say, "That's the
V. KOEL
section at Ellis Island, 20 per­ union's problem," and the unions
1948. Inasmuch as the list is too long for publication
Get in touch with E. E. Ool,
cent of these being repeaters. denied they had any problem.
in the SEAFARERS LOG, members can check the list
906 E. 178th Street, New York
This figure
includes seamen
The marine hospitals, although
60, N. Y.
in any SIU Hall, where a copy is on file.
from all ranks. Captain to Or­ realizing the problem, took on
dinary Seaman, Chief Engineer the general attitude of the others
Men who have money coming should address their
to Wiper, Steward to Messman. and dealt with other matters.
This hospital has cooperated
claim to Mississippi Shipping Company, 1301 Hibernia
Today the steamship companies
with all lay groups working on
know that the seaman who
Building, enclosing their Z number. Social Security
the problem, and today it's a drinks to excess is a liability—
SIU, A&amp;G District
number and date and place of birth.
proven fact that the alcoholic
missing ships, by causing acci­
BALTIMORE
14 North Gay St.
seaman
can be helped and is dents, and destruction of prop­
William Rentz, Agent
Mulberry 4540
worth helping.
BOSTON
276 State St.
erty, and is an inefficient work­
Ben Lawson, Agent
Richmond 2-0140
Seamen's welfare bureaus and
er,
which is no small cost to
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141
organizations have undergone a them.
GALVESTON
308y»—23rd St.
complete change in attitude, from
Keith Alsop, Agent
Phone 2-8446
that of hopelessness to one of
RESPONSIBILITY
MOBILE
1 South Lawrence St.
Cal Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-17S4
interest and cooperation.
NEW ORLEANS
S23 Bienviile St.
The Seamen's Church Institute The unions realize that con­
E. Sheppard, Agent Magnolia 6112-6113
has a department for guiding tracts are two-sided affairs. They
NEW YORK
51 Beaver St.
and helping the seaman who have to supply efficient, sober,
Joe Aigina, Agent
HAnover 2-2764
ERASMO ARROYO
NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St.
By WILLIAM McKAY
wants to do something about his responsible men who know their
Your gear is in the baggage
Ben Rees, Agent
Phono 4-1083
drinking problem. In the last jobs and are able to protect the
TACOMA — I should like to four years of its operation, an union's interests, making each
PHILADELPHIA
337 Market St. room of the New York Hall.
J. Sheehan, Agent
Market 7-1635
take this opportunity to empha­ average of 500 seamen per year ship a better one for a new
4 4 4
SAN FRANCISCO
85 Third St.
size
a point that apparently is have been helped.
crew.
Frenchy Micheiet, Agent Douglas 2-5475
SS YOUNG AMERICA
not
fully
understood
by
some
of
SAN JUAN, P.R
252 Ponce de Leon
The American Seamen's The welfare organizations and
(Voyage W-1)
the men who have been signing Friends Society has lent its sup­ hospitals are now given moral
L. Craddock, Agent
San Juan 2-5996
SAVANNAH
. ..2 Ahercom St.
Will crewmembers who were on Waterman ships in the Gulf
port of its facilities for the help support by this change in at­
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728 aboard this vessel from Oct. 27,
for the Orient run.
of
the alcoholic seamen. The titude,- making cooperation pos­
TACOMA
1519 PaciHc St.
1948 to Jan. 8, 1949, communi­
Broadway 0464
The
ships
involved
are
those
seamen's
YMCA has shown mo­ sible among all. There is still
TAMPA
1809-1811 N. Franklin St. cate with Henry Beckman, care coming into Pacific ports, then
tion
pictures
and has had talks much to be done, and it's to be
Ray White, Agent
Phone M-1323 of Christensen, 3245 N. Damen
expected that progress be slow.
continuing
on
to
Europe
or
the
on
the
problem.
WILMINGTON, CaUf., 227Va Avalon Blvd. Ave., Chicago, 111., giving their
The unions and other maritime But today in the maritime field
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Terminal 4-2874
names and addresses. Beckman Mediterrean.
HEADQUARTERS.. 51 Beaver St., N.Y.C.
organizations
are now cooperat­ it can truly be said that, if any
These ships are on continuous
paid off the ship in China be­
SECRETARY-TREASURER
ing,
and
much
information and seaman with a drinking problem
articles and are scheduled to
cause of illness. •
Paul Hall
knowledge
about
alcoholism as wants help, he can get it.
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
payoff in the Gulf. The trips do
4 4 4
Lindeey Williams
not terminate on the Pacific
NICHOLAS W. FUNKEN
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURER
Coast.
This is the point that
Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
Your discharges and papers should be understood.
Joseph Volpiaa
are being held for you in the
Of course, if a man must pay­
The SEAFARERS LOG as the official publication of the Sea«
New Orleans SIU Hall.
off for a sound reason, such as farers International Union is available to all members who wish
4 4 4
illness, he can do so in any Am­ to have it sent to their home free of charge for the enjoyment of
HONOLULU
16 Merchant St.
Phone 5-8777 HAKAN HENNING JANSON erican port. But groups of men tiheir families and themselves when ashore. If you desire to have
PORTLAND
Ill W. Bumaide St.
Papers are being held for you paying off under flimsy excuses, the LOG sent to you each week address cards are on hand at every
Beacon 4336
RICHMOND. CaUf.
257 5th St ill the baggage room. New York as happened in the Port of Ta- SIU branch for this purpose.
coma recently, is bad practice.
Phone 2599 SIU Hall.
However, for those who are at sea or at a distance from a SIU
SAN FRANCISCO
69 Clay St.
We cannot allow situations that hall, the LOG reproduces below the form used to request the LOG,
4 4 4
Douglas 2-8363
can become a detriment to the which you can fill out, detach and send to: SEAFARERS LOG, 51
SETTLE
86 Seneca St.
NOTICE
welfare of the entire Union mem­ Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
Main 0290
Gear belonging to the follow­ bership.
WILMINGTON
440 Avalon Blvd.
Terminal 4-3131 ing men has been sent to the
PLEASE PRINT INFORMATION
!
Remember that you are re­
addresses listed on the baggage quired to give the customary
Canadian District
tickets. The items were returned 24-hours notice before paying To the Editor:
MONTREAL
404 Lo Moyne St. after being in the New York off. You cannot wait until the
I would like the SEAFARERS LOG mailed to th^
Marquette 6909 baggage room over three months:
ship
is
ready
to
pull
out
to
an­
address below:
HAUFAX
126^ Hollis St. K. M. Kain, Vincent Walrath,
nounce that you wish to payoff.
Phone 3-8911
Homer
Workman,
Leo
Burnett,
PORT ARTHUR
63 Cumherland St.
Name
Phone North 1229 Julio Santiago, A. J. Tansilee,
PORT COLBORNE
103 Durham St. M. Donovan, L. Ritch, A. Mitchel,
Phone: 6591 Dale Ramseyer, Albert Oke, MerStreet Address
TORONTO
Ill A Jarvls St.
lyn
Lormand
and
Albert,
Isiac.
Elgin 6719
The slop chest !• your corZone..
State
City
VICTORIA, B.C. ....602 Boughton St.
4 4 4
HR
store while you ere at
Empire. 4531.
JULIUS E. PARKS
sea. You oaa't take your
VANCOUVER
BOS Hamilton st.
Signed
trade someplace else, if the
J. M. Carras, Inc., of 24 State
PaciSc 7824
Street, New York is holding a slop chest doesn't have what
HEADQUARTERS
...812 McGill St.
Book No.
you need;
Montreal
Ptateau 670 check for wages due you from
the SS Alexandra.

Mississippi Uttclaimetl Wages

SlU HALLS

Gulf-(Ment Ships
NyoH In CM,
Not On Coast

Notice To All SIU Mofflbers

SUP:

AnENTION!

�Page Twelve

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. June 10, 1949

Can Political Action Benefit Seafarers?
By CHARLES RAYMOND

^

Traditionally, the SIU has refused to mix trade
unionism with politics. Seafarers have borne
the nickname "anti-politicals" proudly — es­
pecially when the commies have tried to use it
as a weapon of scorn.
Consequently, the SIU as an organization,
could claim no share of the credit for the land­
slide by which the Democratic Party was re­
turned to power in November 1948, although most
of the Seafarers who voted probably stood with
the Democratic majority.
However, last fall's presidential, and guber­
natorial congressional elections proved that or­
ganized labor has an effective voice. President
Truman himself attributed his victory to the
unions, despite the surprisingly large farm vote
cast in his behalf. Many a congressman, sena­
tor and governor would have to make the same
admission if pressed, and many have.

,
I
®
ing the Taft-Hartley
Act, and replacing it with
'
the kind of labor law the working men and wo­
men of this country want, once again brings up
the old question of political action. In the article
on this page Seafarer Charles Raymond explores
the "political" issue and suggests that it may be
time for the SIU to be thinking in terms of
political activity.
Brother Raymond's views are his own and
do not reflect present Union policy. However,
labor made it pretty clear at the polls last fall
that it wanted the Taft-Hartley Act dumped
and dumped fast. If reactionary Congressmen
and Senators of both major parties refuse to
accept the mandate which was handed to them,
organized labor will have to do something about
the situation in the 1950 congressional elections.
In these circumstances. Brother Raymond's ar­
ticle is both timely and provocative.

LABOR SUPPORT HELPED
More recently young Franklin D. Roosevelt,
Jr., was elected to the House of Representatives
from a New York City district after running
with labor backing.
Last fall's elections may or may not have been
quite so resounding a triumph for labor as they
first seemed — it may take the 1950 congress­
ional election to make victory complete — but
the emergence of organized labor as a real poli­
tical force should make Seafarers wonder whetherournon-poHUcalism cannot be" profitably modified, modified without in the least impairing
our companion policy of economic action where
it will do the most good.
Let's look back and see just why organized
labor came into its own as a political factor in
1948.
The first cause was the 80th Congress, a Re­
publican Congress elected in the off year of 1946.
That was the Congress which alternated be­
tween doing nothing and doing evil.
That was the Congress which let the cost of
living soar out of sight. That was the Congress
which blandly ignored the crying need for a
huge, government-supported housing program.
Above all, that was the Congress which gave
us the Taft-Hartley Act, and winked as big cor­
porations instituted an intense campaign of
union-busting, a campaign that is still in pro­
gress.
NAM PROPAGANDA
Beginning in 1946, the Republicans and the
union-busters really went to town on labor. The
National Association of Manufacturers, along
with chambers of commerce and powerful cor­
porations, bought advertising space in magazines
and newspapers, and purchased time on the air
to "expose" labor, as they put it.
By the summer of 1947, they had succeeded in
relaxing all the controls which had protected
the workingman's pocketbook during the war
period and the immediate aftermath, and they
had enacted the T-H Law.
But instead of being cowed as the reactionar­
ies had anticipated, labor was mad and spoiling
for a fight. By the summer of 1948, labor was
ready.
During the first year of T-H, many unions
began to feel the teeth of the law. As the
months passed, the real intent of the men who
wrote it became increasingly apparent. At the
same time, prices kept sky-rocketing while the
reactionaries muttered something about "free
enterprise," something more about "postwar readjustments" — and did nothing.
Meanwhile, you stood about one chance in ten
finding a place to live, if you didn't mind
spending a month's pay or more for a month's
rent. In the midst of what seemed to be a boom,
tbing.«; were plenty tough. They ^ill are — and
may get worse.
The Seafarers came through this period with

flying colors. Although the Hiring Hall was said
to be illegal under the Taft-Hartley Act, the
SIU turned on its economic power and a tighter
Hiring Hall clause than ever was written into
its 1948 contract.
In preparation for probable stormy weather,
we insisted on a two-year agreement, using our
economic power to make our insistence stick.
We built up our Strike Fund and our General
Fund to make sure that our economic power
enough to meet any emergency,
^ Nevertheless you could not say we were uncame through better
^
we were better prepared
than most. But we weren't liking things any
more than anybody else did. In fact, we still
don't like things.
OUR PROBLEMS ARE MANY
Prices are about as high as they ever were,
The housing problem is still unsolved. The TaftHartley Act remains on the books and the legislation replacing it may not be much of an improvement, despite the excellent bill originally
sent to Congress by the President. Perhaps
another congressional election will be required
to convince Congress that labor means what it
says.
That brings us back to our original question:
Should our non-politicalism be modified in
some degree? Should the Seafarers — as an or­
ganization — enter the political arena, as many
a fine union has done successfully?
Don't forget that one big reason for our nonpoliticalism in the past has stemmed from what
we have seen the communists do. Political act­
ivity on the waterfront has much too often
meant communist shenanigans.
Another reason has been our frequently just­
ified distrust of all politicians, regardless of pol­
itical party. The communists sold the seamen
down the river, and so did others.
But the emergence of labor as a real factor
in the political scene, with no communist strings
attached, puts matters in a different light. Per­
haps labor now has the power to select its own
spokesmen in Congress and elsewhere.
If there are not enough men in Congress now
to carry a labor program, it's up to labor to see
that there are enough after next year's congres­
sional elections. That is the problem in a nut­
shell. Whether the SIU wants to join the battle
as an organization is something for the membership to decide.
One thing that the SIU as an organization
would bring to the political scene, should it decide in favor of political action, is a profound
knowledge of the tactics and strategy of the
various communist groups — those communists
who call themselves Stalinists and those communists who call themselves trotskyites.
One thing we have found out is that both
these groups, and their splinter offshoots, use

the same tactics: everything they do is for the
of themselves only. Neither one
would hesitate the slightest to sell labor down
the river, if its organization could gain any ma­
terial or,political advantage, and t)oth will at*
tempt to infiltrate any organization set up by
unions to use it for themselves.
But the SIU knows how these disrupters work,
and knows how to beat them at their own game.
If these disrupters should enter any grouping
with which the SIU is affiliated, they would
get their ears pinned back — but fast and per­
manently.
Other unions, with anti-communist records
comparable to that of the SIU, have engaged in
politics and been successful. For instance, the
International Ladies Garment Workers Unioii
has been an important factor in politics in New
York for many years, and is now more influen­
tial than ever. The ILGWU membership knows
what it wants and goes after it.
TWO POWERFUL WEAPONS
A trade union acting on trade union principles,
the ILGWU uses its tremendous economic power
whenever necessary, but it supplements econom­
ic action with political action to gain improved
conditions for its members and for organized
labor as a whole. There are other unions which
do the same but the ILGWU is an outstanding
example.
Actually, should the SIU decide to engage in
political action in municipal, state and national
campaigns, we would not come as complete
strangers. We have fought on the political front
before, but from a non-political viewpoint. We
have fought for and against legislation in Washington and fared rather well on many occasions,
In the winter of 1948-49 we conducted a fourand-a-half month campaign to beat the Hoffman
Plan, which would have diverted EGA cargoes
to foreign ships, smashing the American merchant marine in the process. We played the top
role in defeating Paul Hoffman, obtaining from
Congress what may turn out to be a pretty fair
shake for American seamen. We called on the
whole American Federation of Labor to give us
a hand in the battle and many a congressman
and senator, who never had had occasion to pay
much attention to maritime affairs, discovered
that American seamen had a real stake in the
national economy. It was an educational exper­
ience for everybody including Seafarers.
However, fighting for or against particular
bits of legislation is not political action, as that
term is commonly meant. Political action means
not only fighting for or against particular laws,
it means joining in the process of selecting and
electing the senators, congressmen, governors,
state legislators and even presidents who make
and administer laws.
In other words, it means participating in the
process of representative government all along
the line.
MEMBBRSHIP WILL DECIDE

This is not the place or the time to suggest
a policy. Here we can only raise the question.
When the time comes, the membership of the
SIU will decide for itself. However, the time is
not far off, and in the opinion of many the de­
cision to do or not to do will have to be made.
For in the opinion of many, we should look at
our non-political policy and see whether it fits
present circtunstances. If it does, we can main­
tain it. But if the Union stands to gain from
political action, we'd better change our policy
artd change it fast.
Our main job is to protect seamen and continually improve their conditions. In addition,
it is our job to help all organized working meii
gain greater economic and social security. If we
can do these jobs better through political action,
then political action is the answer.
, Let's do some thinking about it.
'

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9916">
                <text>June 10, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9986">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 20</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10007">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10028">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10088">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10106">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10158">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
BRITISH ASK BOYCOTT DELAY&#13;
CANADIAN LABOR EXPELS CSU AS COMMIE-LED&#13;
SNUG HARBOR ENDS 'PROPERTY AGREEMENTS' UNDER STRONG UNION AND STATE PRESSURE&#13;
SENATE DEBATES SUBSTITUTE FOR T-H ACT&#13;
T-H REPEAL&#13;
THE BUMS GET BUM'S RUSH&#13;
CSU GOONS ATTACK SLEEPING TRILAND CREW&#13;
TAMPA SIU ACTIVE IN AFL DRIVE TO WIN BETTER DEAL FOR LABOR&#13;
PORT GALVESTON RIDES WAVE OF GOOD SHIPPING&#13;
PUT PHOTO IN UNION BOOK FOR PROTECTION&#13;
MOBILE SHIPPING PROSPECTS SEEM BRIGHTER&#13;
DESOTO CREWMAN URGES SHIPMATES TO BACK AFL TYPOS IN MIAMI STRIKE&#13;
ANTINOUS CREW SEEKS TO THANK ARROW BROTHERS&#13;
PASSENGER CREWMAN IS RABID HOBBYIST&#13;
SEAFARERS TURNED TABLES ON CUSTOMS IN PORT MARACAIBO&#13;
TAIL END OF A FISH STORY&#13;
SAVANNAH ENJOYS SEVERAL DAYS OF GOOD SHIPPING&#13;
ALCOHOLISM AND MARITIME&#13;
CAN POLITICAL ACTION BENEFIT SEAFARERS?</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10159">
                <text>6/10/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13058">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="961" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="965">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/f09f3ddf70f1fc0245f7cf9cf3d1645e.PDF</src>
        <authentication>82cf14283b391e1ff3f7708040e2d448</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47441">
                    <text>•r*

BRITISH DOCKERS WORK SHIPS;
PHOHY CSU 'STRIKF FOLDS UP

Dockworkers in British ports finally learned
the true character of the commie-dominated Can­
adian Seamen's Union this week. When the fog of
propaganda the CSU's leaders had spread about
their phony "strike" against the 100-odd Canadian
east coast ships, which are contracted to the SIU,
Canadian District, lifted a bit, the British dockers;
understood the situation and immediately with­
drew their support from the CSU. As a result, all
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Golf District, Seafarers International Union of NA
the Canadian-flag vessels contracted to the SIU,
are now being worked in all British ports.
No. 21
NEW YORK. N. Y.. WEDNESDAY. JUNE 22, 1949
VOL. XI

» The action of the British dockers just about ended the CSU's
phony 11-week action, "since the
ships are now sailing every­
where with full SIU Canadian
crews.
Seventeen of the SIU A&amp;G District's 50 contracted companies have signed agree­
However,
the
commie-line
ments calling for a $7.50 clothing* allowance for all ratings, and several other operators leaders of the CSU let out one
are expected to fall into line within a few days. Paul Hall. Secretary-Treasurer of the last bleat on June 17.
The CSU leaders sent a letter
A&amp;G District, announced.
to
Prime Minister Saint Laurent
The action by the operators came within a matter of hours after the SIU. on June
WASHINGTON—The battle in 16, sent letters to all contracted operators requesting talks on a $7.50 increase. The now- of Canada, offering a four-point
.settlement — CSU-commie style.
Congress over repeal of the TaftHartley law is now in its third signed operators signified their okay, and the new provision will now be written into the However, since the CSU pro­
posal took no account of the
week, with a skirmish shapiS[g contracts without opposition.
facts
of the situation, it was ex­
up in the Senate on the issue
The boost went into effect on June 17 aboard' the ships of the companies now
pected to die aborning.
of injunction versu's seizure in
signed.
the handling of strikes which
SIU WARNING
In announcing the boost in take-home pay, the Union stated that it did not expect
may be classified as "national
The British dockers took their
to encounter any difficulties with the operators still to be heard from. Full details of
emergencies."
action after the SIU had cabled
The Senate will consider sev- the SIU's latest increase will appear in the next issue of the LOG.
Prime Minister Attlee of Britain
ei'al amendments to the Admin­
saying that British-flag ships
The
companier
which
have
signed
to
date
are:
istration Bill, which would aban­
South Atlantic Steamship Company, Waterman Steamship Corporation, Alcoa Steam­ might be boycotted by the AFL
don the injunctions now author­
Maritime Trades Department in
ized in such disputes by the ship Company, Bull Lines, Eastern Steamship Company, Mississippi Shipping Company Atlantic and Gulf ports of the
Taft-Hartley law.
Seas Shipping Company, Seatrain Lines, Smith &amp; Johnson Steamship Company, Cuba Dis­ US, if the wildcat, misguided ac­
Senator Taft is intent upon re­ tilling Company, White Range Steamship Company, Mar-Ancha Corporation, Illinois-Atlan­ tions against the SIU Canadian
taining the restrictive features of
ships was not halted.
tic, John M. Carras, Inc., Trans-Fuel Inc., Dry-Trans Inc., and Coral Steamship Co.
his anti-labor bill, but pro-labor
Mr. Attlee apparently turned
forces in the upper House are
the cable over to President Ar­
trying to win support for the re­
thur Deakin of the Trades Union
pealer by softening up provi­
Congress, British counterpart of
sions of the Administration's
the American Federation; who
measure, commonly known as
asked the American unions to
the Thomas-Lesinski Bill.
hold off the boycott until the
British unions could straighten
AGAINST INJUNCTION
matters out.
The Administration labor leg­
smash
teamsters'
strikes,
and
so
is
no
need
for
a
merchant
marine
This the American unions were
WASHINGTON
—
A
bill
en­
islation, backed In its original
reserve
to
insure
manning
of
US
on.
glad
to do.
form by the AFL and CIO, con­ dangering the very life of the
Representative Potter's bill,
vessels
in
wartime,
the
Union
From
then on the problem was
tains nd provision for injunc­ SIU and other maritime unions
described
as
a
"monstrosity"
by
officials
declared.
largely
one of informing the
tions or for government seizure is up for hearings before a sub­
one
observer,
would
prescribe
British
dockers
of the true facts,
They
stressed
the
fact
that
during national emergency dis­ committee of the House Commit­
uniforms for reservists on duty, which British unionists together
there
was
always
more
than
putes. It provides, however, for tee on Merchant Marine and
a thirty-day cooling off period. Fisheries. If the bill becomes enough manpower to keep the and would set their pay at Navy with a representative of the SIU
scales. Reservists would get a proceeded to do.
Senator Paul Douglas (D., 111.), law, SIU spokesmen said, it will merchant marine moving, even
minimum of one month's pay a
As a result, the British dock­
who is anxious to insure passage set the stage so that striking during the most trying days of
year
if they kept their noses ers are now working the SIU
the
conflict.
of the repeal law, has proposed seamen could be put into uni­
Canadian vessels.
SIU Washington representa­ clean.
an amendment, aloiig with Sen­ form and ordered to break their
The Canadian beef dates back
ator George Aiken (R., Ver.), that own strikes. And the precedent, tive, Matthew Dushane, will ap­ The Merchant Marine Reserve
would allow government seizure once established, could be used pear before the sub-committee to would be organized and admin­ to March. At that time, the
inform the Congressmen of the istered by the United States commie leaders of the CSU, af­
of struck plants in emergencies in any industry.
affecting national health and Specifically, the biM seeks to threat not only to seamen's Maritime Service. However, the ter . several months of negotia­
unions if the bill becomes law, Maritime Service would be em­ tion, Induced the CSU member­
safety.
create a Merchant Marine Re­ but to emphasize that the same powered to delegate its functions ship to reject an arbitration
In this way, Douglas and his serve embracing all licensed and
bi-partisan supporters hope ' to unlicensed personnel aboard US device could be used in other to other federal, state or private award to which the CSU leaders*
own spokesman on the arbitra­
fields—that if a Merchant Ma­ agencies.
defeat a substitute bill, backed, merchant ships.
As
a
result
of
this
provision,
tion
board agreed.
rine
Re^rve
can
be
created
to
by Taft and others, that would
It
was
introduced
by
Repre­
seamen
might
wake
up
one
The
CSU membership was left
smash
seamen's
strikes,
a
team­
retain most of the basic features
sentative
Charles
Potter,
Repub­
sters'
reserve
may
be
set
up
to
(Continued
on
Ptge
11)
of the Taft-Hartley act.
CContinued on Page 11)
Bitter opposition to the Doug­ lican, of Michigan, on April 29.
las-Aiken amendment came early It went virtually unnoticed un­
in the week from Senator Wayne til the hearings were announced
Morse (R., Ore.), who offered his the other day.
SIU officials pointed out that
own proposal.
the
section of the proposed legis­
Morse's plan would exclude use
An^ important role in combatting the Merchant Marine Reserve Bill (HR 4448),
lation.
calling for members of the
of the injunction, but would per­
now
before a House Sub-Committee, rests with the individual members of the SIU.
mit Congress to decide what reserve "to be available for im­
Letters of protest from seamen all over the country, their families and friends, lend
should be done on a case-by-case mediate mobilization in time of
war
or
national
emergency,"
is
great
weight to the campaign of opposition being waged by the SIU and supporting
basis. Under the Morse amend­
loaded
with
danger.
ment, Congress could decide on
unions.
NO NEED
use of the injunction, however.
All members are urged to write the sub-committee and stress the importance of
Inasmuch as the bill does not
Organized labor's objection . to
keeping
maritime free of militarization. The members of the House Merchant Marine
the Morse proposal would stem define what is meant by "na­
and Fisheries Sub-Committee are:
principally from the fact.that it tional emergency," the SIU
would institute compulsory arbi­ spokesmen held it could serve
Edward Garmatz, (D. Md.), Chairman; H. C. Bonner, (R. Mich.); William Barrett,
tration, since it provides that the as a cloak for government-spon­
(D. Pa.); James B. Hare, (D. S.C.); Phil J. Welsh, tD. Mo.); Alvin F. Weichel, (R.
fact-finding board's recommenda- sored strikebreaking.
Ohio); Edgar Jonas, (R. 111.).
The committee's address is: House Office Building,
tions are to be put into effect Moreover, the merchant sea­
Washington
25,
D.
C.
.
pending final settlement of the men's contribution to victory in
dispute.
World War H shows that there

Battle Over Operators Sign $7.50 Increase
T-H Repealer
On In Senate

Proposed 'Reserve' Bill Weuld Have
Seamen Breaking Own Strikes

Oppose. Merchant Marine Reserve Bill!

•

�•,m^
Page Two

THE

SEAFARERS

Wednesday. June 22, 1949

LOG

SEAFARERS LOG
Published Three Times a Month by the
SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTIF AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Afiilialed with the American Federation of LaboE
At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Reentered as second class matter May 27, 1949, at the Post Office
in New York, N. Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912. ,
267 -

New Tactics
A Government-sponsored,
Government-organized
Merchant Marine Reserve for use in war and undefined
national' emergencies is the nightmare Congressman
Charles Potter has dreamed up and embodied in a bill
scheduled for congressional hearings this week.
The Michigan Republican's bill, HR 4448, is nothing
but the newest strike-breaking weapon on fhe market. It
would put a lot of seamen in shiny military suits and send
them down to sail the ships the first time a maritime union
hit the bricks in a proper economic beef. For you can
bet your last two bits Congressman Potter means "strike
when he piously writes "national emergency."
At the hearings in Washington before a subcomrfiittee of the House Committee ori Merchant Marine and
Fisheries, a representative of the Seafarers will testify to
the true character of the bill, and demonstrate clearly
that a semi-military Merchant Marine Reserve is the last
thing we need from Congress—in peace or in war. For if
the seamen permit a strike-busting trick like this to be put
over on them, the waterfront unions will be finished.
And then you will be seeing "reserves" organized to break
unions in other fields.
The SIU is going to make a fight
on HR 4448.
Moreover, we are going to win that fight,
and every
-Seafarer should be ready to do his part. Sit down now
and write or telegraph the seven Congressmen listed on
page one of this issue of the LOG. Tell them that HR 4448
is a new scheme to smash the seagoing imions. Ask them
to disapprove it—but fast.
"
,

Hospital Patients
When entering the hospital
notify the delegates by post­
card. giving your name and
the number of your ward.
' Mimeographed
Postcards
can be obtained free at the
Social Service desk.

Tremendous Opportunity
If words will do the trick, we will always have a
inerchant marine, a whopping big one. But asking words
to do it. is- a large order.
Nevertheless, in an address to the King's Point Mer­
chant Marine Academy graduating class. Major General
Philip B. Fleming, the new chairman of the United States
Maritime Commission, declared confidently the other day
that he did not expect a merchant marine sh mp at the
present time.
General Fleming was almost enthusiastic. The way he
spoke, you would think that the maritime industry was
expanding. Yet the truth of the matter is that while the
Commissioner was speaking, the trek to the boneyard was
being stepped up. The only signs of expansion were a
few passenger ships in the drawing board stage and a
few tankers, some of them for foreign-flag use, actually
on the ways.
The MC's optimism is difficult if not impossible
to justify, and is not shared in many quarters. For in..stance, from Washington comes news that Senator Warren
ll^ G. Magnuson's special subcommittee on maritime is be­
ginning its investigation of what the Senator himself terms
the "woeful condition" of the shipping business.
The committee will seek to determine whether pres­
ent day facilities are adequate, whether US ships carry a
proper proportion of passengers and world cargo, whether
shipyard work is strategically distributed on a geographical
basis and how military shipping affects commercial
shipping.
The committee has the opportunity to do a tremen­
dous service for maritime. - Certainly it is high time that
this country's maritime future came in for a little con­
sideration. The sloppy policies followed by the US since
the end of the war have wreaked more damage than we
can afford, and it will take more than cheerful speeches
to mend matters.

A. LUTEY
W. VAUGHAN
W. G. ALSTON
A. L. MASTERS
H. G. REYNOLDS
M. REINKE
G. S. SCOTT
G. D. BRADY
Si's. S.
GALVESTON HOSPITAL
BILLY BROWN
FRED P. LALLIER
EDWIN T. DANBACH

HospHak
These are Ihe Union Brothers currentlv in the marine hospitals,
as reported by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging
heavily on their hands. Do what you can to cheer them up by
writing them.
NEPONSET HOSPITAL
R. A. BLAKE
L. BALLESTERO
J. S. CAMPBELL
V. W. CHESNER
J. T. EDWARDS
I. H. FRENCH
E. FERRER
V. JIMINEZ
J. T. KEMPT
K. G. LUNDBERG
C. L. MOATS
W. SEARS
H. SELBY
^
J. SILLAK
Q. TULL
L. TORRES
T. WADSWORTH
G. WOODS
F. ZESIGER
» » »

FORT STANTON
J. LIGHTFOOT
A. McGUIGAN
D. MCDONALD
J. SUPINSKI
W, H. ROBERTS
J. ASHURST
A A A
STATEN ISLAND ffOSPlTAL
H. E. BONEWALD
N. DOHPMi^S
J. P. PROBST
J. W. FAILLA

W. R. THOMPSON
M. J. LUCAS
A. TREVINO
J. HERNANDEZ
M. FERNANDEZ
L. OIEir
'
T. KANADY
I. RHODEN
M. ROSSI
V. GROVER
J. MAZZIOCCHI
J. F. THOMPSON
W. B. BADILLO
J. J. DEVINE
'
» » »
MOBILE HOSPITAL
J. CURTIS
L. REINCHUGK
J. ASHURST
J. BERRIER
J. PORTER
L.-HOWARD
L. GROVER
W. SIMON
R. SHEPPARD
H. FOY
t A »
BALTIMORE MARINE HOSP.
W. H. WOODILL
T. WADSWORTH
G. A. CARROLL
D. BOYCE
F.TKORVATIN
4VI. I. ELMOUR

^

tr

if

%

NEW ORLEANS HOSPITAL
E. E. GROSS
t,
E. R. MESSINA
E. MA^EY
J. DENNIS
ROTZ
F. LANDRY
ELLARD
L. WILLIS
N. I. WEST
'
w. MCDONALD
L. LA CHAPELL
G. PETEUSKY
G. H. NOLES
G. MEANEY
,•4
C. RAYFUSE
G. MIHALOUPOULOUS
J. PATTERSON
C. BROWN
E.-G. PLAHN DICKINSON
A. ARVANTIS
M. A. LIUZZA
B. C. RESKO
F. L. DROUANT
R. G. BEAUFORT
;
J. GALIANO
m.:
». '4

:!•

�WMnesda]r&gt; Jime 12, 1949

THE

JUST OFF THE PRESS

The "Shipping Guide for Seafarers." a 16-page booklet
containing complete, up-to-date information on registration,
shipping and transportation rules has just been published by
the Educational Department of the SIU Atlantic and Gulf
District. The cut above is an enlarged reproduction of the
booklet's cover. Actual size is 3&gt;/2 inches by S'/z inches. The
"Guide" also listr the principal Branch Halls of the various
districts of the international.
The booklet is available in all A&amp;G District Halls, and
may be had upon request. All members are urged to get a
copy, read it carefully and keep it handy at all times. The
Union's purpose in publishing the booklet was to prevent
misunderstandings arising out of any unfamiliarity with the
Union rules.

SEAFARERS

LOG

Sunmount Example Of New Deal
For Canadian Seamen Under SlU
When a crew has solid Union crew's mess aft with the PO Canadian District Seafarers
backing, it can work wonders Messman serving as Utility man. found that the drain from the
even aboard a prematurely aging Since the Sunmount lacked a drinking water fountain aft
ship like the SS Sunmount, one recreation room, the PO mess- went down to the after peak
of the vessels now imder con­ room was used for this purpose, fre.sh water tank.
They immediately had this
tract to the SIU Canadian Dis­ as well as a place where the
water condemned. Then they
trict, and manned by Canadian men could do ironing.
Next, the SIU delegates set fixed the pipes so that the over­
Seafarers.
about
spicing up the food fare. flow "from the fountain ran out­
During the voyage which end­
Up
to
this point the menu had side. The lads were naturally
ed recently in Port Alfred,
Quebec, the Canadian District been static, featuring one meat more comfortable after that
lads transformed the former CSU and two vegetables each meal, whenever thirst overtook them.
ship from a rust-crusted old with the same two vegetables
FRESH PAINT
water pail into a trim SIU ship. sometimes appeaftng for the
Wherever
paint was sorely
Poorly functioning equipment lunch and supper meals.
needed,
and
that was mostly
was whipped into shape, handl­ Immediate enthusiasm was everywhere, the Seafarers wield­
ing and stowing of stores was registered by all hands when ed the brushes—crew's quarters,
standardized and duties of crew­ two varieties of meat and three messrooms, decks and the rest.
men were clarified, to cite a vegetables braced the table at
Equipment was obtained to al­
few of the improvements every meal time. The Steward low the men to make the proper
noted that this improvement re­
wrought by the Seafarers.
sulted
in very slight increase in repair jobs, and a well-defined
The Sunmount's most distinct
system of storing gear was de­
mark of antiquity-^blue linen the cost of stores. Topside was veloped. The plant, which was
in the foc'sle, permitted by the especially enthusiastic about this operating sporadically, came in
CSU despite the fact that con­ change.
for a good overhauling and it
tracts had called for white—
stopped acting up from then on.
SORRY STOVE
was one of the first to be swept
Previously, the geherators
In the course of straightening went on the blink every two or
aside in the cleaning up cam­
out the chow situation, the Ca­ three days, lights were frequent­
paign.
Reclamation of the Sunmount, nadian Seafarers had opportun­ ly going out, and the fans were
only about three years old but ities galore to demonstrate their fouled up. All were set in order.
looking 30, was clearly' the re­ ingenuity.
The Canadian "District men
sult of her sailing under SIU An inefficient "fuel-saving" aboard the Sunmount said that
contract. George McNash, a Ca­ stove was a prime example. This the former CSU men just never
nadian District Seafarer who stove never got hot enough and, had the support of their union,
was an OS on the Sunmount, as a result, the cooks had to and so they never could accom­
said "Union representation did work as long as 14 hours a day plish anything.
in order to" have the meals ready As McNash pointed out, where
it.'-'
on time.
there's a will, there's a way.
SUNMOUNT ACCOUNT
On the return trip from And the SIU Canadian District
In support of this contention, Georgetown to Port Alfred, the has shown it has the will to
stove went on the blink. The protect and back up its mem­
McNash gave a detailed account
Carpenter did some improvising. bership.
of the stem-to-stern tightening
He rigged up a couple of "hobo That's why the Canadian Dis­
up of conditions aboard the
stoves" by taking two five-gal­ trict is showing the way, and
Canadian ship. Here are the
lon buckets and padding them Canadian seamen are getting a
highlights:
decent deal.
When the Seafarers boarded with cement.
They worked fine, too. For
the ship they discovered that
the first time, the men found
the Mate wanted to continue
that their meals were always"
having two men "on watch, as
ready
on time.
was the case under CSU con­
The SIU delegates also brought
tract.
to a halt the CSU system of
The delegates showed the
rations, whereby each man was
Skipper where the SIU agree­
given each week his quota of
ment called for three men and
sugar, coffee, tea and milk to
said the contract must be en­
be stored in a small locker pro­
forced. A three-man watch was
NEW YORK —Nearly 130,000
vided for the purpose.
instituted.
members
of the International
The SIU men inaugurated the
Marked improvements were
Ladies
Garment
Workers Union,
more satisfactory method of
made almost immediately in the
AFL,
received
$5,450,000
worth
serving everything—even these
galley setup. The PO messroom
of
vacation
checks
last
week.
staples—right from the galley
was abandoned and the Car­
Union business agents went
penter, Bosun and Donkeyman for each meal.
from
shop to shop distributing
A considerable amount of the
began eating their meals in the
effort in cleaning up the Sun­ the holiday pay. The money
mount was expended in the en­ came from the employers—who
gine room. The dirty, greasg- pay„31^ percent of their payroll
laden floor plates were a round- expenses into the ILGWU's
health and vacation funds.
the-clock hazard.
About half the funds went to
The chapter is prepared to Even a slight roll of the ship
85,000
members of locals be­
pay that part of the cost of care would send a black gang man
longing
to the Dress Joint Board,
and treatment you cannot meet," sliding from port to starboard.
and
the
rest to 45,000 workers
she said. "This includes trans­ There were no dust panels un­
under
the
jurisdiction of the
portation, after-care and such der the ladders to keep the dirt
Cloak
Joint
Board--the
ILGWU's
aids as wheel chairs, braces and from falling down the necks of
two
big
bargaining
units
in New
the
men
on
fireroom
•
duty.
other orthopedic equipment."
York.
No
tool
boards
were
provided.
I. Robert Weinberg, labor di­
Vacation payments are based
rector of the chapter, noted that Gear was left here, thex-e and on wage rates, and the prevail­
everywhere.
"this service is made possible by
ing wage in the cloak and suit
the annual March of Dimes
CHANGES MADE
industry is higher than among
which organized labor and per­
the dressmakers.
sons throughout the nation sup­ All this was changed by the
Central records are kept of
Seafarers.
Tool
boards
were
set
port. This support has assured
each
worker's employment, since
that every patient of this disease up, dust panels installed and garment •workers may work in
will receive all the care he must the grease removed from the as many aS half a dozen shops
deck.
have."
A fresh coat of paint was ap­ during a year. This system makes
One other point emphasized plied for the first time in three it possible for a worker to re­
was that fear and anxiety should years. It was revealfed that in ceive credit for all time worked,
be held to a minimum. A calm, the three years under the CSU, in the industry.
confident attitude is conducive the ships engine room had never
A new phase of the ILGWU's
to health and recovery.
social
security program got un­
been painted at all.
Parents, it was noted, should Another example of the CSU's derway this week, too. The Dress
remember that of all those failure to provide safeguards for Joint Board announced that 1000
stricken, 50 percent recover com­ the welfare of its membership union members over the age of
pletely, while another 25 per­ aboard the ship, was its flagrant 65 have qualified for $50 a
cent are left with only slight disregard of the drinking water month pensions. Their checks
are going out this week.
situation on the Sunmount.
after effects.

Polio Foundation Lists Five Proiautions
Warning that the 1949 polio
Kason is "just around the cor­
ner," the Greater New York
Chapter of the National Founda­
tion for Infantile Paralysis to­
day issued a list of precautioniary measures for parents and
those in charge of children dur­
ing the epidemic danger period.
This period usually runs from
May through October, reaching
its peak in Greater New York
City during the Summer months.
Miss Jean Rosborough, execu­
tive director of the chapter, list­
ed five easy-to-follow rules for
children which have been issued
by the . National Foundation's
medical authorities. These are:
1. Avoid crowds and places
where close "contact with pereons is likely.
2. Avoid over fatigue caused
by too activ6 play or exercise,
©r irregular hours.
3. Avoid swimming in pollut­
ed water. Use only beaches or
public pools declared safe by lo­
cal health authorities.

4. Avoid sudden chilling. Re­
move wet shoes and clothing at
once and keep extra blankets
and heavier clothing handy for
sudden weather changes.
5. Observe the golden rule of
cleanliness. Keep food covered
tightly and safe from flies or
other insects. Garbage should be
covered and, if other disposal
facilities are lacking, it should
be buried or burned.
It is advised that a doctor be
called at once* Miss Rosborough
noted, if there are symptoms of
headache, nausea, upset stomach,
muscle soreness or stiffness, or
unexplained fever. Pointing out
that early diagnosis and prompt
treatment are important and may
prevent crippling, the Founda­
tion suggests taking the doctor's
advice if he orders hospital care.
The next step, Miss Rosbor­
ough stressed, is to contact the
Foundation's Greater New York
Chapter, 1 F. 54th St., Murray
Hill 8-1525.

Page Three

ILGWU Members
In New York Get
Vacation Checks

�Page Four

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Wednesday, June .22, 1949

Boston Shipping Bull Line Goes All-Out On New Ship Good Shipping,
Very Few Beefs,
Continues Along
Halifax Reports
In Old Groove
By BEN LAWSON

By ROY LA PIERRE

HALIFAX—Shipping has been
BOSTON—Despite the crewing
pretty good around this Canad­
of Eastern's Yarmouth, another
ian port. In the past week we
two weeks have passed without
shipped upward of 100 men.
' any marked improvement in the
shipping situation in this port.
• Incidentally, almost half of the
The Yarmouth took her first
latter were former members of
crew and set sail on schedule.
the commie-led and practically
It's too bad she's only due to
defunct Canadian Seamen's Un­
run during the hot summer
ion.
months.
They certainly are glad to get
The excursion boats are run­
out from under the commie-line
ning now. The last one, the
officials who have been shoving
Holiday, will take a crew Fri­
them around in recent years.
day. These excursion jobs come
We signed on three ships this
under the jurisdiction of the
week. They were the Saint Malo,
SIU affiliate, the Marine Allied
Grande Hermine and Wabana,
Workers, and all the men aboard
all of the Dominion Coal and
are MAW members.
Steel Company.
We had a few Waterman ships
We had the Wabana back inArchitect's drawing of the SS Puerto Rico as she will appear edter reconversion.
in from the Gulf and a couple
transit, too, along with tlje Louisof stray tankers in from the It looks as if Bull Lines' is mer silhouette did not conform York every second Thursday, ar­ burg and Arthur Cross of the
South. They came in clean and going all out to capture a big to the present day standards of riving «t San Juan three-and-a- same company. In addition, we
left without taking replacements. chunk of the West Indies cruise naval architecture.
half days later.
had the American fiag
Alcoa
The Carabulle, Cuba. Distilling business. The company is spend­ The aftermast has been short­
After a brief lay-over, she will Pioneer to which we sent a re­
tanker, was that company's first ing $750,000 to convert the SS ened 58 feet, the foremast 30 proceed to Ciudad Trujillo and placement for a Fireman who
ship to hit this area in eight Puerto Rico, formerly the Bor- feet and a 29-foot tripod radar then return to New York, ar­ paid off here.
months. We paid her oft in inquen into a real floating pal­ mast has been set atop the riving the following Monday.
There were night lunch beefs
Providence and sent six replace­ ace.
In "Other words, she will make aboard the- Arthur Cross, the
wheelhouse.
ments aboard. The Trinity, an­ The vessel is being completely
Wabana and the Louisburg, plus
The old style funnel has been a : series of 12-day trips.
other tanker, paid off in Portland rebuilt inside and out at the replaced by a more rakish one. The ship's machinery is get­ some complaints about improper
and took eight men.
Maryland Dry Dock Company The 30-foot cutaway forward of ting the same kind of overhaul sanitary work. However, we .got
in Baltimore. Accommodations the bridge has been plated up that the profile and the accom­ everything squared away and the
ANN MARIE IN
and public rooms are being en­ and the old stern has been re- odations are receiving. Exten­ ships sailed in good style.
Bull Line's new addition, the larged so that the passenger styled with stepdowns.
sive alterations are being made
We held an informal meeting
Ann Marie, a knot ship, has capacity will be cut from 377 to
on the engines, boilers and tur­ in the Hall the other night. Jt
The
Puerto
Rico
will
leave
been running into this -port 199.
from Pier 22, Atlantic Avenue, bines, and cast iron sea valves had to be informal because we
steadily for the past weeks and,
did not have a quorum of books.
Even
the
exterior
lines
of
the
Brooklyn, on August 18 to* make are beingreplaced with steel.
we understand, will continue.
Nevertheless, there were about
Bull
Lines
acquired
the
Puerto
Puerto
Rico
are
being
altered.
her
first
trip
to
San
Juan
and
We're a favorite port for in70 men around and we had a
Rico,
then
the
Borinquen,
along
The
ship,
which
is
429
feet
long'
Ciudad
Trujillo.
After
that
she
transits, but, darn it, few pay­
and has a gross tonnage of 7,114, will run on a regular, schedule. with two freighters^from Agwil- good get-together on SIU history
offs.
and policy.
was built in 1931 and her for­ The vessel will leave New ines recently.
During the past two week pe­
riod we contacted all of the
Cities Service ships hitting this
general vicinity. The crews are
patiently awaiting certification.
although we must" admit we're The Associated Fress, the huge the maritime •unions roared their Navy and I understand the Navy
The AP's recent retraction did
getting a bit anxious to get it newspaper wire service which protest.
told them there was no basis for not mean that the wire service
over with. When the SIU gets likes to boast that it reports the A week later, on January 28, the story."
had suddenly got religion and
certified it will mean big things news impartially and accurately, the Navy denounced the stoty as
A Navy public relations offi­ was anxious to undo its past sins.
for this port, as we have four was forced to" eat a little crow a lie, but the proud Associated cer substantiated the Marine What forced the AP's hand was
or five «f their tankers in here the other day when it retracted Press neglected to put out any Corps' statement. But the AP the almost dead certainty that
each week. Here's hoping the a six-year old lie which did retraction of the original false still neglected to retract its re­ the NMU was going to win a
final okay is not long in coming. great damage to union seamen report.
port.
libel suit the CIO seamen's un­
everywhere. It was high time.
The Navy's repudiation was re­ Congress then took a hand and, ion had brought on the basis of
On January 22, 1943, the AP leased in the form of a .report after investigation, a congression­ the story. The AP cried "uncle"
carried a story out of Akron, by Admiral "Bull" Halsey, com­ al committee branded the wh9le and along with the Journal-Am­
Ohio, which maintained that a mander at that time of US story as completely unfounded. erican paid the NMU some ra­
Senator Warren G. Magnuson ther piddling damages.
union crew had refused to un­ forces in the South Pacific.
load a ship at Guadalcanal on a
"In no instance," Halsey said, revealed that the Akron sob sis­ At the conclusion of the four
Sunday. At that time fighting on "have merchant seamen refused ter had declined to identify the paragraph retraction published
By WM. (Curly) RENTZ
Guadalcanal was heavy.
to discharge cargo from their three marines, the two sailors on June 3, the AP said that "a
BALTIMORE — shipping here, First appearance of the story vessels or in any other way fail­ and the pilot who had been the thorough investigation" had fail­
unlike the weather, is not so was in the Akron Beacon-Journ­ ed to cooperate with the US source of her phony yarn. The ed to produce any evidence to
AP took no notice of the devel­
hot. Our old reliables, the coast­ al the day before. A girl reporter forces in that area."
opments,
and the falsehood per­ substantiate .the original phony
turned
it
in,
allegedly
after
in­
The
Admiral
added
that
"the
wise ships and the Ore boats
sisted.
version.
continue to come and go steadily; terviewing three marines, two merchant seamen's cooperation,
Navy
seamen
and
a
Navy
pilot.
efficiency
and
courage,
on
some
it's the foreign-run ships that
are making us cry in our beer— The Beacon-Journal splashed occasions in the face of enemy
the sob sister's yarn under an attack, have won high praise."
they're not coming in.
eight-column, front page head­
NO BASIS
We expect • four ships in for line, "Ship 'Strike' Ires Guadal­
By GAL TANNER
And
how
did the papers play
payoffs following fqreign trips, canal Fighters."
the
Halsey
report?
Here
are
two'
MOBILE — Shipping in the way City, Alcoa Pegasus, Alcoa
but unless-more materialize out The newspaper claimed that
of thin air, this will be a lean "a high official source in Wash-- examples. The New York Journ­ Port of Mobile held its own for Pointer, Fairhope, Afoundria,
week. We handled the week's ington" had confirmed the story. al-American gave it one" para­ the past two-week period. In­ Yaka, Ponce de Leon and De
graph on an inside page in its cluding ' approximately twenty Soto.
crop of steady runners without
FALSE HEADLINES
first edition of the day, then towboat and six deep sea relief
any trouble, and sent a few^ re­
In addition, the Bessemer Vic­
The
AP
picked
up
the
phony
dropped
it.
placements aboard each, just
jobs, 181 riien were shipped since tory, Bull Run, Steel Scientist
enough to keep the port moving. tale and spread it around the The Chicago 'Tribune also gave our last regular rpport.
and Canton Victory were incountry, adding that union reg­ it just one paragraph on an in­
The outlook for the coming ulations forbade the crew to side page, but did manage to - Ships paying "off were the transit callers.
Bienville, Morning Light, Iber­ On the shipping side again,
two-week period is not too work on Sunday.
carry the story in all editions.
bright. The current crop of lay- In New York, old man Hearst's But eveh before the Navy ville, DeSoto and Monarch of prospects for the next week look
ups among the .tankers has nip­ labor - baiting Journal - American released the Halsey report, the the Seas, Waterman; Clipper, fair. Both Alcoa and Waterman
ped shipping a bit, and the long leaped at the chance and played Marines had issued what amount­ Pointer, and Pegasus, Alcoa, and have a couple of ships each that
the William H. Allen, Isthmian. are scheduled to hit this port.
lay-over between cargoes for the up the story on page one. The ed to a denial.
^There
\yere no beefs of any con­ Waterman will have its usual
tramps also contributes to the equally anti-union Chicago Trib­
In Washington, a Marine"^Corps
sequence
on these ships. The three coastwise ships, plus a for-'
general slowdown.
une along with many another general handling public relations
The advice from this port is: paper also gave it big headlines. told reporters: "The Marine few minor ones were settled to eign payoff. Alcoa, will have a
passenger ship and one foreign
Don't come unless you are pre­
With the war effort just swing­ Corps knows nothing about the the crews' satisfaction.
pared to spend a good spell on ing into high gear, the cause of published charges. The people in Vhese ships signed on this payoff.
)^e beach. If we get a boom unionism in general and mari­ Akron called us about it and we week:
We'll give you the full pic-;
out of the blue, we'll spread the time unionism in particular suf­ told them we knew nothing Morning Light-, Alcoa Clipper, ture in the Mobile report in the
word;
fered a vicious blow. Naturally, about it. We referred them to the Iberville, William Allen, Gate­ next issue of the LOG.

Associated Press Retracts Wartime Smear

dipping Cool
In Baltimore

Mobile Shipping Holding Fast

�Wednesday. June 22, 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Jfive

Legitimate Unions And The Two-Book Man
By CHARLES HAYMOND (A&amp;G District)
T. RYAN (SUP)
P. MCDONALD (Gt. Lakes District)

Although they are completely devoid of
influence among maritime workers, there are
a few fringe organizations whose main aim
in life is to stir up trouble. Aware that their
ideologies are, repulsive to alert trade union­
ists, these sterile groups hope to accomplish
something by use of the smear technique.
The article on this page was submitted by
Brothers Haymond, Ryan and McDonald, mem­
bers of three of* the Districts of the Seafarers
International Unfonf, to show how these dis­
gruntled elements operate. Most seamen are
acquainted with the problem, but the Sea­
farers' article is an interesting refresher.

smearing by these ulcerated crackpots exceeded
their best efforts in the past.
Actually it has no basis in fact, and was
merely a rehash of the stories that appeared first
in the various commie propaganda sheets. The
intellectual freaks who edit the lunatic fringe
papers carefully study for "news items" the.
commie sheets, all of which they claim to despise
and condemn.

There are some 14 unions on the waterfront
to which various workers ashore and afloat claim
membership. There are six AFL, six CIO and
two independent unions. Each claims the right
to continue as factors in the maritime industry
through contractual relationship with various
Two of these editors naively admitted in print
employers. Each union came into existence be­
that
their sources of information stemmed from
cause of prevailing conditions and circum­
random letters, careful study of the capitalist
stances.
press
and their own ideas, based on a profound
Their activities through the years have estab­
knowledge
of the class struggle.
lished a pattern of behavior by which each can
be identified as a good or bad influence. The
The admissions were made as a result of pro­
politically dominated unions are mainly con­
tests, and in order to remove the responsibility
cerned with ideologies, which make improve­
At a meeting of these fringers, the organized for these cockeyed articles from the shoulders of
ments on the job of secondary importance.
worker is blasted for his stupidity in belonging their know-nothing followers, who are hardly in
The non-political upions have, as a result, to a union that can do nothing for him; the un- ^ position to support the hearsay carried in the
contributed the greatest number of economic organized worker is blasted because he is so gossip sheets as news.
improvements in the industry. Whether or not backward; all workers in general are blasted be­
CONFUSED CHARACTER
there are too many unions on the waterfront is cause they, as a class, are so misled by the
The two-card atian is looked upon as a carrier
something that the maritirne workers will have capitalist-controlled school system, radio, press
of information to his brother union men and as a
to decide for themselves.
"
and pulpit.
COMPANY UNIONS
composes the diet in speech and print potential fringe group organizer. He is also de­
Excluded from the above figures are two
friend of the exclusive few pended upon to bring some information back on
groups of licensed officers who are compelled to "^o try unceasingly to gam, recognition as an
"s taking place within the union,
join company unions, sponsored and controlled integral part of the labor movement.
Rarely does the two-carder know much about
by the United Fruit Company and the American
proving to themselves that all others are either. - He does not possess the savvy to fully
Export Lines
.wrong, it is felt that they must be correct. That understand the odd position in which he is
There are several such company unions for the conclusion is easy to reach. If that conclusion is placed. He fails to realize that he Is being used
unlicensed personnel. Thus the employees may challenged, then one or several are expelled, as the fall guy, who by virtue of union membe carefully dosed with employer-approved pubousted members can then join some other bership might get away with utterances and
licity through the company union. The mem- established unit or start one of their own.
actions among other union men, or in union
bers of these unions are occasionally granted •»
pamphlet and speech, each outfit takes all hall, that , would not be tolerated from anyone
small concessions. This serves to keep the boys others to task and proves how phony the whole else.
in line and prevents gravitation toward the legipolitical in outlook;
These bush league groups have no policy or
timate unions, through which would be ob- others claim a mixture of all the finer points, program, unless it is to deceive and' confuse.
Several, claim to be interested solely in
m those They are exclusive units who maintain halls
tained more and broader benefits.
strata
of
humans
who
work
for
wages.
Each where thought and opiniop are carefully chan­
The company union cannot protect its mem­
bers, but must condone the thousand and one unit claims a following on the waterfront. There­ neled. By their, actions in the labor movement,
abuses and penalties with which employees are fore, a contact is established in various ports it is possible to think of them as recently
continually threatened by the company brass. where members can meet and add to the general awakened Rip Van Winkles, dazed and be­
Also excluded from the first group are the fund of mis-information. It amounts to a wildered. They can lurther be thought of as
the night riders of the labor movement who,
ipolitical and. social clubs, parties, educational screwed-up "fire and boat drill."
with other anti-labor forces, constantly snipe at
MALARKEY MILL
leagues, crackpots and others who make up the
lunatic fringe of the labor movement. They are
Lacking an informed membership in the in­ the unions. The communist party and the em­
many in number, all different in philosophy and dustry, the leaders find it necessary to go to ployers owe the lunatic fringe a vote of thanks.
attitude. None of these makes a pretense of other sources in search for data on the everFringe units, as you know, are made up of nonimproving the well-being of the worker in in­ shifting scene. They must grub to make more unionists. By their contacts and educational produstry. Their memberships are tiny-and very plausible the stream of mis-information they cesses, they have become violently anti-union.
exclusive because of the very nature of each pour into print. Articles emitting from these Those who work for a living are among the
sources rant, rave, slander and hurl abuse, and great numbers of unorganized, always available
outfit.
to fill jobs in non-union outfits. You can im­
are
rarely written by union workers.
ODD LOT
The articles are drawn up by such whose agine the job a fringe member can do on the
As a result, each attracts a peculiar element
acquaintanceship
with the waterfront is based "illiterates." Innoculated with a rustry victrola
which can only find comfort in each other's
needle, their yapping is incessant and, through
presence. They are made up of worker and on a rare trip aboard a ferry or excursion boat.
utterances born of a warped mind, will repeat
Papers
which
carry
that
sort
of
educational
non-worker alike, with all the gradations of
each, including the most useless element of material are personal mediums of expression. untiringly the rehashed versions of all the anti­
union propaganda issued by the employers and
society. Each. for reasons best known to itself The editor is subject to varying moods, depend­
ent on painful corns, bellyaches or callouses. the intellectual crackpots.
has become a part of the fringe movement.
The actual workers who belong to fringe units These are the screwballs who shape news to fit
HAVE ANTI-UNION RECORD
are those who never belonged to a union, or preconceived notions, and invariably print their
Records also show that when unorganizect
were' kicked oUt of unions for various reasons. notions.
workers
were being balloted in this industry, the
During the past two months, these characters
This element, teamed up with others who sornefringe members and their mistaken friends were
how live without working, make up the majority. have poured into print a running account of the
SIU's activities during the Canadian waterfront the most eloquent ip persuading others to vote
The rare two-book member is more often the
beef. They carefully ignored mention of the against all unions.
person who started with the fringe, and finally
The two-card man would never willingly
joined a union through which many benefits international commie set-up as a major factor
and
its
threat
to
other
unions.
They
forgot
to
sacrifice
the interest he feels in the union con­
could be obtained with the least outlay of time,
energy and money. Union benefits were given mention that the SIU obtained for the Canadian tracts that protect him, through which he is put
them which could never be offered by the fringe seamen security on the job that they never had on the job with all the guarantees that automa­
tically go with union membership. It is some­
before.
outfits.
They neglected to mention that the Canadian thing which no art of the fringe groups can
Some others have tried to join unions, but for
various reasons were rejected. There are obvious seamen obtained higher wages and improved offer or ever, create. The mis-informed union
reasons why each unit has some adherents. Each conditions. However, the great fund of mis- man may adopt a pattern of behavior inimical
has a share of the industrial and social misfits. information, the ill feeling, the stored-up venom to the best interests of his union. That would
the "eccentrics, TrWsporTsrbTes and disgruntled —all found an outlet in \his opportunity to as- mean lending aid and comfort to the enemy,
members of the human family. These persons sassinate the characters of the elected officers
It would be best if the union membership as
occasionally gain an audience into whose ears of the Union, and the membership in general.
a whole eliminated these few two-card members
can be poured the noises best described as the
All were described in the fringe papers as the and those friendly to this form of self-destruc• proverbial "tempest in a teapot."
phoniest collection on this planet. The job of tion. There is no room for them here.

�Page Six

T H E S E A F A WE R S

LOG

Wednesday, June 22,' 1949

AND NEWS
SS Calmar Gourmet Feasts
(Alone) On Hawk A La Kilby

FORMER LIGHTWEIGHT BATTLER

If you're tired of regular shipboard fare, Berle Kilby,
crewmember of the SS Calmar will gladly give you his
recipe for parboiled and fried hawk, a rare delicacy which
he claims tastes like chicken.*
r ^
1
a meal on the wing, for it took
Of course, first you have to off on a straight course, steadily
gaining altitude. It flew on out
catch the hawk.

'Aid Until Well,'
Maiden Crew Tells
Injured Seafarer
The crew of "the SS Maiden
Victory, Waterman, gave a first
rate demonstration recently to
show that the SIU truly is- the
Brotherhofid of the Sea.
When crewmember C. A.
Young was hurt ashore and sent
to a hospital in Astoria,' Wash­
ington, his shipmates were quick
to toss 70 bucks into a kitty
which would see him through
any rotigh times he might en­
counter.
However, after the money was
collected, the Ship's Delegate,
whose responsibility it was to
see that the sum reached Brother
Young, discovered that the in­
jured seaman had been trans­
ferred to the U.S.- Marine Hospi­
tal in Seattle.
But Young got the money any­
way, for Ship's Delegate McCulloch wired it on to Seattle, and
in a telegram told Young that if
more money was needed he
should let the Maiden's crew
know. The crew Would take care
of the rest. Young was informed.
y

How Brother Kilby caught his of sight, but with the binoculars
bird and prepared the sumptuous it was followed for a distance
meal is describe i by fellow crew- of five or six miles.
member Jack F. Christy, in
DIVE BOMBER
letter to the LOG. Christy, like
a good reporter, recorded the tale
"It suddenly dove with out­
as*it came about, all grisly de stretched needle sharp talons on
tails included, but when it came its prey, a tern, killing it in­
to sampling the dish, being no stantly. A few minutes later it
gourmet and the possessor of
alighted in the crosstrees again,
squeamish constitution, he gra­ out of breath, but victorious. It
then proceeded to pick the fea­
ciously bowed out.
thers
off the tern and pop bits
Here's Brother Christy's acof
flesh
into its bill. After its fill
count of Operation Kilby:
of
chow
it sat back to await
"We had just left Panama
nightfall
and
sleep.
heading for .Long Beach, when
we noticed the hitchhiker. It
"Here Brother Berle Kilby,
Seafarer Larry Schroeder, a familiar figure around southern
was perched on the railing
the four to eight Ordinary,
arenas a few years back, sticks up his dukes for the camera.
the crosstrees of the foremast, climbed,the mast with a pair of
Brother Schroeder, who doffed h^ gloves for the seagoing
and from all appearances there leather gloves protecting his " life in 1947, battled many big names in the fight game during
weren't any other birds around hands-and grabbed the hawk by
his career as a lightweight, welterweight and middleweight.
except this''lonely hawk.
the legs. Evidently he intended
Schroeder says sailing in the SIU is easier than scrapping for
a living.
"Suddenly it must have seen to train it to hunt for him, but
it was to no avail. The hawk
couldn't be mastered.
"Thus it was, after great deiberation, Kilby chopped its head
It is the proud boast of the
off with" a deck scraper, scalded,
By SALTY DICK
Seafarers International Un­
plucked, cleaned arid dissected.
ion that an SIU ship is a^ clean
Kilby then parboiled it and dip­
ship Let's keep it that way. ped it in cracker crumbs and
Quiz: How many states are ing in a garage, but comek has sailed aboard. He can also
Although most of the crews fried it.
there in the United States? (An around the New York Hall reg­ tell you all the details, dpwn
leave a ship in excellent con­
"I watched the proceedings. swer at end of column)... The ularly to see "his pals... If you to the exact penny he made on
dition, it has come to the at­
plan to qtut the sea, retire your each trip.
»
tention of the membership Kilby picked off bits of meat and old Borinquen (renamed the book in good standing ... dairies Answer to Quiz: 45 and three
stuffed them into his kisser. He Puerto Rico) is soon to come out
that a few crews have vio­
beamed and cut off bigger slices. and ply between New York^ F. Byrne has a little book with commonwealths: Pennsylvania,
lated this rule. So they have
the names of all the ships he Massachusetts" and Virginia.
gone on record to have all. Somehow it made me think of Puerto Rico and Santo Domingo
the hawk picking apart the tern on a 14-day cruise... In 1941
quarters inspected by the
an
hour or so earlier. After the Harry L. Schuler joined the SIl'
Patrolman before the payoff,
meal
was completed, Kilby rose on the West Coast and since
and if the conditions are im-satisfactory, he has the right and announced that the meal had ^ that time he has never had his
been most enjoyable. It tasted picture in the LOG.
to hold up the payoff until
better than chicken, he an- Who is the fellow who attend­
everything is spic and span.
nounced.
ed a wedding with his camera
Remember that the Patrol­
Since that time he has suffer­ and after taking pictures al
man can only have repairs
made if he knows what has ed no ill effects. However, crew- evening discovered he hadn't
members have reported to me pulled his slide out—no pictures
to be done. Cooperate by
that often on an evening they ... One of the best dressed Wip­
making up a repair list be­
fore the ship docks. Give one have seen Kilby standing at the ers sailing out of here is Teddy
rail, binoculars to eyes, scan- Garcia. He's now on the Cape
copy to the Skipper, and one
ning the horizon. But we haven't' Nome heading for the Med.
to the Patrolman. Then you'll
By JAMES H. DUBOSE
see some action.
played host to a hawk since. Big Andy Carillo, formerly an
Can't blame them, either."
Army Cook, is noW ashore work- Oh, mighty waters, down to the sea,

Keep It Clean!

'The Voice Of The Sea'

Ode To The Mississippi '

HEADING SHOREWARD FROM THE SANTA CLARA VICTORY

Flowing on into eternity
From where do you come, and where go,
From driving rain and melting snoW.

-. -

Moving slowly into the distances,
Taking the course,of least resistance.
If only you'd speak, I'd hear your tales,
Of battles fought on indian trails.

- C -: ,^
15 .,

Of adventures of Marquette and Joliet,
Yes, all this and more you'd sJy.
The massacre of Natchez and even more.
The fall of Vicksburg in the Civil War.

.V
.

Tales of side wheelers and gamblers brawls.
Of bayous echoing with mallards' calls."
Of the" British attack in 1812,
'
And on Jackson's victory a tnoment you'd delve.

From a vanlaga point on. the dock. Seafarer Norman Maffie skelchec the arrival of the
liberty launch from the Isthmian ship Santa Clara Victory, in Bombay, India.

You'cf speak of Lafitte, the pirate prince.
And other great men you've known since.
Yes, yours is a story of endless sensation,
Because you reflect the life of a nation.

.

^ "

^

�Wednesday. June 22, 1949

THE

SEAFARER S

LOG

Page Seven

Digested Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings
DOROTHY. April 3 — M. C.
McCranie. Chairman; J. Henault. Secretary. Discussion on
the bread situation. Since the
Baker .is already working extra
hours and is not receiving over­
time for baking bread, the Stew­
ard hag approved the purchase
of bread in Puerto Rico. Ship's
delegate reported that 12 hours
overtime had been collected for
Oilers at payoff, as result of
Chief
Engineer and Captain
working on deck. No beefs in
the Engine and Stewards De­
partments.
Deck
Department
has a minor overtime dispute.
Suggested that flyspray be used
in the messroom while the ves­
sel is in island ports. Also that
deck around card table be swept
by players at termination of
nightly games. Brother Calebaugh asked for clarification of
work to be performed by men
on gangway watch.

meeting read and accepted.
Ship's and department delegates
made their reports. Motion car­
ried that each departrrlent dele­
gate prepare a repair list and
submit it to ship's delegate who
is to turn them over to the Captaon.' A ball team is to bq or­
ganized and a collection taken
up for- gear. Each man is to
buy his own jersey and cap.
qo-managers are
be elected
at meeting to be held following
this one.
444
STEELORE, April 24 — -R.
Preston, Chairman; J. Castle,
Secretary. Following the reports
of the department delegates, the
minutes of the previous meeting
were read and approved. Mot­
ions carried: That no crewmember is to pay off until all beefs
have been settled by the Patrol­
man; that each mah turn over
his book to the Patrolman at
the payoff, pay his dues, get a
receipt and have his book stamp
to date. Under Good and Wel­
fare there was discussion on
sanitary work, and it was rec­
ommended that this work should
be taken over for a week by
the three departments on a ro­
tating basis. Notices are to be
posted announcing the schedules
for the cleaning work.

dum. There was considerable
pro and Con discussion on this
issue. One minute of silence in
memory of departed Brothers. •
4* 4 4
SEATRAIN NEW ORLEANS,
April 10 — Capote, Chairman;
Hatch, Secretary. Ship's dele­
gate reported that Brother Sheppard will be on board at arrival
in New Orleans to settle any
old beefs. Two hours of disput­
ed overtime were reported in
the Deck Department; no beefs
in the Black Gang or Stewards
Department. Brother Gautraux
resigned as deck delegate and
Brother Alstatt relinquished job
of ship's delegate. Brothers
Wright and Kelley \^ere elected
i.
i,
to replace them respectively.
CALEB STRONG, Mar 10 —
Crewmen extended a vote of
Westphall. Chairman; Cornell,
thanks to the retiring delegates.
Secretary.
Delegates reported
4 4 4
that all was smooth in the three
CITY OF ALMA, Mar 31 —
departments. Doyle elected ship's
Cliff Wilson, Chairman; Daniel
delegate by acclamation. All
Goldblatt, Secretary. Under Old
hands were reminded that when
Business, there was discussion
in foreign ports they must put
of motion calling for Patrol­
in requests for time off. Vote
man's intervention in regard to
of thanks given to the Stewards
painting of messroom. Motion
Department for the good work
carried inquiring Steward to
done on this trip. One minute
furnish requistion of stores that
of silence in memory of depart­
are being picked up in Honolulu.
444
ed Brothers.
EVELYN, April 18 — Bill El­
Patrolman is to be called in to
4. 4. 4.
.
aid in having water tanks ce­ liot, Chairman; C. Mitchell, Sec­
Minutes of
previous
ROBIN "GOODFELLOW, Mar. mented as they are in deplor­ retary.
21 — Vincent Meehan, Chair­ able condition. Repair lists are meeting read and accepted. De­
man; C. Howard R^rdon, Sec­ to be given to the Department partment delegates' reports ac­
retary. Ship's delegate issued a delegates. One minute of silence cepted. A new repair list is to
warning on the consequences of in memory of deceased Union be drawn up and turned in for
this voyage, §is the list from the
intoxication
during
working Brothers.
previous voyage had not been
hours. Disputed overtime was
turned in. After discussion on
reported existing in the three
the forthcoming payoff, it was
departments. Motion by Vincent
Meehan, seconded by Anthony
agreed that no one is to pay­
off until given an okay by their
Pedicini, carried, that any man
respective department delegates.
going ashore and leaving an­
Brothers stood one minute in
other in his place, is-to make
silence in memory of departed
certain that substitute is cap­
4 4 4
able of performing the duties
SEATRADER. Mar. 20 — Union members.
required. Under Education, there Charles Oppenheimer, Chairman;
STEEL FABRICATOR, April
was considerable , discussion on Fred Bruggner. Secretary. Gen­
the history of the SIU and the eral review of repairs submitted 10 — Earl H. C. Poe, Chairman;
structure of the organization. in list of previous trip; accom­ H. D.^ Higginbotham, Secretary.
There was also a reading of and plishments were discussed and Ship's delegate stated that every­
discussiop on the A&amp;G shipping those repairs rejected were not­ thing is going along smoothly.
rules. It was suggested that ed. In election of delegates, the Excfept for some disputed over­
Stewards Department exercise following were chosen by ac­ time, all is okay in each of the
the maximum sanitary precau­ clamation: Fred Bruggner. ship's departments. Motion by Bates,
tions inasmuch as the health of delegate;Teddy Ostaszeski. deck; carried, recommending that Pa­
the entire crew depends to a A. Sanchez, stewards, and F. Jt- trolman see Captain about re­
great degree on their cleanli­ Sylvia, engine. Ship's delegate pairs before ship leaves Balti­
ness.
Fred Bruggner made a short more. Motion by Higginbotham
talk on the ports to be visited that letters of recommendation
and advised all hands to go easy be given to permitmen aboard.
on drinking. He said that each Under Education there was gen­
and every jjian . is expected to eral discussion on Union activit­
do his job and that performing ies.
would not be tolerated. Steward
Bryiint briefly discussed the stor­
ing of the ship and welcomed
suggestion for the change of
menus.- Lights are to be put on
Members who forward
deck near cargo lashings. Bro­
4 4 4
their membership books to
JOHN B. WATERMAN, Mar. ther Oppenheimer solicited the
the New York Hall for retire­
20 — W. S. Porter, Chairman; aid of men interested in wiring
ment are ugred to mark the
E, Jones. Secretary. Delegates to members of Congress and the
envelope with the notation
reported that all was okay. Senate on the Bland Bill. He
"Attentions: 8th floor," in or­
Motion carried to call to Patrol­ was also drafting a letter to the
der to insure quicker hand­
man's attention the changing of Secretary of Commerce, petit­
ling of the matter.
the sailing board at such short ioning him to grant charters to
' Marking of the envelope in
notice. It was suggested that the Arnold Bernstein line for
the manner advised above
two
ships.
,
the washing machine be kept
will save time and will result
clean at all times. Every man
in
prompt return of the book
was advised to get up to the • COLABEE.^Apra^lO — Harry
to
the sender.
Hall and vote on the transpor­ Jaynes. Chairman: John Dugina.
tation question in the referen- Secretary. Minutes of previous

RETIRING BOOKS

TheLop is-theone .srare
oj^ of reeuohiti^^^ttie^ m&amp;mbczship
coith your c^iM&amp;ns and proposals.
Letters to ineLop on the urelfere.
o£- tlieUnion, yc£ir experiences,
and hec^ cvill brin^^ your ideas
before the tvidesrir l^ion^uddicticc.
pertnittin^,all letters ojill

those ttot mlpht

cojnceivuifiy cbm
the Union.Let
foom
'

I

CUT and RUN
By HANK

Thanks to Brother "Sloppy," the oldtimer, for letting us knowabout changing the bundles of LOGs going to a Santos, Brazil,
bar. Now they'll be available at the Washington Bar.. . Mucho
appreciation. Brother "Sloppy" ... Brother John Dolan writes that
he's shipping out. Smooth voyaging, Brother Dolan... It looks
like D. D. Story is up in Massachusetts from his latest voyage...
Congratulations to Brother William Lord of Pennsylvania. He just
rang himself into happy wedding bells. A long voyage of happiness
in the sea of matrimony, Brother Lord... Brother Richard King
writes he's Yokohama-bound aboard the SS James Swan. Good
voyaging to you. Brother King... Here are a few Brothers in
town right now—Woody Lockwood, William Brady, Vic Sulfenick
... Brother Jgck S. White writes that he's in San Francisco waiting
for a ship.
4

4

4

Brother Richaxd "Phoiobug" Martinez and Joe Kotalik are
in New York waiting to ship out. Brother Martinez can't wait
to launch his seafaring photography. Brother Kotalik probably
will auction his "Man from Mars" radio helmet (which scared
the living daylights out of a few Brothers)—unless, of course,
it still works out at sea... We remember Brother Jake Fediow
telling us about how he remembers the hard times in those
good "old bad days" when the soles of his shoes were so thin
he could know whether he stepped on a penny or a dime...
The fine way many of the fellas have been voluntarily helping
for many weeks in putting the hall in a shipshape oondition is
good unionism, indeed... Brothers, the political in-action of
many Congressmen and Senators still keeps the Taft-Hartley
Act on the backs of the labor movement. So keep writing those
letters. Brothers, urging them to repeal this anti-labor lai^
without re-enacting similar destructive amendments.

The SEAFARERS LOG • will be sailing to the homes of the
following Brothers—Leo Feher of New Jersey, J. Daly of Illinois,
V. O'Mary of Mississippi, William Tarrant of Oklahoma (by the
way, he's in New York right now), Melvin Fontenot of Louisiana,
Jack Thornburg of Arizona, T.-E. Maynes of Pennsylvania, Andy
Anderson of California, Helmar Bjork of Pennsylvania, A. -11.
Guidry of Louisiana, Joseph Mucia of New York, Major CosteUo
of Louisiana, Joseph Wing of Maryland, William Utley of Louisiana,
James McComas of Maryland, Vincent Chamberlain of MassachusStts, Glyn Vaughn of Alabama, Roberto Zaragoza of New
York, Robert Miller of Virginia.
4

4

4

Joe Pilutis just came into town... We hear "Peg Leg" Andy
Anderson is down in. Baltimore... Happy voyaging to Timmy
McCarthy, who's pjrobably, out at sea now bound for a long
voyage to India with Adam Hauke and some other Brothers
...Several Brothers have told us they had to wipe their eyes
and hold on to th^ bar when about a week ago they found a
beautifully-rigged Indian motorcyclev parked 'in front of the
tables. And then in a corner on one of the largest seats they
saw a six-foot model-ship of the English-passenger type... Well,
seeing is believing—and that looks like one. situation which
won't ever be duplicated or niade better, indeed... Brothers,
keep up with your Union. Read those booklets. Catch up on
Union activities from back issues of your LOG. Happy sailing!

�Page Eight

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Wednesday, June 22, 1948

THE MEMBEBSHIP SPEAKiS
Recuperates On Job
'Company-Minded' Poor Argument Bosun
After Stint Of 'Light Duty'
For Vacation Plan, Says Buckley
To the Editor:

ing over the side. If you want
muscles, don't write to Charles
Atlas, see our Captain.
If you're hurt on this ship it's
just tough. I fell on deck and
hurt my knee. I was unable "to
bend it. The only medical atten­
tion came from the Mate, who
gave me something to rub on
it. He gave me a job sewing a
canvas cover for the sounding
machine. I was sitting down
working at the job when the
Captain carne along. He seemed
disturbed to see me sitting down.
I was too. I should have been
lying down with my leg elevated.

Jus\ thought that I'd drop a
by the SIU thai broke up these Brothers realize that when jobs
line
or so to give the story of
were
plentiful
they
acted
inde­
cliques.I am opposed to compulsory
Let us correct ourselves on pendently and even though it the trip aboard Isthmian's At­
vacations.
constructive ideas necessai-y for meant putting themselves out lanta City. We have a swell
To say that a Union Brother the welfare of the Union instead they Tefused to take a job to crew aboard. The Mates are in
becomes company-minded or is a of getting the old hungry job- cover the Union. Now that the their early twenties, the bulk of
creator of cliques because he conscious enyy of the individuals famine is approaching they the Deck Department is older
wishes to remain aboard ship who have more staying power blame the Union rules and wish than the officers. The Skipper is
trip after trip is just so much to remain on the job.
to change things in order to cov­ 36, but to hear him talk he
nonsense. We have many mem­ Let's get shed of these so- er their own lack of responsibil­ should be much older. He thinks
bers who are married men and called Union Brothers who sign ity and to hell with the Union. that he is the only one on the
require a steady income to raise aboard ship and then . in the
ship who knows the score.
Joe Buckley
a family. It is understandable first port of call head for a
SS Seatrain New York
The trip started out to be a
why they remain on the job.
booze joint and forget to re­
(Ed. Note: Brother Buck­ good one, but it sure changed
To say that a seaman becomes turn until the ship's whistle ley's letter is in response to in a hurry. If you should happen
lax in union principles because blows an hour before sailing. a LOG article by Richard to hurt yourself here there is no
he remains on the job for a long Let's get shed of these free­ Miartinez urging support of such thing as taking it easy.
HOLLYWOOD CREW
period is darn poor judgment loaders who are too darn lazy the Mobile resolution calling You're put to work on light
of your fellow men. The Union to produce a day's work and are for compulsory vacations. The duty, which'consists of sougeeing He gave me a lecture on the
book doesn't make a Union man, constantly whispering among LOG welcomes further com­ the . foremast, sewing canvas, beauties of shipping Isthmian be­
fore the SIU entered the picture.
it's the man who makes the their shipmates that the Bosun ment on this subject.)
stowing anchor chain and paint- To him we are a bunch of Holly­
is a slave-driver, all because
Union book.
wood sailors. He told me that be­
As an example, let us take these guys are too darned lazy
fore
the Union came in, one
THE PRIDE OF TAMPA
the ship on which I am a crew; to produce.
watch
used to top all the booms.
Let's get shed of these supermember—the SS Seatrain New
That's
a fairy story I'm going
York. This job would provide duper saviours of the working
to
teU
my grandchildren. We
a livelihood for any Union mem­ stiff who constantly beat their
stayed
at
anchor the last nght
ber who wished to work and a gums that' this or that Union
in
port
and
guess what; the an­
official
is
a
phony,
but
when
chance to visit his home every
chor
ball
was
up all night in­
face
to
face'with
the
guy
they're
other week.
stead of the anchor light. But
We have several Union Broth­ as sweet as honey and try to
we're the Hollywood sailors, so'
ers' aboard this ship who have talk their way into the official's
we
couldn't tell them how to'
heen holding down this job right good graces.
run
the ship.
If it's the future these Broth­
steady and they seem to have
Just before we left port I
gopd Union principles. At least ers worry about, then let's go
asked the Mate if he were going
in my opinion they seem good. out for more of the unorganized
to break the sailors out to se­
I!ve seen crewmembers come ships so that we cah make the
cure the ship." He told me to take
and go and all you can hear is "Brotherhood of tlie Sea," a
care of my job and he would
continuous griping about the hundred percent reality under
take care of his. I told him that
ship being phony, or that this one banner.
the Union agreement, called for
particular man doesn't part his The Brothers who object to
hair correctly to suit these in­ members staying aboard ships
all ships to be secured before
dividual free-loaders who only should keep in mind that they
going to sea. He didn't agree. I
use this ship as a ferryboat to had the same chance. I know
Seafarers gather before the SIU's Tampa Hall, a showplace told him that I was going to
what it is to blow my top just
get to another port.
in the Florida city. Seafarer Richard Martinez submitted the bring the matter to the Union's
I don't know how long the because things didn't suit me,
attention when we hit port, but
picture to the LOG.
writer of the resolution in Mo­ as we grow older time makes
he didn't change his mind. We
bile (to make vacations compul­ us understand that the other
had deck cargo consisting of
sory after one year) has been guy has the privilege of an
empty drums and we left the
going to sea, but were he to go opinion and too, that you may
port imsecured. We had time to
back into the records he would have to humble yourself at
do the job, but the Mate seem­
discover that the greatest num­ times. This makes you realize
ed to think that painting over
ber of home* guards and com­ that it pays to take life on the
the side was more important.
pany-minded stiffs came from slow bell.
Five
days later at sea we final­
it, to determine his own bargain­
This business of job security To the Editor:
the old ISU days. It was the
ly secured cargo.
ing agent") The SIU won the
reorganizing of these seamen makes many of these Union
The oppositidn of .the Cities election by an overwhelming ma­ I understand the last crew got
Service Oil Company to the SIU jority.
off because- they couldn't stand
SMILES FOR PUERTO RICO
is deeper than the - question of
It is high time that laws be the officers. I'm sure the story
union representation of crews on enacted by Congress to penalize will be the same this trip. As
its ships. The company is, in firms which deliberately flout for the many charges of laxity .
reality, opposing the principles the laws of the land by deny­ levied at the crew, as Bosun I
of democracy and the constitu­ ing their employees their con­ can say that none of the crew .
tional right of men to choose stitutional rights.
loafed. ..The trouble is, I think, '
their own representatives.
that the Captain has made too .
THEIR VOICE
many
runs to the Persian Gulf.
It is a kick in the teeth to The Seafarers International
Frank J. Richardson
each and every seaman on CS Union, now speaking as the
ships, whether he voted for the •voice of the Cities Service sea­
SIU or not. The company has men, speaks in terms of democ­
set itself above the laws of the racy, of progress and stable hu­
land and above a citizen's fun­ man industrial relations. A man
When your ship'has been
damental rights.
ceases to be a pawn or a slave out of hot water for over
The Cities Service code is the of company policies. The laws twelve hours make sure that
master and slave ideology) a of the land become the great ar­ this fact is recorded in the
throwback to the dark ages. biter in all disputes which may
Engine'log book. It will save
Even the dictators- are forced to arise in the future.
a lot of trouble when your
pay lip service to the people of
Is this power feared by. the 'ship hits port later.
their lands, proclaiming their re­ Cities Service Oil Company,
If you are in port when
actionary rule as being "central­ which boasts of its "American­ the boilers give up the ghost,.
ized democracy."
ism" to the American people in notify the Hall immediately
But not so with Cities (Serv­ paid newspaper advertisements, and a Patrolman will handle
ice. They oppose by hook and termed "public service?" There the matter with the com­
Here are some of the deck .gang aboard the SS Ines, the crook any effort of their seamen seems, to be a gap as wide as pany. Don't wait until the
new Bull Line ship, just before reaching Puerto Rico on a to gain their freedom. This wri­ the poles between their pqbli- ship is half way across the
recent trip. Back row (left to right): E. Pantojas, OS; G. ter believes that tjie fundamental city and operations department. ocean before you send word:
Malby, AB; R. DUlon, AB; B. V. Ledo, AB. Center row; A. rights of the "Mfessboy on a CS They should find out about each
let out a yell before your
Maldonado. AB; D. Diaz. DM; C. Negron, Bosun; G. Carmacho, ship are as great as those of the other. The right hand should ship leaves port and the mat­
Chips.., Down in front: an unidentified OS. Picture was snapped company president. The Messman learn what the left hand doeth. ter will be settled at once.
and submitted to LOG by Juan Colpe. Pantry Utility.
has the right, and'has exercised
Wandering Seafarer
To the Editor:

CS Boasts Of Americanism,
But Denies Seamen Freedom

No Hot WateK?

�Wednesday. June 22, 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Nine

Seafarers At Work — Asea And Ashore
The photos on this page show
two groups of Seafarers as they
toiled to get things ship-shape
- at sea, aboard the Sanford B.
Dole, and ashore, in the Union
Hall in the Port of New York.
The operation aboard the .San­
ford Dole got under way when
crewmembers turned to in a suc­
cessful effort to refloat the vessel
after she had run aground. The'
Dole Seafarers' seamanship paid
off after 58 hours of labor, when
-the vessel was refloated without
assistance. In all she was aground
72 hours.
In photo left, Bob High does
his mighty bit by swinging a
sledge hammer on the deck of
the Dole. Back again in photo
right. Bob and some of his ship­
mates attempt to lash a stream
anchor to two lifeboats for the
kedging
operation.
Lifeboats
couldn't carry it, and a launch
finally had to be used.

Advice and encouragement flowed freely from the deck of
the Dole to the group lashing the anchor to the lifeboats. Here
are John Rood (facing camera) and other members of the Deck
Gang as they watched the operation in progress below. The
Dole crew Was proud of the fact that no assistance from out­
side sources was needed to refloat the ship. All pictures of the
Dole operation were submitted to the LOG by Brother Rood.

The shoreside task—cleaning,' painting and putting gear in ship-shape, condition—in the New
York Hall wasn't an emergency like that aboa:d the Dole, but it was rigorous nevertheless. Here
is part of the crew that is responsible for the bright new look of the New ^ork building. Front
row (left to right)—Joe Kotalik, JValter Fisher. George Perez. Dave Miller and Cecil Thomas; •
middle row—George Lucik, John Carr, Edgar Blake. Norman Pasakoff and George King; rear
row—John Murphy. Alex Becker, JBen Schwartz. Sid Green and Edward Gonsalves.
^

" .1

1 )

Nothing was slighted as the alteration crew went to work on the building equipm^t. Chairs
that appeared to be on their last legs were skil'fully whipped into practically brand-new condi­
tion. In photo above. Brothers Becker, Thomas. Pasakoff and Gonsalves are seen as they sanded
down the furniture preparatory to applying the new finish. Looking on are Surrath Singh
(wearing dark glasses) and John Carr. When these men and their co-workers were finished with
their job, the Hair was ample testimony that the Union slogan, "An SIU ship is a clean ship,"
applies wherever Seafarers congregate.

More than the efforts of a single crew is required to keep
the quarters sparkling throughout the year. So posters were
placed around the building reminding all hands that they could
do their bit'by cooperating. Here are (left to right) Joe Kotalik.
Paul Lansky and Paul Zimmerman, preparing posters asking
all to "Please Keep This Place Clean."
Included in the statistics furnished by the lads working on
the clean-up project in the New York Hall were these: More
then 20 chairs, and five desks were reconditioned; some 50 signs,
urging cooperation in keeping the building clean, were painted.
Several pounds of gum were scraped from the second deck
alone—a job that took 6 men 2 hours to complete.

�Page Ten

TAMPA
Chairman,
Ray
While, 57; Recording Secrelary.
R. H. Hall, 26060; Reading Clerk,
L. R. While, 27165.
Accepted readings of previous
minutes of other Branches. Sec­
retary-Treasurer's financial re­
ports for preceding two weeks
read and accepted. Agent said
that business and shipping were
on the slow side, although the
usual number of ships were
coming into port on in-transit
status. Agent's and Dispatcher's
reports accepted. Motion car-

THE SEAFARERS

Wednesday, June 22. 1949

A&amp;G Shipping From June 1 To June IS
PORT

*

Boston
New York.
Philadelphia
Baltimore
Norfolk.
Suvannah
Tampa
Mobile
New Orleans
Galveston
West Coast
San Juan.
.GRAND TOTAL

ried that any man registered in
one Registration Group not be
allowed to change to another un­
til the next regular meeting
after registration. After discus­
sion a hand vote was taken with
51 favoring the motion, none
against. Motion
adjourn was
carried at 8:30 PM, with 54
members present.
4 4 4NEW ORLEANS —Chairman,
Herman Troxclair, 6743; Record­
ing Secrelary. George Allen, 114;
Reading Clerk, Buck Stephens,
76.

LOG

REa
DECK

22
160
39
113
39
17
6
45
63
. ^"98
35
14
....

650

REG.
ENG.

REG.
STWDS.

TOTAL
REG.

17
130
30
72
17
6
6
56
65
78
33
9

32
141 '
16
62
24
9
4
48
117
66
32
17

71
431
84
247
80
32
16
149
245
242
100
40

29
85
22
81
26
17
• 6
67
72
28
19
13

24
64
10
04
28
12
7
55
64
24
22
8

82
93
8
52
11
17
9
59
122
16
34
9

135
242
40
197
65
46
22
181
258
68
75
30

519

568

1,737

465

382

512

1,359

SHIPPED
DECK

the meeting. Agent's, Patrol­
men's and Dispatcher's reports
read and accepted. One minute
of silence in memory "of departed
members. Meeting adjourned at
8 PM, with 205 members present.
4. 4&gt;
SAVANNAH — Chairman. J.
Drawdy, 28523; Recording Secre­
tary, E. B. McAuIey, 26081;
Reading Clerk, C. M. Rice, 40707.

Agent gave his verbal report.
Dispatcher reported that men
had been sent to the following
^hips: Steel Travel, Purdue
Victory,- Trinity, Marquette Vic­
tory, Yarmouth, Carrabulle, Ann
Marie 'and Ampac Wa^shington.

Minutes of previous meetings
approved. Readings of Secre­
tary-Treasurer's financial report.
Branch Agent stated that ship­
ping had been fair for the past
two weeks, with several clean
payoffs *highlighting the activity
of the period. The Bull Line's
SS Dorothy was in port at the
time of the meeting. Requests
from several members seeking
to be excused from the meet­
ing were disposed of by the
membership.
Motion by J.
Goude that all monies owed to
a crewmember be paid at one
time. After much discussion
on the motion, it passed. One

Members stood in silence for
one minute in memory of de­
parted Union Brothers. Consid­
erable discussion took place on
many subjects under Good and
Welfare. , Meeting adjourned at
7:30 PM, with 65 bookmembers
present.
4 4 4
SAN FflANCISCO — Chair­
man, H. Hutchershn, 126; Re­
cording Secretary, A. Hellmuth,
7755; Reading Clerk, E. M. Col­
lins,' 102120.

Previous minutes of all port
meetings read and accepted.
Port financial reports approved.
Charges against crew members
of a Seatrain" vessel accused of
conduct unbecoming a Union
member were read. Motion car­
ried to notify accuked to appear
before a trial committee in this
port. Port Agent stated that
business affairs of port were in
good shape and that, although
shipping had fallen off some­
what, it was expected to pick
up before next meeting. On
schedule at the moment were
eight ships for payoffs and more
than 25 for in-transit calls, he
said. Dispatcher gave break­ minute of silence in respect to
down on shipping and registra­ the memory of deceased Union
Meeting adjourned
tion figures for the two-week members.
at
7:30
PM
with 69 members
period. Excuses referred to the
Dispatcher. Daniel Maurin ,4ook present,
3^ 4. 4,
Oath of Obligation. There was
NORFOLK — Chairman, Ben
much discussion under Good and
Welfare on matters of vital Rees, 95; Recording Secretary
Union importance. Meeting ad­ and Reading Clerk, J. A. Bul­
journed at 8:20, with 291 book- lock, 4747.
members in attendance.
Minutes of previous meetings
i
in othey Branches read and ac­
BALTIMORE—Chairman, WU- cepted.
The Agent reported
liam Renlz, 26445; Recording fuUy on the organizing work
SecrelEury, A1 Slansbury, 4683; that is now in progress. He re­
Heading Clerk, G. A. Maslerson, counted in detail the good work
20297.
done by the Norfolk membership
Motion' carried to suspend with the crew of the SS Tadregular order of business and dei until an agreement was
take up Obligations and charges. signed. The Dispatcher listed
J. H. Williams, E. Barton and H. the ships that were due in this
port. Under Good and Welfare,
the cleanliness of the Hall was
discussed at great length. Mo­
tion carried to allow any man
with a fine assessed in Nor­
folk to work out the fine by
• W._ Spencer took the Oath of cleaning the Hall. Meeting ad­
Obligation. Charges against a journed at 8:25 PM, with 125
permitman were read.
Trial members in attendance.
Committee found him guilty of
4. 4. 4.
stealing a letter and cashing
BOSTON
— Chairman, J.
check contained therein belong­
Sweeney,
1530;
Recording Secre­
ing to a Brother member. Com­
tary,
B.
Lawson,
894; Reading
mittee recommended man be
Clerk,
A.
Melanson,
44406.
placed in 99-year club. Minutes
of previous meetings read and
Motion carried to accept pre­
accepted.
Motion carried to vious Boston minutes as read.
non-concur with section of Mo­ Minutes of other Branch meet­
bile minutes dealing with ship­ ings road and accepted. Head­
ping rules. Several men with quarters' and Secretary-Treas­
valid reasons were excused from urer's financial reports approved.

New business of previous
Branch meetings read and ac­
cepted. Headquarters' financial
report approved. Motion carried
to accept Headquarters' report
and recommendations contained
therein. Agent and Dispatcher
made their ' reports." Oath of
Obligation was administered to
W. J. Hall. Memembership stood
in silence for one minute in
memory of Union members lost
at sea. Meeting adjourned at
7:46 PM, with 89 book and permitmen present.
4 4 •4
SAN .JUAN — Chairman. T.
Banning, 3038; Recording Secre­
tary, J. . Evans,'^7573; Reading
Clerk, R. Ramos, 21954.
Minutes of previous meetings
in this and other ports read and
approved.- Brother Banninjg re­
ported that shipping had picked
up a little in "the past two weeks
and that he expected it to be
even better in the very near
future. Secretary-Treasurer's
financial report read and ac­
cepted. Motion carried to refer
excuses for absence from meet­
ing to a fiVe-man committee.
Motion carried calling for repair
of water cooler in Hall. One
minute of silence in memory of
departed Brothers. 54 members
were present when meeting ad­
journed at 7:40 PM.
4 4 4
MOBILE — Chairman, C. Sim­
mons, 368;' Recording Secretary,
James L. Carroll, J4; Reading
Clerk, Harc^ Fischer, 59.
Previous meetings' minutes ac-'
cepted as read. Port Agent out­
lined the prospects for shipping
in the port' for the next two
weeks, naming the ships that
are due to come in. He also

SHIPPE
ENG.

discussed the current organizing
drive of the SIU affiliated Ma­
rine Allied Workers, and urged
everyone to support this - effort.
He concluded by telling of the
plans for building alterations
which were forwarded to Head­
quarters.
Action should be
forthcoming in the very- near
future, he said.
SecretaryTreasurer's financial report read
and accepted. Patrolrnen re­
ported on the number of ships
signing on and paying off. All
beefs were settled, they reported.
Dispatcher gave a breakdown on
the registration and shipping
figures for the past two-week
period.. Six men • took the
Union Oath
of
Obligation.
Charges were "referred to Union
Trial Committees elected by* the
membership. Meeting adjourned
at 7:50 PM, with 265 members in
attendance.
4 4 3r
GALVESTON
Chairman,
Ray Sweeney, 20; Recording
Secrblary, Keith Alsop, 7311;
Reading Clerk, W. E. Coutant,
25376.
Minutes of previous meetings
in other Branches read and ac­
cepted. ' Agent reported that
shipping had slowed down a bit,
and that there was a sufficient
number of men on the beach to

crew most anything that came
along. He cited the crew of the
Irenestar, a new ship belonging
to a company recently con­
tracted* to the SIU, for doing a
first-rate job. The payoff was
one of the cleanest that had hit
this port in a long time. He
mentioned that a considerable
number of ships called at Texas
ports during the past two
weeks. Dispatcher gave the fig­
ures for registration and ship­
ping. Motion carried to refer
all communications on excuses
to Dispatcher. Charges against
permitman -^were read. After
considerable"' discussion on the
floor, membership decided to al­
low him a period of six months
to prove himself. If he is again
guilty ' of misconduct during
this period, his permit is to be
revoked, it was recommended.
Meeting adjourned at 8:05 PM,
with 109 members present,
4 4 4
PHILADELPHIA — Chairman,
3. Sheehan, 306; Recording Sec
retary, C. Little, 39770; Reading
Clerk, D. HaU, 43373.

shipping in the port for the past
couple of weeks and he explain­
ed the prospects for the .weeks
ahead. Communications read, in­
cluding one from this city's Cen­
tral Labor Union, the AFL body,
thanking SIU for opportunity to
show "Battle of Wall Street" to
its delegates and business agents
at their June 8 meeting. Patrol­
men and Dispatcher reported on
shipping and registration. Re­
quests for excuses from meeting
were referred to Dispatcher.
Charges read and referred to
elected Trial Committee. Under

Good and Welfare, there was
some discussion on the practice
of some ships giving draws in
vouchers. One minute of sileiice
in memory of departed Brother.
Meeting adjourned at 7:40 P.M.
4 4 4
NEW YORK—Chairman, John
Arabasz, 29836; Recording Secre­
tary, Freddie Stewart. 4935;
Reading Clerk, Eddie Mooney,
4667L
Minutes of other port meetings
read and accepted. Motion car­
ried to non-concur with that
part of Philadelphia' minutes
recommending fines for men tak­
ing jobs for the weekend and
then reporting back to the Hall.
It was pointed out thiat the mem­
bership is not of&gt;posed to the
dea of penalizing men who take
iobs to chisel, but that it is op­
posed to making it a rule, since
many' men imavoidably in a
situation like this would suffer.
Secretary - Treasturer's financial
report read and accepted, as was
the Headquarters report. ' Port
Agent discussed the status of
shipping and explained that the
drop in shipping figures was the
result of several ships being di­
verted to the Port of Norfolk.
One minute of silence in mem­
ory of Brothers lost at sea. Dis­
patcher's reports read and ac­
cepted. Meeting adjourned at 8
P.M., with 1,056 members presr
ent.
'

AFL Sends Food
To Aid Striking
Boriin Workers

NEW YORK — Fully $5000
worth of CARE food packages
are oh their way to striking
Berlin transport workers from
the AFL, Vice President Matthew
Woll disclosed last week.
Woll,'who is chairman of the
AFL's interna$ional labor rela­
tions committee, also wired lead­
ers of the free trade unions in
Berlin:
"Please convey Berlin strik­
ing railroad workers our warm­
est solidarity. Their courageous
fight against Russian totalitarian
oppressors and Moscow's menial
German stooges, the Commun­
ist scabs, is a vital phase of
international labor struggle for
Reading of minutes of previous social justice and human free­
meetings. Port Agent reported on dom."

�TWednesday, June 22. 1949

THE

S E A F A R.E R S

LOG

Page Eleven

British Dockers Load SiU Ships
And Phony, CSU 'Strike' Coiiapses

i
HSS ROBIN GRAY
J. T. Morton, $2.00: E. O. Berwald,
$2.00: A. Jones, $2.00: G. O. Benefiejd,
$1.00: W. O Brien, $1.00: A. F. Knauff,
$1.00: W. J. McLaughlin, $2.00: D.
Van Alst, $1.00: Ah Kan Ho, $1.00: I.
N. Rosvold, $3.00: J. V. Sullivan,* $2.00:
L. Alleluia, $2.00: O. W. Guernsey,
$2.00: W. Sharp, $2.00; R. C. Oden,
$1.00:' J. M. Soto, $2.00: E. E. Walker,
$1.00: C. Young, $I.OQ: E. Jusino,
$1.00: -J. Casas, '$1.O0: J. Burgos,
$2.00: j. F. Ross, $2.00; M. J. Delaney,
$1.00: Wm. L. Nesta, $2.00: R. K.
James, $2.00; L. B. West, $2.00.
SS BESSEMER VICTORY
B. R. Johansen, $1.00: ' M. Simon,
$1.00.
SS SEATRAIN HAVANA
W. H. Susikari, $1.00; G. S. Carlson,
$1.00: C. Savant, $2.00; A. Olaguibel,
$4.00; J. A. Hammond, $2.00; W. B.
Stokes, $1.00: E. Burke, $1.00; V. L.
Mansalto. $1.00.
SS SEATRAIN N. J. '
J. A. Dugos, $f.OO.
SS COLABEEA. C. Castelo, $1.00: Wm. Gerrick.
$1.00: R. A. Johnson, $1.00.
'sS HASTINGS
J. C. Stewart, $1.00; J. H. Parnell,
$3.00: J. D. Saxon, $1.00; G. Black,
$1.00: G. A. Tardieu, $1.00; S. Frank,
Jr„ $1.00: F. S. Crumpbler, $2.00; P.
Baker, $1.00.

SI U H fl L L S
SIU, A&amp;G District

(Continued from Page I)
high and dry by virtue of the
communist leaders' maneuver to
plunge Canadian east coast ports
into confusion and chaos.
Rejection of the Board's pro­
. SS CAPE MOHICAN
B.
Hartsog, $2.00: Receipt
No. posals indicated clearly that this
82849, $2.00: T. H. Watson. $1.00; L,
was the objective of the com­
Klplaks, $1.00.
munists.
SS MARINA
It was at this point that the
A. Sweigart, .$1.00: X; C. Diego,
$1.00: M. Stephen, $1.00; Nieves, $1.00; SIU Canadiah , District, which
Bartolome Delvalle, $2.00; J. Archie,'
had .many friends among CSU
$1.00: C. Conkle, $2.00; J. Word, $1.00;
E. V. Corral. $2.00; H. Dawkins, $.1.00: rank-anR-file, signed the agree­
ments and demonstrated that
J. W. Parker, $1.00.
»
SS EVELYN
Canadian seamen were ready and
C. Mitchell, $1.00: C. Hospedoles,
willing to man the ships.
$L00: P. E., Reed, $1.00 ; T. . Moriaty,
"STRIKE" IDEA
$1.00: M. Snow, $1.00: W. B. Prltchett,
Only then did the startled
$2.00: A. C. Buchacz, $1.00; R. M.
Guthrie, $1.00: H; KilUtrom, J 1.00: W. communist leaders of the CSU
Baranowski, $1.00;, J. J. Cook, $1.00; call their "strike." CSU memE. G.. Ret^ky, $2.00; E. Ardoin, $1.00;
jDerj, however, long awaiting the
R. E. Wagner, $1.00.
opportunity to get out from un­
- SS MiVRINE STAR
S. Garcia, $3.00; C. E. Doty, $1.00; der communist domination, were
J. R. Lafoe, $2.00; W. R. Stoncj $1.00: joining the SIU in droves..^ and
G. T. Skillberg, $5.0; k. M. Ingebrigtsen, $1.0^: G. P. Rosario, $2.00; sailing the ships under SIU con­
J. Byrne, $3.00; R. Comstock, $2.0O: tract.
H. W. Spencer, $1.00; R, Hcrbst, $2.00;
In a short time, the "strike"
J. D. Marchetto, $2.00; W. M. Addi­
son, $1.00: D. Walizer, $1.00: E. Oi»en, $1.00; B. Mpontsikaris, $2.00; D.
L. Pittman. $2.00; T. M. Johnson,
$1.00; J. Retour, $2.00;' E. Schiewek,
$2.00: J. Ortiz, $1.00: L. Bumatay,
$1.00: O. W. Eisele, $2.00; J. Ditrich,
$10.00: J. Nuuhiwa,-$1.00.
SS HASTINGS
J. F. Allbritton, $1.00; R. Wells,
$1.00: J. H. Dinkins, Jr., $1.00; E. J.
Ronan, $1.00; G. Dean, $1.00; M.
Nicholas, $1.00; W. Roche, $5.00; B.
McNuIty, $2.00.

SS suzAime

R. B. Oliver, $1.00; F.' C. Cunning­
SALTIMORE
14 North Gay St.
William Rentz, Agent
Mulberry 4640 ham, $1.00; H. Bank, $2.00; A. Gonza­
BOSTON
276 State St.] lez, $2.00,
SS WM. R. DAVIS
Ben Lawson, Agent
Richmond 2-0140
W.
Laclair,
$2.00: F. . C. Holmes,
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141
GALVESTON
308Vi—23rd St. $3.00: W. E. Gray, $2.00; W. H. HowKeith Alsop, Agent
Phone 2-8448 land, $2.00.
SS STEEL RANGER
MOBILE
1 South Lawrence St.
E. Mclnis, $2.00.
Cal Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-1764
SS KENYON VICTORY
NEW ORLEANS
523 Bienville St.
"
R.
V.
Pulliam, $4.00; W. Elliott,
E. Sheppard, Agent
Magnolia 6112-6113
NEW YORK
51 Beaver St. $2.00; F. Radzvila, $3.00.
SS HILTON
Joe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784
R. McManus, $1.00; R. Schram, $1.00.
NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St,
SS COLABEE
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
A. "Jensen, $2.00.
PHILADELPHIA
337 Market St.
SS BEATRICE
J. Sheehan, Agent
Market 7-1635
A. Anderson, $2.00: H. Morey, $1.00.
SAN FRANCISCO
85 Third St.
SS THE CABINS
Frenchy Michelet, Agent Douglas 2-547?
E. R. Hall, $1.00: J. Shefuleski. $1.00.
SAN JUAN, P.R
252 Ponce de Leon
SS STEEL DESIGNER
L, Craddock, Agent
San Juan 2-5996
H. Kowalski, $1.00.
SAVANNAH
2 Abercorn St.
SS CITY OF ALMA
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728
E. J. Rogg, $1.00.
TACOMA
1519 Pacific St
Broadway 0484
TAMPA
1809-1811 N. Franklin St.
Ray White, Agent
Phono M-1323
WILMINGTON, Calif., 227Vi Avalon Blvd.
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Terminal 4-2874
HEADQUARTERS. . 51 Beaver St., N.Y.C.
SECRETARY-TREASURER
Paul Hall
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
Lindsey Williams
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURER
Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
Joseph Volpian

SUP
HONOLULU

...16 Merchant St.
Phone 5-8777
PORTLAND
Ill W. Bumside St.
Beacon 4338
RICHMOND, Calif.^
; .257 5th St.
Phono 2599
SAN FRANCISCO
...59 Clay St.
DougUs 2-8363
SEATTLE
86 Seneca St.
Main 0290
lyiLMINGTON
440 Avalon Blvd.
Tanninal 4-3131

Canadian District
MONTREAL

.404 Le Moyne St.
Marquette 5909
HAUFAX
'
128&lt;/i Hollis St.
Phone 3-8911
PORT ARTHUR
63 Cumberland St.
Phone North 1229
PORT COLBORNE....-.103 Durham Sti
Phone: 5591
TORONTO..
lllA Jarvis St,
Elgin 5719
VICTORIA. B.C .'...602 Boughton St.
Empire 4531
VANCOUVER
565 Hamilton St.
Paciflc 7524
HEADQUARTERS.......812 McGUI St.
, Montreal
PUtoao 670

HHartia's Book Exposes Communists,
Govemment Red-Tape Artists
A book by Captain Harry Mar­
tin, former president of Local
88 of the Masters, Mates, and
Pilots, and also a former presi­
dent of the national Organiza­
tion, has recently been placed
on sale. The book is titled "Mer­
chant Marine Machinations," and
is an expose of the way the
government red-tape artists have
worked to cut down the Ameri­
can merchant marine in favor
of foreign countries.

THOMAS F. GALVIN
Your mother asks you to write
her at White Plains.

t t t

John D. Petriga is drydocked
in the Marine Hospital at Staten
Island and would appreciate
hearing from any of his old New
Orleans shipmates. His address
is: 537 West End Avenue, New
York City.

tit

LOST PAPERS
The following Brothers can re­
claim their lost papers at the
PhUadelphia Hall:
PETRO KUKRKEMILIS
WOODROW W. WOLFORD
JAMES LEE
VINCENT PEREZ
RONALD EARL SMITH
ADOLPH j. KARST
ROBERT BENDERS
HENRY WILLETT
E. SAVIO
JAMES MALFARA
JAMES JOSEPH RYAN
FRANK D. McCALLENHENRY E. HUMPHREY
JOHN SYRBEHUK
t t t
-L. V^NTZ
Your clothing is being held in
the New Orleans. Waterman
office.

movement on the Canadian front and General Workers Union, callcollapsed completely, and the'ed upon members of his organCSU leaders began a vigorous, ization to ignore the commun­
campaign to draw British .wa­ ists' pleas for "support.
terfront worker^ into their fight
The International Transportto -retain control over Canadian workers Federation, world or­
seamen.
ganization of
anti-communist
Communist party hafks, in­ maritime, transportation and al­
cluding CSU president Harry lied workers, similarly con-"
Davis, flew to the British dock demned the CSU's communists'
areas of Bristol, Avonmouth and leaders' illfated "strike."
other ports, and succeeded in
FINiSHING TOUCH
provoking sporadic, wildcat ac­
tions by small groups of dockers The return to work by Bri­
who fell under the spell of the tish ddckers, who had been fol­
communists' fantastic versions of lowing the communist line in
refusing to load and unload 'Can­
the "strike."
adian
ships under SIU contract,
Britain's trade union move­
spells
final
defeat for the com­
ment, however, saw eye to eye
munist
tacticians.
with the SIU—that the "strike"
was a political maneuver for wa­ Two weeks ago, the Canadian
Trades and Labor Congress sus­
terfront power.
After conferences in London pended the CSU from the or­
with the SIU's International rep­ ganization for adhering to the
resentative, .^Arthur Bird, nation­ communist ling.
al secretary of the Docks Group The TLC said that the CSU
of Britain's powerful Transport had violated the "spirit and let­
ter" of the TLC's constitution;
had failed "to recognize, and ac­
cept its responsibilities," and has
issued literature "vilifying tried
and trusted trade union leaders."
The CSU thus has been repu­
diated
by its own membership,
Captain Martin knows his sub­
the
Canadian
trade union moveject well since he is the veteran
;
ment
and
responsible
labor brpf close to forty years sea-time,
ganizations
abroad.
having obtained his first job, in,

sail, in 1910. He knows from I
practical experience the cpndi- 'DAAAjMffA' DSII
tions he writes about.
Ilvvwl Vv
Dill
The material contained in the
book is of such controversial na-t
ture that commercial publishers
refused to have anything to do
with it. Some friends of Captain
Martin furnished the financial
(Continued from Page 1)
support that made publication
morning
to find their affairs be­
of the book possible.
ing
run
by either the Navy or
Copies can be ordered through
the
shipowners,
neither of whom
the A&amp;G Headquarters at 51
would think twice before smash­
Beaver Street. The price of the
ing a strike, the SIU officials ex­
book is $1.25, postpaid.
plained.
The events recounted in the This week, Seafarers were be­
book are of interest to all sea- ing urged to send letters or tele­
farihg men, and will make in­ grams to the seven members of
teresting reading during a long the House committee conducting
or short voyage. Captain Mar­ the hearings asking the Con­
tin was 'one of the first in the gressmen to disapprove the bill
maritime labor movement to which is designated HR 4448. At
realize the danger of the com­ the same time, the SIU called
upon the entire labor movement
munists, and his chapters on to join in the fight since the bill
this subject are worth the price represents a threat to all or­
of the book alone.
ganized labor.

Weapon Against
Strike Action

RICHARD RAIA
Your sister has moved and
asks you to contact her at 219
Roslindale
Ave.,
Roslindale,
Mass.
t t t
HILARIO BULOUERIN
Communite with your wife at
1563 Wallace Avenue, San Fran­
The SEAFARERS LOG as the official publication of the Sea&lt;
cisco, Calif.
farers International Union is available to aU members who wish
to have it sent to their home free of charge for the enjoyment of
t t t
their families and themselves when ashore. If you desire to have
DAVID R. BASS
Your mother asks you to write the LOG sent to you each week address cards are on hand at every
SIU branch-for ^is purpose.
her immediately.
*
However,
for
those
who
are
at
sea
or
at
a
distance from a SIU
t t t
hall,
the
LOG
reproduces
below
the
form
used
to request the LOG,
HUBERT J..ANDREWS
which
you
can
fill
out,
detach
and
send
to:
SEAFARERS
LOG, 51
Your mother asks you to con­
Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
tact her at once. Your father is
ill.
PLEASE PRINT INFORMATION
t t t
To the Editor:
WILLIAM R. SWEET
I would like the SEAFARERS LOG mailed to the
Contact Shirley Wessel, 25
South Street, New York.
address below:
t t t
Name
BOBBIE B. GUTHRIE
Your mother asks you to
communicate with her. Your Street Address
grandfather" has died.
Zone..
... State
aty
t t t
MARCEL JANDRYS
Signed
You are requested to get in
touch with your parents. There
Book No.
has been an automobile acci­
dent.
•

Notiee To All SIU Menbors

�T H E S E AF A R E R S

Page Twelve

LOG

We^esday, June .22, .1949

'Battle Of Wall Street' Premieres At Sea

Shoreside Unions, Too, Ask
For SlU's Documentary Film
"The Battle of Wall Street,"
documentary .motion- picture
filmed by the SIU "during the
'AFL United Financial Employes'
- strike last - year, will have its
.shipboard premiere this week
aboard the SS Seatrain New
Jersey.
Seafarer Robert Lester, Quar­
termaster on the Seatr^ ship,
who operates his own 16mm.
SDu^d projector as an entertain­
ment feature for his shipmates,
purchased a copy of the Unionmade film of the Wall Street
struggle at SIU Headquarters
. last week.

New m Film
laLastStages
Of Profiuction

The SIU film was unreeled at
the June 8 meeting of the Phil­
adelphia Central Labor Union.
Delegates and Representatives
came out in large numbers af­
ter having received advance no­
tice of tfie showing, Joseph A.
McDonough, the CLU's Business
Manager announced. Brother Mc­
Donough reported that t?ie re­
sponse to the film was "splen­
did."

The Philadelphia labor gi'oup,
in a letter to the SIU, lauded
.the Seafarers' policy of aiding
other unions, of which "The
Battle of Wall Street" is a
He said that there would be graphic example.
several showings of the "Bat­
STIRRING THEME
tle" during the Seatrain New
The film records the entire
Jersey's current woyage and at
least once during each subse­ strike, beginning with tiie for­
quent trip, since it will become mation of the first picketlines.
part of the ship's permanent
A stirring example of interfilm library.
union cooperation, the "Battle"'
"It's a film we can always features the Seafarers in its
use as part- of our educational traditional role of supporting
other labor organizations in­
setup," Brother Lester said.
volved in legitimate economic
WIDE AUDIENCE
beefs, in this case the AFL
United
Financial Employes.
Although the Seatrain show• ihg of the documentary will be
The principal points of action
the first one at sea, thousands in the film are the Ne^ York
of Seafarers have already view­ Stock Exchange and New York
ed the film at SIU Halls on the Curb Exchange, targets of the
Atlantic and Gulf coasts. The .strike, and the SIU Hall at 51
picture will continue to be Beaver Sjireet, which served as
shown at frequent intervals so temporary headquarters for the
that the entire membership may striking AFL financial
workers.
have an opportunity to see it.
Highlight of the production is
In addition -to the Seafarer the tense moment in which the
audience, vast numbers of trade police attempted to smash the
unionists throughout the na­ picketlines and sent strikers and
tion have seen the SIU's film Seafarers to the ground under
record of the Wall Street beef. swinging nightsticks. The film
. Considerable acclaim has been is narrated against a musical
accorded the unusual movie by backgroun'd.
the many unions which have
"The Battle of Wall Street"
purchased copies for showing
is available to SIU crews hav­
to their memberships. Requests
ing sound motion picture equip­
for the picture continue to come
ment aboai'd ship and who wish
in from labor organizations in
to place the film in their librar­
every section of the country.
ies. It is also available to other
The Central Labor Union of trade unions.
Philadelphia and Vicinity, a
Those intere.sted ma.y obtain
municipal body .of AFL organ­
copies of the film at SIU Head­
izations, took occasion to record
quarters, 51 Beaver St., New
"its warm praise of the "Battle"
York
4, N.Y. The purchase price
after witnessing it at the invi­
per
copy
is $40 and includes
tation of SIU Port Agent Jimmy
Sheehan.
express costs.

The . SIU, A&amp;.G district* ig
completing and will shortly re­
lease^ a new union-sponsored
film, depicting the growth of the
Union and' the many benefits en­
joyed through membei'ship.

Robert Lester, Quartermaster aboard the SS Seatrain New
Jersey, looks over copy of. Union-made film, "Battle of Wall
Street," which he purchased last week in behalf of his ship­
mates. Brother Lesteir will run the pictfire off on his own
projector during the Seatrain vessel's current voyage.

Entitled "This Is The SIU,"
the 18-minute sound film
por­
trays the activities of a typical
Seafarer in the New York Hall
from the tirhe he pays off until
he takes a new job.
Included in the film are shots
of an actual payoff, the adminis­
trative set-upi of the Union
Headquarters' recreational facili­
ties and many other features
showing the SIU -in action. One
oL the highlights of the film is
last year's Thanksgiving Day,
Dinner, sponsored by Headquar­
ters and attended by members
of all maritime unions.
The SIU documentary is now
in the process of final
editing.
A definite date for the film's
release has not yet been set, but
it is expected to be available
shortly.
Following the initial showing,
copies of the film will be made
and dispatched to the various
SIU branches.
|

CENTRAL LABOR UN-ION
OF PHILADELPHIA AND VICINITY
OFFICE of BUSINESS M©R . lOOS CfTY CENTRE BLO©.
lomm A. llcOoMoosa
Batlam Maaagor

PHILADELPHIA 7, PA . TELEPHONES Rl. 6-2137-2138

Huur TIKUT
Hoeoidlag Socnlatf

Vlro-Pnild»Blt
NOMUAM BlUMUl*
FUHCW Conr
IiiDoa MIUHK
WtixiiM McEam
Fia&gt; iUosu

Auzn Suia
Pnildoal

TruAt—M
Leo iHMtacmt
Rouir L-.oag
lofcraiac Snet
Soigoaal-al-At.
Cunaa STOCK

June IDth
1 5 4 9
Ur. Paul Hall,
Secretary-Treasurer,
Seafarers Intemptional Uaj.on,
51 Beaver Street,
Hevf York City,Nevf York.
x

Dear Brother Hall •

Jl!e want to express our appreciation to the Seafarers'
mtemational union and the efforts of Brother Sheenan of the
Philadelphia local union of Seafarers' for the opportunity to
.show the film "Plall Street Battle" at our"meeting held on
June 8th.
Upon reoeivii^ word that we could show this film,
we commuaioated with our Delegates and Buelness Representatives
advising them of this fact.
Our attendance at the June 8th'
Meeting was excellent and the response to the film was splendid.
I received many comments from our delegates and Business Agents
about the film after the meeting.
I think that the film and other material published
by your International union on the activiti'es of the Seafarers
particularly its assistance^to other labor unions in time of need
is beneficial to both your members and all others in preating
unity and good will.
Thanks again for your courtesy extended us.
With .best wishes for continued success, I oi
Sincerely yours.

oeiu-14
This tense scene is one Of the highlights of the "Battle of
Wall Street." filmed by the SIU during the AFL United
Financial Employes strike last year. Copies of the sound motion
picture are available at SIU Headquarters in New York.

pi QA
JOSE}PH A LIcDOlIOUGii^
Business ilanager

'

Represenlaiives of AFL qhions affiliated with Philadelpbia's Central Labor -Union had high
praise for the "Battle of Wall Street," after viewing the SlU-made film at the invitation of Port
\
Agent Jimmy Sheehan.

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9918">
                <text>June 22, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9987">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 21</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10008">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10029">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10089">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10107">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10160">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
OPERATORS SIGN $7.50 INCREASE&#13;
BATTLE OVER T-H REPEALER ON IN SENATE&#13;
PROPOSED 'RESERVE' BILL WOULD HAVE SEAMEN BREAKING OWN STRIKE&#13;
OPPOSE MERCHANT MARINE RESERVE BILL&#13;
NEW TACTICS&#13;
TREMENDOUS OPPORTUNITY&#13;
SUNMOUNT EXAMPLE OF NEW DEAL FOR CANADIAN SEAMEN UNDER SIU&#13;
POLIO FOUNDATION LISTS FIVE PRECAUTIONS&#13;
BOSTON SHIPPING CONTINUES ALONG IN OLD GROOVE&#13;
BULL LINE GOES ALL-OUT ON NEW SHIP&#13;
GOOD SHIPPING, VERY FEW BEEFS, HALIFAX REPORTS&#13;
ASSOCIATED PRESS RETRACTS WARTIME SMEAR&#13;
SHIPPING COOL IN BALTIMORE&#13;
MOBILE SHIPPING HOLDING FAST&#13;
LEGITIMATE UNIONS AND THE TWO-BOOK MAN&#13;
SS CALMAR GOURMET FEASTS (ALONE) ON HAWK A LA KILBY&#13;
'AID UNTIL WILL,' MALDEN CREW TELLS INJURED SEAFARER&#13;
MINUTES OF A&amp;G BRANCH MEETINGS HELD IN BRIEF&#13;
AFL SENDS FOOD TO AID STRIKING BERLIN WORKERS&#13;
MARTIN'S BOOK EXPOSES COMMUNISTS, GOVERNMENT RED-TAPE ARTISTS&#13;
'BATTLE OF WALL STREET' PREMIERES AT SEA&#13;
NEW SIU FILM IN LAST STAGES OF PRODUCTION&#13;
</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10161">
                <text>6/22/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13059">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="962" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="966">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/bd39705bef7166ade546ed47cc8328c1.PDF</src>
        <authentication>6dd8507075a2503781646c79be3ab5c5</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47442">
                    <text>SENATE PASSES NEW T-H BILE
The US Senate, by a 51-42 vote, last week resaddled org^anized labor with the Taft-Hartley law.
The upper House rejected the Administration's la­
bor-backed repealer and adopted Senator Robert
Taft's substitute amendments, which left the pres­
ent vicious anti-labor law virtually intact.
The Senate bill gives the federal government
power to use strikebreaking injunctions and to
seize industrial plants to force the settlement of
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA
industrial disputes which threaten to bring about
a national emergency.
NEW YORK, N. Y., WEDNESDAY. JULY 6. 1949
No. 22
VOL. XI

British Labor
Rips Commie
Disruption

Prospects are that the new
Taft-Hartley law would die as
a result of inaction in the House
of Representatives or a presi­
dential veto. But whether the
bill passed by the Senate finally
With the signing of 33 steamship companies to a
becomes law or not matters
little, since there is no funda­
$7.50 clothing allowance for all ratings during the past
mental difference between it and
two weeks, the pay boost is now in effect aboard ships
the original T-H act.
Already repudiated by Bristol
A threatened last minute bat­
of all 50 SlU-contracted operators. Seventeen operators
and
Avonmouth dockworkers,
tle on the ^nat^e floor against
T-H
REPEALER
had signed the inci'ease earlier.
communist
agitators are now
extending the Maritime ComThe measure which the Ad­
The move for.an increase got under way on June'
^ mission's right to charter, sell
ministration had been pushing, concentrating on the London
17 when the A8cG District notified the contracted com­
ahd operate ships failed to ma­
with strong support from the area in a- renewed effort to crip­
terialize, and the extension was
panies by telegrams of its desire to negotiate for the
organized labor movement, would ple Britain's shipping.
written into law several hours
$7.50 increase. The qpmpanies were asl(ed to fall in line
have repealed the Taft-Hartley Communist leaders of the Can­
before the June 30''deadline.
law outright and substituted a adian Seamen's Union, working
with the increase by consent, thereby eliminating the
hand-in-glove with British com­
At the same time that the
modified Wagner act.
necessity of bargaining sessions. ^
munist party hacks, have suc­
Maritime Commission's ppwers
In view of the important part
ceeded
in fomenting a wildcat
Within
a
matter
of
hours
17
.operators
signfied
their
were renewed, the waiver on
organized labor had played, in
stoppage
on London docks.
alien seamen was extended to
approval, and the| remaining 33 operators had made
the elections last fall, repeal of
British
trade union officials
June 30, 1950. Under the waiver,
agreements within ten days.
Taft-Hartley in this session of
have
condemned
the unauthor­
aliens are allowed to make up
Congress was regarded as almost
The increase went into effect on June 17 on all ships.
ized
action,
and
have
pointed out
15 percent of the crew aboard
a sure thing.
to the misguided London dockers
a subsidized ship and 25 percent
With Taft-Hartley repeal as a that they were being made dupes
aboard a non-subsidized ship.
major issue, • the trade unions of by communists trying to up­
(Officials of the SIU's At­
were the only groups to give set the British economy by dis­
lantic and Gulf District re­
solid backing to^ President Tru­ rupting imports and exports.
peated the advice that all
man's campaign for re-election. Communist leaders of the wild­
alien members who are eligible
Virtually every candidate for cat stoppage defied official un­
take immediate steps to obtain
Congress who ran with labor ion orders and urged the dock­
their US citizenship. The Un­
backing won out over his anti- ers not to work on two Canad­
ion pointed out that this is the
WASHINGTON, July 6 — A to be used for strikebreaking labor opponent. However, a large ian ships under contract with
only way aliens could insure spokesman for the Seafarers In­ purposes but, despite his testi­ number of anti-labor legislators the SIU Canadian District.
themselves against the effects ternational Union ^today de mony, the bill could be used for did not come up for election
The ships are the Beaverbrae
of the waiver's expiration.)
and, as a result, these forces and Argomont, whose CSU crews
nounced the proposed Merchant precisely that.
The threat against the Mari­ Marine Reserve bill as a poten 'Other than Rack no' person or were able to stave off repeal of were ordered not to return to
time Commission dame from tial strike-breaking instrument, organization has yet come out Taft-Hartley in the current ses­ Canada by CSU commie officials.
Clement H. Attlee, Prime Min­
Senator McCarran of Nevada, at a hearing held here by the in favor of the proposed bill. In sion of Congress.
who criticized^ its policy, say­ House subcommittee considering fact, the opposition of maritime Organized labor is reconciled ister of Great Britain, and Lalabor, coupled with the Maritime to the fact that the labor-haters | bor Minister George Isaacs, along
ing it was ruining Pacific ship­ the measure.
Matthew Dushane, the SIU's Commission's stand-off attitude, have the edge in Congress and' with waterfront union officials,
ping.
He threatened to fight the Washington representative, told is expected to move the com­ that there is little chance for re­ appealed to the dockers to ignore
extension past the deadline, but the subcommittee that the legis mittee to turn thumbs down on peal—or modification—of T-H in the disruptive tactics of the com­
1949.
munists.
backwatered at the last min­ lation introduced by Represen­ the measure.
Shipowners
are
also
maintain­
In fact, organized labor is al­ Four Labor members, of Par­
ute and gave the measure his tative Charles Potter (R., Mich.)
was vigorously opposed by the ing a hands-off attitude, some of ready training its sights on the liament conducted a waterfront
approval.
them openly calling the measure 1950 elections and is determined investigation, during which they
His move, had it been eiffec- Seafarers, and urged its rejec­ "a hot potato."^
to blast the remaining Taft- boarded the two Canadian ships.
tive, would have thrown the tion.
The
SIU
opened
its
attack
on
Hartleyites out of the political They reported that aboard the
The, proposed bill, kno^n as
maritime industry into chaos.
the danger-laden bill when hear­ picture.
ships they learned that the strike
HR-4448,
calls
for
the
establish­
Immediate result would have
ings were announced two weeks
"was
communist inspired" and
ment
of
a
military
reserve
o
been the government's recalling
TAFT^ TOO
ago. At that time the Seafarers
was
a
"plot to wreck this coun­
licensed
and
unlicensed
seamen
of over 300 ships now on char­
Presidents William Green, of try's (Britain's) economy."
urged the committee to squash
and
would
subject
them
to
mobi­
ter and the transferral of their
lization in time of war and "na­ the measure. It called on all la­ the American Federation of La­ Two weeks ago the commun­
future cargoes to Army ships.
bor unions to fight
the bill, bor, and Philip Murray, of the ist plan to tie up Bristol and
tional emergency."
ECA shipments would have
which,
the
SIU
held,
might
es­ CIO, emphasized that their or­ Avonmouth shipping collapsed
Inasmuch as the measure does
been cut, and coastwise, ship­
ganizations would look to 1950 when dockers voted to ignore
tablish
a
precedent
for
strike­
ping would have been severely not define what is meant by breaking that could be extended to defeat Senator Taft and the the phony CSU beef and return
"national emergency," it could
curtailed.
to work.
(Continued on Page 11)
serve as a cloak for government- to all industries.
STRONG WORDS
sponsored strikebreaking, the
In making known his opposi­ SIU spokesman pointed out to
tion to chatter extension McCar­ the Congressional group.
At an earlier hearing testi­
ran stated: "So far as I am con­
cerned, so long as I can stand mony was heard from Admiral A Senate subcommittee inves- proval of a plan to shift six old in testimony, when Gamble stat­
on~ my feet, I shall not allow Knight, head of the Maritime tigating all phases of the Amer­ tankers to foreign flag opera­ ed that Esso had 23 vessels imthis resolution to go through Commission's training program. ican merchant marine began tions. In return the company der Panama's flag. Ships are also
for the continuation of author­ Admiral Knight did not commit hearings last week, and plunged would put four new tankers un­ registered in several European
ity to this arbitrary and high­ the Commission to a stand on leadlong into a probe of ship der the American flag.
countries.
the biU.
handed Commission."
transfers to foreign registry,
The Commission turned down "In fact," Gamble stated, "ap­
This' was a blow to the bill's particularly Panama.
Senator Magnuson, chairman
the request, he reported.
proximately half of our total
of a subcommittee investigating proponents, who apparently ex­ Headed by Senator Warren G. Gamble then told the commit­ sales are outside the United
the merchant marine, urged Mc­ pected the Commission to come Magnuson, the committee is ex­ tee that the company would States."
Carran to reconsider and said out unqualifiedly in favor of a pected to recommend legislation keep the six old ships under
An indication of the profitable
in the next session of Congress the American flag and put the arrangement Standard Oil en­
that he was investigating J the Merchant Marine Reserve.
The only voice in favor of the calling for stern curbs, on ship new vessels under foreign reg­ joys through its . foreign flag
Pacific coast situation and hoped
Merchant Marine Reserve bill at transfers.
istry.
to correct inequities.
operations was Gamble's state­
In its opening sessions, the Gamble's argument was that ment that Panama Transport
McCarran swung into line today's hearing was that of
when he was told th^t fqr him Frank Rack, representing the principal witness called to ex­ the company did not make Company, a Standard subsidiary,
to deny authority to the Com­ Merchant Marine "Veterans' As­ plain his company's foreign flag money in' American operations paid the parent company a divi­
mission would hurt thousands sociation, a small organization operations was Millhrd G. Gam­ and ah-eady had nearly twice as dend of $20 million this year.
of workers in the maritime in­ of former seamen which is spon­ ble, a Standard Oil Executive. niany vessels as it needed for
The hearings are expected to
Gamble . told the committee its domestic services.
dustry, dnd those people through­ soring the legislation.
continue with representatives of
Rack said that his organiza­ that his company had sought The scope of Standard's for­ other American shipping com­
put the. world dependent upon
tion did not intend the measure the Maritime Commission's ap­ eign operations was brought out panies scheduled to appear.
it for existence.

Alien Waivers,
MC Chartering $7,50 Pay Rise For AH
Extended To '50

Seafarers Blasts Bill
To Set Up 'Reserve'

Senate Committee Probes Ship Transfers

�T H E SEAFARERS

Page Two

LOG

W«dnMd«7&lt; July 6, IMf

SEAFARERS LOG
Published Three Times a Month by the

SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Afiilialed with the American Federation of Labor

At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Reentered as second class matter May 27, 1949; at the Post Office
in New York^^N. Y.,* under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

Waiting For '50
By' re-enacting the essential provisions of the TaftHartley law last week, a coahtipn of 51 US Senators de­
clared, in effect, "The working men and women of Am­
erica be damned."
Despite the 1948 Section mandate, whjch was ac­
cepted universally as a clear authorization by the voters
of this land for repeal of the Taft-Hartley law. Congress
has failed to respond to the will of the people.
In the Senate, a 51 to 42 vote squeezed through
Senator Robert A. Taft's substitute amendments' to the
'Administration's labor-backed bill, thus leaving the TaftHartley law-substantially intact. In the House of Repre­
sentatives,-^the question of a new labor bill has been re­
submitted to cornmittee, but there is little likelihood that
• any action will be forthcoming.
Either the l^U passed by the Senate will die as a
result bf jriaction in the House of Representatives, or it
will be v'etoed by President Truman, who repeatedly has
acknowledged the important role played by organized
labor in the- 1948 elections. Labor, nevertheless, still re­
mains pinned down. New Taft-Hartley or old, it's still
the same old straitjacket.
All of this foreshadows a bitter battle at the polls
•in 1950. The major issue will be Taft-Hartley, and
organized labor is already laying the groundwork for its
campaign to complete the job it began so successfully in
last year's elections.
At that time organized labor routed virtually every
anti-labor candidate for Congress, and sent to Washington
men who publicly recognized the evils of the Taft-Hartley
law and who committed themselves to its repeal.
Unfortunately, a sufficient number of reactionaries
who weren't up for re-election in 1948 were still around
the legislative, halls when the Administration bill, which
would have repealed T-H and replaced it with a modified
Wagner Act, was offered. ,

When entering the hospital
notify the ddegales by post­
card. giving your name and
the number of your ward.
Mimeographed
Postcards
can be obtained free at the
Social Service desk.

It was this group of hangovers from ^the days when
mahagement propaganda whipped up a hysteria against
organized labor that blocked the move for T-H repeal.

Men Now h The Mthine HK/u'tak

The labor movement realistically recognizes that there
is little chance for repeal or even modification of TaftHartley so long as Taft and his labor-hating followers
These ate the Union Brothers currently in the marine hospitals,
as reported by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging
are on the public payroll in Washington.
heavily on. their hands. Do what you can to cheer them up by

Instead of further wasting its time in that direction, writing them.
organized labor — AFL, CIO and independent unions BALTIMORE MARINE
alike—^is girding for the showdown in 1950. Labor is con­ W. G. ALSTON
fident, too, for it knows that it packs the punch needed D. BOYCE
to kayo the reactionaries.
J. CHIORRA
It only has to look back to the 1948 elections for
reassurance. As a result of labor's work at the polls last
fall, the number of labor's friends in the Senate alone
increased by about 75 percent in two years.
In 1947 only 27 Senators were on labor's side when
President Truman's veto of the Taft-Hartley law was
overridden. This year, however, 47 Senator® supported
labor's position—a gain of 20.
In next year's elections, organized labor will put the
question simply to Congressional candidates: "Are you
for us or against us?"
Those who are against us will be voting themselves a
one-way ticket out of Washington. And that's the only
way we can do a sure-fire job in repealing Taft-Hartley
.once and for all.

HOSP.

F. WATERMAN
G. A. CARROLL
W. E. LAMBERT
•
F. KORVATIN
J. M. FERNANDES
W, VAUGHAN
H. G. REYNOLDS
W. H. WOODILL
F. W. CHRISTY
A. L. MASTERS
M. I. EL MOUR
H. H. DIDDLEBOCK
E. ARDOIN
XXX
NEW ORLEANS HOSPITAL
F. CORCORAN
T. SANFORD
C. PLATT
E. MASSEY
W. J. JOYNER

J. DENNIS
G. ROTZ
L. LANG
F. LANDRY
S. MORGAN
C. ELLARD '
L. WILLIS
J. B. ALLRED
B. VARNER
M. H. MUNSTER
N. I. WEST
G. H. NOLES
B. K. JOHNSON
A. MAUFFRAY
N. STRATON
P. G. BEAUFORT E. G. SANDERS
C. R. SCHOOLER
C. RAYFUSE
E. G. PLAHN
C. BROWN
D. KOROLIA
R. DICKINSON
E. WARSAW, JR.

A. ARVANTIS
J. C. JARVIS
J. C. HANSON
4. 4. t
•
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL
C. MEDLEY
J. L. SIKES
U. A. WOODBURY
W. SMITH
J. E. UTZ
C. EZELL
. J:
XXX
MOBILE HOSPITAL
J. CURTIS
J. T. MARLER

J. B. PORTER" ,
J. B. BERRIED
fPAUL VANDEREIK
. L. HOWARD
H: T. FOY
J.* EDMONDS .
XXX
SAN FRANCISCO HOSPITAL
T. ISAACSON
J. W. KEENAN
W. SANDERSON
XXX
GALVESTON HOSPITAL
BILLY BROWN
FRED P. LALLIER
EDWIN T. DANBACH

:2a.

�WedhMtUy.

6, 1949

TBE SEAP ARE RS LOG

What's Source For The Goose
Engineers Still After
Jobs Of Electricians
Wheze do NMU members turn lo get Ihe score? To the
pages of the SEAFARERS LOG, of course. In fact, one NMUer
named Arthur Becker found an article in the May-10 issue of
the LOG, headlined "Engineers Still after Jobs of Electricians."
so revealing that he submitted it to the Pilot,"NMU organ.
The LOG article "was written by someone who knows the
score," wrote NMU member Becker and for that reason he
felt that "these facts should be known to the membership."

Page tbxee

Georgia Pays
Benefits To
Idle Seamen

The SIU's Savannah Branch
has issued a memorandum re­
minding Seafarers employed by
By JIMMY PURCELL
shipping companies whose cen­
tral offices are located in Georgia
Since publication of gn article
waiting for the opThe Pilot reprinted Becker's letter containing the LOG in the Jan. 21 issue of the SEA­ portunity to drop -the axe on
that they are eligible for unem­
article, which was written by James PurcelL SIU Engine FARERS LOG exposing the at­ somebody's neck to bolster their
ployment benefits .in that state.
in discussions with a repre­
Patrolman in the Port of New York. But the Pilot took careful tempt by Engineers to muscle in claims that the Electricians are
irresponsible.
sentative
of the Georgia State
on
Electrician's
jobs
aboard
SIU
pains to conceal the source of the LOG article, deleting the
unemployment agency, SIU
ships, things have improved I 'think it should be pointed
author's name and all references to the SIU article contained somewhat. I should like ta in­ out at this time that there is a
Port Agent Jim Drawdy learned
therein, That is, all but one. The Pilot man with the blue form the membership of my ob­ considerable, amount of jealousy
that the jobless pay is* now re­
pencil muffed it when he overlooked the reference to SIU servations on this score to date. on the Engineers' part, because
stricted to those men sailing on
Special Services Representative Joseph Volpian. That fumble
privately own vessels.
For the benefit of those who the Electrician's pay is high and
was the give-away.
may not recall, , or who did not because Electricians work day
The law at present also covers
work, while Engineers, below
seamen
sailing on ships operated
Reproduced below are a partial clip of the original article read the article, this is the nub First, have to stand watches.
"•
by the WSA hut no money has
as it appeared in the LOG. and the Pilot version which ap­ of it: With things getting a bit What leads this writer to be­
tough for the Engineers, they
been appropriated by the federal
peared in the June 17 issue.
set their sights on Electricians' lieve that the Engineers haven't
government
to extend payments
given up their objective is that
jo)}s. 1
beyond
June
30. So benefits for
They already "have made con­ several instances have cropped
seamen
on
WSA
ships ended as
siderable progress in this direc­ up, wherein Electricians have
of that date.
less itls stiH this writer's OjHiiMiftaat
been
dropped
to
lower
ratings
tion aboard NMU-contracted Uni­
the-Engineer's new tactic is to play pws.
In reminding qualified Sea­
fom. They are simply waitifl'g for lha
ted States Lines' vessels, where and Engineers have taken over
farers to take advantage of the
oppoftuQity to drop tha axe on some- they control the majority of El­ for the remainder of the voy­
Tc the PILOT —lie tollowinc piee*
body's neck to bolster their claims that'
ages.
unemployment insurance
al­
about the way Enpneera are chiselinK in
ectricians' jobs.
the Electricians are inespensiUe.lowed
by
Georgia
law,
the
SIU
M the jobs of Eleettieiani wu written
STRAIGHT
TALK
Iff their campaign, these En­
"I think it should be pointed out at this,
aowoooe who knows the score. I am *«««.
Port Agent outlined the essential
time that there is a considerable amount' gineers laid down a steady fire
In one case that was brought
inc . it in becaMM I ttiiak these facia
of
jealousy
on
the
Electrieisns'
part,-be-!
features
of the rules applied by
•hoold be known by the membeiaUp:
of criticism at SIU Electricians before the Coast Guard, repre- cause the Electrician's pny is high and
the
state
agency.
I , "^ince publication «f an article espoaas a softening up tactic in the sentatives of your Union stated
because Electricians work day work,
I&gt;y Engiaeera to m'usria
while Engineers, below ITirst, have to' drive for the jobs.
REPORT BI-WEEKLY
the
issues
very
simply.
Special
in on Eketrieian's joba, tbniEs hare imC »tand watches.
Jobless pay checks are mailed
The previous article pointed Services Representative Joe Vol­
proved somewhat I ahould like t# inform
leads this writer to believe thaCj
the membership of my observations on , ^e"What
pian
'
and
myself
pointed
out
at
to
applicants every two week's,
out
that
to
effectively
counter­
Engineers haven't given up Oieir ob-;
tbie score to date.
the hearing that the Engineers
jective ia that several instances hnva
with
two checks going out at the
act
such
ambitions,
SIU
Electri­
' Tor the benefit of thaae who may not
cropped up, wherein Electricians - have
involved were never certified as
cians
must
perform
their
ship­
same
time.
know what ia going on. this ia the nub of
been dropped to low;er ratings and Engi­
it: With things getting « bit tougb f&lt;«
board duties to the letter of the "Electricians and had never sailed
In this way an applicant for
neers have taken over for the remainder
the Engineers, they set their sights en
v
of the voyage.
contract, in addition to cooperat­ in that capacity.
the unemployment benefits only
Electricians' jobs.
Therefore, we argued, these
"In one case that was brought before
ing
fully
with
all
hands
aboard
has
to report- to the agency
"They already have made eonsidersblc
the Coast Guard, rcpraseutativaa of yonr
men
had
no
practical
experience
ship.
'
progreae in this direction aboard NMUevery
two weeks, instead of
Union stated the issues vdry simply,
as Electricians and operated sole­
•cootractad United States Lines' vessels.
•Special Services Bcpreeeutative Jee Vol­
EASEU
UP
every
week
as in some states.
Where they eootrol the majority of Eleoly on theory.
pian and myself, painted cut at the hear­
tricfons' jo^
For
example,
if a seaman ap­
In
the
period
since
Jan.
21
the
ing tbat the . Engineers involved were
Nevertheless, these hombres
"In _their campaign, these Engineers . never certified as Electrkians -and hadi
Engineers have toned down. continued to make it as unpleas­
plies for benefits on the first of
laid down a steady lire of criticism at
never sailed in that capacity.
•
They've eased up. on the hard- ant as possible for every Electri­
the month, he is told to report
Electriciana as a softening up tactic in the
"Therefore, we argued these men ha4
timing of Electricians, because cian who sailed under them.
drive for the jobs.
back to the agency's office on
no practical experience as Electricians;
of the SIU's repeated warnings It might be of some satisfac­
"To effectively counteract such ambi' and'operated solely on theory.
the fourteenth.
"Nevertheless, these hombres coniinued.
tions, Electricians must perform their
to the companies and the En­ tion for the readers to know
When he does report, two
to
auke
it
as
uapleasaat
as
possible
for')
ahipboard duties ta the letter of the oaa- '
gineers that the practice would that 1 don't thipk we'll have any
checks, for the intervening
.tract, in additten ta caoperating fully every Electrician who sailed under them.
"U might be of some satisfaction for
have to stop. They were told more trouble from these particu­
with all hands aboard ship.
weeks, are sent to him within
the readers t* know that 1 don't think
'. •v"ln the period siiiee /an. 21 the Engithat if the practice didn't cease, lar Engineers, as they are no
two .or three days. The same
we'll
have
any
mere
trouble
from
tberV
neers have toned down.. They've' eaaed
the companies would have to ac­ longer with the company whose
procedure continues until he
up on" the hard-timing of Electicians, be- particular 'Bngineers, as thiy are no
longer with the company whose ship \r»e
cept responsibility for any con­ ship was involved.
•rause of repeated Union omminga to tha
gets his maximum benefits.
'
/companies and the EngiMera that ther involved.
sequences.
This, however, does not mean
Weekly payments range up to a
practice would have to stop. Tjwy were
Nevertheless, it is this writer's that Union members—or, in par­
told tbat if the praetiee didn't cease tha —Arthur Becker, Bk. 857X
maximum
of $18.
opinion that the Engineers' ne4v ticular, the Electricians—^tian afcompanies would have ta aeoapt respoo- .. &lt; Received by PILOT S-12-49)
All
unemployed
seamen are
fSibililv for imy eooaetnwees. Nevertha-.
to/itio,.Jst—tn nliur noswnn _.The.^
entitled • to the Georgia benefits,
which may be drawn for 16
weeks, out of each 52-week
period. However, men who quit
a job of their own accord forfeit
two weeks' compensation, unless
^ (The following lefder was messhalls, so all the dishes pile itself. One of the men has to break.
they produce evidence that they
received frdm a crewmember up until the end of the meal. nurse it along. All the work for­
That's the very reason they
quit,
for good cause.
of a Cities Service ship. For Then the Messmen have to turn merly done by the " Pantryman have fought so long to keep the
Permitmen who payoff a ship
obvious reasons, the writer's to and clean up the whole damn­ has been put on the shoulders Seafarei*s International Union
and the ship's names axe with­ ed business.
of the two Messmen.
from becoming the bai-gainihg after 60 days, in accordance with
held.)
The blooming machine just
They are both working more agent for the unlicensed person­ Union regulations, are entitled
to all but two weeks of the 16
Well, boys, this outfit—which sits there in the corner until than eight hours a day, and be­ nel on their ships.
weeks
of benefits, and they may
has been fighting the wishes of the lads show up.
lieve me, they don't like it— They know that the SIU will
apply
for
the benefits every time
Its seamen for Union represen­ It doesn't put the dishes in not even a little bit.
see to it that the Cities Service
they
are
unemployed.
tation—has just pulled another the rack, nor does it sougee the
TYPICAL STUNT
tankermen get what is justly
MISCONDUCT RULE
typical Cities Service trick.
pantry or swab the deck. Neith­
This latest stunt is just one due - them.
Men
who are pulled off a ship
They have installed a dish­ er. does it go amidships for can­ of the many things this union- So to you men who are sail­
as
a
result
of misconduct are
washing machine in the pantry ned goods or ice. It never makes hating outfit has been doing to ing Cities Service ships, I say
eligible
for
jobless
pay, but may
hnd the Chief Engineer says salads or cold drinks and it make things tougher for the stay on the ship. Stick it out.
they are going to put them on doesn't cut the lemon and grape­ seamen. Nothing they dp is cal­ Do your job. There are going to be required to forfeit from two
all the ships in the Cities Ser­ fruit or dish out the dessert. culated to give the crewmem- be some changes made and it to four weeks of their unem­
ployment insurance. Similarly,
vice fleet. This would have been
In fact, it doesn't even ruiS' bers a square deal or a fair won't be long.
a man who is fired by a com­
a very good idea, if it was used
pany for just cause may be
as a device to improve condi­
penalized
for benefits up to four
tions for the crew.
weeks.
But that's not 4he case. Any­
The Georgia law respects the
time Cities Service makes a
jurisdiction
of the Union Hiring
The groundwork for a new gress of Industrial Organizations, be simply an anti-commimist
rnove, the men who work their
Hall
and
procedure
in determin­
world
federation
of
free
trade
outfit
but
will
oppose
all
forms
urging; joint action by the free
Bhips generally get a kick in
ing
a
man's
eligibility.
unions
opposed
to
any'
form
of
of
totalitarianism.
trade
unions
of
the
world.
the pants.
Normally, shoreside workers
The American representatives
The dishwashing machine is a totalitarianism was- laid in Gen­ Meaney and Carey called for
pretty rig, but it takes longer eva, Switzerland last week. Del­ a banding together of the gen­ stressed the view that all free are required, to take the first em­
to wash dishes than it does by egates representing 42,000,000 uine trade unions everywhere labor groups should he eligible ployment to which they are rehand. Also (and this was prob­ members of democratic trade to fight reactionary government for affiliation. They also rec­ fered by the state unemployment
ably the whole idea) the damn unions in 33 nations voted to set and employer groups on the one ommended that no one political office.
But a seaman who can show a
hand, and communist "stooge" or ideological tendency should
thing has taken the job away up the world labor group.
shipping
card, with evidence
he permitted to dominate the
Representatives of the Amer­ unions on the other.
Ifrom a man. They no longer
that
he
has attended Union
Although communist domin­ new world-wide organization.
iriiip a Pantryman. The Pantry­ ican trade tmion movement play­
meetings,
is
permitted to tuyn pv,
A
dramatic
expression
of
free
man's work is now divided be­ ed a^ leading role in the initial ation of the older "World Feder­
down
two
ships,
as provided -In
labor's
scorn
for
totalitarian
re­
tween the crew and Saloon meeting, with George Meaney, ation of Trade Unions prompted
the
Union
shipping
rules, with­
gimes
was
demonstrated
in
a
Secretary of the American Fed­ the establishment of the new
iMessman—without overtime.
out
being
penalized
by
the state
clash
that
took
place
between
labor
organization,
conferees
' During the meal both men eration of Labor, and James
agency
for
refusing
employment.
Imust serve in their respective Carey, "Secretary of the Con­ made it clear that it is not to
(Continued on Page 11)

Say Engmws Reai'%IOTY
for Electrician Jobs

Beware Of Cities Service Bearing. Gifts

AFL, OQlMp Start4kw World Labor (Sroup

�i Page Four

THE SEAFARERS LOG

Robin Line Ciouts Reai Homer:
Puts Softball Gear On Its Ships

Wedneidar, July 6, 1949

Martin's Book
Captain Harry Martin's
.book, "Merchant Marine Ma­
chinations," which exposes
cotnmunists and government
red tape artists within the
maritime industry, is now on
sale and available at, A&amp;G
Headquarters in New York.
Martin is former Secre­
tary-Business Manager of
Local 88, Masters, Mates and
Pilots, and also former presi­
dent of the national organir
zation. Martin was one of
^ the first in maritime labor
^ to realise the dangers of the
communists,. and his chap­
ters on this subject are
alone worth the price of the
book.
Copies can be ordered
through the A&amp;G District
Headquartqirs, 51 Beaver
Street, New York. The price
is $1.25^^

Many Payoff
But Few Sign-On
In New York

"Play ball," the cry familiar tured by the A. G. Spalding delight none more than the
By J. P. SHULER
people of Mombasa.
to. millions of sports.-minded Company.
NEW YORK—In the absence
Americans, will shortly be ring­ The Spalding firm is one oj
Seafarer Toby Tobrick, who
of New York Port Agent Joe
ing out in ports up and down the oldest manufacturers of appears in the Robiii' Kirk line­
Algina, who is recovering from
the East and South African sporting equipment, and in up, informed the LOG that, after
pneumonia, I'll try to give the
coasts.
America most big league teams the games, the Mombasan dub
lowdown on New Yprk activi­
The umpire's signa^l will start use their products. In the ^ Na­ told him they would deeply ap­
ties during the past few weeks.
the play of softball "games be­ tional League, the Spalding is preciate it if the next cr^w to
visit the port brought out equip­
What looked .tor awhile like
tween teams representing Sea­ the official balL
a complete halt in shipping has
farer crews of Robin Line ships In each softball "package" be­ ment so games could be played.
filially come to an end, and
and the local citizenry in Dur­ ing placed aboard the Robin
Most important at the mom­
the movement of ships and men
ban, Capetown,, Port Elizabeth, Line ships are the "following: ent is the care and preservation
is a little more active. Although
Mombasa and the rest.
of the new softball gear.
we had a large number of ships
This wholesale transplanting Fifteen caps, nine gloves, six It was suggested that ihe most
bats,
six
softballs,
one
catcher's
in
for payoffs, the turnarounds
of the increasingly popular offadvisable method would be to
mask,
a
set
of
bases
and
a
home
were
slow and few left right
, shoot of the grand old game of , ^
, x.
« .
xx
away. In addition we had three
baseball is the result of an inletter R is stitched appoint a man on each ship to
lay-ups: the Sea Trader, New
take charge of the issuing and
novation aboard all vessels op­ to each cap.
London and Bloomquist.
erated by Robin Line.
The next Robin Line ship to stowing ^f the gear before and
The ships in for payoffs dur­
The company is now outfitting take on the softball gear is the after each game.
ing
the past period were: Algon­
Robin
Tuxford,
which
signs-on
each of its ships 'with a com­
quin
Victory, St. Lawrence Na­
in
New
York
on
July
6.
The
plete set of standard softball
vigation;
Kathryn, Elizabeth,
Tuxford
leaves
on
July
9
and,
equipment, principally as S
Beatrice,
Suzanne,
Cornelia, Bull;
after
loading
in
Baltimore
and
means of increasing the crew's
Loyola Victory, Hastings, Besse­
Philadelphia, will head for South
recreational facilities.
mer Victory, Waterman; SeaThe move, however will fur­ Africa, where the-lads will break
trains Texas, New Jersey, New
out
the,
bats,
balls
and
bases.
ther the cause of international
York
and Havana; Steel Advo­
By
CAL
TANNER
goodwill, something several
MADE DEBUT
cate,
Santa
Clara Victory and
Robin Line crews have already
/
MOBILE — Shipping has been iod was Waterman's^ Golden City.
whipped up on their own in Although all ships will now fair in this Gulf port since our Captain Henry Bishop was ,up Meredith Victory., Isthmian;
Robin Kettering and Robin Lockboast softball aggregations, crews ast report.
many African ports.
,
to his usual trick of logging sley, Robin; Coral Sea, Coral
aboard several of the company's
A numbei; of ships paid off everyone who didn't suit him Steamship Company; Cape Mo­
GOOD STUFF
vessels already have put classy
during
the past two weeks. personally. On this particular,
Softball equipment going Seafarer lineups on the South Among, them were the Alcoa trip, he was .logging men who hican, Mar Ancha; Colabee, Illinois-Atlantic; Southstar, South
aboard the ships is of the finest African diamonds.
Corsair and the following Water­ were sick for not turning to. He Atlantic; and the Seamar, Calquality, with all items manufac- In fact, company officials who man ships: Zebulon Pike, Maid­ threatened to put one sick man
mar — one of the few Calmar
recently made the South African en Creek, Wild Ranger, Fairport, in irons and feed hirn on bread
ships^ we've had in here in a
run on one of the ships - were polden City.
and water for the rest of the long time.
sufficiently impressed by the
Best payoff was aboard the trip.
crewmembers' team that they Zebulon Pike, whose heads-up
Of course, this sort of thing
SIGN-ONS FEW
thought it would be a good idea crew brought in one of the does not go on SIU ships. We
On the sign-on side things
if all Robin Line crews had a cleanest ships to hit this port paid the ship off undS* protest
weren't
so rosy: Allegheny Vic­
team to represent them.
and, although the Shipping Com­
in a long time..
By JIM DRAWDY
tory,
Seamar,
Seatrains Texas,
missioner ruled in favor of the
The idea for the softball teams
As a whole, the rest of the •company at the payoff, this New York and New Jersey*
SAVANNAH —• Rain and heat, can probably be traced to the payoffs were smooth, with the
Southstar, Robin Wentley, Coral
we've had plenty of down here crew of the Robin Kirk, which exception ^of those • aboard the beef is still not settled as far Sea and Meredith Victory.
in the past two weeks but ship- purchased its own equipment Golden City and the Maiden as we .are concerned.
With the big backlog of ships
We'll let the membership
ping activity hasn't kept pace and put a team onto the field Creek, skippered by Captains
in
port we should bust out with
know
via
the
LOG
"when
we
with the elements.
many months ago.
Henry Bishop and Morgan Hiles, get this Golden City beef squar­ a rash of good shipping one of
Most of the men shipped dur- ......
respectively.
these days, at least we hope so.
ed away.
ing the period went to the SS
have shor^
Southland,. South Atlantic; SS considerable enthusiasm for the The schedule for the coming
Another of the Waterman In the meantime we'll keep our
Dorothy, A. H. Bull, and the game and look forward to the two weeks shows the following bucko skippers, Capt. Morgan fingers crossed.
vessel's arrival each trip, be- ships due to hit the Port of Hiles, was in here this week
Here's hoping Joe Algina will
Maiden Victory, Waterman.
cause
Beefs in this port were con- .
,localx,. teams
•
, -iare
x- anxious
• x Mobile: Monarch of the: Seas, with his usual fouled-up ship. be back at his same old stand in
LaSalle, Antinous, Bessemer Vic­ However, we got this one set­ short order. He should be up
finedtothe weather. There were '
tory, Warhawk, Fairisle, Alcoa tled to the satisfaction- of all. and around, raring to go by how.
none aboard the ships coming
Kirkmen.
Ranger,
Alcod Clipper and Alcoa
in here.
Typical enthusiasm for the
Corsair.
A round-up on the activities Seafarers' brand -of play and
The Bienville, Maiden Creekof some of our Brothers in this sportmanship is revealed in a
and
Golden City, all Waterman,
port reveals that J. W. Ringo,' recent story in the Mombasa
are
expected
to crew up within
who just paid off the Southland, Times, reporting on games in
the
nex^
two
weeks, as is the
will enjoy a bit of a rest on which the Robin Kirk team deAlcoa
Planter.
the beach.
jfeated the Mombasa Baseball
By JAMES SHEEHAN
A few of our Brothers are
W. Mulling will spend some Club, 25-16 and 14-2.
in the local Marine Hbspital at
PHILADELPHIA — Although centers around the Philadelphia
SPORTMANSHIP PRAISED
this writing. They are J. Curtis,
perhaps nothing to brag about, Athletics who have renewec^
wife. J. L. Sikes got off the The Seafarers "played in true J. T. Marler, J. B. Porter, J. B- shipping: in this, port has at least their chase of the league leading
Southland to go into the local sportsmanlike fashion," said the Berrier, Paul Vandereik, L. How­ been much better than the New Yprk. Yankees.
x
Marine Hospital, and M. Kavan- Times. "The Mombasa Club looks ard, H. T. Foy and J. Edmonds. weather. We've. had a^ oouple
The lads will probably make;
Among the men on the beach
augh is putting some tinie catch- forward to their next visit,
of payoffs and. a; few ships ih- an interesting... race out , of it;
waiting
^ to ship are ' Brothers
ing the cool sea breezes at one when, it is hoped,_ they rnay
transit -— but no rain for about even if they don't cop. the flag^
E. Biackrmn, W- E- Ward, K. M.
of the Savannah beaches.
Nobody around here is selling
find the advice and tuition they
Purvis, T. Johnson, R. A. San­ 40 days nowi .
!
so readily gave will really have
Aside from the "it-ain't-the- them short—yet.
chez, S. B. Sikes, D. E. Jones,
CLEANING UP
borne fruit."
G. Elliott, R. Kelly, E. Mosely, heat, it's-the-humidity" talk that
BME HAILED
Our Hall looks brighter each The new softball equipment R. Kline and F. Verner:
^u're probably hearing around
week. The lads painted the deck on all Robim ships will probably
On the waterfront side, one of
The prize payoff of the per-' the countryside, local chatter
this week and washed the win­
the chief matters of interest ap­
pears to be the recently-charter­
dows, showing they are mindful
ed AFL Brotherhood of Marine
of the SIU slogan that "an SIU
Engineers. Many Engineers in'
ship is a clean ship" whether
they're asea or ashore.
By FRENCHY MICHELET
The seven arrivals of the have enough men around for this port have pointed out that
In addition to Brother Sikes SAN FRANCISCO—Two pay­ week were slick and clean, none the jobs that are expected, Some this is what has long been need-:
mentioned above. Seafarers in offs, two sign-ons and five ships giving us a beef. The ships of the oldtimers here waiting ed, and they feel it will be a '
the Savannah Marine Hospital in transit made for a fair week touching this port were also for a good one are Bill Lamb, good thing for all oF them. ;.
this week are C. Medley, U. A. here. The tempo is expected to visited by the Brotherhood of M. Mitchell, Bob Schreffers, Many Engineers have beenWoodbury, W. Smith, J. E. Utz be slower, for the coming two Marine Engineers, which is do­ Blackie Aubert and Blackie coming into, and writing to,, the
Philadelphia Branch asking how
and C. Ezell.
weeks, however.
ing a good job of bringing the Coutant.
We would like to remind the The payoffs and sign-ons were Engineers into a union inter­ OthCr Brothers around, but not they could join up with the
boys on the beach here that a the Citrus Packer and Twin ested in economic betterment.
looking for ships, are those in BME. We are referring these
visit to their Brothers in the Falls Victory, both Waterman.
the marine hospital: Brothers T. queries to the proper place. .
OLDSTERS
AROUND
hospital is certainly a worthwhile The five in-transit ships were
Isaacson, J. W. KeenSn, and W. We're about running dry at
way in which to kill a, few hours. the Kenyon Victory, Steel Mar­ Although the beach is not Sanderson. Brother SandCrson this point. We hope you'll ex­
Those in the hospital find these iner, Monroe Victory, Steel Ro­ very heavily populated now—in underwent a major operation last cuse the shortage of news this
visits a big lift during the mo- ver and Steel Inventor, all Isth­ fact, we didn't have a quorum week and we're all rooting for week. It ain't the heat, it's, the,,
lotony of confinement.
mian ships.
humidity, you see.
for _a meeting last week—we his eairly recovery.

Coupk Of Bmko Skippers Mar
Smooth Payoff V\fook For Mobile

Port Savannah
Shipping Drops!

Philly Weather Note: Very Hot,
With Cool Breezes In Shipping
t

Sovoa,Arrivals Give Frisra Fair Shin&gt;lag Week

J

�Page Five

THE SEAFARERS 10 G

Wednesday* J^y 6* 1949

I .i'iiH

wiMr
,v".-

QUESTION: What action, or gain, made by the A&amp;G District of the Seafarers do you
regard as the most impressive?
r

.r

'Hi?'

"TINY" MEASE, MM:

RICHARD McMANUS, FOW:

A. LOGUIDIS. Deck Eng.:

The biggest kick I've gotten The SIU's participation in the
out of being a Seafarer was help­ Wall Street Strike of 1948 gave
ing the Interneitional Ladies Gar: me the most satisfaction of all,
ment Workers Union organize even though I was an organizer
ifae sweat shops on West 35th on Isthmian ships and saw the
Street in New York last fall. Isthmian campaign right through.
Most of those garment workers For one thing, the Wall Street
Were women or older men. When beef' was a tough battle. Even
we went up there, we knew we more important, it gave the SIU
Were going unarmed against arm­ a name all over this country and
ed hoodlums, and we knew we in other countries, too. The Wall
were going to beat them any­ Street Strike really gave us a
way. That's the way it went, reputation for helping other un­
lOo. We took a little beating, and ions. That is a reputation we
ihen we went right baek in there have earned the hard way,'and
and won. It gave me a chance must strive to keep. I'm sorry
to help out a fine umon, when to say I wasn't in New York for
help was what that union need­ the Wall Street beef. I was at
ed. And it gave me a real sea. but our whole crew thirsted
chance to be one of the guys for news of the beef, and do­
who could deliver with the nated to the strike fund when
we paid off.
chips down.

THEODORE CORNELL. Oiler:

SAMUEL SETLIFF, AB:

To me our victory over Isth­
Helping other unions, and hav­
mian
was Ynost- impressive. I
ing them help us, gave me g.
made
a
six-month trip on an
feeling of satisfaction hard to
beat. Our aid to the shipyard Isthmian ship just prior to the
workers, the ILGWU, the AFL strike. Thai was a rugged trip.
retail clerks, the ILA and many The crew was an unsavory lot.
other unions showed everyone
made up mainly of men Hcked
that unioxis can work together.
The help we received from the out of every maritime union in
other unions made a big differ­ the country. They even broke
ence in our tight against Paul into the cargo. I was glad to get
Hoffman's plan to dump Ameri­ back alive. I promised myself
can shipping under EGA. In that I'd never go back aboard
every strike we pull we need
the help of other unions, and if an Isthmian' ship again. How­
we -can help them at any time ever. when the SIU took over,
it makes us and everyone else conditions improved so much
stronger than if we all waged that I've ma-de six Isthmian
our battles alone. Inter-union trips since. I'm sure Isthmian is
solidarity. I'm convinced, really glad to get ^dependable SIU crews
aboard their ships.
pays off.

I consider a couple of things
impressive: the organizing of the
vast Isthmian company and the
Union's great expansion in the
past few years. I joined the Un­
ion in 1938 in Baltimore — we
didn't even have a Hall there
then. I always wanted to see
Isthmian organized, because it
was the most notorious of the
open shop outfits. It was a tough
nut. but the SIU cracked it. Our
expansion is just as impressive
to me. We have helped the In­
ternational reach a point where
it is now the most formidable
maritime grouping on any wa-;
terfront. The number of com­
panies under contract have in­
creased tremendously. We have,
come a long way.

. • iiiii

A. KIDDER MAAMEUR, AB:

JOHN A. TONAZZI, FOW:

LINDLEY RITCH, AB:

The 1946 General Strike was.
The first time the commies I received great personal sat­
in
my opinion, the most im­
isfaction
from
the
help
we
gave
tried in force to ttdfe over the
pressive
action which the Union
in
driving
the
communists
from
ILA in 1945 and their repulsion
pulled
off.
As a result of this
controKof
the
seamen
in
Canada.
by the Seafarers made a great
strike,
all
waterfront
unions ben­
As
a
former
Great
Lakes
sea^
impression on me. It was the
efitted
from
the
victory
won by
man,
I
think
the
Union
did
a
first real test of SIU strength in
the
SIU.
This
was
a
beef
against
New York, and the way the Un­ fine job up there. I've seen how
the
government
ag
en
cy
that
ion handled the beef showed that the commies operate, having
turned
down
the
wage
increase
we were in business to atay. been aboard CSU ships while a
That was my first real action. seaman on the Lakes. Their ships negotiated by the Union. The
The other day, when we helped were in rough shape and the US waterfront was looked tight
repel another communist attempt seamen were by no means happy. for 10 days until the govern­
on the ILA, I recalled that time The Canadian seamen I've met ment agency gave up and per­
mitted the raises. Other unions
four Years ago when we showed will soon enjoy the sazne good then-got the increases we nego­
conditions we have here. It's
them that there was a new force
unfortunate that they didn't come tiated. I camo into the Union in
on the waterfront strong enough into the SIU earlier. They could 1947, but the '48 victory for free
to battle them and beat them have been enjoying these bene­ collective bargaining over the
Washington brass is tops for me.
fits for years.
at their own game.

ARTHUR THURLOW. OS:

ANDREW HARVILLA. OS:

I'd say that the Wall Street
strike of last year impressed me
most. Our support of the muchabused financial district white
collar workers showed that un­
ion members are not far apart,
regardless of what industry they
are employed in. The Wall Street
strike showed, too, that one
group of laboring men could
combine- with another to accom­
plish a common objective in an
area where this kind of solidar­
ity was badly needed. More co­
operative action, such as the
SIU's backing of UFE. would en­
able labor to achieve its goal
much sooner.

I think that the winning of
the Isthmian beef in 1947 was
the most important job done by
the Union. It took a lot of hard
work to bring that big fleet un­
der a Union contract. Every one
of the men who played a part
in this job deserves a lot of
credit. I say this was an import­
ant accomplishment because it
finally gave thousands of unor­
ganized seamen in that fleet a
chance to enjoy the security of
a Union contract, which they
needed for so long. Not only
that, it also brought them the
same top wages and conditions
that were in effect on other ships
contracted to the SIU.

�Page Six

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

iWedfltesda^ July 6. 1949

MINUTES AND NEWS
•

Donahue Eyes Middleweight Title Gangway Fall Proves Fatal
As He Prepares For Ring Return To SS Frances Electrician

Elmer F. Ilose, 52-year-old Chief Electrician, died

Seafarer Pat Donahue, New Orleans' hard-hitting middleweight, is as the result of a fall from the gangway of the SS
planning resumption of his highly successful ring career after a forced lay­ Frances in San Juan on June 9. His body has been re­
off of several months. The classy 27-year-old Crescent City boxer has been turned to his home in New*' TZ
;
Brunswick, New Jersey for is midship
^
recovering from an in­
and which overlooks
burial. He is survived by his the gangway, when I heard a
jury sustained in a gruel­
wife, Mrs. Marjorie Rose.
ling 10-round struggle
noise as of splashing in the wa­
According to statements by ter and then someone yelled in
with George La Rover of
crewmembers. Rose was return­ a loud voice. I ran to the port­
Philadelphia in New Or­
ing to the ship alone at 2 A.M. hole, looked out and saw some­
leans last winter.
when he fell from the gangway one struggling in the water be­

A smashing right in the fourth
round broke Donahue's jaw but
failed, to halt his aggressiveness
and Pat was awarded the de­
cision.
Pat's announced return to the
ring came as "good news" to
his legion of admirers in the
Gulf area. Oldtimer Percy Boyer, who passed the word along
to the LOG, is pretty much con­
vinced that the slugging Sea
farer will fight his way right
to the top of the 160-pound
class.
In fact, this optimism is shared
by Pat himself. Boyer quotes
Donahue as saying that he ex
pects to be knocking on the
door of the middleweight title
holder in another year.
On the basis of performance
Pat's potentialities are promis
ing. He has won 30 of his ap
proximately 45 engagements by
knockouts. A cagey boxer, Don­
Seafarer Pai .Donahue, who is resuming ring career
ahue packs a stiffening wallop
' in both hands, as his record in
dicates.
LOTTA ZIP
Pat's prospects are strengthen
Br SALTY DICK
ed considerably by the fact tha'
at the age of 27, when most ring
Joe Doyle has left the Gulf food and board here is much
sters are beginning to slide, he
is still fresh and vigorous with and is in New York with a more reasonable.
There's a former Shanghai
only four to five fighting
years very sore throat ...Charles
behind him. He took no early Fischer is still pacing the deck newspaperman,, sailing SI^. out
batterings as an amateur, hav­ ike an expectant father and the of PhUly. If he reads this I
ing begun his career as a pro­ only thing he's after is a Fire­ suggest thaat he send some
man's job ... I'm inclined to be­ reports to the LOG.. Norman
fessional.
The broken jaw suffered in the lieve it's cheaper to live in New Maffie should have his draw­
La Rover fight is viewed phil­ York than New Orleans. For ings on display in the SIU
osophically by the New Orleans example: In New Orleans the Halls. May I suggest that he
send some to the Philly Hall.
battler as "one of those things." taxi meter starts with" fifty
cents,
here
in
New
York
it
The walls there are awfully
While the injury was far from
starts
with
twenty.
And
the
bare, and Jimmy Sheehan has
a happy experience, it touched
sent out a plea for pictures.
off a heart-warming demonstra­
tion of loyalty by Donahue's
Brfther Larsen told the story
Quizzical Look
backers among Gulf Seafarers.
recently of the time it took him
A group of Pat's SIU friends,
72 days to reach Buenos Aires
" .
Percy Boyer among them, staged
from New York. Doubting the
a benefit card in New Orleans
story, I asked him for details.
to help defray his medical ex­
The event took place in 1912
penses". SIU backing resulted in
while Larsen was crewmember
a huge turnout and the benefit
of a schooner
D'India is on
for the very popular New Or­
the be^ch and he has no com­
leans man was a great success.
ments on any subject.
And Pat hasn't forgotten it.
Dick Davies retires his book
When he returns to the ring
for a couple of months every
wars he is determined to prove
year in order to sweat it out in
to his supporters that they were
an ice cream plant. He plans to
backing a good man.
be on the high seas in October.
Until he is ready to square
... What crew of what ship
ofiE again, Pat has been tending
went on a safari in Mombasa,
bar at a site familiar to most
East Africa, all dressed like
men of the SIU, in a tavern lo­
Frank Buck? I hear they came
cated at 339 Chartres Street,
back with a baby deer.
former SIU branch hall in New
John Nagler would like to
Orleans.
see his ship remain in foreign
By the time he knocks off duty
MV Sea. Trader crewmem- ports a little longer. He's
each night, Pat figures he has ber "Sir Charles" puffs on sore now because his scow
walked at least a hundred miles. an after dinner cigarette and stayed in Shanghai only four
He feels this will enable him to gives photographer Fred days.... Robert Palter is In
dispense with a considerable Bruggner a "what's up" look. Philadelphia on theTieach. but
amovmt of road work in prepa­ Scene was Maracaibo on the the way he talks it seems that
ship's final trip.
ration for his ring return.
he isn't interested in shipping-

into the water. The splashing of tween the ship and the dock
water and his cries roused the near the gangway.
sleeping crew. The 3rd Assistant
PULLED FROM WATER
Engineer was the first man to
1
ran up to the gangway
reach the scene and succeedec
alleyway
midship and threw
in pulling Brother Rose from
over
a
life
preserver. Then I
the water. With the aid of other
threw
down
the line from the
crewmembers artificial respira­
gangway
block
and tackle into
tion was applied until an am­
the water. By that time Mr.
bulance arrived. At 5 A.M.
hospital doctor pronounced him Lyons, the 3rd Assistant, had got
hold of the man in the water
dead.
and
was holding him up so that
At a special meeting ajsoard
lis
head
was clear of the water.
ship, the officers and crew col­
I
ran
down
the gangway to the
lected $108 which was turned
dock
and
assisted
Lyons to hold
over to an SIU Patrolman at the
the
man
up.
We
made
the line.
payoff in New York. The Union
fast
around
his
waist
and
several
in turn segt a check for the
other
men
pulled
him
up
ontoamount to Rose's widow.
the
dock.
One of the first to arrive at
As soon as Rose was pulled :
the scene 'of the accident was
Bernard Goodrrian, Deck Main­ up he was laid out so that ar-.
tenance. In a signed statement, tificial respiration could be ap­
Goodman described the crew's plied. Three men took turns ap.-!
plying respiration while an amattempt to &gt; save Rose^
"At about 2 A.M. of Thursday, Dulance was sent for. About 35
minutes elapsed between the
time the man was pulled out
and when the ambulance ar­
rived.
The ambulance contained ab­
solutely no equipment or interne,
just the driver.. We - continued.
applying
artificial respiration
at the moment.... The other
while
lifting
him into the ambu­
day I heard that a ship signed
up for five-years, and to make lance and all the way to the
matters worse, she headed for hospital. At the hospital, because
there was no pulmotor, we had
the Persian :Gulf shuttle run.
to
continue giving artificial res­
Jack Horn is attending^ meet­
piration
in conjunction with an
ings while working in a Masonic
oxygen
machine.
The doctor on
temple. He plans to ship out
duty
finally
told
us it was no
around .October
Dick Casteruse,
and
at
about
5 A.M. said
lin is perplexed. He's goiiig to
that
the
man
was
beyond post
write down the names of ten
sible
revival."
different ports and toss them in
Brother Rose joined the SIU
a hat. The one he- selects will
be his next' destination
I paid in August, 1946 and held book
a visit to the yacht. Grille, Hit­ No. 100866. He was in good
standing at the time of his death
ler's former pleasure, cruiser. and Union burial benefits will be
Some scow!
^ paid.

'7%e Voice Of The Sea'

Saves Shipmate In Plunge
F. A. (Art) Savoie, OS aboard
the SS Sunmount on - her last
voyage to South American ports; •
hauled a shipmate from the
water in La Guaira, Venezuela;
on June 9. '
Savoie was^standing gangway
watch at 11 PM when the
launch returned with several
crewmen. Savoie went down to
lend a hand as the water wa^
rough, with five and six foot
swells slapping vigorously
against the ship.

F. A. (Art) SAVOIE

One of the men lost ^ his foot­
ing and fell between ship and
launch. He was going down for
the second time when Art jump- •
ed in and dragged him to the-?
launch, where shipmates pulled both to safety.

�"Wednetday, July 6. 1949

THE SEAFARERS LOG

Page Serea

Digested Miniites Of SI U Ship Meetings
ATLANTA* CITY. May 8—L.
and that players clean up when
Highsmilb. Chairman; Frank
they are finished. Motion car­
W. Chamberlayne, Secretary.
ried to give Steward Department
Deck Delegate reported 20 dis­
a vote of thanks for doing a
puted hpurs a man and Stewards
good -job. It was suggested
Delegate said there was a total
that library books be changed
anih 16MMsoai
of 30 hours disputed in his de­
when vessel hits US. One min­
partment. No other beefs. Un­
ute of silence in memory of de­
nu^vie equipttient:
der Good and Welfare the mat­
parted Brothers.
ter of establishing a ship's hos­
4. 4. 3pital amidships was discussed".
MARYMAR. April 23 — J.
Minute of silence for Brothers
Fisher. Chairman; G. Waller.
Secretary. Motion carried to ac­
lost at sea.
cept reports made by department
4. 4, i.
CHILORE. May 17—J. Penner.
delegates. Motion carried to
Chairman; R. Burns, Secretary.
make up repair list for coming
Extended vote of thanks to Ste­ Juan. Matter,to be referred to voyage and to have it ready for
ward and Cooks for the excel­ Patrolman. Minute of silence action in New York. Matters
lent meals put out despite the for departed Brothers.
discussed under Good and Wel­
Exdiaugiee is iioarav^iJa.37l&amp;.
way the company stores the
fare
included the menus, food,
3. » »
ship.
Discussion to straighten
wearing
apparel
for
messroom
ROBIN GOODFELLOW. April
put responsibility for driving 4—Tony Suarez. Chairman; Mike and noise in alleyway and messThe purch.a.se pirice. is
(aettial
winches and maintaining them. Zelonka. Secretary. Minutes of rooms during the night. Meet­
cost plus postage
Voted to bar any private agree­ two previous meetings read and ing adjourned after observance
aai^ is
iolCtieciCsuxq
ments on working rules. General accepted. Delegates reported ho of one minute's silence in mem­
&lt;1f-£oir a. loop. Tuet&amp;erul.
discussion of problems of keep­ beefs in departments. Passed ory of departed Brothers.
ing washroom and messroom various motions connected with
clean. Minute of silence for de­ efficiency of ship, better medical
minute Qjf ew-tei baimnc/iif atiB?
parted Brothers.
attention and assuring that all
btioiTL.
OT and draw records would be
correct at payoff. Agreement
4 4 4
analyzed under education. Min­
STEEL
EXECUTIVE.
April 17
ute of silence for departed
—W.
C.
McCuistion.
Chairman;
Brothers.
A. D. Brodie. Secretary. First
i
ARLYN. April 17 — Woody meeting, voyage just commenc­
t 4. i
ing. No beefs in any of three
By HANK
MANGORE. May 8—J. Mason. Yant. Chairman; Jack McLaugh­
departments.
W. C. McCuistion
lin.
Secretary.
Delegates
gave
Secretary (Chairman not identi­
The battle lo repeal the TaftA few days after Brotherfied).
Elected Brother Keefer their reports. Motion carried to elected ship's delegate unSnii"nously.. Delegates to arrange Hartley Act isn't over. Keep Charles Dasha a^ed^if his ship­
to confer with Patrolman at pay­ hold shipboard meetings every
off. Voted that each depart­ Sunday at 2 PM. Woody Yant for their respective departments writing those letters to all mate Paul Gondzar was in town,
ment delegate should make out elected ship's delegate. Discus­ to rotate in cleaning of laundry. Congressmen and Senators. in came Paul himself. He met
a repair list for Ship's Delegate sion on better menus. It was Deck delegate to see Mate about Brothers, even though Senator other shipmates, but missed
painting department's showers. Wayne Morse told the Senate Brother Dasha ... Brothers, the
to present to Patrolman. Ste-, suggested - .that ship's delegate
Decided
that creyf pantryman is that the latest revision of the Fetiche Bar in Le Havre, France,
ward to notify next crew of the see Port Agent in Puerto Rico
to
make
coffee just before going law made the whole labor bill is now on the mailing list for a "
stores and linen schedule to about getting pasteurized milk.
off
duty
for 10 AM coffee time "so unworkable and so anti- bundle of ship-bound LOGs. The
forestall any hitches. Discussion One minute of silence in mem­
Ship
was
in Halifax one day labor" that "the sooner we get place is on the Rue General
of the shortage of ice aboard, ory of Brothers lost at sea.
and
night
during beefs with rid of it and take the whole Sarrail, so pick up a few copies
and it was decided to turn ques­
commies. SIU's nightly broad­ issue to the polls in 1950 the ... One Brother recently recom­
tion over to Patrolman. Minute
casts from Halifax were hearc -better." This year or in 1950. mended a good place called the
of silence for Brothers lost at
until the foufth fiay out, after the Tcdt-Hartley Act must be Rex Bar, where SIU Brothers
sea.
which we were unable to get wiped out.
visit. It's down in New Orleans,
4. i
station.
DANIEL H. LOWNSDALE.
in
case you hope to bump into4
4
4
4 4 4
We recently read of the vm- some shipmate.
April 3 — Duke Livingston, ALCOA PLANTER. April 3—
usual manner the people of In­
Chairman; H. Guild, Secretary, W. Tracy, Chairman; E. D. Moyd.
4 4 4
dia christen their merchant ships.
No beefs reported by depart­ Secretary. Financial secretary
A few weeks ago Brother
They use rice, coconuts, kumkum "Red" Shea, who spent many
ment delegates beyond'' a few reported that ship's, fund con­
(which may be something the months aboard the tanker SS
disupted hours. Food situation tained $19.48. Department dele­
4 4 4
Brothers who know the ports of Fort Bridger. sailed out on a
discussed under Good and Wel­ gates reported that all was okay.
fare. . Suggestions agreed upon Ship's delegate said that all re­ CAPE MOHICAN. April 10— India well enough can answer trip. He said something unus­
to be adopted by Cooks. Repair pairs had been made, with only Gonzalez. Chairman; R. Sirois. for us), haldi power and rose ual about taking his car along,
Motion by Halpin. petals. All these, of course, are
list made up for all departments. keys to foc'sles still to be at­ Secretary.
too. but we probably misun­
seconded
by
Stepian. carried, religious Indian customs... An­
Minute of^ silence for Brothers tended to. Jack Chastain was
derstood a few words of the
lost at sea.
elected black gang delegate and that passageway be kept quiet other odd fact we read was about conversation here and there.
E. D. Moyd was elected ship's and that no dice games be held Sable Island, 100 miles off the We only know about such sea­
delegate. Captain okayed steam there. Following discussion on coast of Nova Scotia, which has going pleasure gear as radios,
line for washing clothes. Crew ship's laundry and recreation been called the "graveyard of typewriters, steamer trunks,
reminded not to leaye cups in room. Brother Graf made a mo­ the Atlantic." More than 200 guitars, cameras—and perhaps
messroom. Will try to have ship tion, seconded by Gk&gt;nzalez. call­ ships were sunk there.
even a bicycle. But not an au­
fumigated upon arrival in the ing for a list of all crewmembers
4 4 4
tomobile—never, fellas, never.
States. One minute of silence from which the name of one
Brother Vick D'India is in
4 4 4
each day will be picked for
in
memory
of
departed
Brothers.
town
a
few
weeks
now
since
his
The
SEAFARERS
LOG wiU
4* 4, 4*,
cleaning of the recreation room.
long voyage or voyages aboard be mail-bound to the homes of
4 4 4
SEA TRADER. April 19—
Motion was defeated by 14 to
Charles Oppenheimer. Chairman; W. E. -DOWNING. April 24— 9 vote. Motion carried to keep the SS Bret Harte ... Percy Boy- the following Brothers—Max AcJohn
Poluchocich. Secretary, Bill Blakely. Chairman; Blackie recreation room open every er sailed recently on a fast, hot osta of New York, Allen Kramer
Previous minutes read and ac­ Jones. Secretary. Department evening between 6 PM and 7 PM trip to the ports of India. Take of Pennsylvania, Anthony Fercepted. All repairs to be madei delegates reported. Jack ' Hay- for convenience of members who it easy with the baksheesh, Percy rara of New York, James Miller
it was reported. Delegates had den and Jeremiah O'Bryne nom­ desire' reading material. Chief ... Joe Pendleton, intending to of Minnesota, David Baria of
no beefs to report. Voted to inated for ship's delegate. Steward is to have possession of hit Galveston shipping soon, sail­ Alabama, Karl Ingebrigsten of
hold educational meetings. regu­ O'Byrne .elected by acclamation the recreation room keys. Mo­ ed into town last week with a Maryland, G. E. Anderson of
larly in recreation room. Ail' after Brother Hayden withdrew. tion by Ivrain, carried, that well-tanned face (as usual) but Minnesota, Elmer Fr-ost of Flor- •
old books and magazines to be Motion carried to have delegates everyone using laundry clean it without a mustache or even a ida.
collected and turned in to the check stores and stores list with when finished.
beard.
4 4 4
Motion carried to
American Merchant Marine . Li­ Steward.
Jimmy "Blackie" Saliba just
•
4 4 4
Brother Henry Beckmann sailed into town after a voyage
brary in exchange for new make four copies of repair list,
magazines and twp boxes of one each going to Captain, Chief
will be drydocked some lime ... A few other Brothers in
books. Voted to distribute sta­ Mate, Chief Engineer and ship's
in the marine hospital in Chi­ town are: Frank Waller, Charles
tion cards in' advance of fire delegate. Stores are to checked
cago ... Smooth recovery. Hen­ Oppenheimer (bound for a few
No SIU Crew is lo pay off
drill to avoid confusion. Minute as they come aboard. One min­ any ship until the crew's
ry... A1 Gordon, the tanker- vacation days upstate), Henry
(pf silence for departed Brothers, ute of silence in memory of
sailing
poet, just missed his Bonk... Brother Keith Forster
quarters and equipment are
Brothers
lost
at
sea.
Meeting
shipmate
who sailed recently sailed into our town with his
it 4. 4.
as clean as any Seafarer likes
Adjourned
at
2:43
PM.
after
coming
in from a trip— pipe and smile after a voyage...
to find a ship when he first
FRANCES. May 15—B. Good­
Brother
John
"Bananas." A1 We noticed Ray Queen talking
.444
goes
aboard.
Patrolmen
have
man. Chairman; S. Carr, Secre­
says he can't forget the 800 to the LOG staff. We wonder if
been instructed that the
tary. Previous minutes and dele­ JOHN W. BURGESS. April 24
merry Irish immigrants aboard he donated some original poetry
crew's quarters must be ab­
gates' reports accepted, there be­ J. Furfon, Chairman; Melvin
the ship he came back on as or' just rattled off a poetic digest
ing no beefs for. the delegates to Smith, Secretary. Delegates re­ solutely clean before a pay­
passenger. The Irishmen cele­ of the voyage. Since he's taking
report except for a minor matter ported that there were no befefs off will be allowed. Please
brated with the playing of her out again (the ship we mean,
cooperate with your officials
in the Stewards Department. : n any of the departments. Min­
their bagpipes and violins—and of course) we wish Ray mucho
in carrying out this member­
Voted to put new locks on com­ utes of last meeting read and
no doubt, hitting the decks inspiration for some, let's say,
panion way doors. Discussion accepted. Suggested that poker
ship order.
with those shillelaghs.
comical poetry.
on man hired off pier in San games be played in recreation

IT'S SOPre-T£gaFIC-COlOgg4Ll ^

The Battle erfvmi street —
^SIUfUntroF
the 194€&gt; strike
of the Uwitcd
rinaitcial

a. cliecRte

, aud

CUT and RUN

mmmMm

Notice To Crews

�Page Eight

Wednesday, July 6, 1949

THE SEAFARER SLOG

Political Action, Not Thumb Twiddling,
Will Defeat Anti-Laborites, Says Cassidy

PATRONS OF MUSIC; SIU ARTIST

White House, I strongly felt that Watson, Brother White pointed
the AFL did the right thing in out that Florida had another foe
' I read with deep interest entering the political arena.
in office that labor would be
Charles Haymond's article in the
well rid of. Senator Spessard
^une 10 LOG, "Can Political Ac­ I then explained the stand of Holland. Holland has three years
the SIU, our "hands off" policy
tion Benefit Seamen?"
to run, but could eventually be
toward political action, but
Let me express my views on mentioned also that the SIU was defeated by labor's getting out
^his matter in this way: I paid still in the formative state the vote.
off a five months trip in Balti­ though if it could reach out to
LABOR INCENTIVE
more in February, and feeling help its political friends, it
a period of relaxation due me, would do so.
To my knowledge, Florida is
1 went to Tampa, where I have
one
of the few states that has an
As a further example, I cited
many friends. While there I
anti-closed
shop law, which in
made more friends, among them the Tampa report in the same itself should be "incentive enough
LOG, wherein is named a Flori­
many officials in the shoreside
da politician, Tom Watson, who for all Florida AFL groups to
AFL unions in that city.
attempted to have passed a fight. Laws of this sort have
' While there Ray White and I state law that was worse than been effective in ham stringing
attended a meeting of the AFL the Taft-Hartley Act. I told them labor, but why this situation
John B. Waterman crewmembers gather at coffee time to
Trades &amp; Labor Council. During how the proposal was defeated, should be permitted to remain
listen to the sweet music emitting from Brother Luke Collins'
this meeting this identical ques­ partly through efforts of the so is a mystery to me. Particu­
radio. Left to right, J. Spoder, Wiper; J. Boldizar, OS; A. Laslarly when something can be
tion of political action arose. It SIU.
zaro, AB; F. Douglas, AB and Ship's Delegate; L. Alverez.
then struck me that the SIU had
done to correct the situation.
Steward Utility, and D. Rogodon, Wiper. Twirling the dial is
Brother Ray White then took
viery little to do with the elec­
Paul T. Cassidy
Brother
Collins, DM. Ship was enroute to Europe at the time.
tion of President Truman, where­ the floor and pointed out that
at the rest, or a large part of this same Watson may oppose
the shoreside unions, had gone a long time friend of labor. Sen­
after the vote for Truman and ator Claude Pepper, when his
I think right here and now I
gbt it. They'did it the hard way, term expires next year. White To the Editor:
asked the meeting if it would
should
tell you about the Ste­
by punching doorbells.
make good sense for the SIU to Here on the Fairland, Water­ wards Department. The FairAs Brother Haymond says, we sit back and twiddle its thumbs man, we have one of the best
have done quite weU by keep­ while these two fight for the crews ever to sail out bf.an SIU land claims it has the best Stew­
HaU. It is strictly 100 percent ards Department in the SIU
ing our nose out of politics, par­ Senatorial seat.
The chow is good and plentiful.
ticularly because we have seen I don't think we should. The Union. Topside^ is alright, from
One of the mainstays in the
some of the unsavoryness that results of labor's participation in the skipper.right down the line.
Stewards Department is Alex­
the waterfront Communists em­ the last presidential election
ander Cherney, the Baker. He
ploy in their political activities. clearly showed itsfelf to be of
is the best oven man in the SIU.
But, again I point out that the benefit to labor and all of us.
SIU took no part in the election
While on the subject of the
ABSENTEE VOTE
of President Trumm, who most
Stewards Department" I would
certainly cannot be termed a
like to get this thought across to
If political action should be
communist.
the membership: the crew Messadopted as SIU policy in the
man has a pretty rdugh job and
near future, I very strongly want
i UNITED AFL ACTION
I think all will * agree with me
to suggest that it be gone about
We must realize today that in a complete manner. First, ex­
on that. We should assist him
the. SIU is the biggest force of plain to the membership that
all we can and not get careless
influence on the waterfront,, most states now have absentee
with cigarette butts,.cups and so
Felix Curls, whose- sketches
hence we should swing a bit of ballots (of which I've taken ad­
onr Remember, - he' is'taking a have appeared in the LOG,
weight within the national AFL, vantage in New York since its
living too and is not going to puis the pencil to paper dur­
and to do that we must follow inception two years ago).
with special emphasis on the sea' to clean up'after a'bunch ing an off moment aboard the
the same group's policy, which Then point out in the LOG First Engineer.
of guys who don't give a darn. J. B. Waterman. Seafarer F.
late has very distinctly been who are the friends of labor With the exception of a few His job is taken for granted by
Douglas, who submitted the
fpr political action.
^
and who are not. The men can minor beefs, which can be found too many guys.
pictures, says of Curls: "A guy
To refer back to. the Tampa then vote accordingly.
on every ship, there has been
Frank Harper
with his talent^ is • certainly
meeting I attended.* When the In addition to anti-labor Tom nothing to disturb the harmony.
Engine Delegate
wasting
his time at sea."
pplitical action discussion arose,
To Ihe Editor;

Fairland Galleymen 'SIU's Best'

the response to it struck me as
being somewhat on the indiffer­
ent side. I asked the chair for
the deck and explained that I
was a seaman first and a poli­
tician last, but that in view of To Ihe Editor:
all that "I heard of how labor
had put Truman back in the Being the strong, silent Casa­
nova type, I've decided to let
you Brothers in on my great
love affair which took place
place while in New Orleans re­
cently.
While sitting in Pete Herman's
Bar, which, incidentally, is a
clip joint, I decided to make a
phone call to a girl. She is a
To the Editor:
beautiful blond whom I had met
I'll have to disagree with Mr. previously while in town. As I
Boyer about that "Moon" not be­ turned to go into the booth I no­
ing romantic. Just ask the boys ticed a young lady in the next
who heard Moon Kouns serenad­ booth.
ing Candy at the American Bar
After I closed the door, so .as
down in Santos. Also, just" ask to better hear the lilting tones
the boys about Moon's and Slop­ of the girl I was to call, I found
py Creel's /his running mate) I did not have a nickel for the
romantic nights down in B. A.
phone.
One night after Moon finished Suddenly it happened. The
eating about three steaks, drink­ telephone started ringing. It
ing about a gallon of beer down soimded as though it were a
at the canteen on the docks, he four alarm fire.
Well, like a
want to sleep and snored so fool I answered it, and it was—
loud he woke up the boys sleep­ as I later Jearned—the young
ing on the ship four blocks away. lady in the next booth. Oh,
Alfred Byrd
man, what a voice she had. It

Brother Finds Soft Voiced Fngrid' Packs Mean Right

Croon Or Snooze
——Moon's Voice
Enchants 'Em All

was so soothing and mellow. It
made my heart skip every third
beat.
PERFECT 36
After I had told the young
lady my name, I became curi­
ous to leam what she looked
like. I asked her to describe
herself. This is the way the
conversation ran:
; "Well, I'm small. Oh, it's so
hard for me to describe myself.
Surely you've seen pictures of
Betty Hutton?"
"Yes," I blubbered.
"And you've seen pictiures of
Betty Grable?"
"Yes, yes," I drooled.
"Well," she* purred, "I look
like a combination of the two
with Ingrid Bergman thrown
in." Well, boys, that's whem I
started doing back flips in the
phone booth; Naturally I had to
let the young lady know what
I looked, like so I started:
"You've seen pictures of Clark
Gable, haven't you. And pic­
tures of Tyrone Power and Van

Johnson?"
'
,.
She practically swooned in her
eagerness to say she had.
"Well, gal, I look like Harpo
Marx."
Evidently the young lady
didn't believe me, because we
made a date then and there. I
sure though J^had something on
the line. After I hung up I
went back tO the bar, com­
pletely forgetting the blond I
had intended to call. After all,
Ingrid Bergman comes first.
Then I started drinking my
Seven-up-, because' 1 am by no
means a drinking man. "About
five minutes later up steppedHhe
young lady of the recent tele­
phone conversation.
TAKE IT AWAYl
You have seen pictures of
Betty Hutton and'Betty Grable
and Ingrid Bergman. So have I.
Man, Fve never seen a woman
that could compare to the one
who faced me then. To me she
looked about two shades worse
than Lena the Hyena.

Anyway she looked at me and
said, "Well, Honey, ani I drink­
ing?" I might be a fool, but
ni be darned if I would be seen
with ,this refugee from Slobdovia.
I justJooked at her goggle-eyed
and said, "I' don't know, are
you?"
•
She retorts with, "I mean are
you buying me a drink?"
I broke it to her gently that:
I was in no mood to invest $1.20
in a coke; however, if she
wanted to go down the street
I'd be glad to buy her a shot.
She. gave me the cold stare arid
told the bartender to give her
six bits of Seagrams.
Again she looked at me asked
me if I was footing the tab. I
closed my eyes and counted to
ten, then shook my head.
"Ok, cheapskate," she said, in
a voice that must have been
heard in Mobile.
"Honey child," I told herj "I'd
rather be a cheapskate than • a
damn fool."

�.Wednesday, July 6, 1949

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Ifine

Foc'sle Buddy Of O'Doyle Ship's Delegate Of
Defends His Hurt .Character
.To the Editor:
1 wonder what became of
"Steamboat" O'Doyle? I can't
find anything with ' his name
tacked to it in any recent LOGs,
but I ran across several scan­
dalous remarks about this fine
seaman (me) in-some of -the old­
er issues.
"Steamboat" therein reported
something about research on the
love life of sailors, but it seems
to me that if he wrote an auto­
biography the subject would be
covered nicely.
vOne night in one of the choicer
clip joints of New Orleans I saw
him pick up a nice appearing
girl in traditional sailor fashion.

Straiten Meets
SIU Men In
!Amiy In Japan
To -ih© Editor:
I would appreciate it very
much if you would transfer the
LOG to my new address: 172nd
Station Hospital, APO 547, c/o
PM, San Francisco, Calif.
I have just completed my first
trip on a non-union vessel. It
was on a converted Victory ship,
the USAT Sgt. Howard E. -Wood­
ford, and it was easy to see that
there was no brotherhood among
the crew. The crew , wasn't any­
thing like those sailing aboard
good SIU vessels. The chpw was
lousy.
I've got a good deal- here at
the hospital. There are three
army cooks on duty and forty
Japanese helpers oh each shift.
We have to cook for an average
of 250 army personnel.
All that we cooks do is superVise to see that the Japanese do
everything properly.
I have a good many ex-Broth­
ers here in the army and we all
8eem to talk on the progress that
the Union has made in the last
few years.
Enclosed you will find a don­
ation for the LOG.
.Pvt. Ross B. Straiten
(Ed. Note: We changed the
.address. Thanks for the dona- lion and we trust the LOG
will keep you up on maritime
news until you resume your
sailing career.)

apd so help me he was making
fast time before he had even
bought a drink.
LOWLY COMPANION
Then there was the incident
in South America when the
"Steamboat" decided, while
slightly under the influence, that
the Devil protected his follow­
ing. The ritual blew up when

SS 'Dream Boat'
Pleased With Dutiless Assignment

To the Editor:'
This Isthmian wagon, the Steel
Advocate, has been a happy
home for most of the crew dur­
ing the past four months. Most
of the gang are sticking by for
the next trip, so it is obvious
that the crew is happy with
their co-workers and the topsiders.
As yet we haven't had an
hour of disputed overtime in any
department and we haven't had
a«hard word from the Mates or
Engineers during the voyage. Of

course, the Old Man blows his
top occasionally just for the ex­
ercise, but he has been neglect­
ing that for the past couple of
months.
How we drifted into this ideal
dream ship no one can quite
figure out. Our Chief Mate is
always willing to cooperate and
oblige. He doesn't have to step
on the deck or pass any com­
ment of the deck gang's efforts.
The boys just work along in the
proper SIU fashion, finishing up
with speed and first rate work­
manship. With all this harmony.

the waitress found out that the
extra glass and empty chair were
for the Devil. She refused to
come near the table.
This should serve to take some
of the blemishes from the good
pame of Jensen and cast into
the light the true character of
the great lover, O'Doyle.
Incidentally, I guess I am not
the only one that would like -to
know where he is. There are
probably a lot of women in
ports all over the wprld who
would like to know where that
character is hanging out.
Jerry Jensen

Come On — Smile!

Brother MacKenzie seeing the sights of Calcutta

Colahee Men Show Teamwork
Aboard Ship And OnDiamond
To the Editor:

Despite the urging of the
cameraman. ' Brother Andres
Molina. Messman of the Su­
zanne. clings to his poker face.
Luis Ramirez who took the
picture' says Molina is a crackerja;ck worker on the ship and
is well liked by the crew.
Shot was taken in Ciudad
Trujillo.

SIGHTSEEING IN CVRACAO

I would like to remark that
we on the Colabee have a very
good crew. Every man on deck
is a seaman in the full sense of
the word. As a result of the
teamwork among the deck gang,
the rfien are staying on for an­
other trip, with but one permitman getting off, and that because
of an expired card. This same
wonderful harmony is in evi­
dence in the other departments
as wellj&gt;'
The Softball team we have
organized is an outgrowth of the
feeling in the crew that they
want a real team and must there­
fore necessarily have a uniform.
We played the . Baie Comeau
(Quebec) Softball. team on Sun­
day, May 8 and I would like to
be able to say that we won, but
the Baie Comeauans gave us a

trimming, 21 to 3. The Cola
Bees don't feel bad about it
though, as we realize we are
rusty from long idleness on the
diamond. As soon as the Cola
Bees get some practice we'll
change matters.

&lt;5LD PROS
The fact is that the Baie
Comeau team has been going
strong for seven years and they
show by their playing,, and score,
the considerable practice they've
had. Third Cook Dutton and AB
Lord distinguished themselves by
some major league playing, the
rest of us need a bit of practice.
J. J. Flynn

Thorny Prize

a.

Got A Spare
'Beach Comb'?
Brother Asks

•Brother On Way
To Health Thanks
Hospital Staff

To the Editor:

To the Editor:

Seafarers Harry Benner. OS. and Jack Higghis. AB. pause
during their lour of the-.South Anierican city. Their ship, the
BuU'Run. was tied up nearby.
V

I have been confined here in
the Galveston Marine Hospital
with pneumonia for 16 da:J''S. I
wish that you would publish in
the LOG the fact that I appre­
ciate the efforts of the doctors
and nurses who have been re­
sponsible for bringing me back
to normal.
Upon admission to the hospital
I was in very serious condition.
I am hoping this item will
help the seamen to Cooperate
with the hospital . personnel to
the fullest extent.
William J. Wolfe

a delegate has little to do ex­
cept report, "No Beefs."
At present our fancy rustbucket looks like a yacht inside and
out. We have^ heard oldtime
Isthmian* Mates say that there
never were sailors on their ships
as sober, intelligent and as effi­
cient as the men sent aboard
since the SIU signed a contract.
Of course the food helps the
happy situation. W. - M. Stark,
Steward, has his boys whip up
a mean plate full. It's the best
feeder we've hit in years. Some
say that Kingfish Nelson of theColabee is tops, but on this ship
that point would be debated.
SWEET LABOR
Brothers, don't let anyone kid
you about the fancy ships being
poor sea boats or tough jobs.
All you gotta Igarn is to push
the right button and everything
goes as it should with half the
manual labor involved. Also
there is some satisfaction in log­
ging around 500 miles a day,
and not contending with that
thump, thump, thump, coming
from the innards of the old,
triple expansion jobs.
&gt;
Incidentally, we have a couple,^
of Cities Service Seafarers;,
aboard, men blackballed from th^ CS fleet. They are amazed ,
at the efficient payoffs and •
happy spirit which prevails here
at all times. A far cry from ^
Cities Service.
It is indicative of the chang- |
ing times when we cruise past
a Liberty ship at twice her
speed. This fancy vessel seems
to look down her nose and quav­
er to her topmasts if we dare
to tie up alongside anything as
lowly as a Liberty ship.
It must be the new SIU spirit '
prevailing over the vessel, and
she in turn seems only too glad
to take our lead and do her
share to make each and every'
seaman feel that he is an integ- ;
ral part of the ship's company. '
So it is on the Steel Advocate. '
A happy ship where we "know"^
our rights and know our duties,*^;"
the two main requisites of sea- "
faring men; thus the slogan of^'
old Andrew Furuseth is our by- '•
word. We are well aware that
with freedom comes responsibili­
ties, and as a result we collec- •
lively and individually are striv­
ing to live up to the finest tra- '
dition of the SIU.
James A. MacKenzie
Ship's Delegate

Proudly displaying his catch,
a porcupine, is Seafarer Glen
Vinson. The scene is a hunting
camp in Pennsylvania. Vin­
cent bagged his game with a
Colt .22 pistol.

:!•
•Ju,

|

I would like to begin receiv­
ing the LOG here at Jennings
Land, Smith's Parish, Bermuda,
the paradise of a beach-happy
seaman. If any of my Brother
Seafarers- catch this letter, I'd
like to hear from them.
Now that I'm sojourning in
beautiful Bermuda on its wonderful beaches, I would like to
ask if anyone can furnish me
with any exact information or
data on the use of a "beachcomb." This looks like an ideal
place to make use of such a gad­
get. So, any helpful suggestions
via the LOG will certainly be
appreciated.
George F. Moon

',
f
cr

•f.
d

�Page Ten

TB E S E AF A R E^R S

LOG

WednesdaTr JEuly ®» IfB

G ALVES TO
Chairman,
clothing allowance, bringing all
Keith Alsop, 7311; Recording
the companies into lipe within
Secretary, R. "Wilburn, 37739:
a week from the time the re­
Reading Clerk, Jack Kelly, 10.
quest for a boost was sent out.
Motions carried to accept Galf
Minutes of special meeting hdd
i veston minutes and financial re­
PORT
REG.
REG.
REG.
TOTAL
SHIPPED SHIPPED SHIPPED TOTAL concerning the SS Puerto Rico
ports. Motions Carried .to accept
DECK
ENG.
STWDS.
REG.
DECK
ENG.
STWDS. SHIPPED read and accepted., One minute
Headquarters* report to mem
of silenCe observed for departed
23
50
15
12
17
15
9
41
; bership and financial report. Boston
......M..
150
113
128
391
120
9fl
99
309 Brotheia.
Minutes of meetings held in New York.
...
29
35
25 .
89 .
23
26
21
70
; other Branches accepted. Agen Philadelphia
BALTIMORE^hairman, Wik
Baltimore.
....
109
78
84
271
110
83
.87
280
;,Alsop reported that shipping had
liam
Rentz, 26445; Recording
27
15
19
61
23
33
32
88 Secretary, G. A. Masterson, 20297;
. picked up a bit and then suffer­ Norfolk.
9
4
16
29
5
2
2
9 Reading Clerk, J. Giller, 4014K
ed a relapse. He reported three Savannah.
Tampa..:.
...
NO
FIGURES"
RECEIVED
payoffs, all of them clean. ComVarious reports read and acr
59
—
51
.60
170
40
48
29
117 cepted. Minutes of po;rt meetings
mimication * from Secretary- Mobile
98
84.
112
294
•
74
79
108
261
^ Treasurer concerning $7.50 boos New Orleans.—
101
Galveston
74
64
239
34
35
34•
103
read. Communication accepted
56
27
34
117
59
44
40
143
with a vote of thanks. No New West Coast
•
Business. One minute of silence GRAND TOTAT.
661
496
554
1,711
523 •
437
461
1,421
observed for departed Brothers,
read and accepted, except Sa­
ii ft 4.
vannah and Tampa. Motiftn car­
, BOSTON — Chairman, J. erators had agreed to the $7.50 the General Fund Assessment, to scaled. Agept reported good ship­ ried to non-concur with Savan­
Greenbaum, 281; Recording Sec­ clothing allowance. Tanner told be used for organizing purposes ping for two-week period past nah New Business until clarifica­
retary, B. Lawson, 894; Reading the membership df the action and to battle the Taft-Hartley and saw fair shipping for the tion has been received. Motion
taken in Mobile and vic.mity to Law. In view of $7.50 increase future. He reported six payoffs carried to non-concur with that
Clerk, D. FUzpatrick, 50520.
fight
the Merchant Marine Re­ won this month, the ""submitting and six sign-ons. Under Good part of Tampa New Business re­
Minutes of previous meetings
serve
Bill. Unions, their officers Brothers felt that the time was and Welfare members took the ferring to registration. Under
in Boston and other Branches
and
members
had sent telegrams ripe for the membership to add floor to discuss needed repairs reading of ships' minutes, mo­
read and accepted. Meeting ap­
proved Headquarters' report to of protest to Congress. Secretary- strength to the organization. Re­ in Hall. Meeting adjourned with tion carried to non-concur with
the membership and Secretary- Treasurer's report and financial solution called for Headquarter^ 56 members present.
the New Business of shipboaid
Treasurer's financial report. Ag­ statement read and approved. J. to prepare ballots for referen­
ft ft ft.
meeting on SS Frank E. Spcn*ent reported on the status of E. Prestridge and J. L. Hart t ok dum, should the resolution be
NEW YORK—Chairman, Lind- cer. Item referred to ship's Chief
the Union Oath of Obligation. passed in the ports, in two con­ sey Williams, 21550; Recording Cook. Motion carried to forward
Meeiing adjourned with 473 secutive meetings. Resolution Secretary, Freddie Stewart, 4935; remainder of ships' minutes to
members present.
from crew of "SS Del Norte read. Reading Clerk, Johnny Arabasz, the SEAFARERS LOG for pub"
Resolution called for-a $10 strike 29832.
ft ft ft&gt;
lication. One minute of sjjence
NEW ORLEANS — Chairman, assessment. Motion carried to Minutes of meetings held in observed for Brothers lost at sea;
Herb Knowles, 3725; Recording table ^el Norte resolution until other ports read and accepted, Motion carried to accept with a
Secretary, George Allen, 114; such time as the previous reso­ except those of San Juan, which vote of thanks the telegram from
Reading Clerk, Buck Stephens, lution has been acted upon on were referred back for clariflca- the Secretary-Treasurer announce
shipping for this port during 76.
a coastwise basis. Motion car­ t i o n. Secretary-Treasurer a n - ing a $7.50 clothing allowance:
the past two weeks, and dis­
Minutes of meetings held in ried to accept and concur in nounced the signing of ail SIU- Meeting adjourned with 300
cussed the prospects for the com­ other ports read and accepted. recommendation regarding San
ing weeks. Patrolman's and Dis­ Agent reported that shipping and Juan. Four members took Union contracted companies to the" $7.50 members present.
patcher's reports approved. One affairs of port were in good Oath of Obligation. Motion car­
minute of silence in memory of shape. Large number of relief ried that any SIU member carry­
departed Union members. Meet­ jobs are contributing greatly to ing an 4WW book, turn it in. Djsing adjoiuned at 7:30 PM, with keeping members busy. Agent re­ cussion- on motion brought out
48 members in attendance,
ported that the Brotherhood of that members of IWW had been
ft ft ft
Marine Engineers' organizing blasting SIU, and a man could
SAN FRANCISCO—No meet­
not be a member of both organi­
ing held because of a lack of
zations and still be a good Un­
25 bookmembers necessary for
ion man. Good and Welfare: Dis­
«a quorum.
cussion on marine hospitals and
ft ft ft
SIU welfare plan. Meeting ad­
SAVANNAH — Chairman. C.
journed with 363 members pres­
M. Rice, 40707; Recording Sec­
ent.
retary, Jim Drawdy, 28523; Read­
ft ft ft
drive is in full swing. Members
BASEBALL FOR EVERYONE, he can't answer: how do you
ing Clerk, McClure, 47530.
NORFOLK
—
Chairman,
J.
S.
were
told
of
the
BME's
program
by Joe DiMaggio, Signet, 192 cure a batting slump? You don't
Minutes of previous Savannah
White,
56;
Recording
Secretary,
and
were
urged
to
support
the
cure it, he says, you pray for
pages,
25 cents.
meeting, along with those of
Ben
Rees,
95;
Reading
Clerk,
J.
drive
beirig
made
by
the
new
it
to end.
Whether
you
are
an
18-year
other Branch meetings were read
old kid who can run and throw
and approved. Port Agent stated SIU affiliate. Agent reported the A. Bullock, 4747.
ft ft ft
Motions catffied to accept and and are looking for a 'Class-D HOW TO KNOW THE BIRDS,
that shipping had been poor for port as being completely free of
the. past two weeks. He said that beefs, all having been settled at file minutes of rneetings held in job, or a gaffer who takes his
by Roger Tory Peterson, Men­
Ships arriving in this port were the payoffs or sign-ons. Shep- and floors of Hall should be re­ baseball from the left.^ field
tor Original. 144 pages, 35
the-SS Southland, South Atlantic, pard also reported that a new paired, and recommended that bleachers, you w;ll read this cents.
SS Dorothy, Bull. A few men company is expected to sign a Agent contact Headquarters and book through without stopping.
Occasionally the New Ameri­
contract with the SIU shortly. request that the repairs be made Chances are you'll keep it can Library of World Literaturci
Telegram from Paul Hall an­ other ports. Building Repair around to read again during the which usually publjishes re-prints
nouncing the $7.50 clothing al­ Committee reported that robf season.
of more expensive books, comes
lowance read and approved. Re­ immediately. Committee suggest­ Joe' DiMaggio admits frankly out "with an originfd. This is one
solution offered by 36 members ed that entire inside of building that he is no "pro" a\ the "writ­ of them.
approved. Resolution calls for a be painted and plaster damaged ing game, and had a lot of help It is a "bird book"—that is a
were sent to the Hilton,
$10 assessment, to be known as from roof leaks be cleaned and from si)ortswriter Tom " Meany. kind of dictionary of birds. You
down in Jacksonville,, and to the
Bill Dickey, Frank Frisch and find 'em and they'll flame 'em—
Maiden Victory in Charleston,
others -helped too. But Meany •but very briefly, however. In
One member was excused from
skillfully
let the Jolt^'s own fact, its many references to other
the meeting because of illness.
personality
emerge in every books, by its author—the orni­
One minute of silence was ob­
chapter.
The
result
is a first class thological authority, Roger Tory
served in memory of departed
The recently-concluded coastwise referendum book on the national sport.
Peterson—^is apt ta remind one
brothers. C. Y. Walker and H.
While it is quite apparent (thumbing through its listings of
E. Bacon took the Union Oath resulted in the adoption of a new transportation
_of Obligation. 77 members were rule effective immediately in aH'Atlantic and &lt;xulf now that we - won't see DiMag fifty families of birds, with black
tuEP his bade on the infield and* white drawings) of an ad­
IH-esent when the meeting ad­
again,
run 100 feet and haul vertising brochure for his other
District
ports.
The
new
ruling,
which
the
member­
journed at 7:45 PM.
down
a.
drive with a and more complete works.
ship favored by a vote that Fan three to two, pro­ grace soscreaming
ft ft ft
Yet, if you are just a casual
effortless as to be a
MOBILE — Chairman, S. Sim­ vides as follows:
kind of formal dance, it's pretty fancier of the sky folk, and"
mons, 368; Recording Secretary,
wonder what kind of
**When transportation is due a crew under nice to hear hiA try to tell how asomethnes
James L. Carroll, 14; Reading
bird is dipping his beak into
he did it. One old argument he
Glerk, Harold Fischer, 59.
the terms of the contract, those men who desire settles: he doesn't think Speaker the wake; or if the old salt who
Motions carried to accept min­
to stay on board the ship can do so, providing : 'could have played a shallow sits on the stern in fair weather
utes of meetings held in other
centerfield with today's souped- spinning yarns and calling all
they do not collect transportation. Those men '.r- rup
ports. Agent Tanner reported on
birds "gulls": is always right;
blill.
the shipping prospects for the
desiring transportation can collect same and
then
you may find it "worth tak­
Joe goes through- the game
port during the coming two
ing
along
on some coastwise run
position
by
position,
technique
upon receipt of the money shall get off the ship '.s:
week period. He reported 13
by technique, illustrating every up and down the American
ships as definite, with a possi­
and replacements for those vacancies shall be point with incidents from the coasts.bility of 17 touching the port.
For thirty-five cents what can
shipped from the Union Hiring Hall."
rich history of the professional
Agent also reported that all ^p~
game. There's only one question you lose?

A&amp; G Shipphg From June 15 To June 29

New Traaspartrnkm Hide

�Wednesday. July iB. 1949

rUE SEAFARERS LOG

Page Eleven

The Facts About Alcoholism
By JOSEPH I. FLYNN

lost. Alcohol dilates the blood | drinker-one drink*is too many,
vessels on .the surface, warming and a hundred *ot enough,
People will always invent rea­
the skin, but dissipating heat.
A parting factor for all to
sons for things being aS they are.
Some people have made the keep in mind is the fact that
They will inevitably draw con­
ROY iSAKER (or BARKER)
GEORGE MEANEY
statement that 60 percent of' alcohol does not make the alclusions about anything. The
John H. Whitlock would like
B. T. Knew is anxious to hear
crime
can be attributed to alco-J coholic. The root of the problem
truth of these conclusions is of­
you to -get in touch with him at from you.. He is- at the U. S.
hoi. This has been proven wrong.; is in the man himself and not
50 Pine Street, South Portland, Marine Hospital, Ellis Island, ten proven wrong, for the ob­ It i5 25 to 28 percent, which is in the bottle..
vious reason that there are so still a very high figure.
New York.
Maine.
IN REVIEW
few of us who can look at some­ Here is the answer as to why
4&gt; 4&gt; 4
.This
is
the
eighth, and last, of
4 4.
thing objectively and not let our the problem drinker never wants
a
series
of
articles
on alcoholism.
WARREN CALLAHAN
emotions color our judgment.
to
eat:
Alcohol
is
a
food.
It,
The
subject
is
much
too broad
Get in touch with Arthur L.
Anyone owed money by
The
study
of
alcoholism
has
contains
a
high
percentage
of'a
one
to
have
given
but a
Obre, 60 Wall Street, N6w York,
Ed Gibbs may collect double
brought many interesting facts calories, giving one heat energy.' glimpse of its vastness in these
telephone HAnover 2-5368, in
by leaving his name and ad­
to light. In comparing these ob­ The trouble, here,, is that cal- weekly reviews.
connection with case of Fran­ dress with Rudy or Babe in
jective views with those held by ories without vitamins cannot
It is hoped that those who
cisco O. Blanco who was injur­
the fourth floor baggage.
the
public, we find the people properly nourish the body, leav­ read mem now have a better
ed in fall on Evistar on Dec. 16, SIU Hall, 51 Beaver Street,
have been mistaken in many of ing the alcoholic very susceptible understanding of" this particular
1948.
New York City.
their beliefs as to- the tr".e na­ to other, sicknessfes, pneumonia. problem, and that they may
4&gt; ^ 4*
ture of alcoholism.
beri-beri, heart diseases, TB, etc. i have helped a few who are havMrs. FRANK CHRISTY
Although 12,000 deaths due to' ing difficulty with drinking to.
JAMES BARRETT
Half the people in the United
Please write to your husband
alcoholism
are recorded yearly, see their problem in a new light.
Mrs.
Burge
appreciates
the
States are inclined to minimize
at the Baltimore Marine Hos­
many more die of the sickness It "is with gratitude that I
help
you
gave
hei
son
when
he
the
problem,
believing
that
if
pital, Baltimore, Md.
was ill. She would like you to the alcoholic wanted to stop resulting from the weakened thank the editor and others who
call
her at her home in New drinking he could do so. Only physical condition which attends made it possible for these writ­
FRANK STEVENS
ings to be printed. I am thank­
Jersey, Cliffside 6-8066.
one out of eight is acquainted alcoholism.
You are requested to write
ful to have been a part of the
QUICKLY ABSORBED
with the fact that alcoholism is
to Clay Stevens, 448 N. Waco
a sickness. This in the face of
Alcohol is the only food that educational program adopted by
Street, Wichita, Kansas, or phone
the fact that there are 50 per­ is absorbed right from the stom­ the SIU.
Wichita 4-8861. There is illness
cent more alcoholics than known ach and small intestines into To me it means advancement,
in your family.
cases of TB.
the blood stream. The rate of progress, and freedom from the
4 4. 4.
Alcohol is not a stimulant, as absorption is faster when the shackles that have too long held
JOSEPH C. MIKRONIS
so many believe. It's a depress­ alcohol is taken on an empty back, not only the seamen, but
Please get in touch with your
ant. Alcohol affects certain nerve stomach. It does not require di­ people as a whole.
mother, Mrs.'L. R. Lindsly, 408
centers, relieving us of our in­ gestion. It's eliminated through
Saguaro Aye., Batron Rouge 9, Packages and luggage have
hibitions
(inferiority
feeling, the breath, sweat, Urine and by
been
held
in
the
New
York
Hall
La., as soon as possible.
for more than a year for the fol­ backwardness, etc.) and, although oxidization (burning up by the
a depressant, it gives the illu­ body).
lowing men:
E. Walden, Constantine Sofo- sion of producing a mental up­ Alcohol is a slow-acting an­
esthetic, working just like ether
nios, David Donahue, Halvor lift.
Holt, J. R. Jenning, George WelWe are not smarter or more or chloroform. Watch the bottle
SIU, A&amp;G District don, Edward Cahill, Casimir J. capable
after a few drinks. baby gradually get foggier and
Nick Funken, Ralph Scientific tests have shown that foggier and pass out. Ether would
BALTIMORE
14 North Cay St. Hypny,
(Continued from Page 3)
William Renta, Agent
Mulberry 4540 Rutiglianoi Friedrich Ewald and one ounce of alcohol may re­ put one right out, the difference
BOSTON
276 State St. D. Cardone.
being
one's
a
fast
and
the
other
a
delegate
from the Peron-sp'onduce the reaction to a response
Ben Lawson, Agent - Richmond 2-0140
a
slow
anesthetic.
sored
Argentine
General Fed­
These
packages
will
be
held
of a seen or heard signal by 6
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141
Habits
leading
to
alcoholism
eration
of
Labor
and Jacinto
for
one
more
month,
after
which
percent.
GALVESTON
308V4—23rd St.
are easily formed. Environmen­ Oddone, exiled head of Argen­
Keith AIsop, Agent
Phone 2-844S they will be disposed of.
The
NOT HEREDITARY
MOBILE
1 South Lawrence St. owners are therefore urged to
tal factors are very important in tina's independent unions.
Cat Tanner, Agent
Phono 2-1754
There
is
no
foundation
to
the
the development of the alcoholic. When Dictator Peron's man
call for them at the baggage
NEW ORLEANS... ...523 Bienville St.
saying
that
alcoholism
is
heredi­
Alcohol causes certain mental declared that he would with­
E. Sheppard, Agent Magnolia 6112-6113 room of the New York Hall at
tary.
Only
35
percent
of
alco­
diseases.
Some drink because draw if Oddone was seated, the
NEW YORK
61 Beaver St. once.
holics
have
a
background
of
al­
they
have
a psychosis, others assembly voted to accept the
Joe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784
4 4 4
NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St.
coholism in their family. No drink and develop one.
exiled Argentinian trade . union
Will
Robin
Locksley
crewBen Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
physiological proof has been
Five
percent
of
the
national
leader.
Peron's man was then
member
who
was
issued
Receipt
PHILADELPHIA
337 Market St.
J. Sheehan, Agent
Marke| 7-1635 No. 9429 by Patrolman Teddy found to substantiate such a be­ income is spent on alcoholic bev­ allowed to leave.
erages, with some individuals A 16-man committee, which is
SAN FRANCISCO
85 Third St. Babkowski please get in touch lief.
•
Frenchy Michelet, Agent Douglas 2-547ff with the 6th floor.
How many believe that a little and families spending as high preparing a constitution for the
New York
SAN JUAN, P.R
252 Ponce de Leon
as 50 percent.
new organization, was also in­
L. Craddock, Agent
San Juan 2-5996 Hall, so that the amount in­ drink warms you up? This is not
The
hardest
person
to
convince
structed
to draft a program of
SAVANNAH
2 Abercom St. volved may be credited to your true, for it does not warm the
action.
Among
those serving on
of
the
seriousness
of
alcoholism
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728 name.
body—^in fact, internal heat is
TACOMA
1519 Pacific St.
is the alcoholic, who calls him­ the committee is Irving Brown,
Broadway 0484
self a moderate drinker, reiterat­ the AFL's European representar
TAMPA
1809-1811 N. Franklin St.
ing his ability to take it or leave tive.
Ray White. Agent
Phone M-1323
it alone.
Included in the program will
WILMINGTON, CaUf., 227Vs Avalon Blvd.
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Terminal 4-2874
Once an alcoholic, always an be a plan for the role of .the
HEADQUARTERS . . 51 Beaver St., N.Y.C.
alcoholic. Complete abstinence new organization in furthering
SECRETARY-TREASURER
from
alcohol is the only ineans peace between the nations of
Paul Hall
of recovery. To the problem the world.
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
tuted for it an "improved" Taft(Continued from Page 1)
Lindsey Williams
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURER
Hartley
law. This amendment
rest of his bunch who are com­
. Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
was
adopted
by the 51 to 42
ing up for reelection.
Joseph Volpiasi
vote.
Debate on the Administration's
The SEAFARERS LOG as the official publication of the Sea*
labor measure, commonly known
HOUSE INACTION
SUP
farers
International Union is available to all members who wish
as the Thoma's-Lesinski bill, be­
HONOLULU
16 Merchant St.
In the House, the Administra­ to have it sent to their home free of charge for the enjoyment of
gan
in
th"e
Senate
about
four
Phana 5-8777
tion bill ran into a m£ize of their families and themselves when ashore. If you desire to have
PORTLAND
Ill W. Bumslde St. weeks ago". Except for a lot of
Beacon 433CL talk, little was accomplished, labor-hating opposition and the the LOG sent to you each week address cards are on hand at every
'
RICHMOND, Calif.
257 5th St. and only a few minor amend­ whole question was sent back SIU branch for this purpose."
Phone 2599
to
committee.
Since
then,
nothing
ments were voted on during the
However, for those who are at sea or at a distance from a SIU
SAN FRANCISCO....
59 Clay St.
has
been
done.
.
first
three
weeks.
hall,
the LOG reproduces below the form used to request the LOG,
Douclas 2-8363
A showdown was exp.ected on President William Green said which you can fill out, detach and send to: SEAFARERS LOG, 51
SEATTLE
86 Seneca St.
Main 0290 -two
amendments offered by that in view of the Senate's ac­ Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
WILMINGTON..
440 Avalon Blvd.
Senator Taft, co-author of the tion "it 'would be useless and a
Terminal 4-3131
PLEASE PRINT INFORMATION
T-H Act. Taft's first amendment" niwaste of time to make the rest
of;
the
Taft
bill
more
palatable."
was on that part of the,repeal
Canadian District
bill dealing with national "em­ Labor, Green said, would Tathe Editor:
MONTREAL
404 Le~~Moyne St.
I would like the SEAFARERS LOG mailed to thej
ergency" strikes. It" gave the make a fresh start "with our
Marquette 5909
sights
trained
on
the
1950
elecPresident
the
choice
of
using
address below:^
HAUFAX
12814 Hollis St.
Phone 3^8911 either injunctions, as provided tiQn jpampaign and ^ith all our
PORT ARTHUR
63 Cumberland St. in the original Taft-Hartley law, energies concentrated on 'the de­
Name
Phone North 1229
feat. of the reactionaries from
or plant seizure.
PORT COLBORNE
103 Durham St.
The Administration bill pro­ both parties who teamed to- Street Address
Phone: 5591
TORONTO
lllA Jarvle St. vided for a thirty-day cooling gethei?^: in yesterday's roll-call
Elgin 5719 off period but contained no pro­ (the "Sepate vote on- the Taft
Zone.. -J— State
VICTORIA, B.C. ....602 Boughton St.
visions for injunction or govern­ amendm^ent) to keep the threat City
%;mpire 4531
of
court
injunctions
hanging
ov­
VANCOUVER.........565 Hamilton St. ment seizure during national em­
Signed
er labor "W -head.
Pacific 7824 ergency disputes.
The second Taft amendment "Labor will, never swallow the
HEADQUARTERS. ......512 McGill St.
Book No
Montreal
Plateau 670 struck out all the rest of the injunction," President Green de­
clared.
Administration bill and substi­

AFL And CIO
Help To Start
New Grouping

SIU HULLS

Senate Passes NewT-H Bill;
Labor Plans 1950 Campaign

Notice To AH SIU Members

�Page Twelve

, T H E S E AF A R ERS LQt

Wedneadar. July 6, 1949

Seafarer's Chimera Clicks In Savannah
r

On deck with his camera in'the Port of Savan­
nah this week was E. B. (Mac) McAuIey, ta Sea­
farer who hks for years been looking: at the world
throug:h his viewfinder. What he saw of some of his
Union Brothers in the Savannah Hall and aboard
the Rbbin Trent, an in-transit caller, appears in
the photos on this page.

8?

ill-

"-I liisiiM
.
X:.

piiiiiiiiii
i
if .
• Ji

•

'•2?

i

ABOVE—Chow churners grouped for Ihe camera in Robin
Trent's galley are (left to right): S. Ferrer, Night Cook &amp; Baker;
Ulrich, 3rd Cook; Tom Reilly, Steward, and Athanrouelis, Ch.
Cook.
RIGHT—Oilers (left to right) Robinson, Leo Pigg and Kelly
as they rest during a Robin Trent coffee time.

These Seatoere tod it easy le relax in Ihe Savannah HaU's apic and span, cemforlable
SisT™
ar*)'"® I
I"""
P-n-ykhlh. Franeis Sepo, -Wimpy"
Daniels, Tommy Alkofer and Charles Baird.

Brothers A. D. Edenfield (left) and "Wimpy" Daniels catch
some air in front of the^Hall. They caught plenty of rain, too,
moments after this photo was taken, McAwley said.

From the look on Port Ag­
ent Jim -Drawdy's face pho­
tographer McAuley thought the
phone call was for full crews
for 10 ships. The call was for
a couple of ABs, but Drawdy
registers glee no matter how
many men are requested.

Here's Hay Pomykala (left) as he registered for a job at I
the Savannah Hall. At the other side of the counter is Dis&lt; i
patcher-Patrolman Charles Rice.
|

Looking a bit weary of the camera lens, Drawdy. toting
LOGS, visits the Robin Trent to make sure all is ship-shape
before the Persian Gulf trip. With him is Steward Tom Relliy.

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9920">
                <text>July 7, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9988">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 22</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10009">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10030">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10090">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10108">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10162">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
SENATE PASSES NEW T-H BILL&#13;
ALIEN WAIVERS, MC CHARTERING EXTENDED TO '50&#13;
$7.50 PAY RISE FOR ALL&#13;
BRITISH LABOR RIPS COMMIE DISRUPTION&#13;
SEAFARERS BLASTS BILL TO SET UP 'RESERVE'&#13;
SENATE COMMITTEE PROBES SHIP TRANSFERS&#13;
WAITING FOR '50&#13;
WHAT'S SOURCE FOR THE GOOSE--&#13;
ENGINEERS STILL AFTER JOBS OF ELECTRICIANS&#13;
GEORGIA PAYS BENEFITS TO IDLE SEAMEN&#13;
BEWARE OF CITIES SERVICE BEARING GIFTS&#13;
AFL, CIO HELP START NEW WORLD LABOR GROUP&#13;
ROBIN LINE CLOUTS REAL HOMER: PUTS SOFTBALL GEAR ON ITS SHIPS&#13;
MANY PAYOFF BUT FEW SIGN-ON IN NEW YORK&#13;
COUPLE OF BUCKO SKIPPERS MAR SMOOTH PAYOFF FOR MOBILE&#13;
PORT SAVANNAH SHIPPING DROPS&#13;
PHILLY WEATHER NOTE: VERY HOT, WITH COOL BREEZES IN SHIPPING&#13;
SEVEN ARRIVALS GIVE FIRSCO FAIR SHIPPING WEEK&#13;
DONAHUE EYE SMIDDLEWEIGHT TITLE AS HE PREPARES FOR RING RETURN&#13;
GANGWAY FALL PROVES FATAL TO SS FRANCES ELECTRICIAN&#13;
SAVES SHIPMATE IN PLUNGE&#13;
THE FACTS OF ALCOHOLISM&#13;
SEAFARER'S CAMERA CLICKS IN SAVANNAH</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10163">
                <text>7/9/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13060">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="963" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="967">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/c7b45eb0e2e7db426f4a8c7a6a833b30.PDF</src>
        <authentication>a0d33ff34616af4900adf24aea5600eb</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47443">
                    <text>'•

-y-r.-^.i^rcn
' ••:' A:;r*

/-

1^
1'^'

I'''

I
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA
VOL. XI

):
MI

NEW YORK. N. Y., FRIDAY. JULY 22. 1949

No. 23

Canadian Crew Bills Approve Hiring Hall
Merchant Marine Reserve Bill, which would
Charges CSU have The
forced seamen into breaking their own strikes, ap­
pears
to have died of non-support.
With Betrayal
Nothing has been heard of the measure since the

Crewmembers of the SS Beacerbrae, one of the two Cana­ flood of Seafarers' protests were topped off by the SlU
dian ships being used by water­ Washington representative's denunciation at a House sub­
front communists to cripple committee hearing on July 6.
Great Britain, this week quit
The only voice in favor of the bill was that of its
the communist-dominated Ca­
sponsor,
the Merchant^ Marine Veterans' Association, a
nadian Seamen's Union, after ac­
cusing its leaders of betraying small group of former seamen whose sailing was confined
them. Representing 65 percent to the war period.
of the vessel's complement, 42
With the strikebreaking bill out of the way. Seafarers
men returned to work despite
beatings and the threat of vio­ are turning their attention to legislation now in Con­
lence, and said they wished to gressional committees, which would exempt the maritime
return to Canada with the ship. industry from the closed shop ban imposed by the TaftAnd in Montreal, John Har- Hartley Act. One bill, HR 5008, has been introduced in
kin, former Secretary of the the House by Rep. John Lesinski (D., Mich.). An identi­
CSU and an admitted commu­ cal bill, S 2196, has been introduced in the Senate by Sena­
nist, quit the CSU, saying the
strike was part of a communist tor Warren Magnuson (D., Wash.). Both would amend
plot to break up Canadian and the Taft law by permitting continuation of the hiring
practices prevailing in the maritime industry prior to
US aid to Europe.
TO CHALLENGE COMMIE June 15, 1947.
All Seafarers should write at once to the House Labor
The crewmen said that they
would "challenge" Richard Bar­ Committee and to the Senate Labor Committee, as well as
rett, communist secretary of the to their own Congressmen and Senators, urging favorable
British Stevedores Union who action on these bills.
maneuvered the tieup of more
than half of the port of London,
to keep his word to order his
men back to work if a majority
of the Beaverbrae crew returned
to the ship.
William Lawther, president of
the United Mine Workers Union
and Arthur Deakin, secretary of
A strong United States mer­ "First, we must meet head-on
the Transport and General Work­ chant marine was announced as the question of subsidies," he
ers Union, both have condemnec the objective of the Senate in­ said.
the tie-up as a communist man­ vestigation of shipping, to be re­ That the Senator is opposed
euver. Bristol and Avonmouth sumed shortly by a subcommit­ to the intrusion of the military
dockers, who earlier supportec tee headed by Senator Warren into the private shipping busi­
the "strike," have refused to G. Magnuson (D., Cal.). The ness was set forth clearly, when
have anything to do with the group will study every phase of he declared that the committee
phony political issue and
the maritime industry in the would have to determine "just
communist appesQ to involve course of the second round of how deeply the military should
transport workers in Spitalfields the inquiry, which is expected be in the shipping business."
has been rejected.
"I think we will come to the
to last several months.
The Labor Government has "We will have to resolve a decision," he added, "that it
branded the "strike" as a com­ number of vital questions in the should be only to the extent re­
munist plot to disrupt Britain's merchant marine," Senator Mag­ quired by essential needs, where
economy and has called upon nuson said last week as he out­ no private lines are available.
troops to imload ships blockaded lined the nature and extent of
"The third head-on factor will
by the communists.
*
be the passenger ship field,"
his committee's task.
Among the questions Senator Senator Magnuson said. "We are
Magnuson said wofild have to be not in it at all like other mari­
answered by his group is: "Do time nations. It is a rarity, rela­
we want a strong merchant ma­ tively, for passengers to sail the
seas of the world under the
rine?"
although this
"I am sure," he added, ."that American flag
country
provides
the bulk of
Despite the fact that hostilities we will
affirma­
travel."
.
^
ended three years ago, the haz­ tive."
ards of war are still a grim Senator Magnuson, who has At the first hearings held last
reality for seafaring men.
been in the forefront of every month, the committee dug into
During the first six months legislative effort to bolster the the question of the transfer of
of 1949, 29 ships were sunk or US maritime industry and to American ships to foreign flags,
damaged by mines, bringing the protect the American seamen notably Panamanian. When the
total of casualties to 303 vessels against the competitive disadvan­ sessions resume this phase of
since the wind-up of World War tages held by foreign shippers, the inquiry will be scrutinized
n.
explained that His committee more intensively.
Among the larger cargo ves­ would have "to settle how best Senator Magnuson said he
could "see no reason why there
sels reported damaged by mines to achieve the objective."
should
not be drastic legislation
this year was the SlU-contracted He indicated that this might
setting
up definite limits on
SS Steel Admiral, Isthmian be accomplished through "favor­
transfers,
where the tonnage is
Steamship Company. The Steel able charter provisions, construc­
owned
by
American citizens. An­
Admiral was struck by a float­ tions subsidies and favorable tax
other question: what shall we do
ing mine ln the Saigon River on benefits."
January 23.
The broad scale on which the about the millions of tons in
The Isthmian ship was blasted probe will be conducted became the laid-up fleet?"
off her course and barely avoid­ apparent as the Washington The question of how far the
ed colliding with a passing ship State legislator disclosed the ma­ United States should go in main­
and running aground in the nar­ jor problems, the subcommittee taining its merchant marine is
among those "that must be set­
would attempt to solve.
row stream!

Branches Okay
Assessment Far
General Fund

Demonstrating the same foresight that has
characterized the Seafarers' approach to all Union
problems, Atlantic and Gulf District members have
overwhelmingly* adopted a resolution calling for a
ten-dollar assessment to continue the all-out fight
on anti-union legislation and to enable the SIU to
maintain intact all of its membership services.
The forward-looking action was taken at regu­
lar membership meetings in all ports on Wednes­
day, July 13, and is calculated to meet the effects
of the growing economic crisis upon the Union's;
operating efficiency.

For The Records
Seafarers making pay­
ments to Union Patrolmen
and other authorized SIU
representatives should make
certain the receipts they re­
ceive specify the account to
which the money is to be
credited.
For example, receipts
made for LOG donations
should have SEAFARERS
LOG written clearly along­
side the amount. The same
applies to receipts for dues,
assessments and other pay­
ments.
Careful attention lo this
detail will enable Headquar­
ters to keep its records ac­
curate in crediting income
lo the various accounts.

Strong Amerkan Morrhant Marine
Is Aim Of Senate Committee Probe
tled," Senator Magnuson said.
He added, that "there are di­
vided schools of thought on the
subject, some saying we should
carry more than half our foreign
trade, and some saying that we
should stick strictly to domestic
trade and let other nations do
the overseas hauling."

The assessment would be ear­
marked for the General Fund,
which is the only source of
revenue available to the Union
for meeting its day-to-day oper­
ating expenses. It is the Gen­
eral Fund which also permits
the Union to carry on the ex­
tremely important job of organ­
izing 'on a steady basis, and to
conduct its legislative fights in
behalf of merchant seamen's wel­
fare.
IN NEW ORLEANS
Originally offered and passed
at the regular meeting in New
Orl^ns on Jime 29 by 36 SIU
members in that port, the reso­
lution recommended that after
favorable action "for two suc­
cessive meetings" in all ports,
the question should be submitted
to a referendum ballot.
The balloting period specified
in the New Orleans resolution
would be for 30 days, as required
by the Union constitution, be­
ginning Aug. 1 and continuing
through Aug. 30.
In accordance with the pro­
cedure laid down by the Sea­
farers in New Orleans, the reso­
lution will again be presented
to the membership in all ports
at the next regular meetings on
July 27. If adopted at sessions
at that time, the proposal will
then go before the entire mem­
bership in the form of a ques­
tion to be voted upon in secret
(Contimicd on Page 10)

A SCENE FROM SIU MOVIE

303 Vessels Are
Mine Casualties

"This Is the SIU." a 16 mm. sound motion picluxe, which
highlights the remarkable advances made by the Atlantic and
Gulf District in the past few years, has just been released
and will be available for showing in all ports soon.
A tribute to the membership and the Union, whose notable
achievements have made the name Seafarers known through­
out the world, the film attempts to show in some measure how
the A&amp;G District goes about providing its members with onthe-spot representation and shoreside services. Above is scene
of one of the Union-sponsored Thanksgiving Day dinners
which appears in Iho movie.

�Page Two

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, July 22, 1949

SEAFARERS LOG
^Published Three Times a Month by the

mmi

SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Lsdior

At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784

I

^•ikL &gt;'

Entered as second class matter June 15, 1945, at the Post Office
in New York, N. Y., under , the Act of August 24, 1912.
J

267

An Eye To The Future
A group of alert Seafarers in the Port of New Or­
leans made a move two meetings ^ back that should get
the support of every member of the Atlantic and Gulf
District. In their resolution, recommending that they and
their Union Brothers assess themselves a ten-dollar bill
to strengthen the Union's General Fund, these SIU men—
56 oldtimers—took what at first might have appeared
to be an unpopular step.
But it quickly became clear that the keen under­
standing of what lies ahead for men in maritime, the
devotion to the type of trade unionism that has steadily
brought their wages and conditions to the top in the
industry, and the foresight to protect their security and
[welfare every step of the way, are not the sole possessions
of these New Orleans Seafarers alone.
In ports up and down the coast, their Union Brothers
demonstrated convincingly that they were equally con­
scious of the Union's role as it drives ahead in the face
of increasing obstacles.
Apparently what prompted the forward-looking
resolution is the fact that the current economic recession
has an immediate eflfect on the Union's qperating efficiency.
Although the General Fund is in sound condition, the
loss of revenue resulting from the shipping slump would
ultimately require strengthening of the resources which
are used from day to day in pursuit of a better life for
the membership.
The Union long ago looked the problem square in
the face. Expenses and personnel have been trimmed
constantly, so that the organization is providing com­
plete service to the membership with a minimum of ex­
penditure.
It must be pointed out, however, that the Union's
continued vigilance in protecting the welfare and security
of its membership against the destructive forces led by
vicious anti-labor legislators in Washington cannot be
•relaxed for a moment.
^
Only two weeks ago the United States Circuit Court
These are the Union Brothers currently in^the marine hospitals,
of Appeals ruled that the Union Hiring Hall is illegal as reported by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging,
under the Taft-Hartley law. This means a relentless heavily'^on their hands. Do what you can to cheer them up .by
struggle must be waged if the rotary hiring procedure- writing them.
the backbone of democratic maritime unionism—is not to BALTIMORE MARINE HOSP.
M. H. MUNSTER
be smashed and seamen shoved back decades to the days W. G. ALSTON
N. I. WEST
G. p. NOLES
whem^hey shuffled, hat in hand, from steamship office D. BOYCE
B. K. JOHNSON .
J. CHIORRA
to sfe^ship office in search of work at any conditions.
A. MAUFFRAY
Iiunds for fights like this one, and the one successfully F. WATERMAN
N. STRATON
A. CARROLL
Waged this past spring to protect American seamen's jobs G.
P.
G. BEAUFORT
W. E. LAMBERT
in Marshall Plan shipments, and the one currently under F. KORVATIN
E. G. SANDERS
C. R. SCHOOLER
way to kill off the Merchant Marine Reserve Bill, which J. M. FERNANDES
C. RAYFUSE
would force seamen to break their own strikes—all these W. VAUGHAN
E.
G. PLAHN
H.
G,
REYNOLDS
must be financed from the General Fund.
C. BROWN
W.
H.
WOODILL
There is another way operating funds can be re­
D. KOROLIA
F. W. CHRISTY
plenished. It is the way taken by many other waterfront A. L.. MASTERS
R. DICKINSON
unions, less mindful than the SIU of their membership's M. I. EL MOUR
E. WARSAW, JR.
A. ARVANTIS
security. And that is by opening up the membership rolls H. H. DIDDLEBOCK
J. C. JARVIS
E. ARDOIN
and issuing new books to replace those that are retired.
J. C. HANSON
Because the SIU has carefully avoided this procedure.
t X t
ORLEANS ^HOSPITAL
Seafarers have greater job security than any other group NEW
STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
F. CORCORAN
of seamen in the nation—^in spite of the slump. By not T. SANFORD
H. E. BONEWALD
N. DORPMANS
opening the books to fill up the gaps left by retirements, C. PLATT
J.
P. PROBST
E.
MA-SSEY
the SIU has consistently maintained the ratio of jobs to
J. W. FAILLA
W.
J.
JOYNER
membership as one to one, while in other unions there
W. E. THOMPSON
J. DENNIS
as many as four and five men to one job.
M. J. LUCAS
G. ROTZ
The way suggested by the New Orleans members' L. LANG
A. TREVINO
J. HERNANDEZ
resolution might seem bold. But to those who understand F. LANDRY
• ^
M. FERNANDEZ
the essential of good, sound trade unionism and that the S. MORGAN I
L.
OIEN
Union's first"^ concern should be for its membership's wel­ C. ELLARD
T.
KANADY
^
L. WILLIS
fare, the New Orleans resolution stands as the only intelli­ J. B. ALLRED
I. RHODEN
gent solution to the problem facing all unions today.
M. ROSSI
L
B. VARNER

Mea How In The Marine Hospitak

Hospital Patients

When entering the hospital
..notify the delegates by post­
card. giving your name iwd
the number of your ward.
Mimeographed. Postcards
can be obtained free at the
Social Service desk.
V. GROVER
J. MAZZIOGCHI
J. F. THORffSON
W. B. BADILLO
J. J. DEVINE
4, J. J,

SAVANNAH HOSPITAL
. J. H. MAXEY
C. EXELL
W. SMITH
i 4. t
MOBILE HOSPITAL
J. SKINNER
. i
A. GORDON
J. CURTIS.
M. LEOUSIS
i
P. VANDEREIK
;
' M. SMYLY
•
^
L. HOWARD
. ;\
H.'FOY
I
J. BERRIER
J. PORTER
C. GLOVER
L. REINCHUCK
4 » 4
SAN FRANCISCO HOSPITAL
J. KEENAN
W. LANE
R. W. FRYE
W. SANDERSON
S. WALERK
PETER SMITH
T. ISAKSEN
M. CARAWAY
4 4 4
BOSTON HOSPITAL
.1
JOHN J. FLAHERTY
R. FISHER
FRANK ALASAVICH
VIC MILAZZO
%
E. A. PRENDERGASt
11
H. WHITE

A-

�Ittaat. JTuIy 21 irrt

THE

SEAFAREkS

LOG

Page Thxee

Why Training Program Must Be Scuttled
place, with only such men to schools and the ships, but actual
be trained as the industry could compensation to the state nauti­
cal academies' students to the
absorb.
There is an old adage, "His­ Now, it was not at all uncom­
We have always stated that, tune of $65.00 per month.
tory repeats itself." We should mon in those days for a licensed
It is very difficult for an un­
because there is no GI Bill of
receive valuable lessons from officer to be in the foc'sle, the
employed
seaman or officer to
Rights for seamen and because
liistory repeating itself, but all writer himself having sailed two
they get no educational advan­ get $65.00 from our government
we apparently learn is that his­ years in the foc'sle with his li­
tages, the fairest thing that our after he has already been trained
tory does repeat itself. It seems cense in his pocket. We are un­
government should do is to take at great expense by the govern
that insufficient corrective or fortunately returning to that
young men off the ships for this for the industry.
preventative measures are taken condition today.
education—men who have prov­ So you see. Brothers, it is ap­
to avoid mistakes made in the You are certainly aware that
ed that they want to go to sea, parent that all we learn from
past.
many men who had retired their
that they like the sea, and wiU history repeating itself, is that
Probably the most unfortunate books in the SIU, when they ob­
continue to go to sea, because it does repeat itself.
facet of our postwar industry is tained a license, are now back
That is why the Masters, Mates
they have already .been in the
the fact that our government in the foc'sle having reactivated
&amp;
Pilots has been fighting the
foc'sle, and not to take boys off
did not keep its promises of their SIU books.
the streets and the farms and administration of the training
maintaining an adequate mer­
Naturally, if a man does have
train them to be officers with­ program these years and while
chant marine, with our country to go back to the foc'sle to earn
out even knowing if they will we have been the leader in hav­
as a first-line maritirrte nation. a livelihood, he certainly wants
like the industry or the life at ing the maritime training pro­
As 'a result, today there is a to go back with the union that
gram appropriations cut, we
sea.
huge surplus of trained person­ he supported while he was un­
have already succeeded in get­
We
have
nothing
against
the
nel and no jobs.
WM. C. ASH
licensed, and I believe that every
boys who come out of the aca­ ting the appropriation cut for
Thus, immediately after the bona fide union man will see
demies; many of them make this year by 50 percent.
cessatioik of hostilities, our or­ the justice of this.
is not available, your job will very fine officers. This is particu­
SENATE BATTLE
ganization fronted a drive to But what about the hundreds be attractive to these young offi­
larly
true
of
the
federal
aca­
There will be a battle on the
curtail the training of men for of men that the state nautical cers who have no previous mer­
demies whose cadets get one Senate floor to restore this cut.
ian industry that cannot absorb academies are turning out today, chant ship experience.
year of sea duty on merchant The battle wiU be to support
them, particularly when the and for whom there will be no
ships,
as part of their training Kings Point and keep it going.
POTENTIAL
DANGER
training is provided by our own officers' berth?
prior
to
graduation.
If this were the only objective,
government at fte
expense of
I think then that you surely
It
is
almost
certain
that
they,
there
is much that we could
the taxpayer.
NO EXPERIENCE
like their predecessors \ in the realize the potential danger of
support
in such a battle, but this
_ We succeeded eventually, with
past, will have to go into the turning out hundreds of licensed
In
the
state
academies
they
is
not
the
true picture.
the aid of other unions, in com­
foc'sle if they are going to make officers for whom there are no get only service on their own In order to support Kings
pletely eliminating all appren­
ships or officers' berths.
a livelihood at sea.
training ship — which is usually Point, which is very exemplary,
tice training except for officers.
It is possible that the un­ They are certainly not going We have always felt that in the nature of a luxury cruise they by the same token fight to
licensed seamen would then have into the foc'sle through the good maritime training is a federal at the taxpayers' expense—and save the" state nautical academies
very little, concern as to the will of any unlicensed unions, obligation. It certainly is in all have no experience in dealing and these same state school ships
training of future officers for particularly yours, and-yet these other governments, which nurse with merchant seamen until they would stay in existence by rea­
our merchant marine, perhaps hundreds of trained men are a and foster their maritime pro­ come aboard as licensed officers. son of hanging onto the political
feeling that this is' a problem for potential threat to every un­ gram as a .very important part If the individual states (Penn­ coattails of Kings Point.
of their national economy.
sylvania threw in the sponge You are urged to support our
the officers' unions, but imfor- licensed seaman.
It
seems
that
our
lawmakers
You must remember that, af­
a couple of years ago) position in your own interests
timately this is not the case.
have
no
such
foresight,
.as
has
ter
you
leave
the
original
entry
want to continue the maritime and write yovir Senators about
Let me quote Jhe history of
been
proved
time
and
time
again.
grades
in
your
various
depart­
training
program, they should this, and tell them to stop train
the industry after the last war
ments, you are a skilled man We, therefore, endorsed the do it at their own expense and ing Merchant Marine Officers
on this specific item.
There were five individual and become more skilled the Merchant Marine Academy at our federal government should whose only possibility of getting
state nautical academies, each longer you stay in the industry. Kings Point as the only place discontinue providing not only a job in the future is to go in
maintaining a "school ship" for Therefore, if an officer's berth where such training should take funds for the operation of the the foc'sle.
the training of deck and engine
officers. They were: New York,
Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, Cal­
ifornia and Maine.
In the early days of and prior
But getting the CS job was silence from the officers to
By KEITH TERPE
this system of employment with
to World War II, these state
only
the beginning. The minute whom it was mentioried.
the SIU policy of democratic
academies did not receive any
Oh
Saturday,
July
9,
the
SS
You couldn't see your over­
I
stepped
on the Lone Jack, I
shipping according to rule—and
federal funds for their training,
since they were strictly state Thomas Heyward paid off i.n Mo­ no questions asked. You only was carrying and storing stores time sheet. It was made up, tal­
bile, Ala. Just a lousy grain had to have the oldest card.
—iree—all afternoon. That night, lied, and paid without any con­
projects.
carrying Liberty, tying up for
after
I had served slipper to sultation between you and the
No
begging,
pleading,
prostrate
NOT FOR POOR
repairs. That's what a lot of approach for a ship there. May­ the officers, I also worked get­ paymaster. If it was wrong, try
Although the tuition was free fellows thought.
be the Agent hated my face ting things arranged in the boxes and get it from the beach—^just
and paid for-by the state, liv­ But for me it was quite anoth­ when I threw in for the Hey­ —free.
try, the CS officers said.
ing expense, clothing, uniforms, er story. After four months on ward on April 4. If he did, he
In the SIU each man had his
In fact, overtime was one
books, etc. had to be paid for the Heyward, I was still para­ didn't show it. My card got that phrase you never used on the own overtime sheet checked
by the parents of the students. lyzed by the comparison be­ job for me fairly, squarely and Lone Jack. It always brought weekly by the Captain and the
This, then, precluded the possi­ tween it and another ship that I democratically.
long, cold stares and absolute
(Continued on Page 11)
bility of a poor boy, whose had lately left—the SS Lone
family had nck money, attending Jack, flagship of the infamous
these schopl ships. The result Cities Service fleet.
irS 10 OTLOCK—AND COFFEE TIME
was that the only type of student I joined the Lone Jack early
attending these schools was from in March in Philly, as a volun­
above average-wealth families. teer organizer for the SIU.
Although these schools were After. a long, horrible screen­
in existence for many years, ing I was awarded the job.
tbey could liot at any time in When I say awarded, I mean
their entire history, including just that. Dozens of fellows had
today, prove that more than 25 been waiting week after week,
percent of their graduates ever month after month, hoping and
stayed in the industry, and not praying that CS officials in New
even this percentage continued York would like their faces, po­
to go to sea.
litical outlooks, P.S. record, re­
Thus you can see that, for the ligious background and a dozen
most part, the training and edu­ other intimate little scraps of
cation was wasted, and the in­ infoNthat CS considers vital be­
dustry did not receive men who fore employing anyone.
really wanted to go to sea for
TOUGH LUCK
a livelihood and to stay in the
I'm
afraid
some of those men
profession.
may
still
be
sitting
there hoping
During the depression days of
the late twenties and thirties, for that job. Those were the
and almost up to the days of the onbs the CS secret service had
Neutrality Laws Jn 1939, it was discovered were, or once were.
impossible for a- graduate of a Union members or sympathizers.
school ship to get a job as an Believe mfe, it would have
officer, unless he- had spent a been far easier getting a job
couple ot years in the foc'sle as coimting the 1,000-dollar bills in
The Brothers in the above photo are observing a time honored Seafarers tradition — it's
an Oiler, Deck Engineer, AB or the mint than it was getting on
coffee
(and doughnut) time in the recreation room of the New York*HalL Despite the hot
Qusfrtermaster, even' though he a CS ship in March.
weather,
the steaming brew gets a big play every day at 10 AM and 3 PM.
I couldn't help but compare
bad a license.
By CAPT. WM. C. ASH, Vice-President
National Organization Masters, Mates &amp; Pilots, AFL

SIU Contrait Makes Difference, Says CS Vet

/

�Page Four

THE SEAFARERS

Mobile Shipping Holds Steady;
Coming Weeks Should Be Fair

LOG

UNION READING MATTER

FXUKT, Julp 22r 1949

In-Transits
San Francisco

By CAL TANNER
By JEFF MORRISON
MOBILE — Since our last re­ There was the usual amount
EAN FRANCISCO — With a
port, shipping has been keeping of disputed overtime, which is
majority of ships hitting this
up a steady pace. In addition to to be .expected in the case of
port in-transit taking on a few
the men shipped to vessels sign­ a newly-contracted company.
men, shipping turned out to be
ing on, we answered calls for We settled what we could here
fair for the past two weeks.
16 deepsea relief jobs and 37 and sent the rest to New York
Those responsible for supply­
for final settlement.
towboat relief jobs.
ing
the lift to local shipping
Out of the payoffs we lost
The prospects for the next two
were
the Isthmian ships Steel
weeks look pretty fair, with the four Liberties to the laid-up
Inventor,
Steel Vendor, Steel
major companies expecting sev­ fleet: the J. N. Teal, Thomas
Mariner,
Marquette
Victory; the
Hagood,
Irvin
Cobb
and
James
eral vessels to arrive.
Waterman vessels Purdue Vic­
Ships paying off for the two- Jackson.
tory, Choctaw, Twin Falls Vic­
In the last issue of the LOG
week period just ended were
tory,
Monroe Victory, and two
the Wacosta, J. N. Teal, Morn­ we reported that the SS Golden
Calmar
jobs, the Portmar and
ing Light, Noonday, Monarch City, skippered by Henry Bis­
Penmar.
of the Seas, Antinous, T. Ha- hop, has been all fouled up like
At the moment it appears as
good, Fairisle, DeSoto, Stone­ Grogan's goat.
though
shipping for' the next
Now we are happy to report
wall Jackson, all Waterman;
two
weeks
will be fairly good.
Clipper, Corsair, Planter, Alcoa; that the Union won all of its
Vessels
scheduled
to arrive here,
demands
in
this
beef
with
the
Irvin S. Cobb, South Atlantic,
either
for
payoff,
or in-transit
company
and
the
Skipper.
All
and the Camas Meadows, US
calls, are the Kenyon Victory,
logs were lifted and all other
Petroleum Carriers.
Steel Mariner, Steel Traveller,
Those signing on were the issues were settled in our favor
Maiden Victory, Young America,
Wacosta, bound for the Far East; and the Golden City signed on
Purdue Victoi-y, Oshkosh Victory
Corsair, headed for British West and sailed off.
and the Alamar.
While making the coast load­
Indies; Morning Light, sailing
for Puerto Rico; Noonday, des­ ing several of the Golden City
GETS SCORE
tined for Greece and Italy; Mon­ crew fouled up and were
This past week I called on
arch of the Seas, going to Puer­ promptly pulled off by the Un­
the local uneifiployment insur­
to Rico; Antinous, going on the ion when she came in here to
ance office to see what kind of
coastwise run; Planter and the top off. The Mobile Branch will
system is in effect here. The
Clipper, both heading for the not tolerate any goofing off or
imemployment agency has an of­
performing while in this port.
BWI.
fice on one of the piers here to
In addition to these vessels,
handle seamen's cases.
the Alcoa Roamer, Alcoa Rang­
I learned that California gives
er, Steel Ranger and Andrew
disability benefits, as well as
Jackson came in in-transit.
imemployment pay. This is no
Just off the press is the SIU's latest pamphlet in the series
All payoffs and sign-ons were
help to us, however, since the
of Union educational literature, "Food for Thought." a cover
smooth, with only minor beefs
disability benefits are paid to
reproduction of wluch appears above. The 30-page publication employees of companies regis­
coming up. These were soon
contains six articles on subjects that often are debated among tered in the State of California.
settled to the satisfaction of all
By BEN LAWSON
Seafarers asea and ashore.
concerned.
None 'of our contracted compan­
BOSTON — Beantown ship­
NEW SHIP
Now available at all Atlantic and Gulf District Branch ies is registered here.
The Camas Meadows, US Pet­ ping has been good during the
Halls, the pamphlet may be had upon request. "Food for
All of the^ ships coming in
roleum Carriers, had been out past couple of weeks, we're hap­
Thought" will make a good source of subject matter for
here
in the past two weeks
for 15 months and has only py to report.
educational discussions at shipboard meetings.
were
fairly clean. There was
about 10 of the original gang Our payoffs were aboard the
nothing
like a major beef. The
left aboard. This was the first Yarmouth, Eastern; Trinity, John
few
minor
ones we did have
time since the ship came under M. Carras, and the Anna Marie,
wer^
settled
in SlU fashion.
the SlU banner that she paid off Bull. The Trinity signed on
Oldtimers
on
the West Coast
again.
in this port.
at
this
writing
are
John (Ban­
In-transit was the Waterman
anas)
Zeireis,,
R.
Roales,
L. Gar­
ship Bessemer Victory. She
rett,
M.
Birrane,
M.
Wiilik,
C.
came in with a few beefs in
By JOE ALGINA
Cothran
and
C.
Mitchell.
the Deck Department, but these
NEW YORK — This port con­ carry on its work. One of the
were settled on board the ship
tinues
to roast, and there doesn't main things they will check into
before she left.
appear
to be any immediate is the intrusion of the Army
One very pleasant item we
By WILLIAM MCKAY
prospect
for a break in the heat and Navy into private shipping.
have to report this week is the
SEATTLE — West Coast ship­ fact that our boys aboard the spell—or in the shipping lull,
No SIU Crew is to pay off
A word on the assessment pro­
ping is slow and conditions in Yarmouth are proving them­ for that matter.
posal, which was adopted at the any ship until the crew's
this port are no exception. selves to be a bang-up crew.
quarters and equipment are
Ships are coming in, but ma:ny last regular meetings. A tenChances are that the trend will
as clean as any Seafarer likes
The Eastern Steamship Com­ of them are on the coastwise dollar bill may seem large at
continue.
to find a ship when he first
pany reports that the present run and do not scoop up large first, but we'll wager that' any
During the past week the SS bunch of Seafarers manning the numbers of men.
goes
aboard. Patrolmen have
guy with his feet on the ground
Demostar, Dolphin Steamship ship is the best they have ever
been instructed that the
Among those vessels paying will agree that it is a sound
Company, paid off here and then had on the cruise ship, at least off during the past two weeks move toward obtaining greater
crew's quarters niust be ab­
signed on again. Smith and in the past eight or nine years. were the Inez, Suzanne, Frances, benefits for seamen.
solutely clean before'a pay­
Johnson's Pontus H. Ross paid
off will, be allowed. Please
Helen, Bull Lines; Cape Mohi­
A considerable amount of the
NICE GOING
off but headed out for the bonecooperate with your officials
can, Mar Ancha; Evistar, Tri Union's effort to improve our
yard after that.
in carrying out this member­
It shows that our boys have ton; Colabee, American-Hawaii­ position is spent on the legis­
Several vessels called in-tran-. the know-how and are doing an; Steel Director, Isthmkin, and lative front, fighting in behalf
ship order.
sit. These were the Calmar ships their jobs in a manner that re­ the Chickasiaw, J. B. Waterman, of laws that give us greater
Penmar and Marymar, Water­ flects favorably on themselves Bessemer Victory, and Azalea security. A solid example of the
man's Choctaw and Purdue Vic­ and their Union. This kind of City, Waterman.
good work that is done along
tory, and Isthmian's Steel Mar­ performance pays off.
We're hoping ,to see business these lines is the unemployment
iner.
Among our Brothers on the pick up in this port before long. insurance we now have.
There are no gashounds out beach at the moment are Charlie
With Bull Lines' SS Puerto
JOBLESS PAY GAIN
here, as we don't allow them Moss, who is trying to get a Rico scheduled to begin her runs
By E. B. TILLEY
around the Hall. But occasion­ long trip. Previously he took the soon the prospects appear bright­
Until a couple of. years ago,
ally one pops up on board the Irvin S. Cobb to Mobile, but er. And there's a good chance seamen didn't get a red cent
WILMINGTON — Shipping '
ships coming in. We can remove the ship laid up. Charlie gets that we may see the Bernstein when they were out of work. has been on the quiet side^ in
these men from intercoastals, his old number back because Shipping Company around soon. The law .excluded them from this West Coast port, with most
but on the ships outbound for the ship laicLup within less than This is the outfit that is trying the benefits of jobless pay. But of the activity confined to ships .
Europe, we can't always replace the 15 days.
to put two passenger ships on the Union's five-year battle to calling in-transit.
them.
In contrast to the way the the European run.
Most of the men aboard stick
win eligibility was successful,
This has been said time and lads on the Yarmouth have been
and now all hands are entitled to these ships, which have been
PROBE MAY . HELP .
again, but it bears repeating: doing their jobs, is the perform­
to unemployment benefits when coming in without any big beefs.
Gashounds are a detriment to ance of a Deck man on one of
There are enough men on the It may be that the full inves­ they do not have jobs.
the membership and the organ­ the ships that called here in- tigation of the maritime industry
A drop in income naturally beach to take care of any im­
ization. They only impede the transit.
soon to be resumed by a Senate means that the Union cannot mediate needs this port m.ay
progress of the Union. Certainly
This man has been placed on subcommittee may result in the continue to push all its activities have in the near future.
they can do our organizing charges because he had been strengthening of the US mer­ as it did during more prosperous
A payoff is scheduled for early'
drives no good.
gassing up on the ship and had chant marine. The committee's times.
next month, when one of the
There is nothing funny about been running around issuing or­ chairman. Senator Magnuson, But we think that the fight Isthmian ships comes in off the
a guy, no matter how nice a ders like Hitler used to. The had made it clear that his group must be kept up against those pipe run.
soul he might be otherwise, Union membership is stamping is aiming at a stronger position who seek to harness seamen
Better than shipping out here
whose gassing up hurts our out this kind of stuff, whether for this country's, fleet.
who will sponsor legislation to is the weather. This is one place
chances of making a decent liv- the performers have new books The committee has received with raw laws, and to back those where you' don't have to go to
"igI or old books.
bed with a fan in your hand.
an appropriation of $50,000 to better our conditions.

4^'«|S^TIM6LV ONIONTOPICS
»=BOM ^fMRERS LO© •
official
S.I.U.. AHonKc^&amp;itP
Pien^• AmarMon fitdcmKon op U«l&gt;or•

Boston Pleased
With Shipping

Seattle Shipping
Is No Exception

New York Weather Is Really Hot,
But Shipping Cools Seafarers

Notice To Crews

Port Wlfmlngtoii
Is Quiet But Cool

�i f&gt;ida7. ;uly

THE

1949

SEAFARERS

Page FiT»-

LOG

QUESTION: To what factors do you attribute the tremendous gains made by the
Seafarers' Atlantic and'Gulf District in the recent years?
&lt; jiEEteB.

, j

III
,'I
iSiSp'sssii

''

'

•

A. J. (Hank) SWARTJES. AB:

JAMES F. BARRETT. AB:

HERMAN CHRISTENSEN. AB:

Our Union is a democratic
Union that is interested solely
in improving the status of its
membership. Ho other issues con­
fuse our membership, as has
happened in other maritime or­
ganizations. Our full strength is
used for the one main purpose.
In keeping with the democratic
^inciples. our men have the opT^tunity to speak their piece
at the meetings and get their
point across in the SEAFARERS
LOG. Another thing, if a man
has a beef or troubles. I have
found that he is treated cour­
teously. I have been going to
aea for 30 years, including time
on the Lakes. The five years I
have been a member of the SIU
have been the best.

OLGERDA BLUES. Oiler:
Several things are responsible
for the gains made by our or­
ganization. In the past few years
our membership has been get­
ting the benefits of good Union
education programs ashore and at
regular shipboard meetings at
which all issues are discussed
fully. As a result they know the
score on seamen's problems. All
this means that the members
know what's going on and are
prepared to strengthen their Un­
ion whenever the need arises.
Besides being well-informed.
Seafarers are given satisfactory
representation, and a satisfied
membership is ona that is best
able to move ahead under all
conditions.
,

One of the most important rea­
sons for the success of our Union
is that we have an organizing
department that is on the balL
This is most important because,
while shipping has declined and
most maritime unions have been
hud hit. we have suffered least
of alL Our organizers have gone
ahead steadily organizing new
companies and bringing in new
jobs. The men who have served
as volunteer organizers also
should be mentioned, because by
their sacrifices they have helped
bring more ships under the SIU
banner. However, despite our
gains, we must still push ahead,
because a Union that stops ad­
vancing is inviting disaster.

The fact that the membership
has the strong voice. All issues
affecting the general welfare are
discussed freely before any ac­
tion is taken. The Union consist­
ently urges all members to ex­
ercise their right to vote in every
balloting. We have moved ahead,
too, because of a good educa­
tional program. Educational
meetings and literature have
helped our organizing drive.
They have also helped our mem­
bers understand their rights and
obligations so that, when they
go aboard ship, they are good,
conscientious Union men. able to
solve many shipboard problems
at meetings £it sea.

I think that one of the main
reasons why the A&amp;G District
has been able to make such big
gains is that it is made up of
a membership that is more unit­
ed than that of any other water­
front union. Our Brothers have
shown that, whenever there is
any problem that concerns the
welfare and power of the Un­
ion, they can put aside the minor
things and act as one for the
interests of all. In all of our
beefs to improve the seamen'h
lot. in our organizing drives, our
men have always gone all-out.
And — very important, too —
the Union has always been prer
pared financially to tackle any

PADDY McCANN. Baker:

DUKE O'CONNOR. OS:

EDWARD SAUL. FWT:

JOHNNY ANDERSON, Ch. Ck.;

PETER THOMSON. FWT;
I think the A&amp;G District has
accomplished a lot because it is
run ai an efficient organization,
with the membership having a
voice in the making of policy
and setting up programs. Our
Brothers have shown that they
recognize a problem and cam apt
on it wisely. For example, when
they decided to build up our
Strike Fund, they enabled our
Negotiating Committee to batgain more effectively. This is
the kind of foresight that has
gabled our Union to tackle each
of its problems, and which' proves
fhaf our membership i s way
ahiiifi of those in other unions.

All in all. I think the fact
that the SIU membership has
not had to deal with, any" outside
issues, but only with the things
that finally affect their economic
status, is the big reason for us
pushing ahead the way we have
in the past few years. This is e
credit to the officials of the Un­
ion. who have kept us on the
right course, and to the mem­
bership, which has shown that
it wants the organization to keep
on advancing in their interest.
I believe that you will find a
uniop, like any other organiza­
tion. gets out ahead when those
in it believe in it. Thai's the
way it is in the SIU.

I would say that the Union
has gone forward because the
officials have been on the ball
in sizing up the problems that
lie ahead. Another reason is that
our Union has always been out
for the membership and is work­
ing all the time for its benefit.
A lot of credit must also go to
the members themselves, who
are good loyal Union guys,
ways ready to cooperate with
each other when the general
welfare is involved. When you
have the combination of efficient
Union officials and an alert mem­
bership it's not bard to make
big gains.

I think we have made such
great advances because our Un­
ion has a clear-cut program and
has always been able to plan
ahead to handle any problem
that may arise effecting the wel­
fare and security of the mem­
bership. And the membership has
participated in the making of
policy, because issues are not
voted on blindly but are dis­
cussed pro and con at meetings
and in the LOG long enough for
all hands to learn the score and
decide. Our organizing drives
continue to succeed because non­
union seamen see how effective
the SIU is. and naturally turn
to the organization which is best
equipped and best prepared to
do something for them.

I believe that the great gains
we have made put our Union
in the position of being the
strongest one on the waterfront.
As I see it. this is because the
SIU membership is a satisfied
membership. One of the reasons
for the membership's satisfaction
with their Union is that they
get the best representation. At
every payoff SIU Patrolmen are
on hand to see that all beefs are
squared away, and that our
agreements are lived up to by
the companies. And we have a
record of settling beefs that I've
never seen equalled in all the
years I've been sailing since
1910.

CHARLES ROMAINE. FWT:

Sob.

,

,

�THE

Page Six

SEAFARERS

Friday. July 22. 1949

LOG

SBIPS' MINUTES AND NEWS
Fails To Disturb
Long Haul To Citizenship Ended, Breakdown
Smooth Voyage Of Southstar Member Bids Aliens "fake His Tack
It was smooth sailing for the Seafarers crew of the
SS Southstar on the voyage which wound up in New
York on June 26. Even a breakdown outside Gibraltar on

An eight-year campaign by Finnish-born Seafarer Thomas Sheerburne
for American citizenship was climaxed last month when he took the oath of
June 2, necessitating a 10-day9'
allegiance to this country, the result of accumulating five years of seatime layover
on Oran for repairs, day in Istanbul and Brother
on American Ships, more than half of which he logged during the war days. failed to dampen the crew's Queen recommended that crew­
Known to his shipmates in the
SIU as Thomas Sjoblom, he
dropped his Nordic surname dur­
ing the naturalization process in
favor of Sheerburne, a name he
feels his Union Brothers will
find easier to pronounce.
The 35-year-old Brother's long
voyage toward citizenship began
in 1941 when he came to this
country from Finland and be­
gan sailing American ships. He
sailed regularly during the war
years. His precious pile of dis­
charges grew steadily until the
postwar slack came in shipping,
a slowdown which hit aliens hard
because of government restric­
tions limiting their jobs and pro­
hibiting certain runs.
MAKES IT
Sheerburne, however, kept
plugging, and by November of
last year he had completed his
seatime requirements. He filed
the necessary papers and waited
for Uncle Sam to call him in
for the final okay. But one last
twist of fate kept him from his
goal temporarily.
'Having received no word from
the government by January he
decided to make another trip.
The holder of all deck depart­
ment ratings, he signed aboard
the Atlanta City in New York.
The ship was ready to leave
when he got a telephone call
ifrom his sister telling him that
a letter requesting liim to ap­
pear for final processing had ar­
rived.
FATE'S TRICK
He was stuck on the ship and
could do nothing about it. The
articles had been signed. He bit
his lip and made the trip, a sixmonths jaunt to the Far East.
"That ship dawdled all over the
Orient. I never thought she'd
get back home," he said.
She made it, however. Back in
New York in early June he hur­
ried to the Immigration offices,
and on the 20th he was granted
citizenship.
NOT HARD
When -asked about the final
details of winning citizenship,
Sheerburne said it was not hard.
Once he had his seatime accu­
mulated the rest came with little

Send Those Minutes
Send in the minutes of
your ship's meeting to the
New York HaU. Only in that
way can the membership act
on your recommendatioxis.
and then the minutes can be
printed in the LOG for the
benefit of all other SIU
crews.
Hold those shipboard meet­
ings regularly, and send
those minutes in as sdon as
possible. That's the SIU wayl

Thomas Sheerburne looks fondly at his citizenship papers.
trouble. Other alien seamen con­
cerned with the processes of ci­
tizenship need not worry about
the examinations or red tape, he
stated. "The bundle of discharges
speaks for itself."
With citizenship won Sheer­
burne isn't entertaining any
plans to retire from the sea. He
intends to keep right on sailing
in the SIU, which he joined
in 1945. In addition to the many
rights American citizenship gives
a person, Sheerburne will not
have to worry any longer about
restricted crews and prohibited
voyages. He can make them all
now.
Secure in the knowledge that

he no longer has to worry about
such things as the extension of
the alien seamen waiver. Broth­
er Sheerburne passed along-a
bit of advice to other alien
members of the SIU. He reccommended that they heed the
Union's repeated urging that all
alien members who are eligible
take immediate steps to obtain
their US citizenship. He agreed
with the Union contention that
this is the only way aliens could
insure themselves against the
effects of the waiver's expir­
ation.
Sheerburne makes his home at
25 Willowbrook Court, Staten
Island, New York,

'Battle Of Wall St.' Shown
On Seatrain Ship's Screen
Probably the most popular
crewmember aboard the coast­
wise Seatrain New Jersey is
Quartermaster Robert Lester, the
owner and operator of a 16mm
movie projector, with which
for over a year he has been en­
tertaining crews with the latest
Hollywood celluloid creations.
Slated for showing during the
ship's current run to Gulf ports
is the SIU film "Battle of Wall
Street." Reading in the LOG
that the film was being made
available to crews and organ­
izations for the cost price of $40,
Lester visited SIU headquarters
recently and purchased the
film. Although he usually rents
films, for which the crew chips
in to cover the cost, Lester pur­
chased the SIU film out of his
own funds. "It's a film we can
always use as part of our ed­
ucational set-up," he comment­
ed.

When asked, what sort of films
the crew liked best, Lester list­
ed westerns as first, with mus­
icals' rating a close second.
Unfortunately with summer
coming on the movie goers are
forced to forego seeing fulllength features because of the
heat inside. The heavy load of
deck cargo makes it impossible
for the films to be shown on
deck. For the summer months
the crew will take its movies
in small doses, sticking to sportsreels and short subjects.
An old hand at showing films,
Brother Lester is also an ac­
complished cameraman. In his
days aboard the New Jersey he
has shot several, himdred feet
of the vessel being loaded and
unloaded and the crew at work
in and out of port.
An oldtimer in the SIU, Bro­
ther Lester makes his home in
New York.

spirits, according to Ray Queen, men visiting the Turkish port,
AB, who served as Ship's Dele­ Trieste and Genoa should not
forget to bring their cameras
gate.
along.
He said the atmosphere
The Southstar, a C-2, left New
in
these
places was friendly and
York on April 20 loaded .with
that
there
were a considerable
EGA general cargo for Mediter­
number
of
beautiful buildings
ranean, African and Near East
ports, with Genoa, Italy, as the whose architecture the cameraminded would find challenging.
first stop.
TOPSIDE COOPERATED
From the Italian port, the
South • Atlantic Steamship Com­
Queen said that a share of
pany ship, under charter to the credit for the success of the
Prudential Steamship Corpora­ voyage should go the Southstar's
tion, continued her itinerary, Skipper, Captain Albert (Buttwhich included Triest«*»^ Piraeus, sie) Haman. Haman is tough,
Algiers, Beirut, Istanbul and Is- but fair and considerate, the
kenderun as ports of call.
Southstar's Ship's Delegate
pointed
out.
SHAFT DAMAGED
"He doesn't stand for any fool­
A damaged stern shaft caused
ishness but he can be counted
the breakdown off Gibraltar, as on to give the crew a square
the ship was homeward bound. break," Queen said of the Skip­
She returned to Gibraltar for per. He added that Capt. Hadamage appraisal. From the
mari's handling of draws was
Rock, the Southstar was towed especially noteworthy.
to Oran, where she entered dryThe only hitch in the entire
dock for temporary repairs. The trip, according to Brother Queen,
shaft was repacked and the was that the stores were poor.
Southstar resumed her course to
But he hastened to explain that
New York and the payoff.
Steward Walsh did everything
Queen said that the lads possible to overcome this short­
aboard the Southstar found the coming.
Mediterranean run "lots of fun." Even the sun shone on the
They got a chance to see many Southstar. And good weather.
places that are not ordinarily in­ Queen concluded, can do an
cluded in a ship's stopovers. •
awful lot to help make good
Photography fiends had a field sailing.

'The Voice Of The Sea'
By SALTY DICK
The reason Johnnie Tonazzi is
sore, is because he was chased
out of Cities Service's employ­
ment office by the dispatcher.
Pretty soon things will be dif­
ferent over there
The first
man in the SIU to have his pic­
ture placed in his union book is
Santos Garcia. I believe this is
a " good idea
Andrez Perez,
after three months on the beach,
is ready to go south on a short
trip.
Every ship should have bound
volumes of the LOG in its
library. ' The ship's delegate
should contact the crew on this
matter and get copies from
Headquarters
If you are on
the beach as an out-patient, in­
quire about compensation. If
you're on the beach longer than
the prescribed time allowed you
by the marine hosj)ital (90
days) you may be able to re­
ceive aid if you can prove ship­
ping is slow and it's not your
fault.
Tomas Mercado has been
feeling pretty well and is now
ready to ship. He's the chap
who was operated on in Pert
Elizabeth for appendicitis....
Mike Rossi,- after 12 days in
the marine hospital, 8tates.,.ihe
treatments were very satis­
factory, but he can't say the
same for the chow.

Who's the fellow who is wear­
ing eight wrist watches and can't
sell any?... I believe all Stew­
ards should have at least six
months discharges as Chief
Cook before they can ship out
as Steward
What official is
saving miniature whiskey bottles
as a hobby?
Tex Suit is looking well and
bragging about the Colabee be­
ing a good feeder. He's gained
over ten pounds
I hear the
Greeley Victory is one of the
best ships afloat. The crew gets
along well and there are never
any beefs, except those served
at chow time
I'm not being
a wise guy when I say this, but
there are left handed and right
handed cigars. I can tell the
difference with one look.
Brother Alfred Boijer just
got back from a round-theworld trip and he's a little sad.
He claims he liked Bangkok
better than any other port.
...I understand that Pennsyl­
vania does not recognize
Louisiana'driving licenses and
vice versa.
Who's the fellow who wants
to operate a concession in Coney
Island? He has the idea but is
short on cash. Speaking of
Coney, that's where you'll find
me from now on this summer.

�FMday. July 22. 1949

T ^ E SEAFARERS

LOG

Digested Minutes -Of SlU Ship Meetings

Page Seven

SfeafeiEr&amp;jn saijSi v

DANIEL H. LOWNSDALE
Secretary. All department dele­
April 3—Duke Livingston, Chair
gates reported everything okay.
man; R. Guild, Secretary. Dele­
Motion by Brother Kelpss, sec­
gates reported small amounts of
onded by Kavanaugh that there
disputed overtime in their de­
shall be no. reliefs unless they
partments. Old Business: Letters
come through the US Consul oi'
were written to Congressmen in
the Agent. Under Good and Wel­
reference to Hoffman Plan. Gooc
fare, Brother Maher said that
and Welfare: Suggestions made
early in the trip a motion jyas
concerning chow and turned over
made to encourage Unionisrrf
to Steward. One minute of
among our alien members and
silence observed for departed
he added they have dohe a good
Brothers.''
"
job. Suggested that crew give
vote of thanks to all the dele­
ft t 4.
STEEL VOYAGER, April 17—
gates for the good work they
John Cannan, Chairman; Earl R.
have done on this trip. One min­
Gelnaw, Secretary. Delegates re­ motion (by Joseph Ciuro, sec­ ute of silence in memory of de­
ported no beefs. New Business: onded by Anthony Pedicini) to parted Brothers.
Stockmarr moved that galley have Purser give, prior to pay­
stove be fixed and tbaster be put off, each individual an itemized DEL MApf April^ 24—J. Tuckon repair list. Good and Welfare: account of their slops and draws er. Chairman; F. Sintich, Secre­
Suggestion made to have meet­ and a copy of the overtime which tary. Departmental delegates
ings every two weeks and al­ is approved by the company's gave their reports. Treasurer re­
representatives. Union
ternate the hour, bne minute of s h o
ported that at end of trip there
agreement
was discussed fully.
silence for departed Brothers.
was $8.73' in the ship's fund and
Suggested that all hands stay on that he collected $11, making a
the alert at the payoff and con­
total of $19.73 now on hand. Mo­
duct themselves in an orderly tion carried to elect new Ship's
SIU manner.
Delegate. Brother Scoper elected
ft ft ft
by acclamation. All hands stood
STEEL KING, April 13—E. L. in silence for one piinute in
Eriksen, Chairman; V. A. Cover,
memory of our departed
Secretary. Motion by J. Costello.
Brothers. There was much dis­
seconded by- W. Evanj^f, that
ft ft ,ft '
cussion on the air-conditioning
CAPE NOME, AprU 29 — Ship's Delegate write to Head­ of the ship.
Charles Thompson, Chairman; quarters in regard to safety
James Boyles, Secretary. Steward meetings. It was moved (by C.
reported complaints on chow/nd Kellogg, seconded by H. Kelly)
By HANK
promised a change. Discussion on and carried that letter be • sent
the ability of the Chief Cook. to Headquarters and to the com­
There's no forgetting the Brothers aboard Isthmian's Allegheny
Each department polled on feel­ pany in regard -to carrying of
which sailed about three weeks ago for a lengthy voyaga Tfierc's
ing toward Cook's ability. Mo­ monkeys as cargo without pen­
Red Beers from the West Coast, who talked about the gourmctic
tion carried that Cook remain in alty. If they are to be carried
importance of seasoning "ice-boxed" shipboard food. And there's
galley. One minute of silence for again aboard this ship, a special
ft ft ft
Bill Ayres, the professional musician, who does a fine job with
place aft should be provided for ROBIN LOCKSLEY, April 3— an accordian (although we doubt if he struggles to carry one
Brothers lost at sea.
them. A vote of thanks was Leslqr J. Keyes, Chairman: aboard ship) and a better job with a good old "hambone"—in other
ft ft ft
James J. De'Vito, Secretary. Mo­ words, a guitar. Johnny Parsons is aboard, and he comes from that
ROBIN MOWBRAY, AprU II given to the four delegates. ,
tion carried to add repairs not good old baseball country of BrocJclyn. Sure enough, there's Jim­
i—Vlodek, Chairman; Albert Momade on last trip to list being my Naylor—who keeps playing that record called Georgia On My
sher. Secretary. Deck Delegate
drawn up for this voyage. Dele­ Mind by singer Frankie Laine in the juke-box. Last, but not least,
reported a few hours of disputed
gates reported on activity in there's Tex BoiUin who confessed that the ship should have stayed
overtime, as did the Engine Dele­
their departments, Peter Patrick in his hometown port, Houston, Texas, longer than she has on
gate. Stewards Delegate reported
elected Ship's Delegate by accla­ occasions. Well, fellas, happy sailing, indeed . . . Brother Eddie
everything okay. A vote of
mation. Brother DeVito discussed McNamar shipped about three weeks ago, but it slips our mind
thanks was given the Stewards
unemployment insurance and ad­ what the name of the scow is. Next ship will be better, Eddie—
Department for the excellent food
vised. Brothers that the sooner we'll mention the name, we hope.
prepared and served during the
they apply for it after getting
voyage. Motion carried to elect
ft ft ft
off ship the sooner they will be­
Donate Giangiordano to take re­
Buddy Benson sailed aboard the Oshkosh Victory. Buddy,
SOUTHLANDf
April
24
—
A1
gin receiving benefits. Steward
pair list and minutes of meet­
who'll talk about anything from infinity, rocket ships, gastricing to SIU Hall. One minute of Jones, Chairman; Leon Baker, sdid he would accept soiled lin­
juices, astronomy and spaghetti, says that lots of the Brothers
silence for Brothers lost at sea. Secretary. No beefs except one en at 9 AM and 1 PM, and at
have
heard or visited that famous place in San Francisco for
in the deck department which later hours convenient to men
excellent
Italian food—called Pinocchio's . . . We wish smoot.h
ANNA DICKmSON, April 10 is to be referred to Patrolman on watch., Three departments are recovery to Brother Cecil Lewis, who is down in Virginia right
•—Muches, Chairman; E. Bill Ray, upon arrival in port. Alexander to_ alternate in cleaning laundry
now . . . The C. "See" Mae restaurant and bar down in New
Secretary. Delegates reported no Jones was elected Ship's Dele­ with Engine Department to be­
Orleans has been recommended by the Bosun of the SS An­
gate
by
acclamation.
Delegate
gin, followed by Steward and
disputes. Biehl - elected Ship's
drew
Jackson to receive a bundle of LOGS. Good enough—and
Delegate. Motion carried to in­ was requested to get in touch Deck in that order.
you
Brothers
can pick up your copies, if ever down that way.
vestigate background of man with Captain about purchasing
.
.
.
Brother
Peter
Brownley, citizen of Florida, may still be in
who joined the ship in 'Cuba. union-made goods for slopchest.
town
since
we
noticed
him several weeks ago.
Good and Welfare: Blackboard Three crewmen volunteered to
ft ft ft
get estimate on cost of washing
to be erected in messhall.
We hear there's a record, out some time now, a Western num­
machine and installation. Crew
ber about a crew leaving a Texas port on a tanker. Sounds good,
discussed possibilities of getting
too
. . . The SEAFARERS LOG wiU be traveling to the homes of
new library. One minute of si­ FRANCES,^ May *15—B. Good­
the
following Brothers—Robert Kennedy of Indiana, William Tar­
lence in memory of departed man, Chairman; S. Carr, Secre­
rant
of Oklahoma, Robert Butler of Louisiana, Christopher Karas
Brothers.
tary. Previous minutes read and
of
Massachusetts,
Richard McManus of California, M. Harvey of
Delegates reports were given and
PETROLITE, \pril 16—M. R. accepted. Motion by Peter Viroel Florida, William McCarthy of Massachusetts, Philip Brooks of
ROBIN GOODF^LLOW, April Shea. Chairman; R. C. Bishop, to have Stewards Department Louisiana, Albert Weber of New Jersey, Charles Swain of Georgia,
20 — Bernard Macey, Chairman;
showers and head painted was Harold Lawrence of Florida, Donald Thornton of Maryland, Philip
Mike Zelonka, Secretary. Except
carried. One minute of silence Colca of Mississippi, Jerome Stokes of New York, Jack Walker of
for disputed overtime, there were
in memory of departed Brothers. Washington, George Lukach of Connecticut, Max Bielwaski of
New York and Howard Van Bushkirk of New Jersey.
no beefs in any of the depart­
ft ft ft
ments. Motion by Henry Shepeta,
All delegates aboard SIU
CHILORE,*May *i7 — C. PenWho was and who is in town—Well, there was good old
seconded by Christopher Karas, ships are urged to make cer­
ner. Chairman; R. Burns, Secre­
to have Patrolmen- investigate tain that every ship is fully
tary. Vote of thanks given to "Pegleg" Andy Anderson who sailed in and sailed out real
quick. Smooth voyage, Andy . . . Robert Quinn, the tall oldreasons for men having to pay manned before it leaves port. Steward and Cooks for the fine
timer. is in town . . . Most of the crew off the SS Michael,
for penicillin. Under Education,
If the company tries to vio­
way in which chow was pre­
a
tanker, are in town since she has been laid up. There's Bosun '
Union activities were discussed late the contract manning
pared and served, especially for
Roddy
Smith and his cigars. Brother Richard Hanks, the
in order to familiarize member­ scale by sailing short, the
making the most of the stores
Steward,
bailed out of our town, for the coast, via airplane.
ship with organization. Suggested ship's delegate should call
they had to work with. Under
The
crew
has said he's tops in belly-feeding. "Chuck," the
that all departments have their the nearest Union Hall im­
Good and Welfare there was dis­
Electrician,
is in town and sure glad to see his shipmates of
repair lists ready. Also suggested
mediately.
cussion on matter- of crewmemthe SS Michael... Brothers, read those back issues of your
that Patrolman investigate ship
The Union will lake im­
bers naming their own working
chandler's attitude.
mediate action to see that
rules with officers. This is def­ LOG. Read all the booklets the Union has printed for your
our agreements are observed
initely against Union principles complete benefit and understanding. A new booklet contain­
ROBIN GOODF^LOW, April
to the letter as it does and the agreement. Quartermas­ ing the registration rules, the shipping rules and the trans­
portation rule, as they are today, is of great importance to
4—Tony Suarez, Chairman; Mike whenever violations are re­ ter on the four to eight is to be
every Brother. It's called "Shipping Guide for Seafarers" and
Zelonka, Secretary^ Motion (by
ported. .
notified by tbe delegate to work
Oscar Kelepe, seconded by Hank
Know your contract and
only between 4 ^M and 5 PM. should be read and reread by every Brother sailing into port
Shepeta) carried to install a
report all violations to the
After one minute of silence in. or sailing out for the seven seas... Brothers, hold those meet­
buzzer in the messroom for the Union right away.
memory of Brothers lost at sea, ings aboard ship. Keep your jobs shipshape, according to the
agreement: SIU ships are clean and happy.
Standby watch. Also carried was
meeting adjourned at 6:50 PM.

The iMearOrleans resolutibitTQr aii
Oenefal P^OIKI Assessment
comes before the Br^nclrmeefcit^
fovihe second,
dkS per coaon Jbly 2y, and iP
passed
goes to
a. reforendLiiti vote
oC -the membership.

CUT and RUN

Sailing Short

�Page Eight

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, July 22, 1949

THE MEMBERSHIP SPEAKS
# -

Seafarer Slaps At Homesteading,
Favors Annual Vacation Proposal

ON THE POLARIS IN MARACAIBO

issue of "the Union is supposed acters who are actually afraid
to get off their homesteads as
, "Seaman" is a word which to give us job security." Sure, they're in doubt that they could
the
Union
stands
for
job
secur­
means man-of-the-sea.
If you
ever hold down another job.
are going to sail, be a man. The ity, but what is this thing? It is I've seen and known men on
p'feamble to. our constitution a secure guarantee that your job passenger, coastwise and near­
states, "We hold that the above will not be jeopardized by, the by foreign runs who were afraid
machinations of the boss owners of off-shore dry cargo carriers.
rights belong to all seamen
nor their stooges, the company's I therefore urge all fair
alike;v We do not hold that fair-haired boys. It is not a minded union men to help to
matters that affect the welfare guarantee that a handful of dues pass Mobile's excellent resolu­
of the Union sHould be placed payers shall monopolize jobs tion.
'
when their Brothers lie icffy on
G. W. (Bill) Champlin
in abeyance to other interests.
the beach carrying more than
We. . know that individual their share of the burden of
members, unable to claim legal Union duties.
defendants, may, and frequently
FULL RESPONSIBILITY
db^ have moral financial obliga­
Most men know what I mean,
tions to discharge, equal to the but to leave no careless loopother's legal "ones.
hope of escape, let me expatiate.
The
man on the beach pays all
. Therefore, to set up a claim to
dues
and assessments for job se­ To the Editor:
the • exclusive right to ride
curity, though he has no job at I am a member of Local 257,
ships in perpetuity "because 1 the moment. He stands subject
have a wife and kids" « baloney. to picket duty, and volunteer National Federation of Post Of­
fice Clerks, AFL. I've received
Here are some of the men of the Alcoa ship's Stewards
, Anbther stunt that these mem­ committee work; he must attend your paper, the SEAFARERS
Department
u they were photographed by Sir Charles as the
bers pull is to raise the false meetings, and may have to end LOG, sevjeral times and have
vessel
lay
alongside
the dock in the Venezuelan port. The
up taking a job below his rat­ read the stories lulling of your
photographer
said
the
boys fed well.
ing, perhaps on an unorganized Union's struggles.
ship.
I enclose a donation and ask
The homesteader has eaten that the LOG be sent to me reg­
extra well or he wouldn't have ularly. Your Union has been
homesteaded that particular much in the news lately and I
ship. Certainly the man on the should like to read your side of,
To the Editor:
ity for some member of our
beach has drawn no pay. As the story.
one on the beach at the time,
Fred Godzwon
I have a house and some prop­ Union to get a bargain, if he
To the Editor:
devoted quite a number of days
erty for sale that is an opportun- wishes to make his home in
Syracuse. N.Y.
Florida—near • Daytona Beach.I would like to have the LOG to a Union economic survey
Here is what is for sale:
sent to my home in New York. voluntarily, without even lunch
A fine rest camp, facing on
It!s .my sister's home where I money.
two roads and located on 35
get my mail while in the big I was astounded to discover
acres of high land with plenty
city.
how very many men on the
of shade trees. The camp consists
I sympathize with Brother beach were married with de­
of two five-room houses, one
Flynn on his voyage aboard the pendent minor children.
made of cement block, one an;
old rustpot, Colabee (LOG, May At about the same time I was
old frame house. Both are light-,
20)/1 sailed her before the war serving as a member of the bal­
ed by electricity and are com­
and during the war. Oldtimers loting committee on the trans­
pletely furnished and ready for
caii tell you of the time we portation rule. There I was
immediate occupancy.
hung the hook on that ship amazed at the number of men
A 1937 Pontiac car in good
and made the company enlarge who were holding good paying,
running condition for transpor­
the shaft alley escape. It had good feeding coastwise and pas­
tation goes with the deal, along
By Benno Zielinski
been a violation of maritime law. senger-ship jobs, and had been
with a new washing machine,
By the way, the Colabee is not doing so for over a year, most
electric refrigerator, new bath-.In a little yllage in the country somewhere
a Hog Island ship. (Ed. Note; of whom came to vote for Rule
room and kitchen fixtures,
I met a cute girl, blue eyes and fair hair;
Brother Buckley is right, but No. 2.
screens, tools and more.
just what label can be given This is a dead issue. Why
On first sight something then told me
There are three ^eep wells,
the Colabee is hard to say. She bring it up? Because these men
one
120 feet deep for an electric
This is .the girl for whom I have yearned.
resembles a Hog, though not will be the very ones to rise up
pump and two wells 40 feet
-built at Hog Island, but in Ports­ to defeat Mobile's excellent res­
deep, one with a hand pump.
Over the years, sweetheart, early in the spring,
mouth, New Hampshire, in 1920 olution of recent date.
Plumbing fixtures are ready for
When in the forest the birds do sing.
by the Atlantic Corporation and This resolution is to the effect
installation.
later converted in the Sun ship­ that men due vacations must
And beneath the hills violets blossom,
HOME FOR YEARS
yards to a bulk carrier. The pile off and take a vacation. It
That's when I'll see you again.
The owner of this property,
American Bureau of Shipping is little enough to ask of these
has lived on it for years during,
lists her simply as a "coaster.") job monopolists that they give
It was early in the month of May,
the time he has not been out
the
guy
on
the
beach
a
chance
at
sea. It is ideal as either a
HIGH AND DRY
She told me—she trembled that day^—
at 'two weeks' work and eats,
vacation spot, or for a seaman
When the Colabee was under after they have held a Union se­
She loved a sailor who never came back
who wishes to spend his later
charter to Alcoa her Captain was cured job for a whole year. Let
years in - comfortable, spacious
And she could never love a seaman again.
"Shallow Water" Scofield, who them not then raise the false is­
surroimdings.
gained that reputation because sue of Union security, and if
Ove!r the years, sweetheart, early in the spring.
There is good hunting in. the
. he went aground so many times. one of them should do so, don't
area,
as well as fishing. And the
When in the forest the birds do sing.
The Colabee is one of those old be fooled by it.
swimming beach is not far away.
And beneath the hills violets blossom.
slow, but sure rustpots.
The property is ^taxable at $8
JOB IS THERE
The ship I'm on now, the Seaper year, if used as a home. It
That's when I'll see you again.
train New York, is a good job, His job is not being taken
is located seven miles southwest
In a little village we sat under a maple tree
a! regular crew, and has Stew­ away from him, he can go back
of Daytona Beach, and is four
to it at the end of his vacation.
ard Joseph Malone.
hours by car from Tampa, five
I kissed her rosy lips, held her close to me;
hours from Savannah, two hours
The Brother who signs his There is another objectionable
Then left all my sorrows of what will be tomorrow from Jacksonville, and five
letters. Wandering Seafarer, puts aspect to these homesteaders.
When I was with my little Marie.
hours from Miami.
oqt some interesting reading. He After, a year or more aboard,
they
begin
to
think
they
own
The price complete for this
has plenty jon .the ball.
Over the years,^ sweetheart, early in the spring,
the ship, and, through controlled
bargain
is $3,000 cash.
Looks like I'm getting to be ship's meetings, they may try
Olio
P. Preussler
When
in
the
forest
the
birds
do
sing.
a
car sailor, I've h^n on to put over special regulations
P.O. Box 1026
this ship iBor a mpnth now.
And beneath the hills violets blossom.
that are not in conformity with
Memorial Park
. Joseph Buckley Union policy, I have seen charThat's when I'll see you again.
Port Orange, Fla.
To the Editor:

AFL Postal Clerk
Enjoys Log Items
Of SIU's Feats

SS Colabee Vet
Recalls Rougher
Days On 'Coaster'

Member's Florida Property
For Sale; Price Is $3,000

The Girl From The Village

y

�MttSW

Friday. July 22, 1949

ALOBA TO HAWAII

iiiiiiiiii

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Nine '

With Tears In Their Eyes Seatrader Men
Bid Fond Adieu To Buenaventura And Ship

like some Congressmen in Wash­ along, or know the score, you
ington, who do not give up their are liable to pay double for
Once again the MV Sea Trader business while in Congress, but everything. After all, you arc 9
is about to set sail for the port carry it on to assist their feUow rich American.
of Shangri La, or Buenaventura, colleagues. Sir Charles has his The perfumes, powders,
Colombia. The whistle blows, own slopchest aboard, namely, colognes are only imitations. Be
the lines are up, the tug takes if you need a needle and thread, careful in buying perfumes. Al­
us to the open sea.
he has it. Chewing tobacco, cig­ ways turn the bottle upside
We had the usual difficulties arette papers, fountain pens, an down and see if the trade mark
during the trip. An overflow in extra shirt or tie or cap, shoe­ is imprinted in the bottle. .If it
the linen room spoiled the bed laces, insoles, haircutting tools, isn't, it is a lemon.
linen. We picked up a radio and his own sweet wine, if it is
Most of the goods sold in Col­
message stating that the No. 3 needed for medicinal purposes; ombia are imported. Even their
hold on a Grace Line ship was in fact, he had almost every­ alligator bags, clothing, linens,
afire. We also received a cable­ thing.
silks and leather are imported.
gram from the Steward, telling
Only by careful examination c.an
SPEAK UP. MEN
us he had flown to Miami to
you be sure of not being hood­
catch the ship, but missed it. What startled his shipmates winked.
Then several crewmembers took most was his unique way of
The average pay of the natives
Bidding goodbye to Beautiful Hawaii—^Honolulu, to be sick. For a ship that takes only making them get up and speak
is
$1 to $1.50 a day. There aro
exact—Kyska deck men turn to casting off lines. Left to right: a month for a round trip, we at the end of an educational
two classes of people in Colom­
Jerry, AB and Ship's Delegate; Jackson, AB: Danny, AB, and had more than our share of meeting. Here's how he worked: bia, the very rich and the very
casualties.
He would call on two of the poor. The majority—the poor—
Duda, OS,
Crewmember Sir Charles is crew to get up, face the class live by the side of the road in
and tell them how to make an the hills in squalor. Sanitary
acceptance speech and a. presen­ facilities do not exist and the
tation speech. By giving each food is poor.
of the two a present, such as a 1 found it wise not to eat
bottle of wine, a cigarette case, ashore; instead 1 took a sand­
a fountain pen, or some other wich with me.
article he helped make the
FIESTA AIR
speaker and class happy.
id
To the Editor:
When the ship arrived at the But despite the economic con­
To the Editor:
agin ya, but if yore hankerin
Panama
Canal photographs were ditions the young ladies from
for a feud, then draw yore six The crew of the Canadian- taken and they came out fine. the far away towns and hills
After enjoying myself for gim—I'll pulverize ya."
manned SS Seaside wishes to
came into Buenaventura regular­
the past several weeks here
thank the American Brothers on While we were passing through ly to get work. Ships come and
BOTTOMS UP
Sn Dallas, I've decided to let
the SS Hurricane, out of Mobile, to Christobal, a young lady in go quite frequently and the largo
you know about the grea^st Well, seeing what kind of a for their support and strong a launch came alongside looking
number of sailors in makes the
city on the Red River.
position 1 was in, 1 just dranl: backing in our fight to clear the for Sir Charles, the Dapper Dan. town a lively place.
hi order to get to DaUas from my shot of red eye with a sas- commies out of one of Canada's Sure enough, Charles wanted to
This is one of the nicest
go overboard to greet her, but
Galveston, you go the first 100 parilly chaser and walked slow­ most vital industries.
places
in all of Colombia. Coffee
the Skipper spotted the flurry of
miles by plane. After that you ly out the door.
CSU FALSE
is
the
main export item. People
take a train for 75 miles; then The only trouble 1 had was The CSU and their commie activity and said, "Sir Charles, from all over Europe have come
stay
right
where
you
are."
So
board a stage coach through the my horse was gone. Yep. 1 went leaders are using every dirty and
here to make their home. Tho
wilderness for 4Q more miles. outside to the hitching post and underhanded method in their he stayed.
most prosperous establishments
The
next
night
we
arrived
in
At the end of the stage route found that some wrangler had attempt to prevent the. loading
are
the drinking places, the f«x&gt;d
you get out and swing limb rode off on my nag. 1 had a and sailing of vessels taken over Buenaventura. We were sched­ stores and the drug stores. Tt
from limb for the last five good investment there. 1 paid ten by the SIU and are using terror­ uled to stay for 11 days, but is possible to get a good watch
miles.
bucks for the horse and 40 for istic tactics in the endeavor to were there only seven. This port, here for about 110 pesos, which
There is one good thing about the saddle.
weaken the morale of our crews. to me, is really Shangri La.
in the States would cost $75.
DaRas: a shortage of menr The After finding that Dallas was Needless to say that this is only
EXCHANGE RATE
Upon our return to New York,
other evening 1 went into a gin- a bit too trigger happy for me, serving to increase our deter­
The rate of exchange is 1.95 Red Gibbs came down to make
miU for a shot of red eye, and 1 packed my seabag and-started mination that the SIU record of pesos to the dollar, but the black the payoff, and after the usual
met two young ladies. After hitchhiking back to Tacoma. So never having lost a beef be market offers 3.50 to 4 for a bit of wrangling everything was
buying them several drinks they if anyone sees a fellow who maintained.
dollar. Rum is three pesos, a settled satisfactorily. We left tho
started arguing to see who was looks bowlegged with a seabag At the time of writing, four little less than a dollar a bottle, ship and bid her fond goodbye,
going to win my companionship. on his shoulder, stop and pick of our crew had just been beaten food is 70 centimes, or about 20 as she is being laid up. Here's
After arguing for "about ten me up, cause Tacoma is a fur up while 'ashore or on the way cents for a good meal. Beer is hoping we'll make the trip to
ashore. The two who landed
minutes, one girl says tp the piece o' prairie from hyar.
about 15 cents and coffee two Buenaventura again — it was a
other one, "Listen, gal, 1 ain't
"Shotgun" Still in the hospital are still there cents. But you must bear in mind moist-eyed crew that left that
and are being well cared for, ac­
that these are the prices to the Shangri La of the South.
cording to reports brought back
Sir Charles Oppenheimer
natives. Unless you have a guide
to us by the Captain. The other
two suffered less damaging in­
juries and will be back aboard
SYLVA^S SHIPBOARD HAND LAUNDRY
later tonight.
Again thanking the American
Brothers
for their backing,' we
MEETING NIGHT SHIPPING
will drop the hook on this.
To the Editor:
M. O. Collelte.
Deck Delegate
We, the crew of the SS Marymar, voted and passed the fol­
O.
Martin.
lowing resolution which we think will benefit everyone:
Engine Delegate ,
"If there is any change or new shipping rule enacted, it is
to be posted at once on the bulletin board in every Branch and
CHRISTINE CREW
printed in the SEAFARERS LOG,"
This matter came up when a member shipped on the four SHOWS THAT ALL
o'clock call to report to the ship at 8 A.M. the following morning. HANDS HAVE SAVVY
.Within an hour of reporting to the ship the next morning, he
called the Union Hall and requested a replacement for himself. To the Editor:
He was told, that he would lose his shipping card if he got The crew of the SS Christine
bflf, because he did not attend the meeting the night before after would like to record the fact
being shipped. According to Section. 13 of the shipping rules he that it has nothing but praise
should have got his card back,, for officially he was off the shipping for the fine cooking of Chief
Cook F. C. Harrington and Sec­
list as of 4 P.M., three hours before tlie meeting.
ond
Cook Fred Minco.
Crew. SS Marymar
In fact, all of the Stewards
ANSWER: Technically the crew is correct, but for years Department aboard the vessel
the SlU has been operating on the procedure of not returning are to be commended for the
a shipping card if a man refuses a job taken on a meeting night. fine cooperation they have given.
The Deck Department brought
It was found that some irresponsible members were taking
this ship into port in first-ralte
Jobs and then refusing them Thursday morning, solely to avoid
condition after a five-week .trip,
attending the meeting. To curb this practice, men who refuse and. the Engine room gang did
a job after taking it the day of a meeting lose their shipping its share with a clean engine
cuds. Members who might possibly refuse a job the morning room. The job done by the en­
Frank Sylva turns to suds producing at the end of a day's
tire crew shows that this ship
following a meeting should play it safe by attending the meet­
laboring
in the MV Sea Trader's Engine Department wheso
was in good hands.
ing and having their card stamped. Permitmen. of course,
he's
an
Oiler
and the Engine Delegate. A GI brush and brown
George Weldon
cannot refuse a job under any circumstances. '
soap do an effective job on the grimiest of dungarees. Ship's Delegate
To the Editor:

C'mon, Lulu, Drop The Gun Canadians Thank
—Shotgun's Done Left Town US Seafarers For
Commie Fight Aid

THE BEEF BOX

�Page Ten

THE

SEAFARERS

F^r. jtdt 22, 19li$

L6 G

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings In Brief
ers. Meeting adjourned at 8:35
BOSTON—Chairman, J. GreenPM.
baum, 281: Recording Secretary.
4"
4"
J. Kearney, 28753; Reading
NORFOLK^Chairman,. J. S.
Clerk, B. Lawson, 894.
While, 56; Recording Secretary,
Other Branch minutes read and
J. A. Bullock, 4747; Reading
TOT^
SHIPPED
SHIPPED
SHIPPED
TOTAI.
REG.
approved, along with Headquar­
REG.
REa
PORT
SHIPPED Clerk, B. P. Rees, 95.
ENG.
STWDS.
DECK
REG.
STWDS.
ENG.
DECK
ters' report and Secretary-Trea­
Other Branches' minutes of
surer's financial
reports. Agent Boston
9
26
9
8
9
44
21
14
previous
meetings were accepted
discussed the state of shipping New York
82
263
89
385
92
125
121
139
as
read.
Motion, carried to con­
in the port, saying that it had Philadelphia
17
72 cur with New York meeting's
83
31
30
. 24
26
27
been pretty good for the past Baltimore.
38
163 recommendation on SS Puerto
73
252
65
60
79
100
—
two weeks. Charges preferred Norfolk.
3
11 Rico. Headquarters' report to the
32
131
3
5
45
54
against member were read. New Savannah
38 membership read and approved.
10
48
17
11
.15
12
21
Orleans resolution recommend­ Tampa.
7
23 Following Dispatcher's report,
10
29
11
5
7
12
ing assessment fpr strengthening Mobile...53
168 membership stood in silence for
50
165
56
59
64
51
General Fund was read and con­ New Orleans
62
73
125
260 one minute in memory of oiu:
77
314
88
149
curred in. Brother J. Hubbard Galveston.
55
250
26
96 departed Brothers. After consid­
110
85
41
29 .
took the Union Oath of Obliga­ West Coast
34
29
16
22
85
16
9
41 erable discussion on proposed
tion. Under Good and Welfare
396
1,161 ten-dollar assessment to bolster
657
557
572
1,786
385
there was much discussion on GRAND TOTAL
General Fund was overwhelm­
Union welfare plans. One min­
ingly
carried. Five members took
ute of silence in memory of de­
the
Union
Oath of Obligation.
ed
out
that
this
was
one
of
the
Patrolman's.
Communications
are
the
people
who
were
among
parted Brothers. 62 bookmemMotion
carried
to reinstate Bro­
many
sound
reasons
for
adopt­
from
members
seeking
to
be
ex­
our
staunchest
supporters
in
the
bers were in attendance when
ther
Charles
D.
Loane, who is
ing
the
proposal
for
a
volun­
cused
from
meeting
were
re­
1946
General
Strike,
the
Agent
meeting adjourned at 7:50 PM.
said. A "communication was read tary assessment. The only way ferred to the Dispatcher. One seven months in arrears. He
SAN FRANCISCO—Chairman, from the Secretary-Treasurer an­ the Union can fight on the leg­ minute of silence in memory of presented a hospital slip cover­
Jeff Morrison, 34213; Recording nouncing the pay boost in the islative front is to have funds departed Brothers. Meeting ad­ ing this period. 134 members
Secretary, P. M. Robertson, form of a $7.50 monthly clothing to do so, he said. After much journed at 7:45 PM, with 150 were present when meeting ad­
journed at 8:05 PM.
30148; Reading Clerk, John Zeir- allowance on all SIU contracted discussion pro and con, the New members in attendance.
4 i ft
eis, 4125,
^ ships. Resolution favoring $10 Orleans resolution calling for a
BALTIMORE — Chairman, H.
NEW ^YORK — Chairman,
San Francisco Branch report assessment was adopted, after General Fund assessment was
and minutes of previous meet­ considerable discussion pro and carried. Motion carried that there Lindsay Williams, 21550; Record­ J. Acosta, 37770; Recording Sec­
ings in other Branches read and con. Meeting adjourned at 8:30 be no changing or reallocation ing Secretary, Freddie - Stewart, retary, G. A. Masterson, 20297;
approved. Agent reported that PM, with 59 bookmembers pres­ in Stewards Department, except 4935; Reading Clerk, Johnny Reading Clerk, Jack Geller,
40141.
on direct orders from Headquar­
,
shipping had been fair for the ent.
Regular order of business was
Arabasz,
299832.
ters,
Patrolmen
reported
on
the
past two weeks, with a majority
su^ended
in order to go into
»ships
visited
for
payoffs
and
Minutes
of
other
Branch
meet­
NEW
ORLEANS^—
Chairman,
of the visiting ships taking a
charges
and
Obligations. Oath
sign-ons,
in
addition
to
those
ings
read
and
accepted.
Port
Leroy
Clarke,
23062;
Recording
few men. Several ships are due
of
Obligation
was administered
in next week, he said, and are Secretary, Bill Fredericks, 94; in-transit. Meeting adjourned Agent spoke on the present state
to
W.
E.
Anderson,
John Vieira,
expected to help out shipping Reading Clerk, Buck Stephens. with 286 members present at of shipping in the port, which
Jack
Smith
and
L.
F. Bresnan.
he described as slow. Discussion
here. All beefs were settled in Previous New Orleans minutes 7:35 PM.
Charges
readL
and
trial
commit­
on the ten-dollar assessment for
SIU fashion, the Agent said. approved. Secretary- Treasurer's
tee's
report
was
read
and
ac­
Other reports read and accepted financial report read and ac­ PHILADELPHIA^— Chairman, the General Fund, proposed in
cepted.
Minutes
of
previous
D.
C.
Hall,
43372;
Recording
a
resolution
by
36
New
Orleans
were: Dispatcher's, Headquarters' cepted. Other Branch minutes
and Secretary-Treasurer's. Mo­ accepted. Port Agent said that Secretary, Bob Pohle, 46826; members. Motion to concur in meetings were approved. Mem­
tion carried to elect trial com­ shipping and business had slow­ Reading Clerk, J. T. Manfredi, the resolution was adopted, 489- bers with acceptable excuses
to 54. Headquarters' report and were excused from meeting.
mittee to hear charges against ed down the past two weeks, 34011.
Secretary-Treasurer's
financial Headquarters' report accepted.
Minutes
of
meetings
in
other
but
that
the
outlook
for
the
com­
man accused of conduct imbereport
read
and
approved.
Mo­ New Orleans resolution for tenports
approved
after
reading.
ing
weeks
was
fair,
with
a
coming a Union member. Mo­
tion
carried
-to
accept
report
on doUar assessment for General
Agent
reported
that
shipping
had
couple
of
new
ships
scheduled
tion carried to accept resolution
adopted in New Orleans for a to crew up in this port. He add­ been steady for the past two San Juan ' Hall submitted by Fund piurposes carried, after full
ten-dollar assessment for Gen­ ed that he had been in San weeks, and he named the ves­ New Orleans Agent Earl Shep- discussion. Agent reported that
eral "Fund. One minute of silence Juan all week and will make a sels that^ came into port. All pard and New Orleans Engine shipping had been slow and pay­
in memory of departed Brothers. detailed report to the member­ beefs, he reported, were settled Patrolman Buck Stephens.- Mo­ offs down. All beefs pending
Meeting adjourned at 8:15 PM; ship. All beefs in New Orleans to the crew's satisfaction. Reso­ tion by James DuBose to in­ were settled. Patrolmen and Dis­
have been settled either at the lution offered by New Orleans struct our Negotiating Commit­ patcher gave their reports, which
29 bookmen were present,
payoff or at the sign-on. Patrol­ for ten-dollar General' Fund as­ tee in next discussion to elimin­ were approved. One minute of
tit
GALVESTON — ChaLrman, men's and Dispatcher's reports sessment carried unanimously. ate vacation clause , in favor of silence in memory of departed
Keith- Alsop, 7311; Recording read and accepted. Communica­ Reports read and accepted were: further wage increase, was car­ Brothers. Meeting adjourned at
ried. One minute of silence in 8:30 PM, with 230 members
Secretuy, R. Wilburn, 37739; tions from members wishing to Secretary-Treasurer's financial.
memory
of "our departed Broth­ present.
Dispatcher's
and
Headquarters',
be
excused
from
meeting
were
Reading Clerk, Hutchins, 39420.
referred
to
Dispatcher.
Trial
Minutes of other ports read
and accepted. Agent reported committee reports accepted. C.
that shipping for past two weeks W. Fisher and Paul Frazier took
had been good and should con­ the Union Oath of Obligation.
tinue so for another two weeks, Under Good and Welfare there
to fight 'the constant attack be­ tions like these can - only come
then drop some. Patrolman's and was lengthy discussion on San
^(Continued from Page 1)
Dispatcher's reports read and Juan, where a few men had balloting up and down the coast. ing made to weaken trade unions from the Union's General Fund,
accepted. Membership voted 32 gone on record not to live • up Pointing out the fact that the in their fight to mainta'in decent proponents of the assessment
to 10 to concur with resolution to the policy adopted "by the. -SIU "Atlantiev and Gulf District wages anfi.. conditions for their proposal explained.
At the New Yqrk membership
adopted by New Orleans, calling Union membership and had membership ' benefits from top memberships, they declared.
meeting,
Secretary-Treasurer Paul
threatened
Union
officials
at­
for question of assessment to be
wages, overtime and shipboard HIRING HALL IN DANGER
Hall
commented
that, although
tempting
to
carry
out
this
policy.
submitted to referendum. Meet­
living conditions under the best The resolution is evidence of
ing adjourned at 8:05 PM, with Meeting adjourned at 8:35 PM, contracts in#the maritime in­ the fact that the New Orleans the General Fund was in sound
57 bookmembers in attendance, with 312 bookmembers present. dustry, the New Orleans resolu­ Seafarers who offered it have shape, and that there was no
4,
i
tion recalled that the take-home their ears to the ground. An all- "immediate need or emergency,"
t t t
TAMPA — Chairman, R. H. MOBILE — Chairman, O. $ieT pay of all Seafarers has just out battle is already in the off­ the proposal of the New Orleans
Hall, 26060; Recording Secretary, vens, 115; Recording Secretary, been increased by $90 a year, ing to preserve the Union Hir­ members would enable the Union
E. R. Smith; Reading Clerk, Ray J. D. Carroll, 14; Reading Clink, as a result of the $7.50 monthly ing Hall as a result of decision to face up to the rough times
White, 57.
Harold J. Fischer, 59.
clothing allowance won a few by the United States Court of and still maintain its memberMinutes of previous meetings Minutes of previous meetings' weeks ago by the Union Nego­ Appeals, Second Circuit, which, ship-to-jobs ratio of one-to-one.
in the case of the NMU versus* The Union's strict adherence to
approved. Branch Agent reported in Mobile and other Brarffchies tiating Committee.
that Union's business is in good read and approved. Port Ai^nt Backers of the resolution at Great Lakes operators, ruled on •this ratio is responsible for the
shape and that, although it is reported on the prospect; fpr the July 6 meetings made it July 5 that the Union Hiring fact that^the shipping opportur
nothing to brag about, shipping shipping in the coming ••'two clear that they regarded this Hall is illegal under the Taft- nitics of Seafarers far outstrip
those of the memberships of
has picked up a bit. The num­ weeks, listing the ships sched­ particular time as the most de­ Hartley law.
ber of coastwise ships calling uled to arrive during that ^l^e. sirable to strengthen the Un­ In addition to its other legis­ other waterfront unions.
here has remained constant. He He pointed out that several Ift^ps ion's General Fund, since the lative battles to tighten the se­ The New Orleans resolution
dso said that the AFL Cigar were in the yard and werd- ex­ assessment Would represent but curity of its membership, the also specified that "$2.00 of this
Workers Union will be the only pected to take crews withi^:^two a fraction of the newly-won in- SIU is joining in the campaign assessment be given to the In­
to win passage of the bills of­ ternational for General Fund
union on the ballot in the NLRB weeks. Shipping, thetlfore, ftrease.
election scheduled for next week should be good. He mentioned
Many of those favbrihg the fered by Representative John purposes," since the Internation­
in a number of compalfees. The the progress of the alteration job assessment elaboriatied bh. the Lesinski (D., Mich.) and Senator al has actively aided the A&amp;G
companies called for the elec­ being done on the Hall. The point stressed in the resolution Warren Magnuson (D., Wash.), organizing program—which has
tion to see if the workers want­ Agent stressed the danger to the —that anti-union forces in Wash­ which would permit continua­ been successful in the acquisition
ed representa:tion. The Union is Union membership in the re­ ington have tedoubled their ef­ tion of the hiring practices pre­ of new jobs to replace those lost
working to get a large turnout cent court decision ruling the forts to keep restrictive labor vailing in the maritime industry —and is engaged in widespread
organizing campaigns in all areas
prior to June 15, 1947.
at the elections and we're be­ Hiring Hall illegal under the legislation oh the books.
of
its jurisdiction.
Funds
to
meet
critical
situa­
hind them 100 percent, as they Taft-Hartley law, and he point­ Expenditures must be made
o

CO
00

/

A&amp;G Slipping From June 29 To July 13

General Fund Assessment Okayed

�THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Eleven

SIU Contract Makes Difference,
Cities Service Veteran Finds Out
EDWARD BLOOM
Your brother, Frank, asks you
to get in touch with him at 48
Monument Walk, Brooklyn. Very
important.
4-4-5^
T. C. DEALE.
Contact C. A. Doyle, SS Alcoa
Partner, care of Alcoa Bteamship Company, 17 Battery Place,
New York.
4 4 4
EMIL PONTELLO
Get in touch with P. San
Miguel, care of the SIU Hall,
5i Beaver St., New York.
4 4 4
JERRY
SMITTY
Will these two men, who were
Deck Delegate and Bosun, re­
spectively, aboard the SS Young
America from Oct. 27, 1948 to
Jan. 8, 1949, please get in touch
with Joseph W. Keenan, Ward
Four East, US Marine Hospital,
San Francisco, Calif.
4 4 4
RAYMOND J. DAVIS .
SAMUEL H. DAVIS
Your brother, Louis G. Davis,
is very anxious to hear from
both of you. .Write to him, at

SIU HULLS
SIU, A&amp;G District
BALTIMORE
14 North Gay St.
William Rentz, Agent Mulberry 4540
BOSTON
276 State St.
Ben Lawson, Agent Richmond 2-0140
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141
GALVESTON
308'/a—23rd St.
Keith Alsop, Agent
Phone 2-8448
MOBILE
1 South Lawrence St.
Cal Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-1754
NEW ORLEANS
523 Bienville St.
E. Sheppard, Agent Magnolia 6112-6113
NEW YORK
51 Beaver St.
Joe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784
NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St.
Ben Rees, Agent ^
Phone 4-1083
PHILADELPHIA337 Market St.
J. Sheehan, Agent
Market 7-1635
SAN FRANCISCO.....
85 Third St.
Jeff Morrison, Agent
Douglas 2-5475
SAVANNAH
2 Abercorn " St.
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728
TACOMA
1519 Pacific St.
Broadway 0484
TAMPA
1809-1811 N. Franklin St.
Ray White, Agent , ' Phone M-1323
WILMINGTON, Cailf., ^2.7Vz Avalon Blvd.
E. B. Tilley, Agent " Terminal 4-2874
HEADQUARTERS. . 51 BeaveiVSt., N.Y.C.
SECRETARY-TREASURER
Paul Hall
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
Lindsey Williams
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURERS
Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
Joseph Volpian

SUP
HONOLULU

16 Merchant St.
Phono 5-8777
PORTLAND
Ill 'W. .Burnside St.
Beacon 4336
RICHMOND, Calif.;
.257 5th S^t.
Phone 2599
SAN FRANCISCO
59 Clay St.
Douglas 2-8363
SEATTLE
...86 Seneca St.
7"
Main 0290
WILMINGTON....'..440 Avalon Blvd.
Terminal 4-3131

Canadian District
MONTREAL

404 Lo Moyno St.
Marquette 5909
HALIFAX
128 Vi Hollis St.
Phone 3-8911
PORT ARTHUR
63 Cumberland St.
Phone North 1229
PORT-COLBORNE
103, Durham St.
Phone 5591
TORONTO
..IllA Jarvis St.
Elgin 5719
VICTORIA, B.C
402 Boughton St.
Empire 4531
VANCOUVEj^. ...... .565 Hamilton St.
Pacific 7824
y

HEADQUARTERS
Montreal

.

512 McGlII St.
Plateau 670

Barracks 2, Veterans Amm. Cent­
er, Biloxi, Miss. Enclose photos,
if you have any.
4 4 4
FRANK P. LIVINGSTON
Communicate with your fam­
ily at once. Your father is ill,
and your mother is worried.
4 4 4
FRED HAYES
Benjamin Jaffe, 4086 Bayard
Road, Cleveland 21, Ohio, is
very anxious to get in touch
with you. Forward your mailing
address.
4 4 4
CHARLES G. PETERS
Your
mother,
Mrs.
Mary
Peters, 2953 Fulton St., Brook­
lyn, N.Y., is very anxious to
hear from you, and asks that
you write to her at once.
WALTER HEALY^ HOFFMAN
Get in touch with Local»Se­
lective Service Board No. 38 in
Brooklyn, N.Y.
4 4 4
HARRY W. PORTER
(Z-745244)
Get in touch with George M.
Dodd, 53 State Street, Boston,
Mass., at once. It is a matter of
vital importance.
4 4 4
JAMES L. NICHOLSON
Your sister, Mrs. Melvin Mar­
tin, asks you to get in touch
with her at 918 Main St., Cov­
ington, Kentucky.
4 4' 4
JOBES REED BRIMACOMBE
Get in touch with your wife,
Leola.
4 4 4
JACK SHOEMAKER
Your father is in critical con­
dition. Get in touch with Maude
Daly, 824 North Adams St.,
Peoria, 111., for information.

(Continued from Page 1)
Union Delegate. If either party
disagreed, they just jotted it
down on the disputed sheet and
company officials and Union
Patrolmen took it up from there.
No hard feelings, no lost job.
Quite a difference, indeed.
But wait a minute: I've just be­
gun. You should have seen the
grub on the Lone Jack. Wow!
The meat was so far gone
when it got aboard, even a sea
gull would have passed it up.
You could poke a finger right
through the corned beef, slime
and all. And the rest of the
produce was about the same.
I noticed government surplus
canned goods seemed to be a
favorite on this ship—everything
but the Worcestershire sauce
came from a surplus dump.
Then to top it off, the out­
fit had a surplus starvation
menu. They must have known
the bare minimum necessary to
sustain life, because they surely
dished out the food that way. I
guess I shouldn't even have to
mention that the Lone Jack, be­
ing the flagship, was the best
feeder in the fleet. (At least, they
kept telling me that.)
The menu was nice, though;
Pretty picture of a tanker and
all that. But even time harden­
ed CS men can't gobble up
menus.

KEITH TERPE
you said so. If the heads, or your
room were getting run-down,
you said so.
If you had an OT beef or were
slighted, you said so. Yes, you
said so in a properly conducted
meeting, with an elected chair­
man, recording secretary and
pre-arranged meeting time and
place.
Every issue, no matter how
minor, was treated democrati­
cally, openly, fairly. If the Cap­
tain and the crew didn't see eye
to eye, it was all settled shoreside by a well-informed, fastacting Union representative, who
interpreted the agreement be­
tween company and Union with
complete fairness .'o both.
And there was no secret wire
to shoreside for replacements to
be waiting for the dissatisfied
crewmen when the ship pulled
in.
I wonder how many men in
the last six months have discov­
ered, as their CS tanker made
fast, that they had just "resign­
ed" from their ship.
That is, they discovered this
as their replacement marched
up the gangway filled up with
the good old company spirit by

the company propaganda mini­
sters.
-It must be a fantastic figure.
In two weeks aboard the Lone
Jack I saw over 40 men come
and go—including myself. Yes,
I was caught looking at one of
the hilarious -CS cartoons in the
SEAFARERS LOG-r-and smiling
even.
The Captain must have nearly
had a heart attack when he got
the report that I had soaked up
all the subterfuge, intrigue, slimy
plans and so forth that came up
in the saloon, every day and
every meal.
My replacement must have
gotten an especially fiery pep
talk. He was waiting in Port­
land, Me., to take over for me
when we tied up at 3 AM.
Last, but surely not least, I
have noticed particularly the dif­
ference in pay since leaving the
Lone Jack.
16 days on that CS ship, no
draws, no allotment, and I got
$97.50—and find your own way
back to the New York beach.
On the T. Heyward, for a com­
parable job for 52 days, a $40
draw, no allotment and I receiv­
ed $677 clear payoff money, plus
$67 for pullman fare from Mo­
bile to New York City.
Thus, for seven and a half
weeks, nearly $100 per week,
or two times as. much every 16
days as on CS ships. One hell
of a difference.
And on the Heyward I not
only gained back the 12 pounds
I lost from worrying on the
Lone Jack, but I had to take
exercise to keep up with the
Heyward's Steward Hutchins ex­
pansive feeding program.
Really, I think even the
staunchest Union man should
take one CS ship. I'll personally
guarantee that your outlook wiU
be changed from A to Z. And
if you're overweight — don't
worry", ^ust be sure you bring
along some vitamin pills to fight
malnutrition.

UNION STYLE
Now, on the Heyward, I no­
ticed that the Union Delegate
checked the requisitions-for food
stores before the ship even' ar­
rived, the same as he didi the
linen requisition, repair list,
overtime sheets and a multitude
of other details.
And, fantastic as it may sound,
the Captain not only agreed to
the requisitions but occasionally
ROMAN
»WRANDA
added to them.
Z.431782
For instance, in Holland we
Contact Samuel Segal, attor­ got 50 pounds of strawberries.
ney, 11 Broadway, New York On the Lone Jack, even a wornCity.
out apple represented the peak
of holiday festivity.
The biggest and most impor­
tant thing I felt on the Lone
Jack was not OT (or lack therof) or rotten food, or no repairs,
By JIM DRAWDY
or dirty crummy foc'sles, unpainted passageways, vermin in­
SAVANNAH — Shipping has but Tex got it running again
fested messrooms—no, it was quieted down in this port, in in short order,
fear I noticed most of all. Fear line with the up and down ac­
Brother E. B. McAuley just
for the job, fear of being mark­ tivity we generally experience. got his camera out of hock and
ed a Union man and forever
Our payoffs for the shipping took off on the SS Southwind,
BALTIMORE — The overtime
blackballed from the CS fleet.
period
just ended were the I while C. M. Rice is waiting for
beef on the SS Evelyn, Bull
Two men seen talking together Southport and Southwind, both a job on the first thing that
Lines, that had been pending as
were considered suspicious, three South Atlantic, and the Chry- comes steaming in.
a*result of the crew being re­
or four were really mutiny. You santhystar. Intercontinental. The
Best wishes are in order for
stricted to the ship in Baltimore
didn't express your views if two South Atlantic ships signed Brother R. Merrit, who just took
on Mar. 26 and 27 of this year,
you intended to stay aboard. on again.
the marriage vow and is at
has been settled.
Not on unionism or anything
present loafing around Savannah.
In
addition
to
these
ships,
the
Following is the list of crewelse.
W. J. Groover spends his time
port
had
as
callers
the
SS
Julesmembers who still have not col­
The CS officials have imag­ berg, Terminal Tankers; SS fruitfuUy while waiting for a
lected, and the amounts due
inations overactivated by fear Dorothy, Bull; SS Oshkosh Vic­ ship. He's hauling in plenty of
them:
themselves—^fears that the SIU tory, Waterman, and the SS Steel fish at his favorite sport. We
.Joseph Acquarone, $7.73; Wil­
may well prove to be the strong­ Architect, Isthmian.
change that to read: Brother
liam Boiling, $3.86; Lawrence
est, toughest maritime union in
A beef aboard the Chrysan- Groover spends his time fishEbberts, $3.86; John Cook, $7.73;
the world and will render the
thystar involving overtime in fully.
John Emerick, $3.86; John R.
slimy, usual tactics useless in
There is a laundry strike on
the Engine Department was set­
Wood, $3,86; John Tabb, $3.86;
the end.
«
in
Jacksonville, Fla. The only
tled in typical SIU style.
William Elliot, $7.73; George Ro­
So be careful, you CS men, be
union
laundry in that port at
driguez, $4.45.
Any men who did not receive present is Williams and Son.
careful. You can't even say
Also Ignatius Torre, $2.90; "good morning. Brother," with­ their money on board the ship
We'd like to see the men on our
Louis Borowick, $1.93; James E.
out being earmarked for the can collect from the company ships give their duds to the
Alien, $^.05; XJilbeit Parker,
at its office in New York.
beach.
union plant.
$7.73; Melvin Jones, $7.73; Mar­
TEX
TO
RESCUE
Savannah's Marine Hospital
FREEDOM
FROM
FEAR
tin Beavers, $7.73 and Kenneth
'j.
W.
(Tex)
Ringo
and
Jeff,
lists
the following Seafarers as
Woodard, $7.73.
On the Heyward, we had at
These men may collect their least two meetings''each trip.- No Jillette went to Jacksonville as patients this week: J. H. Maxey,
money by writing to Captain one was excluded, no hush-hush delegates to the AFL Central G. Exell, and W. Smith.
Just to wind it up, here's a
Swenson, A. H. Bull and Com­ about Rhything, ancl everyonis Trades Council meeting. En
route,
Tex
proved
himself
to
local
ball score for the benefit
pany, 115 Broad St., New York had his say, same as anybody
be
as
good
a
mechanic
as
he
is
of
Savannali
SIU men. SavanCity.
else.
a
Bo.sun.
The
car
broke
down,'nah
beat
Augusta,
5 to 2.
Benny Gonsales
If the food didn't suit you,
\

Patrolmen
Say—

OT Beef Settled

SMpping Shws Down In Savonnah

�••

Y'

.• '•
/

Page Twelv®

"

TUB SEAFARERS

* •' .•-'
"

v

LOG

Friday. July 22, 19^

.&lt;

- -f -U-f,

36 Sea^£x7re.rs in the I^rtoP^
New Orleans have ptesertbsd
the ^olloofiii^ jresoltiiiotL&amp;i?
membership ^ictioil.......

"•* mitf

®®S0tVf n.

'•Mffinj ,

«•«» if. aus ^
Vwi ilje
•l-'bi^ ^— ^1
signed, bg
.
•&amp;mowm^ meahbem —
^

r^^arteWo, 303 fl
t

Joe Ma p^^ne,
Francis
53

Toe Vaccaro,

M-Troxc^J; ^

Jobn L. ^
George A»®"VA935

i#i'
itif;
Kr-^'SSfe- Isr^'-"
. gfssa^"

&amp;S£S' sr&amp;»-'"jam^s Sauvi#»

VOTE

•J-L'-. •;'ifl'«l*X.ke-ii4-T?^.'f.Tri«»ii,j

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9922">
                <text>July 22, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9989">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 23</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10010">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10031">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10091">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10109">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10164">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
BRANCHES OKAY ASSESSMENT FOR GENERAL FUND&#13;
CANADIAN CREW CHARGES CSU WITH BETRAYAL&#13;
BILLS APPROVE HIRING HALL&#13;
STRONG AMERICAN MERCHANT MARINE IS AIM OF SENATE COMMITTEE PROBE&#13;
303 VESSELS ARE MINE CASUALTIES&#13;
AN EYE TO THE FUTURE&#13;
WHY TRAINING PROGRAM MUST BE SCUTTLED&#13;
SIU CONTRACT MAKES DIFFERENCE, SAYS CS VET&#13;
MOBILE SHIPPING HOLD STEADY; COMING WEEKS SHOULD BE FAIR&#13;
IN-TRANSITS AID SAN FRANCISCO&#13;
BOSTON PLEASED WITH SHIPPING&#13;
NEW YORK WEATHER IS REALLY HOT, BUT SHIPPING COOLS SEAFARERS&#13;
SEATTLE SHIPPING IS NO EXCEPTION&#13;
PORT WILMINGTON IS QUIET BUT COOL&#13;
LONG HAUL TO CITIZENSHIP ENDED, MEMBER BIDS ALIENS TAKE HIS TACK&#13;
BREAKDOWN FAILS TO DISTURB SMOOTH VOYAGE OF SOUTHSTAR&#13;
THE VOICE OF THE SEA&#13;
BATTLE OF WALL ST. SHOWN ON SEATRAIN SHIP'S SCREEN&#13;
SHIPPING SLOWS DOWN IN SAVANNAH</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10165">
                <text>7/22/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13061">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="964" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="968">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/cca79851d08b2a6581ff3f08346871f6.PDF</src>
        <authentication>cb72869e304eae7959b9111970e8ddba</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47444">
                    <text>GENERAL FUND REFERENDUM ON

Seafarers in all Atlantic and Gulf District
ports were casting ballots in secret referendum
on a ten-dollar assessment to build the Union's
General Fund, with heavy participation reported
as the voting ended its first week.
Balloting on the assessment, which would en­
able the A&amp;G District to continue its running
fight on anti-labor legislation and keep intact all

Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA
VOL. XI

NEW YORK. N. Y.. FRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 1949

No. 24

** The Tbundafion is Wron^, Harry!"

4'Of its services to the member­
ship, came after Seafarers over­
whelmingly adopted a resolu­
tion originating in New Orleans
at the last two regular meetings
in all Branches.
Originally offered and passed
at the regular meeting in New
Orleans on June 29, the resolu­
tion recommended that after fa­
vorable action "for two succes­
WASHINGTON — The Inter­ sive meetings" in all ports, the
national Transportworkers Fed­ question should be submitted to
eration, world-wide organization a referendum vote.
of maritime and allied unions
The voting period began on
with which the SIU is affiliated, August 1 and will continue
has recommended that its mem­ through August 30 for a period
bers in 43 countries impose a of 30 days as required by the
boycott on the 800 „ships flying Union constitution.
the Panamanian flag.
URGE FAVORABLE VOTE
At the same time the power­
The resolution, presented by
ful federation ordered a boy­
cott of the vessels of any coun­ 36 Seafarers in the port of New
try where communist-controlled Orleans, urged the membership
unions refuse to work cargoes to vote favorably on the assess­
of ships sailed by ITF-affiliated ment so that the Union could
continue giving the tjTpe of rep­
members.
These decisions, on two of resentation that has resulted in
the major problems facing free the best contracts, embracing
trade unionists in maritime and top wages, overtime and ship­
allied industries, were reached board living conditions, of any
at a conference last week in on the waterfront
Washington attended by top ITF The 36 sponsors of the resolu­
officials and representatives of tion pointed out that the takehome pay of aU Seafarers has
its American affiliates.
Representing the Seafarers In­ just been increased by $90 a
ternational Union at the con­ year, as a result of ^e $7.50
ference were Harry Lundeberg, monthly clothing allowance ne(Continued on Page 10)
(Continued on Page II)

1TF Boycott
Of Panama
Ready To Roll

SIU Crewmen Sail Steel Flyer
When CIO Unions Ignore Strike
Observing the failure of other
CIO unions to recognize the
CIO longshore strike in Hono­
lulu, Seafarers at a special Head­
quarters membership meeting
last Wednesday voted unanim­
ously to carry out their con­
tractual obligations to the Isth­
mian Steamship Company, and
ordered the unlicensed personnel
to return to the company's SS

The Commies Mobilize Their Waterfront Brigades
By PAUL HALL, Secrettury-Treeisurer.
Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union

With the Committee for Maritime Unity dead and
buried for some two years now, the communists have
revived their efforts for control of the world's water­
fronts.
Through the medium of the recently formed
World Federation of Maritime Unions, the party diehards hope to accomplish on an international scale what
they failed to do successfully on the US waterfronts.
The organization was- formed by communist-controlled maritime unions, meeting in Marseille which, sig­
nificantly, elected Harry Bridges, who previously had
served as co-chairman of the defunct Committee for
Maritime Unity, as its president.
As do all communist fronts, this international body
of party-dominated waterfront groups has a purely
political purpose—to create chaos and confusion that
will bring profit to the' conimunist movement alone.
The maritime unions which the communists con­
trol lock, stock and barrel will naturally be used com­
pletely to carry out the program of disruption on an
international scale. In organizations which the com­
munists do not control, the objective will be to use
well-disciplined party-liners to stir up internal battles
and to befog issues. '

Fortunately for the continued welfare of our
Union, the communists will not be able to accomplish
anything in the SIU, because here they are non-existent
Elsewhere on the US waterfront, however, they have
ample reason to hope for partial success, at least. Events
everyday demonstrate that they have a sufficient base
in several American maritime unions to keep them
rocking from stem to stern.
Because an unstable US waterfront—in fact, an
unstable waterfront anywhere iti the world of free
maritime workers—is a constant threat to the wellbeing of our membership in particular, and seamen gen­
erally, we Seafarers must maintain a 24-hour watch
for the first signs of communist-inspired chaos.
We riiust keep this watch on a world-wide scale,
working with our brother members affiliated with the
International Transportworkers Federation, to smash
any communist attempt to make inroads on the free­
dom of genuine free trade unions.
We must link communist schemers with the
union-hating shipowners, labor-baiting legislators who
seek to put unions in straitjackets, an,d the other en­
emies of a free trade union movement.
We have fought too hard for too long to take any
other course, and we shall come out on top.

steel Flyer and sail her from
the Hawaiian -port.
The Steel Flyer is one of four
Isthmian ships which had been
tied up in Hawaii as a result
of the three-month-old strike of
the CIO International Long­
shoremen's and Warehousemen's
Union, whose president is Harry
Bridges.
When a recently-formed stev­
edoring firm in Honolulu began
unloading the Flyer two weeks
ago, SIU Headquarters instruct­
ed its members aboard the ship
to refuse to work behind a
picketline and the Seafarers
walked off .the ship.
Meanwhile, the Steel Flyer's
licensed engineers—all members
of the CIO Marine Engineers
Beneficial Association—remained
aboard and maintained steam.
With unloading completed, the
stevedoring concern began put­
ting a new 6,000-ton cargo on
the Steel Flyer, and the Isth­
mian company sent a telegram
to the SIU, asking what course
of action the Union would take.
Headquarters decided to put
the question to the membership
for whatever decision it deemed
necessary.
In view of the fact that the
MEBA had not recognized- the
strike, and that CIO dock clerks
affiliated with the ILWU in
Honolulu continued working
during the beef, the SIU mem­
bership voted to instruct the
Steel Flyer crew to honor its
agreement by retmning to the
ship.
Interestingly , e n o-u g h, the
(Continued on Page 10)

�Page Two

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. August 5. 1949

v's mark

SEAFARERS LOG
Published Every Other Week by the

SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor

At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
•

Entered as second class matter June 15, 1945, at the Post Office
in New York, N. Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

Your Insurance
The ten-dollar assessment to build the Union's Gen­
eral Fund, on which Seafarers are balloting this month,
is one of the most important questions affecting the gen­
eral welfare that the membership will face.
Before a member decides how he is going to vote on
this question, he should give it serious thought. He should
understand that unions enjoy no special exemption from
the effects of the prevailing economic situation.
There are innumerable sound reasons why an over­
whelming majority should favor adoption of this assessinent. The General Fund is the source of the Union's op­
erating expenses. Although we are strong financially,
most of our funds are ear-marked for specific purposes
—strikes, building and the like—and cannot be touched
for anything else.
The decline in shipping has resulted in a loss of rev­
enue which is used to maintain the membership services,
the organizing drives, on-the-spot representation, publi­
cations and the host of other essential functions of the
Union.
Long ago the SIU realized that the postwar shipping
boom would eventually level off, and it acted according­
ly. All expenses were constantly trimmed to allow full
operating efficiency with a minimum of expenditure.

SAN FRANCISCO HOSPITAL
J. KEENAN
W.
LANE
We must also bear in mind that many of our smaller
R.
W.
FRYE
I
These are the Union Brothers currently in the marine hospitals,
ports are not self-supporting. Nevertheless, they are
W.
SANDERSON
i
maintained to provide the same representation and ser-| as reported by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging S. WALERK
j
heavily on their hands. Do whet you can to cheer them up by
vices that-are available to members in the larger ports.
PETER
SMITH
writing them.
T. ISAKSEN
The,.Port pf Boston, for example, pointed out this NEW ORLEANS HOSPITAL
M. CARAWAY
W. R. THOMPSON
Week that it is self-sustaining in only three months of the J. DENNIS
M. J. LUCAS
4 ft 4
year. In varying degrees this is -true of other Branches. G. ROTZ
A. TREVINO
MOBILE HOSPITAL
L. LANG
J. HERNANDEZ
J. CURTIS
j
It is -in periods of economic slumps, such as we now F. LANDRY
M. FERNANDEZ
M:. LEOUSIS
find ourselves, that trade unions face the greatest dan­ S. MORGAN
L. OXEN
p. VANDEREIK
i
gers from its enemies. The labor-haters in Congress prov­ C. ELLARD
T. KANADY
E. DAVIDSON
!
I. RHODEN
S. REINCHUCK
!
ed that last month, when they banded together to squash L. WILLIS
J.
B.
ALFRED
M. ROSSI
L. HOWARD
the repeal of the Taft-Hartley law. Opponents of water­
W. W. ROYES
V. GROVER
front umops-proved it again, when they sought to put G.
L. BROWNELL
across the Merchant Marine Reserve Bill, whith would T. J. -HOPE
have forced seamen to break their own strikes. Thanks L. J. COWAN
to opposition of the SIU, the Merchant Marine Reserve H. ABELL

Men New In The Marme Hospitak

M. J. SMYLY
••
Directory Of SIU Halls

bill was knocked on the head.
To meet each of the problems and dangers posed by
these times, the Union must be financially able to dispose
of them, so that the membership will enjoy continued
security.
You should vote "yes" for the assessment, so that
your Union can keep up the fight for your well-being as
seamen. The assessment is a very small premium to pay
for such necessary insurance in these times.

A Time Will Come

L. E. JARVIS
W. SWILLEY
W. JARRETT
A. MAUFFRAY
B. H. LAWDERBACK
E. A. SANDERS
H. R. PITT
J. E. TASSIN
C. D. SHIVELY
A. SYLVERA
C. BROWN
D. KOROLIA
W. KUSCHKE
E. WARSOW, JR.
A. ARVANTIS
S. T. JAMISON
V. LAWRENCE
T. RIGBY
M. H. MUNSTER
i S. 4.
BOSTON HOSPITAL
BOB FISHER
VIC MILAZZO
J. J. FLAHERTY
FRANK ALASAVICH
4. 4.

The profit-hungry shipowners, who have been fleeing
to Panamanian registry to avoid meeting union conditions,
taxes and safety regulations in effect in other maritime
nations, have demonstrated once again that they lack even
dementary decency. Even the government which offered
them refuge felt their sting last week, when only two
shipowners, representing eight out of 800 Panamanian
fiag ships, showed up for a meeting between representa­
tives of shipping, the ITF and the Panama govefnmetit. ISTATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
But these rugged, self-sufficient, money-hungry op­ H. E. BONEWALD
N. DORPMANS
erators may soon find out that |&gt;ride and profits flee be­ 3.
P. PROBST
fore a boycott.
J. W. t-AlLLA

SIU, A&amp;G District
BALTIMORE
14 North Gay St.
William Rentz, Agent Mulberry 4540
BOSTON
276 State St.
Ben Lawson, Agent Richmond 2-0140
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141
GALVESTON
308'/,—23rd St.
Keith Alsop, Agent
, Phone 2-8448
MOBILE
.1 South Lawrence St.
Cat Tanrter. Agent
Phone 2-1754
NEW ORLEANS
523 Bienville St.
E. Sheppard, Agent Magnolia 6112-6113
NEW YORK
51 Beaver St.
Joe Algina/ Agent
HAnover 2-2784
NORFOLR
127-129 Bank St.
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
PHILADELPHIA
337 Market St.
J. Sheehan, Agent
Market 7-1635
SAN FRANCISCO
as Third St.
Jeff Morrison, Agent
Douglas 2-5475
SAVANNAH
2 Abercorn St.
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phiaiie 3-1728
TACOMA
1619 Pacific St.
Broadway 0484
TAMPA
1809-1811 N. Franklin St.
Ray White:, Agent
Phone M-1323
WILMINGTON, CnUf., 227% Avalon Blvd.
E. B. tilley. Agent
Terminal 4-2874
HEADQUARTERS. . 51 Beaver St., N.Y.C.
SECITETARY-TREASURER
P«ul Hall
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
Lindsay Williams
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURERS
Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
Joseph Voiplan

SUP
HONOLULU

...16 Merchant St.
Phone 5-8777,
PORTLAND
Ill W. Burnside St.
Beacon 4336
RICHMOND. Calif
257 5th St.
Phone 2599
SAN FRANCISCO
59 Clay St.
Douglas 2-8369
SEATTLE
86 Seneca St.
Main 0290
WILMINGTON
440 Avalon Blvd.
Terminal 4-313lj

Canadian District .
MONTREAL

404 Le Moyne Sb
Marquette 5909
HAUFAX
128'/, Hollis St.
Phone 3-8911
l»ORT ARTHUR. ...63 Cumberland St.
Phone North 1229
PORT. COLBORNE... .103 Durham St.
.
Phone 5591!
TORONTO
lllA Jarvis St.
Elgin 5719
VICTORIA, B.C.... ..802 Boughton St,
Empire 4831.
VANCOUVER
..565 Hamilton St.
Pacific 7824
HEADQUARTERS
Montreal

512 McGill St.
Plateau 670

�.-..;^C'a:aiZ5aaESW3J3

"7-- .C-".—xr:-—

Friday, Auguri 5, 1949

TBE

SEAFARERS

Page Three

LOG

Two Beefs And What They Mean
The communist party and its trade union hacks have begun a campaign of lies and slander against the AFL maritime
unions, and their chief target has been the Seafarers international Union, which has been their strongest opponent on the
waterfront. Aside from their usual statements about the "Wall Street-dominated Unions" (We wonder where they were when
th^ Seafarers were breaking cops' clubs with their heads during the UFE Wall Street Strike in 1948?&gt; they have been ac­
cusing the SlU and other AFL unions of everything from "selling out to the bosses" to "splitting the working class."
They are particularly incensed by the fact that the SlU Canadian District smashed the control the commie Canadian Sea­
men's Union hod had on the east coast of Canada, and by the fact that many rank-and-filers of the MEBA, tired of having their
union run by commie lawyers and politiciaAs, turned to the SlU for a charter, forming the Brotherhood of Marine Engi­
neers. Seeing their influence waning in maritime—not only in the United States, but over the world—the desperate com­
mies are using all the underhand and conniving tricks they are noted for, trying to regain their once-held power. We pre­
sent here, for the information of the members who may have missed previous articles, a brief summary of the Canadian
lieef, and the story of the launching of the Brotherhood of Marine Engineers.

The Canadian SIU And The Commies
When the communist-dominated Canadian Sea­
men's Union pulled its phony "strike" earlier
this year the Seafarers International Union
charged that the maneuver was strictly a pol­
itical scheme of the communists to plunge the
world's waterfronts into chaos and confusion.
Specifically, the communists were aiming to
disrupt the shipping of Marshall plan goods to
European beneficiary nations, in line with the
stand taken by the Kremlin against the European
aid program.
The communists most certainly would have at­
tempted to instigate their plan for waterfront
action in the United States, if they had had suf­
ficient strength.
The strong anti-communist Influence of the
Seafarers and the other AFL Maritime Trades
Department affiliates, coupled with the fact that
communists were on the wane on the American
waterfront, made this impossible.
They turned, therefore, to Canada, as the most
feasible spot to start their political shenanigans.
There the communists were virtually in supreme
command of the waterfront, because of its air­
tight control of the Canadian Seamen's Union,
which in 1944 had been expelled from the Sea­
farers International Union because its leaders
refused to disavow allegiance to the communist
program.
Briefly, this is how the communists went about
their job of wrecking Canadian shipping, which

was transporting its share of Marshall Plan
goods to Europe:
The communist-controlled Canadian Seamen's
Union had been negotiating for new contracts
to cover its 100-odd contracted ships sailing out
of Canada's east coast since August, 1948, but
talks were stalemated after months of discus­
sion.
In October, 1948, the CSU leaders requested
that a Conciliation Board settle the dispute. The
Board's decision was to be binding on both
parties.
A three-man board was designated, with the
labor member being handpicked by the CSU.
The Board made unanimous recommendations
for a contract, but the CSU immediately reject­
ed them.
The recommended contract contained the same
wages and conditions acceptable to the CSU
membership, but CSU communist leaders con­
cealed this fact by falsely announcing that the
contract called for a 25 percent wage cut and loss
of the hiring hall.
The confused CSU membership, most of whom
were militantly opposed to the communist-line
followed by their leaders, didn't know which
way to turn.
It was at this point that the SIU Canadian
District, which had made friends and sympath­
izers among CSU members, signed the agree­
ments the CSU had rejected and announced that

it had Canadian seamen v/ho were ready and
willing to man the ships.
Only then did the CSU communist leaders call
the "strike"—without consulting its member­
ship this time either.
They discovered almost immediately that their
members, long anxious to get out from under
the yoke of communist domination, were joining
the SIU by the hundreds and were sailing the
ships.
The SIU Canadian District gave wide publicity
to the fact that the "strike" was nothing more
than a political maneuver to use the Canadian
seamen as pawns in the communists' game of
international trickery.
Even the communists' most violent attempts to
intimidate Canadian seamen failed to stem the
tide, as more and more disgusted CSU men turn­
ed to the SIU.
The CSU's communist leaders, sensing disast­
er for their ill-conceived scheme, desperately
sought to maintain their grip on Canadian ship­
ping by inducing CSU men in foreign ports to
strike, telling them they faced pay cuts of $40
a month and similar outrageous lies.
Here again they demonstrated sharply their
complete disregard for the welfare of the men
they allegedly represented, for they exposed
them to punishment under international mari­
time laws.
(CoTitmued on Page 11)

The AFL Engineers And The MEBA
Back in mid-May of this year, the American
Federation of Labor Brotherhood of Marine En­
gineers was granted a charter as an autonomous
union affiliated with the Seafarers International
Union.
The emergence of the BME was the result
of many years of pressure from rank-and-file
seagoing engineers who had long been dissatis­
fied with the kind of representation available to
them. These men were fed up with having their
policies of the Marine Engineers Beneficial As­
sociation, CIO, shaped by the communist party
line.
So tight is the grip of the communist party on
the MEBA that the only way the engineers .could
develop a free, democratic trade union of their
own was to make a fresh start, which they did
through the BME.
Membership was open to all licensed engineers,
provided they are not members or fellow travel­
lers of the communist party or of any fascist
group.
When anyone steps on the toes of an outfit
like the MEBA, he steps on the toes.of the com­
munists. So the establi.shment of the AFL, Broth­
erhood drew from the communists an outburst
that was loud and hysterical.
The MEBA's attack was centered on the fact
that the AFL Brotherhood had a charter from
the SIU. Some asinine observations, like "how

•can a licensed officers' union operate success­
fully when it is connected with an unlicensed
seamen's organization?" were made in the course
of the attack. These had little effect in face of
the BME's clear statement of organization and
the purposes for which it was formed.
The BME is a union of, by and for the engin­
eers. It will have its own constitution, its own
shipping rules and will formulate its own polic­
ies. In short, the AFL Marine Engineers will
run their own affairs from start to finish, indemocratic fashion.
The SIU has no designs on the engineers. The
charter was issued to the BME simply because
the SIU recognized the plight of the engineers
in the MEBA, who are nothing more than poli­
tical footballs for the communist quarterbacks.
The SIU responded to the demands of the en­
gineers because it always felt—and proved—that
seafaring men can only win on the economic
front if they are united and free of political
domination.
The MEBA is perhaps the most backward
union on the waterfront when it comes to ac­
complishments for its membership. Despite its
comparatively long history, it has never made
advances to keep pace with the rest of the mari­
time unions.
This sad fact is the result of communist dom­
ination—the use of the union for political ends

only. That is why the engineers, until the char­
tering of the BME, were demoralized, disor­
ganized and lacking in everything a trade union
should provide.
The loudest screams against the AFL Brother­
hood came from the communist party hacks and
fakers, speaking in their official capacities as
communist smear technicians.
In the official party organ, the Daily Worker,
these party line hacks described the AFL char­
tering of the BME as a move toward "the des­
truction of the labor movement."
Despite the fact that the Worker called the
MEBA a "rightwing, conservative" union, it has
devoted considerable space to singing the praises
of the organization.
The communist party does not pour funds into
tlie Daily Worker for it to glamorize "rightwing,
conservative leadership." Any union, or labor
official, who opposes the communists becomes
the subject of daily tirades in the communist
party paper.
Interestingly enough, the Worker made no
mention of the fact that the "conservative"
MEBA has for a chief counsel Lee Pressman, a
leading tactician of communist unions. Press­
man was fired recently from his job as counsel
to the CIO by President Phil Murray, because
(Continued on Page 11)

�Page Four

Boston Favors
Annual Levy For
General Fund

THE S E A F A R E^R S

LOG

CIGAR MAKERS WAITING TO REGISTER UNION APPROVAL

By BEN LAWSON

Friday, August 5. 1949

Tampa Agent
Heads Central
Labor Assembly
Ray White, SlU Agent in the
Port of Tampa, hafe ben elected
president of the Florida city's
AFL Central Trades and Labor
Assembly.
Elected with White to se* ve
for the coming year was Frank
Diez, president of the Joint Ad­
visory Board of the AFL Cigar
Makers Unions, who takes over
the Tampa labor body's vicepresidency.
OTHEH OFFICERS
Other officers elected at the
July 19 meeting were: Hayward
L. Parker, secretary; William E.
AUen, treasurer; W. L. Vaigneur,
conductor; L. C. Palmer, guard;
and C. H. Johnson, Hazel Carl­
ton and J. R. Webster, - trustees.
White's election comes as the
result of SlU policy of full co­
operation and participation by
port officials in the affairs of
municipal American Federation
of Labor groups, and is based on
the view that the seamen's wel­
fare is bound with the welfare
of other organized workers.
ACTIVE IN COMMUNITY
The Tampa central'labor body
is currently cooperating with
the AFL Labor's League for Po­
litical Education, in an effort to
improve the well-being of the
AFL unions' memberships and
the rest of the community in
Hillsborough cotinty, in which
Tampa is located.
The meeting at which the of­
ficers were elected also saw the
adoption of a resolution protest­
ing the unwarranted high rent­
als in the Tampa area, and call­
ing for a leveling off to a point
more in line with other living
costs.

BOSTON—There was no de• parture during the past two
weeks from the usual slow ship­
ping in this port, but in this re­
spect Boston doesn't appear to
differ from most of the other
ports throughout the nation.
In addition to a payoff on the
SS Ann Marie, Bull Lines, we
had several in-transit ships. They
were the Robin Gray and two
Waterman ships, the Greeley
Victory and Monroe Victory.
The beefs on the Ann Marie
were settled right on board. A
couple of beefs in the Engine
Department of the Robin Gray
Members of Tampa's AFL Cigar Makers Union shattered their employers' dreams of a re­
will be settled at the port of
payoff.
turn to substandard conditions in one of the most resounding union victories on record. De­
luded by the notion that the workers didn't want union representation, the companies called for
The Alcoa Partner sent in a
call for two replacements. These
a cdllective bargaining election by the National Labor Relations Board.
were sent immediately to the
The Tampa cigar makers expressed their wishes in no uncertain terms. Out of 2.811 votes
vessel in Montreal.
cast, 2.751 were for the union. Only 39 voted for no union and 21 votes were ruled void. In
One of our local Seafarers,
above photo are some of the Tampa cigar makers as they waited their turn outside the build­
Alec Olson, is having a heck of
ing where the balloting was conducted.
a time on his new sloop, cruis­
The trade union consciousness of these AFL people is well-known to the Seafarers, as they
ing around the harbors in these
were among the SIU's staunchest supporters in the Port of Tampa during the important 1946
parts. He always finds time to
General Strike. Incidentally, Sam Gompers, founder and first president of the American Fed­
drop in at the Hall, however.
eration of Labor, came out of the Cigar .Makers Union.
Brother Morris Norris is look­
ing for a long trjp, as is Ernie
Belkner, Night Cook and Baker.
Ernie's baking always makes a
big hit with the boys on any
These ships are the Bienville, i to strengthen our operating fund.
By CAL TANNER
ship he sails.
Alawai, Hurricane, Arizpa, Mo- so that we may continue our
MOBILE — Shipping in the bilian. Stonewall Jackson and fight on all fronts to improve
It should be pointed out that
the action of the membership in port of Mobile has been slov/ Jeff Davis.
our position in maritime.
approving the resolution for a for the past two weeks, although
Oldtimers coming back to Mo- Another matter drawing a lot
ten-dollar a.sse.ssment to streng­ we had 11 payoffs and eight
after a trip won't recognize of favorable comment is the July
then the General Fund is a very sign-ons, plus four ships m tranrenovated Hall. Repairs are 22 issue of "Topics for Ship­
good thing for many reasons. sit. Most of the sign-ons were on
^^ead full speed, and we board Discussions," issued by
The smaller ports, most of which ships on continous articles, and
g^j^g
^
the A&amp;G District and being air­
are not self-supporting, should we were able to put only a few class job when they're complet­ mailed to all ships at sea. Opin­
especially go for this assessment replacements on each.
ion is that this is an excellent
ed.
in a very big way.
Ships paying off for the -last The renovations were started way in which to educate newer
two weeks were the Monarch of on orders from the local build­ members.
NOT SELF-SUPPORTING
The port of Boston only sup­ the Seas, Wild Ranger, Iberville, ing inspectors here, and should
ports itself for about three Hurricane, Morning Light, Ariz- be completed about the time of
Stonewall
Jackson,, our next report. When everymonths of the year. Yet the Hall pa,
_ _ Alawai,
_ .
„
is maintained and the member­ Jeff ^Davis, all Waterman, , and I thing IS in order, we +v,i„i,
think iv/r,,
Moship given the same representa­ the Cavalier and Clipper, Alcoa.
tion as anywhere else. It is Ships signing on and their any of the ship-shape buildings
highly important that our Union destinations were: Monarch of the the Seafarers has.
be financially able to continue Seas, Puerto Rico; Fairisle, Bre- A few Brothers are listed as
By JOE ALGINA
this type of representation, and men Rotterdam and Antwerp;
the only way it can do so is by Wild Ranger, Puerto Rico; Iber- jjospital this week. They are J. NEW YORK — Business and Robin Doncaster; Gadsden,
having a sufficiently strong Gen­ ville coastwise; Morning Light Curtis, M. Leousis, P. Vandereik, shipping just about kept pace American Eastern; W. R. Da vies.
with the post-boom average dur­ South Atlantic; Telfair Stock­
eral Fund to enable the organi­ w
T.
Chpfr, British E. Davidson, S. Reinchuck, L. ing the past couple of weeks. ton, Carras.
zation to sustain all ports alike.
K
Cavalier, Howard and M. J. Smyly.
All the Seatrain vessels and
If anything, the current rate of
The conditiohs of our Brothers British West Indies.
Bull
Line scows on the intershipping
established
the
fact
that
SEEN
AROUND
in the local marine hospital are
coastal
runs signed on again, as
IN-TRANSITS
the
boom
period
is
over
and
good, we are happy to report.
If you're looking for former that we have to adjust to the did the Robin Locksley, Robin
These men are Bob Fisher, J. J. In addition, we had several in- shipmates on the Mobile beach
Kettering, Raphael Semmes and
Flaherty, Vic lijilazzo and Frank transit ships. These were the this week, here are some of the new normal.
the Trinity.
In
view
of
the
trend,
it
is
ad­
Alasavich.
Bessemer Victory, Greeley Vic- lads seen around: P. Harrison, visable for a man paying off a
There is a noticeable rise in tory and the Steel Architect. All H. Taylor, P. Leonard, T. Pearce,
FUND TIE-UP
unemployment up this v/ay, a were contacted and necessary H. Boone, J. Carroll, A. Olander, ship to expect to spend a little
South Atlantic is tying up its
condition which is also being felt replacements were sent to them. E. Jones, G. Glennon, C. Shart- longer time on the beach, before Liberty ships pending action by
he
is
able
to
catch
a
ship
again,
all over the country. Naturally, Shipping is. expected to be slow zer and Mel Shipley,
than he has in the past several Congress on the appropriation
there are more and more non- for the coming two weeks. HowA lot of favorable comment years.
needed by the ECA to continue
seamen who are attempting to ever, we have seven Waterman has been heard around here on
its
operations for the • coming
Right now is a good time to
get jobs at sea. We think this is C-2s in port laying around wait- the proposed General Fund Asfiscal
year.
one of the times when Union ing for cargo. They are subject sessment, with many members, remind the Brothers in New
The National , Security Re­
York
that
they
should
not
for­
protection proves to be excep­ to call anytime cargos becomes particularly oldtimers, Stating
get to file applications for un­ sources Board is planning a mo­
tionally valuable.
available for them.
that this is the wisest moment employment insurance benefits, bilization program in the various
if they are eligible. Seamen's fields of shipping.
Five committees have been set
claims are handled at the office
at 165 Joralemon Street, Brook­ up to deal with various phases
of the program, but oddly
lyn.
By PAT ROBERTSON
riving in that strike-bound port. Fairhope, Steel Age, Santa Clara
enough all representatives are
ILLNESS CASES
from the management side. Not
SAN FRANCISCO — Indica­ During the past two weeks re­ Victory and the Seamar.
placements
were
sent
to
the
fol­
one
labor representative has
Among
the
Brothers
who
are
Men
who
sign
off
because
of
tions are that shipping will pick
lowing
ships:
Maiden
Victory,
been
named.
late
arrivals
on
the
Frisco
beach
illness,
should
report
to
the
un­
up during the coming two
Waterman; Steel Traveller, Isth­ are Whitey Lewis, Twitchell, employment insurance office, as
Since the seamen are the most
weeks.
mian; Purdue Victory, Water­ Willie McCuistion, Pete the soon as they receive s hospital important cogs in wartime ship­
For the past two weeks things man; Steel Mariner, Isthmian;
Greek, and a few others who slip showing they are fit for ping, it would seem that a man
have been somewhat slow, since Steel Executive, Isthmian; Mar­
who knows their problems
registered and then took off to duty.
a large number of the ships ar­ quette Victory, Waterman; Port- see the town.
Our payoffs for the past two should be appointed to the
riving were on in-transit status. mar, Calmar, and Young Ameri­ Those in drydock are J. Kee- week period included the fol­ group.
Also affecting business here is ca, Waterman.
We'll close by saying that the
nan, W. Lane, R. W. Frye, W. lowing ships: Frances, Kathryn,
the CIO longshore strike in
Although we expect shipping Sanderson, S. Walerk, Peter Suzanne, Beatrice, Cornelia, and break in the heat spell, slight'
Honolulu.
to improve in the next two Smith, T. Isaksen and M. Cara- Elizabeth, Bull Lines; Steel as it may be, was most wel­
At any rate, I've been kept weeks, we still don't look for ~way. We are all hoping to see Chemist, Isthmian; Raphael Sem- come. Now if we can get a sim­
busy pinch-hitting' for Jeff Mor­ anything phenomenal. Among these guys back up at the Hall mes, Kyska, Claiborne, Water­ ilar break in the shipping lull,
rison, who is in Honolulu to give the ships due in here are the and having coffee with us again man; Sea trains Havana, New we're sure all hands would call
representation to SIU crews ar­ Oshkosh Victory, Loyola Victory, soon.
York, New Jersey, and Texas; it even.

Mobile Hopmg 7 Ships Get Cargoes

NY Shipping Siower, But Keeps
Pace Witb Post-Boom Average

Saa frmckco Sees Signs Of Shipping Pick-Up

�Friday. August 5, 1949

THE SEAFARERS

Page Fire '

LOG

Seafarers Crews Make The News

^

mmmmm-smm
r*
r

i

J'l
Wilmington Agent E. B. Tilley photographed these galley
men on deck of the SS Portmar when she arrived in Long
Beach July 10. Left to right: A. D. Cano. Steward; C. Waldrom.
Ch. Cook; C. Bouskila, Baker; A. Alcoin. MM; M. Aycock. MM,
and W. Schaefer. Utility. The good crew brought the ship in
without any beefs for a clean payoff.

Leaving Long ^each on July 10 was the SS Winthrop
Marvin, bound for the Persian Gulf. Among Seafarers aboard
were men in above photo, also taken by Brother Tilley. From
right to left are B. L. McNeil, 2nd Cook; Ping Sing, Ch. Cook;
Richard Gragg, Steward, and F. Lord, Utility. Two crewmembers on left were not identified.

7
The Fourth of July turkey dinner on the SS Steel Vendor was a humdinger. In photo
above Chief Cook Isabilo Quanico puts the knife to one of the birds, while crewmen stand by.
Third from left is Charles J. Hartman, Baker; sacond from right is Bosun John (Bananas) Zeireis. Among others are James Payne, Ch. Mate; Angel Sylvestri, Ch. Elec.: A1 Robertson, MM;
William Vandervlist, Pantryman; C. Sang, 3rd Ciok. Photo by Joe Dioquino.

"Chips" Schoenbom relaxes
in a shoreside refreshment
station during recent Far East
run made by the SS Steel
Designer^- He and his ship­
mates stood up weH under
the heat, thanks to moments
like these.
&lt;

The Steel Designer was put three months and 22 days, with these lads as part of the ship's
complement. Standing are Brothers Hanna. Bjogum, Charlie Bush, Chips Schoenbom, Kid Par­
ker, Griffin, Smith and Nugent. Kneeling are Carlson, Hula Hula MitcheU, Risbeck and Tom
Crawford. We don't know who the fifth man is. Charlie Bush brought the pix to the LOG.

With the same thought in mind, these three Steel Designer
men take an outside table. Around the refreshments are
Sheriff Keane, Art Raifsnider and Swede Carlson, all of whom
appear contented. Brother Risbeck took this photo and one at
left.

While the Steel Vendor men were enjoying their July 4th
chow, the crew of the SS Hurricane were pumping water into
the ship's port tanks to right her after the iron ore cargo shift­
ed and caused a 22 degree list. It happened off Narvik, Nor­
way at 2 AM and these lads turned to with the rest; (left to
right) Popa, DM; Forbright. AB; Bamett, AB, and Scarbor­
ough, AB. Jack Simison submitted photo.

�THE

Page Six

Del Norte Crew Starts
Classes In Seamanship;
Two-fold Benefits Seen

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. August 5. 1949

THEY'RE BEHIND NEW SHIPBOARD SEAMANSHIP CLASSES

Determined to make the SS Del Norte the best man­
ned vessigl afloat, SIU deck men on the Mississippi Steam­
ship Company's sleek passenger-cargo ship have inaugurat­
ed shipboard classes in seamanship.
"We want to organize things*
so that those who are willing to contracted ships to follow. Such
learn won't have to do so the a
system of shipboard edhard way," said Blackie Banks-i "cation, right at the point where
ton.
ton, the Del Norte's Bosun, who it could be the most practical,
is one of the oldtimers sparking would be of inestimable value
the Union education program on to both the Union and the membership, he predicted.
the cruise ship.
Outlining the unique project. Speaking of the benefits of
Brother Bankston declared that the classes accruing aboard the
the benefits would be two-fold. Del Norte,. Bankston declared:
First, it would enable the men "It has done nothing but good
"who are good material and who on this ship."
are willing to leam" to become The classes in seamanship
expert seamen.
aboard the Del Norte are held in
iiilii
addition
to
the
highly
successful
WILL AID NEGOTIATORS
Here are some of the members of the SS Del Norte's Deck Gang now aiding program of
shipboard Union educational
The second advantage would meetings, which are conducted
education designed to strengthen the arm of Union negotiators and to make the ship's crew the
be of great value to the Union by Brother Bankston, and Thur­ "best in the' field." None of the men were identified, hut that's Blackie Bankston. the Mississippi
as a whole. As Bankston put it, ston Lewis. Del Norte crewmeip;. vessel's Bosun, sitting on the hit at the right.
"This in timn would help in fut­ hers are among the most avid
ure negotiations to keep getting readers of Union Education De­
the best contracts and wages in partment publications.
the maritime industry for the The Del Norte crew has ac­
Seafarers."
quired the use of a 16 mm.
The seamanship classes have sound motion picture projector
been underway for two trips and and all hands will soon have
By RED CAMPBELL
will continue as long as the an opportunity to see the SIU
Backing
the
SIU
fight
on
the
crew deenis it necessary, Banks- films, "Battle of Wall Street"
Having recently completed my annual "ulcer a la Waterman"
legislation to establish a Mer­
ton explained.
treatment aboard the SS Fairland, I find myself on Beaver Street
and "This Is The SIU."
chant Marine Reserve, 19 crewServing as the Del Norte's
members aboard the SS Strath­ still shaking the coal dust out of my hair. The Chief Mate I left
"Professor of Seamanship" is
cape vigorously protested the in Norfolk on a previous shaking. However, with all the distrac­
Bob Garn. According to Banksbill as being in conflict "with tions ten thousand tons of coal can bring, (for days the crew look­
ton, Brother Gam tackles his
ed like the extras from the Jolson Story) our trip to Venice was
our traditional rights."
educational duties with astound­
somewhat
eventful as all Waterman hops are.
Seamen who have had So­
ing enthusiasm.
In a letter to the House
Venice
as you know is the city of watery streets—a decided
"He doesn't mind one bit doing cial Security taxes deducted subcommittee considering the saving to "the taxpayer in the way of brooms. On street corners
from
their
pay
should
check
his share in teaching wire splic­
biU, known as HR 4448, the instead of traffic lights they
ing and reeving blocks—in fact, their old-age and survivors Strathcape Seafarers- said the have bell-buoys. For the vaca­
insurance accounts with the proposed legislation was "an in­
he loves it," Bankston said.
Social
Security Administra­ sult to the seamen who answer­ tioning baseball umpire, local
Response to the seamenship
tion.
The
right of a seaman ed their country's call in World opticians sell seeing-eye fish. As
classes among Del Norte deck
for those famous singing gondo­
men has been more than grat­ or his family to Old Age War II."
liers,
they're nothing but an un­
ifying, Bosun Bankston pointed and Survivors Insurance ben­
Urging defeat of the bill, the organized bunch of off-key gar­
out. There has been "good at­ efits depend on the wages Strathcape men said "we see no lic crunchers. At all funerals,
tendance" at all the sessions reported and entered on the good purpose served by use of
each pall-bearer is supplied with
held thus far and the progress seaman's wage record. The threats, force and military reg­
a bilge pump. Every hotel ad­
size
of
the
benefit
also
de­
of the classes indicates that there
imentation."
vertises its "sunken living room"
pends
on
this
wage
record.
are some good pupils taking
The SIU's denunciation of the —why not?—the Grande Canal
A special post card. Form
part.
bill, which would have forced
OAR-7004 is provided for seamen to break their own runs right through it. Every ele­
vator has a periscope. They even
HOPE OTHERS WILL FOLLOW this purpose, and can be
strikes, coupled with the storm catch herring in the mouse-traps.
The Del Norte Bosun express­ obtained by simply writing of protests made by the Strath­
ed the hope that the seamanship or calling at your nearest cape crew and others, apparent­ This is the only place in the
world where the house detective
classes would establish a pattern Social Security field office.
ly had good effect. Nothing has takes soundings.
for ^ crews aboard Seafarersbeen heard further of HR 4448.
Our journey to town was a bit
long but we enjoyed the com­
pany of an old fashioned bus
driver—when he hit somebody
RED CAMPBELL
he stopped. At this time of the
The "shining example of good seamanship" displayed by the crew of the Osh­ year the town is overflowing with American tourists. The Venetian
kosh Victory when the Waterman ship ran aground off the Mexican coast on June Chamber of Commerce stands by to take care of them when they
11, has been hailed by Capt. V. B. McFaddm and Chief OflFicer Anthony Reale as "a go broke. Two bread lines will be introduced—one white, one rye.

19 On Strathcape Venice Dampens Red's Spirits;
Aided SIU Fight 'See America First,' He Cries
On Reserve Bill

Social Security

Topside HailsOshkosh Vic Men's Know-how

real credit to the Seafarers In-* Complete text of the letter
temational Union."
follows:
The ship's , officers' glowing "It gives us great pleasure in
commendation of the Oshkosh writing this letter of commenda­
tion for the crew of the Osh­
Seafarers was contained in a let­ kosh Victory. On the night of
ter dated Jime 18 and received June 11, the vessel ran aground
at SIU Headquarters in New off the coast of Mexico and
York.
from the time of the groimding
Specifically referring to the to the time the vessel was safe­
work performed by the men in ly underway again, the work and
refloating the vessel, the offi­ effort put forth by the crew
cers' ' letter declared that "this should be marked as a shining
crew, man for man, will stack example of good seamanship
up agakist the best srew afloat." and a real credit to the Sea-

farers International Union.
"During the two days the ves­
sel was aground the crew
worked uncomplainingly and
with such a fine spirit of co­
operation that it is safe to say
that this crew, man for man,
will stack up against the best
crew afloat. Both myself and the
mate feel that if ever again we
should find ourselves in serious
difficulties we hope that once
again we may have a crew like
this ene."

MEAT BALLS WON'T LEAVE TOWN
However, while you're stiU financially able, you can dine at
the "Chit-Chat." Each afternoon they feature very fitting chamber
music—fit for a gas chamber. Eat one meat ball here and I guar­
antee you stay here. The Saturday night special is only 50 lire.
You get a cup of coffee, a salami sandwich, and a stomach pump,
(a highly recommended stomach pump.) The porter in the men's
room quit—he couldn't stand the smell from the kitchen. Some
people think Italian cheese is exported—it's deported. That stuff
could never get to be as old as it smells. Another feature of the
"Chit-Chat" is its midget waiters—you never know when you get
short-changed. To top everything ^Ise Off, the grape-treaders had
a sit down strike—^kinda messy.
Which all brings to mind my favorite pre-war slogan "SEE
AMERICA FIRST."

�is&amp;£Si

"[-ffi-aammfi

Friday. August S, 1949

THE SEAFARERS LOG

Digested Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings

Page Seven

S&amp;maiSmsm!

DOROTHY, May K — M. C.' have been returned dirty and the matter of the dumbwaiter
McCranie, Chairman; F. Wray, stained. Other Robin ships have overtime brought to the atten­
Secretary. Minutes of previous had the same trouble. Motion tion of a Patrolman. Dumbwaiter
meeting accepted as read. Old by DeVito that Patrolman check is out-of order, necessitating the
business settled. Delegates re­ high prices of slopch'est.
carrying of food up to the third
ported that everything was go­
deck. Motion carried to have Pa­
XXX
JOHN W. BURGESS. AprU 24 trolman check with company of­
ing smoothly, with no beefs in
any of the departments. Motions — J. Furton. Chairman; M. ficials as to the poor service
carried: to have water cooler re­ Smith. Secretary. - Minutes of given by chandlers aboard. Mo­
placed or repaired in Savannah; last meeting read and accepted. tion carried that a better grade
to refer to Patrolman the mat­ New Business: Crew agreed that of stores be put aboard. Motion
ter of obtaining a clock for the men will play poker in recrea­ carried that more frozen foods
crew's quarters aft; to give a tion room and clean up after be put aboard. Good and Wel­
vote of thanks to the Stewards game. Motion carried to give fare: Suggestion made that Pa­
Department for the swell chow Stewards Department a vote of trolman see that 'ship is ade­
and cooperation they gave all confidence for a job well done. quately stocked with fresh food.
hands. Crew's Messman, Gun Good and Welfare: Suggestion
ningham, suggested that crew made to exchange library upon
try to keep messroom tidy at arrival in the States. One min­
night. Meeting adjourned at ute of silence .for Brothers lost
at sea.
7:20 PM.
X i X
.XXX
INEZ. May 7—^Lov^, Chairman;
HELEN, May 8—E. Gonzalez.
H. A. Orlando. Secretary. Dele­
gates reported that all' books Chairman; J. A. Highlower. Sec­
were in good standing. Deck and retary. All delegates' reports
4, 4,
Engine men gave vote of thanks were accepted. Motions carried
W. E. DOWNING. May 25
Brady. Chairman; James Hickey. to Stewards Department for their to have Patrolman clarify beef
Secretary. Delegates' reports re­ cooperation. No beefs on board. concerning BR eating in crew's
vealed minor disputed overtime G. Malby was elected Ship's mess at meal time, and to set­
in Deck Department, . disputed Delegate. Under Good and Wel­ tle dispute between Chief and
port time in Stewards Depart­ fare, department delegates were Second Cooks. Under Education,
ment. Discussion on notice post­ reminded to submit repair lists the Bosun explained the way
ed by Captain on conditions of to Ship's Delegate before arrival a good Union man should con­
payoff at Beaumont, Texas. Del­ in port. Meeting adjourned at duct himself aboard ship. The
repair list of the previous trip
egates in respective departments 7:10 PM.
was
checked and it was found
to make repair lists, copies to
By HANK
XXX
ROBIN GOODFELLOW. April that everything had been taken
be given to boarding Patrolman
In two shakes of a fantail, Brothers, we're piling on the scales
on arrival in payoff port. Sug­ 30 — irincent Meehan. Chair­ care of with the exception of a
gestion by Chairman Brady to man; Howard Rice. Secretary. few items which will be at- of this column a fish tale as true as Florida fishing is world famous.
fenlist Day-man Berl Qhlsen as a Delegates reported no beefs. New tended to by Deck Delegate Brother Larry White has confessed to some mighty fine Florida
baiting and biting. In a lightweight workout he caught a 12 pound
hew permitman. Move was ac­ Business: Motion carried to have when he sees the Mate.
bass.
And down in Boca Grande he pulled no punches in giving a
claimed by all members present.
KO
to
a heavyweight whopper—a 163 pound tarpon. Without .any
One minute of silence in memory
grunts,
Larry sure can be classed as a professional fisherman, be­
of departed Brothers.
lieve us or not. . . Several weeks ago that cribbage-playing champ.
4. i 4.
Weaver Manning, was in town. Last week his SS Tulsa shipmate.
MANGORE. May 8—(Chairman
Bill Todd, came in—and back again at those pinochle games on the
not given); Masdn, Secreteury.
recreational deck. . . Bill Gale is in town again with a good old
Delegates reported number of
Florida tan on his face. No doubt Bill would say "And where else
books and permits in their de­
would I get the tan". . . Big Dutchy Bolz is anchored in this over­
partments. Brother Keefer elec­
of the date of voyage and name heated town after his trip on the tanker SS Michael.
JOHN (Dominick) NEWEI,L
ted to confer with the Patrol­
4,
»
4;
There is a letter for you at of ship you referred to in your
man at the payoff. Motion carOldlimer Harry Gallagher writes he'll appreciate hearing
ried that repair lists be made the Seamen's Church Institute, recent letter to New Orleans
from his shipmates while he'll be dxydocked for some time in
Agent Earl Sheppard.
out by each department delegate 25 South St., New York City.
the Ellis Island Marine Hospital in New York. He says every­
and turned over to Ship's Dele­
XXX
XXX
thing
is swell there—except there's no night lunch. Anyway,
gate to be presented to Patrol­
VICTOR E. JOHNSON
JOHN R. WEBB
he
wants
his shipmate. Steward Frank Simone, on the Raphael
man. Steward instructed to notify
Get in touch with your father,
Get in touch with your wife,
Semmes
to
know (but he's only kidding) that he's hospitalized
crew as to when stores and care of Adams Restaurant, 1100 Ed R. Johnson, Box 163, Woodbecause
of
eating bad food. . . Several Brothers with smites
linen are being brought aboard. Magazine St., New Orleans, La. hull, 111.
on their faces are wondering what ever became of B.T.O. Peto
Discussion on amount of toilet
XXX
XXX
Loleas lately? They have been informed that he's studying at
soap to be issued. Matter of JACK LEONARD THROWER
MELVIN RICE
Sheepshead Bay to be a waiter so he can sling hash at his
overtime for making ice to be
Communicate with your moth­
Get in touch with Mrs. Shirley
cousin's restaurant. . . Mike Rossi, the smiling Bosun, is now
referred to Patrolman. One min­ W e s s e 1, Supervisor, Seamen's er, Laverne Rice, 208 Penn St.,
aboard the Waterman scow, Andrew Jackson, somewhere in tho
ute of silence for Brothers who Church Institute, 25 South St., Waxahachie, Texas.
North Pacific Ocean right now. . . That international traveler
lost their lives at sea.
New York City.
of a cook, who is always wearing a mustache on his face,
ALVIN^HENDERSON
XXX
Jimmie Crescitelli (his first name is really Eugene) just tame
Your lawyer, at 291 Broad­
PETER MACKIE
into port from Naples. How was Rome, Jimmy?. , . Les .Ames
Get in touch ^at once with way, asks you to get in touch
is sweating out New York weather after being on the Wesl
Local Draft Board No. 32, 301- with him.
Coast—mainly Portland, Oregon.
303 Hinson Building, Tampa, Fla.
XXX
X
X
X
HARLEY WOLD
XXX
X X i
Brother James Biehl is down in New Orleans light how. How's
Please write to M. E. Jones,
DEL MONTE. April 12—Henry
ANDREW BAILEY
everything with you, oldtimer?. . . Speaking of New Orleans, two
Gerdes. Chairman; Bob Creel.
Get in touch with your wife 2517 W. Jackson Blvd., Chicago
Brothers from Mobile are in town right now, meeting a lot
Secretary. Election held for at 1253 East 35 St., Brooklyn, 12, m.
shipmates. It's Bob Schaeffer and C. Ray. We have had the pleasure
Ship's Delegate. John Alman el­ New York.
XXX
of being told that Bob Schaeffer is-famous.-He's the-Casanova o4
"
THORES
E. DICKENS
ated by acclamation. Deck Del­
XXX
Get in touch with Benjamin the Vieux Carre down in New Orleans. . . And this reminds us of
JOHN SUCHEVITS
egate reported some disputed
Brother Tony Pisano. He is the Casanova of Bourbon Street. . .
Please get in touch with Roy B. Sterling, 42 Broadway, New
overtime which he believed to
Brother "Wally" Wallace, who came in after a trip on the Raphael
te good and payable. Other Roberts, SS Portmar, care of York City, regarding your case.
Semmes,
is probably wondering if Bob High has been turning to
delegates reported all in order. Calmar Steamship Corp., 25
•for
those
baseball games aboard the Robin Kirk—due in New York
CARLOS F. HERNANDEZ
Suggestion by Neagle that each Broadway, New York, N.Y.
soon.
.
.
By
the way. Brothers, we have-heard that • coffee-(and
Communicate with William
man clean wash room after use.
XXX
doughnuts)
put
out to the New York membership twice daily on
Mahler, 170 Broadway, New
MALCOLM M. CROSS
Exhaust fans suggested for all
the
recreation
deck
is better tasting than any of the nickel or dime
Get in touch with your wife York City, regarding your case.
foc'sles. One minute of silence
coffee
these
restaurants
have. Not only is the coffee that good but
Florence, at 736 Cary Drive, San Phone BEekman 3-3289.
for departed Brothers.
it
is
plenty
appreciated
by
the Brothers.
Leandro, Calif.
XXX
XXX
4i
41
4&gt;
MARTIN BLACKWELDER
ROBIN LOCKSLEY. June 19
XXX
Here
are
a
few
items
you
can
shoot
the sea breeze about
Vincent O'Reilly wants you to
—O. Klippberg. Chairman; J. De­
JOSEPH LEBLANC
anywhere
in
the
world.
According
to
an
article
we &gt;read it said
Call at once at the office of get in touch with him at 2427
Vito. Secretary. Delegates re­
that
a
good
cook
is
made
of
the
following
ingredients—(1)
ono
ported no beefs. New Business: William Mahler, attorney, 170 Ninth Walk, Jackson Heights,
part
artist
(which
makes
us
think
that
Brother
Norman
Maffic,
Motion by Walter Gustavson that Broadway. He is holding gear New York. He has checked your
who is all artist, probably would be a perfect cook); (2) two
suit in the New York Hall.
delegate check repair list. Mo­ and money for you.
parts
inventor; (3) three parts efficiency plus a dash of person­
tion by Lester Keyes that when
4. 4. 4- '
XXX
ality.
Well, and with a little gravy overtime any cook can bo
ELEANOR
MARIE
HOTVILLE
FRANCISCO RUFINO
the Patrolman comes aboard, he,
a
super-dooper
genius. . . Accordingg to experts the odds arc
Get in touch with William
Get in touch at once with Wil­
the Steward and Ship's Delegate
(no
fooling)
3,500,000
to 1 against turning up a perfect "29"
Mahler,
attorney,, 170 Mahler, 170 Broadway, New
find out why there wasn't liam
cribbage
hand.
Wanna
bet?. . . Is it hot these days. It sure is
York City, regarding your case.
enough food purchased in US Broadway, New York City.
the
humility
of
getting
this humidity day after day. Even Hie
before trip began. Motion by
XXX
XXX
perspiration
has
perspiration.
Well, Brothers keep the ships
LAMAR PICKETT
O. (Bill) GONSALVES
Steward Albert Vetu that no
clean
and
happy.
Your
jobs
and
contracts are your security.
Get in touch with your parents
Please advise Joe Algina or
laxmdry be sent ashore in LourProtect
them
by
sailing
the
ships
shipshape—the SIU way.
-enco Marques, because goods Joe Volpian at New York Hall in Miami, Fla.

btiw-g OTL the refierexidum -fov
AW. awwiia.! Gewera,! Puwd"
As^essmewi: oiill continue fhtrii
jpiUQu^ So. Hea4dpQrtlien£aaciest;
AsG ha.ll and. cast your vote.
It's your tinion.. and. it5s upijp
you to help run "'

CUT and RUN

�Pagie iSighi

THE

SEAFARERS

Gray Proposes Pooling Cola
Of Hospital Donations

LOG

Friday, August 5. 1949

Bees Trim Bale Cotneau Team, 12-10

To the Editor:

After losing two games by
close margin^ on previous trips,
the Cola Bees defeated the Ca­
To the Editor:
nadian Baie Comeau All Stars,
I had an eye-opening talk with
12 to 10. The Canadians chalked
the Union's Special Service Rep­
up nine runs in the first inning,
resentative, Joe Volpian, the
mostly on Cola Bee errors.
other day. He showed me files
The softballing Seafarers set­
containing the names of the large
tled down, however, and limit­
number of SIU men in hospitals
ed the Canadians to only one run
throughout the world, some as
for the remainder of the game.
far away as Honolulu.
Spectacular hitting' netted the
Some of these men are no
Cola Bees their 12 runs in the
longer eligible for Union hospi­
closing innings. The All Stars
tal benefits because they have
was composed of the best play­
deceived their $3.00 weekly ben­
ers picked from four teams in
efits for the maximum 52 weeks,
Baie Comeau, where the Colabee
^he Union, however, is taking
picks up newsprint for the US.
care of these men out of the
Tiie appearance of the Cola
general fund.
Bees
on the Canadian playing
I have also learned that cer­
field always brings out a large
tain groups of men in some of
number of SIU rooters.
These four Seafarer stalwarts appear in the lineup when
the marine hospitals are send­
BILL GRAY
The Cola Bees keep in shape
ing out form letters to compan­
the Cola Bees, representing the ship of the same name, meet
at sea by practicing in the num­
ies on whose ships they have
softb^l opposition in the port of Baie Comeau. From left to
fund, specifying that it is to be ber two hold on the way to Can­
previously worked, asking for
right: Slim Serralin, John Dugina, Bernie Friedman and Ed
used for the benefit of sill mem­ ada.
contributions from crewmembers.
Nooney, whose fast ball and curve puzzle many a Canadian
bers in hospitals. The money will
John J. Dugina
batter.
One man in this group has for­
thus be earmarked for the spe­
warded one of these letters to
cific purpose for which it is
Seatrain, another man to Missis­ intended.
sippi, another to Alcoa, and so
Judging by what I saw in our
on.
Headquarters files, I realize what
As a result of these direct ap­
a swell job is being done for
peals, the men in one hospital
the members in the various hos­
are receiving excessive benefits
pitals. If we Seafarers have con­ To Ihe Edilor:
factor in supporting or defeat­ working men and women.
while the men in the far away
fidence in our Union—and there
places—all of them good Union is every reason that we should
Concerning Brother Raymond's ing various bills in Congress. In conclusion, as a member of
Being able to accomplish this, the AFL, I believe it is not only
Brothers — are getting along as
— we will make our hospital article on the possibility of the it stands to reason that we also to our advantage to support the
best they can on the regular $3.00
contributions to the regular hos­ SIU actively participating in the could be instrumental in helping political aims of labor but also
weekly benefits given by the
pital fund, and leave it to the AFL's political education pro­ carry out the political purposes our duty as a legitimate trade
Union.
Union to see to it that all mem­ gram, I, and many others whom of the American Federation of union.
TO REGULAR FUND
bers in all hospitals receive I have talked to, are all for it. Labor on other issues affecting
C. N. Mclnis ,
I suggest, therefore, that the equal benefits from the proceeds As Brother Raymond points
out, there was a time when the
men donating money at the pay­ of our donations.
promises made by the majority
offs to their Brothers in the
Bill Gray
of
the politicians to labor was
Marine Hospitals, contribute this
Ship's Delegate
just
so much vot^-getting ba­
money to the regular hospital
Seatrain New Jersey
loney. However, today, in Presi­
dent Truman and many Con­
By I. H. Pepper
gressmen, who were labor-sup­
ported in their elections, we
have men who have consistently
Over the forest green he rode...
proven themselves to be true
Cracking a whip,
To the Editor:
hospital here, with one scheduled friends of labor.
Racing the wind...
Just a few lines to let the to be discharged today. That's
BUCK STONE WALL
about
all
the
news
now.
I
hope
boys know I am here, of all
Death in a flaming robe.
places, in the San Juan Marine to see you all soon. I want to Because Congress is still dom­
say hello to all the boys on the inated by a reactionary, laborA hundred thousand acres burn.
Hospital.
fifth deck and to Paul on the hating element, these men have
Brown-eyed doe with speckled fawn
I have been in hospitals twice second.
been
defeated
in
the
attempts
Trembling,
know not where to turn.
before, once in 1911 for typhoid Dr. Jaime Valitmour was just
to repeal the Taft-Hartley law
and once in 1925 with a broken in and said just one more week.
Remember not one quiet dawn.
leg. Outside of those two &lt;ex- Then to get a ship back to the and replace it with a -fair labormanagement relations bill such
Over the forest green he rode...
cursions, I had never been sick states..
as
the
Thomas-Lesinski
bill.
a day. That is, outside of a little
Scaling peaks.
H. J. Hanes
It therefore seems like plain
hangover. But a trip around the
Hurdling streams...'
common sense to me to try to do
comer would fix that up.
BURNS GRATEFUL
something about this situation.
Death in a flaming robe.
During the current stay in the
By
doing
our
utmost
in
support­
hospital I have had two opera­ FOR HOSPITALITY
Men sweat and curse iand pray for rain.
ing labor's political aims we can
tions. Right now I feel fine,
OF SIU BROTHERS
help put men partial to labor
No rest. Through heat apd night and day :
left New York on Dec. 15 weigh­
in
Congress
and
thus
assure
la­
To
the
Editor:
They
labor on the mad terrain,
ing 201 pounds. At present
bor
of
a
fair
deal.
Where giant firs flare up like hay.
tip the scales at 170.
I should like to ^express my It is only natural that a young
thanks to the crew of the SS organization should concern it­
GOOD CHOW
Over the forest green he rode...
Greeley Victory for the cooper­ self with becoming strong in­
. Onward and onward,
As I say I feel fine. This is ation and kindness they showed
a" nice hospital. Lots of good to me when I was stricken with ternally first. However, we are
Faster and faster...
food, with chicken three times appendicitis. I was Bosun at the now a strong, well-knit and so­
lid organization and we are in
Death in a flaming robe.
a week and eggs every morning. time.
a
position
to
try
to
improve
con­
Of course, if you have an eye At the same time I. want to
Crisp, charred spines of trees poke skyward.
for beauty you must look at the thank the Brothers in the Tampa ditions by appropriate political
Conscious of immodest dress
nurses. We have a nice fellow Hall for the splendid hospitality action.
They
drape themselves in shrouds of srrioke.
at the office here. He makes the they gave my wife while I was
WE CAN DO IT
rounds once a week, and some­ recuperating from the appendix
The mountains blush in nakedness.
We have proven time and
times twice.
operation in the Tampa Munici­ again that we are able to sup­
Over the forest green he rode...
He has lots of waterfront to pal Hospital.
port and win beefs for, and in
Knowing no mercy.
cover and it keeps him pretty
These men all showed them­ collaboration with, other unions.
busy at times.
Leaving but blackness...
selves to be true friends.
These, as well as our own.
Joseph E. Burns
There are six SIU boys in the
Death in a flaming robe. ,
Also, we have been a potent

Support Urged For AFL Campaign To Oust
Anti-Labor Congressmen In 1950 Elections

Log -A - Rhythms

FOREST FIRE

H. J. Haites Expects To Leave
Drydock Soon, Head For US

�Friday, August 5. 1949

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Nine

A Seafarer Sketches His Shipmates Del Sud Carries Good Crew
Bessemer Victory Men Are Subjects For Norman Maffie But Designer Missed Boat
SMttTY
^

To the Editor:

'
'ScHoswf-f?-'

L'V" —:r=rrrr-' v

Vi^

1 tiB£^

!

I have just spent a few months
aboard Mississippi's luxury liner,
the SS Del Sud. I find that I
prefer Baltimore's new Ore ships
to it.
Of course, the run made by
the Del Sud has the Ore ship's
beat a long ways, but the de­
signers of the Ore ships made
up for this, in my opinion, by
doing a better job than is evi­
dent on the Mississippi wagon.

fff:

For one thing, the reefei, en­
gineers on the liner are always
catching it from one end or the
other. The crews' quarters are
air-conditioned, but the Stew­
ards Department lives right over
the engine room. There is no in­
sulation and if the air is cooled
enough for them to be comfor­
table, the passengers and the
Deck Department are too cold.
If the reefer tries to warm these
people up, the Stewards Depart­
ment has to squak. And this
works the other way around in
the winter.

Chow, draft and a cat perplex the Deck Gang.

SMALL

LAUNDRY.

be expected of a Ship's Dele­
gate.
AI Flyim is taking his vaca­
tion this trip after a year of
fine work on board. Keith Winsley, better known as Honolulu,
heads the crew and arranges
such sports as baseball games
with the crews of other ships in
various ports.
Max Lipton, who usually gets
the chairman's job at the meet­
ings, does just as fine a job in
the galley as he does presiding
over the meetings. Hans Spiegel
has been handling the Stewards
Department Delegate's job for
quite a while now, and he has
plenty to do as he has more men
in his department than in the
other two departments combin­
ed.
So with all these good Union
men aboard—and I have only
mentioned a few of them—the
Del Sud should keep right on
being a fine home for SIU men.
With all these men working hard
as they do, they kind of make
up for the designer's mistakes.
For myself though, I'm likely to
go back up to Baltimore and try
another Ore ship for awhile.
Paul Ferandez

The crew's laundry is too
small and it is right beside the
watchmen's foc'sle who sleep in
the daytime, and every time
someone uses the clothes drier
it wakes them up. Then when
the glory hole steward has to
take the dirty linen to the lock­
er, he has to go topside, through
the passengers' quarters and
down another ladder up forward. To the Editor:
Nor are there any wash bowls
In response to Brother Buck­
in the crews' foc'sles.
ley's article in the LOG (June
For a ship as modern as this 22) in which he opposes com­
I was a bit disappointed, but we pulsory vacations,' I would like
have a fine crew aboard to keep to point out what I think are
the spirits up. Warren Wyman a few discrepancies in his reas­
has been doing a fine job as oning.
Brother Buckley makes quite
Bosun, after relieving Rocky
Benson. Jack Hartley keeps a point of job security. Also as
things rolling as smooth as could to the right of a Union member
to remain on ships, as long as
he wants to.
It is my belief that the jobs
belong to the membership of
the Seafarers and not to any in­
dividual. A man may say that he
is entitled to stay on a job as
long as' he wants to regardless
of the scarcity of jobs, but on
To the Editor:
second thought he should re­
Here is something good for the member that he was not alone
membership which I have just on the picket line and that the
accidentally discovered.
job was fought for by all mem­
The American Seamen's Friend bers alike. No one member, or
Society is maintaining a rest one group of members gained
home on Staten Island, where anything by themselves, but all
seamen can board and room for of them pulling together did.
three dollars a day. The home is
IN THICK OF IT
located on 6640 Hylan Boulevard,
Tottenville, Staten Island, and
In some instances, many of the
is the only such rest center now Brothers were at sea on a com­
operating in the Port of New pany's ships that were being
York area. Most of the others struck in the states and there­
closed up after the war.
fore it was necessary for mem­
The building is a former man­ bers on the boach to hit the
sion, not just a lean-to. Bathing bricks and win the beef.
facilities are located right on the
The jobs contracted to the
property, which is in a country­ Seafarers International Union be­
like atmosphere. There are, of long to all membeis and if it
course, games, books, radios and becomes necessary to apportion
other recreational material avail­ the jobs and set a time limit
able.
so that all membeis can work
The fare from Manhattan to part of the time instead of some
"the home is 17 cents, including members working all of the
subway, ferry and bus-transfer. time, then that is what should
The bus stops right at the door. be done.
Every full book member of
I understand any American
seaman who feels he needs a this Union is entitled to his
rest is eligible. Mrs. Lee-Martin share of the work and any other
is in charge; the phone number viewpoint than this is basically
is TOttenville 8-2828. Perhaps wrong.
Irrespective of Brother Buck­
you would post a notice on the
bulletin board or insert a line ley's views there are many men
or two in the Union paper to in the Union who are sobe*', in­
let the boys in on something dustrious and capable of hand­
ling even his job.
good.
William W- Land&gt;
1
F. Smith

Member Says
Jobs Should
Be Shared

Rest Center Wins
Praise As Good
Deal For Seamen

Maffie found the Black Gang pensive and orderly.
'

i/icrc/$.ys-i ^

i •

MOB • ^

^

' «o

^

- """

•"

Jytti
W}f^6:

WR&gt;T€5
H6i/Se --

• "i

The galley was always jumping.

�Page Ten

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, Augusl 5, 1949

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings in Brief
SAN FRANCISCO—Chairman.
two window fans for the Hall
W. McCuistion. 23138; Recording
here. Motion by L. Dardin car­
Secretary, W. L. Busch, 50829;
ried, instructing Galveston
Reading Clerk, Pat Robinson,
Branch to place complete min­
30148.
utes of its meetings in the re­
All minutes of previous meet­
port
to Headquarters, and to
PORT
REa
REG.
REa
TOTAL
SHIPPED SHIPPED SHIPPED TOTAL
ings in other Branches read and
DECK
ENG.
STWDS.
REa
DECK
ENa
STWDS. SHIPPED notify the Secretary-Treasurer
approved. Brother Robertson re­
that this has not been done.
16
23
13
52
3
8
12
23
ported that he is serving as Act­ Boston
4 4 4
143
126
108
377
89
62
53
204
ing Agent during absence of New York.
Philadelphia
29
21
14
64
SAVANNAH
—Chairman, Jeff
20
20
14
54
Jeff Morrsion, who had gone" to
Baltimore
111
111
97
319
Gillette,
37060;
Recording Sec­
105
109
75
289
Honolulu to represent SIU A&amp;G
44
Norfolk
39
retary,
W.
J.
Brantley,
111; Read­
22
105
30
27
21
78
District membership in that port
18
Savannah
10
ing
Clerk,
Charles
Rice,
40707.
17
45
8
9
6
23
during the longshore beef. Rob­
8
Tamna
Headquarters'
report
read
and
6
5
19
7
7
6
20
ertson stated that the affairs of
92
accepted.
Agent
reported
that
Mobile
70
62
224
50
48
31
129
the port are in good shape, with
• 105
96
123
324
99
89
142
330 shipping had been on the slow
the prospects for shipping look­ New Orleans
88
Galveston
90
58
236
18
12
22
52 side. Job calls came from the
ing better. The report on the
Cape Nome in Charleston, and
42
West
Coast
32
23
97
25
21
12
58
San Juan Hall submitted by
the Carabulle and Canton Vic­
New Orleans Agent Earl Shep- GRAND TOTAL..
696
6*24
542
1,862
454
412
~ 394
1,260 tory in Jacksonville. A replace­
pard and Engine Patrolman
ment was sent to the Beaver
Buck Stephens was read in its
Victory,
as one of her crew got
ance
with
recommendations
of
constitution,
the
New
Orleans
bright, he reported, as a settle­
entirety, and the membership
off
to
go
to the hospital. Sev­
Building
Maintenance
Commit­
resolution
calling
for
a
referen­
ment in the grain elevator strike
voted to approve it after full
eral
ships
are
due to call during
tee's
report,
which
has
been
ap­
dum
on
the
proposed
ten-dollar
appears far off. With quite a few
discussion. A resolution on a
the
next
two
weeks.
Minutes of
proved
by
membership
in
all
General
Fund
assessment
was
grain ships scheduled for this
voluntary ten-dollar assessment
other Branch meetings were ap­
Branches.
Under
Good
and
Wel­
presented
for
the
second
succes­
port,
the
beef
has
affected
our
was read and discussed. The
proved. Motion carried to ex­
membership concurred in the fare membership discussed the sive time and the membership shipping, one ship has already
cuse
Frank Oetgen from the
resolution in a show-of-books urgent need for repairs on the voted overwhelmingly for adop­ been diverted to Galveston. meeting.. Following a reading
tion. The Agent spoke on local Agent saicL that if strike should
vote. Under Good and Welfare, Norfolk Branch building.
shipping
and discussed the pros­ be settled before next meeting, x&gt;f the New Orleans resolution
it was urgently recommended
MOBILE — Chairman, Louis pects for the coming two weeks. there should be a pickup in for a ten-dollar assessement for
that the assessment be approved
Neira,
26393; Recording Secre­ Motion carried to place on pro­ shipping. Report oh San Juan the General Fund, there was
by the entire membership. Also
tary,
James
L. Carroll, 50409; bation for two years a permit- HaU read in its entirety. After full discussion on the question.
discussed were the San Juan
Reading
Clerk,
Harold J. Fisch­ man, who had fouled up on full discussion, a motion carried A motion to adopt the resolu­
situation, the Honolulu beef and
er,
59.
three different occasions during unanimously to concur with the tion was carried unanimously.
the organizational problems fac­
Motion
carried,
to
read
only
the past three weeks, ashore and report. Motion carried to adopt Membership- voted approval of
ing the Union.
New Business of other ports. aboard ship. The case was dis­ resolution calling for annual as­ the report on the San Juan Hall,
reaffirming their previous rec­
BOSTON — Chairman, J. Brother Fischer read the Agent's cussed thoroughly and the mem­ sessment to build General Fund ommendation that the Hall be
Greenbaum, 281; Recording Sec report, stating that the Agent bership held that, if the man to enable Union to continue its closed and a representative stay
retary, B. Lawson, 894; Reading was in Washington with other was to be given a chance, he broad functions. Meeting ad­ in PR to handle Union affairs.
SIU International officers to dis­ should be placed on probation. journed to permit showing of
Clerk, M. Norris.
4 4 4
Minutes of other Branch meet­ cuss the proposed Panamanian Under Good and Welfare the film, "This Is the SIU."
boycott.
He
said
the
officials
question
of
gashounds
and
per­
BALTIMORE
— Chairman,
4 s.
ings read and accepted. Agent
were
also
going
to
attend
Senate
formers
came
up,
and
several
William
Rentz,
26445;
Recording
reported on the status of ship­
PHILADELPHIA— Chairman,
ping in this port. Dispatcher an­ and House hearings on bills af­ speakers pointed out the dangers L. Carden, 40375; Recording Sec­ Secretary, Eddie Mooney, 46671;
nounced the number of men reg­ fecting labor and matters of in­ to the Union if their actions retary, D. Hall, 43372; Reading Reading Clerk, A1 Kerr, 29314.
Trial Committee's report was
istered and shipped for the pe­ terest to the maritime industry, were to be permitted to con­ Clerk, S. Bergeria, 7142.
Minutes of previous Branch read and accepted. Minutes of
riod, and Patrolman's report was particularly the closed shop pro­ tinue.
t t 4,
meetings were accepted as read. other ports approved. Several
read. A motion carried to accept visions of the Taft-Hartley law.
NEW ORLEANS — Chairman, Agent gave his report on the men were excused from the
the Headquarters' report to the The Agent's report said that
membership. The New Orleans there were eight C-2s in port to Bill Higgs, 223; Recording Sec­ status of shipping, which has meeting after presenting accept­
resolution calling for a ten-dol­ take full crews. A report on retary, James Tucker, 2209; not been too bad. He also out­ able reasons. The resolution
lar general fund assessment to building renovation stated that Reading Clerk, Buck Stephens, lined some of • the organizing from New Orleans recommend­
activities with which this port ing a ten-dollar General Fund
bolster the Union was read for the repairs on the Mobile Hall 76.
would
probably
be
completed
by
A
motion
carried
to
hold
over
is concerned. Motion carried call­ assessment carried by a vote of
the second week, as per consti­
next
meeting.
As
per
the
consti­
until
the
next
meeting
the
cases
ing
for concurrence with report 340 to 2. Motion carried to ac­
tution. Following discussion, a
tutional
requirement,
there
was
of
11
men
charged
with
activit­
on
the
San Juan Hall submitted cept and concur in report on
vote was taken and the resolu­
tion was adopted unanimously. a second reading of the ten-dol­ ies harmful to the Union, in or­ by Bull Sheppard and Buck the San Juan Hall. Under New
lar General Fund assessment der to give them ample time to Stephens. Motion carried to ac­ Business, a motion carried call­
S.
NORFOLK — Chairman. Ben resolution, put forth by New Or­ appear before the membership. cept Secretary-Treasurer's report ing for the appointment of mas­
Bees, 95; Recording Secretary, J. leans members. Membership vot­ Minutes of other Branch meet­ and the Headquarters report, as ters-at-arms at the meetings.
A. Bullock, 4747; Reading Clerk, ed to adopt the resolution, fol­ ings read and approved. Port well as a motion to adopt res­ During Good and Welfare the
lowing the action taken at the Agent stated that business af­ olution for a ten-dollar assess­ Union's film, "This Is the SIU,"
B. Taylor, 28926.
last
meeting on this proposal. fairs of the port are in igoOd ment, which was presented by was shown and was well-receiv­
Motion carried to accept pre­
Brother
S. N. Hurst and J. R. shape but that shipping and in­ New Orledns members. Under ed by the memmbership. Meet­
vious meetings' minutes as read.
Matthews
took the Union Oath come had fallen off. Outlook, for New Business, motion carried ing adjourned at 8:05 PM, with
Headquarters' report to the
of
Obligation.
next two weeks is j
very recommending that Agent buy 342 members present.
membership read and approved.
tt
iThe Port Agent reported on
GALVESTON — Chairman,
shipping in Norfolk, particularly
mentioning the payoff of the SS Keith Alsop, 7311; Recording
Taddei, which recently signed a Secretary, R. Wilburn, 37739;
Union agreement. The company Reading Clerk, J. Byrd, 34683.
(Continued from Vage/A):-^ r wage fights in the interests of NMU versus Great Lakes oper­
paid off under the new scale, in­ Galveston and other port min­ gotiated by the SIU just a .few the membership on several leg­ ators—that the Hiring Hall is
illegal under the T-H law.
cluding last spring's $3.50 wage utes of previous meetings were weeks ago.
'
.'
, . islative fronts.
increase and the recent $7.50 read and accepted. Port Agent The resolution stressed , the ' They pointed to the dangers Those backing the assessment
clothing allowance. Agent rec- discussed shipping in the port fact that "it is "at dll times nec­ td the Union Hiring Hall con­ proposal declared that funds to
•ommended that a vote of thanks for the past two weeks and the essary to be able to combat any tained in the recent ' Federal fight these battles can only come
be given Brothers Mahoney and prospects for the coming two and all' forces - that might .seek .Court ruling—in the case of the from the Union's General Fund.
Stevens for their efforts in bring­ weeks. Patrolman's and Dispat­ to destroy us" and that, fpr the
ing the ship in Union style, with­ cher's reports accepted. The re­ Union to, be in a position to do
out beefs or disputed overtime. port on the San Juan Hall sub­ so, the. General Fund must' be
The membership responded en­ mitted by Earl Sheppard and strerigtHehed. The ten-doU^cr as­
mie unions, when it means los­
(Continued from Page 1)
ing cabbage, which is what the
thusiastically. Agent said the Buck Stephens was read and a sessment was offered as the .best,
company appears to be a good motion carried unanimously , to means by , which this needed MEBA, which did not see fit Hawaiian situation proved.
one and is an excellent addition concur with recommendations strength could be obtained... . to leave the ship to help their Meanwhile the SIU membership
to the SIU fold. Five ships are made in the report. The resolUi^ Members speaking in beh^ CIO affiliate—even though the refuses to hold the bag for the
scheduled to arrive here in the tion to place the question of a of the resolution at the July l3 AFL Seafarers showed them the commie-controlled ILWU — es­
next seven days to payoff and ten-dollar voluntary assessment and July 27 meetings in A&amp;G way by pulling a "suitcase par­ pecially when the company in­
two others to pick up cargo. At on a referendum ballot was ports pointed out that anti­ ade"—are threatening the SIU volved is Isthmian, which was
the moment there are ten ships adopted for the second succes­ union forces in Washington were on the west coast with action organized only after an exten­
in port that could call crews, if sive meeting.
redoubling their efforts to keep by the same CIO longshoremen, sive campaign which lasted two
cargo for them become available,
i- X t.
restrictive labor legislation on because the Brotherhood of Ma­ and a half years, cost several
the Agent annoimced. The reso­ TAMPA — Chairman, R. H. the books, and offered as evi­ rine Engineers, SIU, is proving htmdred thousand dollars of the
lution to put question of ten- Hall, 26060; Recording Secretary, dence the coalition which has too popular with the member­ Union's money, and meant backdollar General Fund assessment E. R. Smith, 20057; Reading prevented repeal of the Taft- ship of
the commie-ridden breaking work under intolerable
conditions for hundreds of vol­
to a referendum vote was adopt­ Clerk, N. Ellis.
MEBA.
Hartley law.
ed unanimously. Motion carried Only New Business of previous Other supporters of the assess­ But maritime observers won­ unteer organizers—^not when the
instructing Agent to get started meetings in other Branches was ment stressed the fact the Union der just how much cooperation ILWU does not expect the same
on building repairs in accord- read. As required by the Union must be financially prepared to is possible between these com­ support from its own affiliates.

Shipping From July 13 To July 27

Members

Referendum Boilots On Fund

Two CIO Affiliates Ignore ILWU Strike

�THE SEAFARERS

Friday. August 5, 1949

Page Eleven

LOG

The Canadian SIU And The Commies
(Continued from Page 3)
At this stage of the game, the communists'
plans for sabotage of the anti-communist nations'
economies began to emerge in the clear.
Canadian and British communists, working
hand-in-glove, began a campaign to draw British
waterfront workers into the plot. Despite the
pleas of British trade union officials, communistcontrolled dockers in Bristol and Avonmouth pull­
ed unofficial, wildcat stoppages and refused to
handle Canadian ships. Goods for Britain lay
rotting in the ships while the communists re­
joiced.
The International Transportworkers Federa­
tion, representing millions of anti-communist
maritime and transport workers in many nations
condemned the "strike."
Arthur Deakin, head of Britain's General and
Transport Workers Union, and William Lawther,
president of the Mine Workers Union, branded
the "strike" as a communist plot to wreck Brit­
ain's economy.
The Bristol and' Avonmouth dockers finally
heeded their union officials' pleas and voted to
return to work.
The communists then turned to London, where
two Canadian ships with CSU crews were await­

ing unloading. Richard Barrett, communist sec­
retary of the British Stevedores Union, succeed­
ed in tying up more than half of the shipping in
London. Communist party members paraded in
London's streets urging support for the tieup.
The Communist-controlled Italian Confedera­
tion of Labor and the French Confederation of
Labor both followed the communist line to the
letter and parroted in turn that they would urge
their members to refuse to unload Canadian
ships.
Meanwhile, the communist world labor body,
the World Federation of Trade Unions, last week
formed a new seamen's and dockers section to
be used "to promote peace"^of the kind they
prompted on the Canadian and British water­
fronts.
By July 22, the British trade unionists and the
nation at large became so bitter over the com­
munist torpedoing of their nation's economy that
the dockers agreed to return to work.
This break came shortly after British author­
ities seized two Americans and one Dutch na­
tional on charges that they were sent by com­
munists to England to block settlement of the
beef.

The men were Louis Goldblatt, secretary-treas­
urer of the Pacific Coast branch OT the CIO
Longshoremen's Union and chief aide to Harry
Bridges; John Maletta, a member of the same
union's executive committee and Johann Blankeozee, secretary of the communist controlled
General Maritime Union of Holland.
Thus the plot of the communists to wreck Ca­
nadian and British shipping ended—^for the time
being. But the communists are determined to
continue their waterfront sabotage in the interest
of the Soviet Union because of the principal role
of maritime in most nations' economies.
They have bolstered their setup by the foriti,ation of the seamen and dockers section of the
WFTU.
;
All the communist party bigwigs throughdut
the world, especially those in maritime organi­
zations, will be on the alert for opportunities to
use the waterfronts for achieving the movements'
objectives. Of coures, everything will be done
under the guise of genuine trade union beefs.
The Seafarers, who long ago called the ham­
mer and sickle a ball and chain for workers, in­
tends to continue its vigilance in fighting the
communist plotters whenever and wherever they
threaten the security of free maritime workers.

The AFL Engineers And The MEBA
(Continued from Page 3)
he consistently followed the party line and buck­
ed CIO national policy.
The mere fact that the official communist line
is to smear the SIU and the BME, just as it does
every other genuine, democratic trade union,
proves that these organizations are offering to
their memberships something impossible to at­
tain under communist domination—good wages
ahd conditions under contracts negotiated by. the
rank-and-file, free from political maneuvering.
The communists' principal purpose is to keep
seafaring men from accomplishing these objec­
tives. Their aim is to keep maritime in a state
of continual confusion, so that they may control
the situation for the party's own political inter­
ests.
Satisfied merchant seamen are always a
threat to the aspirations of the communists. Com­
munist politicans cannot thrive in a healthy at­
mosphere.

The fact that several shipping companies are
now operating their vessels under contract to
the AFL Brotherhood of Marine Engineers means
that the licensed engineers can look forward to
a new era of unfettered trade unionism, and that
one more communist-dominated waterfront union
is on the skids.
As was also proven in the case of the Cana­
dian Seamen's Union, if rank-and-file maritime
workers are given an opportunity to get out from
under communist domination, they'll take it.
The commies may be on the wane, but they're
not out of the picture by any means. As their
grip on waterfront workers slips more and more,
they'll become more ruthless and fight dirtier to
implement the party's hard and fast policy of
"rule or ruin."
This means that those men sincerely interested
in the preservation of clean, democratic trade
unionism in maritime will have to keep their
heads up, and not ever allow themselves to be

taken in by the malicious lies and slanders that
are the trade mark of the communists.
Meanwhile, since the MEBA and the commu­
nist party are trying to undermine the SIU, all
Seafarers crews are requested to follow the fol­
lowing policies:
To regard all MEBA officials boarding, or at­
tempting to board, SIU'vessels as hostile to our
organization.
To inform all shipboard engineers that the SIU
has no designs on their jobs or security—but
also to point out that engineers can further their
own interests by joining the Brotherhood of Ma­
rine Engineers.
To watch out for tools or stooges of the MEBA
and/or communist party spreading anti-Seafar­
ers propaganda, and to notify SIU officials in
the first port the vessel hits of the lies spread
and, if possible, the names of the individuals in­
volved.

UF Readies Boyeott Of Panamanian Shipping

h

SS PONTUS ROSS
Crewmembers who paid off
this ship in Seattle on July 7
can collect their clothing allow­
ance by calling at or writing to,
Smith and Johnson, 60 Beaver
St., New York City. Applicants
should give their social security
numbers and ratings held aboard
the ship.
t. A tMARION GARROWAY
Chief Cook
SS Steel Rover
Voyage No. 4
Get in touch with Mr. Wool­
len, Insurance and Claims De­
partment, Isthmian Steamship
Company, 68 Trinity Place, New
"Sfbrk City, where you can, pick
up your hospital discharge.
»
KALJO POPP
Your passport has been foiind
'ahd is being held for you on the
6th floor of the SIU Hall, 51
Beaver St., New York City.

(Continued from Page 1)
president; Paul Hall, first vicepresident, and vice presidents
Cal Tanner and Morris Weisberger. _
Also present, at the meeting
were John Owens, secretary of
the International Longshoremens
Association; Tommy Atkins, pres­
ident of Local 88, Masters, Mates
and Pilots, and Charles May,
national president of the MM&amp;P.
The action in the Panamanian
situation was taken as an ans­
wer to the refusal of Panaman­
ian operators to take seriously
a mediation meeting sponsored
by the Panamanian government
at its Embassy here.
Only two shipowners, repre­
senting eight of the 800 ships
flying the Panamanian flag,
showed up' for the meeting, at
which it was hoped the longthreatened boycott couid be
avoided by discussions aimed at
eliminating some of the sub­
standard conditions prevailing on
ships of Panama registry.

Originally scheduled for May
1 last, the boycott was post­
poned by the ITF after the Pan­
amanian government asked for
a chance to correct some of the
abuses on ships which have been
using Panama registry as a ref­
uge from Union wages, condi­
tions and safety inspections.
"ONLY ALTERNATIVE"
The ITF's president, O. Becu,
who is also head of the Belgian
Transport Workers Federation,
said at the meeting that the
boycott "seems to be our only
alternative.
"We have exausted all other
possible means of agreement,"
he said. He warned that "the
boycott may suddenly come up­
on the shipowners."
In a resolution adopted at the
conference, the delegates stated:
'"The labor representatives con­
sidered the attitude of the ship­
owners as definite proof that
they had no intention of deal­
ing with the unions, nor to ac­
cept the efforts of the GoveiU-

ment of Panama to mediate the
difficulties between seafarers and
themselves."
A 'definite date for the boy­
cott will be set by a special com­
mittee.
The decision to boycott ships
of countries whose communistcontrolled unions refuse to work
ships sailed by members of un­
ions affiliated with the ITF, was
made to counteract any disrup­
tive tactics attempted by the
newly-formed communist World
Federation of Maritime Unions,
which has designated Harry
Bridges as president.
DIRECT ACTION
Thus any future actions by
communist-controlled waterfront
unions to tie up ships manned
by ITF members, such as occur­
red in Great Britain when com­
munists halted loading and un­
loading of SIU Canadian District
vessels, will be met by direct,
concerted action by 5,000,000
workers affiliated with the ITF.
In dealing With the Panam­

anian flag problem, the ITF con­
ference pointed out that ABs on
those ships receive as little as
$30 a month, compared with
$233.50 on US ships.
Reduced manning scales have
resulted in as few as 27 men on
ships which should have 45 te
50 in their crews.
The ITF also explained that
American, British, Greek and
other ^ owners had transferred
800 ships to Panamanian regis­
try since the end of the war, to
avoid meeting union standards
and seamen's legislation of the
world's principal maritime na­
tions on safety and taxation.

AHENTION!
If you don't find
linen
when you go aboard your
ship, notify the Hall at once.
A telegram from Le Havre or
Singapore won't do you any
good. It's your bed and you
have to lie In it.

�•&gt;
N® 38447

^•^#1

REFERENDUM BALLOT

Seafarers International Union Of North America
Atlantic and GuU District

REFERENDUM BALLOT
Voting Period From August 1 To August 30, 1949
INSTRUCTIONS TO VOTERS: Vote either YES or NO on the (oUowing reso­
lution by marking a cross (X) in the appropriate box. Do not use a lead pencil
in marking the ballot. Ballots marked 'with lead pencil will not be counted.
Mark your ballot with pen and ink or indelible pencil. DO NOT PUT ANY
OTHER MARKINGS ON THIS BALLOT.

FOREWORD
^etings held up and down the coast on July 13 and
]tted by 36 members in the Port of New Orleans,
Uted to the membership, as per Constitution.

WHEREAS: The SIU. Atlantic and Gii
contracts embracing wages, overtime an
maritime industry, and

irship enjoys the best
bar none, in the

WHEREAS: Anti-union forces elected to office in
utmost to enact and keep anti-union laws on the

are doing their
and •
WHEREAS: We have just won a $7.50 increase in pay. which will increase the
take-home pay by $90.00 per year, and
WHEREAS: We can never become too strong financially, as it is at all times nec­
essary to be able to combat any and all forces that might-seek to destroy us.

THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED: That we go on record as assessing ourselves a
$10.00 Annual Assessment, to be known as a General Fund Assessment, and
BE-IT FURTHER RESOLVED: That $2J)0 of this Assessment be given to the
International for General Fund purposes, since the International to which
we belong has beeu active in our organizing program, and actively partici­
pates iu all .crganizing drives that come under the heading of maritime, and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED: That if this resolution carries, and we earnestly
recommend that it does, as every true S'U member should vote "yes," that
copies of this resolution be sent to all ports to be acted on for two consecutive
meetings, and
BE IT FINALLY RESOLVED: That all Branches shaU notify Headquarters of the
wishes of the membership and. if this resolution is carried. Headquarters
shall stand instructed to prepare ballots and this resolution shall be submitted
to referendum, the voting period to commence August I. 1949. and to run
for 30 days through August 30. 1949.

ARE YOU IN FAVOR OF THIS RESOLUTION?

Yes

I
I
I
I

m
^

I

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9924">
                <text>August 5, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9990">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 24</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10011">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10032">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10092">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10110">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10166">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
GENERAL FUND REFERENDUM ON&#13;
ITF BOYCOTT OF PANAMA READY TO ROLL&#13;
SIU CREWMEN SAIL STEEL FLYER WHEN CIO UNIONS IGNORE STRIKE&#13;
THE COMMIES MOBILIZE THEIR WATERFRONT BRIGADES&#13;
YOUR INSURANCE&#13;
A TIME WILL COME&#13;
TWO BEEFS AND WHAT THEY MEAN&#13;
BOSTON FAVORS ANNUAL LEVY FOR GENERAL FUND&#13;
TAMPA AGENT HEADS CENTRAL LABOR ASSEMBLY&#13;
MOBILE HOPING 7 SHIPS GET CARGOES&#13;
NY SHIPPING SLOWER, BUT KEEPS PACE WITH POST-BOOM AVERAGE&#13;
SAN FRANCISCO SEES SIGN OF SHIPPING PICK-UP&#13;
SEAFARERS CREWS MAKE THE NEWS&#13;
DEL NORTE CREW STARTS CLASSES IN SEAMANSHIP; TWO-FOLD BENEFITS SEEN&#13;
19 ON STRATHCAPE AIDED SIU FIGHT ON RESERVE BILL&#13;
VENICE DAMPENS RED'S SPIRITS; 'SEE AMERICA FIRST,' HE CRIES&#13;
TOPSIDE HAILS OSHKOSH VIC MEN'S KNOW-HOW</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10167">
                <text>8/5/1989</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13062">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="965" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="969">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/720dfac248f0ad938e2e2ff8ca5c2c28.PDF</src>
        <authentication>50918cd4f2b4482f94d61d3df6623a5f</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47445">
                    <text>SEND PACT AID IN US SHIPS: SlU

Pointing to the "critical condition of the United
States merchant marine," A&amp;G District SecretaryTreasurer Paul Hall called upon members of Con­
gress this week to insure 100 percent employment
of American ships and seamen in the transport of
cargo under the foreign military aid bill.
The A&amp;G District official urged the legislators
to support a provision guaranteeing "that all arms
shipped to the North Atlantic Treaty countries be
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA carried exclusively in American flag ships, manned
by American seamen." *ate ~~
No. 25
NEW YORK. N. Y.. FRIDAY. AUGUST 19. 1949
by Senator Warren MagnuVOL. XI

Will Act Fast
Next Meeting On August 31
On Vacation Pay,
Says Waterman
The Waterman Steamship Cor­
poration has assured Union
Headquarters that eligible Sea­
farers applying for vacation pay
would receive prompt payment
upon submitting all pertinent infoiTnation.
In a communication to A&amp;G
Assistant Secretary-Treasur­
er Robert Matthews, a Water­
man spokesman said that an ap­
plicant should have his vacation
pay "within one week from the
date which he applied for it in
any of our offices," provided he
files his application properly.
In order to obtain vacation pay
with a minimum of delay, a Sea­
farer entitled to vacation pay for
service on Waterman ships un­
der terms of the Union contract
must give his social security
number and his correct mailing
address, the communication
pointed out.
UNION REQUEST
The Waterman letter was re­
ceived in answer to a Union re­
quest that the company check on
the procedure for handling va­
cation applications to expedite
payments:
Headquarters acted after hear­
ing a couple of reports that pay­
ments were delayed, mainly
when applications were made to
Waterman offices in cities other
than Mobile, where the principle
office is located.
Discussions with Waterman
representatives revealed that no
delays occured where applicants
provided all the necessary infor­
mation to, enable the company
to check its records quickly.
WRONG ADDRESSES
Tiie company explained that
"we get a lot of requests for va­
cations from seamen who are
not entitled to vacation pay. We
have sent out a good many va­
cation checks to the addresses
that the seamen gave us and
had the checks returned because
of the improper addresses. It
could be that some of these sea­
men are the ones who are com­
plaining about the delay."
To insure prompt receipt of
the vacation pay. Union Head­
quarters advised eligible mem­
bers to present along with their
social security numbers and ad­
dresses, the names of the com­
pany's ships and the dates they
were aboard, when making ap­
plication for the money. •
The whole process can be
speeded up, Union officials stat­
ed, if only those who are elig­
ible under terms of the contract
file for the vacation pay. It- is
useless for others to do so, and
they only cause delay for men
with legitimate claims, it was
pointed out.

Because of the change in the Union's meeting schedule,
which has been approved by Seafarers in all ports, the next
regular membership meetings of the Atlantic and Gulf District
will be held on Wednesday. August 31. Thereafter, the meetings
will take place every other Wednesday, as customary.
No meeting will be held on Wednesday. August 24.
The shift in the meeting schedule was made when owners
of the auditorium where New York meetings convene informed
the SIU that previous commitments made the building unavail­
able on several of the Wednesday ^ghts on which the SIU
would meet this fall.

Since all sessions in ports' outside of New York are held
in Branch buildings, the membership^ voted to accept the
Headquarters^. recommendation that the new schedule be
adopted on a coastwise basis.
As a result of the change in meetings, the next issue of the
SEAFARERS LOG—which is regularly scheduled the week
following the Branch meetings—will appear on September 9.
three weeks itfter this issue.
Remember, the next meeting is on Wednesday. August
31 — in all ports.

The House Foreign Affairs son, and in the House by Repre­
Committee has already approved sentative Schuyler O. Bland,
a measure authorizing the flow which are conducting surveys
of arms aid to signatories of with the objective of strength­
the North Atlantic pact and ening the nation's maritime in­
other non-communist countries. dustry.
Action on the bill in the lower
In his communication. Hall
house is expected this week. In stated, "We sincerely believe that
the Senate, the arms aid pro­ a requirement to insure trans­
gram is still under consideration portation of all arms aid to the
by the Foreign Relations Com­ North Atlantic pact signatories
mittee.
wiU be a step forward toward
"It is imperative that such a rehabilitating the American mer­
provision be incorporated into chant marine, and stemming the
the bill before enactment," Hall .alarming rise in unemployment
stated. Otherwise, he added, the among American seamen."
US merchant fleet will continue
TIME ELEMENT
to diminish,
Stressing the value of the
"Every day more and more of recommended provision to the
our nation's vessels are being national security, the communi­
laid up for the lack of cargoes. cation said that in a program
The numbers of unemployed sea­ designed to tighten US defenses,
men are consequently swelling absolute consideration must be
daily in all sections of the mari­ given to the future of the mer­
time industry," the Union offi­ chant fleet.
cial said.
The lack of adequate prepara­
He pointed out to the members tion in this respect in the last
of both Houses that the rapid war, it was pointed out, held up
decline in the American fleet victory and resulted in the loss
was already a matter of national of thousands of American lives.
concern, as evidenced by the In future emergencies we shall
committees, headed in the Sen- have even less time to come up
with a merchant fleet to meet
the demands of modem logistics,
the SIU communication said.
Emphasizing that the "Ameri­
can merchant marine must be
ship meetings, that the anti-labor kept alive and moving — now
forces were redoubling their ef­ more than ever before," the SIU
forts to weaken organized labor, official added: "Wfe trust you
and they offered as evidence the share with us concern for the
coalition which recently pre­ future of our flag ships and the
vented repeal of the Taft-Hartley security of a large section of
our working population.
law.
They also pointed to the fact "We respectfully urge, there­
that the Union must be finan­ fore, that you support the move
cially prepared to continue its to include a provision for 100
fights in behalf of Seafarers on percent participation by US ships
the legislative front, where this in the final bill authorizing arms
week two attempts are being aid."
(For other news about SIU
made to cut down the hard-won
rights now enjoyed by seamen. activity in Washington see story
on page 11.)
(See story on page 11.)

Referendum Vote Ends August 30
As the deadline drew nearer
for balloting in the referendum
on the General Fund assessment.
Headquarters issued a reminder
to Seafarers in all ports to exer­
cise their voting privileges.
The final date on which ballots
may be cast in this important
Union issue is August 30, which
will cofaclude 30 days of-voting,
as prescribed by the constitution
for referendums.
Meanwhile, all A&amp;G Branches
reported that members were
turning out in large numbers,
indicating that the issue to be
decided at the Union polling
places was recognized as vital
to the future operating efficiency
of the organization.
"YES" VOTE URGED
Copies of minutes of shipboard
meetings reaching the LOG this
week revealed that a large num­
ber of crews were holding dis­
cussions on the assessment ques­
tion, and were urging favorable
action.
At several shipboard sessions,
resolutions were adopted calling
for approval of the proposed
assessment in the best interest
of the membership's welfare and
security.
MAKES IT EASY
The referendum calls for a
"yes" or "no" vote on a resolu­
tion, originally offered by 36
Seafarers in the Port of New
Orleans, for a ten-dollar assess­
ment to offset the drop in income
caused by the current decline
in shipping.
The New Orleans sponsors of
the resolution maintained that
the General Fund must be
strengthened, to enable the

Union to continue intact its
membership services and "to
combat any and all forces that
might seek to destroy us."
In view of the fact that "we
have just won a $7.50 increase
in pay, which will increase the
take-home pay by $90 a year,"
the *New Orleans Seafarers held
that it would thus be easy for
the membership to meet the
assessment, since it represents
only a fraction of the newlywon wage increase.
Others favoring the assessment
pointed out, at regular member­

Balloting in the referendum on the General Fund assessment has been brisk in all ports
from the moment the polls opened on August 1. In photo above Seafarers in the New York
Hall wait their turn to exercise their voting rights in the highly important referendum, as ballot
committeeman Joe Pacheco checks credentials.

i 'I

I '1
i

�Page Two

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. August 19, 1949

SEAFARERS LOG
Published Every Other Week by the

SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Lsdwr

At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Reentered as second class matter August 2, 1949, at the Post
Office in New York, N.Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

A Plan For America
According to estimates of last week, between 30 and
40 privhtely-owned dry-cargo vessels flying the American
flag were idle in Atlantic coast ports alone.
These are in addition to the surplus chartered ships
returned each week to the Maritime Commission. And if
tankers had thumbs 200 would be twiddling this week,
for it is estimated that 100 American-owned fuel carriers
are doing exactly nothing. •
Then there's the vast number of US ships rusting
in the boneyards, the only waterfront locations in this
country where there are daily signs of expansion.
The reason for this postwar tragedy? Just this: no
cargoes, no assignments.
For American flag ships, that is. Other maritime
nations are not facing the same dilemma. In fact, they
are speeding up their shipbuilding to meet increasing
demands upon their fleets.
France, for example, several months ago surpassed
her prewar tonnage. And she's still building. So is England,
Italy, the Scandinavian countries and others. Panama, of
course doesn't build ships, anymore than she has a bone_
_
__
^
^
yard. The 800 vessels flying the Panamanian flag are with ^0§§ nOW IH THB mUtUIC HOSPltUlS
few exceptions runaways.
"
Shipbuilding in the US is at a virtual standstill. You
can count on your fingers the number of ships under
construction in our yards. But you'd need a mechanical
calculator to tally those in the boneyard.
So while other maritime nations are rapidly acquiring
tonnage in excess of what they had before the war, US
maritime is skidding downward—but fast. And accom­
panying the tragic deterioration of our once large fleet,
is the alarming rise in the number of unemployed Ameri­
can seamen, for the most part highly skilled workers—
essential in national emergencies.
Despite this dismal picture, those in a position to halt
the trend have done little or nothing about it. Whenever
an opportunity arose, the Seafarers International Union
and other sections of the maritime' industry offered con­
crete proposals that would aid in revitalizing American
shipping. In several instances, suQh as the plan pushed by
the SIU to employ US ships and seamen in the transporta­
tion of Marshall Plan goods, progress was made.
As a rule, sympathy was expressed for the plans but
action was lacking. Investigations aimed at strengthening
our fleet are under way in Congress at the moment, but
there's no guarantee of definite action. Moreover, it will
take time.
Something should—and must—be done now. And
something can be done, if Congress will adopt the proposal
made this week by the SIU to guarantee that "all arms
cargoes shipped to North Atlantic pact countries be car­
ried exclusively in American ships, manned by American
seamen."
The SIU demand, while no cure-all, will at least
take up some of the slack, until a long range program to
bolster our failing merchant marine can be formidated.
Those who bear the responsibility for the welfare of
our working population, and for the national well-being,
should consider and act favorably on the SIU demand
for exclusive employment of American ships and seamen
in the transport of foreign military aid.

SAN FRANCISCO HOSPITAL
J. KEENAN
W. LANE
R.
W. FRYE
I
These are the Union Brothers currently in the marine hospitals,
W.
SANDERSON
,
!
as reported by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging
S. WALERK
!
heavily on their hands. Do what you can to cheer them up by
PETER
SMITH
,
writing them.
T. ISAKSEN
NEW ORLEANS HOSPITAL
W. R. THOMPSON
M. CARAWAY
J. DENNIS
M. J. LUCAS
4. 4. 4
L. LANG
A. TREVINO
MOBILE HOSPITAL
F. LANDRY
J. HERNANDEZ
J. CURTIS
I
C. ELLARD
M. FERNANDEZ
M. LEOUSIS
'
L. WILLIS
L. OIEN
P. VANDEREIK
C. D. SHIVELY .
T. KANADY
E. DAVIDSON
i
J. B. ALLRED
I. RHODEN
S. REINCHUCK
W. W. ROYES
M. ROSSI
L. HOWARD
W. SWILLEY
V. GROVER
M. J. SMYLY
J. MORTON
L. E. JARVIS
C. BACHMAN
A. MAUFFRAY
N. I. WEST
B. H. LAWDERBACK
16 Merchant St.
BALTIMORE
14 North Gay St. HONOLULU
P. RAULERSON
Phone 5-8777
William Rentz, Agent Mulberry 4S40
G. MOREJON
BOSTON
276 State St. PORTLAND
Ill W. Burnside St.
H. R. PITT"
Ben Lawson, Agent Richmond 2-0140
Beacon 4336
J. E. TASSIN
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141 RICHMOND, Calif
257 5th St.
A. SYLVERA
GALVESTON
.308'/a—23rd St.
Phone 2599
Keith Alsop, Agent
Phone 2-8448
C. BROWN
SAN
FRANCISCO
59
Clay St.
MOBILE
1 South Lawrence St.
D. KOROLIA
Douglas 2-8363
Cal Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-1754
A. ARVANTIS
.86 Seneca St.
NEW ORLEANS
523 Bienville St. SEATTLE
Main 0290
S. T. JAMISON
E. Sheppard, Agent Magnolia 6112-6113
NEW YORK
51 Beaver St. WILMINGTON
440 Avalon Blvd.
T. RIGBY
Joe Algina, Agent
HAnriver 2-2784
Terminal 4-3131J
S.
NORFOLK
127-120 Bank St.
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
R. M. GUTHRIE
PHILADELPHIA
337 Market St.
J. Sheehan, Agent
Market 7-1635
E. E. STUART
SAN. FRANCISCO
85 Third St.
W. L. SMITH
MONTREAL
.404 Le Moyne St.
Jeff Morrison, Agent
Douglas 2-5475
Marquette 5909
C. A. EZELL
SAVANNAH
2 Ahercorn St.
.IZSVs Hollis St.
R. PIERCE
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728 HALIFAX
Phone 3-8911
SEATTLE:
86 Seneca St.
4. ft ft
Wm. McKay, Agent
Seneca 4570 PORT ARTHUR... 63 Cumberland St.
BOSTON HOSPITAL
TAMPA
1809-1811 N. Franklin St.
Phone North 1229
BOB FISHER
Ray White, Agent
Phone M-1323 PORT COLBORNE. ,. . 103 Durham St.
VIC MILAZZO
WILMINGTON, Calif., 227'/4 Avalon Blvd.
Phone 5591
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Terminal 4-2874 TORONTO
...lllA Jarvis Sb
J. J. FLAHERTY
HEADQUARTERS. . 51 Beaver St., N.Y.C.
Elgin 5719
FRANK ALASAVICH
VICTORIA, B.C..,.. .602 Bough ton St.
SECRETARY-TREASURER
ft ft ft
Paul Hall
Empire 4531
STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
VANCOUVER
, .565 Hamilton St.
Lindsey WilliaiRS
Pacific 7824
H. E. BONEWALD
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURERS '
N. DORPMANS
HEADQUARTERS.
12 McGlU St.
Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
J. P. PROBST
Montreal
Plateau 670
Joseph Volpian
J. W. FAILLA
''—-4

Directory Of SIU Halls

SIU, A&amp;G District

SUP

Canadian District

�Frida7&lt; August 19, 1949

Page Three

fttE SEAFARERS LOG

Officers Training SchDOis-Good or Bad?
By JOHN BUNKER
/
•
(This is the first in a series of
articles on itiatitime by John
Bunker, retired A&amp;G District
member. Brother Btmker is now
maritime reporter for the Christ­
ian Science Monitor.)
Recent controversy over pos­
sible closing of the Kings Point
Merchant Marine Academy and
the state nautical schools is be­
ing received with mixed feelings
by seamen and shipping people
generally.
Some will say that their clos­
ing would be small loss. They
will argue, especially about
Kings Point, that the govern­
ment's training program for of­
ficer personnel was getting to
be too much like West Point or
Annapolis—departing too much
from the basic needs and tradi­
tions of the merchant service.
Others, of course, will defend
both the Kings Point school and
the state nautical academies as
essential training units for the
merchant service.
Whether these schools keep
bpen or not, the controversy over
their value and their need em­
phasizes the importance of an
adequate officer training proigram for the American merchant
marine.
It is no sense to deride these
training schools, and then to
offer nothing in their place.
To say that the merchant ma­
rine, advancing as it has far be­
yond the days of 30 years ago
When celestial navigation was
considered the most essential
schooling for a deck officer—^to
say that the merchant marine
needs no officer training pro­
gram at all is almost like saying
there is nothing a prospective of­
ficer need know that he can't
learn himself in spare-time
study.
NOT SO, NOW
This kind of argument was all
right years ago, perhaps. It's
archaic now.
The establishment of the Kings
Point Academy as a wartime
emergency measure was highly
desirable. Those were the days
when ships sailed out with third
assistants shipping as "firsts"
and junior third deck officers
Standing a third or even second
mate's watch. Officers were
needed—thousands of them—
quickly.
Today, however, tells a differfent story.
With the American merchant
marine now at about the prewar
level, with hundreds of wartime
deck and engine officers intend­
ing to stay at sea, and with sev­
eral hundred more young "thirds"
being turned out each year by
Kings Point and the state acad­
emies, the question is becoming
acute as to where they all will
•get jobs.
ADVISABILITY

QUESTIONED

The writer has visited many a,
ship during the past year on
which all the licensed deck of­
ficers had at least a first mate's
ticket. There are some ships in
which all the officers are liceiKed masters—days reminiscent of
the '30s, when it was not suprising to go aboard a freighter and
meet half a dozen mates ship­
ping "before the mast."
It is ohly logical, therefor, to
iquestion the advisability of cdfttinuing Kings Point. It would
teeem, job conditions being What
they are, that a further exten-

mm'ii

One reason why the officer training program for the American merchant marine is of para­
mount concern to the shipping industry today. These hundreds of merchant marine officers are
lined up for graduation ceremonies at Fort Trumbull, New London, Conn., the officer training
school of the US Maritime 'Service during World War II. Many of these men are slill at sea,
competing for a shrinking number of officer vacancies.
sion of life for this "Annapolis
of the Merchant Marine" is an
unjust drain on the public purse,
as well as an imposition on
those hundreds of qualified of­
ficers who cannot find berths
under present conditions.
There is another important
question about the usefullness
indeed We can even say the
DANGER—of continuing Kings
Point.
From the earliest days of the
American merchant marine, it
has been a cherished - tradition
of the service that a man "be­
fore the mast" could, by hard
work, diligence, and self-appli­
cation, rise to officer status.
Ask many a skipper or chief
engineer today — many a port
captain or shipping company ex­
ecutive—how he became an of­
ficer, and he'll answer proudly:
"Through the hawse pipes". . . .
"through the foc'sle."
This is a great tradition, this
being able to advance yourself
by conscientious work and selfstudy. But it is a tradition liable
to be lost, if the federal govern­
ment continues with its desire
to make Kings Point a "closed
shop"—another Annapolis, anoth­
er West Point.
HARDER AND HARDER
Many companies, of which
United States Lines is one ex­
ample, are showing an almost
exclusive preference for Kings
Point in hiring their new of­
ficers.
It is getting harder and hard­
er for the man who puts in his
three years in the foc'sle, and
then gets his ticket at a private
school, to find a berth at sea.
It may, sooner or later, be im­
possible.
It is also quite conceivable that
shipping firms, as they become
more heavily subsidized by the
government, will be "induced"
to hire their officers from the
government's own training
school.
The maritime unions, including
the SIU, are right in keeping a
weather eye dpen on the gov­
ernment's proclivity to train
merchant marine officers, when
there are ho jobs.
They are right in criticizing

the bureaucrat's love for keeping
something in. operation, whether
it is needed or not. They should
be ever watcfiful that no gov­
ernment training system—select­
ing, as does Kings Point, the
"cream" of American youth —
usurps the right of the Ameri­
can sailor to rise in his profes­
sion.
However, the maritime unions
should be careful lest they des­
troy the present officer training
program without putting a sub­
stitute in its place. It wasn't so
long ago, remember, when Amer­
ican ships carried a very large
percent of foreign-born officers
because there were not enough
adequately trained American men
to take the jobs.
WHAT THEN?
If Kings Point and the state
mai-itime academies are abolish­
ed what would we have in their
place? We couldn't drydock our
merchant marine without any
assurance that it is getting some
flow of "new blood" for the
future.

We couldn't be the only nation
in the world not training our
future officers in the ever-de­
veloping techniques of marine
engineering, navigation,* cargo
handling and ship operation.
Perhaps the best answer is in
some kind of an academy which,
while schooling a certain number
of youngsters on a three-yeartraining program for third mate's
or third engineer's license, will
also admit each year so many
men "from the foc'sle" for a
special short term program of
officer training.
HARD SCHOOL
And, to give credit where
credit is due, let's recognize the
contribution of the state nauti­
cal schools to our merchant ser­
vice over many years.
The Massachusetts, New York
and (until its recent demise) the
Pennsylvania Academies date
their history back more than 50
years.
They trained their cadets in
the "hard school." Many of the
men at sea who criticize these

academies would never have sur­
vived the strenuous "boot" sys­
tem and the hard program of
work-while-you-study that has
been traditional at these state
schools.
The writer knows not a few
men who have pursued long and
successful careers at sea after
graduation from the state nau­
tical schools.
Few of them came from any
but average American families.
They were men who, in most
cases, couldn't have afforded a
college education.
Yes, the time has come to as­
sess the value of Kings Point
and the accelerated state officer
training programs, but let's do
it sensibly.
Let's do it with the welfare
of the American merchant mar­
ine in mind. Let's not say "to
hell with the training schools,"
and offer nothing in exchange.
Let's plan—but plan well—for
the future.
(A future article will discuss
the history and training pro­
grams of the various state nau­
tical schools.)

Four Tankers RebulR
To Haul Dry Cargoes
Four SlU-contracted Libertytype tankers are among 13 such
ships being rebuilt to haul dry
cargo because of the drop in de­
mand for fuel carriers.
The tankers are part of a
group of 40 that were sold to
private owners by the Maritime
Commission to meet the severe
tanker shortage during the win­
ter of 1947-48.
Conversion work has already
been completed on a number of
the tankers, and consists mainly
of the removal of cargo pumps
and special bulkheading. The job
requires about 14 days of work.
The SIU tankers being recon­
verted and their owners are: SS
Harry W. Peer, J. M. Carras, Incorporated; SS Chrysanthystar,
Intercontinental Steamship Cor­
poration; W. H. Carruth, Transfuel Corporation, and the SS
Nathaniel B. Palmer, the Palmer
Shipping Company.

Faulty Gear Blamed For Seafarers' Death
Faulty lifeboat equipment was
blamed for the fatal injury to
Seafarer Burton Packard aboard
the SS Twin Falls "Victory in
Wilmington, Del., on August 5,
according to word received this
week from James Sheehan, SIU
Agent in the Port of Philadel­
phia.
Brother Packard, an OS, died
in a Wilmington hospital of a
skull fracture, 24 hours after he
fell to the water in a lifeboat
that had broken loose as a re­
sult of a defective motor casing
in the winch machinery.
The SIU's Philadelphia Agent
reconstructed the accident as
follows:
The Twin Falls Victory, Wa­
terman, was alongside her Wil­
mington dock. Brother Packard
and two other members of the
deck department were placing
the cover over the offshore life­
boat wheh a leak in the motor
casing caused a short circuit and
started the motors.
With the motors running, the

BURTON PACKARD
lifeboat was hauled up until the
falls were two-blocked. The mo­
tors kept running and caused
such a strain that the wires
parted, causing the boat to fall
to the water.
The two men working with

Packard succeeded in jumping
clear of the falling boat. Pack­
ard attempted to do likewise, but
the boat cover swung over him
and trapped him in the falling
boat. He landed on his head
when the boat struck the water,
sustaining the skull fracture
which caused his death.
Sheehan reported -that ship­
mates of Packard said he was
"a good shipmate and a very
willing worker."
When informed of his death,
the Twin Falls crewmen con­
tributed $61.50, which Port Ag­
ent Sheehan forwarded to Pack­
ard's mother in Millelac County,
Minn., where the body was ship­
ped for burial.
Brother Packard, who was born
in Minnesota on June 14, 1927,
joined the SIU Atlantic and Gulf
District in Norfolk. He was is­
sued Book No. 45242 on April
27, 1946.
He was in good standing at
the time of his death and Union
burial benefits are payable.

'

�Page Four

THE SEAFARERS

Read Contracts
And Avoid Roofs,
Says Raltlmoro

LOG

'• » , - -

The Geoii Life Aboard The SS Cardinal O'ConneH (ATS)

Friday, August 19. 1949

In-Transits Pay
Courtesy Visits
To Savannah

By WILLIAM (Curly) RENTZ

By JIM DRAWDY

BALTIMORE—Despite the ar­
rival of a number of payoff
ships, shipping in this port is on
the slow side. Men are remain­
ing aboard most of the incoming
ships because of conditions.
In view of this situation, it is
inadvisable for men to come to
Baltimore hoping to ship out in
a hurry. There are enough men
on tap to fill any of our im­
mediate needs. We'll keep the
membership informed through
the LOG, and as soon as there
is an upswing you'll read about
it.
Several of the port arrivals
dtning the past two weeks were
in-transits. There were a few
Waterman, Bull and Isthmian
ships that came in here to load
up.
One of the payoff beefs we
had was on the Robin Gray. It
involved the black gang and it
should serve to emphasize a
point. For some reason, a great­
er proportion of beefs in this
port lately are in the engine
department.

SAVANNAH —In-transit ships
ships were responsible for most
of this port's activity during the
past two weeks, but we're look­
ing forward to a slight improve­
ment in Shipping.
We expect to put a new crew
on the William Carruth the lat­
ter part of next week. She's in
drydock at the moment. Payoffs
.are scheduled for the SS South­
land and the SS Southport on
Monday and Tuesday of this.
week.
The imtransit ships were the
Steel Surveyor and Steel Fab­
ricator, Isthmian; Monroe Vic­
tory, Waterman; Cape Race,
South Atlantic, and Jean, Bull
Line.
There were no beefs on these
vessels.

SUBSTITUTE

READ AGREEME^ITS

The Jean, by the way, is
taking the place of the Dorothy
for a couple of trips. That about
covers the shipping side of the
Savannah picture.
Brother James Maxwell, who
was injured the other night when
his car overturned, is still under
the doctor's care and all hands
are wishing him a speedy re­
covery. The damage to Max­
well's car is estimated at 800
smackeroos.
A couple of the local lads
went to Galveston recently to
ship. They stayed only long
enough to look things over, then
doubled right back.
Seafarers in the local Marine
Hospital this week are R. M.
Guthrie, E. E. Stuart, W. L.
Smith, C. A. Ezell and R. Pierce.
The rains came aplenty during
the past week, but for nought as
far as we're concerned—it's still
hot as Hades.

Our observation is that the
men in this department are not
fully familiar with the agree­
ment between the Union and the
particular company for which
By TED ANDRYSIAK
they are sailing.
Therefore, we strongly advise
all hands to read their agree­
ments closely. Just make sure
that the agreement you're read­
By E. B. TILLEY
We had our first Cities Serv­ forced to pay dues to the phony
ing covers the company whose
ice ship in this port since I've Citco, the company union we
WILMINGTON — A couple of been out here.
ship you happen to be on.
know as CTMA.
Isthmian
vessels paid off in this
Copies of our contracts are
I find the brass on these ships If anybody fails to pay up
available in all Union Halls, and port last week and "four ships are stiU up to 'their old tricks. immediately, he gets the gate
the name of each company ap­ called on in-transit status.
As soon as the men get a draw at once and is marked as being
pear clearly at the top of each The payoffs were the SS Steel from the Old Man they are a imion man—a real Union man.
one. The black gang men should Ranger, an intercoastal job, and
• take special notice of this sug­ the SS Thomas Sims Lee, in
from the Persian Gulf. Both paid
gestion.
No sensible seaman will deny in good SrU style.
that the SIU has made its A full crew went aboard the
By BEN LAWSON
ship stops over in Nova Scotia. hounds and performers are prac­
membership the best represented, Lee for the return trip to the
Paul Norton and Lex Fanjoy, tically non-existent up here.
best informed and best paid sea­ Persian Gulf. The in-transit call­ BOSTON — Even shipping seldom seen around here, are
Occasionally, a Brother will
men in the world. The Union is ers were the Steel Age, Isthmian; talk was pushed aside, as, this looking for a long voyage. John­ pop in showing signs of having
striving to keep up that record, Yorkmar, Calmar; Fairhope, Wa­ port sweltered in a recent heat ny Gala will take a trip any­ a bit too much under his belt.
but it must have the means to terman, and the Queens Victory. wave during the past two weeks. where. E. Graham, whose baking But he doesn't linger. Just a
The. mercury touched 101 de­
do so.
Here's how things look for the grees just as v/e convened for is tops, just came off the baux­ jolly hello and he's gone. The
membership won't stand for any
ite run,.
rest of the month:
HELP YOURSELF
our first August meeting, and
We'd
like
to
mention
that
gasoffbase
stuff.
On August 17 we have the all hands were plenty pooped.
That's ,why it is necessary to William Tilghman coming in to
vote yes on the referendum on payoff after a Persian Gulf voy­ Just to make matters more
disagreeable, the humidity went
the General Fund assessment. age. She'll crew up here.
The income of the Union has On August 22, the Thomas way up, top, and we were be­
"
fallen off because of the drop Cresap is scheduled to payoff, ginning to wonder if we'd ever
ilipiliiiiiipiilii
in shipping. It's simple to see then sign on for the Persian see the end of this blast-furnace
_
weather.
that, unless our General Fund Gulf run.
You couldn't exactly Blame
is strengthened, the Union can­ The Zane Grey, which makes
not long maintain every one of the same run, wiU arrive on ships for not coming in here
the services it now offers.
August 26, when she will pay­ during the almost overwhelming
A "yes" vote on the ballot off and sign on a crew for an­ heat. Maybe that's why Boston
wasn't much of a payoff port.
- will insure your security by giv­ other voyage.
Most
of our activity was con­
ing the Union the needed means However, the forecast is not
fined
to
calling on ships in tran­
to continue the fight in your be­ always so bright. It just hap­
sit.
V
half.
pens this time that four of the
Well, Brothers', the Port of five ships that make the run Among these were the Canton
Baltimore regrets to announce regularly are coming in almost Victory, Waterman; Kenyon Vic­
tory, Isthmian; The Cabins, The
that a real friend of the seamen at the same time.
here will be lost to us. Dr. Wil­ Thereafter, things will prob­ Cabins Company, Inc.; Steel Sea­
son of the Baltimore Marine ably slow down a bit. And we farer, and the Steel Executive,
Hospital will soon be leaving his might add that there are enough Isthmian.
post here, and all hands sure men on the beach here to take All were in pretty good shape,
will miss him.
care of whatever needs we may except for the Steel Seafarer,
which carried some overtime
He has always gone out of have in filling jobs.
his way to offer a helping hand Don't forget that we are vot­ beefs. They will be settled at
and" provide first-class
treat­ ing on the General Fund assess­ the port of payoff.
ment for ailing seamen. In fact, ment. It is your duty as a good
ALL 'FORE' IT
that has been true of the entire Union man to cast your vote. Big social note of the moment
This quintet of Seafarers, crewmembers aboard the SS
staff of the hospital.
Yarmouth,
make the rounds of the Yarmouth, Nova Scotia,
Your own security is involved, is that all hands aboard the SS
We all want to wish Dr. Wil­ so why not get on down to the Yarmouth have gone in for golf
golf course every time the summer cruise ship hits the
son/the best of luck in taking up Hall and vote "yes?" From the in a big way. Mike Buckley and northern port. Kneeling, left to right, are Tom Fleming, Bob
his duties elsewhere. Wherever \yay the boys out here are talk- Donald Hodge, both watchmen
Waehler and Stan Cuslak. Standing; McKenna and Phil
he does go, seamen will be meet­ ing, it seems that this port will j on the Yarmouth, are serving as
Graduzzi. Brother Waehler interested his shipmates in the
ing a friend.
go aU-out for the assessment. 1 caddies for the crew while the 'game and they've taken to it like ducks to water.

Pipe-Line Run Liberties Hit Wilmington

Boston Hot? Suits 'Em To A Tee—In Yarmouth

Illlljjip

�Friday. August 19, 1949

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Fire

The SS Puerto Rico Steps Off Proudly
NEW YORK, Aug. 18—The trim, new Bull Lines
passenger ship Puerto Rico today sailed proudly from
Brooklyn's Pier 22 on her maiden voyage to Puerto Rico
and the Dominican Republic. There was every indication
that the initial run would be a huge success.
Since the vessel's arrival in New York from the
Maryland Drydocks several weeks ago, the Puerto Rico's
crack, 120-man Seafarers crew had been hard at work
readying the liner for service. With the preliminary job
over, the complement of SIU rrien aboard was determined
to prove that passenger ships under Seafarers contracts
would provide service" equal to, if not better than, any
in the world.
The 7,114-gross-ton liner, which has 199 first-class
accommodations, will maintain a regular service, leaving
New York every second Thursday for the three and onehalf day voyage to San Juan, arriving there Monday and
leaving the following day for Ciudad Trujillo.

Holding down the Stewardesses' posts on the proud Bull
Lines vessel are Hilda Revesz (left) and Eva Castleberry,
shown here on the stairway from the main deck.

Chief Baker C. Voss (left) and Chef W. J. Reedy, photo­
graphed in the ship's streamlined gaJley, know full well that
well-fed passengers are a first-rate advertisement.

4. 4. i
Like everything else on the
trim passenger ship, the pan­
try is a shining example of
cleanliness and competence.
Here are some of the lads as
they were preparing crisp
salads that will make the
Puerto Rico's food something
passengers will enjoy remem­
bering.
From left to right are Marty
Badger, Pantryman; Dan Malenfant. Chief Pantryman; Ed
Adamko, Second Cook; Walter
Patterson and Joe Demuth,
Pantrymen.
4 4 4

4 4 4
In photo left are some of the
Black Gang who are respon­
sible for the precision func­
tioning of the Puerto Rico's
engine room. From left to
right: Fred Barthes, Electri­
cian; John Van Dyke, Oiler;
Ed SauL Wiper; Francis Pannette. Utility; Tony Salorio,
Second Engineer; Danny Morin, Danny Haire and E. McCambridge. Seated is Victor
Gustafson, Watertender.
PHOTO RIGHT—Despite the
load of wire he's toting up
engine room Jadder, Charles
Duncan (Wiper) is all smiles
—probably because he's satis­
fied -that all's well on the
Puerto Rico.
4 4 4^

• Spic and span and ready to
help give the finest shipboard
service available anywhere are
the Puerto Rico's bellboys Joe
Kotalik (front) and Richard
Miller. Both are old hands at
the job.

�Page Six

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. Auguai 19. 1949

SHIPS' MINUTES AND NEWS
Deck Gang Man Killed In Accident
Aboard SS Edith At Galveston Pier

ON THE VOYAGE TO GREECE

Charles E. Scott, 19-year-old Seafarer, was killed aboard die SS Edith, Bull
Lines, in Galveston on July 14, when a winch cable snapped and struck him on the
side of the head, the LOG has been informed. The Edith was being worked at Pier
35 at the time of the accident. *
Scott was rushed to St. Mary's
hospital but was pronounced
&gt;
dead on arrival.
Brother Scott, an OS, was
working near the Edith's No. 2
hatch when the fatal accident
occured. Galveston police report­
ed that as the hatch cover was
being lowered into place a pin
slipped from the winch.

The Edith's Deck Delegate
said that Navarackas was lower­
ing No. 3 lifeboat into the
stream when a faulty releasing
gear caused him to plunge into
the water and drown.
On May 21 last, the Edith had
another shipboard accident while
hatch covers were being lower­
ed at Port Sulphur, La,, Mazur
said.

'.

CABLE SNAPPED
The heavy hatch cover fell
free, then snapped the cable,
which came down on Scott's
head, the police said.
The Coast Guard called a hear­
ing on the afternoon of the ac­
cident at which all witnesses
testified. A. P. Mazur, the Edith's
Deck Delegate told the LOG
that the results of the hearing
CHARLES E. SCOTT
had not yet been disclosed.
Brother Mazur said that Scott's gard for the young Seafarer, a
death shocked his shipmates, native of New York City.
all of whom had the highest re
TOUGH-LUCK
In reporting the accHent to
As the LOG went to press, the LOG, Brother Mazur said
the following message from that the Edith had been having
the family of Charles E. a run of tough luck. He recall­
Scott, addressed to his ship­ ed that crewmember Stanley
mates. was received at Union Navarackas lost his life about
a year ago in a mishap in the
Headquarters:
Mississippi River.
"It is with a feeling of
very deep and lasting grati­
tude that the bereaved
family of your late shipmate.
Charles E. Scott, wish to
acknowledge your warm of­
STEEL APPRENTICE. May 9
ferings of sincere sympathy — Charles Loesch. Chairman;
and financial aid. May God Henry M. Murranks^ Secretary.
bless you and grimt you AU hands are to try to keep
safe journeys in the future. unauthorized persons out of mid­
"Gratefully yours in his ship housing. Water coolers are
to be repaired; cooler in passage­
memory."
way to be turned off while ship

SETS FIRE
A topping lift parted, throw­
ing off sparks that caused a
large flash fire on deck and
smoldering fires in the No. 4
and No. 5 hatches. Mazur said
that it took two hours of in­
tense effort to extinguish the
fires but that no one had been
hurt.
Of the accident in which
Brother Scott lost his life, Ma­
zur said:
"At this time we (Edith crew)
would like to commend the Port
Agent and Patrolman of the
Port of Galveston for their
prompt cooperation and assist­
ance, which they immediately
gave after this accident."
Brother Scott is survived by
his mother, Mrs. W. Scott of 173
East 122 Street, New York City.

t

Deck Gang of Waterman's Ponce de Leon assembles on
deck for photo by shipmate Larry Kretzel. Standing, left to
right: Frank Knight. Touchon. Janicke. "Mac" McCormack.
Hansen. Eddie Fields and Uno. Kneeling, left.to right: Andrew
Hemphill. Little. McGowan. Jones and Bob Humphrey. Brother
Humphrey submitted the photo.

SIU Crew Hailed As Model
By Passenger On SS Harry T
The model job performed by the SIU crew of the
SS Harry T, Mar-Trade, drew glowing praise from a
passenger aboard the ship on the recent voyage to Europe.
~

~~

* The passenger. Father Will­
iam J. Gordon, professor of labor
economics at Villanova College,
in a letter to Union Headquar­
Union activities were discussed ters declared:
for the benefit of new members. "Personally, 1 think that the
labor-relations pattern aboard
this vessel could easily serve as
a model for all of our merchant
ships."

Digested Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings

FLEEING COMMUNIST RULE

After four days on the Adriatic sea, four Yugoslavia
refugees who fled from the communist-controlled country,
were picked up by the Venice-bound SS Gateway City. The
anti-communists were left at a rehabilitation camp in the
city, according to crewmember Bill Zarkas. Photo
above shows -the Yugoslavs pulling alongside the Waterman
ship, whose ladder has already been lowered.

is in port. Delegates gave their
reports. William Glick was elec­
ted Ship's Delegate. He will see
Mate about changing the clock
in the messroom. One minute of
silence observed in memory of
Brothers lost at sea.
STRICT REPRESENTATION
X ii, ^
Father Gordon added that "the
EDITH. May 22—R. H. NicholCaptain
is very pleased with the
XXX
son. Chairman: Louis Rizzo. Sec­
way
things
are going even
retary. Department delegates CAPE MOHICAN. May 8 —
though
Ray
Pulliam
(Ship's Del­
made their reports. Deck Dele­ McHale. Chairman; R. Sirois.
egate)
holds
back
no
punches in
gate bringing up beef about Secretary. No beefs. in any of
defending
the
rights
of
the men
launch service. During discussion the departments, except for oneunder
the
agreement.
Frankly,
on launch service Engine Dele­ half hour of overtime disputed
have been very pleasantly sur­
gate revealed that he had tried in Engine Department. Motion 1
prised."
to make some satisfactory ar­ by O'Malley. seconded by Graf,
While he had nothing but com­
rangements but had had no luck, recommending that crew be sup­
mendation
for the entire crew.
as the Sheriff prohibits the boats plied with cots, bedsprings and
Father
Gordon
specifically men­
mattresses-and
that
same
be
in­
from coming out of the anchor­
tioned
Pulliam
and
George Bry­
cluded
as
a
major
item
on
the
age: Motion carried to turn in
an,
the
Harry
T's
Steward.
He
repair
list.
Motion
by
Cinlron.
stand-by overtime to Patrolman.
said
that
Pulliam
was
"very
cap­
seconded
by
O'Malley.
carried
Members found explanation
given by Brother whose conduct recommending that if agreeable able," and very well-liked by the
was criticized to be unsatisfac­ to crew, that cold supper be officers as well as the unlicens­
tory. Meeting adjourned at 7:30 served on night before payoff ed men.
PM after one minute of silence night in order to give Stewards Of Brother Bryan, the Rever­
in memory of departed Brothers. Department opportunity to get end said, "he is the most hos­
finished early. Motion carried to pitable man 1 have ever met."
placeTock on cleaning gear lock­
LIKED SIU MEETING
er, with one key to be given
Father Gordon also said that
to each department.
he attended a shipboard meeting,
X X which he thought was ably con­
ROBIN GOODFELLOW. April SEATRAIN TEXAS. May 14— ducted.
20 — Bernard Macey. Chairman; Tom Plunkeil. ^ Chairman; L. The Villanova professor wrote
Mike Zelonka. Secretary. Dele­ Willis, Secretary. Ship's Dele­ that "if the rest of the trip in
gates reported no beefs. New gate reported that all repairs had Europe is as pleasant as the voy­
Business: Motion carried to have been made. Aside from three age across, 1 will be very happy,
no one discharged if person was hours of disputed overtime in indeed."
loggpd and have Patrolman Deck Department, there were no He concluded his letter to the
check log book. Motion carried beefs. Motion carried calling for SIU by expressing his "best
to have Patrolman investigate a vote of confidence in the Ship's wishes for the success of your
the reason men have been forced Delegate, H. O. Tennant. Re- efforts in behalf of our mer­
to pay for penicillin. Education:
chant seamen."
(Cqnthrued on Page 7)

�Friday. August 19* 1949

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Digested Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings
(Continued from Page 6)
quested that a new potato locker
be procured and that lower^decks
be cleaned. The toaster In the
saloon is to be repaired. Recom­
mended that everyone make a
contribirtion to the Steward at
payoff, all proceeds to be sent
to the Marine Hospital at Fort
Stanton, N. M. Beefs are to be
brought up at meeting and not
elsewhere.
MALDEN VICTORY. May 29—
Campbell. Chairman; Burke. Sec­
retary. Ship's Delegate McCulloch reported that he had wired
proceeds of collection to Brother
Young in Seattle Marine Hospit­
al, where he is being treated for
injuries suffered ashore while a
member of crew. McCullbch
showed receipt for the money.
Chief Electrician was given note
of thanks for buying and show­
ing motion pictures to crew.

ried to have fresh water pipe
extended from laundry to out­
side deck via the bulkhead for
use of longshoremen. This was
recommended in order to keep
unauthorized persons out of pas­
sageways and vicinity of crews
foc'sles.
4 4. 4
CAPE NOME. May 15 —Fred
Shaia. Chairman; James Boyles.
Secretary. Some disputed over­
time in Engine and Deck Depart­
ments, no beefs in Stewards. Mo­
tion by Shaia seconded and car­
ried that any speaker offering
motion have his name and book
number recorded in the minutes.
Motion by Smith, seconded by
Fricks. that stores be checked
by Patrolman before the signon. Men are to soak clothes in
buckets and not in laundry
room sinks. Ship's Delegate is
to see Port Steward about De­
partment heads receiving enough
supplies for their men.

Page Seven

£11/14
PROTECT
YOUR BOOK!
AvaLlal&gt;ie atall
AeG Brai^cKKall^
dBor $l.5o Ba^amonleatherdObldets.

slopchest is opened. On next
voyage, recreation room is to be
used for card playing, insted of
the messroom. Steward is to call
for new books for library; old
books to be returned to recre
ation room upon arrival in port
" 4. 4. i
PORTMAR. May 29 — Bill
Hendershot. Chairman; Max
Beck. Secrelary. Motion carried
that no one is to sign off unt
STEEL. KING, May 22—Earl
all overtime has been checked
Young. Chairman; Gene Flowers.
by boarding Patrolman. Dele
Secretary. Gene Flowers elected
gates, reported all okay. A three
Ship's Delegate. Deck Delegate
man committee was elected to
Tannehill reported overtime dis­
look into matter of buying wash
puted in his department. Under
ing machine for crew's use. A1
Education, he discussed the
Anderson discussed situation on
things the Union stands for and
4 4 4
By HANK
the Great Lakes and recom
advised all hands to read Union
SEATRAIN
NEW ORLE.' :JS.
mended that some men try to
literature brought aboard ship
While there's great unemployment for American seamen
get up there so there won't be June 4 — Brown, Chairman; Ca­
from the Hall.
and thousands of ships laying idle in bone-yards, the Pana­
pote.
Secretary.
McKay
elected
any shortage of SIU men for
manian merchant fleet is the fourth largest in the world—
the ships. One minute of silence Ship's Delegate. Deck Delegate
with 600 to 800 ships. In fact, a New York steamship company
reported
one
beef
pending;
none
in memory of departed Brothers,
operates 41 ships. The sooner these "runaway" ships axe back
in other departments. Suggested
4. 4.
in the American merchant marine the better—for our seamen
PETROLITE. June 1—Frank that coat hangars be obtained
...There
sure are a lot of Seafarers in town with mustaches.
for
ship.
Delegates
to»
make
up
Livingston. Chairman; Robert E.
One
of
them
is Charlie Bush—who sailed in three weeks ago
repair
lists
now
that
ship
is
Bishop. Secretary. Repair list re
...And
this
week
there was Brother Crowley who raised his
going
into
drydock.
Crew
is
not
ferred to Ship's Delegate. Mo
mustache
after
a
voyage
on the Robin Trent... Brother "Wally"
to
leave
clothes
boiling
in
the
tion carried that recreation room
laundry
buckets.
One
minute
o:
Wallace
says
favorite
bars
for SIU brothers are the Penguin
^
be taken care of by all depart­
Bar in Lorenco Marques, Southeast Africa emd the Ambassador
CITY OF ALMA. May 26 — ments, starting this week with silence for departed Brothers.
Bar in Rotterdcun, Holland... Steward Harold Peeler is prob­
Joseph Felton. Chairman; C. Wil­ the Engine gang. Suggested that
SEATRAIN NEW JERSEY.
ably still in town...To Bill Gray. Ship's Delegate aboard the
son. Secretary. Deck Delegate re­ schedule be worked out to per­
Seatrain New Jersey—a bundle of LOGs for Seatrain men
ported that disputed overtime mit all departments to use wash­ May 23 — John Jellette. Chair­
will be available in John's Bar over in Edgewater. New Jersey.
had been settled by Patrolman. ing machine at regular time so man; W. Connor. Secretary. Dry
Motions carried: to wire port that there will be no confusion cleaning man had pass taken
4
4
4
Happy birthday to Percy Boy- of the bauxite run. In "Amuay
ahead and have Patrolman meet It was noted that most repairs away from him in New Jersey.
ship upon arrival; that anyone had been done at the shipyarc Motions carried: That Ship's er, the humorist of New Orleans, Bay. Venezuela, where American
performing on ship to be brought and by ship's personnel. Remain­ Delegate speak to Patrolman who is now aboard the Isthmian
beer sells for two boli^
^
vars (which is sixty cents in
up on charges. Suggested that ing items are to be shipped to about having 4 to 8 lockers in
Engine * Department's foc'sles scow, steel Advocate. Percy has Americano currency) he met anfood left over after meals be Baton Rouge by the company.
ports and hasn't other electrician, Ed Larkin,
moved; that Ship's Delegate see been in five
left in the pantry. One minute
Chief
Mate
about
having
poop
navigated ashore yet. No doubt who's been working ashore. Broof silence in memory of depart­
deck washed down once a day; he'll take some last-minute bear- ther Johnston is due in New
ed Brothers.
that Ship's Delegate speak to ings and celebrate his birthday York around October time . . .
4. t t
Patrolman about men missing on August 28 when the ship sails Speaking of New Orleans, BroOREMAR. May 24—C. Parker.
ship. Chief Mate agreed to have from Calcutta... From New Or- ther Jack Parker is now aboard
Chairmem; W. J. Fogarty. Sec­
poop deck washed as requested. leans we have word from Bro- a ship in La Guaira, Venezuela,
retary. Delegates reported that
ther James Johnston, Chief Elec- and Brother Thomas "Rocky"
all was running smooth in three
4 4 4
EDITH. May 22—R. H. Nichol­ trician on the Alcoa Ranger for Benson is aboard the SS Del
departments. Charles Omahundru
son. Chairman; Louis Rizzo. Sec­ two trips, that he's slightly tired Santos now in Rio de Janeiro.
elected Ship's Delegate. Motion
retary. One beef in Deck Depart­
carried to have Patrolman an­
4; 4. 4
4
4
4
We hear from Bill Rowe, here in New York, that Brother
FAIRLAND. May 15 — Ralph ment about launch service. This
nounce over loud speaker in the
Bill Chapman may still be in the New Orleans Marine hospi­
Hall that permit men ride with DePaolo. Chairman; Frank Har­ beef was discussed thoroughly;
tal. Speedy recovery. Bill...Roy Grundner and Ziggy Wydra
him to the docks to take jobs per. Secretary. After delegates Engine Delegate tried to make
are two of the many Seafarers aboard the SS Puerto Rico...
in case there are any pier head reports, a motion carried rec- arrangements for service but had
Leo Siarkowski, in New York now after his Waterman scow
jumps. This will prevent non­ commending that matter of food no success. He found out that
was bone-yarded, is waiting for his shipmate, Ozzie Okray,
union men from getting the jobs. supplies be taken up with New Sheriff prohibited boats from
due in soon from his homesteading ship the Algonquin Vic­
York Patrolman unless requis- coming out to the anchorage. Mo­
tory ... Seafarers Birth Department—Congratulations to Mr. &amp;
tions are filled more accurately. tion carried to turn standby
Mrs. Leo Feher of Weehawken, New Jersey. They are the
Port Steward has been swinging overtime over to Patrolman for
heavy red pencil. Motion carried settlement. One minute of siproud mom and pop of a boy weighing 7 lbs. 8 ounces...
to check slopchest and list to be ence in memory of our departed
There are probably a lot of brothers who are laughing at the
turned over to Patrolman to Brothers.
sight of the ship—which looked like a short stool—which was
4- 4i 4.
make sure it is more adequately
pictured in the newspapers recently. The inventor of this
4 4 4
SOUTHSTAR. May 29 — Hay ^ stocked for essential items. Ship's
ROBIN TRENT. May 29 —F.
sea-going stool claims his twin-hulled vessel can revolutionize
Queen. Chairman; W. J. Walsh. Delegate Fred Travis. Electric- Gorenflo, Chairman; Pat Murphy,
ocean travel for passengers because it has no roll at high
Secretary. Ship's Delegate Ray ian, wished it to be stated in Secretary. Motion carried sug­
speed. Well, that's what he says, anyway.
Queen. Deck Delegate E. H. Den- the record that this crew is 100 gesting that ship's office be con­
4
4
4
chy and Engine Delegate J. Ter- percent SIU. He added that it verted into quarters for Bosun
The SEAFARER'S LOG will Clement llospedales is all ready
raciano reported no beefs. Stew­ had been a great pleasure to and Carpenter, as their present be sailing free of cost to the to turn to shipping out with his
ards Delegate C. Gilbert stated represent the boys because of quarters are in bad condition.
homes of the following brothers: mustache after doing some vaca­
that two hours daily is to be their good fellowship and spirit Motion carried calling for meettioning ... Brothers, the voting is
paid to Second Cook for break­ of cooperation.
mg with Patrolman before pay­ Charles Albury of" New York, still going on for the new assess­
ing out meals and" doing all
off to discuss needed repairs and William Barne of Alabama, Jack ment which would immediately
4. 4. 4.
heavy work for Chief Cook, who
ROBIN WENTLEY. June 5 — things in general. Captain was Allen of Alabama, Glen Bene- strengthen the Union and various
has been placed on light duty Stanley G o n d z e r. Chairman; consulted about a spare room field of Florida, Clement Brunet organizational and educational
by US Army doctor in Trieste. Ricky Molika. Secretary. All re­ for ironing facilities. He said of Louisiana, Joe Morgan of programs. It's your right to vote
Messman is to appear before pairs listed during last trip were be had to gpt approval from the j North Carolina, James Pugh of and to vote right for the SIU ...
trial committee before shipping taken care of. Except for dis­ office. This matter to be taken Louisiana ... Brother Jack Green­ Brothers, keep your jobs ship­
for missing ship in Genoa, in- puted overtime in Engine Die- up with the Patrolman. Ship's haw, the oldtimer, is in town, shape aboard ship. Protect your
ciurring loss of wages for one partment delegates had no beefs unds are to be used to have j after some hospitalization. "Rope- agreement by doing the jobs the
man 'because no replacement to report. Motion carried to have washing machine repaired. Leo yarn" Jack says he'll probably SlU-way—the right way. Hold
was required. Notice is to be ship fumigated; previous job 'igg volunteered to take care do some homesteading on one of those meetings — and keep the
posted at least six hours before was imsatisfacfory. Motion car­ of the ship's library.
i the Seatrain scows . . . Brother ships clean and happy.

attd-IdeiatiCiicatwaW'£oldeAr, tuitlv -the SJU tcheeX
otv the CdVCr, (AJUI fegf ^four
IwK a3i«^
iVt
Coti3iition-.

CUT and RUN

�Page Eight

THE

SEAFARERS

Friday. August 19. 1949

LOG

Penmar Survivor Says He Lost Out
When Spirits Were Unveiled In Raft

BETTER WATCH YOUR STEP, BROTHERS
I

1^

^,

/

f

. a

me it was a tongue-swallowing when, in his brief statement to
ordeal. -It was strictly a bum go the LOG, he attempted to de­
Shipping being what it is,
from the start, for the Penmar, scribe the crowded condition of
- felt that the next few,weeks I'd after leaving Halifax had to be the life boat and the two rafts.
have to be on the beach would turned back because of her in­ (The ones who had lifesuits took
be well-spent by my entering ability to hold her speed in a turns on them with the others,
the dry-dock for a repair job. seven-knot convoy. Luck rode for a good sea was still running
So here I am in the New Or­ with us into Halifax for we were and everyone on the raft was
leans Marine Hospital.
unescorted but made it to later assured of being continually wet.)
With one week already behind join a five-knot convoy.
The two rafts were lashed to­
me here and with . about three Things ran smoothly and then gether, then a line was attached
more to go, I truthfully want to the subs started to work the froih one of them to a lifeboat
say that nowhere have I been convoy over, sinking a ship here to make sure we all remained in
treated more thoughtfully or and one there. Then we ran into one group. When my turn came
considerately by everyone from a beauty of a North Atlantic to relieve a man on a raft,
orderlies on up. I strongly rec­ storm that smashed to pieces one was glad of the change. At least
ommend the New Orleans Ma­ of our two lifeboats. And to top on the raft you could stretch
rine Hospital to anyone who it off, we lost our convoy. The out fuU length. There were about
plans on entering a drydock. storm smashed into the aft deck 50 men in the boat, which was
While out on pass the other quarters and into the aft below buUt for about half that many,
day I stopped at the Hall to deck quarters and caused us to reminding me of the subway
see who was in town and I lose most of our gear, including rush in New York.
picked up copies of the LOG the rubber suits.
DARK SECRET
Playing piraies? No, these uncomfortable lads are just
to read on my return to the
But
one
thing I hadn't known pollywogs awaiting the initiation that will make shellbacks
DOWN THE DRAIN
hospital. On reading that night
The seas also kicked into our about was Brother Zielinski's out of them in ceremony held aboard the Del Sud, as the
I noticed several articles of in­
storerooms and on coming out bottle of gin. If I had known
Mississippi cruise ship crossed the Equator on a recent trip.
terest.
into the alleyways they brought about it, I surely wouldn't have Photo was submitted by Paul Fernandez.
RECALLS RUGGED DAYS macaroni, bread, etc., along to cussed him out for being so
The first was in "Here's What plug the scuppers to add to our heavy.
I Think" on page 5 of the June woes. We ate one cooked meal At any rate, after being
10 issue, in which the question in two days because the incoming heroes in dungarees" for three
was "What incident gave you seas broke through the skylight days, the Coast Guard cutter Bibb
fished us out of the drink. We
the greatest thrill of your sea­ and knocked out our galley.
later
wanted to kick up a fund
Then one afternoon our naval
going career?"
to
pay
back for the gear the
Brothel Benno Zielinski, Deck gun crew fought off a surface
Coast
Guardsmen
furnished us,
Engineer, stated his as the tor­ sub attack. One gun crewman
CHARLES A. FLETCHER
ANTHONY ADNRIOLA
but
this
was
nixed
as "out of
pedoing and sinking of the SS was swept overboard and lost,
order."
They
were
a
good
bunch.
Penmar, Calmar. Brother Ziel- despite the fact that we turned
Contact Herbert P. Sklar, 262 Get in touch with Mrs. Jo­
sinski niay or may not remem­ back and threw dunnage over­ We did have a plaque made to Washington St., Boston, Mass.
hanna Fletcher, 10 Miner St.,.
ber one of the two Oilers who board, hoping to give the man secure to the bulkhead of the
Hudson, Pa.
Si
4.
were in the same lifeboat with something to float on if he found Bibb.
THOMAS V. DRZEWICKI
4 4 4
him when it hit the water after it. This happened in the middle It's too bad some of the mar­
EDDIE DEVLIN
the ship was struck by the "tin of a steering control breakdown. tinets in shoreside CG' jobs are Get in touch with Local Board
stiU trying to police the mer­ No. 4, 901 West 8th St., Wilming­
Otto McLean of 2404 Deers
(Nice, huh?)
fish."
St., New Orleans, La., would
We got underway again and chant marine instead of trying ton, Delaware.
I haven't seen him since, but
like to know your address.
I'd sure like to. I ran into the when I went on watch at 8 PM to use their dubious talents to
t t 4
JAMES J. GORMAN
4 4 4
Bosun of the same ship about I went below very sadly. Those help it out in the same man­
EDWARD RYDON
three years ago in France, and men not on watch were sitting ner as did the crew and officers
Write your mother at 2147
the First Mate at the Battery in in the messroom betting on what of the Bibb.
Get in touch with your broth­
33rd
Street, Astoria, N. Y.
Later
the
Army
took
us
under
New York two years later. Also time we would get hit by a "tin
er,
Fred, at 361 West 22 St.,
4 4 4
"Cut and Run Hank," who was fish." (The Bosun won. He said their wing in a camp in Iceland,
New
York City.
GEORGE
RAY
BROWN
10 PM. We got it about 9:50 PM.) where we spent another two
also with us.
4 4 4
Brother Zielinski may put the Brother Zielinski surely made weeks. The two weeks more Get in touch with John DreiFRANK
PASCHANG
experience as a big thriU, but to a masterpiece of understatement aboard the old Seminole. Still sch, 1175 Evergreen Ave., Bronx
two weeks after that we payed 59, N.Y.
Your radio filter has been sent
off
in
New
York.
to
your home by George Leide4 4 4
ON DECK OF THE STEEL ADVOCATE
Paul T. Cassidy
mann.
LEO J. WHITE
To the Editor;

."S;i

MARINE WOWS
BUDDIES WITH SIU'S
ACCOMPLISHMENTS

These Seafarers aboard the Isthmian scow certainly look
contented, if the smiles mean anything. In front row. left to
right; M. T. Coffman, AB; F. Bona, OS; B. Smith, Bosun; F.
Alusson, Dk. Maint.; J. A. MacKenzzie, AB: L. Dixon. Rear
row: T. Snow, OS; R. Comstock, AB; T. Patton, AB; N. Mamat,
AB; Third Cook, end T. Madias, Dk. Maint. Ship's Delegate
MaoKenzie sent photo to LOG.

To the Editor:
Just a few lines to let you
know that I enjoy the LOG very
much.
I've just returned from Guam
after an eight-month stay, and
in all my seagoing career I've
never hit a port as dead as that
one. I'm looking forward to the
day when I can go back to sea
with the SIU.
I have my whole outfit inter­
ested in the SIU and they can't
believe our Union has done so
much for the men in maritime.
I would appreciate it if you
would send me a copy of the
agreement so I can prove that
what I tell them is so on SIUcontracted ships.
I'd like to hear from old ship­
mates. Write me at Maint. Co.,
1st Prov. CSG, Daggett Annex,
Barstow, Calif.
PFC O. L. Richardson, USMC
Serial No. 1087532

Please get in touch with your
wife, care of Mrs. Helen Banach,
296 Harding St., Worcester 4,
Mass.
4 4 4
CHARLES E. DEMERS
Get in touch with your wife
immediately. She says that it is
JAMES E. ROSE, AB
urgent. Address is 25 Hecla St.,
- SS Sieel Artisan
Dorchester, Mass.
4 4 4
The Isthmi^ Steamship Com- .
JAMES F. KANE
pany'itrequests that you call at
Your mother, Mrs. Mary Kane, their office at 68 Trinity Place, ^
162 Bolton St., So. Boston 27, New York City. You may have
Mass^, asks that you get in some money due.
4 4, 4
touch with her as soon as pos­
OSWALD
W. PEDERSON
sible.
4 4 4
You may collect $29.22 trans­
JAMES J. GORMAN
portation money by calling at
Your mother has been wor­ the Actium Steamship Company
ried about you and asks that office at 44 Whitehall St., New
you please drop her a note at York City.
2147 33rd St., Astoria 5, N.Y.
SS TELFAIR STOCKTON
4 4 4
SS ALCOA RUNNER CREW
Crew, who paid off in New
Crewmembers of this vessel York on Saturday, July 30, has
who are owed money by Bill transportation coming. Write to
Gonsalves should write to him John M. Carras, Inc., 24 State "
Street, New York. .
care of the New York Hall.

�Friday, August 19, 1949

THE SEAFARERS

—AND NOBODY GOT CLIPPED, EITHER

LOG

Labor, For(;ed Into Political Arena,
Can't Duck Challenge, Member Says
To the Editor:

The deck of the SS Chrysanthysiar resembled a busy Times
Square tonsorial parlor during a recent trip when it was
discovered that all hands needed their locks trimmed. Here
are a couple of crewmen being prettied up in photo by Luis
Ramirez. FWT.

Year On Ship
Ripens A Man
For Vacation

lilllll

WW''''"'''

mmm

To the Editor:
Even though I have a wife
and five papooses I put my crossmark on rule No. 1, when we
had a referendum last spring on
the question of the transportation
yule.
(Rule No. 1 was the one for­
merly in effect which required
that where transportation was
due a crew, all hands must ac­
cept it and get off the ship.
Rule No. 2, which was adopted
in the referendum last fall and
which is now in effect, made
acceptance of transportation
money optional. If a crewmember accepts it, he must get
off the ship and have a re­
placement sent from the Hall.
Those who do not accept the
transportation
money
may
Stay on board. —Ed. Note)
Now let's do something about
homesteaders. After a man has
put in a year on a ship, let
him take his vacation pay and
get off and give his Brothers in
]the SIU a break.
GOOD FOR ALL
It will do us all good. After
toe year, a man should be

A guy didn't have to go
shaggy on the Raphael Semmes
either, as this shot of Ralph
Padilla in the barber's chair
shows. Brother Nick Coratti
did the shearing.
ready to take his vacation money
and make an opening for some­
one else. He certainly should
have accumulated some money
by then.
I have a wife and five kids
and I've had three vacations dur­
ing the past year due to the old
transportation rule. But I'm not
kicking. If only we can get these
homesteaders to take a vaca­
tion before they die of old age
on these steady run ships.
I'd like to see some letters from
SIU Brothers on the homesteading question.
Jesse (Cherokee) Joy

I was thoroughly aroused by
Brother Raymond's article in the
June 10 issue of the LOG. It
was both timely and tactful.
And it brought to mind the par­
allel between the SIU and the
United States just before the na­
tion entered World War II, end­
ing a policy of theoretic isolation
but all the time being drawn in­
to the larger waters of external
activity by the strong tide of
circumstances.
We can no more forego poli­
tical action today than we. can
our fight for wages and condi­
tions, so inextricably are the two
entwined. Even if we had a free
choice in the matter, the dye
would be cast for participation
on the ground of principle.
We as working men have been
struck a low blow and should
retaliate by fighting it out with
our political foes in every mu­
nicipal, state and national elec­
tion to be held. Did not Taft
and Hartley by a negative pro­
cess push our union and other
unions into the political arena'
when they insisted on officials
swearing they were not mem­
bers of the communist party?
CLOSED SHOP OUT
Did they not invade the sanc­
tity of conscience of each indi­
vidual member when they said
we must work with scabs, who
would share all of our benefits
but none of our obligations
(closed shop outlawed); or when
they, would compel us to act as
strike breakers, possibly to the
end of self-destruction, if our
members hit the bricks in "a legi­
timate beef (secondary boycotts
outlawed)?
The implications and insults
contained in the law leave us
no recourse but action. There­
fore, when the looming battle
for the senatorial seat in Florida
takes place,, the SIU should ex­
pend every energy to see that
our friend, Claude Pepper, is
returned the winner over that
labor-baiting open-shopper, Tom
Watson. But this is only one of
the many campaigns to be fought.
Up to the last presidential el­
ection, most seamen were poli­
tically passive. With the exten­
sion of the absentee ballot to
sailors, however, that situation
may change. Certainly, we Sea­
farers must alert ourselves to
effective use of the ballot. In
these days of rapidly diminish­

ing jobs due to Panamanian reg­
istries, boneyards, a meddling
Coast Guard, we must exert
every pressure to maintain our
present economic status.
BIG OPPORTUNITIES
We must get our families and
friends to support candidates
sympathetic with our views. Fac­
ed with peculiar difficulties, but
also with immense opportunities,
we can become politically as­
sertive and give those views
force of law. What better way
can we destroy the myth spread
by the Peglerian school of prop­
agandists that seamen are sec­
ond-class citizens?
It is up to us to weld work­
ing people with separate econ­
omic interests into a cohesive
constructive voting unit. We
have got to show them that ours
is a common cause. When the
employers dictated the Taft-Hart­
ley law, they aimed, it at the
workers. Try to bring the seem­
ing incompatibles together. For
example, join, or get those close
to you to join the consumers'
cooperative in your neighbor­
hood. By this means some con­
tact may be formed between or­
ganized workers, unorganized
small farmers and white collar
workers. Together, these three
elements could guarantee elec­
tion of any worthy candidate.
It should be remembered, how­
ever, that when the Seafarers
enter the political field, it is no
short-run, short-range proposi­
tion. Victories that are won
should be followed up to con­
solidate gains. Too often in the
past workers withdrew from poli­
tics once they saw their pro­
grams enacted into law. When
enforcement failed to follow,
what should have been positive
law was reduced to the status of
abstract political philosophy.
Nevertheless, labor has nc
mean record of political achieve­
ment. Its courageous, uphill
struggles for reform produced
the following: a free press, pub­
lic education, abolition of im­
prisonment for debt, end of con­
vict labor, elimination of prop­
erty qualifications, establishment
of the eight-hour day, abolition
of the yellow-dog contract, health
and safety laws, social security
and old age pensions, workihen's compensation and many
others.
The SIU has evolved to meet
new conditions in maritime as

Remove Halo And Act Human, McKay Tells '100%ers'
To Ihe Editor:
' Quite often, I read about
people who are in the habit of
hollering about being 100 per­
cent Union, In the first place, if
iBome of these people were to
take stock of themselves, they
might find they rate zero in the
ranks of labor. The so-called 100
percent imion man is about as
extinct as the dodo bird. As
much as the rest of us try to
live up to the best principles ,of
.unionism, we all slip once in
iawhile.
Here are a few things for the
feo-called 100 percenter to ask
himself: Is all the clothing he
wears, even to his shoestrings
manufactured by organized la­
bor? Were they purchased in a
tmion store? Is he sure that the
restaurant where he eats em­
ploys 100 percent union help?

Was the food that he ate, raised
or butchered by union men and
women?
How about his pet ginmill?
Was the barkeep and others
strictly union help? How about
hs take-home bottle and con­
tents, did he look to see if
these were put out by union
labor? Chances are no. Every­
thing that this 100 percenter
wants is okay. But he thinks we
ought to get rid of the poor guy
who is only a poor 95 percenter.
Now if these same characters
are merely referring to the fapt
that they are 100 percent SIU
and are only interested in doing
a good job for the SIU, here
are a few things for them to
remember:
Always boost your union, but
not in the ginmills. Help it to
expand. Be sure and inform the

Page Nine

men who sail unorganized ships
just what the SIU can do for
them. Help your organizers to
organize. Don't stick' your ship­
mates for money or standing
watches. Work and live up to
the Union contract. Keep your
name out of the log book and
away from the Coast Guard.
Oh yes, Mr. 100 percent, I
have watched your kind in the
more than 30 years that I have
packed a Union book and I'm
still looking for the 100 percent
man, except, of course, where
he exists in the minds of the
so-called super militant, who
usually turns out to be a mem­
ber of some other group or un­
ion. And generally his only aim
is that of seeking to destroy the
uhion which is able to secure
for him decent wages and living
conditions.
Don't forget, that we as sea­

men have the natural failings as
all other people in every walk
of life. We try to correct the
things that need correcting. We
try to give our Union and every­
thing we have to help it carry
on in the fight for a decent life
for us all.
Let me say in conclusion that
no part of this article is aimed
at any particular person. Merely
at that small group that are
supposedly 100 percent in every­
thing they do. Fortunately, those
who are always critical of their
shipmates and fellow union mem­
bers are only a very small
minority.
To err is but human, of
course. But for anyone to think
that he is always 100 percent
right and that the correct things
are only those that concern him
personally—well, that stinks.
William McKay

new conditions developed. The
Seafarers are dynamic and vital
enough to be dependable for the
future. It is not just enough for
us to want a strong union, we
must want it and work for it
intelligently.
To vote is not only a privilege,
it is an obligation as well. We
can use our collective intelli­
gence in many ways to good
advantage to benefit our own
cause. The public can be edu­
cated to our side through pam­
phlet distributions, door-to-door
petitions and stump speeches. Of
course, we must take care not
to overemphasize these activities
to the extent of giving second
place to our basic economic job.
Everything we do politically
should be coordinated with the
activities of the AFL Labor's
League for' Political Education.
We have the potential for a
powerful lobby in Washington.
This program may seem in­
adequate to some, ambitious to
others. I am not concerned with
the shape it wiU finally take, as
long as we come up with some­
thing concrete. At any rate,
whatever course of political ac­
tion we may decide on, it
should be (1) a force for con­
structive good; (2) subordinate
to our own primary economic
purpose, and (3) permanent.
Having long since attained our
economic majority, we should
move on to political maturity.
Out of our path, NAM, the
SIU's lobby is on its way!
John Cole

Crews Urged
To Get Bound
Copies Of Log
To Ihe Editor:
Bound volumes of the LOG
have been available for some
time now and many ships have
them in their libraries and a
considerable number of mem»
bers have purchased copies for
individual use.
However, a large number of
these bound volumes still remain
on the shelves in Headquarters.
This is perhaps due to the fact
that ships' delegates have ne­
glected to notify the Patrolman
at the payoffs that copies are
wanted for the ships' libraries.
As a result, crewmembers
aboard these vessels have been
deprived of the valuable store
of information contained in the
bound volumes.
These bound LOGS are avail­
able in semi-annual editions for
the past few years. They are
attractively bound in durable
covers. The cost per volume is
$2.50, which is what the Union
paid to have them bound.
To get these handy reference
books aboard each vessel, it is
suggested that the ship's dele­
gates raise a fund, then present
an order for the volumes want­
ed to the boarding Patrolman.
An official receipt will be is­
sued for the amount received
and the volumes ordered wiU
be forwarded to the ship.,'
Individuals desiring copies of
the bound LOGs can obtain
them at the fourth floor baggage
room of the New Yoi-k Hall, or
by writing to the Editor, SEA­
FARERS LOG, 51 Beaver Street,
New York 4. N.Y.
Freddie Stewart

�Page Ten

THE SEAFARERS

Friday. August ld&gt; 194d

LOG

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings in Brief
PHILADELPHIA — Chairman.
D. Hall, 43372; Recording Secre­
tary, S. Bergeria, 7142; Reading
Clerk, S. White, 38302.
Minutes of other Branch meet­
ings read and accepted. Agent
reported on shipping in this port.
He mentioned that the Steel
Flyer is due here on about Au­
gust 17, and that the SS Alexan­
der was paid off in the past
week. Motion carried approving
decision to sail Steel Flyer from
Honolulu, since CIO unions had
ignored longshore strike there.

Shipping From July 27 To Aug. 10
PORT

Boston
New York.
Philadelphia
Baltimore
Norfolk
Savaimah
Tampa.
Mobile
New Orleans
Galveston
West Coast

GRAND TOTAL

REG.
DECK

REG.
ENG.

REa
STWDS.

15
154
56
109
42
13
11
88
60
80'

13
130
45
108
36
21
8
63
53
67

10
111
31
52
20
13
6
104
70
32

30

26

34

658

570

483

TOTAL
REG.

38
395
132
269
98
47
25
255
183
179
90
1,711

SHIPPED
DECK

6
78
43
60
40
3
9
107
64
IT
29
45^"

SHIPPED SHIPPED
ENG.
STWDS.

5
73
40
54
31
3
8
97
60
16
23
410

TOTAL
SHIPPED

6
67
31
4327
3
9
103
51
14
20

17
218
114
157
98
9
26
307
175
47
72

374

1,240

be excused from the meeting.
One minute's silence observed
in memory of departed Brothers.
Under Good and Welfare, there
was broad discussion on the
possible ways the Hall could be
improved.' Meeting adjourned at
7:40 PM, with 120 members in
attendance.
4 4 »
MOBILE — Chairman, Louis
Neira, 26993; Recording Secre­
tary, James L. Carroll, 50409;
Reading Clerk, Harold J. Fischer.
59.
Minutes of meetings in other
Branches read and accepted. Port
Agent Tanner reported on his
recent trip to Washington, where
he attended the meeting on the
Panamanian boycott. He also
spoke of the building repairs
and reported on the prospect
for shipping in the next two
weeks. He concluded his report
by urging the members to cast
their ballots in the current ref­
erendum on the General Fund

Palmer, T. M. Griffith and J. C. eral Fund assessment on which accepted as read. Patrolmen and
and there was no reason for our Viera took the Union Oath of ballotting is now being conduct­ Dispatcher reported, as did the
men to hold the bag for- them. Obligation. Under Good and ed. The Union film, "This Is The Hospital Committee. One minute
Secretary-Treasurer's financial
Welfare, membership discussed SIU," was shown and was en­ of silence in memory of departed
report and Headquarters' report Panamanian boycott and man­ joyed by all hands. Meeting ad­ Brothers. 210 membprs were
to the membership read and ac­ ning scale for Isthmian Stew­ journed at 8:25 PM, with 98 present when meeting adjourned
cepted. Donald J. Stilley took ards Department. Many men members present.
at 8 PM.
the Union Oath of Obligation. spoke in favor of adoption of
i i 4,
Meeting adjourned at 7:45 PM, the General Fund assessment,
BALTIMORE — Chairman, A. SAVANNAH —Chairman, Jim
with 145 members present.
several of them pointing out that
Bernstein,
2257; Recording Sec­ Drawdy, 28523; Recording Sec­
4;
the assessment represented only
SAN FRANCISCO—Chairman, the price of a round of drinks or retary, G. Maslerson, 20297; retary, L. E. Hodges, 255; Read­
W. McCuislion, 23138; Recording a few hours' entertainment Reading Clerk, A. Stansbury, ing Clerk, Jeff Gillette, 37060. assessment. Motion carried in­
Previous meetings' minutes, structing Agent to get competi­
Secretary, Roy Pierce, 46515; ashore. Meeting adjourned at 4683.
tive bids on air-conditioning
Reading Clerk, Pat Robertson, 8:45 PM, with 378 members Oath of Obligation was ad­ Secretary-Treasurer's financial
ministered
to
Jim
Spencer,
John
unit
for the Hall. Secretaryreport
and
Headquarters'
report
30148.
present.
Treasurer
Hall reported on the
A.,
Whittaker,
Leo
Stephenson,
accepted
'
as
read.
Port
Agent
Branch minutes read and ap­
S. t- X
proved. Acting Agent reported
BOSTON—Chairman, M. Nor- A. Lopez and Edward McCor- said that several men had been state of the Union. After Hall's
that voting was going ahead ris, 5725; Recording Secretcury, B. mick. Previous meetings' min­ sent to ships calling here in report, which was well received,
satisfactorily, with many men Lawson, 894; Reading Clerk, D. utes read and accepted^ Several transit. He said the William Car- the Union film, "This Is The.
coming off ships to cast their Sheehan; 22856.
men were excused from the ruth is expected to come out of SIU," was shown. Patrolmen's
ballots. He said that Brother
Minutes of previous meetings meeting by the membership, af­ drydock shortly, and added that and Dispatcher's reports wfere
Tilley had notified him that ship­ in other Branches read and ac­ ter presenting valid reasons. Ag­ the Southland and the South- read and accepted. One minute
ping for bookmen would be good cepted. Agent reported on the ent discussed shipping in Balti­ port are scheduled for payoffs in of silence in memory of de­
for the next two weeks in Wilmore during the past two weeks this port. Membetship Voted to parted Brothers. Meeting ad­
•' mington, as there were several
and the possibilities for the com­ excuse two of the three men journed at 7:45 PM, with 258
vessels , on the Persian Gulf nin
ing period. Headquarters' reports who had written in asking to members present.
signing on. All beefs have been
settled, he said. Patrolman and
Dispatcher's reports read and ac­ status of shipping in this port.
cepted. Trial committee was elec­ Patrolman and Dispatcher also
ted to hear charges made made reports. Headquarters' re­
against a creWmember. Under port to the membership and Sec­
Good and Welfare, there was retary-Treasurer's financial report
general discussion on the Hawaii read and approved. One minute
longshore strike, interchangeable of silence in memory of departed
shipping from port to port and Brothers. Meeting adjourned at
on the General Fund assessment. 7:30 PM, with 59 bookmembers
Meeting adjourned at 8:15 PM. in attendance.
t S, i.
,«p. h
NEW ORLEANS — Chairman. GALVESTON—Chairman, Ray
A BPnoKLr ccmiasmoH or wars reow THI aR*rAKeR8 too
Johnny Johnston, 53; Recording Sweeney, 20; Recording Secre­
Secretary, Herman Troxclair, tary, Keith Alsop, 7311; Reading
The Atlanic and Gulf District's recently inaugurated world-wide information service has
6743; Reading Clerk, Buck Ste­ Clerk, R. Wilburn, 37739.
touched
off unanimously favorable commeht among the Seafarers on the high seas. Response
phens, 76.
Galveston and other port min­
to
the
first
two issues of the SEAFARERS BULLETIN, the bi-weekly digest of the leading news
Charges read and trial com­ utes of previous meetings ac­
items
from
the SEAFARERS LOG which is airmailed to all SIU ships at sea, reveals that the
cepted
as
read.
Port
Agent
spoke
mittee elected. Motion carried
that charges against several on shipping of the past two Union's latest effort to keep all of its membership abreast of maritime events of interest is being
members be referred to next v/eeks, and discussed the possi­ enthusiastically received by all hands.
meeting in order to" give ac­ bilities of, the coming period.
Accompanying the BULLETIN is material offering topics for shipboard discussion. Repro­
cused men chance to appear for Dispatcher listed the number of duced here are the mastheads of the two new SIU services and excerpts from some of the first
hearing. Agent announced that men registered and shipped in comments received at Headquarters:
miy member wishing to sit in each of the three departments
SS DEL SUD, Virgin Islands—"Received first edition of the BULLETIN and entire crew of
with trial committee could do during the last shipping period. Del Sud extend their approval and congratulations to Headquarters on another step forward. Will be ,
so to observe how it functions. Auditing Committee, composed looking forward to another edition when we get to Rio de Janeiro."
Several members sat in on the of Frank Fisher, Gene PaschaU
SS ARLYN, San Juan, P.R.r—"Received BULLETIN and posted same. We think this is a very
and Charles Fox, reported on the
finances of the Branch for the good idea, a^ it keeps us posted on what is going on."
SS LAFAYETTE, London—"Crew thinks BULLETIN is a very good thing and will be look­
week ending August 6. Oath of
Obligation was administered to ing forward to .getting news much faster this way. BULLETIN will be a great help, as men at sea
two members. Meeting adjourned will be able to keep up with what's going on in different ports in US."
hearings. Port Agent said that at 7:40 PM.
SS MARINA, Philadelphia^"Would like to congratulate the originators of the SEAFARERS
shipping prospects for next two
BULLETIN
for a wonderful idea^Tt can't help but prove successful fof the purpose it serves."
A* 4"
weeks were not too good. He
NORFOLK — Chairman, Ben
SS DEL VALLE, At Sea—"A good step forward in keeping the membership at sea well in­
said the grain elevator strike Rees, 95; Recording Secretary, J.
formed
as to activities ashore. PSpe the good work is continued."
was over and that this develop­ A. Bullock, 4747; Reading Clerk,
SS
AMES VICTORY, Santa Maria, Cuba—"Our copy of BULLETIN received and crew favors
ment might h61p local shipping, T. HUl, 1410.
continuing
it and sends Vote of.thanks. Future editions will be appreciated. Keep them coming as
if grain ships that had been di­ Previous meetings' minutes ac­
we
are
on
18 months articles." '
verted to other ports were re­ cepted as read. Agent reported
routed to New Orleans. He urged that men had been .shipped to
all members to ca.st' ballots in the Tini, Taddei, Strathcape,
the General Fund assessment ref­ Sea wind and John Dickinson.
erendum. Since resolution for Four vessels had payoffs. Out­
the assessment originated in New look for the next two weeks is
Orleans, he stated that it was not bright, he reported. Dispatch­
only fitting that this port regis­ er gave shipping and registra­
ter a large vote, and especially tion figures.
July 22. 19&gt;i9
Under Good and
•ol 1 ffe.
I
la large "yes" vote. Excuses re­ Welfare, Agent pointed out the
ferred to the Dispatcher. W. A. necessity for carrying the Gen­

New Overseas Bulletin Well Received

SmPBQfiSD DISCUSSIONS

'«w UWQM/MATTERS •

�Friday. August 19, 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

No Change In New York Shipping r
But At Least The Heat's Gone

MORE ACCLAIM FOR SIU'S WALL STREET FILM

Department of Research and Education
OF THE KEIVTVCKY STATE FEDEUATIOM OF LABOR
312 ARMonv PLACE

LOUISVILLE 2, KY.

Page Eleven

LOG

By JOE ALGINA

PHONE CLAY 7761

SAM EZELLE
Director

•

JIM WOLFE
AMI, Director

August 4, 1949

Paul Hall, Secretary-Treasurer,
SeaTarers Int'l Union of North America
51 Beaver Street,
New York 4, N. Y.
Dear Sir and Brother:
We are today returning your film, "The Battle
of Wall Street" with the greatest of thanks. The
film has been shov/n to the students of the •"•entucky
Labor school (attended by 44 delegates from 20 diff­
erent Int"l unions) and also to several v/orkers edu­
cation classes here In Louisville.
We have seen most of the flljus produced by the
CIO, APL film council, and various International unions
and have used many in our Kentucky workers education
' program. The Seafarers film Is the best v/e have yet
come acrossi The response to'Tiie flhn has been exceptlonally good here. The strikebreaking tactics of
the police, the cowardly scab, the biased newspaper-—
elements all too common In many of oirr strikes here
In Kentucky
are vividly documented In "The Battle
of V.'all Street". I thlnlc that a great lesson In
brotherhood Is found In the film as It proves unmistakeably v/hat can be done v/heii unions cooperate to
attain a goal.
Congratulations!

Praternally./*

. NEW YORK—The heat spell
broke in New York during the
past week, but shipping remain­
ed pretty much at the level
maintained in previous weeks.
On the payoff side were the
Steel Chemist, Steel Seafarer,
Isthmian; Purdue Victory, Azalea
City, Waterman; Dorothy, Su­
zanne, Frances, Rosario, Cornelia,
Bull; Cape Mohican, Mar Ancha;
Robin Sherwood, Robin, and
Evistar, Triton.
The sign-ons included all the
Bull Line payoffs, the Steel
Chemist and the Robin Doncaster.
Most ships are coming into
this port in ship-shape condition.
The vessels paying off during
the past weeks were true to
form in this respect and the
crews appeared happy.
HERE'S HOPING
Five ships that usually sail
out of this port were laid up
some time ago; and we're hop­
ing that they will be pulled out
for service in the near future.
If and when they are, we'll let
it be known.
Right about this time, many
of the original members of -the
Union are finding that their
membership books are filled up.
These men have been carry­
ing these books since they were
issued to them 11 years ago, and

they can be justly pro'ud of the
fact that they have taken part
in the campaigns which have
seen the Seafarers raise seamen's
standards one hundred-fold.
New books are now being is­
sued to replace the old ones,
but men wishing to do so may
keep the original books—and I
should think they would. There's
a hell of a lot of sentifnent at­
tached to them, for they are a
symbol of our progress.
GOOD MOVE
As you will read elsewhere in
this paper, your Union has urged
members of Congress to insure
100 percent participation of Am­
erican ships and crews in carry-,
ing whatever arms our govern­
ment decides to ship to nations
that signed the North Atlantic
Pact.
The condition of the US mer­
chant marine at this point cer­
tainly makes our position justi­
fiable. It is a tragedy that those
who can do something about it
neglect our merchant fleet, un­
til an emergency arises. Here's
their chance to get on the ball
at the right time.
Bull Lines' smart new passen­
ger ship, the Puerto Rico, left
yesterday for her maiden voy­
age to Puerto Rico and the
Domincan Republic. We're wish­
ing the ship and all hands good
sailing.

-€?•
The letler reproduced above is typical of the scores of messages lauding the SIU's stirring
documentary, the "Battle of Wall Street." which are arriving at Union Headquarters. More and
more requests for copies of the film are also coming in, from trade unions and community
organizations throughout the nafion. The possibility is that in the very near future the "Battle"
will be most widely exhibited labor movie in the land.
The "Battle of Wall Street" is available to unions and SIU crews for $40, which includes
postage and insurance. Central labor bodies, state federations and union conventions may borrow
the film for special showings at no charge. Requests for purchase or loan of the film should be
sent to the Seafarers International Union, Atlantic and Gulf District, 51 Beaver St., New York
4, N. Y.

SS J. B. WATERMAN
R. J. Kelly, $2.00; C. J. Dougherty.
$3.00; J. R. Murphy, $3.00; N. A.
Fisher. $2.00; W. L. McCarthy, $1.00;
J. Vilos. $3.00; W. C. Patterson, $T.T)0;
S. L. Birkland, $3.00; H. M. Kohv,
$3.00; C. M. CigantelU, $1.00;
H.
Pifren, $1.00; E. A. Bishop, $1.00; M.
Pi»rarinski, $1.00; J. Boldiszar, $1.00;
C. A. Bobbe, $1.00; J. Luciani. $3.00;

Seafarers Moves To Preserve Seamen s Cains
The SIU's Atlantic and Gulf
District took steps this week to
protect the interests of seamen,
whose pending suits for damages
incurred on government-owned
vessels have been invalidated by
a recent US Supreme Court de­
cision.
At the same time, the Union
voiced its opposition to proposed
changes In the Federal Employes
Compensation Act, now being
considered by the Senate Labor
and Public Affairs Committee.
In telegrams to the committee.
Paul Hall and Morris Weisberger. International vice-presidents,
urged that seamen be specifically
excluded from the federal com­
pensation law.
Unless action is taken to ex­
clude seamen from HR-3191,
"seamen of this country would
Buffer a severe setback," the
SIU officials declared.
In the Union's opinion, 1:he
wording of the law would per­
mit seamen working governmentowned ships to be classified as
government employes and, there­

fore, entitled only to workmen's
compensation.
Hall and Weisberger told the
committee that if seamen were
not excluded from the proposed
law, they would be prevented
from enjoying the benefits of the
Jones Act and the Federal Em­
ployes Liability Law, on which
the rights of seamen to seek
indemnity for injuries and dis­
abilities are based.
"Compensation does not go far
enough," the Union officials said.
The proposed law, they main­
tained, would, deny seamen ac­
cess to the courts to obtain main­
tenance and cure and indemnity
for personal injuries sustained
in the course of their employ­
ment.
In the case of McAllister ver­
sus the Cosmopolitan Shipping
Company, the high court ruled
that seamen with claims for
damages sustained on govern­
ment-owned ships operated by
private companies under the
General Agency Agreement can
only sue the government and
not the private operators.
This is a reversal of the same*

court's ruling of several years
ago in the Hust versus MooreMacCormack case, in which it
was held that the seamen could
sue either the government or
the operator.
LANE BILL
Legislation in behalf of the
seamen whose cases have thus
been voided has recently been
offered in Congress by Repre­
sentative Thomas J. Lane (D.,
Mass.). Lane's bill, HR-4051,
would allow men who had al­
ready "begun suit against pri­
vate operators additional time
to now enter suit against the
government.
Specifically, HR-4051 would
grant seamen, who have cases
pending against agents for gov­
ernment ships under the Gen­
eral Agency Agreement, one
year from date of enactment of
the bill in which to enter new
suits naming the government as
defendant.
This is necessary because, un­
der the Statute of Limitations, a
man wishing to sue the govern­
ment must do so within a period

of two years from the date the
damages were sustained.
Most of the cases affected by
the Supreme Court decision have
been pending for that length of
time or longer and, unless rem­
edial legislation is adopted, the
actions cannot be renewed
against the government.
ASKS MORE TIME
The SIU -las informed Rep­
resentative Sam Hobbs (D., Ala.),
chairman of the House subcom­
mittee considei'ing HR-4051, that
the Lane bill does not go far
enough in protecting the rights
of the men affected by the
court's decision.
. The Union proposed additional
relief by calling for extension
of the time limit beyond what
is provided in the bill.
The SIU recommended to the
sub-committee chairman that, in
addition to the one year pre­
scribed in the Lane measure,
the bill should also grant men
seeking damages one year from
the date their pending suits
would be dismissed in which to
file directly against the gov­
ernment.

E. Jones. $3.00; R. A. Grunder. $1.00;
R. Peter. $1.00; P. Charles. $1.00; S.
F. Prusinski. $1.00; R. Cregorio, $1.00;
I. S. Whitney, $1.00; D. Mease, $1.00;
S. Watson, $2.00; G. Flecha, $1.00; C.
J. Hawley, $2.00; S. R. Waller, $1.00.
SS GOV. GRAVES
C. B. Gepec, $3.00; E. J. Gerce,
$1.00; A. Demodo, $1.00; L. CoUins,
$1.00; A. W. Claude. $2.00; E. A. Lumbanc. $2.00; j. P. Campbell, $1.00; A.
.T. Diamond. $2.00; J. F. Pacheco,.
$1.00; E. L. Wentz. $1.00; M. J. Karlovcc. $2.00; C. jurewicz, $3.00; W.
Wright, $3.00; M. Kalkis, $3.00; W. M.
Hayes, $3.00; H. C. Wirtz, $1.00; F.
Gorgas, $2.00; W. Giszcak, $2.00; C,
J. Meller, Jr., $3.00; W. Kenny, $3.00;
E. R. Jordan, $2.00.
SS WOLLCOTT
E. E. Sjoholm. $2.00; J. E. Morgan,
$3.00; E. M. Eaton. $4.00; J. C. Gellathy. $2.00; F. Tdoio, $2.00; A. W.
Mc.Arthur. $3.00; E. Jetter. $2.00; L.
H. Uochapell. $2.00; J. B. Kilgoro,
$1.00; R. Bryant, $2.00; J. Freeman,
$2.00; B. Coleman. $5.00; N. Hall,
$2.00; K. Larsen, $2.00; L. Harris,
$3.00; J.\F. Williams, $2.00; J. Mar­
tin, $3.00; B. A. Solomon. $2.00.
SS R. SEMMES
J. P. Hayward, $3.00; J. J. Haggarty, $1.00; A. HufTstadt. $1.00; J.
Valincia, $1.00; H. Viik, $1.00; M. E.
Medina, $1.00; J. Milukas, $2.00; W.
Newhoff, $1.00; F. S. Simione, $2.00;
J. Dedicatoria, $1.00; L. N. Evans,
$4.00; R. M. Garrod, $5.00; J. Bedner,
$1.00; S. W. Kliderman, $1.00; J. P.
Rowan. $2.00; H. A. Croke, $1.00-; J.
E. Badcer, $2.00; H. C. Peterson, $1.00;
R. Vantz. $1.00; R. G. Wilt, $1.00; .R.
A. Rhodes, $1.00; P. Loleas. $1.00.
SS NEW LONDON
T. P. Clark, $1.00; .A. A. Bernard,
$2.00; R. G. Grigg, $1.00; M. W.
Houx. $1.00; H. W. Gigham, $1.00; H,
H. Mossburg, Jr., $1.00; W. E. Bigham, $2.00; V. Maflfucci, $1.00; C. R.
Pimental, $1.00; J. M. Flaherty, $1.00;
G. P. Nicastro, $2.00; W. P. Doherty,
$1.00.
SS SEATRAIN HAVANA
A. Olaguibel. $1.00.
SS SUZANNE
L. F. Rivera, $1.00; R. OUver, $1.00.

�THE SEAFARERS

Pag» TWOIT*.

LOG

Friday, August 19, 1949
T-!-

,0'^

S,TfWi\3^

i\i

&lt;&lt;«•
»tv«

&gt;#4

Vft&lt;
LVO**'

\0

Siv®'

b*'*'

v»*

-f&gt;
v.»*

Iv*
0«

^vS".

. ..*.

1*^

ia»*

»W

4oV«
i*v*

-V&gt;N

v»f

,,ot^9 \.e»* *

i »» "^A-

*•«
^ 9^;'*

. Nl*

VI

»

\&amp;im§ cniheGeneml
Fcau3,Assessjtien1r
ereiiduiti ends on.,
Soeh. I£ gouliaven'
voted yet, go to-llie
neangst Ae&lt;5 Hallani

tiw?

TOKFFP V^miOM^a»»

toCWmNueWFff&amp;MTflPi
AiaSFJoes

wmKF

I 'AT, •

Ite
.Afelviivsjjfepi

savsee

\N^

»« Vo
lot

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9926">
                <text>August 19, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9991">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 25</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10012">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10033">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10093">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10111">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10168">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
SEND PACT AID IN US SHIPS: SIU&#13;
WILL ACT FAST ON VACATION PAY, SAYS WATERMAN&#13;
REFERENDUM VOTE ENDS AUGUST 30&#13;
A PLAN FOR AMERICA&#13;
OFFICERS TRAINING SCHOOLS -- GOOD OR BAD?&#13;
FOUR TANKERS REBUILT TO HAUL DRY CARGOES&#13;
FAULTY GEAR BLAMED FOR SEAFARERS' DEATH&#13;
READ CONTRACTS AND AVOID BEEFS, SAYS BALTIMORE&#13;
IN-TRANSITS PAY COURTESY VISITS TO SAVANNAH&#13;
PIPE-LINE RUN LIBERTIES HIT WILMINGTON&#13;
BOSTON HOT? SUITS 'EM TO A TEE--IN YARMOUTH&#13;
THE SS PUERTO RICO STEPS OFF PROUDLY&#13;
DECK GANG MAN KILLED IN ACCIDENT ABOARD SS EDITH AT GALVESTON PIER&#13;
SIU CREW HAILED AS MODEL BY PASSENGER ON SS HARRY T&#13;
NO CHANGE IN NEW YORK SHIPPING BUT AT LEAST THE HEAT'S GONE&#13;
SEAFARERS MOVES TO PRESERVE SEAMEN'S GAINS</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13063">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="966" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="970">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/224d5226b27002a49538c55b50d55294.PDF</src>
        <authentication>49c0d941eb177dcb7720b36f26854326</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47446">
                    <text>SENERAL FUND ASSESSMENT
CARRIES BY BEHER THAN 5-1

~ NEW YORK—^With Seafarers in the ports of
Seattle, Wilmington and Tampa setting the pace,
the Atlantic and Gulf District membership over­
whelmingly approved a ten-dollar assessment to
strengthen the Union's General Fund in the refer­
endum which ended on August 30.
Upon completion of the ballot count on Wed­
nesday the Headquarters Tallying Committee an­
nounced that 84.4 percent of the valid votes were
cast in favor of the assessment.
The port-by-port breakdown revealed that all
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA
ports had rolled up a vote for the assessment by a
No.
26
I?EW
YORK.
N.
Y..
FRIDAY.
SEPTEMBER
9.
1949
better than two-thirds majority, with the exception
VOL. XI

4of Philadelphia. Although Phil­
adelphia registered a majority
TALLYING BALLOTS CAST IN REFERENDUM
vote for the assessment, it miss­
ed making two-thirds by a hair,
with a 66.4 percent favorable
vote.
Article XXIII, Section 3 of the
Union constitution states that a
To prevent confusion among
two-thirds majority vote is nec­
members who have come ashore
essary to carry an assessment.
in the past few weeks, SIU At­
The Philadelphia vote has no
lantic and Gulf District Head­
bearing on the outcome of the
quarters reminded Seafarers that
balloting, however, sinde the
the next regular membership
constitutional requirement refers
meetings in all ports will be
to the total vote cast on a unionheld on Wednesday, Sept. 14.
wide basis.
Subsequent meetings are sched­
(The complete referendum
uled for every second Wednes­
results appear on Page 3.)
day evening thereafter..
The port of Seattle went for
The new meeting schedule
the assessment 100 percent. Wil­
went into effect on Aug. 31, as
mington rang up a 98.6 percent
a result of the unavailability of
vote for the levy, with Tampa
the auditorium used by the New
close behind with a 96.5 percent
York membership for certain
tally in favor of the assessment.
nights on the previous schedule.
The Tallying Committee's re­
A new schedule was drawn up
port will be submitted to the
and approved at regular mem­
membership at the next regular
bership meetings to permit all
meetings in all ports on Sep­
Branches to hold their sessions
Members of the Headquarters Tallying Committee, elected at the Aug. 31 membership tember 14. After the report has
simultaneously. This was the
meeting. a.s they rechecked and tabulated results of the voting on the General Fund assessment. been concurred with at these
simplest solution, since all
Around the table, from left to right: Roderick Smith. Larry White, Sam B. Luttrell. Jose meetings, the assessment will
Branch meetings outside of New
become payable.
Pacheco.
Lars Hillertz and Patrick McCantt. It took four days for the committee to count and
York are held in the Union's
check
the
votes,
which
passed
the
General
Fund
assessment
by
a
84.4
percent
majority.
TO MEMBERSHIP
own quarters and the changes,
The
report
.of
the
committee
will
be
placed
before
the
membership
ad
the
next
meeting
The
referendum on the Gen­
therefore, could be easily ef­
and,
after
approval,
will
be
payable
at
any
Branch
of
the
Atlantic
and
Gulf
District.
eral
Fund
assessment stemmed
fected.
from a resolution presented by
36 Seafarers at the regular mem­
bership meeting in New Orleans
on June 29.
The resolution was adopted by
NEW YORK—Unless the ship included a reduction of 13 cents the new contract, the responsi­ week. The union negotiators have the New Orleans membership
owners take a more realistic in the hourly wage rate and bility would be the shipowners' made it clear that they wiU not and was passed at all Branch
alone.
take any offer of the operators
smaller working gangs.
viewpoint in current negotiations
meetings on July 13 and again ^
At this point the ILA's 120- Another meeting between the back to the ILA membership un­
with the AFL international ?nan negotiating committee, rep­ two groups is scheduled for next less it is a "good one."
(Continued on Page 3)
Longshoremen's Association, the resenting all locals of the Atlan­
possibility of a tie-up hangs ov^r tic Coast District, walked out of
the meeting, with ILA President
the Atlantic coast.
Joseph
P. Ryan calling the pro­
So far, the shipowners have
posal
"an
insult to the union
refused to discuss any of the
membership."
Union's demands, which include
A third meeting was held on
a 22-cent increase in straight pay
Tuesday
of this week, at which AFL President William Green sciously or unconsciously helping influences of our age, I place
over the present $1.88 per hour,
the
ILA
committee formally re­ called for an intensified effort to to push working people into the World Communism.
inci-eased overtime pay, a pen­
sion system, larger work gangs, jected the operators' proposals, resist the "destructive forces" ranks of the Communist Party. I accuse World Communism of
"The Tories profess to love seeking power at any price, of
increased vacations and an im­ and stated flatly that they would which seek to "tear down all
not alter their original demands. the good that labpr creats," in freedom," he said, "but only for keeping alive the threat of war,
proved ^welfare plan.
at a time when the human race
= The ILA is also demanding The shipowners consumed most a Labor Day address in San themselves, not for labor."
recognizes that war is the great­
Mr.
Green
said
that
labor
is
Diego,
California.
of
the
session
with
allegations
that any agreement reached
The
AFL
official
singled
out
fighting
the
obnoxious
Taftest
curse and destroyer of man­
with the New York Shipping that "things were tough."®
world-wide communism and the HaTtley law because it realized kind, and of exterminating hu­
Association be made to cover
SINISTER MANEUVER
forces of reaction at home as that by keeping American labor man freedom and liberty over
the lLA's entire Atlantic Coast
President' Ryan charged the the "twin evils" which must be free and strong the nation can vast areas of the earth by the
District, which extends from employers with "trying to use
checkmated by free, democratic be kept free and strong. He de­ most cruel and forceful methods
Portland, Maine, to Hampton the current manpower surplus as
imaginable.
labor unions.
claimed:
Roads, Va.
a weapon to force wage cuts and President Green lashed out at
"Those who believe in the
Finally, I accuse World Com­
to pull back all the gains made the Tory "reactionary combina­ American ideal must realize that munism of reviving slave labor
INDIVIDUAL PACTS
tion in Congress" which seeks it can triumph and survive only on a mass basis, thereby destroy­
In previous negotiations, a by the union since 1945."
He
said
they
were
thus
try­
"to
suppress and prohibit the if the American people are given ing the dignity of the individual
contract was first
worked out
ing
to
follow
the
pattern
adopted
natural
instincts and desires of full and free opportunity to im­ and reducing him to the status
for the New York locals, and
after
World
War
I.
The
ILA
all
free
Americans to .improve prove their standard of living of a prisoner of the state, with­
then became the pattern for in­
committee
made
it
clear,
how­
their
conditions
in life and to and to secure their future against out a soul, without a mind of his
dividual pacts in the other ports.
The ILA's demands for a new ever, that this maneuver would provide security for their child­ the social handicaps and eco­ own, without reason for exist­
nomic catastrophes which cause ence.
ren."
contract, to succeed the one ex­ not succeed.
«
«
*
piring on September 30, were The shipowners' own profit re­ Mr. Green charged that heartaches, discontent and event­
When the last war ended, the
presented to the employers at ports, the ILA committee main­ through their activities, the Tor­ ually can lead to revolution."
Following are some ''•of the American Federation of Labor
the first meeting two weeks ago. tained, are sufficient proof of ies, while they profess to hate
At the following meeting the their ability to meet the long­ communism—which he described highlights of President Green's foresaw the strategy of the Com­
as "first and foremost among the speech:
munists. "We anticipated what
shipowners rejected all of the shoremen's demands.
would
happen—and did happen
hateful
corroding
and
inhuman
First
and
foremost
among
the
They
warned
the
operators
union's demands and countered
influences
of
our
age"—are
con­
hateful,
corroding
and
inhuman
tliat
if
a
tie-up
resulted
over
(CMthmrd
on Page 3)
with their own proposals, which.

Headquarters Tells
Recent Arrivals Of
Meeting Date Change

ILA Takes Firm Stand In Coast Contract Talks

Green Calls Commies And Reactionaries
Twin Enemies Of Free, Democratic Labor

I'
|j?

i"

�Page Two

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, September 9, 1949

SEAFARERS LOG
Published Every Other Week by the

SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor
At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Reentered as second class matter August 2, 1949, at the Post
Office in New York, N.Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

The Membership Speaks
The membership of the Atlantic and Gulf Distric.t
once again proved that they have faith in their Union.
By a majority of 84.4 percent they voted to assess them­
selves $10 a year, for the purpose of building the Union's
General Fund. $2 of this amount will be earmarked for
the International's General Fund for general organizing
that will benefit us directly and indirectly.
The balance will be used by this District for the
important work that must be done if we are to not only
keep our gains, but to add to them: fighting against dis­
criminatory and reactionary legislation in Washington,
maintaining the present Union services in the face of a
general shipping slump, and organizing new compani^
under the SIU banner—all of which add up to security
and protection for all of us.
We are not surprised at the large "yes" vote—some­
how, we expected it, in view of past performances—but
it is always gratifying, especially in a period when times
are a little tough, to see a concrete example of organiza­
tional loyalty and farsightedness.
With that kind of spirit we can't lose!

Look Who's Talking
Labor-haters and union-busters are following a new
tack in their all-out effort to weaken the collective security
of organized workers. They are trying to sell the American
public the screwball notion that unions are dangerous because they tend to become big and accumulate "huge
treasuries."
Coming from guys who pump billions of dollars of
profit out of the American working people every year
and who are always digging for more—this cry is about
as valid as a used postage stamp.
But just to make the cheese more binding, let's look
at the record.
As was pointed out in a recent issue of the League
Reporter, weekly publication of the AFL Labor's League
for Political Education, the picture painted by the big
boys of "big labor" is a myth, pure and simple. And the
Reporter didn't use its own figures to prove the point.
Instead it took the proof from a survey made by Life
Magazine. Life, by the way, is no lover of organized
labor, but believes in free enterprise—free of trade unions,
if possible.
Anyway, Life Magazine last year totalled the wealth
of 32 of the largest unions in America, representing more
than half of the trade union membership. This total
amounted to $224 million.
But, in the same year, the assets of one corporation—
the American Telephone and Telegraph Company —
totalled $10 billion. Or 40 TIMES AS MUCH AS ALL
32 INTERNATIONAL UNIONS COMBINED.
The National City Bank also reported in 1948 that
56 corporations had assets of more than $500 million
dollars each. In other words, each corporation had more
than twice as much wealth as all 32 of the nation's
largest unions put together.
We think Senator Hubert Humphrey (D., Minn.)
hit the nail right where it hurts most, when he remarked:
"I haven't heard yet of any labor leader becoming a
millionaire ... No group in this country has done more
to increase the American standard of living than organized
labor.
"For every man who has been abused by labor, there
are thousands — yes, millions — who have been cheated,
reamed and dry-cleaned by such things as bank failures'
foreclosures, business bankruptcies and the like."
That kind of sums it up.

__

_
^
_
NOW itt THC

_

'HOSOitok
•
These are the Union Brothers currently in the marine hospitals,
as reported by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging
heavily on their hands. Do what you can to cheer them up by
writing them.
NEW ORLEANS HOSPITAL
J. DENNIS
L. LANG
F. LANDRY
C. ELLARD
L. WILLIS
C. D. SHIVELY
J. B. ALLRED
W. W. ROYES
W. SWILLEY
J. MORTON
L. E. JARVIS
C. BACHMAN
A. MAUFFRAY
N. I. WEST
B. H. LAWDERBACK
P. RAULERSON .
G. MOREJON
H. R. PITT
J. E. TASSIN
A. SYLVERA
C. BROWN
D. KOROLIA
A. ARVANTIS
S. T. JAMISON
T. RIGBY
i. t, t,
MOBILE HOSPITAL
J. CURTIS
MIKE LEOUSIS
L, HOWARD
T. GALVIN
R. LONG
D. C. MILLER
A t. t
STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
H. E. BONEWALD
N. DORPMANS
J. P. PROBST
J. W. FAILLA
W. R. THOMPSON
M. J. LUCAS

A. TREVINO
J. HERNANDEZ
M. FERNANDEZ
L. OIEN
T. KANADY
I. RHODEN
M. ROSSI
V. GROVER

SAN FRANCISCO HOSPITAL
J. W. KEENAN
T. ISAKSEN
B. WIGG
J. GILL
T. MACK
t X S.
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL
L. T. McGOWAN
W. L. SMITH
T. R. DeLOACH
t. SBOSTON HOSPITAL
BOB FISHER
VIC MILAZZO
J. J. FLAHERTY

Directory Of SIU Halls
SIU, A&amp;G District
BALTIMORE
14 North Gay St.
William Rcntz, Agent Mulberry 4640
BOSTON
276 State St.
Ben Lawson, Agent Richmond 2-0140
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141
GALVESTON
30823rd St.
Keith AIsop, Agent
Phone 2-8448
MOBILE
1 South Lawrence St.
Cal limner. Agent
Phone 2-17S4
NEW ORLEANS
623 Bienville St.
E. Sheppard, Agent Magnolia 6112-6113
NEW YORK
61 Beaver St.
Joe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784
NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St.
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
PHILADELPHIA
337 Market St.
J. Sheehan, Agent
Market 7-1636
SAN FRANCISCO
86 Third St.
Jeff Morrison, Agent
Douglas 2-6476
SAVANNAH
2 Abercorn St.
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728
SEATTLE
86 Seneca St.
Wm. McKay, Agent
Seneca 4670
TAMPA
1809;.1811 N. Franklin'St.
Ray White, Agent®
Phone M-1323
WILMINGTON, CaUf., 227 &gt;/, Avalon Blvd.
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Terminal 4-2874
HEADQUARTERS ..St Beaver St., N.Y.C.
SECRETARY-TREASURER
Paul Hall
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
Lindsay Williams
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURERS
Robert Matthews
J. P. Sbuler
Joseph Velplan

SUP
HONOLULU

16 Merchant St.
Phone 6-8777
PORTLAND
Ill W. Bumslde St.
Beacon 4336
RICHMOND, Calif
267 5th St.
Phone 260B
SAN FRANCISCO
69 Clay St.
Douglas 2-8369
SEATTLE
86 Seneca St.
Main 0290
WILMINGTON
440 Avalon BlvdU
Terminal 4-313IJ

Canadian District
MONTREAL

404 Le Moyne St.
Marquette 6909
FQRT WILLIAM. .118&gt;/a Syndicate Ave.
Ontario
Phone 3-3221.
HAUFAX
1281/a Hollis St.
Phone 3-8911
PORT COLBORNE....103 Durham St.
Phone 6801
TORONTO
lllA Jarvis St.
Elgin 6710
VICTORIA, B.C
602 Boughton St.
Empire 4531
VANCOUVER
566 Hamilton St.
Pacific 7824
HEADQUARTERS
Montreal

.512 McUU St.
Plateau 670

�Friday. September 9. IMS

THE SEAPARERiS

Page Three

LOG

Members Okay General Fund Assessment
Food Sanptos Good,
Oromar Crew Tells
Company, Send More
Never let it be said that Sea­
farers are lacking in the niceties
of etiquette. We offer the fol­
lowing "bread-and-butter" letter,
sent recently by the SS Oremar
crew to the Ore Steamship Com­
pany, giving thanks to the Ore
SS Co. for the overabundant
fare, as a case in point;
"We, the crew of the SS Oremar, wish to thank you and
your company for the fine
variety of foods you stored our
ship with. Words can't express
our gratitude, especially for the
four watermelons and the 40
ears of corn.
"We, the 46 men aboard the
good ship Oremar will close
With these words: Hoping you
grow fat and prosperous.
"Sentimentally yours,
"Crew, SS Oremar"

(Continued from Page'1)
approved on July 27, in accord­
ance with the sponsors' provision
that "two successive meetings"
PERCENTAGE OF act on the proposal.
VALID VOTES
In proposing the ten-dollar as­
YES
NO
sessment, the New Orleans Sea­
farers specified that the money
9.9
90.1
be ear-marked for the General
Fund to permit the Union tb
13.0
87.0
meet its day-to-day operating
33.6
66.4
expenses without curtailing any
28.2
81.8
of the membership services.
Proponents " of the resolution
29.1
70.9
at regular membership meetings
32.5
67.5
strongly urged adoption as being
vitally necessary to offset the
3.5
96.5
loss of revenue due to the slump
16.0
84.0
in shipping.

How Bramhes Voted In Referendum
BRANCH

YES

VOIDS. TOTAL
NO :NO VOTES VOTES

Boston
146
163
16
1
New York
1134
170
1325
21
Philaddphia..
95
48
2
145
Baltimore- • •
455
101
568 .
12
Norfolk
107
41
149
1
Savannah
77
37
115
1
Tampa
83
3
90
4
Mobile
220
42 .17
279
New Orleans475
45
6
526
8.7
91.3
Galveston
86
33
1
120
17.7
72.3
San Francisco78
25
4
107
24.3
75.7
Wilmington-69
1
0
70
1.4
98.6
Seattle - 23
0
2
25
.00 100
TOTAL
3048* 562
72
3682
15.6
84.4*
* Resolution was carried by more than two-thirds of valid votes
cast, as provided for by the Atlantic and Gulf Constitution.

The Soviet System Of Mind Control: I
the Party Of Lenin And Stalin

This is Ihe first of a series of articles on the Soviet
System of Mind Control by George S. Counts, of Teach­
ers College, Columbia University, and distributed by
the Workers Education Bureau of America. Dr. Counts
has long been considered an authority on Russia and
her ruling communist clique, and we know that the
membership will find this series interesting and in­
formative.

ANTI-UNION DRIVE ON
Moreover, those favoring the
assessment pointed out, anti­
union forces were encouraged by
the economic recession and were
already demonstrating that they
are out to weaken the security
of trade unionists.
It was also recalled that the
activities of the SlU on the
legislative front in behalf of
seamen's welfare was being ex­
panded of necessity.
The SIU could only continue
its all-out fight against anti­
union legislation if it was as­
sured of the rpeans to do so, and
it was for this reason that the
resolution was offered.

Since the October Revolution buro and seventy-two members
of 1917 the Russian Bolsheviks of the Central Committee.
30-DAY VOTE
have developed the most com­
In Lenin's time the operation
Balloting on the assessment be­
prehensive and far-reaching sys­ of the Party was supposed to
gan in all ports on September 1
tem of mind control known to proceed under the principle of
and continued through Septem­
history. They have been able to "democratic centralism." Accord­
ber 30, the voting period specifi­
surpass earlier despotisms in this ing to this principle all policies
ed in the original resolution.
respect because they have had at would be fully discussed by the
At the conclusion of the vot­
their disposal aU of the agencies rank and file in the thousands
ing ^period, each port elected tal­
for the moulding of the mind of cells which constitute the base
that modern science and tech­ of the organization. Thereafter port without qualification the to explain and argue, to per­ lying committees to count bal­
nology have created. They co­ delegates would be chosen pre­ basic policies of Stalin and the suade and cajole, to secure the lots. The results were forw^arded
ordinate and employ these agen­ sumably to represent the mem­ Politburo.
adoption of resolutions of ap­ to Headquarters, where the elecies—the school, the press, the bers at regularly called Party PUBLIC DISCUSSION BARRED proval, and to prevent the em­ checked and tabulated all votes
radio, and the moving picture, congresses and the policies adop­
Under this system of control ergence of any kind of organi­ cted Tallying Committee re­
the automobile, the airplane, and ted would be,binding on the en­ there can be no public discus­ zed opposition. All branches of cast, completing its task on Sep­
the machine gun, science, liter­ tire membership. Under Stalin sion of grand policy, either for­ the cultural apparatus are made tember 7.
Members of the Headquarters
ature, and art—with utter ruth- this entire process has been eign or domestic. Such policy is to serve the same purpose. The
lessness and singleness of pur­ abahdone'd, and even reversed. discussed and formulated by the Soviet citizen reads and listens Tallying Committee, who were
pose.
The last congress convened in Party high command, and is then in vain for the slightest critic­ elected at the New York mem­
The key to the understanding the spring of 1939. And if an­ commonly given to the world in ism of any policy adopted by the bership meeting of August 31,
were Roderick Smith, 26893; Pat­
of this system of mind control other congress should be called the form of a resolution by the central organs of the Party.
This monolithic system of rick McCann, 20273; Lars Hillis the All-Union Communist in the near future, as promised, Central Committee. It is there­
mind
control will be laid bare in ertz, 48392; Sam B. Luttrell,
Party, or the Party of Lenin and one may be certain that every after the function of the other
the
materials
to be presented in 46568; Larry White, 27165, and
Stalin, with its six million mem­ delegate will be carefully picked members of this political army
Jose Pacheco, 6889.
subsequent
articles.
to
carry
the
policy
to
the
people.
bers, its Central Committee of by the leadership and will supseventy-two, its • Politburo of
fourteen, and its complex and
far-flung apparatus. Here also
is the real key to that "under­
standing" of the Soviet Union
So far, the keynote for the
mine that support through the fication of all organized labor
which so many people are ask­
(Continued from Page 1)
ing for today. In fact the Party, in Czechoslovakia—if the Soviet so-called World Federation of in this country. May God speed Tory campaign is the empty,
barren, sterile charge that the
and not the government, is the forces were able to capture con­ Trade Unions. The American the day!
•
*
«
progressive
legislative program
Soviet state.
trol of organized labor in Europe. Federation of Labor consistently
favored
by
labor
and espoused
But
Communism
is
only
one
refused to join that organization
ORGANIZED AS POLITICAL We, therefore, begged and plead­ because we recognized it as a of the twin evils which beset by President Truman would
ed with the occupation author­
our times. The other is Toryism, change the American way of
The Party of Lenin and Stalin ities of our own country to help Communist front.
Now the World Federation of promoted by a reactionary com­ life and lead us to statism.
of course is not a political party and encourage the prompt re­
Here and now I brand that
Trade
Unions has fallen apart, bination in Congress.
at all in the sense in which the vival of free trade unions in
charge
as utterly false. It is imTo
my
mind,
the
basic
crime
thoroughly
discredited"
and
al­
term is used in democratic states. Germany.
adulterated
propaganda designed
of
the
Tories
is
that
they
seek
most
completely
isolated
as
a
We sent some of our ablest
It rules neither on authority nor
to
mislead
the
American people
to
suppress
and
prohibit
the
na­
Communist
fifth
column
move­
men
across
the
ocean
to
see
that
with the consent of the people.
Like its predecessor, the empire, the job was done right. We gave ment. And the free trade unions tural instincts and desires of all and to dodge the real issues.
it can be dislodged only by vio­ money, equipment and moral of 50 nations, with the enthu­ free Americans to improve their The American Federation of
lent revolution. In general struc­ support to the rebuilding of the siastic support and encourage­ conditions in life and to provide Labor is opposed to statism be­
ture and mode of operation it is free trade union movements of ment of the American Federation security for their children. This cause we oppose both a dictator­
a kind of political army. Follow­ Italy and France and other na­ of Labor, are banding together is a crime against the basic prin­ ship of the right and of the left.
and will form a new internation­ ciples of natural law and the We have never and we will
ing with amazing precision the tions.
never advocate a program which
Against fearful odds, we com- al organization in defense of democratic. way of life.
plan for a revolutionary organi­
would undermine the American
Promotion
of
the
welfare
of
peace
and
democracy
next
No­
zation outlined by Paul Pastel, batted Soviet attempts to enlist
way of life. On the contrary, we
the
American
people,
which
is
vember
at
a
conference
in
Lon­
a Russion revolutionist of the European workers in opposition
convinced that our
explicitly set forth in the Con­ are firmly
don.
early nineteenth century, it has to the Marshall Plan.
The American Federation of stitution as one of the primary progressive program is a sound
We exposed the hypocritical
its three levels or circles of
membership: it has its common propaganda of the Commimist Labor, which has never harbor­ objectives of our government is middle-of-the-road policy, which
soldiers, its commissioned and leaders; we upheld the honor ed or tolerated Communism considered by the Tory combina­ will strengthen the free enter­
non-commissioned officers, its and integrity of America's pol­ within its own ranks, hail^ the tion and the interests they repre­ prise system, reinforce the econ­
new determination of the CIO sent as a dangerous and revolu­ omy of our country and make
high command. The duty of the icies, and we won the fight.
Without the support of labor, to purge itself of Communist tionary idea. They berate the American freedom and democ­
soldiers and officers is to carry
but the orders of the high com­ the European Recovery Program leadership. It is a healthy trend, "welfare state" as a form of to­ racy more secure and more
mand. The latter consists of the could never have succeeded. The one which I venture to predict talitarianism, when it is really meaningful to the American
people.
'fourteen members of the Polit- Communists sought to under­ will promote the eventual uni­ the true goal of democracy.

Tories, Gomniles Called Majer Fees Of Leber

�THE

Page Four

New Orleans Shipping Gets Hot,
But Leveiling Off Is Expected

SEAFARERS

LOG

A SHIPBOARD PAPER MAKES ITS BOW

By EARL (Bull) SHEPPARD

Friday, September 9. 1^949

Strikes In Steel
Would Affect
Port Baltimore

NEW ORLEANS — Shipping of New York, as far as quarters
By WILLIAM (Curly) RENTZ,
here in the Crescent City took messroom and other facilities are
concerned.
BALTIMORE—Despite a num­
a decided jump during the past
The company plans to cut the
ber
of payoffs and sign-ons ship­
week. The activity reminded us
foc'sles into watch foc'sles, anc
ping wasn't hot here during the
of the situation a few years ago, will also put several small tables
past weeks, because most men
when the board was lined with in the messroom in place of the
were remaining aboard their
jobs. It would be nice to feel two long tables now being used.
ships for another trip.
The payoffs included the fol­
this will continue, but the cold
COMFORT ON THE WAY
lowing: Chilore, Marina, Bethore,
facts indicate otherwise.
Cubore,
Mangore, Catahoula;
We have had several meetings
The fellows over at the local
Southstar, J. W. Cullen, Topa
with Seatrain Lines in regarc:
grain elevator are like that fel­ to the new setup and it appears
Topa, Feltore, Marquette Vic­
low Finnegan—they're in again, to be a problem as to how to
tory, Penmar, Marore, Evelyn,
out again.
St. Augustine Victory, Algon­
accomplish the changes. But we
quin Victory, Venore and Edith,
. At the present writing, they are certain the ship will be made
Signing on were the Marore,
are again pounding, the bricks, more comfortable, particularly
Chilore, Venore, Bcthorc, Cubso don't let the fii'st paragraph the sleeping quarters, which will
ore, Marina, Catahoula, J. W.
of this article influence you to be equipped with innerspring
Cullen, Evelyn, Edith and Southbit the road for our sunny clime. mattresses.
star.
At least, not with too much ex­
Seafarers on the SS Puerto Rico, new Bull Lines passenger
We had a fine assortment of
Several of the ships paying
pectancy, since the strike could oldtimers in recently, when the
ship now on her second voyage to San Juan and Ciudad
off
were laid up, or are waiting
very easily slow down this sud­ Del Norte and the Alcoa Corsair
Trujillo, are putting out a shipboard news sheet, the SS Puerto
for
cargo.
All beefs were squared
den spurt in shipping.
arrived in port recently.
Rico Advocate. In photo above George Boney, who serves as
away,
with
everyone concerned
editor, makes ready on the mimeo for the paper's first run.
This is the third strike at the
Among the crews were LeRoy
going
off
satisfied.
Lending a hand are James Morin (left). Oiler, and Stanley
elevator in the past two months. Clarke, Blackie Bankston, Red
All grain shipments to New Or­ Hancock, Jack Parker, Jimmy .Hawkins, BR. Photo by Jimmie Golden.
COMMIES AT WORK
leans have again been halted or King, Joe Powers, Tony Nicolo,
The communist role in the
diverted to other ports.
Charlie Bradley, Paul Boudreaux,
Bridges' longshore strike iri
Thurston Lewis, Danny Byrnes,
Hawaii became pretty clear here
BIG "YES" VOTE
Frank
Russo
and
Francis
on the Baltimore waterfront last
By JOE ALGINA
week. We saw a few members
A large number of Brothers Peredne.
of the Marine Cooks and Stew­
around here cast ballots in the On the beach, we had more
If we all do our share of the
NEW YORK — A goodly num­
General Fund assessment refer­ oldtimers,
including Leonard
work
on the job and treat • our ards giving out literature, stat­
endum. And the vast majority of Craddock and the Creel brothers. ber of ships came into the shipmates squarely. If every guy ing that they backed Bridges.
Port of New York for payoffs
The men told us that the MCS
them were in favor of adopting Sloppy and Bob.
does just that much, you'd rare­
the resolution, as the final re­ Brothers getting standbys from and sign-ons during the past ly find a beef among crewmem- had requested them to give out
the stuff, but that they didn't
sults clearly show.
the Hall when they want time two weeks, but most of them bers.
know" what it was all about.
Apparently, members in New off are complaining that they are were in the coastwise trades.
LEGION RIDES AGAIN
This is another example of
Orleans, where the resolution catching hell from the heads of
how the commies are trying to
was originally offered, were de­ their departments, who say the Among those paying off and
The American Legion, which
termined to prove they shared standbys seem to think all they signing-on were the following: for some warped reason thinks use whatever influence they, have
the views of the sponsors of the have to do is take eight bours Catherine, ^Elizabeth, Beatrice, it has a special claim on use "of in maritime unions to help them
in their latest drive to capture
proposal. The results are a pretty of coffee time and standby—no
Ann Marie, Inez and the Puerto the word American, is again control of the waterfronts.
good example of the strong .Un­ work.
sticking its nose in places where
The steel strike, which is
ion spirit that prevails among We urge all Brothers accept­ Rico, Bull Lines.
it doesn't belong. Now the "hol­ scheduled to get underway on
John
B.
Waterman,
Raphael
New Orleans Seafarers.
ing standby jobs to turn to and
ier-than-thou" outfit has asked
The old Seatrain New Orleans protect the other Brother's job Semmes, Bessemer Victory, Mai­ the President to set up a loyalty Sept. 15, will have immediate
will soon be in as good shape — in the same manner you'd den Victory, Chickasaw and check system for all personnel effect on Baltimore shipping if
it comes off. The Ore ships will
Claiborne, Waterman.
as her ^ister ships operating out want your own job protected.
on American ships.
especially
feel it.
Seatrains Havana, Texas and
Man for man, the American
Speaking of the Ore ships
New York.
seamen can match their war
' Steel Executor and Steel Flyer, records and patriotism with the brings us to the same old beef
—the food. This company ap­
Isthmian.
Legionaires. any time, many of parently can't understand that
Also the SS Trinity, Christina, whom, especially those from by feeding its men decently, they
Carras; and the Evistar, a Triton World War 1, never saw a shell are going to have a more effi­
tanker.
outside of a peanut shop. ^
cient group of shipboard work­
By JIM DRAWDY
ers. If you ration a man so that
It's
about
time
somebody
start­
SIGN-ONS TO COME
ed checking the real purposes he is always unhappy, he can't
SAVANNAH—^Two South At- supply men, but you must let
No sign-ons have yet taken of the Legion, which is about be expected to do his best.
lantic Steamship Company ves­ us know what you need.
place aboard three ships that as self-seeking a group as you
Every man who knows any­
sels paid off and signed on in So far, the delegates aboard also paid off. These are the Isth­ will find anywhere. Its record thing about shipping would be
this port during the pa§t week. SlU ships calling at Jackson­ mian ships Queen Victory, the of gain at the expense of^ the able to tell them that a wellville and Charleston have been Steel Maker, and the Robin rest of the nation is nothing for fed crew is a happy crew, and
In addition, two ships called on doing a splendid job and we Kirk.
a happy crew works efficiently.
"patriots" to be proud of.
in-transit status—the SS Jean, want to thank them for being Two additional sign-ons were
Bull Lines, and the SS Chet- on the ball.
the Robin Gray and the Water­
^'UNCLAIMED, RETURN TO SENDER"
camp, which is contracted to the The hurricane that ripped man vessel, Yaka.
through Florida last week slowed
SlU Canadian District.
For the most part, these pay­
down to a mere 70 or 80 miles offs and sign-ons were smooth,
The Canadian vessel came in an hour on arrival here, and
with few beefs requiring any­
with a beef over the number of there was little damage in this thing but routine settlement.
men required to stand sea port. The SlU Hall was un­
And while we're on the sub-'
watches. We pointed out to the touched. But ever since the big ject of beefs, this is a good time
Chetcamp's Mate the paragraph blow came by we've been bur­ to mention that all-important
dened with heat and rain.
shipboard ingredient called co­
in the agreement stating that
operation. Without it no trip can
SAVED
THE
DAY
three men should always be on
be a success, and without it
y
sea watch for the safe naviga­ To break the monotony. Bro­ you're going to have beefs that
tion of the vessel.
thers Blackie Blizzard and never should arise ordinarily.
The Mate replied that he con­ Toyimy Thomas went fishing.
OATH IS IMPORTANT
sidered himself the third man They came back without any
on watch, but he was told that fish but they did manage to cap­ When a man takes the Union
that was not his job. At any ture a bushel of crabs.
Oath of Obligation, he gives his
rate, the beef was settled.
Brother B. Varn, who lives solemn word that he will work
in Plant City, Fla., had the bow along with his Union Brothers.
CALL THE HALL
of his house blown away by the If all hands would live by that
All Seafarers—especially dele­ hyrricane. He and his family oath, there'd be no trouble.
gates — aboard ships touching have moved astern and are get­
Not that we shouldn't expect
Jacksonville or Charleston are ting along okay until the re­ beefs to come up among men.
This is what happens to that mail-that you are "too busy"
advised to make absolutely sure pairs can be made.
It's only natural that everybody
to pick up. Here Baby Miller ruefully looks over the mail that
that all replacements are to be Only three Seafarers are in isn't going to see eye-to-eye with
has been gathering dust for more than 90 days in the New
gotten through the Savannah the Savannah Marine Hospital his shipmate. But we do have a
York Hall. After this picture was taken, the pile you see here
Hall. It is not necessary to sail this week. They are L. T. Mc- right to expect the other guy
was taken to the post office, to be shipped back to the sender.
from either of these ports short- Gowan, W. L. Smith and T. R. to act like a real Union Brother,
Come up, and get yours. Brothers.
handed. Savannah can and will DeLoach.
and we should do 'pe same.

New York Gets Coastwise Vessek

Port Savannah Squares Beefs
For Crew On SlU Canadian Ship

�Friday. September 8. 1849

THESE A FARERS

LOG

Page Five

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings In Brief
NEW ORLEANS — Chairman.
Blackie Bankslon. 21851: Record­
ing Secretary. Herman Troxclair.
6743; Reading Clerk. Buck Steph­
ens; 76.
Minutes of previous meetings
in New Orleans and other
Branches read and accepted.
Trial committee elected to hear
charges against several mem­
bers. Motion carried to have this
committee also serve as tallying
committee to count ballots^ cast

in the General Fund assessment
referendum. Following were
elected to committee: J. E. Ken­
nedy, Paul Boudreauk, John
Hull, G. J. Hall, Alexander Mar­
tin and George Curry. Agent
Sheppard reported that affairs
of Branch are in good shape and
that a slight pick-up in shipping
had been noted during the past
. couple of weeks. He said that
more men had been shipped than
registered for the three-week
period. The outcome for the
next two weeks looks fair, he
said, although two scheduled ar­
rivals will head for the boneyard. Quite a few beefs arose
since the last meeting, the Agent
reported, but all have been set­
tled, except for a minor Stew­
ards Department dispute aboard
the Cavalier. That will be squar­
ed away when officials of Alcoa
arrive from Mobile tomorrow.
Excuses were refered to the
Dispatcher. Motion carried to ac­
cept committee's recommendation
to reactivate book of Brother
Ernest H. Ibarra. Meeting ad­
journed at 8:15 PM, with 245
members present.
4. 4. i
PHILADELPHIA — Chairman.
C. Kimball. 52; Recording Sec­
retary. James Doris. 23177; Read­
ing Clerk. George H. Seeburger.
6932.
Minutes of previous Philadel
phia and other Branch minutes
read and accepted. Agent re­
ported on shipping and announc­
ed that the Steel Flyer was
among the vessels due to ar­
rive in this port during the
coming week. Shipping had been
pretty good for the past few
days, he said. Under Good and
Welfare it was suggested that a

representative be sent to Hono­
lulu to represent SIU men in
that port. Motion carried to ex­
cuse Carmen Williams from
meeting because of illness. One
minute of silence in memory of
departed Brothers. Meeting ad­
journed at 8:15 PM.
i, i,
MOBILE — Chairman. O.
Stevens. 115; Recording Secre­
tary/ James L. Carroll, 14; Read­
ing Clerk. Harold J. Fischer. 59.
All Branch minutes Were read
and approved. Agent Tanner re­
ported on prospects of shipping
for the next two weeks, stating
that Waterman was planning to
move two laid-up C-2s this week
and that 13 ships were due to
hit this port within the twoweek-period ahead. Headquar-

ships. The Jean also came in
and took several replacements.
Scheduled for September pay­
offs are the Cape Nome, Cape
Race and the Jean. Dispatcher's
report read and accepted. Mem­
SHIPPED SHIPPED TOTAL
ENG.
STWDS. SHIPPED bership acted on written excuses
6
5
18 from men not present. Motion
104
93
323 carried to excuse permitmen
from meeting due to overcrowd­
35
23
94
ed Hall. Committee elected to
109
108
361
tally ballots in referendum con­
28
21
76 cluded on Aug. 30. Serving on
9
8
21
the committee were Arthur
9
10
33
18
20
64
139
167
462
21
18
60
50
43
150

AStG Shipping From Aug, W To Aug. 31
PORT

REG.
DECK

REG.
ENG.

REG.
STWDS.

Boston
New York
Philadelphia
Baltimore
Norfolk
Savannah
Tampa
Mobile..:.
New Orleans
Galveston
West Coast

26
174
74
185
56
29
11
74
115
36
60

17
132
41
162
36
18
11
63
91
30
41

14
153
32
159
35
12
9
70
134
26
48

57
459
147
506
127
59
31
207
340
92
149

7
126
36
144
27
4
14
26
156
21
57

GRAND TOTAL..

840

642

692

2,174

618

ters' report to the membership
read and accepted. Motion car­
ried to elect tallying committee
to count ballots in General Fund
assessment referendum. Follow­
ing were elected: O. Price, M.
Shipley, L. Lott, R. Seckinger,
M. Blanton, L. Neira. Other mo­
tions carried: To instruct Agent
to cooperate in AFL Labor Day
program; to send a wreath to
funeral of Brother F. Dunlop,
a Brother who died recently in
New York. After considerable
discussion, a motion to extend
shipping cards by 60 days was
defeated. Motion carried to ac­
cept trial committee's report.
Under Good and Welfare, there
was much discussion of the
Puerto Rico situation, with a
large number of members taking

part. Meeting adjourned at 7:45
PM, v/ith 258 members in at­
tendance.
$ 4 ^
BOSTON—Chairman. J. Greenbaum. 281; Recording Secretary.
B. Lawson. 894; Reading Clerk.
G. Russell. 25690.
Minutes of Boston and other
Branch minutes accepted as read.
Agent discussed shipping during
the past couple of weeks and
the prospects for the coming
weeks. Dispatcher reported the
shipping figures. Secretary-Trea­
surer's financial reports read and
accepted. Motion carried to elect
tallying committee to count port's
ballots in General Fund assess­
ment referendum. Elected were
W. McKenna, E. Haskins, G.
Hunt, G. Russell, J. Riddle and
H. Wiese. One minute of silence
in memory of departed Brothers.
Meeting adjourned at 7:30 PM,
with 59 bookmembers present.
4 4 4
BALTIMORE — Chairman.
William Renlz. 26445; Recording
Secretary. G. A. Maslerson.
20297; Reading Clerk. F. A.
Siansbury. 4683.
D. Milligan and Thomas Wal­
ton took the Union Oath of Ob­
ligation. Minutes of other Branch
meetings read and accepted.
Several men were excused from
the meeting after presenting
valid reasons. Headq-uarters' re­
port to the membership accept­
ed as read. Port Agent reported
on the status of shipping in this
port and was followed by Patrol­
men and Dispatcher, each re­
porting on their activities dur­
ing the past three weeks. Mo­
tion carried to accept hospital
committee's report. Motion car­
ried to elect tallying committee

TOTAL
REG.

SHIPPED
DECK

to count ballots cast in recentlyconcluded referendum on the
General Fund assessment. The
following men were elected to
serve on the committee: Ray
Queen, J. Giller, J. Higgenbotham, W. C. Thomas, A. Bern­
stein and Ed Janaszak. Commit­
tee members were instructed to
begin tally on Sept. 1 at 10 AM.
One minute of silence in memory
of departed Brothers. Under
Good and Welfai-e, members
were urged to take good care
of the new chairs which were
provided for the comfort of all
haids. Meeting adjourned at 8:15
PM, with 309 members present.
4 4 4
NORFOLK — Chairman. Ben
Rees. 95; Recording Secretary,
J. A. Bullock. 4747; Reading
Clerk. G. Lawson. 39580.
Other Branch minutes of pre­
vious meetings read and ap­
proved. Headquarters' report to
the membership read and ac­
cepted. Agent gave a picture of
prospective shipping for the near
future in the Port of Norfolk.
He pointed out that the 15 ships
assigned to crew up and payoff
in this port are the only regular
ships making this port to take
crews. He also stressed the nec­
essity of doing a good Union job
on these ships. William C. Mur­
phy and Caleb G. Sparrow took

the Union Oath of Obligation.
Port tally committee was elected
to count votes cast in referen­
dum on General Fund assess­
ment. The following men were
chosen to serve: Cecil Saunders,
K. Konstantinos, James A. Wynn,
Niels Grungahl, Jacob Lauer,
George C. Gillikin and John
Price. Meeting voted to accept
excuses from three members un­
able to attend. Several subjects
of interest to the membership
were discussed under Good and
Welfare.
4 4 4
GALVESTON — Chairman.
Keith Alsop, 7311; Recording
Secretary. R. Wilburn. 37739;
Reading Clerk. W. Brightwell.
7279.
Galveston and other Branch
minutes read and accepted. Sec­
retary-Treasurer's and Headquar­
ters' reports accepted as read.
Port Agent said that shipping
for the past three weeks had
been slow. Payoffs here recently
were the SS Coe Victory and
the SS Jefferson City Victory.
He said that the following ships
are scheduled to call here intransit; Choctaw, City of Alma,

528

516

1,662

Fairisle, Lafayette, Ponce de
Leon and Yaka, all Waterman,
and the St. Augustine Victory,
Isthmian. In addition, the Steel
King has a payoff scheduled for
Sept. 14, the Agent concluded.
The following Brothers were el­
ected to serve as a tallying com­
mittee at the conclusion of the
General Fund assessment refer­
endum: J. Bird, J. Allen, W.
Zieler, S. Smith, G. Jordan and
A. A. Ellis.
4 4 4
SAVANNAH — Chairman. Jim
Drawdy. 28523; Recording Sec­
retary. W. C. Spivey. 43456;
Reading Clerk. Jeff Gillette.
37060.
Secretary-Treasurer's financial
report read and accepted. Agent

reported that payoffs of Southport and Southland were clean
and that most of the crews had
signed on again. However, 18
replacements were sent to the

Fricks, Joseph H. Booker, John
Blizzard, Charles Moss, C. R.
West, Clarence Reynolds. Meet­
ing adjourned at 7:45 PM, with
148 members in attendance.
4 4 4
TAMPA — Chairman. R, H.
Hall. 26060; Recording Secretary.
K. Lopez. 50711: Reading Clerk.
37062.
Minutes of other Branch meet­
ings read and approved. Port
Agent discussed shipping during
the past period, and mentioned
the immediate prospects. Secre­
tary-Treasurer reported on the
state of the Union, the shipping
picture in the various ports.
Branch buildings and the prob­
lems facing the SIU. His re­
marks were v/ell taken. Dis­
patcher cited the port's shipping
figures. Under Good and Wel­
fare, many men took the deck
to discuss the problem of men
who take jobs in this port and
then leave the ship in another
port. A trial committee was elec­
ted to hear charges filed against
three members accused of miss­
ing ships in this port. Men were
placed in six months' probation.

Marine Hospital Locations
The complete list of Class A U.S. Marine Hospital is
printed below. In addition to these the United States Public
Health Service also provides second and third class relief
stations in smaller American cities and foreign ports.
Baltimore. Maryland—Wyman Park Drive and 31st Street.
Out-patient office—Custom House.
Boston (Brighton). Massachusetts—77 Warren Street. Bos- •
ton. Out-patient office—Custom House. Boston.
Buffalo. New York—2183 Main Street. Out-patient office
—228 Federal Building.
Carville. Louisiana—(P.H.S. Leprosarium.) Freight and
express address: St. Gabriel. Louisiana.
Chicago. Illinois—4141 Clarendon Avenue. Out-patient of­
fice—New Port Office Building.
Cleveland, Ohio—Fairhill Road and East 124th Street.
Out-patient office—New Post Office Building.
Detroit. Michigan—Windmill Pointe. Out-patient office—
Post Office Building.
Ellis Island. New York.
Fort Stanton. New Mexico—(Tuberculosis Sanatorium.)
Freight and express address: Capitan. New Mexico.
Galveston. Texas—45th Street and Avenue N. Out-patient
office—302 Custom House.
Kirkwood. Missouri—525 Couch Avenue.
Memphis. Tennessee—Delaware and California Streets.
Mobile. Alabama—St. Anthony and Bayou Streets.
New Orleans. Louisiana—210 State Street. Out-patient
office—Custom House.
New York. New York—(Dispensary) 67 Hudson Street.
Out-patient office—Barge Office.
- Norfolk, Virginia—^Hampton Boulevard. Larchmont. Out­
patient office—Custom House.
Portland, Maine—331 Veranda Street. Out-patient office—
Custom House.
San Juan, Puerto Rico.
San Francisco, California—14th Avenue and Park Blvd.
Out-patient office—^Apprmser's Building.
Savannah, Georgia—^York and Abercom Streets.
Seattle, Washington—Judkins Str^t and 14th Avenue
South. Out-patient office—Federal Building.
Stapleton, Staten Island, New York—Bay Street.
Vineyard Haven, Massachusetts.

�Page Six

THE

SEAFARERS

Friday. September S, iS49

4L O G

MEWS
Dan Cremmins, SIU Member
Since 1945, Dies In Santos

MEN BEHIND THE GOOD CHOW ON SANTA CLARA VICTORY

Seafarer Daniel J. Cremmins, a member of the crew
of the SS Dei Santos, died in a hospital at Santos, Brazil,
on August 14, the LOG was informed this week. He
became ill aboard the Mississippi*
Shipping Company vessel and Port of Boston on May 19, 1945The late Seafarer was born
was hospitalized upon arrival in
in
Massachusetts on Sept. 26,
Santos.
1922.
He lived at the home of
Burial took place at the Saboa
his
parents,
Mr. and Mrs. J.
Sisolosia Cemetery, Santos, on
Cremmins,
at
121
West St., Mai­
August 15 Services were con­
den,
Mass.
ducted by a priest of the Catho­
lic Church.

Motor Ship
Twenty members of the crew
of the SS Del Monte, another Collides "With
Mississippi ship, attended Bro­
ther Cremmins' funeral, accord­ SS Colabee
SIU MEN AT SERVICES

ing to Henry Gerdes, Steward
on the Del Monte. Captain John
F. Owens, and Chief Mate -Werhan, of the Del Monte, represent­
ed topside at the services.
The crew of the Del Santos,
which was at sea when word
of Cremmins' death was received,
sent a wreath for the funeral.
Floral pieces were also sent by
the crew of the Del Monte and
the Delta Line, Mississippi sub­
sidiary which operates the ves­
sels.
JOINED SIU IN '45
Brother Cremmins, who held
book No. 47799, was in good
Union standing at the time of
his death. He joined the SIU At­
lantic and Gulf District in the

In a dense fog described as
"one of the worst" experienced
off the Nova Scotia coast, the
110-foot motor ship La vernier
collided with newsprint carrier
Colabee, bound for Bale Comeau.
The collision occurred about
12:30 PM, July 29, with visibility
practically zero in the fog-bound
seas. The Lavernier's stem was
sliced off as she crossed the
Colabee's bow, and her six-man
crew was tossed into the water.
Seafarers aboard the Colabee
immediately lowered a couple
of lifeboats and picked up the
six men. Later they were trans­
ferred to a small ship, the Ed­
ward L, out of Nova Scotia.
The Colabee then continued on
her course to Baie Comeau.

With these Seafarers in the galley, there's plenty of reason why feeding should be firstrate on the Isthmian ship. In front row (1. to r.): Johnny McElroy. 2nd Cook &amp; Baker, and A.
Telan. Steward; rear row: Rozendo Serrano. Utility; James McGhee. Utility; James Miller, Sa­
loon MM; Antonio DeSouza. MM; E. R. Single, Utility; Frank Resquites, 3rd Cook, and L. Tate.
Ch. Cook. Wilson Caro. BR. was not present when photo was taken. Group was photographed
in Tacoma. where Santa Clara Vic loaded lumber for East coast ports.

'Voice Of The Sea'
By "SALTY DICK'
ABOARD THE SS PUERTO RICO — You'll

the bones to make the publication a success . . . Our Ship's
hearing a lot about this ship, which just made her first Delegate, Paul Sanford, is on
^
»run as a passenger^^hip under the ball. We already have a
the Bull Line flag.
good-sized ship's fund . . . Bro­
There are a bunch of old- ther Colucci is writing a column
timers aboard. We brought the for the ship's paper. He calls it
Two observations on the four-month-old Hawaiian strike of Harry Bridges' ship to New York from Balti­ "Around the Bases." If you're in­
more where she was fitted out terested in Softball, see Colucci.
CIO longshoremen were disclosed in letters received by the LOG this week.
and then sailed on the maiden
The fanciest pair of shoes I've
One of the communications
Steel Flyer had been un- is going on all over the world voyage to San Juan and Ciudad ever seen belongs to Kenny Eckwas from Arturo J. Lomas, a loaded by union longshoremen and it will take courageous gov- Trujillo on Aug. 18.
holm. Ask him to show them
Seafarer who wrote from Hono­ upon- arrival in the US from ernments and union men and
Everything ran smoothly. The to you . . . Wedding bells will
lulu's Tripler General Hospital. Honolulu, declared:
women to combat it and keep only event was that we found soon ring for Jack Cockerill.
The other was from a resident
"Now we shall see how strong us out of war.
a stowaway aboard on our trip First he plans to save a few
of Honolulu who is a friend of Harry Bridges and his cohorts "The strike is certainly com- north.
bucks. while sailing.
SIU member Eddie Giza. Giza are. I hope this will be the end munist-inspired and is backed by
Not mentioning any names,
Pete Gonzalez is our Chef.
turned the communication over of him. If Bridges is ousted the Soviets. Keep up the good Pete's got an earned reputation but the smallest member of the
to the LOG because he felt it from the CIO, then I hope the work. Believe me, it is good to as a good feeder. He's famous crew has just received a lock
was of general interest.
AFL gets in—and in a hurry, know that there are men of for arroz con polio ... Fred (Lil of hail- from his girl friefid. He
"It isn't what is happening courage and good faith in Abner) Barthes is in the Black carries it near his heart . . . For
Brother Lomas wrote that he
couldn't understand how the here so much. The same thing unions."
Gang, but the only grease on those who don't know, Puerto
longshoremen "could hold out
him is on the seat of his pants. Rico means rich port.
A certain waiter promised a
so long. The papers and radio IT WAS COFFEE TIME ON THE TRAVELER
Among this fine crew is oldgirl in Baltinfore a wedding
have a powerful propaganda
timer Frank Bose, Chief Elec­
band. Several days later she
setup going full blast. Programs
trician. He and his assistant, Sal showed up in New York, and
Brother James W. Kelly
are' interrupted about every 15
Colls, are always ready to help
submitted this photo so his
came on board looking for him.
minutes for a blast at the com­
out anyone. They recently in­
shipmates on a recent trip
Our ship's library has re­
mies.
stalled a fan in my room. Whew! ceived some books and maga­
aboard the Steel Traveler "can
"Public sympathy," he con­
see it in the LOG." Unfortu­
Jimmie Golden is BR-ing here zines and one crewmember has
tinued, "seemingly is much
nately, identification didn't ac­
and
is doubling as our ship's already donated a bound volume
against the strike (it hits most
company picture so we can't
photographer.
You'll be seeing of the SEAFARERS LOG. We're
people directly — lack of food,
tell you who the men are.
some
of
his
stuff
in the LOG. hoping others will follow suit
etc.y We haven't been too much
Bosun
Eddie
Parr
is walking . . . Someone said that "Tiny"
interested in same owing to the
with
a
limp—it's
a
boil
near his Mease got .stuck in a locker the
commie angle. But with this
stern.
other day.
^
sickly propaganda, which is also
Night Steward on the PR is And 77 Concha Road in Ciu­
^ blast at all labor, unfortunate­
Ray Griswold, former bartender dad Trujillo is becoming the
ly, and the filthy record of capi­
on
an Alcoa scow. He's coming most popular resort for seamen
tal in these islands since way
around
fine after a recent opera­ in this ship . . . The skipper is
back, one can only hope that
tion
.
. . "Fibber McGee and a good joe. He gave sun-wor­
labor will not be hurt by any
Molly"
are the names given to shippers permission to go out
adverse movement which may
Eddie
Smith
and Stan Hawkins, on boat deck so they could catch
arise.
both
of
whom
are room stew­ some of the sun's rays
and
"It appears, however, that the
ards.
there
are
plenty
of
them.
setup for such an anti-labor
We've got a ship's paper, the We must include the fact that
movement is good, from what I
SS
Puerto Rico Advocate. Re­ the crew aboard ^ this ship is
can see," Lomas concluded.
sponsible,
for the job is George working as a unit and doing a
The letter from Giza's friend,
Boney.
He's
worked his fingers good job of it.
who wrote after learning that

Comments From Hawaii On Bridges' Beef

�Friday. September 9. 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

Page Seven

LOG

Digested Minutes Of SID Ship Meetings

SAM

ELIZABETH. May 21 — Dan
ing used as linen storeroom.
Butts. Chairman; R. F. Stewart,
Change would be mor^e conven­
ient all around. Motion by B.
Secretary. Chair read communi­
cation from SIU representative
Goodman that voluntary dona­
tions'^ be accepted at payoff to
in San Juan. Motion carried that
purchase wreath to be sent to
dispute between Chief Cook and
funeral of Brother Rose, who
galley boy be dropped. Brother
passed away at San Juan. Under
Curley recommended that re­
pair list be'handed to company
Good and Welfare it was recom­
mended that Stewards Depart­
representative in time for re­
ment be consulted before the
pairs to be made. Motion by
stairway Leading down to ice­
Butts carried that shore gang in
PR be restrained from doing
boxes is painted so as to avoid
possibility of accidents.
work that might eliminate over­
time for crewmembers unless
X if ^
Deck Gang doesn't want the
ALLEGHENY VICTORY. June
work. Recommended that des­ sline gave pep talk on Unionism, 18 — James Naylor. Chairman;
tination of ship be posted on praising the fine way in which Paul L. Whitlow. Secretary. No
sailing board. Suggested that the crew has conducted them­ cppy of last repair list left
DDT bombs be made available. selves in traditional SIU style. aboard by previous crew so it
Henri Robin. Baker, was elected
suggested that new one be
% %
ALEXANDRA. June 3—Frank Ship's Delegate.
drawn up and sent to Headquar­
4. S. 4.
Dowd. Chairman; Mel Brown,
ters; copy also to be presented
SUZANNE. June 12—G. BoneSecretary. Ship's Delegate re­
at Baltimore when port authori­
peated previous advice to crew font, Chairman; Peter Serrano. ties come aboard to check re­
to be careful not to take more Secretary. No beefs to report in pairs for New York, where work
cigarettes ashore in Germany any of the departments. G. Bone- will be done. Whitlow was elec­
than allowed by regulations. font was elected Ship's Delegate. ted Ship's Delegate. Motion car­
Brother Healy discussed need for Motion by Carbone calling for ried instructing Ship's Delegate
fumigation of ship. Brother Rious a set of new table cloths for to get names of Agents in ports
confirmed Ship's Delegate Mil­ crew's mess. Motion by A1 Ri­ we are scheduled to hit. Dis­
ler's observation that Steward vera to keep customs guards in cussion held on -washing ma­
and Cook are talking unneces­ Trujillo City out of the crew's chine for crew's use. Will get
sarily about each other's work. mess as they discriminate against estimates on cost of one, then
the crewmembers going ashore. crew will contribute amount
Discussion was held on the mat­ needed.
By HANK
ter of fresh fruits. Crewmembers
charged that there had not been
A vote of thanks to the crew of the good ship SS Puerto Rico.
enough.
They are a swell bunch, all departments are in shipshape condi­
i. t. t.
tion and the chow turned out is tops. Smooth sailing, fellas. By
MAIDEN CREEK. June 12 —
MALDEN VICTORY. June 9
the way, Eddie Murphy aboard the SS Puerto Rico can sit and
-—Robert McCulloch. Chairman; Oliver Kase, Chairman; Joseph
listen all night to those Western songs. And he_ says "Skippy"
G. E. Campbell. Secretary. Ship's Malazinsky. Secretary. Ship's
Gusczynsky is real happy when a certain Western number is
Delegate read a letter from Delegate advised everyone to
played . .. Brother Donald Rood, the electrician (if we're not misBrother who left ship to go to leave his quarters clean for the
XXX
taken) was in port a few weeks ago. Now it looks as if he's out
hospital. He thanked crew for oncoming crew. Disputed over­
BIENVILLE, June^ 11—Pwks. voyaging again . . . Congratulations to Luis Ramirez. He recently
sending money and said he was time was reported in the three Chairman; John G. Brady. Sec­ became the proud "poppa" of another boy ... Where's little Pete
coming along fine. Under Good departments. Patrolman is to be retary. Delegates reported all Drebas right now? He's a guy with a sense of humor and never
and Welfare discussion was de­ requested to check into matter okay in all departments. Motion stays in port too long... "Duke" Wade sailed into town recently
voted to the subject of "Good of stores which were promised by Taimer that Ship's Delegate after a trip.
Unionism" and proper conduct of but never delivered. Ship's Dele­ see Chief Mate about painting
XXX
good union members. Meeting gate reminded all hands that a of the fantail, instead of using
Joseph
De
Cabo.
who
has a habit of wearing dark glasses,
sober payoff is expected of fish oil. This is advised for the
adjourned at 7:30 PM.
is
continuing
bis
musical
business (call it a side-line hobby)
everyone. One minute of silence benefit of the crew. A vote of
t, tas
dancing
instructor.
Is
it true, Joe. there's a new dance
DEL VALLE. June 2fr—N. A. in memory of departed Brothers. thanks was extended to the
called
the
canasta?...
Thomas
Cully. A1 Sacco are probably
Bartlelt. Chairman; Earl Laws.
Stewards Department for a job
still
in
port...
Apparently
there's
a brother who thinks the
Secretary. Ship's Delegate re­
well-done. Appreciation was also
name
of
the
ship
he's
on
is
called
the Robert Kettering. He's
ported that disputed overtime
expressed for the fine spirit and
mistaken.
The
name
of
the
ship
he's
on is called the Robin
had been collected. N. A. Bartcooperation shown by all de­
Kettering...
That
oldtimer.
Mike
Gottschalk.
has informed
lett. Carpenter, elected Ship's
partments throughout the trip.
us
he's
going
to
introduce
a
new
ilavorable
concoction
for the
Delegate by acclamation. Three
Repair list was discussed and
passengers aboard the SIU's newest passenger ship, the SS
departments are to rotate in
t i- X
drawn up.
Puerto Rico. It will be culinary—not a new type of drink.
keeping recreation room and, QITY OF ALMA. June 12—S.
XXX
laundry clean. Ship's Delegate p^rtado. Chairman; N. Lust. Sec
XXX
QUEENS VICTORY. June 4—
instructed meeting that hence- ^etary. Ship's Delegate said that Philip Archilles. Chairman; Joe
Congratulations to William Zarkas. This winter he'll be- ringing
forth all shipboard beefs are to Ug had asked to put Captain cat- Wright. Secretary. Ship's Dele­ the bells of bethrothal and starting on the long voyage of matri­
be taken to the delegates for ^alk forward but had been turn- gate reported on cigarette ra­ mony. We're also inWmed that Brother Zarkas didn't cross an
settlement, and that the practice ed down. Everything was re­ tioning. Except for some disputed AFL picketline outside one of the big movie houses around Times
of calling the Hall is to be dis­ ported going smoothly in the overtime in Black Gang, there Squai-e recently. Indeed, it is this tj'pical helpful spirit on the
continued. No man is to leave departments. Question as to why were no beefs to report. Motion part of every union man throughout the labor movement which
the ship unless he has been milk was not put aboard in last carried to give each man a full helps the union guys on anji- picketline to win their fight against
properly relieved or excused by US gulf port. Suggested that men set of linen each week, and to anti-labor actions and resistance.
his department head.
try to keep washing machines charge him for pieces missing
XXX
and laundry tubs clean, and that when he turns it in. Steward
John Riebel is in town right now. By the way. Brother
attempt be made to decks in requested that everyone change
Riebel is the champ of the checker players on the recreational
quarters back aft painted. Crew­ his own linen. There was ex­
deck. Or could it be he's just .Qne of the many checker champs?
members are to refrain from tensive discussion on the food
... Bing Miller had a birthday last month. Do any singing.
using obscene language during situation, with the result that
Bing?.. . Joe James sailed into town recently from a trip.
meals. (Ed. note: Port Agent more stores are to be ordered
if if- X
The SEAFARERS LOG will be sailing free of cost to the
OREMAR. June 26—F. Barron. Tilley reported from Wilming­ at the earliest opportunity.
homes of the following brothers—Henry Sedgeway of Alabama,
Chairman; W. J. Fogarly, Sec- ton that the catwalk had been
Alexander Stankiewicz of California, Joseph Sintes of Louisiana,
zetary. Delegates made their re­ put on the ship.)
Leonard Munna of Louisiana, John Toledo of New York, Richard
ports. Suggested that Agent be
if X X
Johnson of Louisiana, Billy Hartzog of Alabama, Harry Green of
ROBIN MOWBRAY. June 5—
notified of the condition of the
Louisiana, Aubrey Smith of Georgia^ T. Lehay of Alabama...
water aboard. As ship just came Robert Garris. Chairman; Melvin
To insure payment, all
Brother H. A. Manchester is aboard the tanker SS Petrolite, on a
out of the drydock, men feel Brown. Secretary. Department
claims for overtime must be
year's shuttle-run between the Persian Gulf and France.
there is no excuse for drinking Delegates reported. Kirby Digturned in to the heads of de­
X
X
X
water not being satisfactory. Al­ man resigned as Ship's Delegate
partments no later than 72
Norman
Maffie,
the
artist,
just
grabbed
a job on a Bull
so suggested that the rooms be and Arne Larsen was elected by
hours following the comple­
Line
ship...
Say.
Norman,
how
about
drawing
the typical
touched up with paint. One min­ acclamation to succeed him.
tion of the overtime work.
shipboard
"draw."
It
should
make
a
good
scene
...
With
apolo­
ute of silence in memory of de­ Crew recommended that anyone
As
soon
as
the
penalty
gies.
we'll
ask
who
is
the
former
chief
passenger
steward,
found using narcotics should be
parted Brothers.
work is done, a record should
initials E. M.. who complained when he received a ten cent
put" on charges and if found
i, X if
be given to the Department
lip. In our opinion, any brother with a sense of humor a.nd a
TELFAIR STACKTON. June 6 guilty put on the social register.
head, and one copy held by
broad mind, would still pop his safety valve over such an
— M. Burnstine. Chairman; C,
J, Ji ^ 4"
the man doing the job.
experience... Brothers, read your agreements thoroughly so
FRANCES. June 12—B. Good­
Kerfoot. Secretary. No beefs in
that your jobs and beefs can be performed in the proper and
In addition the depart­
any of the departments. Motion man. Chairman; F. Townsend.
mental
delegates
should
understanding manner. Keep those ships clean. Hold those
by J. Kearney that each dele-^ Secretary. All was reported in
check on all overtime sheets
shipboard meetings. Read all the booklets printed for every
gate make repair list, copies to order by the delegates; no beefs
72 hours before the ship
Brother's welfare. A continuous reading of all SIU literature
be forwarded to New York and pending. Motion by A. Valentine
makes port.
is an obligation to your Union and yourself. Smooth sailing.
Norfolk, as ship is in port to carried, recommending that laun­
Brothers.
load for only one day. M. Burn­ dry be moved to place now be-

£veKqo&gt;ie likes -to hear news
his
sUipmcctes. If c|ou
dM i+ew abouira wewber thdTqou
iVi-teres+-fifeoHiers,
Sewd it-in-to CUT'AMP'ROM HAMK.
9bniBLoe, SCBBAVBR ST,N .y. -4.:

CUT and RUN

On Overtime

m
HI

�Page Eight

THE SEAFARERS

Friday, September 9. 1949

LOG

Man's Odd Conduct Puzzles Let The Postman Ring
'Wayfarer' On Far East Trip

AT EASE IN VENICE

The SEAFARERS LOG
welcomes letters from the
membership for publication
in the "Membership Speaks."
Your -Union newspaper is one
of the most effective me­
diums through which you
may air your opinions.
Constructive criticisms are
welcome but letters must not
contain libelous statements
against members of the
Union.

written and carved his name tmTo Ihe Editor:
til
now it has become an art—
Having recently made a trip
a
symbol
in itself. A symbol of
to the Far East I feel I should
man's
destruction
as compared
write about two things which
to
the
once
beautiful
edifice
impressed me very much—"The
created
by
man
for
his
God.
happiness of some men," and
"The destructive nature of Man." Not only have they carved
In French Indo-China, ,I paused their names in the temples and
to watch small, frail girls and tombs but they have broken off
women do the work of oxen, the heads, legs and arms of the
pushing and pulling wagons beautiful statuary and Oriental
loaded with tons of material. works of art. These have been
Their ages appeared to be from carried off as souvenirs and
12 to 30 years. The older women curios, later to be disregarded.
were digging ditches with picks What has possessed man to
destroy everything of beauty, be
and shovels.
it
man or woman, city or town,
But despite the hard work and
temple
or home? Destroy! De­
the hot sun and the unbelievably
stroy!
It
seems to be the way
low wages, they appeared very
of
all
men.
Will it lead to final To the Editor:
happy as their laughter and
self-destruction?
Is it because As a result of my letter in a
horse play were ever present.
man's
soul
seeks
peace
and there recent issue of the LOG in which
The soldiers who watch over
is
no
peace?
I offered my Florida property
these coolie women to see that
they do their work without re­ Ah, would that I were a for sale, I have been swamped
bellion or strife make very little learned man. I would seek the with replies from all over Ameri­
more than the coolies themselves. reasons for man's destruction. ca. I am going over each o:
Yet they, too, seem satisfied with Then we would all know the them.
answer.
I am aboard ship at present
their brutality and authority.
But I am a seaman, who hav­ and I cannot arrange to show
ON TO CITY
interested parties the property
' But let us leave the coolies ing seen, passes on.
"The Wayfarer" But as soon as I get back to
and the soldiers and go to the
Florida and have finished going
heart of the city and to the
through the replies I will be
better restaurants and night Corsair Crew Backs
clubs. Who do we see there? Not
able to handle the situation.
the coolies who are happy just Fund Assessment
I will write to those who sent
in questions and who are in­
to exist, not the soldiers who To the Editor:
are happy with the power of
terested just as soon as I ge
We, the crew of the Alcoa ashore. I regret any inconveni­
authority.
We see the contented business Corsair, would like you to know ence they may have been causec
man in his white palm beach that we are 100 percent behind by having to wait until I re­
suit and peroxide mademoiselle, the proposed ten-dollar assess­ turn.
drinking champagne and eating ment for the General Fund. We
Thanks again to the LOG for
lobster a la Newburgh. Yes, it hope all the Branches up and the assistance I got in telling
is he who is happiest of all. down the coast see the necessity people of the property I have
Happy that the coolies exist, of this move, as we see it. It for sale. It sure got results.
happy, that the soldier protects, may come in very handy in any
I am enjoying my trip to
happy that business is as usual. tight spot.
Puerto Rico aboard this ship.
In Singapore, I. visited the Here's hoping it is voted in We have a very fine crew and
"Haw Par Garden." This once with flying colors.
the ship is kept clean. We should
beautiful garden is slowly being
Edward Fuselier
be in New York some time
destroyed forever. All over the
Ship's Delegate
around the middle of August
temples and tombs man has
(For the crew)
Oflo Preussler

LOG Aids Member
In Selling His
Florida Property

Seen here are Chief Steward C. A. Newman and Saloon
Messman Tetterton. as they relaxed at a sidewalk cafe in the
Italian city. Photo was taken when the Seafarers were ship­
mates aboard the SS Cecil N. Bean.

Brother Offers Few Changes
In Electrician Work Rules
To the Editor:

topping gear on a Saturday in
port, the Electrician has to be
on board to turn on the power
on deck and again to turn it
off. This messes up his chance
of going ashore. An Electrician
also must be on hand to take
care of any electrical trouble
that might pop up.
Also, I think the Electrician
should furnish his own tools and
be compensated for it in a way
similar to the Carpenter.
This would save money in the
long run for the companies, and
it would eliminate the trouble
of Electricians having to sail
short of tools because a lot of
times a man will come aboard on
sailing day, or too late to order
tools.
I have found these troubles
existing on the Del Sud and
several other ships.
Paul Fernandez

Every now and then we read
an article in the LOG about the
Electricians. I would like to
keep the ball rolling and blow
off a little steam on the same
subject.
I have a few suggestions in
regard to their working rules
which could be worked into the
next agreement. I think the rules
should specify that the Chief
Electrician is in charge of. the
main and emergency switch­
boards, and that, except in em­
ergencies, it should be his duty
to change over generators.
Also, that whenever the Deck
Gang is using deck machinery in
port for any purpose outside of
the Electrician's regular working
hours, he shall be paid continu­
ous overtime while this work is
being done.
representation the crew got when
For example, if the Bosun is
we hit that port. The men all
appreciate the very close at­
tention and interest shown by
Port Agent Joe Algina. Also ap­
preciated was the fine repre­
sentation given us at the com­
pany office by Patrolman Red
By James H.
Gibbs.
Oliver Headley

Crewmember Says SIU Representation In NY
Was A Pleasant Wind-up To Tough Voyage
To the Editor:
I would like to give a sample
of some of our experiences
aboard the tanker Sweetwater on
a recent voyage.
When we were in the Red Sea,
I took out one side of the black­
out panel board from the star­
board side of the panel board
from the aft door of the foc'sle.
This was done because the cool
air system in the foc'sle was in­
efficient. The foc'sle caught. all
the heat from the stack and
the fire room uptakes. Before the
change the temperature was 123
degrees, after the change it had
dropped to 85.
As a result of the heat, the
bugs ran wild. Despite the bene­
fits of this change, the Skipper
made it very clear that he didn't
like what was done.
On July 4 I was refused treat­
ment for a swollen ankle, al­
though I have a letter from one
of the officers saying that I
was hurt while assisting the
First Assistant pack throttle
valves. I slipped and injured
my left ankle. I reported to the

Third Mate on the bridge but
he told me to "come back later."
WAIT
On July 15 when I awoke with
a sick headache and a bad stom­
ach, the Chief Mate refused to
give me salts. I was told to
wait until 8 A.M.—three hours.
On July 16 the Chief Mate or­
dered the Chief Pumpman to
grease the motor in motor boat
but there were no grease fit­
tings attached to the motor. On
June 26 the Skipper washed
down the deck from 9:20 A.M.
to 10:30 A. M. Reason was that
the men had previously been or­
dered to mop deck from bow to
stern with fuel oil and the deck
was in an unsafe condition.
There were some bright spots,
however. One of them was Chief
Engineer Joseph Sheehan, a
really swell guy. No Seafarer
who sails with Sheehan will
ever make a mistake. He's one
of the best. So is Larry Glass,
First Assistant Engineer, who
we were lucky to have.
A word of credit is due the
New York Hal; for the first-rate

Log-A-Rhythms:

CONSOLATION

New Member's Wife
Becomes LOG Fan
To the Editor:
I am a newer member of the
Brotherhood. My wife recently
visited me aboard ship and she
happened to pick up a copy of
the LOG.
She enjoyed reading it very
much and asked me if it was
possible for you to put her on
the regular mailing list so she
can get a copy at home every
time it comes out.
Gus Paskaris
(Ed. Note: You bet. Copies
will begin arriving soon at
the Paskaris home.)

How
How
Since first
Since first

Dubose

long ago if seems,
long ago it's beew.
I saw her in my dreams,
my love was seen.

She was beauty, perfect beauty.
Beauty unakin.
For her's was beauty of the soul,
Not beauty of the skinBut, now she is gone,
Faded behind a marital screen.
For me not to be loved.
For me not to be seen.
Should I face disappointment with regret?
No. That is the weakling's way.
After gazing on beauty, I am able yet
To laugh and walk away.

�Friday. Septembar 9. 1949

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

CONTENDING SOFTBALL TEAMS ON THE DEL NORTE

Pistol-Packers Belong Home
On The Range, Ames Says
To the Editor:

These Seafarers frimmed the Delia liner's topside team, 2 to 1. in a game played recently
in Santos. Brazil. Bottom row. left to right: Domenicis. Garn. Tucker. Streickland and Russo;
top row: Hursey. Hughes. Pedersen. Callahan. Garcia and Foster.

Page JYine

One night during a recent
voyage of the SS John W. Bur­
gess, I took over the wheel
watch from Brother E. G. Tesko
at 10 o'clock. About ten minutes
later the Skipper came into the
pilot house and walked out tthe starboard wing of the bridge.
He bumped into the bulkhead
as he was stepping out the door.
'After speaking a few words
to the Mate, the Skipper return­
ed to the starboard wipg, where
he made a great deal of noise. It
sounded as though he was jump­
ing up and down on the grating,
or kicking it. Soon he went to
his room.
Shortly after, a shot rang out.
The wheel house clock showed
10:28 P.M. The shot, which
sounded as though it came from
the Master's room, was followed
by another and another. It con­
tinued until 10:55 P.M., and I
thought I was at a gallery range

Union Movie
Makes Hit On,
Seatrain N.J.
To the Editor:
Quartermaster Robert Lester,
the Seatrain New Jersey's impre­
sario, who owns a top notch
sound movie projector, came up
with a prize movie today, the
"Battle of Wall Street."
Lester purchased the film re­
cently at SIU Headquarters out
of his own money to add to his
collection. In view of the fact
that he puts on several shows
a V eek, giving of his time and
effo; t freely, the crewmembers,
over Lester's objections, insisted
on taking up a collection to de­
fray the cost of this excellent
movie of our white-capped Bro­
thers in action on the Wall Street
In the officers' lineup were—bottom row. left to right: Wyble, Nielsen. Eaton and Boyd; top
picketlines during the rough and
row:- Peterson. Cradick. Johnson, Greenard and Morris. Kramer was not around for picturetough UFE strike.
taking.
Every Seafarer should make it
a point to see this film. It will
clear up any doubt in the minds
of Brothers who may have won­
dered why we took part in a
beef so far removed from mari­
time. The film shows very clear­
To the Editor:
work it has
In these colonies, there are for the very fine
ly that trade unions of all types
thousands of men who need done and still is doing to im­
must stand together or be lick­
I read with interest in the
work, and the shipowners sail prove the working conditions of
ed separately.
SEAFARERS LOG that a com­ the ships to the ports mentioned seamen.
GOOD JOB
mittee had been formed for the and pick the crews.
I sincerely hope the American
The camera man sure did a purpose of boycotting Panama­
The working conditions on the Federation of Labor and its af­
good job and got clear pictures
nian ships. I am glad to see the Panamanian ships are terrible. filiated unions will bring pres­
of every phase of the long
SIU represented on that com­ Living conditions are very un­ sure to bear on Congress, so they
struggle. We saw the first group
sanitary. On some ships no can throw out the undemocratic
mittee.
of white-capped Seafarers march
towels or bed linep are issued legislation that is the Taft-Hart­
I can assure you that the
in orderly fashion to their ap­
to the crews. The food isn't any ley Act.
pointed pleaces and soon the move of the International Trans- good, and when the men com­
The recent victory of the Ca­
well-behaved picketlines were portworkers Federation and its plain they are told "take it or nadian District of Seafarers In­
established. Soon thereafter, the affiliates to boycott the Pana­ leave it."
ternational Union over the Ca­
Wall Street stooges—a total of manian fiag ships is timely. It
For example on wages, a Pan­ nadian Seamen's Union is a
should have the full support of
800—arrived.
amanian ship named the Katie blessing to Canadian seamen. I
The efficient work of our gal­ all democratic trade unions.
pays wages ranging from $50 to am sure they will be happier
I agree that seamen are at $55 for an OS, and $60 ^or an and much better protected under
ley men in supplying the picketlines with food and hot coffee, the the mercy of the owners of AB. Can you beat that?
the banner of the SIU.
speeches by Dave Keefe, of th( ships under Panamanian regis­
I. must congratulate the SIU
A.
Khan
UFE, Paul Hall of the SIU, Mike try. Unfortunately, the men who
Garrigue of the Hotel, Restaurant sail these ships do not belong
Employes Union, Gus Tyler of to any recognized, bonafide un­
the ILGWU and the others were ion.
To the Editor:
mask themselves behind the cry
shown _ on the screen in the
Most of the crews on Pana­
of "job security" when their real
mass rally.
manian ships are being taken
In regard to the recent compul­ interest lies in the fact that they
Then we were treated to the on in British Guiana and the sory vacation argument, I must
have at last found a job carry­
most disgusting spectacle of any West Indies. While there are concur with Brother W. Lamb,
ing mail for* topside. In some
of us have ever seen—the kick­ seamen's unions in British whose letter appeared ip the
cases, this covers up their own
ing and clubbing of helpless Guiana, Jamaica, Trinidad and SEAFARERS LOG of August 9.
incompetency.
pickets as they lay prostrate on the Barbados, they are powerless
T am of the opinion that homeA job for every book is enough
the sidewalks of Wall Street. to do anything, as there is no steading and apple-polishing run
security
for any union man. I
New York's "finest" sure proved legislation to compel the ship­ hand in hand. The two are im­
say
share
the jobs and promote
themselves.
owners to deal with the unions, possible to separate and are cer­
real
union
security.
BUI Gray
or to pay a specified scale of tainly not good for any union—
Let's keep our Union strong!
Ship's Delegate
wages or establish certain stan­ especially the Seafarers.
Seatrain New Jersey
dards.
Clifford Thompson
The Mates' fair-haired boys

Canadian Seaman Hails Move Of Seafarers,
ITF Affiliates To Halt Panama Transfers

Brother Favors Job-Sharing

in Coney Island, not on a ship
on the high seas.
The Third Mate and I natur­
ally were a bit concerned. The
Mate came into the wheel house,
saying he didn't want to get
hit and that he didn't like the
idea of anyone shooting a gun
off behind his back. I didn't
hear the rest of what he said
because another shot drowned
out his voice.
The Third Mate then went
out to the starboard wing of
the bridge, but no sooner had he
stepped ^outside than another
shot was heard. Right back into
the wheel house came the Mate.
He said, "He (the Skipper) is
shooting out the porthole." Then
he expressed a fear that one of
the bullets might hit some part
of the bridge and ricochet in
his direction.
BETTER TO SEE
Once, between shots, I heard
the gun fall on the deck. I felt
much less comfortable than I
would have if I had been on a
Coney Island shooting range. At
least there , I could have seen
what was going on.
Seriously, however, I want to
say that anybody—even a Skip­
per—who shoots a gun aboard
at night, when he is far from
being alert is a ~ danger to the
lives and limbs of all others
on the vessel. Two of the shots
were so close that I could hear
them hit the water. Shots that
close to the ship show that this
man did not know how to han­
dle a gun. Certainly, he didn't
know how much danger he was
creating for the rest of the men.
Les Ames ,
I

Voyager Menr
Working In
SIU Style
To Ihe Editor:
While making a round- ' theworld voyage on this Isthmian
ship, we ran across the crew of
a newly organized SIU Canadian
District vessel, the SS Federal
Voyager. We spent a consider­
able amount of time discussing
conditions aboard their ship and
I felt that what they had to saywould be worth passing on to
the rest of the membership.
First of all, they could not
give enough thanks to the Sea­
farers for helping them get
started with their new contracts
for better wages and conditions.
When this gang took over,
they found the ship in one hell
of a mess, as the CSU crew be­
fore them had really fouled up
the quarters and the messrooms
But the boys have turned to on
that scow despite that and have
made it a clean ship, true to
SIU standards.
GOOD SEAMEN
As a matter of fact, the Ship's
Delegate told us that they had
the Mate working ahead of
schedule and thai he really was
amazed at what a good union
crew can accomplish.
One other thing for which
these men wish to express their
thanks is for the books and
magazines donated 4o them by
crews of various SIU ships dur­
ing their stop in Honolulu, as
their library was completely de­
stroyed by the former CSU
crew.
P. T. Archilles
Ship's Delegate
SS Queens Victory

�Ttti SEAFARERS LOG

Page Tea

Friday, Sepletnhex 9, 1949

Boston Shipping Okay, Okay - So YOU Were
On Quiet Side
By

LAWSON

By PAT ROBERTSON

BOSTON—^In addition to the
SB Yarmouth, ships paying off
during the past week here were
the SB The Cabins and the BB
Ann Marie.
Only the BB The Cabins, a
Cabin Company tanker, signed
on again, so shipping could not
be reported as anything but poor
for the period.
In-transit ships making this
port were the Marquette Victory,
Isthmian; Greeley Victory, Wa­
terman; Robin Kirk, Robin; Penmar, Calmar; Bessemer Victory,
Waterman; Queens Victory, Isth­
mian; Canton Victory, Water­
man; Bt. Augustine Victory, Isth­
mian; Algonquin Victory, Bt.
Laurence Navigation, and Banta
Clara Victory, Isthmian.
PERSONALITIES
Johnny Lane is fresh off a
tanker and he is going to double
his money at the races — he
figures. George Russell, one of
our swell cooks, is .still waiting
around for a ship.
Little Pete Jomides is looking
fine after a week in the hospi­
tal. Pete is one of those rare
birds whose appearance will
stump you every time. You'd
never know he'd been sick by
looking at him. You'd think he
had just come off a vacation
instead.
There aren't any beefs to re­
port from this quarter, All hands
are really cooperating — except
for the ambulance chasers who
are pestering the Brothers in the
Marine Hospital.
We'd like to remind the hos­
pitalized members that if they
need any assistance, they should
ask the Boston Port Agent, when
he makes regular visits to the
Marine Hospital,

Bernstein Asks MC
Fer Immediate Bids
On Recenversiens

Frisco Getting
in-Transit Ships

By TED ANDRYSIAK

Reiki Jobs Take Up Mobile Shipping Slack
By GAL TANNER
MOBILE—Bince our last re­
port, shipping has been anything
but spectacular. We had a total
of 10 payoffs and eight sign-ons,
plus eight ships in-transit, for
the three-week period.
The payoffs included the Antinous. Wild Ranger, Iberville,
Fairport, Morning Light and
Noonday, Waterman, and the Ca­
valier, Clipper and Corsair, Al­
coa.
With the exception of the
Noonday, all of these ships sign­
ed on again. The in-transit call­
ers were the MV Ponce, head­
ing down to the Islands with a
heads-up crew aboard; Alcoa
Roamer, bound for the West In­
dies; Fairhope, heading for Eur­
ope; Greeley Victory, going up
the coast; Bessemer Victory, also
north-bound; Bteel Inventor, on
the way to Hawaii; Chickasaw,
another north-bound job, and
the Anna Dickenson, which
headed for the lay-up fleet.
Bpeaking of lay-ups, a few of
our Brothers are confined to the
Mobile Marine Hospital. They
include J. Curtis, Mike Leousis,
L. Howard, T. Galvin, R. Long,
D. C. MiUer.

The Arnold Bernstein Line
has urged the Maritime Com­
mission to invite sealed bids for
the reconversion of two former
Army transports which the com­
pany is planning to place into
the Atlantic passenger service.
The two Army vessels are the
General Pope and the General
Weigle, both P-2 type ships,
which Bernstein is anxious to
have operating by next spring
ht least. Both would offer oneclass passenger accommodations
to Antwerp and Rotterdam.
In asking the Maritime Com­
mission to speed action on the
PROSPECTS
alteration of the two ships,
Bernstein told the agency that Shipping prospects for this
it is attempting to work out a port for the next two weeks
financial arrangement in connec­ don't look too good at this point,
tion with its application for an with only a few foreign payoffs
scheduled. We still have seven
operating subsidy.
C-2s of the Waterman company
The Bernstein Line pointed out
in the yards waiting for cargo,
to the Commission that the Uni­
and they might break at any
ted Btates Lines is considering time.
placing its flagship, the Ameri­
ca, in cruise service this winter. Relief jobs have been a big
According to the Bernstein Line, help in the last three weeks.
this would leave the North At­ Approximately 30 tugboat relief
lantic "without privately-owned jobs and 12 on the rigging gang
American-flag passenger service." were added to ten calls for men
The company also informed on deep sea relief jobs.
the commission that it has al­ Two crews were shipped to
ready received more than 20,000 tugboats and helped to take up
applications for accommodations some of the slack in employment
on the two ships, "without soli­ during this slow period.
citation on our part."
Repairs on the Mobile Hall

are still proceeding- at a steady
pace and, from the comment re­
ceived from members on the
beach here. Seafarers are sure
going to be proud of their new
Hall.
The job is going to take a
little longer than was first ex­
pected. We flgiured it was best
to take it a little slow and do a
first-class job. It'll be worth wait­
ing the additional time.
BAGGAGE CALL
By the way, anyone who has
baggage in the Mobile Hall is
reminded to pick it up as soon
as possible. The baggage room
will soon be in the path of the
renovation crew, and the gear
will have to be moved to permit
work to continue. Borne of the

stuff being held has been in the
Hall for a very long time.
Well, the voting period for the
referendum on the ten-dollar
General Fund assessment has
come to an end, and the entire
membership is waiting anxiously
to learn the results.
All of the oldtimers on the
beach here are sure the results
will show a majority of "yes"
votes, which will mean a big
step forward for the Union.
And speaking of oldtimers,
some of them around Mobile at
the moment are Blackie 'Huller,
"Ding . Dong" Bell, William
Morse, H. Carmichael, L. Lott,
C. Mitchell, J. Crawford, C. Dunlop, J. Prestwood, J. Jordan,
Jimmy Naylor and B. Bims.
Bee you next issue!

PORTRAIT OF A SEAFARER

A Normaat MaBU sketch of Tony PUano

BAN FRANCIBCO — Vessels
hitting this port during the past
week were in-transit callers only
and shipping, therefore, was on
the slow bell.
Two callers were the Oshkosh
Victory, Waterman, and the Cal­
mar, of the company of the
same name. There were no beefs
on either of these ships.
Buddy Benson, the Bosun, was
on the Oshkosh Victory, and
E. M. (Bud) Bryant, former piecard, came in off the.BB Afoundria. Bud says he's going to hang
around awhile, so we had to
rope him and put shoes on him.
Also seen on the Frisco beach
were W. M. Pennington, W. L.
Busch, Nick Nutin and Earl
Spear.
Seafarers currently listed as
patients in the Ban Francisco
Marine Hospital are J. W. Keenan, T. Isaksen, B. Wigg, J.
Gill, and T. Mack.
We're looking for some jobs
aboard three ships scheduled to
call at this port. They are the
Monroe Victory and Loyola
.yictory of"^ Waterman, , and the
Bteel Designer, Isthmian.
Something might break soon
on the Hawaiian longshore
strike. Brother Jeff Morrison is
still in Hawaii looking out for
the interests of the A&amp;G Dis­
trict membership^ there. At pres­
ent all we can do is sit tight.

The following men have
money due them from SmithJohnson, 60 Beaver St., New
York. Write that office giving
address and social security num­
ber and vouchei; will be for­
warded.
Alexander A b o 1 i n e , James
Beaners, George T. Brannan,
Frank Campbell, Fred W. Car­
roll, Douglas W. Clifton, Steve
Coleccki, Thomas J. Dawes, An­
tonio, DeCosta, Jose N. Dominquez, Albert E. Edefors, George
M. Everett, R. Fiore, George C.
Foley, Paul N. Proom.
J. (5ibbs, Charles O. Gillikin,
Paul Gonzales, Henry R. Gordon,
Neils E. Grundahl, John W. Haas,
Thomas Harris, Martin J. Hitch­
cock, Herbert R. Hutchins, Earl
D. Johnson, George N. Kaeliwai,
Charles A. • Loute, George W.
Lowry.
Erling Melle, William J. Michaelis, J. Mikaljunas, Stylianes
Mondanos, Robert E. Pritchard,
Harold Quimby, Francisco M.
Reyes, Henry J. Rote, Stanley
Ruzyski,
•r. Bandstrom, Lloyd G. Bchop,
Biloran O. Sierra, Gosta W. Sovelius. Otto J. Btemmo, Jack P.
Steward, John Btraka, Gunnar
K. Svalland, Fred Szoblik, Rob­
ert C. Templetoh, Lucian H. Tetterton. Goon Pay Thlu, Cecil
Thomas, .Roy Thompson, William
P. Vaughn, Robert H. Watkins&lt;
David L. Williams, D. M. Woods,
Steve Zouvelos.
4.
4.
SS LILICA
The followiiig meh can collect
the money coming to them by
getting in touch with the Do]^
phin Steamship Company, 52
Broadway, New York City:
Hermanes, J. Out, Oiler; Loreto Refalo,' DM; and Samuel
Hudgins, MM.

�Friday, September 9, 1949

THE SEAFARERS

Page Eleven

LOG

Marine Hospital
in Pittsburgh
is Ciosed Down
CHARLIE POND
ANTONIO BILYK
The U. S. Marine Hospital at
Get in topch with Eddie CaraGet in touch with Benjamin
Pittsburg, Pennsylvania will dis­
continue admitting patients on vona, 11913 Pawnee Ave., Cleve­ Sterling, 42 Broadway, New York
City.
September 9, and the Hospital land, Ohio.
will be closed as soon as pos­
if if is&gt;
if i i
INDIVIDUAL DONATIONS
Osker, Uusmann, $5.00; D. B. Moller,
sible,
according
to
an
announce­
MELVIN
C.
KLEIBER
DONALD
LIGHT
J. A. Andersen, $1.00; J. R. Sojka, $2.00; C. A. -Pineyro, $2.00; P. . Salvo,
by Federal
Get in touch with Mary C.
Bruce Henn has lost your ad­
$1.00; J. E. Murphy, $1.00; Fred Bar $2.00; T. J. Rezeveteb, $2.00; F. La- ment made today
thes, $2.00; Wm. Throop, $3.00; Fred Plant, $2.00; W. P. Roux, $6.00; C. M. Security Administrator Oscar R. Smith, Local Board No. 18, Room dress and asks that you write
Walker, $2.00; C. E. .Long, $5.00; C. Webb, $2.00; A. T. McLucas, $1.00; R. Ewing,
11, Memorial Building, Middle­ him at Teaneck, N.J.
Johnson. $5.00; G. D. Allen, $5.00; C. Hudkins, $4.00.
Surgeon General Leonard A. sex County, Framingham, Mass.
if i i
C. F. Porter, $5.00; A. R. Ditman,
SS MEREDITH VICTORY
Scheele recommended closing the
JOHN
FEDIOW
$1.00; Wm. Woeras, $10.00; J. Besuila,
if
if
if
R. Gelling, $3.00; C. H. Johnston,
$10.00; C. Whithurst, $3.50; M. Robin­ $1.00; N. T. Tala, $10.00; F. C. Nolan, Hospital to the Administrator in
The Cape Mohican crew has
FRANK BARON
son, $7.00; V. Mlynek, $1.00.
$5.00; T. J. King, $5.00; L. M. Henri- the interests of economy and of
Get in touch with Mrs. Shir­ checked your gear at the SIU
E. M. Christian, $1.00; C. Fisher, quez, $5.00; A. E, Iglesias, $5.00; I. providing
better medical care
ley Wessel, Supervisor, Missing Hall in Philadelphia.
$1.00; F. j. Huttick, $25.00; J. Giar- Ostrowski, $5.00; F. S. Suniega, $5.00;
to merchant seamen, members
dina*. $3.00; W. G. Jarvts, $5.00; B. L. A. Canavino, $5.00; W. H. Nelson,
i i i
Persons Bureau, Seamen's Church
Tombocon,
$1.00;
Robert
Guthrie, $5.00; A. J. Raifsnider, $2.00; M. N. of the- U. S. Coast Guard and
PETER J. WALSH
Institute, 25 South Street, New
$5.00; A. Aubin, $10.00; R. Kendoor- Dishman, $5.00; A. G. Anapolo, $2.00; other groups for whose medical
Get in touch with J. L. Wash­
ski, $11.00; W. B. Orman, $1.00; Wm. E. D. Spradley, $2.00; E. V. Matinki, care the Public Health Service York 4, N. Y.
burn,
Administration Dep't., Air
Feil, $5.00; N. Fredborg, $5.00; A. $4.00; D. Downey, $5.00; R. W. Murry,
i i if
is responsible.
Conditioning Training Co., Inc.,
Ingibretson, $30.00; Wm. C. Fisher, $2.00; J. D. Cummins, $5.00; W. G.
WOODROW DOWNS
The action has been taken
Youngstown 1, Ohio.
$5.00; V. A. Engel, $5.00; Onice Tan­ Sargent, $5.00; A. J. Cobb, Jr., $2.00;
Get
in touch with your mother,
ner, $5.00; C. Safounics, $5.00; E. J. H. E. Rode, $2.00; J. I. Briant, $2.00; both because the decrease in the
» » »
Mrs. J: R. Chestnut, 717 W. OlSproch, $5.00; J. Saurez, $2.00.
J. J. Mlllin, $2.00; H. F. Corbitt, Jr., number of persons in the Pitts­
ROBERT C. STEPHENS
SS MARQUETTE VICTORY
$2.00; W. W. Denley, $5.00."
burgh area who are entitled to ney Road, Norfolk, Va.
Write to Joyce Deming, 6111
W. Merren, $5.00; N. Nomicos, $2.00;
SS SEATRADER
if
if
if
medical
care
at
the
U.
S.
Marine
Clybourn,
No. Hollywood, Calif.
J. Magnusson,
$2.00;
C,
Lockhart,
S. C. Bartoletti, $1.00; T. M. OstasMELVIN RICE
$2.00; S. Rothman, $2.00; C. Whitted, zeski, $2.00; H. Zucker, $1.00; R. W. Hospital does not warrant the
i i if
Your mother, Mrs. Laverne
expense necessary to
$2.00; E. Laws, $2.00; R. Flood, $2.00; Davies, $1.00; M. Awall, $1.00; B. sizable
JOHN ULAS
Rice, Keats, Kansas, would like
J. Sidor, $5.00; R. Ferreira, $2.00; B. Ruthowski,
$2.00;
H.
E.
Svenson, maintain" the Pittsburgh Marine
William Bennett is anxious to
Gross, $2.00;
R. Jensen, $2.00; G. $2.00; Frank Lis, $2.00; A. J. Nicolto
hear from you. She would
Hospital, and because of the in­
hear from you. Write to him at
DeNoma, $5.00; G. Liakos, $5.00; M. outos, $4.00; D. J. Provslezianos, $6.00;
creasing difficulty of staffing also like to hear from his ship­ 18802 Henry St., Melvindale,
Rodriguez, $2.00; J. Jancy, $1.00; N. J. E. Steube, $7.00; F. Gonzalez, $1.00;
mates.
Magash, Jr., $5.00; J. Gardner, $5.00; S. Wawzinak, $5.00; M.' N, Katsimbris, and equipping a small hospital
Mich.
i i i
J. Basco, $5.00; F. Indihar, $5.00; R. $1.00; W. R. Carroll, $6.00; A. Mc- to give a full range of special
i i i
Barker, $5.00; E. Warsaw, $5.00; C. Cabe, $2.00; F. H. Brown, $2.00; J. services.
WACLAW LUESCHNER
SS ROBIN KIRK CREW
Bevell,
$5.00;
E. Fairbanks,
$5.00; Cabral, $2.00; F. Maher, $2.00; R.
CHARLES J. NEUMAIER
Dr. Scheele assured Mr. Ewing
Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. ComFrank Travis, $5.00; B. L. Wilson, Rivera, $3.00; G. D. Finklea, $4.00;
It
is very important that you pton thank the men who were
that
full
provision
has
been
$5.00; J. Ford, $5.00; W. Newman, C. L. Donlin, $5.00; J. A. Castelin,
$5.00; R. Vela, $5.00; F. Fernandez, $5.00; J. Ruiz, $1.00.
made to continue to provide ad­ get in touch immediately with aboard this ship on Aug. 24 .for
$5.00.
SS I. S. COBB
equate medical care for Public J. J. Doyle, attorney, 519 Cali­ the gift given to the Compton's
SS ANNISTON CITY
G. Holgerson, $1.00; W. Simkins, Health Service beneficiaries in fornia St., San Francisco 4, Calif.
new baby.
C. Sypher, $2.00; B. Martinez, $5.00; $10.00; J. Zeschitz, $1.00; J. Corriker,
the
Pittsburgh
area.
i
i
i
if i i
J. Pagan, $2.00; A. Gregory, $5.00; A. $1.00; W. W. Zeeler, $2.00; L. Palmer.
W. PARKER
Patients seeking treatment for
BENJAMIN E. KOSOW
Malouet, $2.00; R. Macaraeg, $2.00; A. $1.00; R. Morton, $1.00; R. E. Davis,
W. THORNTON
chronic illnesses will be referred
Martinez, $5.00; F. Regalado, $2.00; J. $1.00; F. S. Stevens, $1.00.
Get in touch with Mrs. B.
Stoddard, $2.00; F. Nadal, $2.00; F.
SS SEATRAIN N. Y.
J. Crowley has left your over­ Kosow, 227A-E 102 Drive, Brook­
to other Marine Hospitals where
Crodevant, $5.00; W. Hightower, $5.00;
C. Carlson, $2.00; G. H. Villacres,
special facilities and specially time sheets from the SS Trinity lyn, New York.
P. Cunderson, $2.00; V. Keller, $5.00; $2.00; W. C. Chappell, $2.00.
in the mail room of the New
R, Pepin, $2.00; R. Ramos, $5.00; V,
C. Goldstein, $1.00; J. T. Walker, trained personnel are available
i i if
York- Hall.
for their treatment.
Enriquez, $5.00; S. Suliman, $2.00; M. $3.00; W. T. Dalton, $1.00.
JACK MAYS
Rivera, $5.00; J. Madsen, $2.00; C.
Communicate with Nona But­
Nelson, $2.00; J. Velasquez, $2.00; Ftery,
2011 Leland, San Pedro,
M. Donaldson, $5,00; L. Brain, $5.00;
Calif.
Important.
H. Sorensen, $5.00.
SS KATHRYN
B. Estrella, $1.00; A. Decena, $1.00;
P. G. Gonzalez, 50c; R. Peerez, $1.00;
Antolino G. Soto, $1.00; P. P. Colon,
$1.00; E. Torres, $1.00; R. Torres,
$1.00; A. Acosta, $1.00; J. Pasapera,
$1.00; G. Gonzales, $1.00; M. Rodriguez,
$1.00; L. A. Vila, $1.00; Pedro Perez,
$1.00; L. Guellintz, $1.00; C. C. Mojica,
$1.00; L. Rodriguez, $1.00; G. Mar­
tinez,
$1.00;
T.
Rivera,
$1.00;
J.
Figueroa, $1.00; G. Llamos, $1.00; A.
Oquendo, $1.00; C. Martinez, $1,00; J.
Cilsmp, $1.00.
SS FAIRLAND
D. DeSei, $5.00; P. Prevas, $3.00; M.
Kondylas, $1.00; W. Wyhooki, $1.00;
B. Schmitz, $2.00; F. D.. Thompson,
$2.00; J. Baugher, $1.00; 1. R.' Pedersen, $3.00; 1. C. Dongen, $2.00; H.
Mobley, $2.00; New Williams, $2,00; O.
Figueroa, $1.00; J. R. Murelle, $1,00;
J. H. Fort, $2.00; A. Serpe, $3,00; A.
Whler, $1.00; V. Silva, $1.00.
SS MALDEN VICTORY
R. F. King, $5.00; W. Milburn, $2.00;
W. R. Salazar, $4.00; B. P. Burke,
$4.00; G. Majdek, $15.00; D. Blumlo,
$15.00; F. M. Collins, $2.00; S. Longham, $2.00; V. Arjona, $2.00; RT H.
Smith, $2.00; T. Lenczewski, $4.00; J.
Ostroski, $3.00; J. Dunn, $.500; H. C.
Hutcherson, $4.00; E. J.^Kosecki, $2.00;
J. J. Burke, $6.00; A. Praza, $5.00; C.
T. Ridge, $2.00; R. Coleman, $15.00. .'
SS CARRUTH
R. J. Denayer, $2.00; J. C. Brush,
$5.00*.
SS SEATRAIN TEXAS
W. E. Pepper, $2.00; E. N. Mclnis,
$2.00.
SS CHRYSANTHY STAR
W. Alvano, $2.00; 1. C. Chuistner,
$1.00; 1. White, $5.00.
SS BESSMER VICTORY
E. Delaney, $2.00; F. Kenfield, $1.00.
SS NEW LONDON
B. H. Meade, $3.00; W. C. Murphy,
$1.00; Osmael, Ruiz, $2.00; A. G.
Esplneda, $1.00; W. M. Todd. $1.00: C,
R. Pimentel, $2.00; C.. L. Pearson,
$1.00.
SS QUEENS VICTORY
N. Swolka, $2.00; L. Derstler, $4.00;
C. Gladhill, $3.00; E. R. Hulet, $5.00;
J. Wright, $2,00; J. J. Corden, $3.00;
P. R, Vorke, $5.0&lt;I: M. P. Dario, $2.00;
H. Ahmed, $2.00; H. W. Sherman,
$2.00; S. R. Webb. $2,00; G, Saurento,
$4,00j F. Quintavo, $2.00; W. M. Vanderburg, $3.00; A. Hernandez, $5.00; C,
W. Bakebnr, $3.00; M. Rialland, $2.00;
C. Atkins, $2.00; F. T. Caiman, $4.00;

A SAILOR GOES HOME
By JOHN J. FLYNN

. The SS Francis Cole layed
rusted and drab alongside the
wharf and, except for the voices
of seamen heard in the passage­
ways, an air of forlorness hung
heavy about the ship.
A discordant quietude pre­
vailed, broken by the murmur
of life seething from distant
streets, the lap of water as in
gentle caress against the hull,
and gulls wheeling and swoop­
ing in raucous cry, gulping sa­
vagely at the refuse on deck.
The longshoremen had gone to
supper, leaving behind a scene
of suspended action, while the
sunglow of the late afternoon re­
ceded before the shadow of the
looming dusk.
PLEASANT SIGHT
Tilley leaned on the rail over­
looking the welldeck. It was
pleasant to survey the helterskelter of trailing bull ropes, guy
lines and odd angled booms, and
know he wasn't going to secure
them for sea when the ship
pulled out.
He was going home. The tele­
gram from his father in Okla­
homa said in essence — come
home, I need you, the farm
needs you and Helen thinks
you're forgetting her.
How often he thought of home
on calm nights, looking at a
velvet sea and drained the cup
of regrets that he was so far
away—from her, the homestead;
yes, even from himself.
But reconcile himself that he
belonged there, that those years
of toil from a boy to manhood
on a heartbreaking, dusty, plag­
ued land—go back to that!

He broke into a nervous giggle.
No he didn't really want to, but
she was there, and he needed
her and the farm needed him.
He belonged to the land.
Tilley smiled ruefully; there
were horizons that the sea didn't
contain and it seemed he rode
a solitary passage to many
strange and polyglot ports that
touched him not.
He could never break away.
How odd that, when he was
there, he hated the farm and yet
on night watches he , evoked
dreams of a new tractor, raising
of soy beans and the use of a
new fertilizer he read about in
an agrarian magazine. Such it
was that he reflected.
"Tilley, the Purser, is paying
off." It was Garrity, and the old
man was smiling at Tilley's be­
numbed look. "Well, you don't
seem anxious to get your pay."
Sure, sure, Garrity; I was
just thinking—" he hesitated,
then offered his hand. "So long
Garrity, I'm going home to Okla­
homa."
THEY'RE WAITING
"Yeah, that's what you're been
saying all day. You got folks
and a sweetheart; that's a lot
to go back to—see that you stay
put," the old man observed
grufflyHe shook his head thoughtful­
ly, "Just a calf, a lucky calf,"
he muttered and leaned on the
rail where Tilley had been.
He surveyed the maze of gear,
hazily thinking what a mess a
ship looks when she imloads. A
languid rdjpose settled over him.
The sun dropped slowly be­

if

i i

WILL BERG
Get in touch with F. B. Michelson, Mills Hotel No. 3, 161 West
36 St., New York 18, N.Y.
4- 4. 4.
ANDY LAVAZOLI
Get in touch with Teddy
Cucchiarelli, 1030 Faile Street,
Bronx, New York City. Phone—
LUdlow 9-8098.

hind the skyscrapers, tinting the
mackerel clouds in diverging
pinks and coloring the water in
undulating silver.
The old man blinked. Sure is
pretty, but kind of sadlike, as
if a lot of good things happened,
i. t.
small things — the boys raising
LORAN J. HARRIS
the booms like they were mad,
Communicate with Mrs. E., W.
and the bosun so damned ex­
cited he almost had us topping Hobson, 94 Spence, R. No. 6
Birmihgham, Mich.
No. 4 boom to the crosstrees.
4 4 4
ALL GET IT
SOFRONIO ALINGOSA
And the Old Man—here Gar­
Write to Miss Corazon Alingrity wheezed with mirth—dress­ osa, Alimodian, Iloilo, Phillipine
ed as an admiral fit for parade, Islands.
smiling like a harlot at the pilot.
4 4 4Channel fever touches 'em all.
JUAN LEIBA
A letter is being held for you
Now it's all over, and the
in
New York Hall from Carmen
night is coming like the inflow
Pura
Diaz, Government of Puer­
of the tide covering all the
to
Rico
Department of Labor,
sunny-touched things, and these
little things are ^one and even 1881 Broadway, New York City.
seem like long ago that once I You are requested to get in
touch with her.
lived amid them.
4 4 4
"So long. Pop."
GUY F. PLAHN
"Eh," it was Werner taking
"Please get in touch with me.
off. "So long, son."
Worried about you, Ann."
He watched the seaman walk
4 4 4
cautiously down the gangway
PAT DARROUGH
with his seabag. He watched
Get in touch with Frank
others, and said goodbye to them Knight at Sophie's and Shorty's
all and everyone that went left Blue Room, Galveston, Tex.
him feeling emptier than before.
4 4 4
The longshoremen returned,
SVEN REGNER
and soon the rattle of the
Important that you get in
winches and shouts of men dis­ touch with Mr. and Mrs. B.
pelled somewhat the loneliness Brown, 547 So. Park St., Eliza­
of the ship. The blue that hid beth 1, N. J.
the stars had faded, leaving
4 4 4
those eternal worlds again to WALTER HENRY HOFFMAN
wateh mutely the destinies of
"Come home as soon as pos­
men.
sible. Business matters to be
The old man sighed and taken care of. Urgent. Mother
thought of going for a beer.
and Dad."

�Page Twelve

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. Septexnber 9. 1949

Southwind Seafarers Record Their Trip

E. B. (Mac) McAuley, one
of the SIU's most accomplished
camera fiends, is currently
aboard the SS Southwind. Mac
sent the photos on this page
from a Turkish port. At left.
Tony Parker. Oiler, gets a
haircut from B. Tippins. the
Southwind's able "clip artist."

This shot was made in Rotterdam
Auley was aboard the Cape Race. From
Race crewmen "Sleepy" Matthews. Bill
nelly and Bob Pierce (facing camera).
Coral Sea. another SIU ship.

last May when Macleft to right are Cape
Warmack. Hank Don­
In background is the

ABOVE—Bill Padgett (left). FWT. ajid H. A. Kelsall. 3rd
Engineer, flash a couple of Sunday smiles in the Southwind's
Engine Room.
LEFT—SIU teamwork on the job is demonstrated by this
trio of Southwind Deck men: left to right. Deck Delegate
"Rags" Hanley, AB; Van Sant. OS. and Bob Harper. Bosun.

More smiles in the engine room. This time they belong to (left to right)
Jim McDonald, Oiler; Joe Martin. 2nd Assistant Engineer, and Eddie McCranie.
FWT. They're on the four-to-eight watch.

These galley men were cooking up a meal for the Southwind crew when
MpAuley appeared with his camera. Left to right: L. Harris. Chief Cook; B«
Tippins. Night Cook and Baker, and A. Feliciano. Utility. '

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9928">
                <text>September 9, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9992">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 26</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10013">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10034">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10094">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10112">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10169">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
GENERAL FUND ASSESSMENT CARRIES BY BETTER THAN 5-1&#13;
HEADQUARTERS TELLS RECENT ARRIVALS OF MEETING DATE CHANGE&#13;
ILA TAKES FIRM STAND IN COAST CONTRACT TALKS&#13;
GREEN CALLS COMMIES AND REACTIONARIES TWIN ENEMIES OF FREE, DEMOCRATIC LABOR&#13;
THE MEMBERSHIP SPEAKS&#13;
LOOK WHO'S TALKING&#13;
FOOD SAMPLES GOOD, OREMAR CREW TELLS COMPANY, SEND MORE&#13;
THE SOVIET SYSTEM OF MIND CONTROL: I&#13;
NEW ORLEANS SHIPPING GETS HOT, BUT LEVELLING OFF IS EXPECTED&#13;
STRIKES IN STEEL WOULD AFFECT PORT BALTIMORE&#13;
NEW YORK GETS COASTWISE VESSELS&#13;
PORT SAVANNAH SQUARES BEEF FOR CREW ON SIU CANADIAN SHIP&#13;
DAN CREMMINS, SIU MEMBER SINCE 1945, DIES IN SANTOS&#13;
MOTOR SHIP COLLIDES WITH SS COLABEE&#13;
COMMENTS FROM HAWAII ON BRIDGES' BEEF&#13;
BOSTON SHIPPING ON QUIET SIDE&#13;
FRISCO GETTING IN-TRANSIT SHIPS&#13;
RELIEF JOBS TAKE UP MOBILE SHIPPING SLACK&#13;
BERNSTEIN ASKS MC FOR IMMEDIATE BIDS ON RECONVERSION&#13;
MARINE HOSPITAL IN PITTSBURGH IS CLOSED DOWN&#13;
A SAILOR GOES HOME&#13;
SOUTHWIND SEAFARERS RECORD THEIR TRIP&#13;
</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10170">
                <text>9/9/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13064">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="967" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="971">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/2ad66a9251cf5d5ce3058f6db215ff27.PDF</src>
        <authentication>0fe4ccd5281145836479fad4e35a03fa</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47447">
                    <text>FILING BEGINS FOR A&amp;G POSTS

The preliminaries to the annual election of
officials to serve the Atlantic and Gulf District
in 1950 got under way this week with the adoption
of the customary resolution putting nominationsr
in order. Twenty-nine positions in Headquarters;
and the ten A&amp;G District Branches were desig­
nated by the resolution to be filled in this year's
balloting.
Nominations for the offices will be accepted'
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA
until Oct. 15, and the referendum balloting wiU
NEW YORK. N. Y- FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 23. 1949
No. 27
VOL. XI
begin on Nov. 1 and continue through Dec. 31, as
required by the SIU Con-*
:
stitution.
Because of the continuing
slQmp in the shipping, industry
and its effect upon the Union
Qualifications for office in the Seafarers Interna­
economy, the resolution points
tional Union, Atlantic and Gulf District, as provided for
to the fact that further retrench­
by the Constitution and By-laws are as follows:
ment had been mecessary during
{a) That he be a citizen of the United. States.
the- past, year.
The SIU Atiantic ^nd Gulf
NEW YORK—Two AFL- wa­
(b)
That
he
be
a
full
member
of
the
Seafarers
In­
terfront unions, affiliated with
With no major improvement District will press for continua­
the AFfc Maritinre Trades De­
in the shipping situation indi­ tion of bonus payments to sea­
ternational Union of North America, Atlantic and Gulf
partment, are pushing demands
cated, the number of Union of­ men facing injury from mines
District, in continuous good standing for a period of two
for new contracts in meetings
ficials needed to provide full when the Maritime Emergency
(2) years immediately prior to date of nomination.
with employer groups here..
representation for the member­ Board convenes on Nov. 1. "The
(c) Any^ candidate for Agent or Joint Patrolman
ship is not as large as in pre­ Board will hold a series of hear­
The present contracts of both
must have three years of sea service in any one of three
vious years, when the industry ings ~ on the question of warorganizations — the International
area Iwnuses.
was going full blast.
departments. Any candidate for departmental Patrol­
Longshoremen's Association, and
Originally scheduled to get un­
the Masters, Mates and Pilots of
man must have three years sea service in their respec­
POSTS OPEN
der way on Sept. 28, the hear­
America—expire on Sept. 30.
tive department. Sea service as specified in this article,
The resolution calls for the ings were postponed at the re­
ILA demands include wage in­
shall mean on merchant vessels in [unlicensed capacity.
election of four Headquarters of­ quest of several witnesses who
creases, broadened welfare plan,
(d) That he has not misconducted himself pre­
ficers, ten Port Agents and fif­ indicated a desire to testify.
pensions, extended vacations, and
teen
Port Patrolmen, with the The hearings will be devoted
viously while employed as an officer of the Union.
improved working conditions.
breakdown
as follows:
to a full examination of the
The AFL longshoremen also in­
(e) That he be an active and full book member and
Headquarters—One Secretary- question of war bonus payments
sist that the new contract must
show four months discharges for the current year in an
Treasurer, and three Assistant to seamen travelling in foreign
cover the entire Atlantic coast.
unlicensed rating, prior to date of nomination. This pro­
waters where floating mines may
Secretary-Treasurers.
MOVING SLOWLY
vision shall not apply to officials and other office hold­
be
encountered.
• Boston—One Agent.
ers working for the Union during current year for per­
So far only slight progress has
Shipping
and insurance com­
New York—One Agent, two
been made, the operators having
panies
want
the bonus payments
iod of four months or longer.
Deck Patrolmen, two Engine Pa­
countered with a proposal for
to
be
stopped,
contending that
Any member who can qualify may nominate him­
trolmen, and two Stewards Pa­
continuation of the present con­
damage
to
American
vessels by
trolmen.
self for office by submitting, in writing, his intention
tract for two more years. This
mines
left
over
from
the war
Philadelphia—One Agent.
to run for office, naming the particular office and sub­
week the employers withdrew
has
been
greatly
reduced.
Baltimore — One Agent, one
mitting the necessary proof oif qualification as listed
their original demand for a 13Deck Patrolman, one Engine Pa­ At the hearings, the SIU will
cent cut in the hourly wage rate,
above.
trolman, and one Stewards Pa­ point up that the danger of in­
which had been rejected by the
jury from mines is still a real
The notice of intention addressed to the Secret arytrolman.
ILA negotiating committee.
threat.
Even if the number of
Norfolk—One Agent.
Treasurer must be in his office not later than October
The MM&amp;P is asking a gen­
casualties resulting from mines
Savannah—One
Agent.
15, 1949, when nominations will be closed.
eral five percent wage increase,
has decreased, the Union will
Tampa—One Agent.
In addition, each candidate shall submit a regula­
a union shop, hiring hall, month­
Mobile—One Agent and two emphasize that the possibility of
ly uniform allowances and in­
tion passport photo, taken recently, a statement of not
incidence still exists.
Joint Patrolmen.
creased vacation allowances. The
more than 100 words, giving a brief summary of his
New Orleans—One Agent, one The number of left-over mines
shipowners have countered with
Union
record
and
activities—^both
of
which
will
be
run
Deck
Patrolman, one Engine Pa- is not known, the Union holds,
an offer to renew without change
and as long as a single mine
in
the
SEAFARERS
LOG
prior
to
the
voting
period.
(Continued on Page 3)
the present contract.
exists in an area, the lives of
seamen travelling in that area
are exposed to danger.
Since the end of World War
11, 303 ships have been mine
casualties. Twenty-nine of these
were sunk or damaged in the
first six months of this year,
among them the SlU-contracted
Steel Admiral, Isthmian, which
The two-pronged campaign m access to the courts to obtain (R., Ore.), members of the La­ support of the SlU's demand, was struck by a floating mine
in the Saigon River on Jan. 23.
behalf of seamen's rights cur­ maintenance and cure and in­ bor Committee, drafted amend­ but it was defeated.
However, by the time the
ments to HR 3191.
demnity
for
personal
injuries
rently being waged on the legis­
sustained in the course of their These .were formally introduced measure was presented on the
lative front by the SIU Atlantic employment.
by Senator Morse: to the sub­ floor of the House, considerable
committee restudying the'meas­ support for a 50-50 provision in
and Gulf District is bringing rePOORLY WORDED
ure, and the prospects of their regard to the transport of arms
'sults.
adoption
with the final bill on aid was whipped up among
The
Union's
position
was
based
In response to the Union's de­
Two developments here and
mand that * seamen's rights be on the contention that the word­ the floor of the Senate are bright. House members.
An A&amp;G District representa­ abroad that would affect sev­
protected in the proposed revi­ ing of the proposed law would
ON THE WAY
tive went to Washington, ac­ eral SlU-contracted ships were
sions of the Federal Employees permit seamen working on govCompensation Act (HR 3191), ernnient-owned ships to be de­ The second of the present SIU companied by Joseph Pomarlen, announced during the past week.
leading Senators and Congress­ fined as government employees legislative objectives, that of secretary of the Liberal Party's One was the recommendation
men have worked out additional and, therefore, entitled only to guaranteeing the use of Ameri­ Trade Union Council, which of the Interstate Commerce Com­
can ships and seamen in the represents most of the trade mission's water carrier bureau
amendments which will preserve workmen's compensation.
transport of cargo under the for­ unions in New York.
that the Waterman^, Steamship
Seamen
could
only
be
protect­
all the rights now - enjoyed by
eign
military
aid
program,
has
Corporation
be permitted to add
ed
from
such
injustice,
the
Union
seamen under admiralty law and
WINNING SUPPORT
also
appeared
to
be
on
the
road
Yaquina
Bay,
Ore., to its ports
officials
Explained,
by
having
a
other statutes.
They
succeeded
in
winning
to
success.
of
call.
Waterman
has . several
provision
written
into
the
pro­
- When it was announced re­
cently that the Senate Labor and posed law specifically exempting In the House of Representa­ sympathy for the plight of vessels on the Arrow Line run
tives, the arms aid bill adopted American seamen who are fac­ between the East and West
Education Committee was in the them from its coverage.
process of revising the federal The SlU's viewpoint was also contains a provision insuring em­ ing increased unfemployment, coasts.
compensation law, Paul Hall and presented to legislators by the ployment of at least 50 percent while foreign shipping is on the In Haifa it. was reported that
•
-•
' new piers and equipment are
Morris Weisberger, international Union representative in Washing of American ships to carry the rise.
As
a
result,
an
amendment
for
arms
cargoes
to
North
Atlantic
being built and will be ready
vice-presidents of the SIU, im­ ton.
50
percent,
at
least,
in
the
use
Pact
associates.
for
use in 1950. The Isthmian
mediately urged that seamen be As a result of the Union's ef­
of
American
ships,
was
intro­
When
the
bill
was
still
before
Line
recently included the Is­
specifically excluded from the forts, which were supported by
duced
by
Rep.
Herbert
C.
Bon­
the
House
Foreign
Affairs
Com­
raeli
port in the itinerary of
other
labor
organizations
through­
law.
1
some
of
its ships on the Persian
ner
(D.,
N.C.).
mittee,
Rep.
Jacob
Javits
(R.,
out
the
country,
Senators
Paul
Otherwise, the STl)[ officials de­
N.Y.)
offered
an
amendment
in
Gulf
run.
(Continued
on
Page
3)
Douglas
(D.,,
111.),
Wayne
Morse
clared, seamen would be denied

ILA And MM&amp;P Qualificatiotts For A&amp;G Offke
Carry On Talks
For New Pacts

SHI Pressing
for Continiied
War Bonus Pay

Seafarers' Fight To Protect Rights AaJ Johs
Of American Seamen Saining Strong Sappert

Waterman Opening
Pert On West Coast

�THE

Page Two

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, September 23, 1949

SEAFARERS LOG
Published Every Other Week by the
SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA

Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor
At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Reentered as second class matter August 2, 1949, at the Post
Office in New York, N.Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

Make A Nomination
This week the opening bell sounded for an annua
event that is always of .great interest to Seafarers. And
of great importance, too.
^
Nominations are now in order for elective positions
in the Atlantic and Gulf District, and they may be sub­
mitted at any time up until Oct.-15. Actual balloting
gets under way on Nov. 1 and continues through Dec. 31
Ts-

Perhaps the most striking thing about the A&amp;G Dis­
trict's annual elections is that any Union member who
meets the few simple qualifications laid down in the SIU
Constitution can become a candidate for office; (See list
of qualifications on page 1.)
All a qualified member has to do is write down the
name of the office he is interested in ruhning for, enclose
it in an envelope with proof of his qualifications, a recent
passport photo of himself and a few words on his Union
record. The envelope containing this material should be
sent to the Secretary-Treasurer's office, 51 Beaver St.,
New York 4, N. Y. It must be there on or before Oct.
15, when nominations close.
Despite the ease with which any member can get
on the ballot, it should be borne in mind that a nomina­
tion for Union office should not be taken lightly. Repre­
senting the membership of the Atlarftic and Gulf District
is a serious responsibility. The welfare and security of
every member depends upon the abilities and understand­
ing of seamen's problems possessed by those charged with
the administration of Union affairs.
With the American merchant marine facing one of
the most critical periods of its history and the opponents
of organized labor stepping up their efforts to cut back
seamen's hard-won gains, a Union official takes on a
mighty task.

Hospital Patients •
When enleriilg Ihe hospital
notify the delegates by post­
card, giving your name and
the number of your ward.
Mimeographed
Postcards
can be obtained free at the
Social Service desk.

Men Now h The Marine Hespitab

Staten Island Hospital
It is not enough that a member seeking Union office
These
are
the
Union
Brothers
currently
in
the
marine
hospitals.
You can contact your Hos­
be a nice guy. Candidates for office in the Atlantic and
as
reported
by
the
Port
Agents.
These
Brothers
find
time
hanging
pital delegate at the Staten
Gulf District should be motivated by a desire to fight
heavily
on
their
hands,
Do
what
you
can
to
cheer
them
up
by
Island
Hospital at the follow­
in behalf of the interest of their Union Brothers on a
writing
them.
ing times:
round-the-clock basis.
BALTIMORE HOSPITAL
J. T. MURRAY
Tuesday — 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
If you know of someone who fits the bill—or if you
I.
LLENOS
—
(on 5th and 6th floors.)
think you yourself qualify—have those credentials in on J. SALMON
S. LEVY
W.
L.
AKINS
time. The membership will do the rest.
Thursday — 1:30 to 3:30 pan.
G. E. ROUSE
F. KORVATIN
A. R. KORBACK
(on 3rd and 4th floors.)
W. V. CONNORS
H.
R.
PITT
^
C. PRECLARO
Saturday — 1:30 to 3:30 p.m.
M; BRYANT
J, KOVISH
"^
(on Ist and 2nd floors.)
P. VAN DER EIK
T. MASTANTUNY
A. SYLVERA
There is a woman in La Belle, Florida — who asks D. McCORKINGDALE
T, M. SAUVE
that she be nameless —^ who regularly contributes a dollar R. W. BELL
M. J. LUCAS
J. E. TASSIN
a month to the A&amp;G Hospital Fund.
P. B. COGLEY
A. TREVINO
C. E.- PARKER
J. CISIECKI
J. HERNANDEZ
V. LAWRENCE
This is not a solicitation of funds, the Hospital Fund L. TICKEL
O. HOWELL
M. FERNANDEZ
has sufficient money—^indeed, that assessment was discon­ G. A. CARROLL
L. KAY
L. OXEN
tinued while, at the same time, the benefits were increased. J. DERKSMEYER
J. O'MALLEY
T. KANADY
E. F. PAUL
I. RHODEN
Instead this is a tribute to one who knows and ap­
' t t t
X X i,
M. ROSSI
preciates what unions have done for the American worker,
MOBILE
HOSPITAL
V. GROVER
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL
and feels a compulsion to do whatever she can to help
J.
CURTIS
t t' t
W. L. SMITH
them.
MIKE
LEOUSIS
SAN FRANCISCO HOSPITAL
W. W. ALLRED
L. HOWARD
There are people like her in unions who sometimes get
J. W. KEENAN
tit
T. GALVIN
T. ISAKSEN
their brains beaten out on the picketjine to gain what NEW ORLEANS HOSPITAL^
R. LONG
B. WIGG
D. C. MILLER
they know is right and just. There are others like her— J. DENNIS
J.
GILL
wives and mothers—-who-unhesitatingly and uncomplain­ L. LANG
t t t
T. MACK
F. LANDRY
ingly do without food arid clothes for the same reason.
STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
t t t'
-i
C. ELLARD
It is because of people like her—^men and women— C. D. SHIVELY
H. E. BONEWALD
BOSTON HOSPITAL
N. DORPMANS
that the SIU and the labor movement have gone as far L. WILLIS
BOB FISHER
J.
P. PROBST
B.
W.
BIGGS
as we have.
VIC MILAZZO
J. W. FAILLA
J. B. ALLRED
J.
jr. FLAHERTY
And why w;; will accomplish even more.
W. R. THOMPSON
F, M. KENFIELD

To A Friend

in® J

•is.;" "ii C

�T*-"':W! -

i^rida7.'Se)&gt;lember 23, 1949

\ •". •".

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Three

Nominations Onened For 29 A&amp;G Offices
(Continued from Page 1)
trolman, and one Stewards Pa­
trolman.
Galveston—One Agent and one
Joint Patrolman.
The following adopted resolution puts into motion the nominating If developments during the
coming year make the opening
machinery for the referendum to dete^'mine 1950 officials in A&amp;G Head- of
additional Union Branches or
quarters and branches.
offices-' necessary, the " resolution
(Continued from Page 1)
Nominees will, if qualified, go on the referendum ballot to be voted on stated that the staffing of such
Strong support of the SIU's by the membership in all ports during November and December, as provided offices should be left to the dis­
cretion of the Secretary-Treas­
demand came from the New for in the SIU Constitution.
urer, subject to the approval of
York delegation in the House,
Text of the Resolution follows:
the membership.
with the following playing an
active role in obtaining adop­ WHEREAS: It has been customary for the Union to determine annually by resolution Inasmuch as the A&amp;G District
tion of the amendment: Louis
what elective offices shall be placed on the ballot for each annual election Halls on the West Coast are op­
erating on a temporary basis, the
B. Heller, John J. Rooney, Abra­
other than those provided for in the Constitution, and
r e s o 1 u tion recommended that
ham Multer, Arthur G. Klein,
Jacob J. Javits, Walter Lynch, WHEREAS: Since the last election - many changes have occurred in the industry they should not be placed on
the ballot.
which will affect our organizational life, economically, and
Isadore Bollinger, Anthony TaiiIn order to be eligible for a
riello and Franklin D. Roosevelt, WHEREAS: The Union, because of adverse conditions, has had to retrench during
place
on the ballot, candidates
Jr. Rep. Helen Gahagan Douglas
the past year and, from information we have, conditions are not apt to get
must possess a few simple quali­
(i)., Cal.) also supported the SIU
better during the,coming year, and for these reasons we should i^lace a mini­ fications, as required by the
proposal.
mum
number of elective offices on the ballot,
Union Constitution. Among these
The A&amp;G District launched its
broadside in favor of the use THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED: That the following offices be placed on a refer­ are the requirements that a canof American ships when Secre­
endum ballot for the annual election of the Seafarers International Union of Alate be a citizen of the United
States, a full bookmember for at
tary-Treasurer Paul Hall urged
North America, Atlantic and Gulf District, for the year 19^50:
least two years, and have had at
iall members of Congress to rec­
NORFOLK:
HEADQUARTERS:
least three years of sea time in
ognize the "critical condition of
1 Agent
1
Secretary-Treasurer
an unlicensed capacity, with
the United States merchant mar­
SAVANNAH:
3 Assistant Secretary-Treasurers
four months in the current year.
ine," -by guaranteeing their par­
1 Agent
BOSTON:,
PHOTOS. TOO
ticipation in the carrying of
TAMPA:
1 Agent
The resolution renewed the
arms cargo to Europe.
1 Agent
requirement, first adopted in the
NEW YORK:,
"It is imperative that such a
MOBILE:
1947 elections, that each candi­
1 Agent
provision be incorporated into
1 Agent
date submit* a recent regulation2 Deck Department Patrolmen
-the bill," Hall declared. Other­
size passport photograph, as well
2 Joint Patrolmen
wise, he' warned, the US mer­
2 Engine Department Patrolmen
NEW ORLEANS:
as a statement of not more than
chant fleet
would continue to
2 Stewards Department Patrolmen
100 words, summarizing his
1 Agent.
diminish.
PHILADELPHIA:
Union record.
1 Deck Department Patrolman
With the Senate still to take
1 Agent
The pictures and statements of
1
Engine
Department
Patrolman
final action on the arms aid bill,
BALTIMORE:
all
candidates who qualify for
1
Stewards
Department
Patrolman
the A&amp;G District is continuing
1 Agent
the
ballot will appear in an is­
its fight to have an amendment
GALVESTON
1 Deck Department Patrolman ''
sue of the SEAFARERS LOG
similar to the House's 50-50 pro­
1 Agent .
1 Engine Department Patrolman
prior to the start of balloting.
vision incorporated into the
1 Joint Patrolman
1 Stewards Department Patrolman
Repeating . the call made in
final measure.
AND BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED: That if, during the year, it becomes necessary previous years, the Union urges
to open additional offices, the staffing of such offices shall be left to the dis­ members wishing to accept the
cretion of the Secretary-Treasurer, subject to approval of the membership, responsibilities of Union office,
and who meet the qualifications,
and
to place their names in nomina­
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED: That, inasmuch as the Atlantic and Gulf District tion, so that the membership
The maximum dividend that
Halls on the West Coast are of a temporary nature, these officers not be would have a wide choice of
.will be refunded to World War
candidates from whom to select
listed on the referendum ballot, and
II 'Veterans on their National
their representative for the com­
Service" Life Insurance policies BE IT FINALLY RESOLVED: That in addition to the regular constitutional require­
ing year.
is $528.
ments, each candidate for office shall furnish with his acceptance for office In last year's elections, 61
That sum will go to those vets
a regulation passport picture of recent taking, as well as a statement of not qualified candidates competed
who had $10,000 policies in force
more than 100 words, giving a brief summary of his Union record and acti­ Tor 33 elective positions, four
for 96 months and who took out
vities, such picture and statement to be run in the Seafarers Log just prior more than will appear on this
the policies when they were 40
to commencement of voting. This to be done in accordance with previous years ballot.
years old or less.
difference in the number
SIU members who served in ^
membership action to. familiarize the membership with the names, faces and of The
posts
refiects the Union's con­
the armed forces during the war
records of all xrandidates for office.
stant
drive
for economy to meet
can figure
how much they've
the
decline
in income caused by
ROBERTA.
MATTHEWS,
154
LINDSEY
J.
WILLIAMS,
215
50
got coming in life insurance
the
drop
in
shipping.
L. A, GARDNER, 3697
- dividends by using fhe follow­ J. A. ALGINA, 1320

SlU Campaigns
In Washington
Making Headway

Resolution On AM Clesthns

Top Gl Insurance
Refund Will Be $528

ing scale:
Age 40 or imder—55 cents a
month multiplied by each $1,000
of insurance; 41 to 45—scaling
down from 52 cents to 40 cents;
46 to 50—37 cents down to 25
cents; 51 to 54—24 cents down
" to 21 cents; 55 and ovel-—20
cents per $1,000.
The SIU urges all members
who are ^ war vets to get their
dividend applications at the near­
est port office. The VA will be­
gin mailing checks oh January
1, 1950.,

This is how it's done under a
communist regime, specifically in
Hungary. A so-called "rank-gndfile" worker in a "factory stands
up on a box during, a rest period
and say's:
"Comrades, I move that we
all vote to work an extra hour
today to help our fellow-com­
rades
in the French coal mines
/
&gt;
(or whatever the current trouble
spot is)."
The first time this happened
With the membership con­ in the ^Hungarian factories, the
curring in the Tallying Com­ anti-communist workers demur­
mittee's report on the assess­ red. The next day leaders of
ment referendum at all the opposition groups were sum­
Branch meetings Wednesday. moned before the secret police,
Sept. 14, the ten-dollar Gen­ and the next time a "vote" was
eral Fund assessment is now ' taken, there was no opposition.
payable.
That's the report from the
Seafarers are urged to one-time leader of the Hungari­
make their payments im­ an movement,, Charles Peyer,
mediately so that their books who recently arrived in America,
and permits can be marked an exile from his native land. He
was brought here by the Inter­
, paid up to date.
national Rescue Committee, an

Assessment Due

—

Lobor Refugee Exposes Misery Under Commies
orga/iization of labor leaders and
liberal spokesmen on whose
board are AFL Vice President
Matthew Woll and ILGWU Vice
Presidents Luigi Antonini and
Louis Stulberg.
In a special interview with the
AFL News Service, Mr. Peyer
disclosed that the work-week in
Hungary has been increased
from 48 hours to 54 hours with
no increase in wages. In fact,
the average weekly wage for an
industrial worker today is worth
in purchasing power about $10.
According to . Mr. Peyer, the
Communist regime in Hungary
has:
• 1. Abolished the right to strike.
2. Prohibited a worker from
leaving one job for another
3. Introduced political s e 1 e ction in appointment of foremen
and superintendents.
4. Introduced a spy system in
factories so that in every group
of 10 workers, one "is working

for the secret police.
5. Compelled women to work
in factories and abolished pro­
hibition against child labor. Pre­
viously no child under 14 was
allowed to work in a factory.
Today, as Mr. Teyer said, "they
don't ask questions." Worst of
all, he said, the children are
trained to spy on their elders
who work in the factories.
Hungary at one time had a
high standard in social legisla­
tion. Since "sacrifice" is the
propaganda line in present-day
Hungary, no Hungarian worker,
who values his life, would dream
of' taking advantage of sickness
or accident insurance, old-age
pensions, allowances for depen­
dents or other benefits.
Mr. Peyer, who began his ca,reer as a toolmaker and then be­
came secretary of the Iron-work­
ers Union and later secretarygeneral of the Trades Union
Council, said that sabotage in in­

dustry and agriculture was fairly
extensive -in Hungary. However,
he said the Hungarian anti-com­
munist movement could do little
against the might of the Soviet
army which still occupies the
land.
The leader of the Hungarian
Social Democratic Party, who
had to flee the Communist re­
gime under Bela Kun in 1919,
then was imprisoned by the Fas=
cist dictatorship of Admiral Horthy, then imprisoned by the
Nazis in the Mauthausen concen­
tration camp and finally had to
flee for his life when the Hun­
garian Communists, under Matayas Pakosi, came into power.
The International Rescue Com­
mittee is currently conducting
an Iron Curtain Refuge Cam­
paign to proyide material aid to
recently escaped refugees from
Communist-contjrolled countries
in Europe. The campaign chair­
man is Admiral Richard E. Byrd,

�THE SEAFARERS

Pag* J'our,

Shipping Shews
Improvement
In Port Mobile

Bosm

LOG

Hand Of The SS Bleedmg Hewt

Friday, September 23, 1949
By Ted Andrysiaji:

•1

By CAL TANNER
MOBILE — Improvement has
been noted in shipping in this
port during the past two weeks.
Although it has not been what
we would like it to be, we can
say that shipping has been fair,
with 247 men being dispatched to
jobs during the period.
Ships paying off include the
following:
Morning Light, Monarch of
the Seas, Golden City, Alcoa
Clipper, Fairisle, Choctaw, Hast­
ings, Ponce de Leon, Noonday,
Zebulon Pike and the Alcoa Pen­
nant.
Sign-ons took place aboard the
Morning Light, Gateway i City,
Jeff Davis, Monarch of the Seas,
Golden City, Alcoa Clipper, Jean
LaFitte, Fairisle, Mobilian and
Choctaw.
IN-TRANSIT
In addition, the following ves­
sels called in-transit: Alcoa
Roamer, Grely Victory and
Canton Victory.
Only one ship was lost to the
boneyard during the past twoweek period. She jvas the Water­
man Liberty SS Zebulon Pike.
All of the payoffs were smoot^
with the exception of the Alcoa
Pennant's. This ship had a deck
department overtime beef that
involved stevedores shifting ship
in Norfolk. However, after con­
siderable discussion, the over­
time was collected for the crewmembers.
'
Some of the Brothers you can
find on . the Mobile beach at
present are Henry Hicks, W,
Gradick, Ralph Dorgan, C. Jansen, Joe Henderson, J. Kulakowski, J. Hall, A. Hollings, W. G.
Lewsi, F. Stmary, F." Bradley,
and T. Eppeletie.
Well, that's about it for this
time, except to add that shipping
does not look too bright for the
next two weeks, inasmuch as
few arrivals are scheduled thus
far for this port.

New York Shaping On The Upgrade,
But Enough Men Are Avuihhie
By JOE ALGINA
NEW YORK — Shipping took
a rise in the two-week period
just ended, but there were more
than enough' men on the beach
to take care of all our needs.
Getting down to the payoffs;
there were the City of Alma,
Warrior, Loyola Victory, Azalea
City, Bessemer Victory, Maiden
Creek, all of Waterman; Frances.
Cornelia, Kathryn, Elizabeth and
Puerto Rico, Bull Lines.
• Other payoffs included the
Colabee, American-Hawaiian;
James Gillis, Smith and Johnson
job which went into lay-up; Seatrain New York; Steel Admiral
and Steel Architect; Isthmian.
Tanker payoffs were the Alexan­
dra, Carras; New London, Mathiasen, and Evistar, Triton.

with the; big companies. Their
high-priced executives are well
taken care of and many of them
get a substantial pension when
they leave thp companies' em­
ployment. And they don't con­
tribute to tlie fund, either.
But the working guy, as us­
ual, always /faces a battle when
he tries. to improve his security.
What would the steel worker—
or any organized worker, for
that matter—do without his un­
ion.

Frisco Agent Returns From Henelulu Stay

By JEFF MORRISON
Under these conditions, the to create turmoil and- chaos in
SIU
felt that there was no Teas- their party's interest, and the
SAN FRANCISCO—Shipping
on
why
its men should stay off workers' welfare is just second­
for the past two weeks has been
the
ships,
while CIO Engineers ary.
fair, but nothing to, boast about.
affiliated
with
• the striking dock Beefs are used only as an ex­
SIGN-ONS
The majority of the bookmen
workers
remained
aboard and cuse to further the communist
Sign-ons were the City of who were ready to ship during worked. It was at this point that program, and to weaken ' the
Alma, Topa Topa, Warrior, Bes­ this period were able to get out. the Seafarers returned to the anti-communist forces.
semer Victory, Francis, Kathryn, However, it was a^ little slow ships.
Right now the commies are •
Cornelia, Elizabeth, Puerto Rico, for permitmen.
going
all-out in a drive to mess
HELPED
COMMIE
PLOT
In
the
way
of
payoffs,
we
had
Robin Kirk, Coral Sea, Steel
ujp
maritime
in all nations where
the
SS
Young
America,
Water­
It should also be remembered
Fabricator, Steel Voyager, Steel
they
ai:^
iiiot
in power or control.
man.
This
was
one
of
the
clean­
that the ILWU sent a couple of
Maker, the Steel Seafarer and
est
ships
to
hit
this
port
in
some
"
Bridges,
as
you may remem­
its
top
men
to
England,
to
urge
St. Augustine Victory. The lattime.
The
ship
was
a
pleasure
ber,
has
been
elected to head
dockworkers
there
to
tie-up
ships
ter two were port payoffs and
to
payoff.
the
communist-controlled
World
of
the
SIU
Canadian
District.
sign-ons.
The ships hitting port in-trans­
Maritime
Federation.
You
can
One
of
these
men
was
the
Due to the efforts of the Un­
it were the Monroe Victory, Ken- ILWU's secretary,, who is a com,- look for this outfit to start its'
ion organizers several jobs came yon Victory, Twin Falls Victory,
up for the membership in the Purdue Victory, Marymar and mie. He was tossed out of the operations pretty soon.
Wherever the opportunity
country about the time that the
form of three sign-ons that we
Clarmar. Almost all of them commie plot to cripple British arises, it will be out there bang­
wouldn't have othei-wise had.
called for a few replacements.
ing away at genuine trade un­
shipping collapsed.
These were the Stockton, Car­
Looking ahead for the next
In every waterfront beef that ionists who regard the commies
ras, which came out of lay-up
two weeks&lt; shipping might be the commies have a hand, the as enemies of -the seamen every­
to take a full crew; Algonquin
very slow. Ships thus far sched­ pattern is plear. They are out where.
By BEN LAWSON
Victory, St. Lawrence Naviga­
uled to call here are all intion Company; and the Dorian
BOSTON—"Poor" is the only Prince (formerly the William G. transit jobs. Of course, there's
word for shipping here in the Lee&gt;, Dorian Steamship Com­ always the hope that we may
Beilntown. Although several ships pany. All were fairly recently get a surprise payoff.
came into port during the two- put under the SIU banner.
HONOLULU TRIP
'
By JIM DRAWDY
week period just ended, only
As the membership knows,. I
The wage increases of $3.50 was recentljs-in Honolulu to pro­
SAVANNAH—For a port of of drydock and ready Ho go to
one paid off and signed on.
and $7.50 per month, which the vide representation for Seafar­ this size, shipping has been very work. Likewise Arthur Frick, an
She was the Bull Run, a tank­ Union negotiated last December
oldtimer who just corripleted a
er operated by the Petrol Tank­ and last June, respectively, are ers arriving in that strike-bound good for the past two w.eeks.
The SS Cape Nome, South At- round of the Gulf in search of
ers outfit. The others were in- new being paid by the St. Law­ port. This strike by BridgEs and
lantic,
paid off, and signed on ®
transit callers—the SS Steel Ad­ rence Navigation Company, ope­ the conduct of him and his hench­
"Lemon * Extract" Hodges is
again,
along
with the SS William
men
show
that
the
commies
are
miral and Steel Recorder, Isth­ rators of the Algonquin Victory.
ready
to ship and "BR"/Carrolcarrying out the program of H. Carruth, Trans-Fuel.
mian, and the Greeley Victory,
ton
attended
the meeting the.
Men
who
will
have
money
waterfront disruption laid down
Besides these, we had several
Bessemer' Victory and Raphael
other
night.
Juky
Cohen has been
due
for
these
increases
during
by the Soviet Union.
ships calling on in-transit status.
Semmes, Waterman.
quiet
for
a
long
time, possibly
Employment with this company
The first SIU ships to arrive
Things were fairly smooth on can get it by writing to the St. in Honolulu, were tibd up by They were the SS Steel King, due to the fact that he is naall ships, with only some dis- Lawrence Navigation Company, the strike' when Seafarers fol­ Isthmian, and two vessels con­ vigatihg with the aid of crutches.
tracted to the SIU Canadian Dis­ . The weather has been fine
puted overtime on the two Isth­ 75 West St., New York City.
lowed
Union
instructions
to
trict,
'•the SS Dingwall and SS
mian jobs. These wiU be car­
here for the past two weeks.
walk
off
the
ships.
However,
Argobec.
GOOD SIGN
ried to the ports of payoff for
Maybe it goes hand in hand with
Engineers aboard these vesselsAll
of
these
ships
came
in
final settlement.
good
shipping. But the labor sit­
With the cold weather coming all members of the CIO Marine
clean,
without
a
single
beef
to
uation
is not so bright. As in
After the hottest summer on on, tankers are beginning to Engineers Beneficial Association
other spots, unemployment is
record up here, we had to turn show increased activity. We hope -stayed on tjie ships and kept complicate things.
Among our Seafarers in Sa­ rising.
on the steam in the Hall last this continues, naturally, because up steam, despite the fact that
Most of the boys form groups
week to tak^ the chill off and it will mean more jobs for our their union was affiliated with vannah at the moment is Nollie
Towns.
He
is
shipping
out
on
and
go fishing or crabbing be­
chase the dampness. One thing j members.
the CIO longshore workers.
the
Jean
as
Carpenter.
Nollie
tween
ships. Most of our mop
you can never be sure of around i The threatened steel strike is
It was also discovered that the
seems
to
like
the
isles
of
en­
and
broom
brigade have shipped
Jiere is the weather.
bound to have wide effect on striking CIO union had men
out and we're now open for
See you all in the next issue many industries and if it comes working cargo at the docks of chantment in the Carib.
'
Barracuda Bob Pierce is out volunteers.
off the responsibility will rest the American Tin Company.
Df the LOG.

Boston Shipping
On Chiiiy Side

Savannah Not Singing The Bines

�Friday, September 23, 1949

THE SEAFARERS LOG

Page Fire

grade ore as Mesabi itself did
back in 1892. The American steel
Merchant shipping is closely industry is looking to Labrador
• ' -I
bllied td changing economics. as the great hope of its iron
Never static, it is always in a ore supply for the'future.
gtate of flux.
Before this orf can be ship­
Many a shipping service has ped to blast furnaces, a 350-mile
gone out of business, just as railroad must be built from the
many another has started, ac­ interior to the Gulf of St. Law­
cording to new trends in do­ rence. Some ore already has
mestic or foreign trade. Particu­ come out of the range for ex­
larly interesting to shipping perimental purposes, and the rail­
people, maritime unions, and road is under construction.
many seamen, therefore, are
changes of great consequence But' what mills will be able to
now underway, which may effect use this ore—whether it will go
a large part of the American to the Great Lakes or to even
merchant marine, especially the new steel mills along the At­
huge Great Lakes fleet of ore lantic Coast—depends on what
happens to the proposed St.
chips.
Lawrence Seaway connecting the
The United States is depleting Great Lakes and the ocean.
its vital iron ore here at home,
WOULD BE USELESS
and is forced to import more
and more of it from abroad. Sure At present, the Great Lakes
to feel the impact of this de­ fleet of long ore ships would be
pletion is the Great Lakes fleet, useless for transiting the St.
which depends almost entirely Lawrence, being unable to get
on the ore trade for its exist­ through the canals. They are too
long and of too deep a draft to
ence.
The George F. Rand, above, a self-unloading bulk freighter, is typical of the Lakes Ore car­
Future prosperity of Great make the locks.
riers. Unless the St. Lawrence Waterway is approved before the Mesabi range is exhausted,
Lakes shipping, with its 15,000 Construction of the huge and
these ships may soon vanish from the Lakes, because their draft is too deep for the present
jobs for merchant seamen, is costly St. Lawrence Seaway, a St. Lawrence canals.
linked to the words Mesabi, La­ joint American-Canadian venture
brador and St. Lawrence.
to be paid for mainly^ with Am­ thinks it will pass in the next
If this is done, the Great Lakes ciation of manufacturers in the
erican
dollars, has been debated session of Congress.
BEGAN IN 1892
ore fleet will gradually go out northeast states) has just an­
The modern Great Lakes fleet in Congress for many a year and If the Seaway is not built and of business, as the Mesabi range nounced that a combine of steel
had its beginning shortly after comes up for consideration at if the steel industry does, as yields its last high grade ore in interests has already blueprinted
the great Mesabi range of iron almost every session.
every indication points it will, diminishing returns year by year a plan for the erection of a
ore was opened in 1892. Year It was a pet idea of the late start using Labrador ore in the over the next few decades.
$200,000,000 steel mill some­
by year since then, as the na­ Pres. Franklin Roosevelt, but de­ mid-west mills, the Great Lakes
where in New England adjacent
SIU ORE CARRIERS
tion's economy has grown more spite his ardent backing was ore fleet would have to be re­
to tidewater.
dependent on steel, the Lakes never okayed by Congress, be­ built. Only small ships can tran­ This is not a wild drearn—the Whether this will come about
fleet has grown in numbers till, cause no one has ever been able sit the St. Lawrence system of idea of steel mills on the, coast. depends, of course, on the ra­
in 1948, some 260 vessels carried to give definite facts as to how locks. Small ships, however, are Bethlehem Steel for many years pidity with which Mesabi ore is
82,000,000 tons of ore from Lake much traffic the canal would not economical ore carriers.
has had a big plant at Baltimore, used up, and whether or not the
Superior to "down lake" points carry or whether it could ever JWhat Great Lakes shipping importing its raw materials in St. Lawrence Seaway project is
be self-supporting.
between May and December.
people hope will not* happen — SIU ships from Chile and, lately, approved in the near future.
From the fabulously rich Me­ Growing interest of the steel indeed what the great steel cit­ Venezuela. This company proves It is possible enough, however,
sabi range, where steam shovels industry in Labrador ore, how­ ies of Pittsburgh, Chicago, Cleve- that steel-making on the Atlantic to make shipping people on the
have only to scoop the high ever, has given the St. Lawrence 'land and Youngstown hope will Seaboard is practical and profit­ Great Lakes look at their huge
grade ore out of the groimd in­ Seaway an importance it hafc not fake place — is the relocat­ able.
investment in ore carriers and
to railway cars, has come the never had before, and there is ing of steel mills from the mid­ And, more interestingly, the wonder — "How long will the
vital raw materials that made a lot of expert opinion which west to the Atlantic Coast.
New England Council (an asso­ jlong ships last?"
the Steel Age in America.
More than this, the great Me­
sabi furnished most of the iron
for steel making . in World War
II—25,000,000-tons of it!
Stalinists in Britain. In a recent equities in the wage structure,
By IRWIN SUALL
Among the smaller unions, the
This terrific exploitation drain­
issue of the Communist Review, as between certain industries and communists control the Amal­
ed the Minnesota fields to the The British Trades Union Con­
Hai-ry Pollitt, national secretary others, skilled and unskilled, men gamated Union of Foundry
limit, and most experts now gress has taken up the challenge
of the British communist party, and women, etc. It is these in­ Workers (69,000) and are in­
agree that Mesabi has only a of the communist party and in­
equities which the Communists fluential in several others. In
few more years to go as a major augurated a vigorous program to said:
"There must be an irreconci­ exploit to the fullest, in an ef: some of the vital city central
producer of iron ore—maybe 15 set its house in order.
lable fight against the right- fort to disrupt the entire anti- organizations, communists have
or 20 at the most.
This campaign is the reaction wing labor leaders."
* inflationary program.
managed to gain control.
Before long, mining engineers to the actions of the communists
How
strong
are
the
party
lin­
On the General Council of the
MUD-SLINGER
say, there will be no more "free who, conforming slavishly to
ers
in
the
British
unions?
Among
TUC,
the communists are com­
shipping" ore at Mesabi (ore that the dictates of the Cominform,
The pages of the British Daily the 730 unions in Great Britain, pletely without influence.
can be easily scooped into steam denounced virtually all TUC pol­ W&lt;wker regularly froth with de­
The Trades Union Congress
shovels and sent down the Lakes icies and bent every effort to nunciations of the "American sharing a membership of 9,100,000, there are fifteen that have has by no means been tilting"
without any processing).
exploit the workers' grievances stooge" Labor government. Re­ 100,000 members or more. Of
in an attempt to disrupt the sponsible union officials like these fifteen, the communists lances at windmills. The com­
SUPPLY LIMITED
munists, although not threaten­
Despite the possibility that trade unions and further their Vincent Tewson and Arthur are most thoroughly entrenched ing capture of the British labor
Deakin are called every name in the Electrical Ti-ades Union,
these pessimistic estimates might own political line.
movement, have definitely suc­
in
the vituperative dictionary of whose membership is 162,000.
be exaggerated for various rea­ Some months ago the General
ceeded
in boring their way into
sons by the big steel interests, Council of the . Trades Union the Communist Party.
several strategic niches.
INSIDE
COMMIES
The major targets of attack for
there is no doubt that the na­ Congress carefully analyzed the
It will require a campaign of
the
communist^ in Britain have The general secretary and a
role
of
the
communists
within
tion cannot rely on this iron
no
mean dimensions to dislodge
ore supply in the future as it the unions and called the affili­ been the TUC policies on pro­ large section of the executive all of them from their positions.
has in the past, especially in ated organizations to actjpn on ductivity, ERP, wages, prices board of the 138,000-strong Civil Of one thing we may be certain,
this vital problem. Pointing out and profits, and the WFTU. They Service Clerical Association are
the event of another war.
however. The British unions
There will still be iron at Me­ the manner in which the com­ have chosen the wage issue up­ communistic. In the powerful have resolutely determined to
sabi, but it will be second grade munists within the unions re­ on which to concentrate. Pur­ Amalgamated Engineering Union, do all in their power to aSsist
ore; harder to dig out, and so ceived their orders from sources suing a poliry of strict price with a membership of 723,000, in the national effort toward ec­
much, more expensive to refine alien to the British workers, the controls and rationing of scarce the non-Communist general sec­ onomic recovery and advance­
commodities, the Labor govern­ retary is faced with a touch-andbefore it can be put into the Council stated:
ment. Under a Labor govern­
blast furnaces, that it will cer­ "The trade union movement ment has called upon the unions go' situation on the executive ment they feel that it is the
tainly boost the price of steel has never precluded the minor­ to use care and discretion in board.
workingman who,has the great­
Other unions - with a member­ est stake in the nation's "balance
ity within the movement from their wage demands so as not
considerably.
The alternative is to find high seeking to change policy, but to upset a policy of resistance to ship of over 100,000 in which the of payments" drive.
"comrades" seem to have in­
grade iron ore somewhere else, it is contrary to the whole con­ inflation.
If, as there is every reason to
fluence
but no control are the
Viewing^the
fate
of
workers
and this the big steel companies ception of our movement, for­
believe,
the Briti.sh communists
are trying desperately to do — eign to its traditions, fatal to in inflation-ridden countries on Tailors and Garment Workers
persist
in
their effort to upset
spending millions of dollars in its prestige, if it permits its the Continent, the Trades Union Union (133,000), the National
this
program,
the trade union
the process. It's not a cheap democratically determined policy Congress realized that the gov­ Union of Mine Workers (572,movement
and
the communist
to be disrupted at the behest of ernment's economic program 000), the National Union of Railquest.
party
are
in
for
many head-on
served the best interests of the waymen (447,000), the Distribu­
Costly explorations have vm- an outside body."
collisions.
»
tive
Workers
(210,000)
and
the
covered vast deposits of iron ore That this outside body is in­ working people and responded
The
TUC
has
plainly
stated:
Teachers
Union,
which
is
not
in
a
responsible
manner.
How­
in Labrador. This range is be­ tent on disruption can be seen
affiliated
with
the
TUC.
ever,
there
remain
certain
in­
(Continued on Pige 11)
lieved to'contain as much high- from every utterance of the
I

By JOHN BUNKER

British Labor Movement Takes Off Its Gioves

�THE SEAFARERS

Page Six

SIU Home For Aged, Infirin
Proposed At Ship Meeting
A

recommendation

that

the

SIU

consider

LOG

DISPENSING SEAFARERS' SERVICE

the

Friday, Sepiember 23, 1949

SS Puerto Rico's
Shipboard Paper
Is Growing Up

The SS Puerto Rico Advocate,
feasibility of establishing a home "for the care of aged
shipboard publication of the SIU,
and infirm Seafarers" was laid before a recent meeting
crewmen aboard the Bull Lines
passenger ship, stepped out in
aboard' the SS Seatrain New Jersey by Brother John
full dress during the second
Jellette, Steward. The crew ap-t
case, alterations to suit the needs
round trip to San Juan and Ciuproved the recommendation after
of the project would be made by
dad Trujillo.
it had been presented in the
the Union, the Seatrain New
form of a motion.
Expanded from its original two
Jersey crewmember proposed.
In proposing the "refuge" for
pages,
the mimeographed news
Jellette concluded his motion
Union members, Jellette implied
sheet
cowered
the events from
with his personal choices for a
that obstacles might be encount­
stem
to
stern
in
five pages of
name for the home^ They are
ered that would render such a
all
around
interest.
"Safe Harbor," and "Seafarers
venture inadvisable.
The front page featured a di­
Anchorage." However, he sug­
For this reason he suggested gested that "the membership
gest of maritime news taken
that a committee of Union of­ could be called upon to submit
from the air waves by the ship's
ficials and rank and file mem­ a Suitable name for the refuge,"
radio man, a member of the
bers be elected to explore the if the project proved practicable.
AFL Radio Officer's Union, and
possibilities for a SlU-operated
a report by the Ship's Delegate,
convalescent and rest center.
Paul Sanford. The Delegate's re­
The committee would be elected,
In the SS Puerto Rico's Coral Cafe, Bartender Joe port reveals that the ship's fund
after the proposition had been
DeGeorge sets up drinks which Luigi ^ovino will take to now totals $202.
placed before regular shoreside
passengers at a nearby table. At left. Bartender Eddie Mooney
meetings.
MEMBERS' VIEWS
performs a similar task. One of the Bull Lines' ship's Bellboys,
Richard Miller, stands by at right..
COMMITTEE TO DECIDE
The conventional newspaper
This committee, Jellette's mo­
features also appear in the Ad­
tion pointed out, would be enSeafarers aboard the Allegheny
vocate. Crewmembers' opinions
powered "to discard or reccom- Victory make the most of ship­
on all subjects are aired in the
mend the proposal" on the basis board meetings to get across the
"Letters to the Editor" section
of its survey. In the event the correct score on Union rules and
and there is a shipboard gossip
committee deemed it advisable regulations.
By "SALTY DICK'
column penned by a crewman
to set up the home, it would
At a recent meeting on the
,
. .
who signs himself "Stringbean."
then "discuss the ways and Isthmian vessel, a full round of
Aspiring verse writers pour
means of financing the project discussion was devoted to the
m the Gulf on the Cava- down but there are others who
their efforts into the "Poets'
without disturbing the various, subject of permitmen, their duthas his eyes on the are taking these jobs.^Some of
Corner." In the current issue
very essential funds we now ies and obligations.' The permit- ^"erto Ricd...Bill Gardner, af- them are from families who-don't
crewmember Jerry DeMeo is the
maintain," Jellette explained. men present at the meeting were if spending six months in a need, dough. They're just after
contributor, with a bit of verse
Besides giving the committee asked to voice their opinions and ^ew Orleans hospit^, went to adventure.
entitled
"I Wish I Were An ~
Do you fellows know the
the task of determining the best to submit any and all questions f.
North CaroArtist."
method of raising fimds for the they had regarding the rules
recuperate. He did and female mosquitos are the ones
The Advocate has a section
proposed rest home, the Jellette and regulations laid down for
J" New York, ready that bite? The male never
devoted
to Union education and
to ship out.
motion said that it would also their conduct.
bothers anyone, it's just the
a
suggestion
box devoted to ways
fxmction on a permanent basis The questions were answered
Not mentioning any names, female who causes all the
in
which
shipboard
functioning
as a committee on admissions. by the meeting chairman, F. but a certain seaman, ready to cussin' . . . One of the boys
can
be
made
smoother.
Beers, and the Ship's Delegate, ship out as a waiter, is a spent a couple of weeks at
ELIGIBILITY
George Boney, Utility, is Edi-?
Eligibility for admissions Paul Whitlow. Discussion was former fire engine salesman. the seashore recently and while
there
he
sent
his
mother
^
box
His
initials
are
J.
U....
In
the
tor
of the she6t. He is assisted
then
turned
to
charges.
Speak­
would be based on "standards
of qualifications" drawn up by ers stressed the seriousness of New Orleans Marine Hospital of taffy. He's supposed to have by Managing Editor George
the committee, according to Jel­ this method of filing complaints there's a woman doctor to take a reputation for being a tough Eckholm, a staff of reporters and
an editorial board.
against Union offenders and held care of male patients. I've seen guy. without any emotions.
lette.
In so far as a site for the that no one should take them quite a few old salts detour
when they hit that town and
home is concerned. Brother Jel­ lightly.
lette offered two alternatives; After the proper procedure for head for Mobila . or elsewhere
either a tract of land could be making charges was outlined, &lt;... Sir Charles plans to go to
purchased for the Union to build a question and answer period school for a refresher.
the structure upon, or a package was held, with the chairman Today I talked to a 16-yearpurchase of land and building and delegate leading the dis­ old kid, who was offered a job
The decisive majority rolled up in Tavor of the
could be made. In' the latter cussions.
as a messman on a foreign ship
General Fund assessment by Seafarers in the recent refer­
THAT PROBLEM COMES UP AGAIN
endum is almost what the men aboard the SS Coe Victory
called for. They simply wanted*"~r
Tj
TT
.. when all other maritime unions
to see a 100 percent favorable are losing jobs wholesale."
vote.
ONLY WAY
Unable to vote because the The Coe crewmen added that'
ship's destination cannot be pre-1 "we realize that the only posdetermined, the Coe crewmen sible way we can 'maintain our
went on record unanimously en-1 present enviable strength is'
dorsing the resolution appearing through assessing ourselves a
on the referendum.
mere fraction of the great finan­
cial
gains made in the past three
JOB FOR EVERY BOOK
years."
.
Basing their approval of the "Therefore, be it resolved,"
assessment on the organizing ac- the resolution concluded, »"that
complishments of the SIU, the we go on record to endorse this
Coe crew declared in a resolu- assessment unanimously."
tion that "our Union is the only
one in the maritime industry
that can offer its membership a
;ob for every -bookmember."
Check the slop chest be­
The resolution pointed out that fore your boat sails. Make
by recently negotiating a con­ sure that the slop chest con­
tract with the Victory Carriers tains an adequate supply oi
Crewmembers of the SS Del Valle, Mississippi, toss over a few ideas during coffee time Corporation, operators of the all the things you are liable
on what to do and where to go when they hit a South American port. One is already having Coe Victory and 10 other ships, to need. If it doesn't, call the
Iiis sho«e brightened up by an accommodating shipmate. In this photo, by Earl Laws, are the SIU "brought over 350 jobs Union Hall immediately.
to our membership at a time v
Brothers Nettling. Hoover, Val, Tucker, Church and Neal.

Union Savvy
Marks Session
On Allegheny Vic

'The Voice Of The Sea'

Huge Vote For Assessment
Just What Coe Men Wanted

Cheek It—But Good

�THE SEAFARERS

Friday. September 23, 1949

Page Seven

LOG

Digested Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings
'MARYMAR. Ju^e 12 — Guy
Waller, Chairman; Ted Weems,
Secretary Only beef to report
was one in Engine Department
involving disputed overtime for
painting and which will TJe taken
up at payoff. Motion carried to
keep record of work done by
officers that should be unlicens­
ed men's duties. Watch going off
should clean cups and make
them ready for men coming on.
DOROTHY? June% —" William
Rhone, Chairman: Jones, Secre­
tary. No beefs in any of the de-,
partments. Deck Delegate posted a complete set. Other motions
Union literature on bulletin carried: That meeting be held
board and suggested that every­ before payoff; that awning be
one read it. Suggested by Cun­ erected aft; that Captain give
ningham that new lockers be ob­ each crewman a complete recoid
tained in Savannah. Steward of payroll data at the payoff.
said that new mattresses would Suggested that Carpenter check
be taken aboard in Savannah. all doors before putting in for
One minute of silence in mem­ repairs. Also suggested that the
ship be fumigated, and that an­
ory of departed Brothers.
other port hole be put in the
hospital bulkhead.

in his department was subject
of overtime dispute. Other de­
partments were reported run­
ning smoothly. Motion carried
that company put ice-making
machine- aboard before vessel
sails on next voyage. In reply
to beef made by. Brother Leon­
ard Bugojowski at previous 'meet­
ing that there wasn't enough
Union literature aboard at be­
ginning of trip, Brother Mazur
stated that he found . it much
more effective to put out this
material on the homeward pai't
of the trip. In this way, he said,
the Union literature better serves
the purpose for which it was
intended. Brother John Wauchek
added that he put out some
Union material when the ship
was in Singapore.

reixirrt o£ a. number of LOGS^ ±o us
ind-ioates 'that some- &amp;jre ^in£&gt; cuide of
-the inau-lc. When you change gour
address be sure to notiftfLis
The Loo,
® 51 Beaver street,

t. % X

4. 4,
CAPE MOHICAN, June 3—A.
Anderson, Chairman; S. Sirois,
Secretary. Two hours of dis­
puted overtime in deck depart­
ment reported by Delegate W.
Scott; five hours in Black Gang
by Delegate A. Anderson. Stew­
ards Delegate G. Lukacs report­
ed no beefs, in his department.
Ship's Delegate L. Kiploks ad­
vised that three copies of repair
list be made out and that some­
one remaining on ship see that
oncoming crew gets one copy.
Suggested that bunk in 12 to 4
Oiler's quarters be repaired, and
that fan in Cook's quarters be
fixed. Twenty-six members pres­
ent at meeting.
t, i t.
SOUTHLAND, June 26 — Al­
exander Jones, Chairinan; J. W.
Bamett, Secretary. All depart­
ment delegates reported every­
thing running smoothly. Alex­
ander Jones elected Ship's Dele­
gate. He reported on new wash­
ing machine. Motion carried to
sell old one at cost to crewmember, and proceeds to be ap­
plied to new one. Motion carried
that copies of bound LOG's be
purchased out of ship's fund.
Ship's Delegate gave an item­
ized report on the receipts and
expenditures of the ship's fund
and the balance now on hand.

4.
4,
ALGONQUIN VICTORY, (No
date)—Thomas Maga, Chairman;
Fred G. Oestman, Secretary. Ex­
cept for a few hours disputed
overtime in Deck Department,
no beefs were reported. Motion
to send two delegates to New
York Hall for information on re­
troactive wage increases. Patrol­
man to inform Chief Mate that
sailing time should be posted
when shifting ship. Steward De­
partment advised to dump gar­
bage astern. One minute of si­
lence in memory of departed
Brothers.
4. t
ROBIN TRENT. July 31—John
L. Crowley, Chairman; Thomas
M. Reilly, Secretary. All three
delegates reported some disputed
overtime. Motion carried to have
Carpenter use his own tools and
that he be compensated for same,
as the company does not supply

DOROTHY', July 7—BUI Scoil,
Chairman; Star Wells. Secretary.
Ship's Delegate reported that
Captain maintains ship did not
carry any penalty cargo. Dis­
pute is to be placed before Union
Patrolman in Savannah. E. A.
Haltaway elected Ship's Dele­
gate. Brother McCranie gave a
short talk on Unionism and sug­
gested that anyone wishing to
know more about their organi­
zation see his department dele­
gate for SIU literature. Former
Ship's Delegate George Finkler
was given a vote of thanks by
the entire crew for his efforts.

&amp; &amp; it
MALDEN VICTORY, July 31—
A. Lucas, Chairman;
Andy
Stephens, Secretary. Crew sent
letters to Senate and House
Labor Committees urging repeal
of the Taft-Hartley law. Motion
carried ' unanimously approving
the proposed ten-dollar General
Fund assessment. Under Educa­
tion, points ' on the court ruling
on the legality of the Hiring
Hall were discussed. Also dis­
cussed was -the necessity of being
prepared for the defense of our
rights in the future. It was sug­
gested that men cooperate with
messmen by showing up for
meals at the start of the meal
hour. Motion carried urging con­
tinuation of • the air-mailed Sea­
farers Bulletin, saying if it was
impossible to air-mail a copy
of the LOG, the Bulletin would
fill the need.
4. 4. 4&lt;
PETROLITE, July 10—Duke
Livingston, Chairman; Frederick
Willis, Secretary. Motion carried
that minutes of previous meet­
ing be posted in bulletin board.
Ship's Delegate Cy Magnan re­
ported that there would be a
draw in the next port. If ship
is y^irected back to Syria crew
will request Captain to send wire,
asking that mail be forwarded
from Port Said.' Education pro­
gram for permit men to help
them leam about their Union
will be held each Sunday morn­
ing at sea.
-Jt *• 4,
STEEL WORKER, July 24 —
Charlie Mazur, Chairman; George
Brown, Secretary. Deck "Dele­
gate. announced that 134 hours

ATect/ York A-, X.'V:

4.
A
Remember 'to^iveas your old and. necu address 1
ROBIN LOCKSLEY, July 24—
Fred Roman, Chairman; Charles
Achoy, Secretary. Ship's Dele­
gate reported that he had spoken
to Captain about installing shelf
By HANK
in PO mess for books and asked
crewmembeis to cooperate by
Electrician Frank Bose is happily homesteading aboard the
keeping the shelf and books in
"pride of island run" SS Puerto Rico. By the way, Frank happens
order. No beefs reported in any
to have a mustache, too. 'Well, anyway, to him and the wife —
of the departments. Tony Esposcongratulations on the birth of their son, Frank Edward, weighing
ito elected manager of crew ball
team by acclamation. Engine se.ven pounds... Charles Little, who just sailed into town from
Delegate asked men working his trip on the tanker SS New London, says in view of the fact
days to avoid making unneces-j that we are always mentioning oldtimers, he is proud of being
sary noi,?e as it disturbs men off a" oldtimer too. Brothers, meet curly-haired Charles Little, class
watch who are sleeping.
1938! ... John Crowley shipped out... Robert Wallace grabbed
a tanker, if we are not mistaken... Ever hear the stories spliced
^ 4; 4'
by Brother Tex Jernigan who is a member of the "grease monkey"
ALEXANDRA, July 9—Frank
department
aboard the SS Puerto Rico? We heard one good one
Dowd, Chairman; Mel Brown,
about
why
Tex had to go to sea after what happened to the
Secretary. Crew's thanks given
shi'^fering
donkey
on a farm in Texas. Ask Tex for a story...
to Ship's Delegate, for job well
Henry
Bonk
picked
up one of those long unclaimed letters ad­
done; to Brothers Dowd and
dressed
to
him
and
found
— of all things — three cheerful dollars.
Vam for supplying all hands

CVT and RUN

with reading material; to Broth­
er Devenie, for making ice for
men during hot weather, and to
Cooks for fine peiformance dur­
ing last few weeks. Discussion
by Brother Miller on draws in
Naples. He added that provision
had been made whereby crew
might' draw additional money if
desired. Brother Putzgruber sends
thanks to entire crew who made
it possible for him to fly home
in time to attend burial of his
father.

4. 4. 4.
LAKE GEORGE. July 31—W.
Earth, Chairman; J. Hill. Secre­
tary. Deck Department Delegate
reported his men had all over­
time work they could handle
and would need help from the
other departments for- painting
inside. Steward G. Dunn said
his department was ready and
willing to paint mess halls, gal­
ley passageways and quarters to
help maintain SIU living con­
ditions. W. Beckwith asked to be
relieved of his duties as Ship's
Delegate, saying he was tired
of listening to a lot nf petty
beefs that could be settled by
department delegates. Steward
took floor and pointed out what
a fine job Beckwilh had done
and suggested he be given a
vote of confidence and asked
to continue. This was put into
a motion by J. Hill, seconded by
J. Coyle and carried, unanimous­
ly. The time of our last meeting
before getting back to the states
after being out some eight
months, was set for Aug. 21.

4*
4*
4,
Speedy recovery to that oldtimer, John Hanson, who re­
cently said he will be dry docked in the Queen Mary Veterans
Hospital in Montreal, Canada, for some time. Some of his
shipmates will no doubt drop him a cheerful letter, indeed...
Willie West and Claude Morgan ar,e both in town again... A
few other familiar faces in town are—I. Levy. Les Ames. Bill
Gale and John Santos... Red Braunstein paid a fast visit to
the hall. He's aboard the Santa Clara Victory... His ex-ship­
mate Leon "Chink" White is homesteading as a private in the
Army over in Japan and writes his regards to ail shipmates
... From San Francisco. Frank Mitchell sends his regards to
•all and sun-tanned... To Peter Versage down in Florida—
You're aboard the LOG mailing list... That oldtimer, Tommie
Lehay. might still be down in Mobile ... Brother Nalesnik—
you're on the LOG mailing list. By the way. looks like quite
a lot of your shipmates live in Clifton. New Jersey, too.
44.
4.
Frank Stokes, the steward, is anchored in this town ... Carl
Lawson, the Bosun, is happy as a king. He finally got his citizen­
ship papers... The SEAFARERS LOG will be sailing free of cost
to the homes of the following brothers — A. Driessens of New
Jersey, Elmer Simonetti of California, Joseph Mora of New York,
Leonard Layton of Maryland, Alphonse Pavilonis of Ohio... To
Brother Carl Richard out in Ohio — You're on the good old LOG
mailing list... Brother Cy Magnan is homesteading aboard the
Seatrain New Jersey with Steward John Jellette (who still has
that familiar mustache, handle-bar style practically) and Brother
Bill Gray. Cy" says Jimmy Naylor is down around New Orleans
way... Bob Scott, who is aboard the Algonquin Victory, asked if
Charles Dasha, his shippiate, was in port—since he hasn't seen
him in many months and always misses him in port by a few
days... We wish Brother Rudolph Baasner, hospitalized here in
New York, speedy recovery... A card from Brother Howard Moore
from Virginia says that he's taking an engineering course at the
University of Virginia. Good luck, Howard.
44.
4
We're prelty sure Brother Fred Paul is still wearing a
mustache. Anywqy, he's anch.ored in this town... Brothers,
there is an excellent booklet which all hands in the Union
should read—ashore and asea. It's a green-coyered booklet
with the title "Shipping Guide for Seafarers." What's in it?
Well, the exact things which help to know what to do. It has
the registration rules the shipping rules and the transportation
rule. You can't get fouled up in any way if you read these
rules, read them again and understand exactly what should be
done...Hold those shipboard meeting. Brothers. Keep those
ships clean and operating in true SIU style.

.-.J
• •.• • .n

�I ny-vrirVf

Page Eight

THE SEAFAREtLS LOO

Frl^ny, September 23, 1949.

MEMBERSHIP SPEAKS
Heads-Up Direction Can Check Toll
Of Shipboard Mishaps, Flynn Says

Log-A-Rhythms:

One Oream Fulfilled
By Don D. Brown

doing, or because we feel they men used for this job in a mone­
To the Editor:
It was rather sad to read in might resent our advice or help tary light, when to all patent Now I Ihink every child you have ever known.
and rather than. incur the dis­ purposes the Mate was trying
the August 19 LOG about the like of the seamen we hold our to be economical in saving wear
Had dreams and ambitions that were his alone,
deaths of those two Seafarers tongue.
and tear on the precious pilot I was no different from the rest of the boys.
Only mine were realistic while theirs were of toys.
I recently paid-off the Greeley ladder.
from an accident while working.
Hours
I spent in dreams as a boy.
Victory
on
completion
of
the
The
offshoot
of
all
this
bung­
I can't help but think that
To me were not wasted but filled with joy.
ling
was
that
the
men
searched
trip
from
and
back
to
New
York.
though these accidents that oc­
Some of the conditions under the ship and a ladder was found,
cur aboard ship are unforesee­ which the men had to work which though far too short to I wanted to mingle with people from afar.
And see for myself just the way things are.
able, a little vigilance on the were brutal until they became reach to the water, was tied on
I
was
curious, but doubtful of my geography teacher
part of the seamen and those so angered they told the Bosun to part of a ladder we already
And
wondered about places 1 heard from the preacher,
who direct his worH, the Mate forthright that they weren't go­ had.
1
wanted
to know the world as a whole,
ing to work under a hazardous
and Bosun, can prevent a poten­
SKIPPER
VAGUE
1
know
now it's impossible to reach that goal.
condition when there was posAnd
as
1
look
back on my travels to date,
tial accident.
While b^ing paid-off I asked
tive, "right" way of doing a job.
I
can
see
it
was 1 who was steering my fate.
It takes a number of years,
the Captain why we couldn't
HYGIENIC MATE
use the pilot ladder. He pro­ I think 1 have come as close to my dreams.
speaking of sailors, working on
fessed
to believe that there was
The
situation
was
this:
men
As ever it's possible to reach, it seems,
all kinds of ships before a man
another one somewhere on board, I have checked and checked well on my geography teacher.
were
sent
down
on
a
stage
to
really masters his trade. Some
paint the bow. When it came but anyhow that the pilot lad­
I found she was right, as well as the preacher.
individuals learn the rudiments time for them to come up, they der we had couldn't be used as
I found the same in China as I did in France,
and then the high points of sea- were forced to do so by holding paint would apt to get on it.
People live and die and love and dance.
This is a somewhat lengthy Customs do differ but life goes right on.
menship more quickly than on to the eye of a hawser and
others by an intelligent appli­ lifted with the power of the account of a small incident, but
Just people seeking happiness, whether m Wales or Saigon.
cation to their jobs, but seamen- windlass, even though there was it goes to prove the amount of
ship, more so than most other a pilot's ladder that could have confusion that can be treated by So now that 1 know what goes ox* in the world.
That I've seen foreign lands with flags unfurled.
trades is gotten by experience. been lowered to them. The rea­ those in authority, either be­
Therefore, it takes years before son the men couldn't use the cause of carelessness, or indif­ One day 1*11 stay home and a good citizen I'll be.
Making room for another, who dreams of the sea.
one accustoms himself to the ladder was because the Mate ference, stupidity or just lack bf
know-how in the work.
rig of a ship, knots, splices, didn't want it to get dirty.
A" man's life is a very pre­
The next day I went down
ground tackle, theoretical sea­
manship, etc., and how to apply with another fellow to paint the cious thing and in the maritime
the tools of one's trade to any bow on the stage. When coffee industry, especially where the
novel situation that crops up time came, we assumed that accident rate is very high, exr
while working aboard ship. the Mate would give us the lad­ treme care should be taken- in
about the way the union affairs
Nothing, however, can ever re­ der since the haphazard manner the manner of one's work. Cau­ To the. Editor:
were conducted.
of working would be obvious tion and proper management of
place clear, quick thinking.
Recently I decided to take
even to him. But, instead, a the work by Mates and Bosuns
It seems that the more I ob­
ACCIDENTS
bosun's chair was lowered. Un­ as well as the seamen doing the vacation from the sea and di­ served the more I realized how
It sometimes happens that a beknown to the Mate, this make­ ; ob, can prevent much of the rected my course to a pine- fortunate I am to belong to the
seaman accustomed to a par­ shift rig was costing money, if accidents aboard ship.
crested spot up in the high SIU.
John J. Flynn Sierras of California.
ticular way of working will act one reckoned the services of the
ENDED BLACK BALL
automatically and carelessly
The stake I had salted away
w;hile on a job and it can hap­
Perhaps one of the greatestfor this pleasiiralale occasion
pen that the tools and rig he
advantages
of our Union is that
came in very handy and every­
uses possess a flaw. Or he may
it has brought about the abolish­
overlook a detail or two in the To the Editor:
the so-called key jobs wjll be thing went well for awhile, until ment of the black ball system
way he works and then the inmore equally divided among the finally the inevitable happened in the maritime industry —
I agree with everything Bro­ men who hold these ratings.
e^ritable accident follows.
and I was hemmed in on all among organized companies.
ther
G. W. Champlin said in his
It is not uncommon to see ac­
The
time
has
come
when
the
sides
by the high cost of living. In some industries, if a man
cidents occur because of a faulty article about homesteading, and work should be divided as equal­
fouled up once with a company,
I
would
like
to
add
a
few
stopper knot on some line or rig;
ly as possible among the mem­ One series of events led fo he is washed up for good with
thoughts
of
my
own
to
what
he
not enough turns of the top­
bers. We all pay the same and another, until I found myself that company and frequently
ping lift wire on the niggerhead; said.
we should all hqve the same working for a logging outfit. I with other outfits in the industry.
attended all the meetings of the
an insecure or wobbly gangway; The majority of homesteading chances to. get it.
local union there as I was anx­ I believe that if our SIU mem­
men working, one under the is done on ships with steady
J. S. Arzamendi ious to learn as much as possible bers would do some investigat­
other while aloft with a chip­ runs by men in key ratings such
ing and make some comparisons
ping hammer, paint or what as Bosuns, Carpenters, Electri­
with other unions, they would
have you. It is not unusual to cians, Stewards, Chief Cooks and
OLD
WORLD
ATMOSPHERE
find,
as I have, that when it
drop a tool while trying to man­ Waiters. Also by aliens working
comes
to doing things for the
age to do one's work with poor to get enough time for citizen­
membership
the Seafarers In­
footholds, a swinging bosuns ship papers (and you can't blame
ternational
Union
leads the
chair, etc. The instances are in- them for that).
parade.
The key rating homesteaders
niunerable of where experienc­
Fred L. Miller
ed seamen and green hands are so afraid they might not get
alike; commit boners inadvert­ another job they've been riding
MARVIN OFFICERS
ently of which they more often these ships for over two years
than not are the chief victims. without getting off. Others have
PRAISED BY CREW
It happens sometimes that we been taking a trip off with the
To the Editor:
are helpless to aid or give ad­ imderstahding with the head of
vice to those who are under the department to get back on
We, as a sober, even-minded
some hazard because we as­ board at the end of the trip.
body of men, earnestly recom-":
I
would
like
to
point
out
that
sume they know what they are
end Captain W. C. Schafran,
the majority of these fellows
Chief Mate W. J. Nolan and
who
ride
the
ships
in
perpetuity
Brother Settles Down
Chief Engineer A. Anderson for
manage to do it. not on accoimt
In Mid-West - For Awhile of their ability and knowledge
a write-up in our Union paper.
on the job they are holding, but
We sincerely think they rep­
To the Ediiof:
because of the apple polishing
resent a very fine type of Union
men themselves. They have per­
Just a few lines to let the for the heads of the departments.
The only way to stop this is
sonally gone to "a lot of trouble
gan^ know I am out here in
in the interest.s and welfare of
the Middle West for awhile, I'd to. niake a rule that when a
the crew so as to make the long
like my copy of the LOG sent man has a vacation coming to
Ames Victory Seafarers quaff a few cool ones and exchange and arduous- Persian Gulf voy-'
to me out here. I'll probably be him, he should get off the ship
yarns
while being serenaded by local muricians in USS Club, age as pleasant as they possibly
and
he
should
not
be
allowed
to
headed back to New York before
Bremerhaven,
Germei-iy. Seated, left to right: Edwiurd Morris, could.
ship
back
on
the
same
vessel
lopg. Meanwhile*my best to all
DM:
Ike
Copper,
NCB; P. Shaugher, Pantryman; Charles
with
the
same
rating
until
at
The crew
my friends.
Williams,
OS,
and
Deck
Delegate
Bill
Welch,
AB,
least
a
year
later.
In
this
way.
SS
Wintrop Marvin
Frank McLaughlin

Whuck At Lumber Joh Makes
Seafarer Pine For The SIU

Urge Compulsory Vacations

�Friday, September 23. 1349&lt;

Mombasa Rivals
!Aim To Extend
SIU Softballers

THESEAFARERS

LOG

OSHKOSH
BEST,
'
•
• • • CREW IS ONE OF
.n
. 7. B*GOSH
•

Page Niae

Luck RidesThe New London,
But Bad Vies With The Good

stowaways have caused the Skip-,
To the Editor:
To the Editor:
As another trip aboard the per and Mates a good deal of
I am writing this letter to you
tanker New London nears an worry and trouble.
Next, we ran aground at the
on behalf of the Mombasa Base­
end and we think about the
ball Club in the hope that you
things we did, the ports we mouth of the San Juan River,
Will publish it in_ the SEAFAR­
made and the good times we right in the center of the chan-ERS LOG so that" any American
had, one thing seems to stand nel. It seems that mud and silt
ship and crew putting into'" Mom­
out above all others—and that washed down by rains have
is. that all things, good, or bad, built up a sand bar during the
basa will know that we here
seem to run "in a series of three. rainy season. We were stuck
can give them a game of base­
ball.
Any doubts' in my mind about there for about 36 hours, finallythe truth of this were certainly getting off with the aid of a
It may be of interest to you
dispelled during the two and one mosquito boat (small tanker).
to know that Mombasa was in­
The third misfortune and the
half months voyage of this scow.
troduced to baseball when two
The chap who first
made that saddest, most heartfelt of all was
American warships, the USS
statement must have been a sea­ the deatl/ of "Shorty" Tetterton,
Huntingdon and the destroyer
an Qiler who was well liked byman.
Douglas H. Fox, visited us on a
To begin with, we hit three all. He died on Sunday, Septem­
goodwill tour. It was suggested
good ports and three bad ones. ber 4. We rushed back to Trini­
that a local ball team be or­
Taking the good ones in order, dad at full speed in an attempt
ganized and this was done with
first
there was Copenhagen, to save his life but it was too
the then American vice consul,
Denmark, where we found late. His body was placed
Edward Mujcahy, as president.
Antonio A. Blais says he hopes the next ship he's on boasts
plenty of old world courtesy, ashore in Trinidad and the Am­
Baseball, then, was regarded
a crew as good as the one he sailed with on the Oshkosh
marvelous -scenery, and last, but erican consul will attend to fun­
here as a glorified version of
Victory. These men helped to make voyage a happy one.
eral details.
not least, good beer.
"rounders." This View was
Standing, left to right: Kipp, OS; Blais, DM; .Chico. BR;
changed very rapjidly and we
ACCIDENTS, TOO
DIFFERENT VIEW
O'Hough, AB. and Buddy Benson. Bosun. Kneeling is Buss,
now know the difference.
The First Assistant had a freak
The young buckos aboard
Utility.
MAIN OPPONENTS
would certainly say that beau­ accident, when a 75-foot length
Our main opponents at the
tiful and congenial lassies were of acetelyne hose blew up on
moment are the crews of the
what they liked best, but old­ him, something that doesn't hap­
vessels of the Seas Shipping
sters like the Chief Cook and pen but once in a thousand. The
Company. We have had several
Second Pumpman got a mean
myself wouldn't know.
hotly-contested games with crews
Le Havre, France, was the gash in his hand but it is okay
of these' ships, especially those
next good port. Freed from mili­ now. As for yours truly, I hit
aboard the Robin Kettering, To the Editor:
their "little , red wagon."
tary control and with the na­ myself in the head with a ball
Robin Goodfellow and Robin
These kind of people mean tives better clothed and fed, the peen hammer. The hammer
In so far as the question of
Hood.
compulsory vacations is concern- well, they are all "good fel- franc stabilized, this is the sail­ wasn't damaged too badly and
The men of the last named ed, the big issue as I see it is lows," just looking out for them- ors' dream port. The femmes are it didn't affect me too much. In
ship have just sailed from Mom­ mainly one of showing a little' selves as best they can with the —well, 'nuf said, you know wh^ fact, I'm thinking of making
basa, after having again beaten consideration for our SIU brother 'tools they have.
another trip. So, for now, good
I mean.
us—but at least we gave them members in these times of job
UNION IMPORTANT
The third port is good old sailing.
a tough tjme. The team of the shortage.
Freddy Bruggner
The sooner we all realize that New York, which is home to
Robin Hood arranged a small
(with George Marcin)
bur
Union
and
the
membership
most
of
us.
Andj
of
course,
ar­
I personally am entitled to a
party at the Regal Restaurant vacation when we return to the is more important than one ship rival here means payday and
(Ed. Note: The New London
the night before they sailed and states and although this is a and one company—or, for that that alone makes it a good port made it without further
everyone enjoyed himself.
trouble. She paid off in New
good ship, with a fine Stewards matter, than all ships and all in any language.
At some of our future games, Department, and on which I companies — the better will be
The three stinkeroo ports were York on Sept. 11.)
we hope to be able to get some could homestead indefinitely, I our job security for all. And Amuay Bay, Venezuela, Caripita,
photographs, and these we would am certainly going to give the there will be better feelings and Venezuela, and Aruba, N. W. I.
send to you for publication if job to another Electrician when relations among ourselves.
Put them together and you have
you would like to have them. we pay off.
The examples that I slated lousy beer, plenty of heat and
INFO GIVEN
above exist to a greater or less­ high prices, plus a miniature
TURN IT OVER
Here are. two addresses that
er degree oh every one of the dictatorship and gestapo thrown
anyone can write to for informa­
I would like to see the new ships on a regular run that I in for good measure.
tion. We assure you that any Electrician stay a year if he have been on, as far as home­
Continuing with misfortunes in
letters received will be replied likes and then turn the job over steaders are concerned, with, of series of three, two stowaways
to: Colin Beck, TO Box 446, to another Brother.
course^ a few exceptions.
were discovered two days out of
Mombasa, B. E. A.; David PasI notice that members who are
I brought up this issue of Le Havre, which certainly was
more, PO Box 141, Mombasa, on a ship too long tend to be­ compulsory vacations at a re­ 'no joy to the Skipper. These
Editor:
B. E. A.
come lax or indifferent to Un­ cent shipboard meeting and I two boys spent the rest of the
In the middle 40s I was ship­
This letter seems to have be­ ion affairs — principally because urged the other members of the voyage trying, to escape and
mates
with a character who re­
come a screed and so I will they seem to get out of touch crew to send their opinions in nearly succeeded in CarapifSL But
minded
me of Lon Chaney, but
finish it off with the hope that with things.
to the LOG, as a sort of forum. due to the alertness of the gang­ he soon wound up with the
we have lots mor^ games and
Some men develop marked
way watch, the escape was pre­ name of "Ragbag Jim." He was
Dutchy Moore
that even if we don't win, at company leanings and sympa­
vented and since then the two as hard to find as a needle in a
, SS Robin Hood
least that we will give our op­ thies. Some develop their own
haystack. Later, we found out
ponents a good game.
circle of friends, known vulgar­
WHAT'S WRONG WITH THIS PHOTO?
that the best place to locate him
For, and on behalf of, the ly as cliques, and live in a little
would
be at the ragbags. There
Mombasa Baseball Club.
world all their own. Arid some
we.
would
find him sitting down,
David H, Pasmore
just remain out of contact with
selecting
clothes
for his ward­
(Ed. Note: We're looking all Union activities and never
robe.
forward tt&gt; those' photographs.) bother as long as they can rjde
Ragbag Jim would strut up
and down the deck every day
dressed up in golf suits, polo
suits, baseball suits, tuxedos, kimonas,^ajamas, and even night­
gowns. Ragbag Jim used to tell
us that he was saving his money
To the Editor:
sight, Mac can be spotted stand­
to set up a shack on the barkk
ing at the dock, briefcase and
A few lines from the flagship
of the Mississippi River.
'
all.
of the Dolphin Steamship Com­
When we hit Frisco on a Fri­
This dull trip has been made
pany, the SS Demostar.^yAt the more enjoyable by the fine work
day noon,! Ragbag went down
present time we are still on the of the Stewards- Department,
the gangplank for a weekend
grain run from Columbia River headed by Albert Isaac arid con­
ashore. On Monday he -was back
ports to various ports in Japan. sisting of Frank Airy, Chief Cook
and right on the ball. At coffee
So far, we have had only one and Lester Baker, Night Cook.
time he mentioned that he had
kind of weather—foggy. Up to
had a wonderful time, but that
We took this ship over from
now the boys all look as though the National Maritime Union in
he had had to part with $1.§5
they have been spending their March and so far the company
and he couldn't account of 35
time in a poolroom instead of and officers seem to be well
cents of it. Honest, I thought the
on the briny deep.
guy was whacky.
satisfied with SIU crews. A few
At the payoff I noticed that
Up to the present time our of the crewmembers have been
my slopchest bill was $65 and
payoffs * have been handled by aboard since March and even­
his was 92 cents, for a few bags
iWilliam McKdy, the SIU Agent tually hope to bring it around
of Bull Durham. But after all
Not a thing, according to Dutchy Moore, who believes in
working out of Seattle. He has to New York as a home port.
is said and done old Ragbag Jim
plenty of company when ho spends time ashore. Dutchy
handled all of our beefs in true Our officers are a fine bunch of
minded his own business and
only identified his- companions as Angel (left) and Connie,
Seafarers fashion. Pulling into fellows.
he
was a good shipmate.
and withheld the name of spot where picture was taken.
Longview or Portland, long be­
John Haworlh
Percy Boyer
Bartender trying to get in the act vtas tagged "Old Devil."
fore the grain spouts hove into
Joseph Nelson

Moore Bids Homesteaders
Consider Union Brothers

Ragbag Jim
Was A Guy-

Easily Suited

Crew Brightens Demostar's
Fog-Bound Trips To Japan

�Page Ten

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, Seplember 23. 1949

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch
SAVANNAH —Chairman, Jim
Drawdy, 28523; Recording Sec­
retary, Jeff Gillette, 37060; Read­
ing Clerk, A. L. Pricks, 60.
Minutes read and accepted.
Motion carried to accept Secre­
tary-Treasurer's financial
report
and Headquarters report to the
membership. Port Agent stated
that shipping had been good for
the past two weeks. The SS
• William Carruth crewed up and
is going coastwise, he said. The
Cape Nome paid off and signed
on again. Also calling I^ere were
the SS Steel King and two. Ca-

A&amp;G Shipping From Aug. 31 To Sept. 14
PORT

Boston
New York
Philadelp"hia„
Baltimore
Norfolk
;.
Savannah.
Tampa.
Mobile
New Orleans
Galveston.
West Coast
GRAND TOTAL

nadian District ships, the Argobec and the Dingwall. Scheduled
arrivals include the SS Jean on
Sept. 15 and the SS Cape Race
on Sept. 20, the Agent reported.
After the reading of the Head­
quarters Tallying Committee's
report on the results of the vot­
ing in the General Fund assess. ment referendum, a motion car­
ried to concur in^ the report.
I. Francis E. Parker, Book No.
51305 took the Union oath of
obligation. Motion by Nollie
Towns that educational meetings
be held regularly. Amendment
by Jeff Gillette that a committee
of two men from each depart­
ment be elected to map 'out
plans as to when and where
these meetings are to be held.
I' .Motion and amendment carried.
Elected to serve on the commit­
tee were Nollie Towns, A.'Fricks,
Glisson, C. Schuck, B. Pierce and
E. Stewart. Meeting adjourned
at 7:45 PM, with KM) members
present.
S* 4- t'
MOBILE—Chairman, D. Park• er; Recording Secretary, L. P.
Marsh; Reading Clerk, Harold
Fischer, 59.
Minutes of previous meeting in
Mobile and other Branches read
and approved. Port Agent re­
ported on the progress of the
-building repair job and said that

the Hall would be ready in ap­
proximately two weeks. He said
that the membership's approval
of the proposal for air-condition­
ing wilL b» of great help in
making the Hall comfort^le. He
^ said he felt sure that when the
'i alterations are completed the
; Mobile Hall will be one of the
I- /-finest in the Atlantic and Gulf
District. The Agent also reported
on the prospects of shipping for
the next two weeks,' and in­
formed the membership that the
I following ships are due to arrive: Wild Ranger, Chickasaw,
Greeley Victory, Oshkosh Vic­
tory, Alawai, City of Alma, Ca­
valier, Clipper and Ranger. The
Agent also told of liis meeting
with Waterman officials on the
question of unemployment com­
pensation. Further meetings on
this question will be held with
company and state officials to
halt the raw deal Waterman sea­
men have been getting on unem­
ployment compensation. Any ac­
tion that is taken will be re-

Atlantic and Gulf District would
shortly get under way and that
those seeking office should file
their nominations, provided they
met the requirements. The Tal-'
SHIPPto SHIPPED SHIPPED TOTAL lying Committee's report on ref­
DECK
ENG.
STWDS. SHIPPED erendum results of the - General
Fund assessment wSs read and
I
9
3
17 concurred in. Trial committee's
5
90
268 report read and accepted.
101
77
34
23
77
20
4 4 4
162
135
395
98
19
54
17
18
NEW ORLEANS — Chairman,
47 Leroy Clarke, 23062; Recording
17
15
15
(NO FIGURES RECEIVED)
Secretary, Herman Troxclair.
91'
79
77
247
81
69
120
270 6743; Reading Clerk, Buck Steph­
^
23
15
9
47 ens, 76.
17 .
12
23
52
Previous
minutes
of
all
539
475
460
1,474 Branches read and accepted.
Charges read and appropriate

REa
DECK

.r.

REG.
ENG.

REa
STWDS.

TOTAL
REG.

19
97
54
113
46
5

15
13
47
91
92
280
43
38
135
119
65
297
23
17
86
11
7
23
(NO FIGURES RECEIVED)
91
68
67
226
86
63
111
-.260
31
24
12
67
49
32
27
108

591

ported at the next meeting. Mo­
tion carried to concur with Head­
quarters Tallying Committee's
report on the assessment refer­
endum. Meeting adjourned at
7:30 PM with 409 members
present.
t 4 4
BALTIMORE—Chairman, Wil­
liam Rentz, 26445; Recording
Secretary, G. A. Masterson,
30297; Reading Clerk, F. A.
Stanshury, 4683.
Motion carried to suspend legular order of business and go
into obligations and charges.
Following members took the Un-

ion oath of obligation: J. L.
Geehetly, Angelo Maciec, Jesus
Garcia, Edward Lyons and Semion Gamier. Charges and trial
committee's
recommendations
were read and approved. Minutes
of previous meetings accepted as
read. Several men were excused
from the meeting after present­
ing acceptable reasons. Tallying
Committee's report on the tendollar General Fund assessment
referendum was read and con­
curred with by unanimous vote.
Port Agent, Dispatcher and Pa­
trolmen made their reports. Mo­
tion carried to accept report of
port hospital committee. One
minute of silence in memory of
departed Union members. Meet­
ing adjourned at 8:10 PM, with
340 members present.
t X. i,
PHILADELPHIA — Chairman,
D. Hall, 43372; Recording Sec­
retary, C. Kimball, 52; Reading
Clerk, J. Doris, 23177.

489

449

J,529

Two men, Joe Heckman and
Thomas Gorman, were excused
from the meeting. There were
no charges to be read. One min­
ute of silence in memory of de­
ceased members. Meeting ad­
journed at 7:40 PM.
4" 4" 4»
BOSTON—Chairman, B. Lawson, 894; Recording Secretary.
E. Dakin, 180; Reading Clerk, M.
Norris, 5725.

committee:, T. Lawson, 'Boschi,
C. Saunders, Pat Rogers and C.
Garner. Motion carried to accept
reasons and excuse following
Brothers from the meeting: J.
E. Caron, Dick Hudgins, C. Mo^r
and A. H. Anderson. Under Good
and Welfare, there was 30 min­
utes' of discussion on Union af­
fairs and the shipping situation.
Motion carried to adjourn at 9
PM, with-140 members presents
4 4 4
NEW YORK—Chairman, Joe
ALGINA, 1320; Recording Secreleury, Freddie Stewart, 4935;
Reading Clerk, Robert Matthews,
154.

action taken by the membership
for the election of committee to
hold trial. Secretary-Treasurer's'
financial report and. Headquart­
ers report to the membership
Minutes of previous Boston and
approved after reading. Agent
other Branch meetings read and
reported that since last meeting
accepted. Agent discussed the
there had been 10 payoffs and
state of shipping" in this port.
approximately 24 ships hitting
Patrolman and Dispatcher's re­
here in-transit. So far, eight
ports were accepted as read, as
payoffs are scheduled for the
were the Headquarters report Minutes of New York and next ; two weeks and on this
and the Secretary-Treasurer's fin­ other Branch meetings of Aug. basis, shipping should be able
ancial report. One minute of- 31 read and approved. Secretary-" to hold its own. All of* the many
silence was observed in memory Treasurer's financial report and beefs since the last meeting have
been settled to the satisfaction
of departed Brothers. Meeting
of all parties, he said. Trial com­
adjourned at 7:50 PM, '^ith 65
mittee recommended that mem­
bookmembers in attendance.
ber be cleared of charges. Head­
4 4 "4
quarters' Tallying Committee's
GALVESTON — Chairman,
report on the balloting in the
Keith Alsop, 7311; Recording
General Fund assessment refer­
Secretary, J. Bird, 34683; Read- Headquarters report to the mem­ endum was concurred in. Under
bership accepted as read. Port
iner Clerk, R. Wilburn, 37739.
Agent discussed shipping during Good and Welfare, there was
All Branch minutes of August the past two weeks and the heavy discussion on' matter of
31 meetings were read and ac­ prospects for the period ahead. men niissing ships in one port
cepted, as were the Headquarters He also stated steps would be and rejoining it in another. It
report and the Secretary-Treasur­ taken to see what could be done was brought out that this was
er's financial
report. Tallying to improve the functioning of a direct violation of the shipping
Committee's report to the mem- the television set qn the recre­ rules and that delegates on ships
ation deck, which has been should call the Hall as soon as
faulty due to the tall buildings they arrive in port so they can
in the area blocking reception. get replacements if shorthanded.
He announced that nominations Meeting adjourned at 8:30 PM,
for the annual elections in the with 310 members present.
bership on the referendum for
the General Fund assessment
was read and a ^notion to adopt
it carried. Agent reported .,on
By EARL (Bull) SHEPPARD
shipping, as did the Dispatcher.,
Thomas J. Moor, Book No. 47937,
Beefs around here have been
NEW ORLEANS—As expect­
and William M. Smith, Book No. ed, shipping in this port fell off mostly routine. One of the prin­
49693, took the Union oath of some&gt;«h3t.:; after three weeks of cipal reasons for this excellent
obligation. There was one min­ heavy activity. However, ship­ state of affairs is the increas-"
ute of silence in memory of de­ ping kept ahead of registration ing practice of holding educa­
parted Union Brothers. Motion for the past two weeks, so', all tional meetings aboard ships at
to adjourn carried at 7:45 PM. in all, things aren't too tough. sea, particularly on -^passenger
iTie local grain elevators is ships. There are a large number
4 4 4
NORFOLK—Chairman, J. A. again working. We are-in hopes, of members on these ships}^ in­
Bullock, 4747; Recording Secre­ therefore, that some of the grain cluding many permit men, and
these educational meetings help
tary, Ben Rees, 95; Reading ships that had been rerouted
during the strike will be sent many men to understand the
Clerk, T. Lawson, 4641.
back in here. They were orig­ regulations and contracts.

Reading of minutes of previous
meeting . in Philadelphia and
other Branches. Agent reported
that quite a few'ships had come
into this port in the past two
weeks and almost every one had
some sort of a beef. Motion car­
ried to. give Union officials in
this port a vote of thanks and
confidence for the smooth pay­
Norfolk and other Branch min­
off on the'SS Ames Victory. Sec­
retary-Treasurer's financial
re­ utes of previous -meetings read
port and Headquarters report to and accepted. Motion carried to
concur and accept the Tallying
Conunittee's report on the re­
sults of the General Fund assess­
ment referendum. A motion (by
C. Gamer, seconded by 0.
Saunders) was, carried, calling
the membership read and ap­ for election of a building repair
proved. Brothers Walter Anthony conrmittee to inspect and make
and Ronald E. Voss took the recommendations on the condi­
Union oath of obligation. Mo­ tion Of the wall of our building
tion carried unanimously to con­ which was laid bare by the tear­
cur with the report of the Tally­ ing down of the structure next
ing Committee on the General door. The following members
Fund assessment referendum. were elected tp serve on the

New Orleans Shipping Levels Off

inally scheduled for ,this port
but were diverted when the ele­
vators shqt down.
MADE GAINS
. We understand that the men
working on the elevators have
received a considerable boost in
their hourly wages, though they
didn't get every one of the de­
mands they made. The gains
made proof, once again, that
solidarity pays off.
The rainy season is starting
hereabouts, so any of you Broth­
ers heading this way had better
not forget your foul weather
gear.

MOVIE FANS
Most of the Union-contracted
passenger ships sailing out of
this port^ have purchased the
two movies made by the Atlan­
tic and Gulf District of the SIU
out of the ships' funds. These
films are being shown at least
twice on each trip. If any of
you Brothers catch one of these
wagons, you'll have a chance to,
see your Union in action.
All hands are enthused over
these films and have recom­
mended that every Seafarer
make it his business to see them.

�Friday. Septamber 23. 1949

TH E SEAFARERS LOG

Pag* El*v*a

British Labor
Takes Off Gloves
(Contintied from Page 5)
"The General Council jre de­
termined that, notwithstanding
the smokescreen of falsehood and
vilification directed against them
• * *, this issue will be fought
out."
The Transport and General
Workers^ Union described at its
recent convention, that no. mem­
ber of, the communist party
shall be eligible to hold any
kind of union office. As the
largest union in the country,
the Transport and General
Workers have given a strong
lead to all British labor in re­
gard to the problem of com­
munists.
Uncertain as jthe situation may
be in some of the Continental
countries, there is no reason to
doubt that in Britain democratic
trade unionism will thoroughly
defeat the commies.
(Baafarer Irwin SualL /vho
last year was one of the five
recipients of the Ruskin Schol­
arship. awarded by the British
Trade Unions, has been in Eur­
ope for the past year studying
and writing on the European
labor movement. This article is
reprinted through tlA courtesy
of the "American Federationist.")

CATRINA PALACIA
Get in touch with M. W. Sher­
man, 4300 Woodlea Ave., Balti­
more, Maryland.
til
INDIVIDUAL .iiONATIONS
oler, $5.00; S. C. Hudgens, $5.00;
RICHARD H. SEVERSON
O. T. Jopaen, $1.00; R. El. Inscoe, C. V. Ramos, $5.00; Julian S. Mineses,
Your parents want you to get
$5.00; John Curlew. $1.00; E. D. Sims, $5.00; Victory M. Torres, $5.00; J. J-,
in touch -with them
once, at
$25.00.
Ecock,
$5.00 r
Celestino
DeSouza,
C. J. Rapdazzo, $1.00; R. R. Sierra. $10.00; Ignacio Pires, $5.00; Vasser
R. 3, Osseo, Wis.
$1.00; R. Booker. $1.00; L. M. Hop- Szynanski, $5.00;
E.
W.
Monahan,
I 1 i
kins, $5.00; M. Creenberg, $1.00; M. $5.00; A. Keane, $5.00; Louis T.' Britt,
ED HODGE.
P. Masek, $2.00; A. A. Palmenta, $2.00; $5.00; W. G. Schoenborn, $2.00.
"I do not have your book,
V. J. Rizzuto, $1.00.
SS ANGELINA
R. J. Schmidt, $5.00; F. F. Smith.
nor do I' know of its ,where­
J. Aquiar, $2.00; O. Plaza, $2.00l
$2.00; B. Edelman, $2.00; j. W. Hietz. S. Escobar, $2.00;- E. Ventureira, $1.00;
abouts; L. B. Knickerbocker." •
$1.00; W. L. Rocheleau, $4.00; C. E .H. Jensen, $2.00; J. Q. Nunn, Jr.,
111
Fowles. $5.00; Carl A. Richard, $1.00; $2.00&lt;; A. Pasapera. $1.00; A. Colon.
ROBERT GEDDINGS
H. J. Foy, $1.00; W. C. Fisher, $1.00; $1.00; R. Santos.-$1.00; N. Williams,
S. Floreak. $5.00.
Your wiffr is ill and has gone
$1.00; W. Davis. $1.00; A. Delgado,
J. C. Key. $5.00; W. W. Barrett, $1.00; B. Toner, $1.00; R. E. Wisham,
to her family at 1622 Erato
$2.00; J. Purcell, $1.00; J. Colpe, $5.00; $2.00; E. Bayne, $2.00; J. R. Boone,
Street, New Orleans, La.
C. N. Owen. $5.00; C. DjUn. $2.00; $2.00; E. Rubio, $1.00.
J. Reyes, $1.00; H. Ceril, $5.00; C. E.
Ill
SS LOYOLA VICTORY
Seymour, $2.00.
If Reefer Engineer on Voyage
R. Trottier. $1.00; S. Monardo, $1.00;
W. C. Julifs. $1.00; F. X. DiSano,
No.-3 of Steel Admiral gets in
L. E. Simon, $2.00; O. E. Orr, $2.00;
$2.00; L. E. Falkman, T$I.OO; R. J.
S. D. Ocasio, $2.00; J. A. Doody, $4.00;
touch with Eddie Hallinan. c/o
Grant, $1.00; A. E. Slowik, $2.00; P.
R. G. Noe, $4.00; C. J. Neumaier,
Steel Admiral or New York Hall,
J. Verkamman. $2.00; K. S. Wong.
$2.00; W. C. Fisher, $1.00; W. G.
$2.00; E. B. Flowers, $5.00; M. Brenhe can get his personal belong­
Rivera, $15.00; C. D. Lewis, $15.00;
dle, $5.00; H. Jd. Jansen, $6.00.
ings he left aboard.
C. N. Hankel, $15.00; R. A. Osborne,
SS SANFORD DOLE
$15.00.
II 1
K. Forster, $1.00; T. Reilly. $1.00.
SS STEEL VENDOR
WILLIAM P. DOHERTY
SS CITY OF ALMA
J. W. Lebrosse, $1.00; C. R. KalmYour papers were sent ^ 40
J. Cubano, $1.00; P. Tole, $2.00; bach. $2.00: T. Tonisson. $2.00; J. R.
Park" Street, Charlestown,* Mass.,
A. R. Hasson, $2.00; E. W. Gallaghan, Aquinaldo, $2.00; J. Palmeri, $2.00;
$2.00; B. F. DeLima. $1.00; C. P. E. M. Lewis, $3.00; R. Fugueras, $2.00;
by Oswald P. Smith.
Negron, $1.00; J. C. Carvalho, $1.00; J. H. Mones, $2.00; B. Billaroza, $4.00;
III
A. M. Arroyo, $2.00; M. Lind, $2.00; S. A. DiMaggio, $5.00; 1. Quanico,
JAMES E. BOND
H. Munker. $2.00; J. F. Rooney. $2.00; $10.00; A. Hanstrest, $2.00; D. S.
Get in touch with attorney
C. L. Barnes. $1.00; B. Berglund. $1.00; White, $1.00; E. Burke, $1.00; R. A.
J. Miniz. $1.00; E. Pederson, $5.00; Singer, $3.00.
Edgar T. Reeves, Jr., Louisa,
R. C. Palmer, $1.00; E. J. Rogg, $2.00;
SS ALLEGHENY VICTORY
Virginia.
^
E. P. O'Brien, $2.00; B. D. Friedman,
M. Makatangay, $5.00; W. Young,
111
$2.00; J, Duha, $2.00; S. Barnes, $5.00; E. Brondelsbo, $5.00; A. Ander­
GUY F. PLAHN
$2.00; R.
Burton, $2.00; J. Fern­ son, $2.00; J. Early. $2.00; W. PrzyCHICAGO—Infl Typographi­ andez, $2.00; £. Jimenez, $2.00.
"Please get in touch with me;
lomski, $5.00; L. Lucas, $5.00; E.
SS STEEL ADVOCATE
cal Union-AFL Local 16 won its
Gladzer, $5.00; A. Felix, $5.00; F.
worried; fAnne."
22-month strike against Chicago V. D. Mahan, $1.00; J. E. Bonilla, Castro. $5.00; J. Robinson. $1.00; H.
Ill
H. Pacheco, $1.00; J.- Meeks. Donelan, $3.00: E. McDavid, $2.00;
daily newspapers. It was an­ $1.00;
NICK CAPUTTA
$2.00; G. R. Sinclair, $1.00; C. Bidet, G. Fiance. $2.00; A. Vicera, $1.00;
"Wish to hear from you and nounced on Sept. 15 that the $2.00; W. A. Tobey, $1.00; T. Snow, A. Venettia, $2.00; W. Walters Willsettle that little debt I owe jrou: publishers had agreed to a union $2.00; M. C. Bonds, $2.00; D. T. Gar- iams, $5.00; W. F. Hanford, $5.00; B.
Macis, $5.00; Edward Wilisch, $5.00;
Loji Glatthorn, SUP, 440 Avalon security clause which is not far ofaro, $2.00; A. Leiner, $2.00.
SS MARVIN
J. Rivera. $4.00;- J. V. Bocala. $3".00;
from being a closed shop clause. E. Tsotspros,
Blvd., Wilmington, Cal."
$1.00; J. Canul, $1.00. F. Rodrigues. $5.00; T. Desouza. $5.00;
All hiring will be done through
SS SEATRAIN TEXAS
Ill
T. H. Graskiaer. $5.00; R. H. Ingram,
a joint union-employer board Marko Koss, $2.00; E. M. Oombrow- $5.00; R. C. Atmore. $2.00; T. M.
HENRY B. DONAHO
Contact your Local Board at which will judge the competence ski, $3.00; O. Gracham. $1.00; D. W. Landron. $2.00; F. Senent, $5.00; P.
Hayden, $1.00; K. W. Kelly, $1.00; E. Plensar, $2.00.
WINSLOW HOMER
of job applicants.
Lufkin, Texas.
C. V. Bedell, $3.00; S. Malkowicz,
SS SAND CHIEF
All crewmembers who paid off
$1.00; A. J. Lavoie, $1.00; J. R. Miller,
Ill
J. Foelsler. $1.00 ; D. Hall, " $1.00; E.
this vessel in Portland, Ore^, on
$2.00; M. Hynes, $2.00; R. B. Stein- Kunchich, $1.00; J. Berson, $1.00; P.
WILLIAM LLOYD LEAH
Aug. 19 have two hours due
metz, $1.00; E. W. Geter, $1.00; G. Coponiti, $1.00; J. Cole. $1.00; J. Yanik,
Whitehurst, $1.00.
them for delayed sailing time. Any person knowing his
$1.00; J. Brown, $1.00; E. KasnowSS STEEL DESIGNER
sfcy, $5.00; J. Norgard, $1.00; Receipt
C. Eberhardt has, in addition, whereabouts please get in toUch
Carroll K. Clyde, $5.00; Hanley D. No. 91313, $1.00; J. Kenny, $1.00; J.
eight hours overtime coming to with Betty A. Leah, 75 Summit
Paul, $5.00; C. Jackson. $5.00; John Lippincott. $1.00; F. Libby, $1.00.
Drive,
Indianola,
Penna.
It
is
him.
Lee Nugent. $5.00; L. K. Bertlsen.
SS SEATRADER
This money can be collected urgent.
$5.00; A. G. Perez. $5.00; M. MaleG. Meltzer. $2.00; A. Sanchez, $1.00;
Ill
spin. $6.00; C. Martinez. $2.00; Jack F. Gonzales. $1.00; M. Awall, $1.00;
by calling at, or writing to, the
Smith, $2.00; F. Cotellis, $1.00; T. C. C. Rocaford, $1.00; J. Cabral, $1.00;
EDWIN TROY
SERGE LOMAKIN
Waterman office in Mobile, Ala.
Rabaria. $5.00; G. W. Fensom, $2.00; J. Williams, $1.00; M. N. Katsirabris,
This injured Brother is pres­ This member is in a Lexing­ J.
Port Agent William McKay states
T. Hell, $5.00; J. W. Barnes. $1.00; $1.00; A. J. Nicoloutos, $1.00; B. Rutthat if the crew had delayed the ently in the Gorgas Hospital, ton, Ky., hospital and asks his John Irvin Grady, $2.00; Putzgruber, kowski, $2.00; D. J. Provelezianos,
payoff one hour until he ar­ Ward 2A, Ancona, Canal Zone, former shipmates to write to $5.00; S. Lomakin, $5.00; J. T. Schim- $3.00; W. Gerrick, Jr., $1.00.
rived from Seattle, the beefs and asks any of the Brothers him, addressing letters as fol­
would- have been taken pare of within reach to drop in for a lows: Edwin Troy, EO Patient,
WH 3, P. O. Box 2000, Lexing­
visit.
in Portland.
ton, Ky.
4- 4. i
SIU, A&amp;G District
SUP
SS STEPHEN W. GAMBRILL
16 Merchant St.
14 North Gay St. HONOLULU
The following persons who BALTIMORE
Phone 8-8777
The SEAFARERS LOG as tlw official publication of the Sea­ were members of the SS Steph­ William Rentz, Agent Mulberry 4640
276 State St. PORTLAND
Ill W. Bumslde St.
farers International Union is available to all members who wish en W. Gambrill on ,or about the BOSTON
Beacon 433*
to have it sent to their home free of charge for the enjoyment of 20th day of December, 1946, and Ben Lawaon, 'Agent Richmond 2-D140
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141 RICHMOND. CaUf.
267 8tb Stt
their families andNthemselves when ashore. If you desire to have witnessed an accident in which GALVESTON
308&gt;/i—Urd St.
Phone 280*
'the LOG sent to you each week address cards ar^ on hand at every Charles L. Simmons was injur­ Keith Alsop, Agent
Phone 2-6448
SAN FRANCISCO
69 Clay Sfc
MOBILE
1 South Lawrence St.
SIU branch for this purpose.
Douglas 2-836S
ed aboard said vessel, are asked Cal Tanner, Agent
- Phone 2-1764
SEATTLE
86 Seneca St.
However, for those who are at sea or at a distance from a SIU to please communicate with Her­ NEW ORLEANS
623 Bienville St.
Main 0880
hall, the LOG reproduces below the form used to request the LOG, man N. Rabson or Benjamin B. E. Sheppard, Agent Magnolia 6112-6113
NEW
YORK
61
Beaver
St.
WILMINGTON
440
Avalon
Blvd.
which you can fill out, detach and send to: SEAFARERS LOG, 51 Sterling of 42 Broadway, New
Joe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784
Terminal 4-3131
York 4, N.Y.:
Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y..
NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St.
John W. Graves, William A. Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
PLEASE PRINT INFORMATION
337 Market St.
Canadian District
Driver, Iris H. Arkerson, Luther PHILADELPHIA
Market 7-1636
H. * Hamand, Arlie C, Lucas, J. Sheehan, Agent
FKANCISCO
88 Third St.
To the Editor:
MONTREAL
404 Le Moyno St.
Juan Medina, Ramos P. Narela, SAN
Jeff Morrison, Agent
Douglas 2-6476
Marquette 8808
I would like the SEAFARERS LOG mailed to the James L. Conner, Gabriel Bone- SAVANNAH
2 Ahercom St.
FORT WILLIAM.. 118% Syndicate Ave.
fort,
William
H.
Johnson,
Mario
Jim
Drawdy,
Agent
Phone
3-1728
address below:
Ontario
Phone 3-3221.
86 Seneca St.
Figueroa, Joaquin Passapera, SEATTLE
128% HoIHa St.
Wm. McKay, Agent
Seneca 4670 HALIFAX
Cruz Negron, Leroy F. Amerson, TAMPA
Phone 3-8811
Name
1800-1811 N. Franklin St.
W. E. Harper, Richard T3. Tucker, Ray White, Agent
Phone M-1323 PORT COLBORNE:...103 Durham St.
Donald K. Tighe, Harold O. WILMINGTON, CaHf., 227% XvalonBlvd.
Phone 8081
Street Address
Terminal 4-3874 TORONTO
lllA Jarvis St.
Aronson, Antonio. .Ori:^; John E. B. TiUey, Agent
Elgin 871*
Guimly, E. F. Tappy, Marion G. HEADQUARTERS. .61 Beaver St.. N.Y.C.
SECRETARY-TREASURER
VICTORIA, B.C
602 Boughton St.
State
—
Zone...
City
Batchelor, Wayne S". Hamilton,
Paul Hall
Empire 4831
Charles J. Evans, Andrew J.
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZA-nON
VANCOUVER
865 HamUton St.
Signed
Lindsay 'Williams
Pacific 7824
Dougherty, Leo Pescopo, H. H.
Lewis, Norman' Ross, Booker J. ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURERS HEADQUARTERS
812 McQU St.
J. P. Shnler
Book No.
Pompey, Harold Rill, Lee Rank-, Rebert Matthews
Montreal
Plateau 67*
Joseph Volplaa
in, John J.ee, E. Sugendez.
ROMAN J. MIRANDA
Get in touch with Samuel
Segal, 11 Broadway, New York
City.
4.
MITCHELL T. REED
Get in touch with the office
of Benjamin B. Sterling, 42
Broadway, New York 4, N.Y.
4. 4.
PAUL GAY
Write to Albert Campbell, 302
E. Front St., New Bern, N.C.
4.
4.
PHILIP WAGNER
V
Write to your mother at 120
East 34 St., New York._
i a&gt; 4.
WILLIAM PEPPER
'Would you please extend the
heartfelt thanks of the crew of
the Seatrain Texas to crtir past
Chief Steward, Brother William
Pepper, Book No. 37126, \Vho re­
cently had to go to the hospital.
"The crew of the Seatrain
Texas remembers the mtlny good
deeds he had done for the crew,
and wishes him the best of lUck
and a speedy recovery."
4*4
CLIFF BAKER
Anyone knowing his where­
abouts is urged to notify' Mrs.
Letha Adams, Rt. 3, Box 643,
Tampa, Florida. It is very im­
portant.
4. 4.
JUSTO R. VELEZQUEZ
Write to Rosie Rodriguez, 311
W. 29 Street; New York City.

Chicago Typos Win
22-Month Strike

Directory Of SIU Halls

Notice To AH SlU Menbors

�THE

Page Twelve

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. September 23. 1949

Seafarers' Cameras Capture Many Moods

The

look

Miller's

on

face

indicate

George

certainly

that

he

is

(Red)

This

would

Anthony

pleased

time

statuesque

pose

shows

Pedicini

as

from

his

lifeboat

the

Jackson

out

he

took

over the fact that he's headed

scraping

f.or some relaxation in Manila.

to oblige Agulto and his cam•

George
drew

is

Bosun

Jackson,

on

which

the

An­

tied

up

i n the Philtppines o n Sept. 2.

Conditions shape the moods of men, as several of the photos on this page show. In the one

above,

ta.\cen aboard the SS Andrew J!ckson in

Manila.

rain,

and

afternoon

an

off

era.

without

job

Tony

.on

must

have

been

thinking about a ride on the

any dough registers gloom on the faces of these six crewmembers.

New York subway.

Agulto also boarded the SS Madaket when she called at
Manila

and

found

that

t:rewmembers

Kuhl

and

Chico

were

with

some

serious subjects for bis camera.

These SS Madakei crewmembers were pretty well
Some of those in photo a.re Walter Copper, A. R.
Weston,

Chester

White, E.

contented and show it on

Sawyer,

Julian

Wilson,

Carl

their

faces.

Carlson,

Joe

Zedokeros, Hugh Meacham and V. S. Kiehl.

On the serious side is this photo taken recently aboard the SS Harry T. as services were
conducted by

a,

Catholic priest, the Rev. William J. Gordon, professor at Villanova CoMege, who

was a passenger on the SIU -contracted ship. Kneeling
Father Gordon lauded the Seafarers crew as "a

at

left

is Ray

Pulliam,

credit to the mercha11t

Ship's Delegate.

marine."

Three
San

Madaket

Miguel

cutups

quench

refreshments .. Agulto

their
said

thirsts

there

were

no

dull

moment"!&gt; in getting these men to do their stuff for the camera.

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9930">
                <text>September 23, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9993">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 27</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10014">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10035">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10095">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10113">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10171">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
FILING BEGINS FOR A&amp;G POSTS&#13;
ILA AND MM&amp;P CARRY ON TALKS FOR NEW PACTS&#13;
SIU PRESSING FOR CONTINUED WAR BONUS PAY&#13;
SEAFARERS' FIGHT TO PROTECT RIGHTS AND JOBS OF AMERICAN SEAMEN GAINING STRONG SUPPORT&#13;
WATERMAN OPENING PORT ON WEST COAST&#13;
MAKE A NOMINATION&#13;
TO A FRIEND&#13;
TOP GI INSURANCE REFUND WILL BE $528&#13;
LABOR REFUGEE EXPOSES MISERY UNDER COMMIES&#13;
SHIPPING SHOWS IMPROVEMENT IN PORT MOBILE&#13;
NEW YORK SHIPPING ON THE UPGRADE, BUT ENOUGH MEN ARE AVAILABLE&#13;
FRISCO AGENT RETURNS FROM HONOLULU STAY&#13;
BOSTON SHIPPING ON CHILLY SIDE&#13;
SAVANNAH NOT SINGING THE BLUES&#13;
DEPLETION OF MESABI RANGE POSES PROBLEMS&#13;
BRITISH LABOR MOVEMENT TAKES OFF ITS GLOVES&#13;
SIU HOME FOR AGED, INFIRM PROPOSED AT SHIP MEETING&#13;
SS PUERTO RICO'S SHIPBOARD PAPER IS GROWING UP&#13;
UNION SAVVY MARKS SESSION ON ALLEGHENY VIC&#13;
HUGE VOTE FOR ASSESSMENT JUST WHAT COE MEN WANTED&#13;
NEW ORLEANS SHIPPING LEVELS OFF&#13;
SEAFARERS' CAMERAS CAPTURE MANY MOODS&#13;
CHICAGO TYPOS WIN 22-MONTH STRIKE</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10172">
                <text>9/23/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13065">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="968" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="972">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/9351d1fd20cf64738fe49b41f4304fb2.PDF</src>
        <authentication>6704bc2d0b7f55050394981220f78b80</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47448">
                    <text>}

I

SEAFARERS INTENSIFIES FIGHT
ON CG CONTROL OVER SEAMEN
The SIU Atlantic and Gulf District has fired i
the opening gun in an intensified campaign to oust
the Coast Guard from control over merchant sea­
men. Charging that the present military set-up {
deprives seafaring civilians of access to due process
of law, the Union is demanding that jurisdiction
over seamen be returned to the Department of
Commerce.
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA
The Union's position, and plans for the all-out
fight on the Coast Guard, were set forth in a
No. 28
NEW YOHK. N. Y.. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 7. 1949
VOL. XI

50% Of Anns Aid To Go On USShips

*resolution adopted unani­
mously at the Headquarter*
meeting on Sept. 28.
In stepping up its drive to
have the Bureau of Marine In­
spection and Navigation trans­
ferred from the Coast Guard to
the Department of Commerce,
the Union is seeking to enlist
the support of the American
Federation of Labor and its af­
filiated unions. The bid for AFII
aid will be made at its conven­
tion in St. Paul, Minn,, this
week.
The A&amp;G District resolution
underscores the fact that the
US merchant marine is a "civi­
lian institution" and has been
manned by civilians throughout
its history.
The A&amp;G District's opposition
to the arbitrary police powers
held by the Coast Guard under
the present set-up is based on
a long string of abuses and in­
justices' piled on civilian seamen
by the military body.
Motivated by a traditional bias
against civilians, the Coast Guard
has deprived many seamen of
their right to continue to make
their living at sea in procedures
which the Union has termed
"railroading."
Long ago, the SIU branded the
Coast Guard's hearing units as
•kangaroo courts." With the
{Continued on Page 5)

For the second time this year
the SIU Atlantic and Gulf Dis­
trict has successfully campaigned
to protect the employment of
American seamen and ships in
transporting foreign aid cargoes.
Last week Congress passed the
arms aid bill, including the
amendment pushed by the SIU
which guarantees that 50 percent
of the military supplies shipped
to non-communist nations will
go on American vessels, njanned
by American seamen.
Earlier this year, the battle
waged by the SIU and other
maritime organizations resulted
in the passage of a law requir­
ing EGA Administrator Paul
Hoffman to send at least 50 "per­
cent of Marshall Plan goods on
American flag ships.
CONGRESS TOLD
The A&amp;G District touched off
its fight in favor of the use of
In photo above, taken recently in the House Office Building in Washington, SIU Interna­
American ships when Secretarytional Representative Albert Bernstein (left) discusses Union's stand on legislative matters af­
Treasurer Paul Hall informed
fecting
seamen with Congressmen from New York. With Bernstein, from left to right are. Con­
members of Congress that the
"critical condition of the United
gressmen Abraham^ Multer, Walter A. Lynch, John J. Rooney, and Joseph M. Pomarlen, execu­
States merchant marine" made
tive secretary. Trade Union Council of the Uberal Party.
the guarantee imperative.
Unless such a provision were
incorporated into the bill, the
US merchant fleet would continue
to dwindle, Hall warned.
The A&amp;G District Headquar­
ters then dispatched Internation­
al Representative Albert Bern­
A suit brought against the cern itself with the motives of were members of the defendant
stein to Washington to apprise
Atlantic and Gulf District of the the union or the propriety of Seafarers International Union of
the lawmakers of the dire em­
Seafarers International Union by the action taken, and will not North America, Atlantic and
ployment situation faced by
29 former permitmen was dis­ interfere in the internal affairs Gulf District, A.F.ofL., and that
American seamen, and of the
missed last week by Supreme of the union on behalf of per­ they were illegally expelled
dangers created by neglect of
Court referee Isidor Wasservogel. sons who admittedly never held therefrom. They seek an injunc­
the domestic shipping industry.
The 29 men claimed that they membership books in the or­ tion to restrain defendant from
Bernstein succeeded in invok­
had been illegally expelled from ganization.
interfering with their rights and
ing the aid of a number of Con­
the Union, and sought damages "Nothing in the record war­ privileges as members, from
gressmen, all of whom expressed
and an injunction.;
rants the conclusion that the communicating the fact of their
grave concern over the decline
The SIU countered with the union's officers or members act­ expulsion and ineligibility to
of the US fleet and the conse­
assertion that these men were ed with fraudulent intent or in employment as members of the
quent loss of employment oppor­
"never bookmembers but merely bad faith in withdrawing permit unu,n, and to compel a restora­
tunities for American seamen.
permit holders" and thus were cards from plaintiffs. Under these tion of their evidences of mem­
not entitled to full rights.
SEAMEN'S RIGHTS
circumstances, their claim for bership, as well as $250,000 dam­
damages
may not be sustained." ages. Defendant contends that
EVIDENCE CLEAR
The Union's International Rep­
plaintiffs were never book mem­
resentative also elaborated on
Mr. Wasservogel's decision The Union was represented by bers of the union, but merely
attorneys Benjamin Sterling and
the A&amp;G District's demand that
said in part;
"permit-holders," and, as such,
seamen's rights be protected in
"The evidence clearly indicates Cy Miller.
are
not entitled to the rights and
the proposed revision of the Fed­
that plaintiffs were merely per­ The full text of the decision privileges granted to book mem­
eral Employes Compensation Act
Congressman Louis Heller of mit holders in the union and as follows:
bers.
(HR-3191).
such
were
granted
the
privilege
Brooklyn looks over bound
SUPREME COURT — SPECIAL
PRIMARY ISSUE
As a result of the Union's
of working on union-affiliated
TERM, PART X.
copies
of
the
SEAFARERS
stand, amendments have been
ships only in the event that no
The primary issue raised by
By
made in the proposed law which LOG to gel the seamen's point book members were available
the
pleadings concerns the status
HON. ISIDOR WASSERVOGEL,
will preserve all the rights now of view. Photo was taken last for employment. In accepting the
of
the'plaintiffs
in the defend­
Official Referee
enjoyed by seamen . under ad­ week, when Congressman Hel­ permits, plaintiffs voluntarily ac­
ant union.
miralty law and other statutes.
ler visited A&amp;G District Head­ cepted their qualified employ­ Neri et al, v. Hall, as treas­ The evidence clearly indicates
ment of temporary union sanc­ urer of the Seafarers Interna­ that plaintiffs were merely per­
As originally offered, the re­
quarters as part of his effort
tional Union of North America,
tion.
vised federal compensation law
mit-holders in the defendant
"In the absence of any allega­ Atlantic and Gulf District—This
would permit seamen working to obtain a complete under­
union, and, as such, were granton govemment-owned ships to be standing of problems con­ tions and proof of malice or con­ is an action brought by twentyspiracy, the court may not con­ nine plaintiffs, who allege they
(Contmuei on Page 5)
fronting maxitime labor.
(Conthttud OH Psge } )

Court Throws Out $250,000 Damage Suit
Of 29 Former Permitmen Against Union

�THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. October 7. 1949

SEAFARERS LOG
Published Every Other Week by the
SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor
At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Reentered as second class matter August 2, 1949, at the Post
Office in New York, N.Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

'Wall Street Unionism'
The communist propaganda producing organs are
showing signs of sterility. With their influence in the trade
union movement dwindling day by day, these unionwreckers have had to dig into the mothballs for smear
labels. And the best they have 'been able to come up
with is that broken down, monotonous cry of "Wall
Street."
Only this time it is not the capitalists they are calling
"Wall Street." Nope, this time it's the "Wall Street
unions."
"Wall Street unions," by the way, are the organiza­
tions that don't like commies and who do something about
it. Genuine trade-unionists call these organizations noncommie, or anti-commie, unions.
Oddly enough, the only trade unions that are obtain­
ing greater security and economic protection for their
members are the non-commie unions, or the so-called
"Wall Street unions," to use the commie lingo.
Take the United Mine Workers, where commies are
regarded as more obnoxious than coal gas. The miners
were the first large union to win a broad pension and
Welfare set-up — paid for by the employers. And they
won it the hard way.
The Steel Workers union which has declared war
on the commies and is expected to try to. boot Harry
Bridges out of the CIO very ^oon, has just called a strike
against Big Steel to win employer-financed pensions. The
Hospital Patients
Steel Workers, according to the commies, are a "Wall
When entering the hospital
Street union."
notify the delegates by post­
The giant United Auto Workers Union, which re­
card, giving your name and
cently cleaned its house of commies, has just forced the
the number of your ward.
[powerful Ford Motor Company into granting companyMimeographed
Postcards
can
be
obtained
free
at the
paid pensions to its workers. Not bad, for a "Wall Street
Social
Service
desk.
lunion" that, until the house-cleaning, was almost bankupted and destroyed by communists.
L. G. LARONDE
And the International Ladies Garment Workers Union
D. H. BRUNIE
bas pioneered in establishing welfare benefits for its halfE. G. SENFF
[nillion members. And the commies call the ILGWU a
M. P. LAMELA
These are She Union Brothers currently in the marine hospitals, J. KOVISH
'Wall Street union" from 'way back.
The story is the same in maritime, where the commies as reported by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging G. A. CARROLL
heavily on their hands. Do what you can to cheer them up by A. L. MASTERS
ave kept up an unsuccessful campaign to pin the "Wall writing them.
F. J. DUKSMEYER
treet" label on the AFL waterfront unions whose wage STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
R. SMITH
W. C. HALL
itandards and working conditions are tops.
M. LUKSO
STEFAN TRZCINSKI
W. CURRIER '
D.
lATE
R. C. REED
One of the principal targets of the commie smear J. F. GAMBLICH
H.
ALI
j.
LOCKLER
rtists has been the SIU, which has continually led the MICHAEL J. LUCAS
H.
G.
PEEK,
Jr.
H.
E.
BONEWALD
VAj in winning top wages and conditions, and whose
SAVANNAH^ HOSPITAL
M.BRYANT
LARRY MOORE
ttainments were especially pronounced during the period WM. PIETERS
J. C. POWELL
J. O'MALLEY '
pv^hen the commies were in complete control of the NMU, JOE HERNANDEZ
O. F. MARTIN
A. Mc,\RTHUR
W. L. SMITH
P. VANDEREIK
ind could only get wage increases by yelling "me-too," W. J. REIDY
W. W. ALLRED
T. M. SAUVE
WILLIAM ROACH
fter the SIU had led the way.
T. BEAMS
X % %
This is the same SIU which fought for ithe war R. GRALICKI
BOSTON HOSPITAL
L. COLBURN
W. E. COUTANT
)onus — and hit the bricks to do so — while the commies ANDREW AHLSTROM
FRANK ALASAVICH
R. L. McCOMBS
vere busy making "no strike" pledges to the shipowners. FRED VYKRUTA
VIC MILAZZO
A. SYLVERA
BOB FISHER
J. E. TASSIN
Hiis is the same SIU which was the first union to rush M. N. PETERSON
W. SULLIVAN
J.
A.
ROTHERMEL,
bll-out to support the Wall Street white collar workers M. KENNEDY
•R. BOLDUC
M.
LOPEZ
ROYAL
HARGRAVES
•when they pulled the pin in the world's financial capital,
G. MIHALOPOULOUS
land whose anti-commie members tangled with police and J. c. MCCARTHY
SAN FRANCISCO HOSP.
V; LAWRENCE
M. ARMANDO
1brokers alike.
DUSTY
MEEKS
F. JACOBSON
H. MORTON
T.
ISAKSEN
O.
HOWELL
The commies are hollering "Wall Street unions," bet i
J. KEENAN
A. BANKSTON
Icause the workers have called their bluff and pyt them NEW ORLEANS HOSPITAL
H.
FASAKERLEY
% ^ %
Ion the run. The present line smacks of self-consciousness. J. DENNIS
R.
GUTHRIE
BALTIMORE
HOSPITAL
I The commies never won anything for the workers be- L. LANG
R. AHEARN
LONNIE TICKEL
F. LANDRY
Icause they never fought for economic gains. Commie- C. ELLARD
SAM DRURY
A. TANSKI
W. L. MELLON
XXX
jled beefs have always been political, designed to create L. WILIS
MOBILE
HOSPITAL
R.
W.
BELL
C.
FOWLER
chaos and insecurity among workers for the benefit of
J.
CURTIS
J.
CISECKI
C.
LOWE
the international communist movement.
MIKE LEOUSIS
W. L. AKINS
J. B. ALLRED
I
The "Wall Street" tag is especially funny coming H.
L. HOWARD
W.
V.
CONNORS
R. PITT
from the Kremlin stooges. We'll bet even Stalin doesn't P. ROBERTS
T. GALVIN
E. LYNCY
R. LONG
P. G. DAUGHERTY
believe it.
R. L. TOLER

Men Now b The Mnrbie Hes/utak

�J'riday, Ocldbdr 7. Id49

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

A36 Resolution On Coast Guard
WHEREAS: The United States merchant marine is a civilian institution which has, ever
since the inception of the American merchant marine, been operated and manned by
civilian merchant seamen, and
WHEREAS: The United States Congress on June 26, 1884, established a law which created
the United States Shipping Commissioner, whose duties were to protect the American
seamen when signing ship's Articles with the employers, and whose other duties were
to interpret the shipping articles in the event of a dispute between the Master and
the seamen, and to protect the American seamen against any abuse from the ship­
owners; and further to protect the seamen against the- crimping and shanghaiing
which were prevalent in the industry at that time; and further to penalize the sea­
men in the event they broke any maritime laws, and
WHEREAS: When Congress established the United States Shipping Commissioner, it
p^ced that bureau under the control of the Department of Commerce, and
WHEREAS: The American merchant seamen ever since then have beery under the juris­
diction of the Department of Commerce up to and including February 28, 1942, when
President Roosevelt issued ^n executive order transferring the functions of the Bur­
eau of Marine Inspection and Navigation and all other functions of the Secretary of
Commerce pertaining to shipping, including the United States Shipping Commissioner,
his office and functions, from the Department of Commerce to the Commandant of
the United States Coast Guard, to be exercised by him under the direction and sup­
ervision of the Secretary of the Navy, and
WHEREAS: This was done by the President only as a wartime measure, and on Decem­
ber 29, 1945 he issued another executive order directing the return of the Coast Guard
to the Treasury Department in accordance with the policy of returning the nation to
peacetime status, and
WHEREAS: This should also have immediately transferred the Bureau of Marine Inspec­
tion and Navigation, together with the functions of the Secretary of Commerce per­
taining to shipping, and the United States Shipping Commissioner and his office and
functions, from the Coast Guard back to the Department of Commerce where it be­
longed and has belonged throughout the history of the American merchant marine, and
WHEREAS: On May 16, 1946, President Truman under the power of the Reorganization
Act of 1945 recommended, under Plan No. 3, Section No, 1, that all functions and
duties of the United States Shipping Commissioner be transferred permanently un­
der the control of the United States Coast Guard, over the vigorous objections of all
American merchant seamen who at that time were not given an opportunity to ap­
pear before Congress to state their views against this move of placing civilian sailors
under the control of a semi-military organization such as the United States Coast
Guard, and

29 Former Permitmen
Lose Suit Against SlU
(Continued from Page 1)
ed the privilege of working on
union-affiliated ships only in the
event that no book members
were available for employment.
The official shipping rules of
the defendant union, (section 35,
subdivisions B and C) make this
distinction between permit-hold­
ers and book members evident.
The payments which plaintiffs
were required to make to obtain
and keep the permits issued to
them by the defendant do not
entitle them to the benefits en­
joyed by book members. It is
unreasonable to assume that
plaintiffs, many of whom have
worked in affiliation with the
defendant union as permit-hold­
ers for several years, were not
aware of the rights and privil­
eges granted to book members,
as opposed to their own rights
and privileges as permit-holders.
The court does not doubt that
plaintiffs have been hurt by the
defendant's withdrawal of their
permit cards. In the absence of
any allegations and proof of
malice or conspiracy, the court
may not concern itself with the
motives of the defendant or-the
propriety of the action taken
and will not interfere in the
internal affairs of the union on
behalf of persons who admitted­
ly never held membership books
in the organization (Murphy et
al., V. Higgins et al., 12 N. Y.
S., 2d, 913, affirmed 23 N.Y.S.,
2nd, 552).

CAN'T SUSTAIN ARGUMENT
Plaintiffs contend that, as the
union's constitution and by-laws
provide only for probationary
and book membership, their af­
filiation with the union must
necessarily fall within one of
these categories. This argument
cannot be sustained. The present
WHEREAS: Since the control of the United States Shipping Commissioner's Office, its system was necessitated by the
functions and duties under the law dealing with the American Seamen were trans­ recent world conflict and the
growing need of manpower in

ferred to the United States Coast Guard, the American seamen have found them­
selves up against an impossible situation, wherein they are forced to deal with a
bureau which is biased against civilians to begin with, and which has through its
action shown total disregard for the welfare and rights of the American seamen, and

WHEREAS: Many bona fide seamen have lost their right to go to sea through the dis­
criminatory practices of the United States Coast Guard of railroading American sea­
men with practically no regard for the law whatsoever, and
WHEREAS: It is obvious that a civilian sailor can have no protection under this setup
where a semi-military bureau functions as investigators, prosecutors and judges of
merchant seamen, and even functions as an appeal court in cases of appeal, and
WHEREAS: Nowhere under the American jurisdictional system are any other citizens
subject to this type of legal procedure, or illegal procedure, and
WHEREAS: The American merchant seamen are the only civilian workers in the United
States who are judged and prosecuted by a semi-military setup,
THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED: That we, the members of the Seafarers International
Union of North America, Atlantic and Gulf District, and in all component Districts
of the Seafarers International Union of North America, hereby officially go on record
to institute a campaign in Congress to introduce laws that will take the functions of
the Shipping Commissioner and the dealings with the American merchant seamen
out of the hands of the United States Coast Guard and replace them where they right. fully belong and where they have been since 1884, namely, in the hands of the United
States Department of Commerce, and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED: That this resolution and the wishes of the American
seamen be introduced in the forthcoming American Federation of Labor Convention
at St. Paul, Minnesota, and a request be made by the American Federation of Labor
'
that the wishes of the American seamen on this subject be included in their platform
'
and be put before President Truman and legislators favorable to the American Fed­
eration of Labor, and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED: That this resolution be forwarded to all Congressmen and
Senators at the proper time and also that all Labor Councils and friendly organiza­
tions throughout the country be requested to aid the American seamen in this just
fight.

Page Three

A&amp;G Nominations
Members wishing to
run for Union office in
Ihe forthcoming A&amp;G
election have until Oc­
tober 15 to file their nom­
inations and credentials
with the Secretary-Treas­
urer. Any nomination re­
ceived after that date
will be automatically dis­
qualified.
See page 11 of this is­
sue for the list of offices
to be filled and the con­
stitutional requirements
that must be met.
- And remember to in­
clude a recent passport
photo and a summary of
your Union record and
activities, not to exceed
100 words—which will be
published in the LOG
prior to start of voting—
so that the membership
will have some know­
ledge of all candidates.

the Merchant Marine. It is well
established, particularly in the
maritime industry, that a labor
union may grant an applicant
temporary membership rather
than unlimited membership.
Public policy does not prohibit
the issuance of a temporary card
or permit. The reasons for not
granting probationary or per­
manent membership to all ap­
plicants are immaterial and are
not within the jurisdiction of
the court (Murphy et al. v. Hig­
gins et al., supra). When the ap­
plicant receives a permit which
is given expressly with certain
conditions and reservations as to
his rights and privileges, he may
not complain that he has been
deprived of rights enjoyed by
members. In accepting the per­
mits, plaintiffs voluntarily ac­
cepted their qualified enjoyment
of temporary union sanction. The
court may not extend or enlarge
that temporary status by judicial
decree (Schein, v. Rose, 12 N.
Y.S., 2d, 87). I hold, therefore,
that plaintiffs were merely nonmember permit-holders from
whom defendants could disaffili­
ate themselves at will.
NO PROOF OFFERED
The law is well settled that
damages cannot be recovered in
an action against a labor union
unless it is both alleged and
proven that the members of the
union fraudulently and in bad
faith approved of the wrongful
acts committed (Schouten v. Al­
pine, 215 N.Y., 225, Glauber v.
Patof, 294 N.Y., 583; Browne v.
Hibbets, 290 N.Y., 459; Haveiifi
V. King, 250 N.Y., 617).
Nothing in the record war­
rants the conclusion that defen­
dant's officers or members acted
with fraudulent intent or in bad
faith in withdrawing permit
cards from plaintiffs. Under these
circumstances plaintiffs' claim
for damages may not be sus­
tained. Judgment is rendered for
the defendant dismissing the
complaint on its merits.
Submit decree within ten days
on three days' notice.
The foregoing are the facts
found by me and constitute the
decision of the court as requir­
ed by section 440 of the Civil
Practice Act.

US Ships To Cot
50 Percent Of
Arms Aid Cm-go
(Continued from Page 1)
defined as government employ­
ees and, therefore, entitled only
to workmen's compensation.
Seamen, the Union pointed out,
would thei'eby be denied their
present access to the courts to
obtain maintenance and cure,
along with indemnities for per­
sonal injuries sustained in the
course of their employment.
The amendments, based on the
Union recommendation that sea­
men speficially be excluded from
the provisions of HR-3191, were
drawn up by Senators Paul
Douglas (D.. 111.) and Wayne
Morse (R., Oi-e.) Prospects that
they will be adopted with the
final bill on the floor of the Sen­
ate are bright.

�THE SEAFARERS

Page Foiir

Friday. October 7. 1949

LOG

MOBILE HALL GETS THE WORKS

Savannah Wins Overtime Beef
For Deck Men On The SS Jean
By JIM DRAWDY
SAVANNAH — How is ship­
ping? It's slow at the moment,
despite the fact that we had sev­
eral payoffs and sign-ons during
the past two weeks.
On the payoff side, we had the
SS Cape Race, South Atlantic;
SS Jean, Bull, and the SS South­
land, South Atlantic. The Jean
came in with a 45-hour overtime
beef as a result of work perform­
ed by the Skipper and Mate that
should have been given to the
Deck Gang^.
The beef was settled and the
overtime collected, after we got
in touch with the Bull Lines'
Port Captain in New York.
We explained to him the na­
ture of the beef in detail and as­
sured him that it was a legiti­
mate beef. That he was convinced
of the legitimacy of this beef is
proven by the fact that the over­
time was paid.
JEAN SIGNS ON
The Jean signed on again here,
as did the Southland and the
Cape Race. Along with these, we
had a few ships in-transit: the
Iberville and Fairland, Water­
man, and the Steel Trader, Isth­
mian.
The South Atlantic Steamship
Company has taken to entertain­
ing and dining various officials
aboard their ships in European
ports.
The Stewards Department men
have been fully paid for their
extra services in this connection
and have also been highly prais­
ed for their courteous and effici­
ent service.

ment store will get another
chance to indicate their prefer­
ence for a union.
Since the first election wais
held at the store, the National
Labor Relations Board has in­
formed management that it must
not directly or indirectly coerce
or intimidate the employees. Cer­
tainly if these clerks are anxious
to improve their conditions, they
will vote for the union.
At a special meeting called on
Sept. 21 to act on the resolution
sounding the opening of the an­
nual A&amp;G District elections, the
membership here unanimously
concurred in and adopted the
resolution.
Four of our Brothers are pres­
ently in the Marine Hospital but,
we're happy to add, none of them
is seriously ill. These men are J.
C. Powell, O. F. Martin, W. L.
Smith and W. W. Allred.
The weather is a little on the
cool side, and that is okay with
all hands down here.
Oh yes, a reminder—it is im­
portant that the crews on ships
touching Jacksonville send their
laundry and cleaning to a Union
laundry. Try to be as near 100
percent Union as you possibly
can. This is one way that you
can be.

Port Bdtunore Has Inough Men
To Handle All Shipping Needs
By WILLIAM (Curly) RENTZ

BALTIMORE — There were
more than enough men on the
There are a number of old- beach here to take care of our
timers in Savannah right now shipping needs during the past
waiting to catch ships. To name a two weeks, as a result of the drop
few, there's D. Medlock, L. Kris- in the number of payoffs and
tiensen, M. R. Wickham and R. sign-ons.
Reddick.
Payoffs here were the Arlyn,
Mae,
Evelyn, and Rosario, Bull;
We are strongly in favor of
Steel
Scientist, Steel Admiral,
regular Union education meet­
Steel
Architect,
Isthmian; Balings, and submit the recommen­
dation that such meetings be held tore, Cubore, Marore and Venat least twice weekly in all of ore. Ore.
Among those in-transit were
our Union Halls.
the Iberville, Loyola Victory, St.
And during these meetings all Augustine Victory, Seamar,
members of voting age should be Christine and the W. E. Downing.
urged to register and vote in the
FEW BEEFS
elections in their home towns, so
There
were
a few beefs on
that pro-labor candidates can get
these ships, but all were settled
proper support.
satisfactorily. Crew members
LOCAL LABOR
aboard the Loyola Victory were
That's one way we can fight especially happy over getting the
to get rid of the Taft-Hartley fans they had waited for.
Signing on were the Baltore,
Law and other measures that are
Marore,
Cubore, Arlyn, Rosario,
harmful to the working man.
Evelyn, Mae, Loyoja Victory,
On the local labor front, the Fairland, Carrabulle, and Steel
retail clerks at Adler's Depart- Scientist.
If the steel strike continues
for any length of time, this port
will feel the effects because the
Calmar and Ore ships will be
affected.
The AFL longshoremen who
SYDNEY, Australia — Another are now in negotiations for a
free trade union group withdrew • new contract are determined to
from the Soviet-dominated World i win their demands, especially the
Federation of Trade Unions to one for pensions. They have a
further weaken its influence in good beef because all workers
world labor affairs.
who put in a lifetime for a comThe Australian Council of
protection
Trade Unions voted 231 to 134'°^ ®
income when they
to cancel its affiliation with the
WFTU, charging that it had con­ The companies keep piling up
profits and they make provisions
formed to Communist policy.
for the care and replacement of
The council controls major un­ their machinery. But they don't
ions in Australia, with the ex­ seem to be as interested in the
ception of the Australian Work­ human beings without whom
ers Union, a strongly anti-Com- they couldn't do a thing. When
munist group with authority a man gets old on the job and
over most rural unions.
the company no longer has use

Aussie Union Groups
Withdraw From WFTU

The Mobile Hall, if you can see through the network of supports, is getting 'a, thorough
going over, inside and out. When the job is finished, says Agent Gal Tanner, it will be the finest
looking Union Hall in the South, and ready for heavy shipping which, he hopes, is just axound
the corner. At any rate, when alterations are completed, all Brothers are invited to pay a visit
to Mobile and see for themselves.
When these splints are removed, says Brother Tanner, the outside of the Building will
show a pebbled granite exterior. And here's a cheering note for those who find beer is not
enough in the summer — the Hall will be air-cooled throughout.

for him, they toss him on the
heap.
The ILA men in this port voted
to extend the contract discus­
sions, to allow the government
conciliators time to work out a
plan on which agreement can be
reached.
More power to the crew of the
SS Puerto RicO and the editors
of their shipboard paper, the
Advocate. They're doing a swell
job and I hope they keep it up.
Hovy about sending the Advocate
to all ports, so all can see the
fine job they're doing? (The
crew is mailing copies of the Ad­
vocate to all ports—Ed.)
Well, we'll see you all next
week. Meanwhile we're hoping
for a pick-up in shipping for the
men on the beach here and
everywhere.

This is an inside view of whed is being done to the
Mobile Hall. The repairs and alterations have been on the
agenda for quite a while, but the high prices of materials
made the job prohibitive. Now that the work has been started,
it won't be long before the Mobile Hall will be as up to date
as any other SIU Hall. Pictures of the refurbished building
will be printed in the LOG. as soon as received, for all to see.

Seattle Gets Two Weeks Of Good Shipping
By WILLIAM McKAY
SEATTLE — Shipping in the
Port of Seattle was good dur­
ing the past two weeks. We ship­
ped a total of 46 men to vessels
of the Calmar Line and Water­
man Steamship Company, and
to the Dolphin Steamship Com­
pany's SS Demostar. At the.mo­
ment, however, things have
slowed up a bit.
We paid off the SS Afoundria,
manned by a very good crew,
most of. whom came up from
Frisco.
TURMOIL CONTINUES
The Demostar paid off with no
beefs. It should be mentioned
that this crew has shown very
strong support of the SEAFAR­
ERS LOG and a word of thanks
is due the boys.
The waterfront situation on
the West Coast remains in the

usual state of turmoil, created,
of course, by Harry Bridges and
the regular bunch of commie
stooges, aided by various other
trouble makers.
To those who are continually
getting fouled up aboard ship,
I'd like to point out that the
SIU and the SUP have been
putting up a hard and cdstly
fight to get rid of the Coast
Guard. And we are going to
continue fighting until the job
is done.
The Unit.n is doing a better
job of policing on its contracted
ships than ; ly bunch of bureau­
crats can d "*. I think that it has
proven that the Coast Guard is
not needed to act as a police
outfit in th? maritime industry.
Insofar n the foul-ups are
concerned, the point is that the
Union is nc . going to go all-out
against the Coast Guard's con-

tinued jurisdiction and then let
a bunch of irresponsibles carry
on as they please, without any
regard for the vast majority of
serious-minded,
sound-working
members. Foul-ups should not
expect to receive any special con­
sideration from the Union.

Assessment Due
With the iriembenbip con­
curring in the Tallying Com­
mittee's report on the assess­
ment referendum at all
Branch meetings Wednesday.
Sept. 14. the ten-dollar Gen­
eral Fund assessment is now
payable.
Seafarers are urged to
make their payments im­
mediately so that their books
and permits can ba marked
paid up to data.

�Xrida", Oclober ,?. IMS
Friday. October 7. 1949

.TMf-cr A V

THE

A .n F n c

SEAFARERS tOG

Page Seven
Page Five

Pro-SIU Crews Have Cities Service Rocky
As the handwriting on the wall looms larger and
larger, Cities Service hatchetmen are running wild on all
company ships, lopping off scores of crewmembers with
complete disregard of their previous service and com­
petence. Having used up all available legal tricks to block
certification of the SIU as collective bargaining represen­
tative for its unlicensed men, embittered company officials
are firing CS employes in wholesale fashion. It doesn't
matter that a crewmember has served the company long
and well. If he looks, acts or talks like a man interested
in the Union — or shows the*
slightest sign of interest - he's
"unsatisfactory." The
finished, junked as soon as
Assistant gave them 24
hours notice on the night of
vessel ties up.
Sept. 21.
In the past few weeks, more
than a score of pro-Union Cit­ The Abiqua men said that
ies Servicemen have been made fear dominates every man seekvictims of the company's hys­ ing a Cities Service job and
terical purge, which has even that it is almost impossible for
touched men who were only a man to keep his self-respect
while working for the company.
They were unanimous in de­
claring that, when the Union is
certified by the NLRB, a Cities
Service crewmember could then
These four victinis of Cities Services' continuing purge of pro-Union men were fired from
be "a man among men." The
the SS Abiqua on 24-hour notice, despite their established competence and satisfactory ship­
big issue — even bigger than
the better wages and working board service. Left to right, Paul Aubain, Red Leonard, Bill Condra and Mike Carlin.
conditions that would come with
Union' representation — is the Union sympathies under cover, this ship cooperated for the meetings the crewmembers dis­
job security, the four Abiqua "because one slip and you're ex- common good. We could speak cussed our problems. We got to
our' minds without fear of spies. know the score and were able
victims said. As Red Leonard Cities Service."
Chester Reiss, who was fired The wages and overtime were to take action, if it was neces­
put it:
"GiVe Cities Service men the from the Royal Oak in May, better, and working conditions sary.
"In other words, we have a
security that comes with SIU because he refused to sign a were tops.
membership and they'll be free,
"Cities Service men," Reiss
self-respecting men."
continued, "would be fools if
Two crewmembers from the
they didn't hold onto their con­
SS Chiwawa, A1 Sirhpson, Ma­
viction that the SIU was the
chinist, and A1 Litwins, DM, got
only way out of their present IBl
the short end of the stick when
mess."
they were paid off in Linden,
After working on the SS Bents
N. J. on Sept. 25.
AL LITWINS
Fort under three different Cooks
Litwins, who had been aboard
and three Stewards, all of whom
for
two months, was ^sked by
found him competent, Dominic
slightly suspected of having
the Chief Mate if he were go­
Pasqua, Utility, suddenly got the
sympathy with the SHJ.
ing
to make another trip. When
axe for "unsatisfactory service"
Practically all of these victims
on June 6. The Second Cook
of the Cities Service firings who he said "yes," the Chief Mate
and a Messman went with him.
are pro-SiU have since shipped put it this way:
Someone had spotted them read­
out on vessels contracted to the "From what I've seen of your
actions and conversation with
ing a SEAFARERS LOG.
Union.
Several have already reported the men about the Union, I don't
But Pasqua didn't feel badly
that the transfer from the spy- think you should."
for
long. He shipped out on the
rigged,
open-your-mouth-once- That ended Litwins' service
SlU-cbntracted
SS Couer de
and-you're-finished
atmosphere with Cities Service.
Alene,
of
"Victory
Carriers Corp.
aboard CS ships to the security, Simpson's two and a half
And
with
a
contract
to protect
DOMINIC PASQUA
AL SIMPSON
better wages and working condi­ years of working on Cities Serv­
him
and
to
specify
what
his job
tions and protection of a SIU- ice ships came to the same ab­
was, he enjoyed good overtime,
contracted ship is like stepping rupt end. The Mate discovered company-union CTMA pledge the top wages in the industry, strong organization of seamen
into another world — and they he was pro-SIU, and told him card handed to him' by the Stew­ better food and quarters than he like ourselves behind us. And
ard, has one trip aboard the
that makes all the difference
said they wanted their former not to sign on again.
had on CS ships and most of all in the world, as any Cities Serv­
Both
Simpson
and
Litwins
SlU-contracted
Mankato
"Victory
CS shipmates to know it.
—freedom and job secuiity.
ice crewmember can tell you,"
From the stories told by the said that CS men haven't the under his belt.
"After
a
trip
on
a
ship
under
"I
could
talk
without
being
Pasqua said.
CS victims, it is clear that the
afraid
to
lose
my
job.
If
I
had
Union
contract,
all
I
can
say
"I sure hope the SIU is cer­
company's present tactic is to
is
that
I'm
sorry
for
the
guys
a
beef
I
went
to
my
Department
tified
soon,"' he concluded. "It'll
send its hand-picked stooges on
on
the
Cities
Service
ships,"
i
Delegate,
•
who
saw
that
it
was
mean
a new day for those guys
roving assignments in the fleet.
Reiss said. "All hands aboard , straightened out. At shipboard on CS ships."
These company robots finger
the guys whose hair isn't parted
right and then the axe falls,
with the stooges moving on to
the next ship to repeat the per­
formance.
The pattern is the same on
every CS ship — the SS Abiqua,
SS Royal Oak, SS Bents Fort,
In 1884, the resolution points 1945 President Truman issued a
(Continued from Page 1)
SS French Creek, SS Chiwawa,
Coast
Guard
functioning
as
in­
out.
Congress enacted a law cre­ directive returning the Coast
SS Salem Maritime and the rest.
vestigator,
prosecutor,
judge
and
ating
the office of the United Guard to the Treasury Depart­
Take" the Abiqua, for instance.
jury,
a
civilian
seaman
finds
States
Shipping Commissioner, ment "in accordance with the
"When she paid off on Sept. 22,
himself
the
victim
of
a
virtual
whose
function
it was to pro­ policj' of putting the nation back
four of her Black Gang got the
military courts-martial proced­ tect seamen in the signing of on peacetime basis as soon as ;
boot. They were fired
shortly
ure.
ship's articles and to rule on possible."
!
after David Fiirman, front man
This flagrant
discrimination disputes between the Master and
The. merchant marine's return
for the company-controlled Cities
against the American seamen crewmen. The Commissioner was to civilian status ended at that ,
Service Tanker Men's Associa­
CHESTER REISS
denies him the right to a fair also empowered by the law to point, however. For on May 16,
tion (CTMA), came aboard.
trial, which is the constitutional discipline seamen found guilty 1946, President Truman, under .
Paul Aubain, Wiper, has been
the powers granted him by the
aboard for 32 days; Mike Carlin, slightest protection against the guarantee of all under the con­ of violating maritime laws.
Reorganization Act, recommend­
Wiper, for three months and 12 company's abuses, and that the stitution of the United States.
WAR MEASURE, ONLY
No other US civilian worker
ed that all functions and duties
days; Bill Condra, two and a only hope for liberation from
half months, and Red Leonard, insecurity, poor wages, bell-to- has been subjected to this type Although President Roosevelt of the US Shipping Commission­
three months and 12 days. Be­ bell work and the rest, was of juridical procedure and the transferred in 1942 the shipping er be placed under control of the
sides, Condra has been in the through representation by the SIU's intensified campaign functions of the Department of Coast Guard.
At that time the SIU Atlantic
against the Coast Guard is in­ Commerce, including the office
CS fleet for about a year and SIU."
of
the
Shipping
Commissioner
and
Gulf District vigorously op- ,
tended
to
wipe
out
this
inequal­
The
two
Chiwawa
men
are
a half, and Leonard had been
to
the
Coast
Guard,
this
was
posed
the transfer, which went i
ity,
and
give
seamen
the
same
certain
that
the
vast
majority
of
serving on the company's ships
only
a
wartime
measure,
the
through
a Senate committee by ;
rights
under
the
law
as
civilian
CS
men
are
pro-SIU.
Simpson
for about a year.
resolution recalls. On Sept. 29, the narrow margin of one vote. |
Suddenly, though, their serv­ said everyone tries to keep his shoreside workers.

Seafarers Intensifies Campaign
Against CC Control Over Seamen

l''
r •

[f

�T M

Typhoon Drives Packer
Aground In Tokyo Bay;
3-Week Ordeal Elated

OLDTIMERS' REUNION IN NEW ORLEANS

Still stuck fast in five feet of sand after being driven
aground on Aug. 31 by a typhoon in Tokyo Bay, the SS
Citrus Packer, Waterman, is a sCene of rugged existence,
according to a dramatic ac-*
ohama to assist us, but she sail­
count of the ship's difficul­ ed back and forth for several
ties reaching the LOG this hours, then went away. The
plant went out and we were
week from crewmember Al­ eating cold sandwiches and bath­
ing out of buckets.
bert E. Hellmuth.
"Sept. 2—Still laying here on
Brother Hellmuth kept a daily
log of life aboard the Packer the beach and wondering when
from typhoon time on. The log we'i-e going to get some atten­
tion. The plant is still out so
runs like this:
we're
cooking stews on deck
"Aug. 31—We let go at 6 AM
with
wood
fires.
and sailed for Seattle. Hit heavy
"Sept.
6—Broke
sea watches
seas and high winds as soon as
today
and
started
working
the
we made the open sea. It rain­
ed all day. We secured hatches Deck Gang—bell-to-bell... We're
and booms until noon. About 11 still washing out of buckets and
AM the Captain found the ty­ eating the best the cooks can
The simultaneous deckings of the Alcoa Corsair and the Del Norte gave some of the crewphoon too rough and he headed make on the wood fires... mostly
members a chance to celebrzite their meeting. Among those taking advantage of the event in
back to Yokohama. Visibility stews.
Sgt. Hand's place in the Crescent City are (standing, left to right): Leroy Clarke, Sgt. Hand,
was poor, so we dropped the
NO WATER
Brailmont and Bob Creel: seated: Shakle Short, Blackie Bankston, and Sloppy Creel, Bob's
hook in the mouth of Tokyo
brother. Photo by Mel Hiltz.
Bay. By 2 PM she was turning "Sept. 7—Conditions are going
over 80 revs and both hooks, from bad to worse. Everything
with eight shackles of chain seems to be dirty. There isn't
water enough to keep things
each, were out.
clean. Even if there were, it
wouldn't drain off. We're laying
DRIFTING
Messages from SlU-contracted ships throughout the world jcontinue to pour
"She still drifted toward the at a ten-degree list and our
scuppers
don't
drain.
Sent
three
into Union Headquarters praising the Seafarers Bulletin as an up-to-date source of in­
western shore, but a little later
the wind hit us abeam, driving delegates to the consul in Yok­ formation for Seafarers on the high seas. The Bulletin, a bi-weekly digest of the major
us rapidly onto the eastern ohama to see what can be done.
Z
I
! T";
"Sept. 8—As soon as the Cap­ news items appearing in th'e^T
shore. First our bow ran aground,
en A c A T&gt; f T&gt; c T'
1^"® scores of comments received have to listen to rumors that are
then the high winds swung our tain heard about the Delegates bLALAKEKb LOG, is wing- go
f^om SIU crews at sea: spread from ship to ship in forstem around and we lay on the going to Yokohama, the plant ed via airmail to every ves­ SS Southport — The Seafarers
ports. We think the Bullesand, starboard side to, while was started... might be a coinci­ sel under the SIU banner. Bulletin is without a doubt a tin is a good thing and hope
dence.
..
the heavy seas pounded and
In virtually every communica­
that it will continue."
"Sept. 18—Four tugs tried to tion the SIU crews emphasized most useful and novel way of
pushed us further up on the
keeping
the
membership
fully
in­
St. Augustine Victory — "The
refloat the ship today, but she the need for the new, direct
beach...
formed
regarding
Union
activi­
crew
was very much pleased
"Sept. 1—The wind subsided wouldn't even groan. She's stuck method of supplying news of ties. We hope it will meet with with the Bulletin and thinks it
fast
in
four
or
five
feet
of
sand.
Union and general maritime ac­ the unanimous approval, of- the is a good idea to have Union
at daybreak; we were high on
tivity and hailed the Seafarers membership and continue to news sent to them at sea. In this
the beach. The shore was only Looks like a dredging job...
"Sept. 20—The Captain is get­ Bulletin as a splendid innova­ serve as the useful and success­
20 feet away and we were a half
way we won't have too much
mile from deep water... a tug ting more antagonistic all the tion.
ful organ it has proven itself trouble trying to catch up on
Here are some samples from to be."
had been dispatched from Yok­
CContinued on Page 7)
back issues of the LOG, when
SS Calmar—"The crew thinks we return to the States."
the Bulletins are a good thing, SS Robin Locksley—"Everyone
so keep them coming as good on board is looking forward to
reading matter for crewmem- the next issue. We think it is a
bers."
great little paper and a neat
By "SALTY DICK'
,SS Steel King—"We have re­ way to keep the members in­
ceived two copies so far and it formed."
A farmer in Iowa will settle icnger ships and Union Halls. world ... Of all the lovers I've sure is good to get some news SS Russell Alger—"The crew
many beefs for us in the near The crew is out to show how met, I think George Perez takes from the best damn Union in appreciates the Bulletins very
future. He's breeding chickens well they can function . . . Sug- the cake. He claims he can go maritime history, after spending much. We have been at sea about:
. ...
Igestion: When you're in Trujillo out with any girl in any port, a few months away from the 40 days and we were very glad
without wmgs. This shotUd ~me
d„„.t p.y
one doUar without money. Yet he was seen States. All of us aboard the to have something like it to
as w^me news to the wys
,he Jaraga Hotel by recently in San Juan with a Steel King think it is a good read."
who beef at chow time about ,^,,1
senorita after asking a few of idea. Keep up the good work."
SS Allegheny Victory—"Hope
Jways getting wings...One of
his shipmates for a five-dollar SS Robin Wentley — "We are that we shall continue to receive
the best galley boys who ever
loan. He needed the money for receiving the condensed versions more Bulletins as they come off
°
this hotel and you can al- carfare, said George.
of the LOG and the crew is en­ the press, for they are well ap­
, "Big Sinn." He was from Vir-j
^
J
One of the PR's waiters form­ joying them very much. The preciated and will be kept post­
ginia and he always t^ked^^ deck chair, taking a sun hath, erly worked in New York's Wal­ whole crew wants to express its ed for everyone to read."
about^ulah and how much he|
Frank Bose dorf-Astoria. For several weeks thanks for the Bulletins and urge
The Bulletin, the first issue of
missed her and the plow. Beulah
there he served an old lady who| that the good work be kept up." which was published July 22, is
was the old mule.
recently presented always left him a one-cent tip. SS William H. Allen — "We made up and ready to take off
In the New York Hall they|with juniors ... A sof^ball One day he blew his top and have received the second copy via air within a couple of hours
now have coffee time at 10 team has been organized aboard told her off. The following day'of the Bulletin and think it will after the LOG is "put to bed." A
AM and 3 PM. Donuts come|the Bull Lines passenger ship... he received $100 (that's one- prove to ,be one of the best things complete itinerary of all SIU
with the coffee and you can j believe the ship's fund is one hundred bucks) as a tip.
that ever came out to keep all ships is maintained at Headquar­
watch television whUe you dunk of the largest on any SIU ship The crew of the Puerto Rico Union Brothers informed about ters so that the Bulletin can be
...Things are pretty slow. And
The crew is cooperating is lucky enough to see one movie! their Union."
delivered directly.
it's times like these when the fully in donations to the ship's going south and another on the' SS John B. Waterman — "We
In order to give all hands an
benefits of a compulsory vaca­ fund and the LOG.
return north. The other day the wish to express our gratitude for opportunity to see each issue of
tion rule would be felt.
Seafarer Jerry DeMeo goes spectacle was "Mighty Joe the information on the latest the Bulletin, delegates are urged
The Editors of the SS Puerto ashore with a golf bag but not Young." We didn't like it, but Union events, sent direct from to post them on the ship's bulle­
Rico's paper, the Advocate, are to caddy. He claims he has play­ we couldn't get our money back, the Union Headquarters. By re- tin board, in the crew's mess, or
sending copies to all SIU pass- ed on golf courses all over the Why? 'cause it was free.
Iceiving the Bulletin, we do not in similarly convenient spots.

Crews, Acclaim SIU Overseas News Bulletin

'Voice Of The Sea'

/•

(
./

I •

�Friday, October 7, 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Seven

Digested Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings
BESSEMER VICTORY. July 28
—A. E. Sullivan, Chairman; L. R.
Waller, Secretary. Everything re­
ported okay in all departments.
Kivitchoff elected Ship's Dele­
gate. Captain has ordered that
all linen will be issued piece by
piece. Suggested that Steward
try to get better grade of coffee
when ship arrives in New York.
Department Delegates are to pre­
pare repair lists; Steward to or­
der new pillows and matresses.
Members reminded that cots are
to be put away when not in use.
t, X i
ALCOA PLANTER, July 9 —
L. E. Kilgore, Chairman; J. P.
Shaughnessy, Recording Secre­
tary. Ship's Delegate reported
that all repairs had been taken
care of so that ship is starting
out clean. No beefs in any of
the departments. Motion carried
to have Ship's Delegate check
slopchest. It was suggcisted that
at least two coffee times each
week be devoted to discussions
on Union matters. All hands ap­
proved. Delegate is to get in
touch with the Merchant Marine
Library Association to see about
getting new b^oks.

XXX
EVISTAR, July 4 — Doyle,
Chairman; W. Thornton, Secre­
tary. No beefs reported by any
of the delegates. Motions carried:
to wire in for new library; that
a letter be written to Congress­
men expressing crew's objections
to the proposed Merchant Marine
Reserve Bill. Brother Doyle was
elected Ship's Delegate. After
one minute of silence in mem­
ory of departed Brothers, meet­
ing was adjourned.
XXX
JEFF DAVIS, July 10 — T.
Boland, Chairman; C. W. Ladwig, Secretary. Disputed over­
time was reported by the Deck
Delegate, none by the other de­
partment representatives. Brother
McGuire suggested that the card
players keep the recreation room
clean by cleaning up at end of
sessions. Motion carried unani­
mously concurring in Mobile re­
solution that men taking vaca­
tion pay get off their ship. Night
Cook and Baker and the BR are
entitled to eat supper in the
messhall. Table is to be kept
open for the watch. One minute
of silence in memory of departed
Brothers. Meeting adjourned at
1:30 PM.

XXX
EDITH, July 16 — Thomas G.
Hickey, Chairman; Louis Rizzo,
Secretary.
Delegates
reports:
Deck — some disputed overtime;
Engine — all disputed overtime
straightened nut; Stewards —no
beefs. Gerald Smith elected
Ship's Delegate. Discussion on
collection for shipmate who was
fatally injured. Delegates to ac­
cept contributions, with proceeds
to be sent to deceased's family
with letter of condolence. Bro­
thers urged, to keep laundry
clean. Each delegate to draw up
repair list. Deck Delegate A. P.
Mazur asked deck crew to co­
operate with man on sanitary
duty. His proper duties are to
be explained to him fully.

SUZANNE. July 10 — M.
Richelson, Chairman; William
Gannon, Secretary. Motion car­
ried to elect delegates at end
of each voyage. Ship's Delegate
reported that one crewmember
has missed ship in San Juan. A
few minor beefs in Deck Depart­
ment; none in the others. Elec­
tion of delegate held. William
Gannon elected Ship's Delegate;
Teddy Ostaszeski, Deck; John
Decker, Engine, and Jesus Ayala,
Stewards. Suggested that messmen make coffee in the morn­
ing, because Wipers claim they
they have too much to do to
make it. Matter is to be brought
to attention of Patrolman in New
York for decision.
XXX
WILLIAM H. DAVIE, July 19
— H. Gregorski, Chairman; Os­
car Payne, Secretary. No beefs
in any of the departments. Mo­
tions carried: to draw up a re­
pair list; to post repair list on
bulletin board. Billy Curry, Ste­
ward, asked that all linen be
turned in so that it may be put
on inventory. All hands reminded
to be sober for payoff. Men
leaving ship are to leave foc'sles
ship-shape for replacements. Vote
of thanks given to Stewards De­
partment for their efficiency.
Crew thanked the watch for
having messhall in good condi­
tion in the morning.

XXX
TWIN FALLS VICTORY, July
25 — Robert G. Varnon, Chair­
man; Lee de Parlier, Secretary.
Motion carried that Ship's Dele­
gate notify Headquarters about
Wiper who missed ship ir Frisco.
Under Good and Welfare there
was much discussion on mem­
bers staying aboard ship for
over a period of one year. A
hand vote on this question show­
ed 18 men in favor of having
crews get off after one year;
8 against.
XXX
KATHRYN, July 16 — John
Clamp, Chairman; W. Blanton,
Secretary. No beefs. Engine Dele­
gate reported that it had been
settled that engineer has right
to break and set sea watches
at same hour Some disputed
overtime in Black Gang. Motion

to hold shipboard meetings once
a month was overruled as con­
trary to Union procedure. Motion
carried to allow only food hand­
lers to enter galley and pantry
during meal hours to, serve them­
selves and that crew members
leave messhall after meals and
not return until messmen have
cleaned the room. Under Good
and Welfare, there was a variety
of discussion on night lunch be­
longing to men on watch, loud
talking and noises in the passage­
way while men are sleeping.
XXX
RAPHAEL SEMMES. July 17
— Leonard Eisele, Chairman; D.
Stone, Secretary. One hour dis­
puted overtime in Deck Depart­
ment, 20 hours in Engine, six
hours in Stewards Department.
Motions carried: That all dele­
gates and Patrolmen check re­
pairs before signing on and to
hold special meeting if necessary;
that slopchest be checked and
new slopchest be put on ship,
with sufficient variety and sizes.
Washing machine i'tmd reported
at $20.70. Men using washing ma­
chine are to clean it when finish­
ed.

CUT and RUN

wmm.
XXX
DEL NORTE, Sept. 4 — Tom
Banning, Chairman; Thurston
Lewis, Secretary. No beefs re­
ported. Frank Domjnicus, chair­
man of recreation committee, an­
nounced that immediately after
meeting, there would be a get
together of men wishing to play
Softball or baseball. Brother
Bradley reported that after pur­
chase of educational film there
is a balance of $49.59 in ship's
fund. J. King was elected Ship's
Delegate by acclamation. Motion
by Landry carried calling for a
posting of ship's rules and list
of offenders and fines imposed
in all lounges. A suggestion to
change the meeting schedule was
ruled impracticable because sug­
gested time would be inconveni­
ent for majority of men. Since
ship could not supply everyone
with writing paper in quantities
desired. Brother Findley sug­
gested that stationery for crew
be purchased out of ship's fund.
Union films to be shown tonight
following regular movie. Meeting
adjourned at 3:45 PM.
XXX
TRINITY, July 24 — J. Lane,
Chairman; A. W. Gowder, Sec­
retary. Port screens will be pro­
cured when we get in from this
trip. Ship's Delegate reported
that other than transportation
and screens everything is okay.
No beefs in any of the depart­
ments. A lot of discussion about
Brother painting his foc'sle deck
without authorization or the pay­
ment of overtime. This Brother
was reprimanded by Ship's Dele­
gate Marple. It was agreed to
turn the beef over to the Pa­
trolman upon getting in port.

Packer Aground In Japan
(Continued from Page 6)
time. A member of the Navy
salvage crew made some trouble
up in town last night, so the
Captain sent in a charge of de­
sertion of a ship in distress, al­
though they were sober and
had - performed their regular
duties yesterday.
"When the guilt of the Navy

JMIMATIONIS FOR A6JS OFFICES
CLOSE ON OCTOBER 10TM. So IF VoU vVANJ
TO As/0&gt;tAIKJATE SOMEONE - OR YOURSELF
fOR THAT/MATTER- MAKE SURE THAT THE
THE CREPE MTIALS REACH
HALL.
SBC'Y.-Tt^AS.. S/BBAVBf? Sr. A/EtV
BY THAT PATE . QUAUFlCATIOAJS FOROFFTCC
ARE GIVEN OAJ ANOTHER PAGE OF THIS ISSUE »

man had been established the
CID let our men go and told
them they could come ashore
again as far as the Army was
concerned. They also said what
they thought of the Captain. Al­
though we've been here three
weeks, he refuses to give us
either shore passes or a draw.
We're sending another delegate
to the consul tomorrow."

By HANK
One of the happies guys we've seen sail into the hall last
v/eek was William Zarkas. He's working on the SS Puerto Rico—
and the jobs on her rate tops in the SlU . . . "Tex" Suit gave us
two newsy items. He said that the baseball-minded department of
deck apes aboard the SS Colabee are going to donate their softball playing gear to the kids of the community center in the small
Canadian port of Bale Comeau, in Quebec. The other item is full
of praisethe baking products Brother Harold Peeler put
out—Danish pastry, etc.—and especially something caUed a chiffon
pie which has to be stowed in the ice box so it won't spoil. Well,
Brothers, send in the names of those you seriously consider the
best bakers in the SlU. We'll mention them all and the names of
the ships they're on, if you know . . . Speaking of the best bakers
we'll ask who are best Bosuns in the SlU? To start it off we'll
name Brother Eddie Parr who is now serang of the SS Puerto
Rico. What are your nominations? Looking good after mucho Gulf
shipping. Brother Charlie Tannehill sailed into this town. He's
sure happy to have finally seen those two excellent SlU sound
films called "Battle of Wall Street" and "This is the SlU." Through
all the months Charlie was shipping down South he never had the
luck to see these films. Now he's carrying a bigger smile than he'
ever did, no kidding.
XXX
Charlie Walson, the Electrician who was strike-bound
a.board the Steel Flyer which finally was the first to sail loaded
out of paralyzed Hawaii is now waiting for a "Bull run." His
shipmate. Electrician Frank Mandler (Who. by the way, was
recently married—so congratulations and smooth sailing) is
also waiting for a "Bull run." Bull—eeze, fellas, that's a lot
of Bull—competition, you know! After a long absence from
New York Peter Gvozdich is back again—and was asking for
his shipmate. Bosun Christianson! Those Seatrain New Jersey
homsteaders sailed into town again. John Jellette s^ill has his
mustache and confessed last week that he's been ooard for
six months to the day of his birthday, September 29. Happy
birthday, John. Bosun Bill Champlin is also aboard with his
mustache and shipshape, true-SlU style of sailing ships . . .
Brother M. F. Morrison of Illinois, writes he's just returned
home from a six month trip and requests to have the LOG
sailing to his home. Okay, Brother Morrison, you're Logged!
XXX
Returning to college soon is Brother Edward Grady of Louisi­
ana. Good luck, Ed . . . Donald Smith of Pennsylvania is an­
chored in New York now after a recent voyage, we presume . .
The SEAFARER LOG will be sailing free of cost to the homes of
the following- brothers—Ruben Humphrey of Arkansas, Alexander
Martin of Louisiarta, James Murphy of Pennsylvania, Early Punch
of Louisiana, James McConathy of Tennessee, George Key of Ala­
bama, Ben Talbert of Texas, Charles Johnston of Maryland, Harold
Gillen of Massachusetts, Richard Adell of Massachusetts, Clayton
Jb'ield of New Jersey . . . "Aussie" Smith is anchored in town right
now ... So is big. George Whale, the Steward . . . Brother John
Goldsborough is now drydocked in the Wadsworth General hospi­
tal in Los Angeles, California. His shipmates no doubt will cheer
him up a little by dropping him a letter.
XXX
We're still wondering what's wrong with the way farmers
walk? Recently one Brother told -another Brother, who was
dressed in a half-way decent suit and flashy tie-shirt combina­
tion—"You look like an executive." The over-praised Brother
blushed slightly and mumbled "Aw, ?-top the kidding" and
heard the guy answer, "Yeah, but you walk like a farmer."
The humor of the matter is^—what's wrong with the way
farmers walk? . . .

�THE

Page Eight

SEAFARERS

Friday, October 7. 1949

LOG

tm MEMBERSHIP SPEAKS
SUP Man Calls Loyola Vic Tony
Seafarers 'Real Brothers'

Swears By Hospital Of Ras Tanura

To the Editor:

Here is a tip for the Brothers
who make a trip down the Per­
sian Gulf way: If you need hos­
Kindly publish this letter in
pitalization in that area, try to
the SEAFARERS LOG.
get to Ras Tanura — where they
I am an SUP bookmember. I
have the best hospital in the
signed on the Waterman interEast. In fact, it compares favor­
coastal scow Loyola Victory in
ably with many in the States.
Frisco, as a member of the Deck
The doctors and nurses are of
Gang. This ship is SlU-contractthe best. Dr. Bentzen is known
ed and has a g'ood SIU crew in
by the Aramco men in Ras Tan­
all three departments.
ura as the best surgeon in the
The Ship's and Deck Delegates
Far East. I think he is, too, on
are real Union Brothers, as are
the
basis of personal experience.
the rest of the crewmembers. It
is a real pleasure to ride with
Dr. Bentzen removed a stone
these men who have treated me To the Editor:
from one of my kidneys after
and other SUP men as their
26 days, but he saved me from
Just a few lines to let the fel­ an operation by so taking his
Brothers.
I am in favor of taking steps lows know how this scow has time.
against men who agitate against been doing.
During my hospitalization, I've
our two unions by knocking the We recently loaded for another been enjoying a lot of special
organizations and their officials run on the rum and coke trail, privileges — going to the beach,
This bevy of perl "women in while" makes il easy lo
without any foundations for their and only God and Alcoa know theater, recreation hall. It's all
undersland why Tony Zalewski raves aboul Ras Tanura's
remarks. These agitators also how many more runs. But we are free, except for the drinks and
hospilal. From lefl lo righl Ihe girls axe Emilie Pural, Ann
knock the rules and regulations all set for anything, with a they are cheap.
Fuhrken, Lou Wenlzel, Carol Carson and Jean Fedesna.
laid down by the majority of first-class crew and officers and
a clean ship. (Yes sir, not even I am enclosing a picture of a long time before getting this shortcake and most any kind of
the memberships.
old Mr. Bauxite can get this ship some of the swell nurses on the shore job. He, too, makes it a soft drinks.
WARNING
hospital staff. The others were pleasure to be here, for the way I think anyone who has read
dirty.)
off at the time the photo was
Ships crews should be warned
I read in the LOG about the taken or they'd have been in it. he puts out' a meal — and all this letter will agree with me
to keep on the lookout for these
you can eat.
that the Ras Tanura hospital
Brotherhood of Marine Engineers They're a swell gang.
agitators. There are trouble-ma­
The
Cook's
name
is
John
Constaff
can do a lot to make a
affiliating with .he iSlU, and I
kers (as a rule, gashounds who
think they made a very smart And here is one for the books. erly and here's a sample of some guy's stay there pleasant and
perform aboard ship and con­
move. After all, we are the top The hospital's Chief Cook is a of the choice morsels he served: one to be long remembered. I'll
tinue when they hit the beach)
Union on the waterfront and I seaman. He's been here for six steak with mushrooms, lobster never forget my time there.
who do nothing but blast every­
years, but had been sailing for salad, ice cream, strawberry
Tony Zalewski
guess they realize it.
thing about the unions. Their
MAKE IT A RULE
purpose is to disrupt and keep
the organizations from going I like very much the sugges­
ahead with their programs of tion made by Joe Algina about
fighting for the welfare of the putting our pictures in our Un­
US seamen.
ion books with the Union seal
And the only people who are over them. I think this should
To the Editor:
(Ed. Note: The LOG at­ cause they are illegible. When
served and helped by these be made into a Union rule.
tempts
to publish as many of
a particular set of minutes is
phonies are the commies and Also, I am in favor of the Mo­ I am enclosing a copy of the
the shipowners. I hope that our bile resolution for compulsory Del Norte's shipboard minutes the ships' minutes as space especially interesting it is pub­
two unions wiU get together vacations. I recognize Brother because some of the Brothers will permit. Occasionally, pro­ lished in the news columns, as
and warn all characters who dis­ Joe Buckley's point of view and have been checking back in the ceedings will not be published
were the Del Norte minutes
rupt, or who continue to make I admit that he made some very LOGs and do not find any rec­ because they do not contain
which
were the subject of a
the name of the ship, or the
false accusations in order to keep good points in his letter to the ord of the proceedings.
dale of the meeting, or be­ story in the LOG of Aug. 5.)
the bona fide memberships di­ LOG and they are true.
vided that these tactics are com­ But I wish to remind my We have had some good writemie-inspired and beneficial only Brothers that job security is for ups in the paper, but the men
think that the delegates have
to the shipowners and the com­ all and not for a few.
not been sending in the minutes
mies themselves.
William J. Blanco promptly. Of course, I realize
SS Alcoa Puritan that there is not enough room
Meanwhile, I want to thank
To the Editor:

you very much for sending the
LOG regularly to my Frisco ad­
dress. My wife like the paper
very much and I read all copies
when I come back from a trip.
Carl A. Dahl
SUP. Book No. 2245

Member's Photo
Belongs In Book,
Blanco Agrees

H
5
I
I'
r
'

Del Norte Men 'Impressed' By SIU Movie;
Say It Aids Ship's Education .Program

Log-A-Rhythms:

Carter Takes Trips Across
Ballroom Floor—As Teacher
To Ihe Editor:
I'd like to use the SEAFAR­
ERS LOG to send a few lines
to all my friends, wherever they
may be. I've been in retirement
since last May and as I was
hospitalized for a few months
since my last trip, I'd. like you
all to know that I'm in ship­
shape condition again.
Everything was squared up
with the Isthmian Steamship
Company from my trip on the
SS Steel Maker.
The good news I would like
to tell you all is that I am now
an Arthur Murray Dance Instruc­
tor. Any of my old friends who
are in Baltimore and who wish
to see our studio are welcome.
I'd sure like to see some of
the fellows whether they're in­
terested in dancing or not. Come
on up and see what goes with
ballroom dancing—it's fun.
Wiley Carter

WILEY CARTER

in the LOG, nor is it essential,
to publish all ship's minutes.
By the way, the crew of the
Del Norte wants me to say that
we are all heartily in favor of
the Ship's Bulletins which have
been sent to us. All that we
have received have been posted
and read by all hands.
Last night, we saw the film,
"This Is The SIU," for the first
time and we were all impressed.
These educational films tend to
increase our Union patriotism
and are a great help in our edu­
cational program aboard ship.
In connection with this pro­
gram we would like to receive
some of the Union's latest pam­
phlets, particularly some copies
of "Food for Thought."
I would like to add that the
film, "This Is The SIU," has
pointed out to us "the great
strides we have made in the
last few years and the Brothers
aboard this ship ask me to ex­
tend a vote of confidence and
thanks for the excellent leader­
ship we are enjoying.
Thurston J. Lewis
SS Del Norte

A SAILOR'S NIGHTMARE
By LIGE

At the ripe old age of twenty-three.
I decided to take a, wife.
But "woe is me" as you will see.
It's not a Sailor's life.
Ah joy and bliss, that first sweet year.
Wag one for all the books.
But the second year, it brought a tear.
For she began to lose her looks.
You can't do this and you can't do that.
Her song was getting rusty.
"You stayed out late, you're on the mat.
"But your alibi — It's dusty."
Then you sailed away across the sea.
On some foreign shore, you'll land.
Her letters state — "Come home to me.
"With your paycheck in your hand."
You head back home with a joyous heart.
You've been granted a pay increase.
But it doesn't do you uiy good.
For her gimmies never cease.
The beach, it calls — you stay a week.
You live on cokes and drinks.
You wonder why you were so meek.
To get caught by the marriage jinx.
So smile my boy. just laugh and grin.
And see the world and mingle&gt;
Take it right on the chin,
'
For there's more of us married than single, .f

�Friday. October 7, 1949

THE SEAFARERS

BUSY HANDS ON THE FRANCES

Sees Vacations As Job Spur
To the Editor:
In regard to a recent letter
in the LOG from a Brother who
says that the Brothers should
accept vacation pay and get off
the ship after one year of steady
employment, I want to say it
is a very good idea.
We had this discussed and
voted on back in '39 and it
worked swell for the member­
ship.
Just recently I put in 12
months on a key job. And I
think like everyone else — I
thought I owned the damn scow!
Boy, was I glad to take my va­
cation pay and get off. I'm
married and I have two kids
but I certainly didn't mind tak­
ing my chances on the shipping
list again.
Sure enough, within 60 days I

Seafarer Offers Quality
Photo Work At Low Cost
To the Editor:
I'd like to let my Union Bro­
thers know that if any of them
have a need for any kind of
photographic work, my partner
and I can give them the finest
quality jobs at low rates.
We're doing business as Bill
Reilly and James Duff here in
New York. If you want pictures
pf a social gathering, wedding
party, or if you want portraits
taken at home—anything, let us
know.
Just phone MO 9-3229, ask for
Bill or Jim. &lt;
James McDuff

was out again—on the same key
job.
Every man gets the same
breaks in the SIU. So how about
the men on the ships for a year
or more giving the fellows on
the beach a break.
Why not vote on making va­
cations after one year compul­
sory!
Book No. 307

In the past four months about
15 percent of the ships arriving
in the Northwest have headed
for the lay-up fleet. The Ghost
Fleet of the USA far exceeds
that of all other maritime na­
tions combined.
As a consequence the beach
lists of the various unions con­
tinue to grow larger. Some of
these men who have followed
the sea for a livelihood most of
their lives are beginning to re­
mind me of what happened in
the depression, or Hoover era.
Lack of work saps their minds,
weakens their strength. They are
continually trying to find ways
and means to exist.
When a man's physical and
mental faculties get into this
weakened condition, he becomes
easy prey for the commits and
other finks. It seems sad, but
it's true enough.
FALLING INTO TRAP
The powers that be in Wash­
ington are playing into the hands
of the commies by depriving the
American seamen of their right

Meo Favors Rotary Shipping
—For The Homesteaders, Too
To the Editor:
I read some of the letters in
the LOG favoring compulsory
vacations, and I wish to go on
record in support of the proposal.
I believe in rotary shipping
and believe that anyone who has
been on a vessel one year should
take his vacation and give somebne else a chance to make some
money.
I believe, also, that many of
the homesteaders are selfish and
do not show sufficient interest
in their Union's activities an i

life has been emblazoned to
the public, while his normal life
and needs have been but neg­
atively stressed.
As regards these inferences
that the seaman sees little of the
world in all his wanderings and
he remains a negative factor in
society, let me, if possible, scale
this phenomenon to its unexaggerated dimensions.
"The seaman is for one thing
a working man and ' since the
nature of his work is a fixed
routine of four hours on and
eight off for the duration of the
passage till he reaches port, all
his other activities rotate around
those hours. The seafarer reg­
ulates his off hours into time
for sleep, eating and recreation.
He must conform to a measure
of discipline that takes in the
above forms, adjust himself to
the individualties and idiosyn­
crasies of his shipmates, and be
adaptable to the exigencies of
his work, which sometime de­
mand the maximum of skill,
stamina and courage.
Finally he must be content
with these conditions while the
ship plows through the sea,
breasting fair or rough weather
to deposit the seaman in the
contingent future on land.
The seaman, then, when he
reaches port, takes his pleasure
for the most part as I'obustly as
the elements he has to contend
with at sea.
It is like a statement once ex-

pressed to me by an old timer
Bosim:
I have noted in sundry books
"Wlien a man completes a
about the sea the inference that
three
liionth trip and has only
though the seaman travels tens
a
few
days ashore before the
of thousands of miles yearly to
ship
sails
out again he wants tc
the far corners of the earth he
cram
as
much
as he can into
does, in actual fact, see very
those
few
days."
little of the world. That his
The body and mind call for a
status in society, because of his
respite
in which to assuage the
long absence at sea and the
pent-up
feelings accumulated by
continual migration up and down
the
trip.
The seaman, therefore,
the coast, to and from the Great
does
not
as
a rule, like the tour­
Lakes, for a favorable port have
ist
take
to
visiting castles and
resulted in the seaman playing
museums
or
other serious sight­
but a negative role in society.
seeing,
but
hies
himself while in
Novels like Conrad's,. "Nigger
a
foreign
port
to
places where
of the Narcissus," London's, "Sea
there
is
entertainment,
such as
Wolf," etc., and, closer to our
pubs,
dancehalls,
red-light
dis­
time, Eugene O'Neill's one act
tricts,
movies,
etc.
plays, "The Long Voyage Home,
It must be remembei-ed that
Bound East for Cardiff," etc.,
the
professional seaman has be­
have depicted the seaman in
come
so inured to travel that
glowing prose. Uncouth, tender,
the
novelty
of a foreign port
savage, drunken, courageous, he
doesn't
present
to him the same
is a composite of the best and
freshness
that
it
does to a tour­
worse in human nature. Impor­
ist.
The
seaman
will
be thrilled
tantly though in real life, as
at
reaching
a
foreign
port, but
well as in fiction, these qualities
for
different
reasons
than
the
stand out sharply.
tourist
has.
The seaman knows no privacy
MAY RAISE EYEBROWS
aboard ship. Ashore he is swal­
lowed up in the teeming water­
The seaman's mode of enjoy­
front which from time immem­
ment ashore in a foreign port
orial has presented a picturesque
may seem reproachable from a
if somewhat sordid aspect to the
sophisticate's point of view, but
public. The seaman lives extroI truly believe that the man who
vertly, yet for all the sharp de­
enjoys himself with moderate
piction of him as a romantic
drinking, a girl, a dance or a
figure and adventurer, he remains
movie, is healthier mentally and
something of an enigma to the
better able to endure long trips
public. The fact is that all the
and get along with his ship­
heroic and sordid aspects of his
mates than the fellow who reads •
books in port, or goes chasingthe arts.
This is not to imply censure
of the crewmember, for after
to earn a livelihood. A well-fed better things. We should make all, every one has his own tastes.
politician, ignorant of the needs full use of them by fighting Although it is a fine thing for a
of the working man, can be Just along the political front, as well man to have cultural tastes, such
as much of a detriment to these as on the economic front. We a man in my rough measure us­
United States as any commie. cannot afford to let our econ­ ually fits happier in more sedate
Both practice the identical policy omic gains be jeopardized by the fields than seafaring.
of rule or ruin.
political activities of others. We It is a popular belief that sea­
Right now, there is a move on must be prepared to meet them men haunt the waterfront dives
to transfer some of the vital in­ on their own ground.
and only by accident make for
dustries from Pacific coast ports
WilUam McKay
the center of a city during a
to the Middle West. Stupid poli­
stay in port. I believe this as­
tics .are behind this move. This
sumption is a carry-over from
would throw thousands of work­
sea stories that still like to keep
ers out of employment — more
the seaman in the muck. The
grist for the commie mill. We
All applications for unem­ fact is that the present genera­
are ignored because we don't
ployment insurance in New tion of American seamen are
raise our voices or vote in oppo­ York City must be made clean-cut, idealstic and with a
sition to the various groups who
through the offices at 165 good education behind them. It
Joralemon
St„
Brooklyn is not uncommon to hear in a
seek to take away our hard won
gains and conditions.
(Third Floor), instead of the messroom bull session the as­
District offices, as formerly. pirations of men professing the
We have in our Union the
brains and ability to lead us to
higher things of life, such as a
business, home and marriage.
BUT WHAT DOES POP SAY?
Conditions have changed fav­
orably for the seamen and no
longer need the writer seek in
the stereotype of the seaman of
the past for his sea story char­
acters. There is di'ama enough
from the events of these recent
years upon which to draw. The
war years and the struggle of
the Unions to better conditions
for the seaman—surely these are
worthy.- backurops against which
to set the drama of men.
Certainly the SIU has rais­
ed the conditions and status of
its members to a livable plane,
where the future is relatively
secure; and in so doing has in­
fluenced the raising of wages
and living standards of other
union and non-union ships. In
the end, however, it is up to
the individual seaman when he
goes to sea, to find all those
things that can enrich his life,
be it experience, companions,
Seafarer John Chaker (left) poses with Emil Ager, a long­
work or study. They will exact
shoreman whom he met in Le Havre, while John's ship, the from him his best and mold him
SS Lilica. was unloading coal. Chaker says the French docker
at lea.st a better man.
John J. Flynn
bears a striking resemblance to his father-in-law.

Tell Politicos Where We Stand, He Says
To the Editor:

problems. In order for us to
grow, we must all work togeth­
er. Above all, I cannot see
cliques on our ships, because
they encourage apple polishing
and stooges.
It is very likely that a good
many homesteaders have been
away from Union Halls so long
they have forgotten what the
Halls look like—or how to go
about shipping out.
I'd like to see other members
join in this discussion because
it's very important to us all.
Frank Meo

Page Nine

Seafaring Is Still Rugged But Public
Knows Nothing Of Modern Seaman: Flynn
To the Editor:

A shipboard cameraman was on hand when the Deck
Gang of the Bull Lines ship were topping booms over the No.
5 hatch.. From left to right: Soto, DM; an identified AB; Ramos,
AB; Napoleonis, OS; M. Gonzalez, OS, and Dominick, Carpenter.

LOG

Attention Members!

�Page Ten

THE S E AF A RE RS

LOG

TxtdAy. October 7, 1949

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings In Brief
NORFOLK — Chairman. Ben
Bees, 95; Recording Secretary.
J. A. Bullock. 4747: Reading
Clerk (chairman acted as read­
ing clerk).
*
Motion carried to accept rec­
ommendations made by Build­
ing Repair Committee. Motion
carried to concur in Headquar­
ters' resolution on the forthcom­
ing elections for officials to serve
in 1950. Motion carried to post
minutes of various Branch meet­
ings on the bulletin board. Head-

quarters report to the member­
ship and Agent's verbal report
accepted. Motion carried to in­
struct Port Agent to petition
Secretary-Treasurer to appropri­
ate $1,950 from the Building
Fund for repairs to wall and
building caused by removal of
building next door (125 Bank
Street). One minute of silence
in memory of departed Brothers.
Meeting adjou 'td at 7:45 PM,
with 55 meimbers present.
%
%
BOSTON—Chairman. T. Flem­
ing. 30821; Recording Secretary.
B. Lawson. 894; Reading Clerk.
R. Murphy. 39427.
Minutes of previous meetings

1^

I*

A&amp;G Shipping From Sept 14 To Sept 28
PORT

REG.
DECK

REG.
ENG.

REG.
STWDS.

Boston
New York
Philadelphia
Baltimore.
Norfolk
Savannah.
Tampa.
Mobile
New Orleans
Galveston
West Coast

36
114
29
115
25
12
18
53
77
11
21

27
100
24
• 85
20
5
24
52
75
16
23

53
124
30
81
10
9
18
38
107
11
25

GRAND TOTAL

511

451

506

in all ports read and approved.
Agent spoke ori the shipping sit­
uation for the Port of Boston.
Dispatcher announced the ship­
ping figures for the past twoweek period. Headquarters'" re­
port to the membership read arid
approved, as well as the Secre­
tary-Treasurer's regular financial
report. Motion carried to excuse
two Brothers from the meeting.
After one minute of silence in
memory of departed Brothers,
motion carried to adjourn. 146
members were present.
4. 4. 4.
SAVANNAH — Chairman. Jim
Drawdy, 28523; Recording Sec­
retary, Martin McCranie, 45052;
Reading Clerk, S. J. Colcock,
38407.

TOTAL
REG.

lie"
338
83
281
55
26
60
143
259
38
69

SHIPPED
DECK

12
76

16

79
31
9
11
58
59
72
97
3
13
8
(No Breakdown Available)

1,468

354

326

330

228
24
79

1,089

Committee's report read and ac­
cepted. One minute of silence in
fnemory of departed Brothers.
Under Good and Welfare, there
was lengthy discussion on var­
ious subjects pertaining to good
of the Union. Meeting adjourned
at 7:40 PM, with 365 members
present.
4 4 4
NEW ORLEANS — Chairman,
James Tucker, 2209: Recording
Secretary, Johnny Johnston, 53;
Reading Clerk, Buck Stephens,
76.

ting around. It was pbirited out
that every beef coming irito this
port could be traced to this mat­
ter. Most of the speakers felt
that if a riian Wanted a day off,
he should call the Hall for a re­
lief for the day. The SS Aritinous, which is in port, has a beef
aboard revolving around the
question of time off. Meeting
adjourned with 57 members in
attendance.
4 4 4
GALVESTON — Chairman,
Keith Alsop, 7311; Recording
The following were read and Secretary, R. Wilbum, 37739;
accepted: Previous meetings' Reading Clerk, J. Bird, 34683.
minutes of all Branches, Secre­
tary-Treasurer's financial report. Galveston minutes and those
Headquarters' report to the mem­ of other ports read and approved.
bership. Charges read against Agent discussed local shipping
member, and committee's deci­ situation and was followed by
sion. Port Agent said that every­ Patrolman-Dispatcher who re­
thing. was going okay. There ported on two-week activities.
were nine payoffs and five sign- Motion carried to extend ship­
ons during the past two weeks, ping cards 30 days for book­
he said, with about 25 ships in men. One minute of silence in
air coming into port. The in- memory of departed Brothers.
trarisits did not take many re­ Meeting adjourned at 7:20 PM.
placements, so shipping was riot
4 4 4
given much of a boost. Pros­
NEW YORK—Chairman, L. J.
pects are that shipping will re­ Williams, 21550; Recording Sec­
turn to normal in the coming retary, Freddie Stewart, 4935;
weeks. The Union represented* a Readinjg Clerk, Robert A. Mat­
Brother involved in a Coast thews, l54.
Guard beef here and succeeded
in winning his acquittal, the Ag­ Minutes of previous meeting
ent reported. Excuses referred read and approved. Port Agent
to Dispatcher. Letter read from discussed shipping, which has
the Alcoa Steamship Company been fair during the past two
requesting men getting re^ef weeks. Secretary-Treasurer re­
jobs to check with the heads of ported that the alterations on
their departments. A comrriittee the Mobile Hall are nearing
recommended that Brother -Wal­ completion. He added that when
ter G. Smith, Book No. 48069, the Hall is ready it will be one
be allowed to become active of the most comfortable and
again. Motion carried to "Concur
in committee's recommendation.
Following Brothers took th,e Un­
ion Oath of Obligation: P. W.

Reading of Savannah and other
Branch minutes of previous
meetings. They were accepted
along with Headquarters' report
to the membership. Port Agent
reported on shipping in the port
and said that a beef on the SS
By RAY WHITE
Jean concerning overtime be­
TAMPA—Everything is mov­ cause of unlicensed men's work
ing along smoothly here, with performed by the officers had
more ships coming into port
than ever before. The only draw­
back is that they are mostly intransit callers and require few
replacements.
At this writing, on the sec­
ond day of the week, we have been settled. He said 45 hours
already had four ships in port, overtime was involved. The
and several more are due. Yes­ prospects for the next two-week
terday we had the Iberville, Wa­ period are not too good, the
terman. Today, we have the De- Agent said. He reported that
Soto and Canton Victory, both Brother Jeff Gillette was down
Waterman, and the Alcoa Pa­ in Jacksonville to cover a few
ships, and also to attend a meet­
triot.
The Iberville called for one ing of the AFL Central Trades
man — a Wiper. However, we and Labor body, upon which he
managed to ship a few ABs will report when he returns.
arid FOWs on most ships touch­ Brothers Boland Hoffman, Book
ing this port. The Florida still No. 47621, and J. B. Davis, Book
caUs for several Engine and No. 50453, took the Union Oath
of Obligation. Brother P. W.
beck Department men.
Reynolds was permitted to re­
EATERIES OUT
The Spanish Restaurant Em- register as Wiper. Meeting ad­
ployees are out on strike here. journed at 8:10 PM, with 110
All waiters, cooks, bartenders, members present.
Dalton, M. Pierprinski,' "B. C.
4 4 4
dishwashers have walked out.
BALTIMORE
—
Chairman,
Collins,
S. L. Grice, :H.;rW. GirIn fact, the only ones remain­
William
Reniz,
26445;
Recording
ard
and
C. Cervantes, ^eeting
ing are the bosses, and the res­
Secretary,
Maurice
Burnstine,
adjourned
at 8:2(5'with 270
taurants look like ghost shops.
2257;
Reading
Clerk,
G.
A.
Masmembers
present.
The largest of the struck shops,
terson, 2257.
4
the Columbia, one of the most
•publicized eateries in the coun­ Charges and trial committee's TAMPA — Chairman, Ray
try, has been especially hard rulings read and accepted. Min-. While, 57; Rechrdiiig Secretary,
hit. Needless to say, the SIU utes of previous nieetings read R. H. Hall, 26CD6(1; Reading Clerk,
as usual has offered any assist­ and approved. Several members N. EUu, 16.
ance needed in this beef.
were excused from the riieeting
Previotis meeting's minutes of
The State of Florida just gave after presenting acceptable rea­ Tampa arid other Biranches read
birth to a three percent sales sons. Headquarters report to the and accepted. Branch Agent
tax. This is one thing that the membership approved as read. made his report on shipping.
Governor assured Florida citi­ Letter read from the Baltimore Communication frdin Headquar­
zens would never happen. It Federation of Labor asking for ters' bookkeeper was read, inseems he has forgotten all cam­ donation for the AFL Grain and forniing Branch to remit General
paign promises. Since the aver­ Mill Workers Local 74. Motion Fund assessment. Secretary-Trea­
age wage here is less than 30 carried to contribute $25. Port surer's financial report read and
bucks a week, this tax is going Agent stated that shipping dur­ approved. Under Good and Wel­
to work a hardship on a lot of ing the past two weeks had fare, the subject of time off
people.
taken a sharp drop. Hospital came in for a good bit of bat­

Tampa Kept Busy
Visiting Ships

modern on the coast. The Mo­
bile Hall, he said, was in need
of repairs for some time, but
that they had been put off be­
cause of the high cost of ma­
SHIPPED SHIPkED TOTAL terials. Now that prices have
ENG.
InWbs. SHIPPED eased off, the job is being done
at considerable savings to the
9
6
27
Union. Headquarters' resolution,
70
73
219
calling
for return of the Bui-eau
12
5
53 of Navigation
from the Coast
68
62
209
Gruai-d to the Commerce Depart­
19
29
79
ment, was read. The resolution
7
15
31
recommended that a campaign
11
8
30 be instituted by all Districts of
45
37
130 the SIU to remove the Coast

Guard from authority over sea­
men and that the support of the
American Federation - of Labor
be enlisted at its current con­
vention. The resolution was pass­
ed unanimously. Secretary-Trea­
surer Hall introduced Morris
Weisberger, East Coast repre­
sentative of the Sailors Union
of the Pacific, and a vice-presi­
dent of the SIU. Weisberger
spoke briefly, praising the closeworking relationship of the A&amp;G
District and the SUP. He re­
ceived a roaring ovation from
the membership.
4 4 4
PHILADELPHIA— Chairman,
D. Hall, 43372; Recording Sec­
retary, G. H. Seeburger, 6392;
Reading Clerk, A. Fusco, 42860.
All minutes of previous Branch
meetings accepted as read. Agerit
reported on the status of ship­
ping in this port. Motion car­
ried to put lock on televisioft
set. Secretary-Treasurer's finan­
cial report and Headquarters'
report to the membership read

and accepted. Warren Neilson
took the Union Oath of Obliga­
tion. Motion carried to refer ex­
cuses to the Dispatcher. One
minute of silence in memory of
departed Brothers. Meeting ad­
journed at 8:10 PM, with 300
members present.

In-Transit Ships Help Frisco
But Beach Stiil Has Its Quota
By JEFF MORRISON

SAN FRANCISCO — In-tran­
sit ships are taking a few men,
but not enough to enable us to
report that shipping is good out
here. It takes payoffs and signons to do that.
The past two weeks saw these
ships calling here: SS Gateway
City, SS Maiden Victory, SS
Jeff Davis, Waterman; SS Mar­
quette Victory, SS Steel Seafarer,
Kenyon Victory, Isthmian, and
the SS Marymar, Calmar.
All of these vessels came in
clean. With nothing to handle
other thari routine affairs. The
questions put to us by the men
aboard them were mostly on
matters of overtime.
Bob Schreffius, the ladies' man
of the Gulf, shipped on the Mai­
den Victory, an intercoastal job,
and Bill Lamb, another oldtimer,
shipped on the SS Twin Falls

Victory. Bill made the previous
voyage on the Twin Falls and
liked it well enough to re-ship
on her after she made the loop.
He talks like he has found a
home for awhile.
Seafarers on the shoreside this
week include J. Faraquohoe, V.
T. J. Malone, F. Keely, Sam
Drury, B. Boxley, W. Silverthorn, J. D. Otto and G. Gabbler.
At a special meeting held ih
this port to act on the resolu­
tion setting forth the Union posi­
tions to appear on the ballot in
the approaching A&amp;G electiOris,
the membership voted unani­
mously to concur in the recorrtmendations.
Our men in the Marine Hospi­
tal this week are Dusty Meeks,
T. Isaksen, J. (Blackie) Keenari,
H. Fasakerley, R. Guthrie, R.
Ahearn, and Sam Drury.

�Friday, October 7, 1949
; 1

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Eleven

Posts And Qualifications In A&amp;G Elections 'Subway Series' Takes The Play
Below are listed the A&amp;G District posts that are to be filled in the
forthcoming election, and the constitutional requirements that all candidates
must meet. Read these carefully before sending in nominations and creden­
tials, which must reach the Secretary-Treasurer by October 15.
NORFOLK:
1 Agent
SAVANNAH:
1 Agent
TAMPA:
1 Agent
MOBILE:
1 Agent
2 Joint Patrolmen
NEW ORLEANS:
1 Agent
1 Deck Department Patrolman
1 Engine Department Patrolman
1 Stewards Department Patrolman
GALVESTON
1 Agent
1 Joint Patrolman

HEADQUARTERS:
1 Secretary-Treasurer
3 Assistant Secretary-Treasurers
BOSTON:
1 Agent
NEW YORK:
1 Agent
2 Deck Department Patrolmen
2 Engine Department Patrolmen
2 Stewards Department Patrolmen
PHILADELPHIA:
1 Agent
BALTIMORE:
1 Agent
1 Deck Department Patrolman
1 Engine Department Patrolman
1 Stewards Department Patrolman
Qualifications for office in the Seafarers
International Union, Atlantic and Gulf Dis­
trict, as provided for by the Constitution
and By-laws are as follows:
(a) That he be a citizen of the United

States.
(b) That he be a full member of the
Seafarers International Union of North
America, Atlantic and Gulf District, in con­
tinuous good standing for a period of two
(2) years immediately prior to date of nom­
ination.
(c) Any candidate for Agent or Joint
Patrolman must have three years of sea
service in any one of three departments.
Any candidates for departmental Patrolman
must have three years sea service in their
respective department. Sea service as spec­
ified in this article, shall mean on merchant
vessels in unlicensed capacity.
(d) That he has not misconducted him­
self previously while employed as an officer
of the Union.
(e) That he be an active and full book

member and show four months discharges
for the current year in an unlicensed rat­
ing, prior to date of nomination. This pro­
vision shall not apply to officials and other
office holders working for the Union during
current year for period of four months or
longer.
Any member who can qualify may
nominate himself for office by submitting,
in writing, his intention to run for office,
naming the particular office and submitting
the necessary proof of qualification as listed
above.
The notice of intention addressed to the
Secretary-Treasurer must be in his office
not later than October 15, 1949, when nom­
inations will be closed.
In addition, each candidate shall sub­
mit a regulation passport photo, taken re­
cently, a statement of not more than 100
words, giving a brief summary of his Union
record and activities—both of which will
be run in the SEAFARERS LOG prior to
the voting period.

Away From New York Shipping
By JOE ALGINA

NEW YORK —This port set­
tled down to a two-week period
of fair shipping. Practically all
activity was on the routine side.
What excitement there was came
from the news that this town
will be the scene of all the World
Series baseball games, with the
Brooklyn Dodgers and the New
York Yankees coming to grips
for the championship.
With ducats for the games sold
out and scalpers asking as high
as a hundred bucks for their
pasteboards, we guess most Sea­
farers will watch and listen to
the games via television and ra­
dio.
But to get back to shipping,
here's the line-up of vessels that
paid off here during the past two
weeks: Robin Wentley, Robin
Goodfellow, Steel Rover, Steel
King, Steel Vendor, Suzanne,
Marina, Bessemer Victory, Chick­
asaw, Raphael Semmes, Seatrain
Havana, Seatrain New Jersey,
Bull Run, J. W. Cullen, Puerto
Rico and J. B. Waterman.

Sign-ons were the Cecil Bean,
a Dry Transportation Corpora­
tion vessel; the Suzanne, Marina,
Puerto Rico, Steel King, Steel
Vendor, Jefferson City and all
the others on the intercoastal
runs.
We're glad to see that the steel
workers have come out fighting
for their demands, and are not
leaving the issue to be handled
by any government bureaucrats.
The principal cause of the cur­
rent strike in steel is the com­
panies' insistence that any pen­
sion plan should also be support­
ed by the workers
The men have a good beef in
demanding that the employers
pay for the pensions, because
some of the smaller outfits have
signed up with the union, show­
ing that they can afford it. And
if the little guy (if you can call
any steel manufacturer a little
guy) can manage to put some­
thing away for his employes' old
age, certainly the big operators
can do the same.

Alas, Shipping In Port Boston,
Like Red Sox, Is An Also-Ran
By BEN LAWSON

BOSTON — Practically every­ port of payoff for settlement.
thing that happened in this town
The payoff aboard the SS
during the past two weeks has Trinity was a beaut, thanks to a
been overshadowed by the conk­ pre-payoff education meeting.
ing out of the Boston Red Sox Everything was in perfect order
in the last hours of the Ameri­ as a result of this session and
can League pennant race. But the payoff came off smoothly.
the Boston team might be con­ Pretty nice going, I'd say.
soled by the fact that we haven't
Big Alec Olsen just registered.
been pounding out any great He's as brown as brown could
shipping figures.
be. Not from a trip, but from a
Three ships came in for pay­ full, hot summer spent on his
offs, two of which signed on sloop. During his slooping. Alec's
again, the SS Cabins and the entire wardrobe consisted of a
SS Trinity. Eastern's SS Yar­ pair of bathing trunks and he
mouth paid off, then tied-up.
certainly looks it.
In-transit visitors for the peri­
Also in this week is old Jim
od were the SS Steel Vendor, Hanso, who is looking for a
Isthmian; SS Yorkmar, Calmar; Plumber-Machinist's job.
SS Canton Victory and SS Gree­
By the way. I wouldn't advise
ley Victory, Waterman. Things the Brothers to head this way,
for the past 2V2 months, and were fairly smooth aboard these if they are looking for a ship.
would appreciate visits from his ships, except for some disputed The tying-up of the SS Yar­
fi'iends.
overtime carried on the York- mouth has given us a big ship­
mar. This will be taken to the ping list.
4 4 4
FRANK RAKAS
James C. Latham, Rights of
Way Examiner, Rights of Way
Dept., Maryland State Roads
Commission, 302 S. Aurora St.,
Easton, Md., asks you to get in
touch with him.
BALTIMORE
14 North Gajr St. HONOLULU
16 Merchant St.
William Rentz, Agent Mulberry 4540
4 4 4
Phone 5-8777
BOSTON
276 State St. PORTLAND
MITCHELL T. REED
Ill W. Bumslde St.
Beacon 4335
Contact Benjamin B. Sterling, Ben Lawson, Agent Richmond 2-0140
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141
RICHMOND, CaUf
257 Sth St.
42 Broadway, New York, im­ GALVESTON
.308%—23rd St.
Phone 2599
mediately. Phone DIgby 4-7830. Keith Alsop, Agent
Phone 2-8448

ville Street, New Orleans, La.,
JAMES P. SMALL
or
to 813 Baronne Street, New
Contact Mrs. Shirley Wessel at
Orleans.
Seamen's Church Institute, 25
4 4 4
South Street, New York.
WM. G. PURDY
4. 4 4.
Your mother asks that you
JOHN W. WARD
write her at 27 W. Genesee
Get in touch with your mother
at 100 N. Arboles Ct., San Pedi'o, Street, Hornell, New York.
Calif. °
JOHN WALTON
4. 4 4
Get in touch with your daugh­
ALLEN D. EWING
ter, Aileen Walton at 36 .Sid­
Local Board No. 1, Rose Gil­ ney Place, Brooklyn N.Y.
bert, Clerk, 80 Lafayette Street,
New York 13, N.Y., asks you to
CREW, SS^ NOONDAY
call.
Shipmates of Bob Lambert
4 4 4
ai-e asked to get in touch with
CARMELO ^GIUGA (GUIGA)
ROY R. WHITE
him at the marine hospital, StatYour»mother is very ill. Get
Get in touch with your par­ en Island, New York City.
in
touch with Accurso Bonti,
ents, at Box 9, Reelsville, In­
4 4 4
c/o
Giuga, 123 Elizabeth Street,
diana.
EMERY DEWEY CROWELL
New York 1^ N.Y.
4 4 4
Get in touch with your wife
4 4 4
LEROY FRAZIER
at 161 West 94 Street, Apt. 7,
C. MARTIN
Your sister, Inez Frazier, 119 New York City,
The number in your book,
Shamrock St., East Alton, 111.,
4 4 4
51513, is incorrect. Bring or mail
RED HUNNEYCUTT
wants you to get in touch with
your book to Headquarters, 51
her.
This Brother is in the New Beaver St., so that the correct
Orleans Marine Hospital, Ward number, 51313, can be put in.
4 4 4
WARD LEWIS HOWIESON
D-5, and wants all former ship­
4 4 4
Contact the Missing Seamen mates to write or visit him.
WILLIAM O'CONNOR
Bureau, 25 South Street, New
4 4 4
Write to Richard J. Brown,
BOYD DAVIS
York 4, N.Y.
care of the SIU Baltimore Hall.
4 4 4
Helen, in Canada, asks that It is very important.
ROBERT A. CARTER
you write to her.
4 4 4
HARVEY HILL
Anyone finding the papers,
Your sister-in-law, Mrs. J. W.
RICHARD GRALECKI
discharges, etc., of this Brother,
This Brother, off the Seatrain Hill, Slusser Avenue, New Hart­
Z number 93162, is asked to
mail them to him care of the New Jersey, has been in the ford, N.Y., asks you to get in
fiew Orleans Hall, 823 Bien­ Staten Island Marine. Hospital touch with her.

I

Directory Of SIU Halls

SIU, A&amp;G District

MOBILE
1 South Lawrence St.
Cat Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-1754
NEW ORLEANS
523 Bienville St.
E. Sheppard, Agent Magnolia 6112-6113
NEW YORK
51 Beaver St.
Joe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784
NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St.
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
PHILADELPHIA
337 Market St.
J. Sheehan, Agent
Market 7-1635
SAN FRANCISCO
85 Third St.
Jeff Morrison, Agent
Douglas 2-5475
SAVANNAH
2 Abercom St.
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728
SEATTLE
86 Seneca St.
Wm. McKay, Agent
Seneca 4570
TAMPA
18^9-1811 N. Franklin St.
Ray White, Agent
Phone M-1323
WILMINGTON, CaUf., 227% Avalon Blvd.
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Terminal 4-2874
HEADQUARTERS. . 51 Beaver St., N.V.C.
SECRETARY-TREASURER
Paul Hall
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
Undsey Williams
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURERS
Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
Joseph Volplan

SUP

SAN

FRANCISCO

SEATTLE
WILMINGTON

59 Clay St.
Douglas 2-8363
86 Seneca St.
Main 0290
440 Avalon Blvd.
Terminal 4-313^

*

Canadian District
MONTREAL

404 Le Moyne Sh
Marquette 5909
FORT WILLIAM..118% Syndicate Ave.
Ontario
Phone 3-3221
HALIFAX
128% HoUis St.
Phone 3-8911
PORT COLBORNE
103 Durham St.
Phone 5591
TORONTO
Ill A Jarvis St.
Elgin 5719
VICTORIA, BA:
602 Boughton Sk
Empire 4531
VANCOUVER
565 Hamilton SV
Pacific 7814
HEADQUARTERS.
Montreal

12 McGlU Sib
Plateau 670

�Page Twelve

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, October'?, li949

Statements On Policy By A&amp;G District
In the less than six months since it received
its charter from the Seafarers International Un­
ion, the Brotherhood of Marine Engineers has
firmly established itself as a going trade union
organization on the American waterfront. The
fledgling organization has signed contracts with
six steamship companies and is currently in ne­
gotiations with several other major operators,
which, when signed up, will make the BME the
collective bargaining agent for Engineers aboard
hundreds of American flag ships.
WELCOMED BY SIU AFFILIATES
When the BME was granted its charter by
the SIU last May, the membership of the Atlan­
tic &amp; Gulf District, as well as the other com­
ponents of the International, went on record to
give complete support to the new affiliate. The
SIU policy of giving unstinted aid and support
to the BME has aided this organization materi­
ally in getting on its feet. The facilities of all
SIU Branches were thrown open to the BME,
and every possible effort was made to speed the
BME along in its drive to bring the Engineers
of America's merchant marine real trade union
representation.
With the backing of the SIU, the BME im­
mediately plunged into an organizational cam­
paign. The response of Engineers to the drive
has now reached almost landslide proportions,
with pledge cards and letters seeking member­
ship numbering in the dozens arriving at BME
headquarters daily. Aboard many ships BME
representatives are finding the Engineers eager
to abandon the sinking MEBA, in favor of trade
union protection which will guarantee them a
democratic set-up and a hand in shaping their
contracts, free from communist influence.
Though the Engineers on the ships are root­
ing for the success of the BME, there are other

The signing of a contract with Isthmian in
1947, after a bitterly fought organizational drive,
was considered by the SIU to signal the end of
the Isthmian campaign, but events in .recent
months have demonstrated that the SIU is fight­
ing a second Isthmian campaign—this time to
preserve its hard won gains from the crippling
tactics of Harry Bridges and his communist sup­
porters.
BRIDGES SPINS WEB OF DESTRUCTION
Fortunately, the SIU in this campaign has
•utmaneuvered Bridges, and will emerge from
the battle unharmed. The same, however, can­
not be said for other unions that became en­
meshed in the Bridges web, spun on the shores
of beautiful Hawaii.
The SIU policy in the current Hawaiian
strike was set two months ago, when the mem­
bership at a special meeting voted to honor its
contractual obligation with Isthmian. The crew
of the SS Steel Flyer was told to sail their ves­
sel, tied up then in Honolulu. The SIU took its
stand in light of the fact that to jeopardize its
contract with Isthmian might mean the loss of
almost three years of effort spent in organizing
the fleet, during which time over a quarter of a
million dollars was spent.
CIO ENGINEERS IGNORED BEEF
Also figuring in the SIU's decision was the
fact that the CIO Engineers had not recognized
the strike. On the Steel Flyer the Engineers re­
mained aboard and kept up steam. To add to the
foul-up, CIO dock clerks and checkers, affiliated
with Bridges' union, continued to work during
the beef.
Bridges' actions prior to the Hawaii beef
,2how an unending campaign directed against the

The BME Campaign
forces at work anxious to see the BME die in
infancy. A case in point is that of the SS Sir
John Franklin, a ship owned by the Isbrandtsen
Company. When the Franklin arrived in New
York last month, the Marine Engineers Benefi­
cial Association, CIO, arbitrarily obdered the
ship's Engineers to shut the plant down and go
ashore—an order which completely ignored pos­
sible jeopardy of the Engineers' licenses. Four
days later, Isbrandtsen was presented with de­
mands for a new contract, demands which far
exceeded those okayed by the MEBA in agree­
ments signed recently by 40 other Atlantic and
Gulf operators.
MEBA DISCREDITED
With Isbrandtsen no longer contracted to
the MEBA, and NMU and CIO radio operators
aboard ready to sail the vessel, the BME de­
clared the vessel unorganized and sent members
to the company for employment aboard the ship.
The move by the BME was in line with its gen­
eral policy that the entire MEBA is a discredit­
ed organization, riddle 1 by dissension, dominated
by the communists and no longer representative
of the wishes of ship Engineers.
When the ship sailed five days later, BME
Engineers were aboard in the engineroom. An
NMU crew and CIO radio operators were aboard,
too, their unions having demonstrated their dis­
favor with the MEBA tactics by dispatching
crewmembers with orders to pass the picketline
—a phony left wing MEBA demonstration—and
go aboard the ship. Thus ended the Franklin in­
cident. The BME subsequently signed a contract
with Isbrandtsen.

the Hawaiian Beef
SIU, both in the Union's regular activities and
its organizing drive in Isthmian. During the
years the SIU fought to win the Isthmian fleet.
Bridges did everything possible to hamstring
the SIU on the West Coast. The NMU, striving
for the same prize, was treated royally at ILWU
piers, though the efforts came to naught when
the votes were tallied.
Bridges took a crack at the SIU when he
tried to have the SUP crew of the BS Mello
Franco replaced by an NMU crew in Coos Bay,
Oregon. New Orleans saw a Bridges drive to
take over the longshoremen there nipped in the
bud through SIU aid. Again and again Bridges'
drives to weaken the SIU have been repelled.
There is no need to reiterate the many times
Bridges has sought to smash the SIU; the mem­
bership is well aware of his past drives.
BRIDGES' AIMING HIGH

The fact that the BME proved itself capable
of coping with the MEBA in a waterfront action
immediately brought forth screams of anguish
from the MEBA. They immediately launched an
attack on the BME, claiming the ship was scab­
bed out. Strangely enough, they had nothing to
say about the NMU or CIO radio officers unions,
both of which crossed their picketline. They cooed
sweet nothings at their, fellow CIO unions while
levelling both barrels at the AFL Engineers and
its parent, the SIU.
ROAD WILL BE ROUGH
With the BME now a recognized factor on the
waterfront, the road is going to get rougher *for
our affiliate. Despite the fact that the BME
already represents several hundred marine En­
gineers, and has majority representation in sev­
eral companies, the MEBA will attempt to smear
the new outfit and eliminate it entirely from the
waterfront scene.
When and if the showdown comes, the SIU
stands fully behind the BME. The SIU is joined
in this support by the Maritime Trades Depart­
ment, whose power has been sufficient to repel
left-wingers' attacks against AFL unions before.
BME HAS STRONG BACKING
The backing of the AFL waterfront organi­
zations will guarantee the BME complete vic­
tory in its fight to bring genuine trade unionism
to the marine Engineers. The SIU is pledged to
support the BME men to the finish, and wher­
ever the SIU has pledged its strength in the past
the battle has always been won.
SIU members should stand alert for MEBA
and communist propaganda aimed at causing dis­
sension within the SIU's ranks. The bell has
sounded, and the SIU is in the BME's corner
until the end.

On the West Coast, unions which have fol­
lowed blindly behind Bridges' pied-piping now
find themselves on the verge of extinction. The
beginning of this year saw the end of a 100-day
longshore strike; a strike that sapped great
strength from the West Coast labor organiza­
tions. (A strike, incidentally, that was supported
by the SIU.) Now Bridges is involved in a strike
entering its sixth month in Hawaii that is prov­
ing to be disastrous for the small West Coast
unions, particularly the MFOWW.
SIU AVOIDS RED TRAP
All of the small unions on the West Coast
ifind themselves at the mercy of Bridges, and can
do nothing except wait for him to release the
noose—if that day will ever come for them. The
SIU, however, refuses to let itself be dictated to
by an outfit whose aim is to take over and dom­
inate American maritime workers.
The SIU refuses to throw away the work
and money that went into the organizing of
Isthmian. The SIU refuses to live or die by the
dictates of Bridges and his communist followers.

THUMBS DOWN ON POWER GRABS
In his current drive he is being a bit more
A beef which is legitimate will always get
subtle. By forcing the SIU to break its contract
the
support of the SIU, but where the sole ob­
with the Isthmian Steamship Company, Bridges
hopes to deal a body blow to the SIU's strength. ject is to gain power, whether it be over the
The loss of Isthmian — a SO-ship company — SIU or over the economic life of an isolated
would seriously dent the SIU's contracted fleet, island in the middle of the Pacific, the SIU re­
and throw the company into the unorganized fuses to lie down and die. The membership of
ring again. The prospects of having to tackle the SIU demonstrated that fully, when it voted
Isthmian all over again, Bridges undoubtedly unanimously to honor the Isthmian contract in
presumes, would be too much for the SIU. Even Hawaiian ports. The policy of the SIU in the
if no other union would be capable of organiz­ Hawaiian beef has been set by the membership
ing the company, his objective would have been of the Union. The second battle for the Isthmian
gained. The rule or ruin tactic of the commies fleet will be won by the SIU.
is history in dozens of America's unions, the
The SIU's policy is to honor its contracts
in Hawaii.
NMU being a good example.

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9932">
                <text>October 7, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9994">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 28</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10015">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10036">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10096">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10114">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10173">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
SEAFARERS INTENSIFIES FIGHT ON CG CONTROL OVER SEAMEN&#13;
50% OF ARMS AID TO GO ON US SHIPS&#13;
COURT THROWS OUT $250,000 DAMAGE SUIT OF 29 FORMER PERMITMEN AGAINST UNION&#13;
WALL STREET UNIONISM&#13;
A&amp;G RESOLUTION ON COAST GUARD&#13;
SAVANNAH WINS OVERITME BEEF FOR DECK MEN ON THE SS JEAN&#13;
PORT BALTIMORE HAS ENOUGH MEN TO HANDLE ALL SHIPPING NEEDS&#13;
SEATTLE GETS TWO WEEKS OF GOOD SHIPPING&#13;
PRO-SIU CREWS HAVE CITIES SERVICE ROCKY&#13;
TYPHOON DRIVES PACKER AGROUND IN TOKYO BAY; 3 WEEK ORDEAL RELATED&#13;
CREWS ACCLAIM SIU OVERSEAS NEWS BULLETIN&#13;
TAMPA KEPT BUSY VISITING SHIPS&#13;
IN-TRANSIT SHIPS HELP FRISCO BUT BEACH STILL HAS ITS QUOTA&#13;
POSTS AND QUALIFICATIONS &#13;
'SUBWAY SERIES' TAKES THE PLAY AWAY FROM NEW YORK SHIPPING&#13;
ALAS, SHIPPING IN PORT BOSTON, LIKE RED SOX, IS AN ALSO-RAN&#13;
STATEMENTS ON POLICY BY A&amp;G DISTRICT&#13;
THE HAWAIIAN BEEF</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13066">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="969" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="973">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/17545c08d9b73084d18b65dc2ed2dadb.PDF</src>
        <authentication>0ee1875e842f643f934b51745ac3a935</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47449">
                    <text>Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA
VOL. XI

When the polls open in all SIU Atlantic and
Gulf District Branches on November 1, Seafarers
will begin casting votes to elect Union officials to
PRO-LABOH SENATOR AND AFL UNIONISTS serve
in 1950. This year's ballot will contain the
names of 47 qualified candidates who have been
nominated for the 29 elective A&amp;G offices.
The list of candidates was announced this week
by the Credentials Committee, after it had com­
pleted examination of the qualifications of all

NEW YORK. N. Y.. FRIDAY. OCTOBER 21. 1949

Storm, Mine
Hit SlU Ships;
One Man Lost

47 Candidates
Are Qualified
For A&amp;G Posts

No. 29

nominees who filed
notice oi^TT '
[ ; „ . ,
~~~ T"
their intentions to run before vided on the ballot for write-in
Two SlU-contracted ships made
Oct. 15, the deadline date estab­ votes.
To aid the membership in con­
the casualty lists and one Sea­
lished by the Constitution.
sidering the various candidates
farer was reported, missing this
Of the 54 men nominated be­ for Union office, this issue of
week as the result of smash­
fore the closing date, seven were the SEAFARERS LCXJ carries
ing hurricane-force winds off the
disqualified by the Committee the biographical sketches and
New England coast and a left­
for failing to meet the constitu­ photographs submitted by the
over mine in the North Sea.
tional requirements for a place qualified nominees. This feature
In serious condition, accord­
on the ballot.
is carried in pages 5 to 8.
ing to sketchy information avail­
Of
the
seven
nominees
dis­
VOTING UNTIL DEC. 31
able as the LOG went to press,
qualified, five
did not submit The ballot calls for the elec­
was the SS John Marion, Marevidence of the necessary three tion of one Secretary-Treasurer,
Trade Corp., which was reported
years of seatime, and two did three Assistant Secretary-Trea­
at the mercy of lashing winds
not
present evidence of having surers, 10 Port Agents and 15
off Providence, R.I.
had
four months seatime during Port Patrolmen. The voting pe­
One of her crew was lost as
the
current
year.
riod will continue through Dec,
heavy seas and winds washed
Senator
Claude
Pepper
(center)
of
Florida,
discusses
im­
Serving
on
the Credentials 31, in accord with the Union
all lifeboats over the side. Two
Committee, which was elected Constitution.
Coast Guard cutters were report­ portant campaign ahead with Ray White (right). President of
the
AFL
Central
Trades
and
Labor
Assembly
of
Tampa,
and
from
the floor at the regular Preparations for the coming
ed steaming to the aid of the
Frank
Diez,
Vice
President
of
the
labor
group.
Headquarters
meeting in the elections got under way in Sep­
helpless vessel.
Port
of
New
York
on Oct. 12, tember, with the adoption of the
In the North Sea, the Water­
were:
Deck
Department—Joseph
visory
Board
of
the
AFL
Cigar
customary resolution calling for
Acting
to
insure
continuation
man ship Maiden Creek struck
Burns,
24993,
and
Roderick
Makers'
International
Union,
con­
nominations and designating the
of
the
fight
against
the
Tafta mine, but all hands escaped
Smith,
26893;
Engine
Department
Union positions to be filled in
ferred
with
Senator
Pepper
in
Hartley
law
and
other
oppresive
injury. The extent of the dam­
age is not yet known. The Maid­ labor legislation, representatives their capacities of president and —Fred Barthes, 7449, and Lars this year's balloting.
en Creek made the port of Bre- of Tampa and Hillsborough vice-president, respectively, of Hillertz, 48392; Stewards Depart­ With shipping in a slump and
merhaven under her own pow­ County, Fla., trade unions met the Central Trades and Labor ment—Michael F. Dellamo, 45123, no major improvement indicated,
the resolution pointed out the
er. She is expected to spend at with Florida's pro-labor Senator Assembly of Tampa. They as­ and W. J. Reidy, 6734.
least two weeks in drydock there Claude Pepper last week to dis­ sured Pepper, a vigorous oppon­ The committee's report, which necessity for continued economy
cuss his campaign for re-elec­ ent of the Taft-Hartley law who was approved at special mem­ in Union operations. It suggested,
for repairs.
is always in the forefront of bership meetings held in all ports therefore, that the ballot list 29
Ironically, the Maritime War tion.
The AFL labor union repre­ fights to improve labor's posi­ this week, appears on page 5 elective positions, which are four
Emergency Board will soon be­
gin healings on company de­ sentatives, Ray White, SIU Port tion, that he will have the sup­ of this issue. A sample of the less than appeared" on last year's
mands that wai- bonus payments Agent in Tampa, and Frank port of Tampa and Hillsborough official ballot is reproduced on ballot.
page 12. Space has been pro- -Because West Coast A&amp;G Dis­
Diez, President of the Joint Ad­ County Trade unionists.
be terminated.
trict Halls are operating on a
temporary basis, they do not ap­
pear on the ballot in regular
elections.
As the resolution stated, if
The subcommittee's r e p o r 11 ating chaos by means of phony developments diuring the coming
The American Federation of although civilian employees, are
year make the opening of addi­
Labor, at its 68th annual con­ in the unique position of being hailed the role of the SIU in its political waterfront strikes.
Specifically, the AFL com­ tional Branches or offices neces­
vention in St. Paul, Minn., went under the regulation and control relentless fight to drive the com­
mended
the SIU for its recent sary, the staffing of such offices
on record as "fully supporting of a semi-military establishment munists from strategic water­
victory
in
behalf of free trade should be designated by the
and endorsing the position" of . . . the United States Coast front positions and for blocking
unionism
in
the recent Cana- Secretary-Treasurer, subject to
the attempts of the red-dominthe SIU in demanding that the Guard."
the approval of the membership.
ated
seamen's
unions
from
ere-'
dian
commie
beef.
Coast Guard be relieved of auth­
Administi-ation of the. Federal
ority over civilian seamen.
laws affecting the rights and ob­
Referring to the recent com- ligation of American seamen has
CHECKING OFFICE-SEEKERS* QUALIFICATIONS
mio. CSU beef in Canada, the traditionally been a function of
convention also hailed the SIU the Department of Commerce, a
and other member unions of the civilian agency, Meany said. He
AFL Maritime Trades Depart­ explained that the wartime trans­
ment for winning "another tre­ fer of this function had been
mendously important battle in made permanent in 1945 by Exe­
our war against Communism." cutive order of President Truman.
As a result, the AFL official
SEEK PRESIDENT'S AID
continued, American seamen are
Convention delegates adopted subject to "the extremely rigid
a report of the . AFL Executive regulation and control and
Council recommending that the wholly unsuitable and often ar­
President of the United States bitrary and unrealistic processes
take steps to return the Office of a semi-military establish­
of the U.S. Shipping Commis­ ment."
sioner and the Bureau of Marine
USE ANY MEANS
Inspection and Navigation to the
Department of Commerce.
Recommending that the con­
Action on the Coast Guard vention back the SIU in its fight
was taken after the SIU's posi­ to remove the Coast Guard from
tion was set forth in an urgent authority over seamen, Meany
request for aid frotn SIU Inter­ urged the convention to advocate
national officei's, among whom and support "whatever legisla-'
was Paul Hall, Secretary-Treas­ tion may be needed to effectuate
urer of the Atlantic and Gulf such transfer."
District, and first vice-president
Meany's report for the Execu­
of the International.
tive Council was delivered to the
The Executive Council's report convention on Oct. 6, fourth day
Examination of the qualifications of nominees for A&amp;G District offices was carefully hand­
was submitted to the convention of the meeting. On the follow­
led
by
the Credentials Committee, shown here as it began its task. From left to right, around
by AFL Secretary - Treasurer ing day the convention adopted
the
table:
Roderick Smith. Joseph Burns, Michael Dellamo. W. J. Reidy. Fred Barthes and L.
George Meany, who pointed out the report of the Committee on
A.
Hillertz.
..
.
that "American seamen,- . . . the Executive Council's Report.

AFL Votes To Join SIU Fight On Coast Guard

�Page Two

THE

S E A F ARERS

LOG

Friday, October 21, 1949

SEAFARERS LOG
Published Every Other Week by the

SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor

At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Reentered as second class matter August 2, 1949, at the Post
OSice in New York, N.Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

The Membership Votes
For two months beginning on November 1, Seafarers
will be engaged in the vitally important business of choos­
ing the men whom they wish to serve as officials of their
Union during 1950. Polls will be open daily in all Atlantic
and Gulf Distridt ports until December 31.
Elections via the secret ballot are an outstanding
example of democracy in action, but they don't mean
much unless there is wide participation. For this reason,
every member of the Atlantic and Gulf District is urged
to cast a ballot.
Every effort has been made by our Union to encour­
age the fullest possible participation in the elections. In
line with this policy, this issue carries the complete list
of the candidates whose names appear on the ballot, along
-with their photographs and a summary of their Union
activities, to give voters a chance to choose from the
record.
We don't care how a man votes — that's his personal
business. But we do care that he votes — that's the busi­
ness of all of us who want to contihue to enjoy the free
atmosphere of democracy.

The War Area Bonus

Seafarers Members Now in The Marine Hospitals

Just as the shipping interests and the insurance com­
panies were intensifying their campaign to terminate STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
war bonus payments to seamen entering mined areas, un­ BERNARD JURROWSKI
willing testimony was submitted by an SIU ship that for ARCHIE KING
FRED VYKRUTA
seamen, at least, the war is not yet over.
The SS Maiden Creek, a Waterman C-2, was struck
hy a mine in the North Sea and, naturally, came off
second best. The extent of the damage to the ship is not
•yet known, but she was able to make Bremerhaven,
where she will spend two weeks or so in drydock, under
her own power.
Fortunately, no one was injured, according to early
reports. But that is beside the point. The fact of the
matter is that mines left over from the war still are a
clear and present danger to seamen travelling in foreign
waters.
If the shipowners and insurance companies were to
get their way at the hearings, which get under way Nov.
1"before the Maritime War Emergency Board, the payment
of war bonuses to seamen facing injury from mines
would be ended.
But their contention that the damage to American
vessels has been reduced to a point where continued pay­
ments are no longer necessary will not go uncontested.
The SIU Atlantic and Gulf District will be at the
bearings in behalf of its membership and all American
seamen, demanding that the bonus payments continue for
travel in areas where floating mines may be encountered.
The Union representatives will argue that no one knows
how many mines are left over from the war and that,
,so (ong as a single mine remains, the lives of seamen travel~4.mg in that area are exposed to danger.
The Maiden Creek incident is one more argument
wbich the Union will be able to present in favor of
continued war bonus payments.
The shipping and insurance cpmpanies had better
[• ^ 4ook at the grim facts, instead of their profit statements,
when it comes to the lives and limbs of seamen.

SAL MANCINI
MICHAEL ARMANDO
WILHELM PIETERS
JOSE REYES
ROYAL HARGRAVES
J. F. GAMBLICH
JOHN C. LONG
JOE HERNANDEZ
R. G. ANDERSEN
P. ALBANESE
RICHARD GRALICKI
ANDREW AHLSTROM
WILLIAM ROACH
H. E. BONEWALL
R. R. SIERRA
SIDNEY SWITZER
CARLOS MAl^
M. J. LUCAS
R. L. LAMBERT
JOHN B. DOLAN
FRANK NEARING A. JUL. KASAITIS
IVAN A. THOMAS
% X ^
BALTIMORE HOSPITAL
W. MELLON
E. A AINSWORTH
A. B. CHASON
S. BOJKD
M. A. DOUCETTE
H. A. JEFFREY
G. A. CARROLL
J. KOVISH
F. PINKOWSKI
• A. EMMONS
A. H. SCHWARTZ
E. F. PAUL
F. J. RICHARDSON
C. J. CLARK
W. V. CONNORS

w. L; AKINS

R. AHEARN
R. GUTHRIE
MOBILE HOSPITAL
L. HOWARD
J. TAMBLING
J. CURTIS
R. E. LONG
J. MILLER
E. WASDEN
XXX
BOSTON HOSPITAL
FRANK ALASAVICH
VIC MILAZZO
W. SULLIVAN
R. BOLDUC
A. KUDARSKI
J. GREENBAUM

STATEMENT OF OWNERSHiP

•

L. G. LARONDE
F. H. HOUCK
P. G. DAUGHERTY

W. WHITE
E. LYNCH
A. L. MASTERS
C. P. THOMPSON
D. H. BRUNIE
P. MCCORKINDALE
F. KORVATIN
P. B. COGLEY
XXX
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL
O. E. MARTIN
ARTHUR SEGO
XXX
SAN FRANCISCO HOSPITAL
SAM DRURY
R. FRYE
T. ISAKSEN
J. W. KEENAN

'

STATEMENT OF THE OWNERSHIP,
MANAGEMENT, CIRCULATION" ETC.,
REQUIRED BY THE ACTS OF CON­
GRESS OF AUGUST 24, 1912, ANP
MARCH 3, 1933 of THE SEAFARERS
LOG published every other week at
General Post Office, New York I, N.Y.,
for October I, 1949-.
State of New York,
County .of New York, as
Before me, a Notary Public In and for
the State and county aforesaid, per­
sonally appeared George Hovick, t^o,
having been duly sworn according to
law, deposes and says that he Is the
Editor of the SEAFARERS LOG and that
the following Is, to the best of his know
ledge and belief, a true statement of the
ownership, management (and if a dally
paper, the circulation), etc., of the afore­
said pi
publication for the date shown In
the above
bove caption, required by the Act
igust 24, 1912, as amended by the
of August
Act of March 3, 1933, embodied In sectlon $37, Postal Laws and Regulations,
print^ on the reverse of this form, to
wit;
1. That the names and addresses of
the publisher, editor, managing editor,
and business managers are:' Publisher
Seafarers International Union of North
America, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, SI
Beaver St., Now York 4, N. Y, Editor,
George No^ck, SI Beaver St., New York,
N. YT'Managing Editor (none) Business
Managers' (none).
2. That the owner Is: (If owned-by a
corporation, its name and address must
be stated and also immediately there­
under the-names and; addresses of stookholders owning-or.holding one per cent
of more-of -total sunount of stock. If not
owned by a -corportion, the - names and
addresses of the Individual owners must

be given. If owned by a firm, company,
or other unincorporated concern, its
name and address, as well as those of
each individual member, must be given.)'
Seafarers International Union of North
America, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, SI
Beave'r St., New York 4, N.Y.
3. That the known bondholders, mort&gt;
gagees, and other sceurlty holders own.
Ing or holding I per cent of more of
total amount of bonds, mortgages, or
other securities are: (If there are none,
so state.) None.
4. That the two paragraphs next
above giving the names of the owners,
stockholders, and security holders, tf
any, contain not only the list of stock,
holders and security holders as thep
appear upon the books of the company
but also. In cases where the stockholder
or ' security holder appears upon tha
books of the company as trustee or In
any' oflier fiduciary relation, the nam*
of the person or corporation for whom
such trustee Is acting, is given; al^
that the said two paragraphs contain
statements embracing affiant's
fuH
knowledge and belief as to. the clrcum.
stances and conditions under which
stockholders and security holders wtto
do not appear upon the books of tha
company as trustees, hold stock and se'
curltles In a capacity other than that of
a bona fide owner; and this affiant haa
no reason to believe that any othar
person, assoslatlon, or corporation haa
any interest direct or indirect In the said
stock, bonds, or- other securities thaa
as so stated by him.
(Signed) GEORGE NOVICX, Editor
Sworn to and subscribed before md
this 1st day of October, 1949, ROSE
S. ELDRICE, Notary Public. (My c6m4
mission expires March 30, 1950.

�TM B ^ E

dVJEIt S LJO€

igMS^ :Thzeo

Is A Hollow Phrase To
By RICHARD ADELL

j
•V:

Wiper, I know what I'm talking
about.
In all fairness to the Stew.ards I've sailed under, I believe
the food they put out is con­
trolled by the Port Steward.
It would take up top much
space to go into details here,
but look at these few samples.
When I first went on the Gov­
ernment Camp the ship had just
returned from afi eight month
trip and there were a lot of
crummy old stores aboard.
There wefe over 200 pounds
of weevil-infested flour, 14 cases
of practically rotten eggs—very
noticeable to the nostrils. The
Steward told me, "The Health
:Department inspector has condeemed this flour and I'd like to
throw it overboard with a lot
of other stuff, but I've got to
wait until the Poi-t Steward says
I should."
Yet I know for a fact, that
these crummy old stores con­
tinued to be used. To the best
of my knowledge, they were all
used up, too. The point I'm try­
ing -to illustrate is that you
could eat this stuff or go hun­
gry—and do nothing about it.
On an SIU ship, if such a con­
dition existed, you could call a

You can't beat Cities Service'
for the way .it treats its seamen.'
You work, like I did, for the
company fpr eight and a halfj
months, break your back trying;
to do the job right, never get;
drunk, never miss work, do!
everything that's asked of you—
and what happens? They fire
you for what you believe in.
I was raised to believe that'
freedom of thought, speech, lit­
erature and opinion were my
birthright as an American citi^n.
I chose to think, read and
talk about the many benefits
Cities Sei-vice seamen would re­
ceive under an SIU contract. Yet
these beliefs of mine were kept
RICHARD ADELL
pretty much under coVer until
i went aboard the SS Govern­ shine the apple so as to be sure
ment Camp.
of their jobs. Sure, they hate to
There, after I let my true do this, but with families to
feelings come to light, I got the
support, they have to.
axe.
Despite the company's efforts
WHAT SECURITY?
to improve the feeding on its
That's what happened to me ships as a cover-up for its weak
after eight and a half months. I spots, the food they .put out is
wonder if this is an example of pretty rough. Having sailed as
the job security they brag about galleyman for five and one half
giving their men? And the com- months on the SS Paoli, and 16
,pany probably wonders why the days as galley man on the SS
men are so dissatified on their Government Camp before I went
ships.
Company officials say to them­
selves, "Look at the good wages
we give them."
Yet, in paying, these "good
wages" Cities Seiwice does not By WILLIAM (Curly) RENTZ
It is, interesting to note that,
recognize national holidays be­
although the MFOWW and the
J. R. Gormley, Baltimore Marine Cooks and Stewards have
cause it does not want to pay
Agent
of the Marine Firemen, previously attacked the SUP
overtime for work performed on
Oilers,
Watertenders
and Wipers, many times for having three de­
these days.
in
an
article
in
the
Marine
Fire­ partments on a number of West
Overtime, when you do get it
man,
official
organ
of
the Coast outfits' ships, they have
—and this is very seldom—is al­
MFOWW,
in
the
issue
of
Sep­
most always disputed at the dis­
recently gone on record them­
cretion of the department heads. tember 14, published the names selves for the same type of Un­
They always try, and succeed, in of 14 SIU-SUP men with an in­ ion.
clipping you out of a couple of direct plea that they be dumped.
For instance, only a few weeks
The excuse Gormley, incident­ ago, the MFOWW annnounced on
hours.
This was especially true in the ally an "ex"-commie, used for the West Coast in the future not
Stewards Department of the putting the finger on these SIU- only will they attempt to or­
Govvernment Camp, which I SUP men was the result of an ganize the Firemen on unorgan­
know all about. And I am sure organizational job done for the ized companies, but will also or­
these conditions also exist on SUP by a number of SIU-SUP ganize cooks and sailors into the
men.
all Cities Service ships.
MFOWW.
Such outrages could never ex­
The MCS also took this same
The Alaska Stearnship Comp­
ist on an SlU-contracted ship, aS' any, a newly-formed outfit which action, and is now on record to
either the Ship's Delegate or the will run exclusively between the organize into the MCS on the
Union Patiolman would settle West Coast and Alaska ports, West Coast firemen and sailors.
nil beefs on the spot.
This attempt on the part of
recently bought their first vessel
the
Firemen and Cooks to or­
to
go
into
this
trade.
The
ship
SCUTTLEBUTT
was the MV Asa Lathrop laying ganize -the other two depart­
Then there is the matter of
ments comes at a very late date,
in the Port of Norfolk, Va.
rumors, rumors, rumors. "Who
The SUP requested the SIU
is getting fired this trip?" "There
are going to be some new faces to instruct its membership to
attempt to secure jobs in this
,around here."
vessel, for the purpose of organ­
It's the same old story everyizing the vessel under the banner
By FRANK HOSE
time you .arrive at a payoff port. of the SUP and securing a con­
You're always wonderring if it
tract. The SIU A&amp;G District did
In 1950, the SIU Atlantic and
js your turn to get the axe. You what the SUP requested. This was
Gulf
District will enter negotia­
ijever know just how you stand. done in the same manner as
tions
for renewals of. its con­
J*ersonally, I think these rumors the SUP had previously helped
tracts.
These negotiations will
are started on purpose so that the SIU in organizing such com­
take
place
against a different
the company can keep the men
panies as Isthmian, etc.
background
from
that of 1948,
.sweating it out at top speed.
As a result of SIU and SUP when our present agreements
-But for anyone who needs a men securing jobs on this vessel, were reached.
job, and who doesn't, this rumor­ the SUP won an NLRB election
A good indication of the cur­
mongering does not help any by a 100 percent vote.
rent trend is the situation in the
ulcers he may have. All it does . It goes without being said that steel industry, where the giant
,is keep everyone on edge. No- other West Coast unions didn't cotporations li a v e refused to
.body knows how he stands, un- like the outcome of this election. meet the steel workers' demand
.til he is signed on again, and This applies especially to guys for an employer-financed pen­
even then he is not sure if it is like Gormley, who had been sion system. As a result the men
coastwise articles.
charged with the responsibility are out on strike.
This condition never exists on by the MFOWW to organize the
Another example of the em­
.en SIU ship. You never have to black gang of the MV Asa Lath­ ployers' attitude these days
worry about your job on a rop for the West Coast Firemen, emerges clearly from the nego­
Union-contracted vessel as long and who couldn't cut the must­ tiations being conducted between
.es you do your job.
the AFL International Long­
ard.
On CS ships you're always
Therefore, Gormley, to cover shoremen's Association and the
-afraid that some official or qp his own lack of ability, fin­ shippers. Here the union's orig­
-Btooge will not like the way you gered these SIU-SUP men and inal demands were met by a
«ct and that you'll be fired has done, and is doing, all he counter proposal from the em­
itherefore. So a lot of guys, either can possibly do t© have these ployers calling for a 13-cent
hourly wage cut.
bpenly - or on the QT, have -to guys worked over. '

shipboard meeting and get some
action.
"
Oh yes, I don't want to forget
some of the excellent working
conditions that CS offers on its
ships.
I sailed as Wiper for the past
three trips on the Government
Camp. On the last trip they had
us vacuum cleaning and paint­
ing the fidley while in the Gulf
of Mexico. Whenever I went
down to the fire room to get
more paint, I felt as cool as an
iceberg—118 degrees Fahrenheit.
HOT SPOT
It must have been 145 degrees
in the fldley. They usually kept
the fldley
doors locked. They
kept them locked on us the first
day. When we asked the Chief
Engineer if we could open the
doors, he referred us to the Sec­
ond, who said, "Can't open those
doors. It fouls up the water level
with cool air circulating past the
boiler drums."
As an after thought, they un­
locked the doors the ne.xt day.
They probably figured our health
might be impaired under such
heat, and t h r e e sick Wipers
would probably cost the com­
pany more money than the gain
to be had from the boilers by
keeping the doors locked. Yeah,

Cities Service offers "wonderful
conditions."
And how is it that a certain
Fireman can foul up on three
consecutive times in different
ports, missing watches on ac­
count of being drunk, and on
one occasion causing another
Fireman to stand a 20-hour
watch? This man got three warn­
ings from the Chief Engineer,
but wasn't fired.
But eight of the crew were
fired without warning, even
though we had never fouled up
once. We were all supposed -to
have been fired for "incompe­
tence." Everyone on the ship
knew how we stood about the
SIU.
That Fireman, by the way, is
still aboard the ship. He is liie
CTMA organizer. Do you sup­
pose that could have anything
to do with him not getting fired?
On every Cities Service ship,
a notice is posted, saying in ef-"
feet, "That every man shall have
the right to decide whether he
wants a union to represent him
or not." Oh yeah!
I guess CS officials weren't
raised to believe in the same
things that the majority of other
Americans are.

inasmuch as they had previously
turned down the SUP's offer to
go into a joint organizing cam­
paign to knock over the West
Coast tanker companies.
Upon their refusal, the SUP
went in and organized all tank­
ers in all departments on the
West Coast. Since that time, the
West Coast Firemen and Cooks
have been crying, claiming they
had'been "robbed of their juris­
diction."
This matter of being "robbed
of their jurisdiction" is now set­
tled for all times, inasmuch as
they have now gone in for or­
ganizing all across the beard
themselves.
We, the members of the A&amp;G
District, regret very much to see
the MFOWW sanction such" a
statement as made by their Balt­
imore Agent, Gormley. To this
date, we have not had a fight
with this outfit. But, if they

think for one minute we are go­
ing to sit on our cans, and let
a fat punk like Gormley finger
our guys to get worked over,
then they have another guess
coming.
If any of our guys do get
slapped down Ijecause of Gc.rmley, then we certainly are not
going to like it. It is regrettable
that characters such as Gormley,
who has been labor-faking so
long that he can no longer do
the job for his membership, has
to cover up his own lack of or­
ganizational ability by attempt­
ing to cause a fight between two
organizations.
If the West Coast Firemen
know what they are doing, they
will immediately disavow Gorm­
ley "s position of fingering oiir
men, or else—if they do not dis­
avow Gormley's position—^then
we will know exactly how we
stand with the MFOWW.

Member Offers New Assessment Method

...

In all negotiations between
union workers and employers
throughout this country today,
the employers are taking advan­
tage of two situations to fight
the workers.
One is the Taft-Hartley law.
The other is the surplus of un­
employed people, which the em­
ployers are attempting to use as
a wedge to weaken union -de­
mands for improvements, either
in wages or conditions.
I think, therefore, that we
should be financially
prepared
for any eventuality in the fu­
ture.
In the light of the situation
facing union negotiators today, I
should like to submit a proposal
for-the Brothers to comment and
to make further suggestions on.
The proposal is as follows:
1. That instead of the present
method of. assessment, we adopt
a two percent annual assessment
based on the money earned in a
particular year.

2. That 25 percent ox this
money be placed in the General
Fund, ~and 75 percent in the
Strike Fund.
In support of this plan, I would
like to point out some of its .ad­
vantageous features. Assuming
that the average annual wage oi
Seafarers is $3,000 and that there
are approximately 10,000 jobs,
my proposal would bring in
about $600,000 annually, whichr
is about $400,000 more than our
present income from our $18.00
annual assessments.
Furtliermorc, my proposition
would place the burden on those
best able to bear it. The perniitman who works only a few
months a year would pay in pro­
portion to his income. An Or­
dinary Seamen and a Messman,
for example, would pay less than- -j
an Electrician»»Bnd a Bosun, who
earn more money.
I ask the Brothers to consider rj
this proposal and then say \vha(k u
they think of it.

.y'r. \

�Page Four

THE

Ore Ships Tie-Up In Baltiinore
As Steel Strikers Hoid Fast

SEAFARERS

LOG

Frida^' October 21, 1949

LAST LOOK AT OLD LOOK

Elehtiens Held'
Mehile's Stage

By WILLIAM (Curly) RENTZ

By CAL TANNER
B \LTIMORE—The steel strike the military ^authority and dis­
MOBILE —"Dead slow" des­
is having its effect on shipping cipline of the Coast Guard and
cribes the condition of shipping
in this port. At least six Calmar has proven that it is capable of
in this port for the past two
and Ore ships are lying idle as disciplining men guilty of ship­
weeks. Activity revolved around
a result of the shutdown of Beth­ board violations. In this way, a
five payoffs, six sign-ons and one
lehem steel plants in this area. man gets more just treatment,
ship in-transit.
How long the strike ^will last but a beef aboard the Beaure­
Payoff vessels were the Alcoa
no one seems to know. The Steel gard didn't seem to satisfy some
Corsair
and Alcoa Cavalier, and
Workei-s are determined to hold guys—those that had fouled up,
the
Waterman
company's Iber­
out until they win a pension that is.
ville,
Kyska,
and
Wild Ranger.
fund, financed solely by the em­
NO LOGS
The
in-transit
ship
was thg
ployers.
A
couple
of
foul-ups
on
that
Greeley
Victory,
also
of
Water­
We hope they get what they
ship
had
the
good
fortune
to
man.
want, for when a man has work­
Signing on were the Stonewall
ed the best part of his life for a have a Skipper who didn't log
Jackson,
Iberville, Kyska, Wild
them
and
put
them
up
before
big corporation, he should be en­
Ranger,
Waterman,
and the Al- '
the
Coast
Guard,
but
who
was
titled to some security in his old
coas
Corsair
and
Cavalier.
willing
to
let
the
Union
handle
age. As things now stand, most
The payoffs were smooth, with
outfits give a man his walking the matter. A trial committee
j
practically
no beefs on any of
dealt
with
these
men,
and
they
papers after he begins to slow
1
the
ships.
The
Kyska payoff was
are
the
only
ones
who
offered
down. But the executives are
'
one
of
the
smoothest
we have
any
objections.
While the new look is being applied to the Mobile Hall,
looked out for, and they manage
had
in
the
port
in
a
long
time.
The
point
is
that
the
member­
to retire on very comfortable
these Brothers try a little relaxation. Next picture of Mobile In addition to being free of
ship
of
this
Union
has
repeated­
pensions paid for by the com­
recreation room will be after alterations eure completed. The i beefs, she carried a heads-up
ly gone on record in favor of
panies.
faces in the picture may be the same, but the room won't be. Union crew.
having the CJpast Guard taken
GOOD PAYOFFS
off the necks of merchant sea­
PROGRESS ON BUILDING
Payoffs in the port were pretty men.
Although
the renovations on
good but, as pointed out above?
Foul-ups who insist on doing
the
Mobile
Hall have not yet
some of the ships tied up, on ac­ as they please, without regard
reached
the
final
stages, it won't
count of the steel strike. These for the welfare of their ship­
be
long
before
everything
is in
were the Bethore, Chilore, San- mates, cannot be allowed to
first-class
shape
and
ready
for
tore, Oremar, Feltore, and Cu- jeopardize the well-being of the
By EARL (Bull) SHEPPARD
use.
Brother
Robert
Matthews,
bore.
entire Union membership.
been down in the* Gulf
The other payoff ships were
It seems that the foul-ups are
NEW ORLEANS —Things are week. The men won an increase who has
•
v. •
. i *•
..
„
on
Union
business, took time out
the Warrior, Beauregard, Cape the only ones to holler, when rocking along in ship-shape fa- in wages, as well as overtime
.u,.
Mohican, Steel Vendore, Robin they are finally told that they shion down here in the Crescent raises and improved working to observe the progress of the
Hood and Sanford Dole.
cannot get away with this stuff. City. Shipping is holding its conditions. The new contracts renovations. ,
Ships signing on were the War­ Well, we'll be seeing you all own, with as many Brothers also contain a clause for re­ The Mobile Branch is keenly
rior, Beauregard, Steel Vendor, next issue. Meanwhile, we hope shipping out as there were regis- opening discussions on wages interested in the AFL Labor's
League for Political Education)
Sanford Dole and Robin Hood. some good news is in the mak­ tering in the past two weeks. and the manning scale.
which is in the process of being
The Union has been fighting ing. Steady as she goes, and no Thus, we are maintaining the
THANKSGIVING PAY
formed
here in Mobile. All of
for years to free seamen from foul balls.
status quo.
Several Brothers, who appar­ the Mobile seamen who have
Several of the new companies' ently have not forgotten the
been in the State for two years
• F
ships that have been recently Thanksgiving Day party that was
are eligible to register and vote
brought under SIU contracts by given in the Hall here last year,
in the State, city, and county
the organizing department paid
have
been
inquiring
if
there
is
elections.
By JIM DRAWDY
off here. Among them were a going to be another such dinner' Men now sailing, who are vet­
Victory
Carriers Corporation ship this year, and several of the first- erans, are eligible to register
SAVANNAH—Shipping is just those of the Garden City Cab
and
the
Eagle Ocean Transport rate Cooks that are members of without paying back poll taxes.
about fair to middlin' here, with Company, as this is the only
Company's
SS Mother M. L.
most of the jobs in the past two union taxi outfit in the city.
our Union have already volun- It is very important that people
weeks coming from vessels call­
BANG-UP
JOB
friendly to organized labor be
teered
their services.
CLERKS' BEEF
ing in-transit.
So here's looking forward to elected. The only way we can
The
crews
on
these
two
ships
These in-transit callers, each On the tenth of this month, did a very good job and there a Thanksgiving spread, with all, accomplish this is by registering
of which took from one to five the Patrolmen and several mem­ was absolutely no performing the trimmings, here at the Hall and voting for the candidates we
men, were the SS William Car- bers of the SIU from this Branch of any kind aboard either one. in the "red-bean city."
jknow are friendly to our cause.
ruth, Trans-Fuel Corp.; the Hur­ attended a hearing in the Fed­ Nor were any but a few minor
ricane and the Chickasaw, Wa­ eral Court Building between the beefs. This was a fine job and
terman; the Angelina, Bull, and Retail Clerks International As­ worthy of commendation, espesociation, AFL, and the Leopold
the tanker New London.
By JEFF MORRISON
Everything went smoothly Adler Department Store. The
aboard these ships, except for Adler outfit is charged with 29
SAN FRANCISCO — Shipping Loyola Victory, Waterman; Fairan incident on the Carruth in­ violations of the National .Labor
continued on the slow side dur­ land, • Waterman; Steel Admiral,
volving three men who got into Relations Act. It appears that
ing the past two weeks, despite Isthmian; Santa Clara Victory,
a fight. They were taken off the the head of the company is
plenty worried.
cially since it was the fifst trip the fact that eight ships came Isthmian; Alamar, Calmar and
ship.
There is a good possibility that under SIU contract for both of into port. They were in-transits the Seamar, Calmar.
SEE THE "BATTLE"
Five of these vessels are inand took replacements.
the clerks of the store who were these vessels.
'We now have a 16 mm. sound fired because of union activity The weather in New Orleans These ships were the Purdue tercoastals and one is bound for
motion picture projector and will be reinstated with all back has changed again, and the rainy Victory, Waterman; Fairland, the Far East, but all will call
we're using it to run off the pay. The membership of the days have taken a backseat for Waterman; Santa Clara Victory, here in-transit.
"Battle of Wall Street," which SIU in Savannah has offered its sunshine. If we were as poetical­ Isthmian; Maiden Victory, Wa­ The. crew aboard the Maiden
shows the SIU's part in the dra­ assistance to the Retail Clerks ly inclined as' our good Brother terman; Marquette Victory, Isth­ Victory is a happy one. Bosun
matic fight of the United Finan­ Union.
Frenchy Michelet, we could real­ mian; Penmar, Calmar and the Red Shea is a camera bug and
he totes all the standard photo­
cial Employees for better wages We're wishing Seafarers O. E. ly paint a word picture of old Alamar, Calmar.
and conditions.
graphic
gear, from camera to
All of these vessels were in
Martin and Arthur Sego speedy New Orleans as she is today.
Several members have ex­ recovery. They're both in the The Marine Allied Workers, good shape, with the few beefs darkroom equipment.
Red shares his hobby with
pressed their enthusiasm over Savannah Marine Hospital.
the SIU's inland boatmen and being of a routine nature and
this picture and said they would We're still having summer marine workers affiliate, signed settled in regular SIU style.
his shipmates. And when he goes
like to see more of these films weather down here, not a cold two-year contracts with the tug­ Scheduled for arrival here in ashore, he's always carrying his
produced by the SlUr
day so far.
boat operators of this area last the coming two weeks are the camera. He says it helps him
Among the men who are
with the women.
BEACH SIGHTS
making eight hours daily at the
On the beach here in Friscp
Dispatcher's counter these days
the past week were F. Gibbons,
are Brothers D. Medlock, R. J.
Jones, J. B. Davis, and J. T.
By BEN LAWSON
putes on the Bessemer Victory Among the local lads, there's H. Chadburn, H. Brown, L.
Moore.
BOSTON—There has been no and they were settled right on John Hunt, who recently got Twile, G. Johnson, J. Kniess, A.
Here's a reminder to all crews change in shipping here in the board ship by the Port Agent. himself a new Buick. If you Anderson, T. Foster, J. Delesa,
aboard SIU shipS touching Jack­ past two weeks^ and things are The only excitement in this want a thrill ride at plenty miles B. Wigg, S. Drury, W. O'Dea,
sonville and Charleston. If you still moving along at a snail's port during the past couple of per hour, contact John. E. Mis- C. Wallace, R. Myrick, R. Frye,
need any replacements you pace.
weeks was the arrival of the losky is nr-.v on the top of the H. Stivers and H. Hill.
should immediately notify the The Bull Run, Petrol Tankers French Liner He de France, shipping list and is raring to go We received a letter from
Brother Thomas Foster in- Death
Hall here in Savannah. The tele­ Industries, paid off and signed which came in from New York —anyplace.
phone number of the Savannah on. In addition, the following ves­ on a courtesy call. She embark­ Our men in the Marine Hospi­ Valley, saying that he had been
Branch is 3-1728.^
sels called in-transit: Yorkmar, ed some 700 passengers and then tal this wc"k are Frank Alasa- laid up for a few days on ac.count of a sprained ankle sufr
While on reminders, we'd like Calmar; Bessemer Victory, Wa­ left. This was the first time in
to urge all Brothers in Savannah terman; Kenyon Victory and a long while that the Beantown vich, Vic I lilazzo, W. Sullivan, fered while hunting. We're won&gt;that, if they use cabs here, they Meredith Victory, Isthmian.
has had a liner of this size in R. Bolduc, .A. Kudarauski and dering what he was hunting in
Death Valley.
"&gt;
should make sure they patronize There wer^e a few overtime dis- port.
J. Greenbaum.
V

Shipping In Port New Orleans
Keeps Pace With Registrations

Savamah Calls Shipping \

In-Transits Hit Frisco Clean

Full Weigh Of Shipping Simp Felt By Boston

..-i.

"

�Friday, October 21, 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

Page Fiye

LOG

The Qualified Candidates For A&amp;G Offices
Secretary-Treasurer
(One to be elected)

Report On Credentials

New York Deck Patrolmen
(Two to be elected)

A

PAUL HALL — No. 190: A member of the Seafarers
International Union since its beginning. Holds clear­
ances for all strikes.
Sailed actively in all
areas during late war.
First assumed elective
office in 1944 as New
York Port Agent. Was
Director of Isthmian
Organizing drive. Was
elected Secretary-Trea­
surer in 1947. Has serv­
ed as a member of
SIU negotiating com­
mittee during all recent
contract talks. Has also
served in various ca­
pacities in practically
all emergencies and strikes during history of the Union.

Assistant Secretary-Treasurers
.(Three to be elected)
LLOYD A. (Blackie) GARDNER — No. 3697: Has been
a member of the Seafarers International Union since
its formation. During
^
the war sailed into all
combat areas. Holds
clearances for all
strikes, beefs and or­
ganizational drives of
the Union. Served as
Dispatcher in the Port
of New York. Worked
as volunteer Organizer
in many drives. Was
elected Agent for the
Port of Philadelphia
for 1948. Did not run
for office in 1949. Has
served as Headquarters
Representative for past year in New York.

We, the undersigned Committee on Credentials, duly
elected at the regular business meeting at Headquarters
on October 12, 1949, have examined the credentials
of the candidates for^ the election of the officers of
the Seafarers International Union of North America,
Atlantic and Gulf District, for the year 1950," and
submit the following report:
We recommend that the men who are qualified
for office be placed on the ballot in alphabetical form
under the offices for which they run, and that the
ports, following the Headquarters Offices, beginning
with Boston, be arranged on the ballot geographically
as has been done in the past.
Letters of acceptance were submitted to the Cre­
dentials Committee for the respective ports, as follows:
. John L. Crowley, 42061—Baltimore Deck
Patrolman
Benjamin Rucker, 39187—Baltimore Stewards
Patrolman
Ted Thomson, 36236—Baltimore Stewards
Patrolman
Lawson Rynes, 20870—Tampa Agent
Edwin Westphal, 46203—New Orleans Stewards
Patrolman
These men did not submit the necessary three years'
seatime; therefore, the letters are being filed in Head­
quarters Office and these men are hereby disqualified.
Letters .of acceptance were also submitted to the
Credentials Committee for the respective ports, as
follows:
Frank Sullivan, 2—New Orleans Deck
Department
Jack Kelly, 10—Galveston Patrolman
Inasmuch as Article Xlll, Section 2, Subsection (e),
in the Constitution states that a man must submit four
months' discharges for the current year, this Commit­
tee did not accept anything but certified discharges as
proof of seatime for the current year, and the above
men are hereby disqualified.
Joseph Burns, 24933
Roderick Smith, 26893
Lars Hilleretz, 48392
Michael Dellamo, 45123
Fred Barthes, 7449
W. J. Reidy, 6734

Boston Agent

LOUIS COFFIN — No. 4526: Transferred into Sea­
farers from AFL Seamen's Union in March, 1939. Par­
ticipated in 1941 Bonus
Beef, 1946 General
Strike, and Isthmian
Strike. Has been Pa­
trolman and Agent in
Philadelphia and Jack­
sonville, and Assistant
Secretary-Treasurer o f
the Atlantic and Gulf
District. Was elected
Deck Patrolman in the
Port of New York for
1947, 1948 and 1949.
Has clearances for all
Union actions of past
ten years. Has taken
part in negotiating new contracts for SIU.
, 4.

4.

4-

CHARLES (Cotlon) HAYMOND — No. 98; One of
original SIU members. Has been active in organizing.
and has held elective
and app-ointive positions
in the Union. Was el­
ected Jlouston Agent
for 1947, but returned
to sea when the mem­
bership closed the
Branch for reasons of
economy. Sailed during
the war in all areas.
Was active in all SIU
strikes since joining the
Union. Was elected
Jacksonville Agent for
1948; port was closed
before he took office.
Has since been Headquarters P.epresentative in New
York.
4"

"41

4«

(One to be elected)
4,

4.

4.

ROBERT MATTHEWS — No. 154: Joined the SIU
when it was first formed. Sailed as Engine and/or
Ship's Delegate on
many ships. Seryed as
Patrolman and Agent
in the port of Mobile,
and later as Jackson­
ville Agent and San
Francisco Agent. Was
assigned by the 1946
quarters
Representa- -,
tive. Served as member
of the Negotiating Com"
mittee, 1946 and 1947. •
'
Was elected Assistant
Secretary-Treasurer in
1947. Has worked on organizational and educational
projects for the Union. Has participated in all SIU
strikes and job actions. Is strike clear.

New York Engine Patrolmen

BEN LAWSON — No. 894: Has been a member of
the SIU since 1938. Has taken part actively in all
(Two to be elected)
strikes and * has aided
in the organizing of TEDDY BABKOWSKI — No. 7391: Joined the SIU
several steamship com­ in 1941 and sailed during the war to all zones. Served
panies. Served as Pa­ as a volunteer Organi­
trolman in Norfolk and zer in the Isthmian
was elected as Deck fieet and with tanker I
Patrolman in Baltimore companies now under
for 1948. Was Chair­ contract to the SIU.
man of 1946 Strike Served on the New
Committee in Port of York Isthmian Strike
Norfolk and held same Committee. Participa­
job during Isthmian ted in the 1941 Strike,
Strike in 1946. Was el­ Coos Bay and Shipyard
ected Boston Joint Pa­ beefs. In aiding the
trolman for 1949. Was shipyard, workers and
appointed head of Bos­ 'telephone workers, he
ton Branch when Agent was transferred to the West served on the Balti­
Coast and is currently in charge there.
more committees. Has
held various appointive
Union positions and was elected New York lingine
4^
4.
4,
Patrolman for 1948.

New York Agent
(One to be elected)
JOSEPH A. VOLPIAjNr — No. 56: First went to sea JOE ALGINA — No. 1320: Transferred from AFLSU
in 1922. Active in organized maritime labor for m^y into the SIU when this organization was formed. Sailed
years before joining actively during the
the SIU in 1940 in Port war until going to work
of New. Orleans. .Served for Union as Organizer.
as Engine Patrolman in Has served in various
Port of New York from capacities such as New
1943 to 1945. Later York Deck Patrolman
served as Special Serv- and Acting Agent. Was
ices« representative in elected Agent in the
charge of membership Port ofNew York for
problems relating to 1948 and 1949. Partici­
Coast Guard, immigra­ pated actively in Long­
tion, unemployment in­ shore and Coos Bay
surance and other mat­ beefs, 1946 General
ters. Was elected As­ Strike, UFE beef, and
sistant Secretary-Trea­ Isthmian Strike., Has
surer in 1947. Has a been on Negotiating
Committee for past three years.
clear record for all past SIU strikes and -beefs.

THOMAS J. CLARK — No. 25027: Joined the Sea­
farers International Union in 1943 in the Port of
New York. Has an ac­
tive strike record since T
^
^
then, having participa­
ted in the 1946 General
Strike, the Isthmian
Strike and other water­
front actions of the
Atlantic and Gulf Dis­
trict. Sailed through­
out the war into the
war zones of the world.
During active sailing
days has served as
black gang delegate
aboard many vessels.
Latest ship was the
SS St. Augustine Victory, Isthmian.

�Page Six

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, October 21, 1949

VICTOHIO D'INDIA — No. 20875: Became a member
of the Seafarers International Union in 1941 when
he joined in the Port
of Boston. Since that
date has actively par­
ticipated in all beefs,
strikes and organiza­
tional drives of the
Union, holding clear­
ances for all strikes.
Was elected by his
shipmates to serve as ^
black gang delegate on
,
many occasions. Sailed
throughout late war,
hitting several batt^^
zones. Latest ship was
the SS Bret Harte, Wa­
terman, where he served as Deck'Engineer.
t
4.
4.
FREDDIE STEWART •— No. 4935: Was a volunteer
Baltimore Deck Patrolman
JAMES PURCELL—No. 7802: Has been going to sea Organizer for the Seafarers International Union from
since 1919, and has been a Union member the entire its beginning. Partici­
(One to be elected)
time. Joined the SIU in
pated in all major
1942, and sailed into
R. E. DICKEY — J^o. 652: Has belonged to Seafarers
strikes — Bonus, Isth­
all zones during the
International Union since its formation. Was Deck
mian, '46 General —
Patrolman in Baltimore
recent war. Has parti­
and other actions of
from 1938 to 1942, when '
~
cipated in all strikes,
the Union. Led direct
given leave of absence
beefs and organization­
action to secure milk,
al campaigns of the
provisions and decent
out. Returned 1?o job in J
'
Union since joining.
shipboard conditions for
June, 1943. Was dele­
Served as. Engine Pa­
seamen. Was New York
gate to first SIU Con- ^ ,
trolman in New York
Stewards
Patrolman in
vention and helped to .
during 1946, 1947, 1948
1947, and Joint Patrol­
draw up the present - ^
and 1949. In past years
man in Port of New
Constitution. Took ac- &gt;5
has sat in on Engine
York
in 1948 and 1949.
Department n e g i otiative part in all SIU
,
Assisted in the draw­
tions and clarifications
strikes in/ Union's his- ' '
ing up of many of the
and has helped write
tory, and has a clear
Union's past agreements.
SIU contracts.
record. Last ran for
44.
4.
Union office in 1948 /
4"
4*
4*
CHARLES SCOFIELD — No. 21538: Became a mem­
election for Deck Pa­
Philadelphia Agent
ber of the SlU in 1941 in the Port of Norfolk. Served
trolman in Port of Baltimore.
(One to be elected)
as an active Seafarer
4.
4.
4.
*
throughout the war, STEVE CARDULLO — No. 24599: Has been an CARL (Red) GIBBS — No.- 2341: A charter member
hitting most of the active participant in all SIU strikes and beefs since of the Union, and a veteran of the Union's early job
actions, strikes and
combat zones. Aboard joining the organiza­
ship has been elected tion. Served as Marcus
beefs. Has clearances
engine delegate and Hook Agent until that
for all beefs, major and
ship's delegate many port was closed. Has al­
minor, in Union's histimes by crewmembers. so served as Patrolman
tory. Has had activity
Has clearances for all in Philadelphia and as
as an Organizer, ship
I'
strikes and beefs of West Coast Represen­
and shoreside, in the
~ '
Union since time of tative. Is presently
Isthmian campaign and
•
- joining. During 1946 serving as Headquar­
Great Lakes Drive. Has
General Strike served ters Representative in
served as a delegate to
f'' '
on Savannah Strike New Yprk. During the
International
conven- i
f '
Committee.
Recently war sailed into all
tion. Elected Joint Pa- 1
served as Chief Elec­ zones of action. Holds
trolman for 1948 and|
trician aboard the Southstar, South Atlantic -Steam­ clearances for all Un­
Deck Patrolman for I
ship Co.
ion waterfront actions.
1949 in Port of New
Actively participated in
York.
44"
4successful .organizing and striking of Isthmian SS
4
4
4
New York Stewards Patrolmen
Company in 1945-47.
LEON (Blondie) JOHNSON — No. 108: Was one of
(Two to be elected) '
4.
4.
t
the first seamen to join the newly-formed SIU in
JAMES SHEEHAN—No. 306: A member of the SIU 1939. Took part in the
RAY GONZALES—No. 174: Joined the SIU in 1940, since its formation in 1938; saw service as an Prgan- P&amp;O Strike, Bonus
transferring from the ILA tugboat branch. Has parti­ izer for the Union in
Strike, anti-commie
cipated in all strikes
the Gulf Area during t
Longshore beef and
since date of joining.
1938 and 1939. Was "
other
major actions of..|
Sailed throughout .the
elected to Union office
the
SIU,
holding strike
war as Chief Steward.
in 1944 and has been
clearances
from each.
Elected Stewards Pa­
re-elected t o various
Was
Agent
in Port Ar­
trolman for the year
Union posts-since:
thur
during
the 1946
of 1946 and has been
Deck Patrolman for
General Strike. Has
re-elected each year
New York in 1947 and
served as Patrolman
since. Has participated
1948, and Philadelphia il|
in New Orleans, Gal­
in negotiations on
Agent for 1949. Began
veston, New York and
Stewards D e p artment
sailing in, 1924 and . ,
Norfolk. Was elected
clauses of contracts.
shipped as AB and Bo- ' '
Patrolman
in Galveston
Was Area Commander
sun since then, holding '
in
1947.
Elected
Deck
in 1946 General Strike
down shipboard dele- 4^
Patrolman
for
Baltimore
in last year's election. Sailed
ill
and Wall Street Strike.
gate jobs. Holds clear­
during
the
war..
Chairman of Food and
ances for strikes and actions of SIU for past ten years.
4
4
4
Housing Committee during Isthmian Strike. Active
-4. "4
4
in Canada during recent CSU-SIU beef of 1949.
Baltimore Engine Patrolman

These pictures ami biographical sketches ef the
guaiified candidates are printed tor your information
and benefit, in order to acquaint you more fully with
the men who will he ymm imion representutives for
the year of 1950.
Read these carefully before you vote^ so that your
hullot will he based on the fullest possible information.

\

4*

4*

4*

HOWARD GUINIER—No. 478: Came into Union at its
beginning. Was Organizer for the SIU from 1938 ito
1941. Represented the
Union * before the Na­
tional Defense Media­
tion Board contract
dispute in Washington,
D.C., in 1941, Chair­
man Headquarters
Branch Bonus Strike
Committee, and Chair­
man New York Branch
Food and Housing
Committee during 1946
General Strike. Secur-'
ed 3000 berths for
members during the
action. Stewards Pa­
trolman in New York during 1946, 1947, 1948 and
1949.

Baltimore Agent

(One to be elected)
4
4
4
WILLIAM (Curly) RENTZ—No. 26445: Helped organ­
ize the SIU in the Gulf area in 1939. Was wounded
five times and crippled.
Went back to sea in
1942, after being laid
up for, more than two
years. Active during
Isthmian Drive and
Isthmian Strike. Also
directed activities fof
Port of Baltimore dur­
ing Genera] Strike of
1946. Elected Agent in
Port of Baltimore for
1947, ,1948 and 1949.
Has clear record for all
SIU actions and strikes.

(One to be elected)
AL STANSBURY — No. 4683: A member of the Sea­
farers International Union, A&amp;G District, since its in­
ception in 1939. Joined
in the Port of Balti­
- '
' •
more. Has taken active ' ' 'gfraiQii
part in all actions of
the Union both strike
and organizational. Sail­
ed during the war into
- most active war zones.
Has served the SIU in
various appointive ca­
pacities. At present Dispatcher for the Port of
Baltimore. Aboard ship
served, in. many capa­
cities • in the engine
room. Also served the
crew often as black gang delegate.

�Friday/ October 21, 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

L O CT

Page Seven

Baltimore Stewards Patrolman

Savannah Agent

Mobile Joint Patrolmen

(One to be elected)

(One to be elected)

(Two to be elected)

JOHN (Hoggie) HATGIMISIOS—No. 23434: Worked as
organizer for the AFL Restaurant Workers in Phila­
delphia,-^nd also help­
ed the U. S. Army
Dredges before going
to sea. Joined the SIU
in 1942 and sailed
throughout the war.
During the 1946 gen­
eral Strike was active
in Baltimore set-up.
Was active in organiz­
ing Isthmian ships in
Baltimore and Phila­
delphia. Participated in
Isthmian Strike. Was
elected Stewards Pa­
trolman for Baltimore
for 1948. At present is acting Patrolman in Baltimore.

ERNEST M. BRYANT — No. 25806: Since joining the
Union has participated in all beefs and actions, notably
the 1946 General Strike
and the 1947 Isthmian
Strike. Holds clearances
for all major SIU ac­
tions and has aided the
organization in various
organizational
capaci­
ties. Has served m tem­
porary official positions
in the Ports of Jackson­
ville and Savannah.
Saw service aboard ship
during the war. Latest
trip was as Steward
aboard the Afoundria,
Waterman
Steamship
Company.

ROBERT J. JORDAN — No. 71: Has sailed since
1938, always in the Engine Department. Was appointed
Organizer for Isthmian
ships and tugs in the
Gulf area in Septem­
ber, 1945. Appointed j
^
Engine Patrolman in
Port of Mobile in Feb\
ruary, 1946, and also '
acted as Dispatcher and
Organizer. Elected En­
gine Patrolman for the ^
.
Port of Mobile for 1947 hf
and reelected for 1948. '
Has been active in all
^
«
strikes and is strike s , ^
clear. Was elected to \
^
Joint Patrolman post
in Mobile for 1949.

llll!

JGEORGE F. HAZEN — No. 4075: Known to most JIMMIE DRAWDY—No. 28523: Joined the SIU in 1943.
Seafarers as Frank Hazen. A member of the SIU Sailed actively during the wai' . until coming ashore
since
its
inception, to work as SIU official
in the Port of New
I..' .
transferring over from
York. Was then sent to
the AFL Seamen's Un­
Wilmington as West
ion in 1939. Since that
Coast Representative.
time has participated
When West Coast office
in all beefs and organi­
closed, went back to
zational drives of the
sea until e,lecte,d as
Union. Holds strike
Joint Patrolman for
clearances. During 1946
New York in 1946; in
was acting Stewards
1947 was elected EnDepartment Patrolman
, gine Patrolman. Took
under Ray White, then
part in 1946 General
Agent in Norfolk. Sail­ . Strike, Coos Bay and
ed during the war and Isthmian beefs. Was
saw action in many of elected Engine Patrol­
the war zones. Recent- man for 1949; was later
transferred to Savannah as
ly served as Steward aboard the SS The Cabins, Agent by Headcjflarters.
Mathiasen Tankers, Incorporated.

ISiB

mill

/

i-

W. J. (Red) MORRIS — No. 264: Has sailed .since^
1939. In March 1945, was appointed Acting Agent in,
Port of Jacksonville.
Was later assigned first ;
to New York, then to •" ,
Norfolk as Patrolman. ,
Was also Acting Agent
in Charleston until that ||ii|
Branch closed in Feb- ; , ruary 1947. Went back ?,
to sea until appointed
Patrolman in Port of ?
Mobile on September 1, 1947. Was elected
Deck Patrolman ' f o r
Port of Mobile for 1948 [
and Mobile Joint Pa- &gt;
trolman for 1949. Is
strike clear for all Union beef and actions.
4

NT y-v * T »

'\T

M1V

* I-.

3-4-5.

New Orleans Agent
Tamfia Agent

Norfolk Agent

(One to be elected)

(One to be elected)
D. E. (Casey) JONES — No. 116: A member of the
SIU since its formation; active in waterfront campaigns
of Union. A veteran of
1946 General Strike,
during which he servfed part-time as cbpirinan of the Strike Com­
mittee in the Port of
Norfolk. .Served as Pa­
trolman in the Port of
Norfolk during 1944
and 1945. Prior to that
he sailed to various war
zones. Served as a vol­
unteer Organizer in the
Isthmian fleet,
helping
to bring that company
into the SIU. Has since
done organizational work in other companies now
under SIU flag.

RAY WHITE — No. 57: Transferred into the
farers International Union in 1938 from the AFL
men's Union. Helped
organize the P&amp;O Line.
Was Patrolman in the
Port of New York for
six months, and served
as Norfolk Agent for
three years. Bas serv­
ed as Tampa Agent for
past year. Was active
in Isthmian Drive and
Strike. Has a clear rec­
ord for all Union beefs.
Prior to election as
Tampa Agent last year
served as Headquarters
Representative, enter­
ing negotiations in Deck Department matters.

EARL (Bull) SHEPPARD — No. 203: Was one of the
SIU's original members. Active in P&amp;O Strike and
other early actions in
: Union's formative years.
I Appointed by Director
of Oiganization to di•5 rect field
work for
i Isthmian campaign. AlJ so participated in Great
:/j Lakes drive. Director
• :j of waterfront activities
f; in New York during
1946 General Strike.
W a s appointed New
Orleans Agent in sum­
mer of 1947 by mem­
bership action. Elected
New Orleans .A.gent for
1948 a nd 1949. Sailed all through war. Is strike clear.
4.

5.

5-

New Orleans Deck Patrolman
Mobile Agent

(One to be elected)
BEN REES — No. 95: Joined the SIU in 1938. Appointed Patrolman for Port of Norfolk in June, 1945. CAL TANNER — No. 44: Has been a member of the
SIU since it was granted a charter by the AFL. Dur-Served until elected
ing the war was an
Joint
Patrolman
for
Iliiiiii active seaman, seeing
that port for 1947, Reelected to post for 1948. ' ' { &gt;
service in most combat
Appointed Agent for
zones. Was active in
Port of Norfolk in
the Isthmian Drive,
March, 1948. In charge
both as ship and shoreof stewpot and publi­
side Organizer. Was el­
city for Norfolk Strike - • '
ected Agent in Port of
liiiii Mobile for 1947, 1948
Committee in 1946 Gen- ~
eral Strike. Active for
and 1949. Participated
Strike Committee in ..
,
in various organization­
Isthmian Strike. Also
al campaigns of Union
active in UFE Strike.
the Gulf area. Was
Wiiiiii in
Organized crews and
active in all beefs of
signed contract with
the SIU .and holds
Virginia Ferries Corporation this year.
strike clearances.

w

(One to be elected)

. (One to be elected)
L. S. (Johnny) JOHNSTON — No. 53: Joined the
Union in December 1938, before that being a member'
of other AFL seamen's
unions. Has an active
record for all strikes
and beefs in which SIU
has been involved since
1938: 1946 General
Strike. Isthmian Strike liiiii
among those actively
i
entered in. Shipped to
all areas during the
war. Was Assistant Dis­
patcher and Joint Pa­
trolman for Port of
New York in 1945 and
1946. Elected New Or­
leans Deck Patrolman
for 1947, 1948 and 1949. Has also assisted in organiza­
tional work of the Union.
• )

Dec. 31

�Page Eight
EDDIE METROS — No. 299: Has sailed on deck
of various vessels for the past twenty years, often
serving as deck and
ship's delegate. Has ;
participated in all SIU '
strikes when in port
and holds clearances ,
j
for these actions. Has
taken active part in
all shipboard meetings,
serving often as chair­
man or recording sec­
retary. Sailed during
„
the war and entered i
most combat zones. In • ' . ^
^
recent months was AB , ~
^
aboard the Seatrain
New Orleans and Del
Santos.
4.
4.
1,

New Orleans Engine Patrolman

THE SEAFARERS

LOQ

These are the Branches of the Atlantic
and Gulf District, where you can cast
your vote for the officers who represent
you in 1950.
14 North Gay St.
Baltimore ...
276 State St.
Boston.
308V^2 —23rd St.
Galveston
.
Mobile
1 South Lawrence St.
New Orleans.
523 Bienville St.
New York ...
51 Beaver St.
Norfolk
. . .127-129 Bank St.
Philadelphia..
337 Market St.
San Francisco
85 Third St.
Savannah...
. 2 Abercorn St.
Seattle
86 Seneca St.
Tampa
1809-1811 N. Franklin St.
Wilmington, Calif
227^2 Avalon Blvd.

(One to be elected)
Galveston Agent
C. J. (Buck) STEPHENS — No. 76: Joined the SIU
(One to be elected)
in December 1938. Was active in 1939 Isthmian Strike,
1939 Bonus Strike, 1946. KEITH ALSOP — No. 7311: Has about fifteen years
General Strike and 1947 of sea service, most of it spent in Engine Department.
Sailed during the war
Isthmian Strike. Has
"&lt;,
"• •••"..- -Ji to various combat zones
served the A&amp;G Dis­
trict in different capa­
of the world. Has been
cities, ranging from
Port Agent in Charles­
Dispatcher to Agent in
ton and Galveston. In
addition, has been Pa­
Port of New Orleans.
trolman in New York,
Shipped to all areas
New Orleans and Nor­
during the war. Cofolk. Was on the Gen­
chairman of UFE Strike
eral Strike Committee
Committee in New Or­
for the Port of Nor­
leans. Holds clearances
folk in 1946, and was
for all Union strikes
chairman of the Isth­
and actions. Elected
mian Strike Commit­
New Orleans Engine
tee for the Port of
Patrolman for 1947, 1948 and 1949.
Galveston. Has been
^ 44.
4.
Galveston Agent since 1948.
New Orleans Stewards Patrolman
4
4
4
(One to be elected)
.RAY W. SWEENEY — N.o. 20: Joined the SIU in
ADOLFO CAPOTE — No. 86: Has served aboard November 1938, in Mobile, and has taken part in all
scores of ships, always in Stewards Department. Has strikes since the Union
started. Was Patrolman
had ten years experi­
in Mobile in 1941, Pa­
ence in the Stewards
trolman in New York
Department. Participa­
in 1942 arid 1943. Was
ted actively in all SIU
elected Agent for Gal­
strikes and beefs, also
veston in 1944; was at
aided in the organiza­
sea
in 1945. In 1946 and
tional campaigns waged
1947
served as Patrol­
by the SIU. Atoard
man
foi* the Port of
ship has served as dele­
Galveston.
Since then
gate, also as chairman
has
•
been
sailing.
At
and recording secretary
present
is
a
crewmem­
in shipboard meetings. ,
' I
ber of the Jefferson
Has a strike clear rec- ,
^
City
Victory.
ord. During the war
sailed into war zones.
, ;
4
4
4.
Sailed several months
Galveston Patrolman
this year aboard the Seatrain New Orleans.
4
4.
(One to be elected)
A. W. GOWDER — No. 36884: Became a member of
CHARLES
ALLEN
— No. 21795: Has been going to
the Seafarers International Union, A&amp;G District, in
sea
off
and
on
for
twenty years. Stopped going to
1944 in the Port of
sea
in
1934
to
help
or­
Savannah. Since then
ganize Local 515, of the
has been active in all
Steelworkers,
Shipmen's
Union beefs, strikes
Branch,
in
Baltimore.
and organizational cam­
Returned to sea when
paigns, among them
the
war began and has
the Isthmian drive and
sailed
since. Since be­
Strike, the 1946 Gener­
coming
a member of
al Strike. Has served
the Seafarers Interna­
on numerous shoreside
tional Union, has taken
Branch committees. Has
part in practically all
also "Served as dele­
of
the Union's strike,
gate, chiiirman and re­
beef
and organization­
cording secretary
al
campaigns.
His last
aboard many SIU ves­
two
ships,
Avhere
he
sels. At present is a
served
as
AB,
are
the
crewmember of the SS Trinity, Carras, Inc.
SS John Hansen and the Jefferson City Victory, the
4.
4
4
last
recently organized.
HERMAN TROXCLAIR — No. 6743: Joined the Sea­
farers International Union, A&amp;G District, on March
12, 1941, and has been
an active member since
that date, partaking in
all strikes, beefs and
organizational
cam­
paigns of the Union.
Holds clearances for
all strikes. During the
late war sailed in near­
ly all combat areas.
Has always sailed
Stewards Department.
Was elected Stewards
Department Patrolman
for New Orleans for
1948,and re-elected for
1949.

Friday, October 21, 1949
F. HOLCOMBE
No. 151: Joined the Seafarers In­
ternational Union in December of ,1938. Has a clear
record of all strikes
^
since, including the
Isthmian Strike and the
.
1946 General Strike.
^
'
Was active during the
J
war, sailing into most
- f
of the war zones. Has
f
served on various ships '
'
as ship or departmental
"
delegate. Has also serv" '
I
ed -as chairman and ~ "
?
recording secretary. '
- %
Sails deck department.
^
Latest ship: the Antinous,' where he was
AB.

• .'

PERCIVAL L. SHAUGER — No. 48325: Joined the
Union in 1945 in New York. Sailed aboard an Isth­
mian ship in drive,
earning Union book for
organizational work.
Stood picket duty in
the anti-commie Long­
shore beef in New
York and, during the
General Strike, worked
in the galley in the
New York Hall. Was HIHH.
aboard the SS Trinity,
Carras, when she was
organized, and is now
a member of the SS
Carriers ship, which he
helped crew when she was being organized. Is strike
clear.

C. M. TANNEHILL
No. 25922: Was ship's Organizer:
during the Isthmian Drive, during which time he
spent eighteen months
on Isthmian ships. Also
worked as shoreside
Organizer in Ports of
New York, Mobile and
New Orleans. Partici­
pated in many beefs,
including the 1945-.
Longshore beef, tire'
Coos Bay beef, 1946:
General Strike and'
Isthmian Strike. Hasassisted in contract ne-;
gotiations. Was elected:
Boston Joint Patrolman:
' . ,
for 1948. Currently aid­
ing in Cities Service organizing drive.

JAMES L. TUCKER — No. 2209: Has been going to
sea since 1932, most of the time in the Deck Depart-^
ment. Acting Patrol­
man in Port of Norfolk
from October, 1943
through January 15,
1944, when he resigned
to go back to sea. Ap­
pointed in June, 1944,
to go to Charleston, &lt;
S.C., to open Branch
there. Later was as­
signed to Mobile to act
as Agent. Was relieved
by newly elected Ag­
ent in February, 1946,
and went back to sea.
Holds strike clearances
for all actions of the Union.

, Here b the cempkte dope en the election
for Atlantic and Gulf District officials:
Place: Any branch of the A&amp;G District
Date: from Novemher 1 To Decemher 31.
Who: AH memhers m

�Friday, October 21, 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

Page Nine

LOG

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings In Brief
GALVESTON —Chairman,
Keith Alsop, 7311; Recording
Secretary, R. Wilbum, 37739;
Beading Clerk, J. Raniera, 50272.
y

Minutes of previous meetings
in all Branches read and accept­
ed. Secretary-Treasurer's finan­
cial report and Headquarters' i-eport to the membership approv­
ed. Agent reported on shipping
and Dispatcher gave shipping
figures for the past two weeks;
both reports being approved. Re­
solution setting forth Union's allout campaign to remove Coast
Guard from jurisdiction over
seamen, was read and motion
carried to concur in it. Also read
was resolution announcing elec­
tive offices that will appear on
ballot in forthcoming Union elec­
tions. A motion carried to accept
this resolution. Meeting adjourn­
ed at 7:40 P.M.
4, t 4
NEW ORLEANS — Chairman.
Jack Parker. 27693; Recording
Secretary, Bill Fredericks, 94;
Beading Clerk, Buck Stephens,
76.

Coast Guard. Under Good and
Welfare, Agent expressed his ap­
preciation for the cooperation
all hands had given in keeping
the Hail clean. Also for the good
of the Union, it was pointed out
that men on ships hitting the
Port of Seattle should avoid the
Mahoney beef, and that if any
of these disgruntled characters
come around with their smear
and disruptive literature they
should be told in no uncertain
terms to hit the road. Meeting
adjourned at 8:20 PM, with 28
bookmen present.
4 4 4
NEW YORK — Chairman, J.
Algina, 1320; Recording Secre­
tary, F. Stewart, 4935; Reading
Clerk, C. Tannehill, 25922.

Agent Tanner, will confer with
Alabama state authorities in an
effort to win a better deal for
seamen in that state. Hall re­
ported on the organizing ^ctories of the SlU-affiliated Marine
Allied Workers in the New Castle
Ferries, of Philadel^ihia, and the
Virginia Ferry Company. He
said that at the moment there
were no indications of a strike
by the ILA and MMP, both of which had extended their con­
tract talks for another 30 days.
A SIU repr^entative will 'be
maintained in Puerto Rico to "
protect the interests of the Un­
ion there, the Secretary-Treas­
urer said. Motion carried to ac­
cept Secretary-Treasurer's report.
Motion carried to open nomin­
ations for credentials committee, •
as per constitution; two men
to be elected from each depart­
ment. Nominated were R. Mart­
inez, W. C. Grosvenor, W. Thorn­
ton, M. F. Dellano, W. J. Reidy,
Stewards; L. R. White, Fred
Barthes, L. Hillertz, Engine; Joe
Burns, Robert High, Charles Pal­
mer, Roderick Smith, C. S.
Loades, Deck. Elected were
Brothers Reidy, Dellano, Barthes,
Hillertz, Burns and Smith. Mo­
tion by Guild carried that man
be assigned every meeting night
to stamp shipping cards up to
7:30 PM.
4 4 4
PHILADELPHIA — Chairman.
Don Hall, 43372; Recording Sec­
retary, C. I. Cooper; Reading
Clerk, James Sheehan, 316.

Minutes of previous meetings
in other Branches read and ap­
proved. Port Agent discussed
shipping, which he described as
fair. A communication from
Radio Station WFDR war referI'ed to the auditing committee.
Secretary-Treasurer Hall, in his
Headquarters' report, told of his
attendance at the convention of
the American Federation of La­
bor in St. Paul, Minn., where
he presented the SIU's stand on
the Coast Guard, and sought
the aid of the AFL in the fight
to remove seamen from the jur­
isdiction of the military body.
He also reported that Asst. Secretai*y-Treasurer Robert Mat­
thews was in the Gulf area at­
tending to Union matters, among
which was the problem of un­
employment insurance for sea­
men. Matthews, with Mobile

Minutes of other port meetings
read and approved. Agent dis­
cussed shipping which had been
fair during the past two weeks.
Motion carried to concur in
Headquarters' resolution on
forthcoming election for officers
to serve Union in 1950. Motion
carried to concur in resolution
setting forth Union's position on
Coast Guard, and signalling for
all-out fight to have its super­
visory powers over seam.en trans­
ferred to the Dep^tment of
Commerce. Secretary-Treasurers
financial report and Headquart­
ers' report to the membership
read and accepted. Excuses were
referred to the Dispatcher.
Charges read and trial commit­
tee elected. One minute of si­
lence in memory of departed
Brothers. Meeting adjourned at
8 PM.

AftG Shaping From Sept 28 To Ott 12
PORT

REG.
DECK

REG.
ENG.

Boston.
New York.
Philadelphia
Baltimore
Norfolk
Savannah.
Tampa
Mobile
New Orleans
Galveston
West Coast

5
117
24

13
•102
22

GRAND TOTAL..

405

REG.
STWDS.

TOTAL
REG.

17
83
24

SHIPPED
DECK

35
302
70

77
52
20

10
12
9
26
82
24
14

73
33
22
74
230
151
59

2
98
37
34
2
10
7
23
76
10
18

343

301

1,049

317

(No Figures Received)
37
12
9
30
71
75
25

few ships that hit port in-transit
each took from one to five men
and they accounted for the num­
ber of men shipped d .:j-ing the
pa.st two weeks. Motion carried
to excuse Brothers McCranie and
J. B. Davis from meetings as
they were on official Union busi­
ness in Jacksonville. Motion car­
ried to concur in Headquarter's
resolution condemning Coast
Guard and calling for its re­
moval from authority over sea­
men. Meeting adjourned at 7:45
PM, with 105 members present.
4. 4&gt; 4'
BOSTON — Chairman, S.
Bayne, 13; Recording Secretary,
M. Norris, 5725; Reading Clerk,
B. Lawson, 894.

26
9
4
/

Bessemer Victory, Wacosta, Fairilse, Alcoa Clipper, Alcoa Run­
ner and Alcoa Corsair. He also
reported that the dispute on the
Greeley Victory had been settled
to the satisfaction of the men
involved. The Agent said that
he and Assistant Secretary-Trea­
surer Robert Matthews were go­
ing to Montgomery to meet with
the Director of Unemployment
Insurance and other state au­
thorities to see if adjustments
could be made in the present
set-up, so that seamen may be
able to get benefits which are
rightfully theirs. Agent Tanner
concluded his report by explain­
ing the need for interest in the
political field within the ranks
of organized labor to help elect
candidates with a pro-labor view­
point. He said that the Interna­
tional, along with the other AFL
internationals, had formed the
AFL Labor League for Pohtical
Education, for this purpose. At
this point, the Agent turned the
floor over to Assistant SecretaryTreasurer Matthews who elabo­
rated further on the subject. Mo­
tion carried to accept the resolu­
tion concerning the annual SIU
elections. Motion also carried to
accept the Headquarters' resolu­
tion announcing the Union's in­
tensification of its fight to drive
the Coast Guard out of the mer­
chant marine, 'by returning its
functions over civilian seamen to
the Department of Commerce.
Headquarters' reports read and
approved. Meeting adjourned at
7:35 PM, with .356 members
present.
4 4 4
SAN FRANCISCO—Chairman,
Jeff Morrison, 34213; Recording
Secretary, P. M. Robertson;
Reading Clerk, W. Shea. 43186.

Charges read against member,
and motion carried to instruct
all ports not to ship him until
he appeal's before trial commit­
tee in this port. Minutes of pre­
vious meetings read and accept­
ed. Secretary-Treasurer's finan­
cial report read and approved.
Port Agent announced that, al­
though shipping had fallen off,
it was just about holding its own
Other Branches' minutes of
in relation to the amount of
previous
meetings read and ac­
members registered. There were
cepted,
except
for motion to non­
nine sign-ons, nine payoffs and
concur
with
Galveston
New Bus­
about 20 ships in-transit during
iness.
Agent
discussed
shipping
the past two weeks, he said. The
in
this
port.
Dispatcher
gave
Alcoa Runner is undergoing re­
shipping
figures
for
past
two
pairs and, if she is completed
weeks.
Headquarter's
report
to
in time, her old crew will get
the
membership
read
and
ap­
their jobs back. The Agent said
that the Mother M.L. came in proved. Motion carried to ex­
here after her first trip as an cuse Brother F. Burns, P. King,
SIU ship, and that the crew was J. Hunt and A. Collello from the
to be commended for doing a meeting. After one minute of
hangup job. The* ship is now silence in memory of departed
awaiting orders and may sail by Brothers, meeting adjourned at
the end of the week. The Agent 7:40 PM with 148 members pres­
also spoke against the reported ent.
4&gt; 4 4
agreements made between Elec­
NORFOLK
— Chairman. Ben
tricians and Engineers regarding
"overtime. He warned that any Rees, 95; Recording Secretary.
such practice, if ti*ue, was not in J. A. Bullock, 4747; Reading
accordance with the agreement Clerk, C. Moser, 36392.
and might react to the disadvan­
Mr. Morrison of the local So­
tage of the parties involved. Pa­ cial Security Administration Field
trolmen reported on the various Office spoke to the membership
beefs, sign-ons, etc., with a minor on the subject of unemployment
beef pending on the Del Valle. insurance. Branch minutes of
Resolution on the Coast Guard, Norfolk and other ports read
Which the Union is seeking to and appi'oved. Headquarters' re­
have removed from authority port to the membership read and
over merchant seamen, was read accepted. Agent discussed the Minutes of previous meetings
end carried after motion was plight of shipping in this port, in all ports read and approved.
made to concur in it. Trial com­ and Dispatcher read the ship­ Agent reported that shipping had
mittee reported its ruling in ping figures. Brother John "W. been slow for the past two weeks.
cases of two members with Igilebeck, Book No. 50744, took Although eight ships were in
charges against them. Committee
the Union Oath of Obligation. port, they were in-transits and
recommended that Robert E. Al­
Motion carried to excuse the few replacements -were called
len, Book'TJo. 38443, who is over
following Brothers from the for. The prospects for the next
bne year in arrears, be allowed
meeting: John R. Hudgins, G. two weeks are not too bright,
to register and ship as he has
Daniels and F. E. Taylor. One he said. Several factors are re­
shown ample proof that l\e is
minute of silence in memory of sponsible for this situation, he
not at fault in being in arrears.
departed Union Brothers. Meet­ pointed out, among them the
After short discussion on forth­
foreign flag transfers. But the
coming elections, rfieeting ad­ ing adjourned at 8:10 PM, with greatest factor is the policy of
73 members present.
journed at 8:25 PM, with280
several of the commie-dominated
4 4 4
bookmembers present.
MOBILE — Chairman, D. L. Pacific coast waterfront unions
4, 4, t
ParkM, 160; Recording Secre­ in setting their sights for long
SAVANNAH — Chairman, Jim tary, E. D. Moyd, 10829; Reading strikes with political purposes in
Brawdy, 28423; Recording Sec­ Clerk, Robert A. h^thews, 154. mind. Dispatcher made his re­
port. Secretary-Treasurer's and
retary, L. E. Hodges, 255; Read­
Minutes
of
previous
meetings
Headquarters'
reports read and
ing Clerk, Ernest D. Sims, 48971.
in Mobile and other Branches accepted. Motion carried to ac­
Previous meetings' minutes and read and approved. Port Agent cept Headquarters Reinstatement
Secretary - Treasurer's financial
spoke on the prospects of ship­ Committee's report. Brothers T.
report read and approved, as ping for the coming two weeks E, Foster, J. Otto and F. W.
well as Headquarter's report to and said tlTat the following ships Schmidiel, exq^used from meet­
the membership. Agent reported were due in the Port of Mobile: ing. Motion carried to concur in
that shipping was very quiet. A Monarch of the Sea, Chickasaw, Headquarters' resolution on

SHIPPED SHIPPED
ENG.
STWDS.

TOTAL
SHIPPED

2
73
34
39
1
7
6
22
77
10
24

7
61
36
28
3
3
8
22
107
17
14

11
232
107
101
6
20
21
67
260
37
56

295

306

918

Shipping Stiii Fair in New York
By JOE ALGINA
NEW YORK — Shipping was
fair in this port during the past
tvvo weeks, despite the adverse
effects of the steel and coal
strikes on conditions in general.
New York numbered among
its payoffs the following ships:
Kathryn, Frances, Ann Marie,
Puerto Rico, Cornelia, Elizabeth
and Evelyn, Bull; Steel Rover,
Meredith Victory, Isthmian;
Bessemer Victory, Claiborne,
Waterman: Calmar, Yorkmar,
Calmar; Irenestar and Evistar,
Triton; Colabee, .American Ha­
waiian; Mankato Victory, Vic­
tory Carriers; Algonquin Vic­
tory, St. Lawrence Navigation;
The Cabins, Mathiasen; Southstar, South Atlantic and the Seatrain New York.
Sign-ons took place aboard the
Bull Line ships, the Steel Rov­
er, Evistar, Colabee, Yorkmar,
Mankato Victory, Algonquin Vic­
tory^ The Cabins, Southstar and
the Be.ssemer Victory.

All vessels paying off and
signing on were in good shape,
thanks to the fact that they
were crewed by a good bunch
of men. An occasional gashound
popped up, but was taken care
of without harming the efficient
functioning of any of the ves­
sels.
GOOD CREWS
We'd like to remind the men
that they should take good care
bf their Union books. Some fel­
lows have lost as many as three
books in the space of a few years.
These guys might take a lesson
from some of the original mem»
bers of the Union who are still
carrying the first book issued to
them.
The Union membership book
is one of th5 most important
items in a Seafarer's working
gear and Should be guarded as
such. A little care in this mat*
ter will save a lot of headache^
and time later on.

�'
• V

jPi^e Xen

S£ 4^ 4n£JR S t^ G

Sounds As Though The Lads
Found Home On The Ranger

^44a.n Qfm»t 2i. fSiS

FAICA MEN ENGAGE IN SOME SHORESIDE YAKA'TA-YAKA'TA

Tp the Editor:

We're not trying -to put our
Union in the household appliance
We are on the last lap of a business but in these days of
very short and pleasant cruise. sudden switches in flags
and
Down in the islands we had boneyard tie-ups, we're making
good weather and the usual
sure that no finks have the com­
amount of fun — such as the forts of a washer at our expense.
ports' we visited had to offer. So the washing machine became
We stopped for a few hours Union property by unanimous
at Paraniaribo, and after leaving vote at a shipboard meeting. In
ihere called at Paranam, where case the ship is switched or -tiedwe took on a partial load of up, the washer goes to the near­
bauxite. Having a good and cap­ est Union Hall. It's an idea all
able Bosun, Sam Marinello and delegates on ships having ma­
Peck Department, that was soon chines should check into.
taken care of, and an SIU ship This little atory -of a pleassmt
tliat is always a clean ship em­ cruise can be a lesson to those
erged in the sun once more.
who form cliques aboard ship.
We all know that on any ship We have on here -real SIU co­
the Stewards Department plays operation and team work. The
an important part in keeping up habits of team work and co­
morale. We have an efficient operation which are the basis of
"jShqrt GitCMit" Lumpkin Cse^ed At left) points opt something amusing to his shipmates
Steward, C. F. Aycock, who does leadership, are acquired chiefly
.and the wsitreases a.t .a .Houston fdvern. Othen in photo ate: left to -right. Bosun Sjoberg
just that. Our menus are always through group activities. This is
(behind .Lumpkin). John Walker, Bobbie Jordan, Slim Barnett, Taylor and Lonnie Lonski.
;good. Our Chief Cook, J. Barker, aound SIU policy. And it is the
is one of the best I've ev^ reason we on the Ranger are
sailed with.
practicing and living a real
Brotherhood of the Sea.
SIZZLING, TOO
Steaks are to order on this So as my Brothers on the beach
«hip. The food is well prepared. are getting lean aroimd the flip­
Barker knows his stuff. Now pers, I will fasten my bag with To fhe Editor:
draw your own conclusions as one of which was taken in the
Manila Bar in Houston, during
•girls, don't get excited. He's very a zipper—and over the gangway The Brothers who passed up a to his former occupation.
This is a harddrinking, but happy moments.
much married to a wonderful goes a one-tripper.
job on this scow, the rSS Yaka,
W. H. N.
Incidentally boys, "Red Lea(T'
^ttle lady.
in Baltimore last August sure hardworking crew and it won't
SS Alcoa Ranger
Anderson
is back in circulation.
tolerate
any
performing
aboard
Baker Roy M. Ayei'S is also
migsed a good job. Bractically
He
is
now
Skipper of the Jean
ship,
as
one
of
the
ABs
found
tops in his line. His qakes, pies
all of the officers, from Captain
LaFitte.
out.
He
never
turned
to
when
and bread are superb. By the The LQ^ WiR Bejitiain
Hans Hansen, on down are wellJerry (Lonnie) Lonski
way. Ship's Delegate Daniel Clif- In the Becar Familj;
liked by the crew, and can be we secured for sea and even
SS Yaka
missed
a
couple
of
his
wheel
iqrd is no longer a Yankee, he's
classified ps good Joes.
watches.
He
was
warned
repeat­
strictly rebel. We're going to To the Editor:
Chief Mate "Catfish" jKenopke
Jceep him in the Gulf. He even
is
an ex-^SIU man and I, believe edly but to no avail, and when
eats corn bread now without I would like to make a re­ he knows the agreement word the Mate fired him he said the
quest. I hope it is possible for
scratching his throat.
for word. He's strictly on the crew' was against him. He does­
n't know how close he came to
To you boys who are wonder- you to send the LOG to my level with us.
being brought up on charges.
ving where John Buckley, Esq., fiancee, who is soon -to become
This
is
the
first
C-2
I've
been
There's only one thing wropg
.is, the rffan with the butterfly my wife.
oh that only has three mates, a
net doesn't have him. He is eat­ When she visits my home, she Chief, Third and Junior Third. with these Far East runs—every
ing and singing his way home always reads the LOG. She likes' What happens "to the Second time you turn around, someone
its colorful stories, its demo­
takes a swipe at you with a
on the Ranger.
cratic
style and free expression. Mate? Why he's referred to as needle. We gof nine shots and a
We have a real good bunch of
the "second maid." In fact, he
. UNPOPULAR SONG
men in all departments. There Therefore, I would like her to acts like a frustrated old maid. vaccination so far.- It was the
By "POP MARTIN
are no cliques aboard and the receive it at her home regularly. I've heard it rumored that he- first time I didn't ask for a
Stephan
Becar
Brotherhood of the Sea is prac­
was a door-to-door salesman be­
I don't see meat
ticed here, not just preached.
(Ed. Note: The LOG is happy fore going to sea, though he
In the stews any more;
Last trip, the boys had a table to place Brother Becar's fi­ claims he's a retired Navy man.
What good is gravy
top muster and put a washing ancee on the LOG mailing We have a bell rigged up ,frpm
If the beef's in the store?
machine aboard. ..All feel they .list. Don't forget, .to let .us the bridge to the crew's pantry,
I eat some spuds.
got their money's worth out of Jcnow when the wedding bells for the standby. The Mate will
In their jackets, I mean;
it on the first trip in use.
ring out.)
ring on the slight^t pretext. So
If I get coffee
There ain't any cream.

Fun? Yeah, But Don't Try Any Funny Work
On The Yaka, Warns The Hardworking Crew

They're Eager For Bulletins On Beav^;
Men Marvel At Speedy Overseas Service
Tp Ihs Editor:

tion of the Bulletin here, where
it
had been forwarded from
The first thing I want to write
Aden.
Thanks a million.
about is the receiving of the
Bulletin. We have received sev­ Til try to give you a little
eral copies of this news sheet dope on our condition here.
Apd they sure hit the bull's eye
RAN AGROUND
as a publication which lets us We ran aground here .23 days
"Seafarers know what's going on ago" at 3:53 AM- No one knows
at home and in the "Union.
who, if any one, is to blame.
' The next thing I want to com­ About four days later the SS
mend you on is this: our next Steel Rover tried to pull us off,
port of call was supposed to but this didn't work.
have been Belawan Deli, Suma­ A week ago a salvage tug
tra, But due to Isthmian effi­ showed up from Bombay. They
ciency we are now on the shore rigged their tacklg and gave -a
of this barren island of Jabal, try at refloating us. But again,
Zuquar, instead of at Belawan no good. They then ordered a
Deli; What I want to bring out 1,000-ton coastal steamer, which
is that , even though we're ashore has since arrived and is now
$&amp;!e, someone is on the ball. Be^ just about loaded. When she's
cause we received the last edi­ finished, another 500-ton job,

which is standing by, will take
her turn at unloading us.
Our shower water on this tub
is so hot -that one has to duck
in and out unless he wants to
get scalded. And the weather is
Responsible for .Ihe excellent
just as hot. The Chief Mate has
the watch over the side witlv bhow aboard the Yaka are
hammers working on a chipping^ Steward Bill Chandler (left)
assignment. No rest, J .guess. A- and Baker Roosevelt Brown.
lot of the boys are aU broken
out with septic heat rash,
doublq, when I "was told do get
the tempers on heye are -atill a shot.
'—
rcopl.
. ..r
The S t e*w a r d Department,
So, again, thanks for the Bul­ bended by .fBiUvChapdler is doing
letins.
a swell jcb
the chow situa­
Anionio Bchiavone tion, .and :all hands have com­
SS Beaver ^Viotory ; pliments rfor jBaker Rposevelt
(Ejd. Jfote: And Numks to' -Brown rfor his -rolls and doughYPU. Brother .Schiavoiie; ior -nute that &gt;appear; foequently at
the jnews
ithe B«avpr Vie- eoj^e ttme.
En.glosed .are a tfew pietvires.
fory-i)

When on the beach,
I don't feed so damn well;
Pound after pound goes,
I'm skinny as hell.
In times like these.
Ghosts don't walk as before;
1 can't build stews if
I don't see meat any' more.

OLD ^SAILOR'S
AMBITION
By "POP MARTIN
When I'm working on the deckff
I do the best .1 can;
It's a great disadvantage
To he a sailorman.
:I'd like to dell the Mate off
'WheiT ho's on the rgm.
But I have to gripe, real low.
Or he as silent as a clam.
Wish 1 was a bivalve,
I'd teU hfan, '^Go to helL"
Back right up, pull~ the hatflk
And.closje my:little shell.

�^Fri(Uy. Octobar 21« }M9

TH E SE AF ARERS

Paga Eleven

LOC

Digested Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings
. CAROLYN. July 17 — Snow.
Chairman; F. J. Hall, Secretary.
Deck Delegate reported that one
of the men missed ship in Rouen.
Only disputed overtime was in
Black Gang. Requested that side
dishes be supplied for crew messhall. Suggested that fans be
taken ashore and repaired. Also
that a couple of spares be pro­
cured. A suggestion that letter
be drawn up for Patrolmen con­
cerning man _who missed ship.
Change in sailing schedule was
the cause, and erew felt he
wasn't guilty.
S, S, 4
GREELEY VICTORY. July 31
— W. O. Turner. Chairman; L.
N. Stricklin. Secretary. L. H.
Pentecost elected Ship's Delegate.
Motion carried that recreation
room be cleaned by all three de­
partments, times to be set by
Ship's Delegate. Discussion on
ship's stores. Decision on ' Fire­
man who missed ship in Tampa
to be reported to Patrolman.
Each department is to turn beefs
over to its delegate before re­
porting to Ship's Delegate. To
have two meetings each trip,
one after leaving Mobile, and
one before the ship arrives in
New Orleans. Repair list to be
posted on bulletin board.

Mobile (port of origin) and Seat­
tle. Motion by Conroy carried
to give vote of appreciation and
confidence to Seattle Agent Mc­
Kay for able manner in which
he handled payoff. A large num­
ber took part in discussion on
proper SIU way of leaying ship
for new crew and conduct at
payoff.
4 4 4
ANTINOUS. Oct. 2—E. Higdon.
Chairman; M. C. Gaddy. Secre­
tary. Motion by E. R. Smith that
Ship's Delegate get clarification
on time off in port, also clarifi­
cation about missing ship in port
where we do not have a Branch
and catching it in another port.
Under Good and Welfare there
was discussion on proper precedure to be followed in dealing
with licensed personnel: Sug­
gested by Lopez that members
see department, delegates, who
in turn will see the department
head.

guests brought aboard should be
fed after crew has eaten. One
minute of silent prayer in mem­
ory of Brothers lost at sea.
4. » 4
AMES VICTORY. Aug. 14—
C. Simmons. Chairman; D. Jones.
Secretary. Delegates reports ac­
cepted. Brother Webber elected
Ship's Delegate to succeed Jones,
who resigned. Motions carried:
Chief Engineer be asked to re­
pair dringing fountain in engine
room; that Steward move gear
from recreation room and have
:t cleaned. BR volunteered to
keep rec room clean for rest
of trip. Ship's Delegate is to
4 4 4
collect department repair lists
SEATRAIN NEW JERSEY.
and present them to the Cap­
Aug. IS—Robert Adams. Chair­
tain.
man; John Bourg. Secretary. No
4 4 4
beefs in the departments. Ship's
STEEL RECORDER. Aug. 22
Delegate reported that repair
—Laurence D. Cook. Chairman; list had been taken care of in
Stanley
Golowski. Secretary.
New Orleans. Also that due to
Ship's Delegate reported all in
insurance company requirements,
good order; Deck—penalty meal passageway lights cannot be
hours disputed; Engine—Delayed
blacked out any more. He re­
sailing time disputed at Columported that one man missed the
bo; Stewards—Dispute on how
ship in New Orleans and another
to divide passenger and extra had been put off for misconduct.
meal money. Motions cari-ied:
4 4 4
That Ship's Delegate see that
SOUTHLAND. Aug. 31—Alex
each man has a receipt for his Jones, Chairman; F. Chamberdraws and slopchest: That Pa­ layne. Secretary. Delegates re­
trolmen check stores and slop- ported everything okay in their
chest before next voyage. Under departments. Delegates were to
Education, there was discussion serve as committee to purchase
on how to become a good Union new washing' machine out of
member. Also discussed was the ship's fund. Leo Weeks volun­
new overseas news bulletins,
teered to act as . treasurer till
which was acclaimed as a good next meeting. Ship's Delegate
idea.
welcomed Engineers to meeting

SEATRAIN NEW ORLEANS,
July 12 — Gautreau, Chairman;
A. Capote. Secretary. Ship's Dele­
gate McKay said that company
had agreed to put irmerspring
mattresses aboard and that he
had instructed Steward to accept
nothing else. Deck Delegate
Newberry reported that some
overtime was pending. Engine
Delegate Rnbinson reported no
beefs. Stewards Delegate Eklund
qlso reported on his department,
which had no beefs. Motion by
Alphonse that Chief Cook be
on behalf of all members of
allowed to clean galley stove at
A&amp;G District. Chairman outlin­
least once a week. Brother Timed
history and growth of SIU
ongue expressed his appreciation
and
spoke on recent granting of
for the consideration given him
charter
to BME in response to
while in the hospital in Havana.
demands from Engineers.
Men were instructed not To leave
4 4 4
cots out on deck.
ALCOA
PIONEER.
Aug. 20—
4. 4. i
Red Sully. Chsurman; Bill Hay,
MEREDITH VICTORY. Aug.
Secretary. Delegates reported no
22—Joseph Mucia. Chairman; E,
beefs. Charlie Moore elected
C. Eaton. Secretary. No beefs in
Ship's
Delegate by acclamation.
any of the departments, except
4 4 4
After
discussion
on need for
OREMAR, Aug. 28—Eugene
for few hours disputed overtime
fan
in
recreation
room. Chief
in Stewards. Everyone is in favor Senff. Chairman; Ted Thompson.
Electrician
said
he
would have
of the bulletins being sent from Secretary. No beefs of any kind
one
fixed
up
and
installed.
Bill
headquarters to all ships. In re­ to report. Motion carried to al­
Story
suggested
that
Deck
and
sponse to request for more fresh low non-members to attend
vegetables in port. Steward said meeting. Other motions carried: Engine Departments alternate in
.Engine Department to take care cleaning of laundry, and Stew­
that they had been ordered.
of laundry room. Deck to be ards to take care of recreation
responsible for Lounge and room. Chairman Sully recom­
Stewards to take care of pantry. mended that DM look into all
Steward Department given vote minor repairs.
!j£.
of thanks for good feeding. Mem­
bers putting feet on chairs,, sit­
4 4 4
TAINARON. July 10 — W. T. ting on tables, or leaving coffee
Dalton. Chairman; Richard Zu- cups on deck or in lounge to be
brod. Secretary. Ship's Delegate fined one dollar and proceeds to
spoke to Captain about the mats go to men in hospitals.
4 4 4
riNI. Aug. 24—Jack Long.
which men had voted on at pre­
4 4 4
AFOUNDRIA. Aug. 21—W. C. Chairman; L. Gooch. Secretary.
vious meeting. Captain said mats
would be obtained if possible.. McCuistion, Chairman; D. W. Steward and Chief Cook report­
He also will try to get fresh Conroy. Secretary. Motion by ed they had taken inventory as
vegetables and fruits in season Weaver, seconded by Roy Pierce, requested at last meeting and
and will cooperate wifh men that crew leaving ship in Port­ that they have requistioned
within reason. Sliip's Delegate land Ore., stand criticized for enough supplies to carry us from
also said that Captain would leaving quarters in disorderly Honolulu to Japan and back to
give a draw before the ship condition and for failing to co­ Panama. Suggested that laimdry
docksi No beefs in the depart­ operate with Port Agent. Am- be taken care of in Honolulu.
ments. Men were informed that mended by O'Sullivan calling for Steward stated that he would
sick man's room was to be clean­ coiomittee to draft .letter re­ issue linen piece for piece, in
ed every day and his dishes steri­ garding these actions and that accordance with procedure rec­
lized. Men agreed that any copies be sent to Headquarters,- ommended in agreement.

CUT and RUN
By HANK
The Brooklyn Dodgers lost the World Series. England and
other countries devalued their bloody pounds. The steel strike is
gradually affecting shipping and this town of New York is getting
chilled for the winter. There's not much of newsy items about
the Brothers so here goes with what we have for this issue...
One of the friends of Brother Art Walsh, the Baltimore shipperouter, writes in to 'say that Brother Walsh sailed into that port
sporting a ring on a portside finger...
Brother Harold Laurvik
of Kansas writes to say he's taking a little vacation. Take it
easy, oldtimer, and you're logged for the good old LOG to keep
you informed of what's going on in the SIU... A vote of thanks
to Bill Champlin. He wants it to be known that he's definitely
not a homesteader for any ship... Warren Callahan is in town
and so is his brother. Buddy, after mucho New Orleans shipping
... Over there in the Persian Gulf area are two seamen's clubs
which receive bundles of LOGS. That's in the port of Ras Tanura,
Arabia, and in the port of Abadan, Iran. Any Brothers know if
they have been picking up any LOGS from these places?
4
4
4
The Black Swan Tavern in Cork. Ireland, is now on the
mailing list for a bundle of LOGS... Percy Boyer. that New
Orleans humorist, sailed into town after a voyage on the Steel
Advocate. Percy's latest yam about Brother Moon Kouns of
New Orleans is about an overcoat. Ask Percy to tell you the
yarn—as only he knows how...Chuck Allen, the oldtimer.
sailed into New York from a voyage on the Jefferson City
Victory... Brother Cornelia Presclars. who just finished some
hospitalization, has been nominated as being one of the best
Bosuns in the SIU. He's been sailing the Robin Sherwood for
a long time, we're informed, and is now anchored down in
Baltimore waiting for a scow... Brother Cyril Loades made
the Deck Maintenance job for the Southsteir. Speaking of the
Southstar—we have a story about a hat. One of the crewmembers owns one of those world-famous Itcilian-made fedoras
called "Borsalino," bought in Trieste for five dollars. In Turkey
the Brother was caught in a heavy rain with his "Borsalino."
But the next morning he says you would never have thought
the hat had ever got soaked. Here in the States this imported
hat sells for more than thirty dollars. Well, "hat's off" to the
"Borsalino" hats.
4
4
4
The SEAFARERS LOG will be sailing free of cost to the homes
cf the following Brothers—Thomas Wadsworth of Pennsylvania,
Seward Cantrell of Georgia, James Maxey of South Carolina,
Eugene Wood of Pennsylvania, Carl Pierce of Florida, Harry
Dismuke of Georgia, Michael Kicko of Pennsylvania, Allen Bullard
cf Georgia, CarroU Rollins of Virginia, William Smith of Florida,
J. S. Capp of Texas, John Bednar of New Jersey, John Velasco of
Florida, Palle Gylov of New Jersey... Brother Timmy McCarthy
sailed into our town recently wearing that familiar smile... Frank
Brown is in town... Brother Ray Queen sailecTon the Steel Ad­
miral, we're informed. Brother John Crowley also grabbed a job
on her... Brother Tony Zalewski recently sailed into town after
a tanker trip.
4
4
4
One of Ihe Brothers who came in from some tankersailing says his ship has been receiving those overseas Bulletins
which the SIU air-mails to all ships throughout the world.
He said it sure was a good idea although some articles were
too brief... Brothers, hold those shipboard meetings. Keep
those ships clean and the jobs running in ship-shape SIU
style... For the benefit of the Brothers aboard ships we would
like to urge them to check as to whether every ship has the
following important booklets so that they are read and under­
stood by all hands. These particular booklets are called "Food
for Thought" and "Shipping Guide for Seafarers."

�•'•• •
•

Page Twelve^

THE

SEAFARERS^ LOC

Fridajr, October 21, iMf ]

Official Ballot For
"V

Official Ballot For Election Of 1950 Officers
Seafarers International. Union of North America
ATLANTIC &amp; GULF WSTMCT
1949- ELECTION OF OFHCERS FOR 1950
VOTING PERIOD NOVEMBER 1st THROUGH DECEMBER 31. 1949
INSTRUCTIONS TO VOTERS — In order to vote for a ccmdidate, mca-k a cross
(X) in voting square to the left of name. If you vote for more candidates for
office than specified herein your vote for such office will be invalid.
YOU MAY WRITE THE NAJffi OF ANY MEMBER WHOSE NAME DOES NOT
APPEAR ON THE BALLOT IN THE BLANK SPACE PROVIDED FOR THAT
PURPOSE UNDER EACH OFHCE.
'
^
Do not use a lead pencil in marking the ballot. Ballots marked with lead pencil
will not be counted.
MARK YOUR BALLOT WITH PEN AND INK OR INDELIBLE PENCIL.

SECRETARY-TREASURER

PHILADELPHIA AGENT

Vote for One

Vofe for One

MOBILE JOINT PATROLMAN
Vote for Two

• Paul Hall. No. 190

• A. Steve Cardullo. No. 24599

m

Q Jim Sheehcm, No. 306

^

• Robert Jordan. No. 71
• Wm. (Red) Morris, No. 264

ASSISTANT SECRETARY-TREASURERS
Vote for Tfiree

• Lloyd A. Gardner. No. 3697

• Robert Matthews. No. 154

BALTIMORE AGENT
Vote for One

NEW ORLEANS AGENT

• W. (Curly) Rentz, No. 26445

Vote for One

• J. H. Volpian. No. 56

m

BOSTON AGENT
Vote for One

BALTIMORE DECK PATROLMAN

' • Earl (Bull) Sheppard/No. 203

Vote for One

• R. E. &lt;Rex) Dickey, No. 652

NEW ORLEANS DECK PATROLMAN

• Carl (Red) Gibbs. No. 2341

Vote for One

• L. (Blondie) Johnson, No. 108

• L. (Johnny) Johnston, No. 53

• Ben Lawson. No. 894

NEW YORK AGENT

• Eddie Metros, No. 299
BAI.TIMORE ENGINE PATROLMAN
kVMMfor One

MPI

NEW ORLEANS ENGINE PATROLMAN;
Vote for One

|1
• Joe Algina. No. ^oU If 1

BALTIMORE STEWARDS PATROLMAN

• C. J. (Buck) Stephens. No. 76

Vote for One

NEW YORK DECK PATROLMAN
Vote for Two

Louis Goffin, No. 4526

• J. (Hoggie) Hatgimisios. No. 23434 '

• Geo. F. Hazen. No. 4075

NEW ORLEANSSTEWARDS PATROLMAN
Vote for One

^

• Chos. G. Haymond, No. 98

NEW YORK ENGINE PATROLMAN
Vote for Two

Q Adolfo Capote, No. 66

NORFOLK AGENT

• A. W. (Andy) Gowder, No. 36884

Vote for One

Herman Troxclair, No. 6743

• D. E. CCaseyi Jones. No. 116

• Ben Rees, No. 95

. • Teddy Babkowski. No. 7391'
• Thos. J. Clark. No. 25027

• Victorio DTndia. No. 20875
• James Purcell. No. 7802

• Chas. Scofield. No. 21536

NEW YORK STEWARDS PATROLMAN

• Ray Gonzales. No. 174

Vote for One

Vote for One
•

TAMPA AGENT

• Keith Alsop, No. 7311
• Ray Sweeney, No. 20

GALVESTON JOINT PATROLMAN"
Vote for One

• Vote for One

• Ray White. No. 57

• • Chos. Allen, No. 21795

H

• F. Holcombe,.No.T51

• Howard Guinier. No. 478

MOBILE AGENT

• Freddie Stewart. No. 4935

Vote for One

m
I x:-.

SAVANNAH AGENT

• E. M. Bryant, No. 25806
• Jimmie Drawdy, No. 28523

H ^

Vote for Two

GALVESTON AGENT

• Cal Tanner, No. 44 •

C

• Percival L. Shauger, No. 48325
• C. M. TannehiU, No. 25922

»

• James L. Tucker, No. 2209
O

.V , i

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9934">
                <text>October 21, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9995">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 29</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10016">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10037">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10097">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10115">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10174">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
47 CANDIDATES ARE QUALIFIED FOR A&amp;G POSTS&#13;
STORM, MINE HIT SIU SHIPS; ONE MAN LOST&#13;
AFL VOTES TO JOIN SIU FIGHT ON COAST GUARD&#13;
THE MEMBERSHIP VOTES&#13;
THE WAR AREA BONUS&#13;
'FREE SPEECH' IS A HOLLOW PHRASE TO CS&#13;
MFOW AGENT FINGERS SIU-SUP MEN FOR DUMPING&#13;
MEMBER OFFERS NEW ASSESSMENT METHOD&#13;
ORE SHIPS TIE-UP IN BALTIMORE AS STEEL STRIKERS HOLD FAST&#13;
ELECTIONS HOLD MOBILE'S STAGE&#13;
SHIPPING IN PORT NEW ORLEANS KEEPS PACE WITH REGISTRATIONS&#13;
SAVANNAH CALLS SHIPPING 'FAIR'&#13;
IN-TRANSITS HIT FRISCO CLEAN&#13;
FULL WEIGH OF SHIPPING SLUMP FELT BY BOSTON&#13;
THE QUALIFIED CANDIDATES FOR A&amp;G OFFICES&#13;
SHIPPING STILL FAIR IN NEW YORK</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10175">
                <text>10/21/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13067">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="970" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="974">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/3a4c7ba3881f12856610953e51d7620a.PDF</src>
        <authentication>0dc286bbe4996e33c9c697ee64432b54</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47450">
                    <text>Internees
Are Warned
OfPhony'Aid'

SIU Branches
Report Big
Vote Turnout

Warnings to ex-prisoners of
war and internees have been is­
sued by Daniel F. Cleary, Chair-""
roan of the War Claims Commis­
sion. In issuing the warning he
said, "The Commission has al­
ready discovered several cases
where claimants have been the
victims of racketeers and we are
doing everything in our powet
to put a stop to such frauds."
Under the War Claims Act of
1948, military personnel held
prisoner in any theater and cer­
tain American civilian citizens
—including merchant seamen—
who were internees of the Ja­
panese may be entitled to com­
pensation for their period of
confinement. "Even before the
Act was passed by the Congress,"
Chairman Cleary explained, "cer­
tain promoters, gyp artists, and
assorted grifters began their un­
scrupulous operations.

Keen interest in the current
SIU Atlantic and Gulf District
elections was indicated by the
heavy turnout of early voters
when polls opened in all ports
on Nov. 1.
In the balloting, which will
continue through Dec. 31, Sea­
farers will elect officials to fill
29 elective District positions for
1950.
The ballot contains the names
of 47 candidates who met the
constitutional requirements for
Union office-seekers. Of those
elected, four will serve in Head­
quarters posts and 25 will rep­
resent the membership as Branch
officials.
Of the positions to be filled,
10 are for Port Agents and T5
for Port Patrolmen, with one for
Secretary-Treasurer and three
for Assistant Secretary-Treasur­
ers.
The 29 elective posts to be
filled in the current election are
four less than appeared on last
year's ballot and indicates the
Union's continuing note of econ­
omy, necessitated by the • decline
in American shipping.

FEE-SEEKERS "We have evidence that many
individuals and groups of per­
sons have been established to
supply help to claimants—for a
price. Some of these groups have
assumed titles which might
easily be confused with the name
of the War Claims Commission.
All forms of assistance have been
offered, from the filling out and
filing of forms to the actual sale
of forms and instructions," Cleary
declared.
"At the present time there
have been no forms of any type
issued by the Commission, When
forms and instructions are avail(C&amp;nthnted on Ptge 3)

Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA
VOL. XI

NEW YORK. N, Y.. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 4. 1949

No. 30

AS POLLS OPENED IN ANNUAL A&amp;G DISTRICT ELECTIONS

On Nov. 1. Seafarers began balloting in all A&amp;G Branches to elect officials who will serve
the Union during 1950. Early voters were out in large numbers when the 60-day voting period
got under way. Above is a scene on the first day of balloting in the Port of New York as
members lined up to register and receive their ballots.

AFL Convention Votes To Aid Two SlU Campaigns

57 FILED
The 47 candidates appearing
on the ballot were the success­
ful nominees from among the 57
Seafarers who filed notice of in­
tention to run before the Oct.
15 deadline. Seven nominees were
disqualified by the Credentials
Committee for failing to meet
the constitutional requirements.
for a place on the ballot.
Of the seven disqualified, five
men did not submit evidence of
the necessary three years of seatime, and two did not furnish
proof of having had four months
of seatime during" the current
year
Preparations for the annual
elections got under way in Sep­
tember, when the customary
resolution calling for nomina­
tions and designating the Union
positions to appear on the ballot
was adopted by the membership
at regular meetings in all ports.

The determined fight against to stop the fiow of Marshall Plan cutive Council of the American from the Maritime Unions!-^ Un­
the communists waged by the Aid to democratic nations Federation of Labor formally doubtedly the most effective
Seafarers International Union Strikes were ordered — politico called upon the Executive of the thanks we can give these rnen
Trades and Labor Congress of is to help them in their fight to
and its affiliates in the AFL strikes, all over the world. ^
Maritime Trades Department was The fight centering in Halifax Canada to take effective rem­ preserve their freedom. This we
hailed by delegates to the 68th was destined to be a fight to the edial action to prevent further pledge ourselves to do.
annual convention of the Ameri finish. The Communists had ta­ Communist subversion of the A case in point: There has
can Federation of Labor in St. ken practically complete control purposes of the Trades and La­ been referred to our Committee
Paul, Minn., last month, as it of the civilian life of the com­ bor Congress of Canada.
a section of the Executive Coun­
ALL-DAY VOTING
voted to aid the Seafarers' two- munity. Those who opposed them We are now pleased to report cil's report which deals with the
pronged fight
against Panama­ were intimidated or attacked. that during the Convention of nefarious practice of certain
The polls will be open every
nian transfers and Coast Guarc
Our maritime unions sent in the Trades and Labor Congress steamship owners in placing day in all Atlantic and Gulf
control over merchant seamen. more and more men. They knew of Canada held at Calgary, Al­ their ships under the Panaman­ District Branches throughout the
The convention delegates ad­ this was a struggle of world­ berta, during the month of Sep­ ian flag, in an effort to evade or 60-day voting period and mem­
opted the AFL Executive Coun­ wide significance. Their convic­ tember 1949 the Communist- destroy the hard-won working bers are urged to cast their bal­
cil's report on the MTD, which tions were confirmed when the dominated Canadian Seamen's standards for which, our men lots as soon as possible, to make
emphasized the victory of the Communist dominated World Union was expelled from affilia­ have so valiantly fought through certain they have their say in
selecting those who will repre­
SIU over the commie-led CSU Federation of Trade Unions and tion and other effective measures the years.
The
report
states
the
matter
were
adopted
to
assure
a
con­
particularly
its
maritime
division
sent them in the coming year.
in Canada last summer as a vital
is
now
before
the
ILO.
Should
tinuing
free
and
democratic
stopped
shipping
all
over
the
Instructions for proper mark­
contribution to the principle OJ:
there
be
any
delay
in
effecting
trades
union
congress
and
per­
world:
Australia,
Italy,
France,
ing
appear on the ballots. The
free and democratic trade union­
an
equitable
solution
through
mitting
a
continuation
of
our
England.
Union
stressed the importance
ism.
this
agency,
your
Committee
Our
men
accepted
the
chal­
fraternal
relations.
of
properly
following these in­
The text of the Executive
recommends that the Executive structions so as to keep the num­
lenge through bodily combat and
Council's report follows:
VALUABLE AID
Council be authorized to take ber of invalid ballots at a mini­
through international negotia­
Only three years ago the con­ tions. The Maritime Unions were Our International Unions affili­ whatever steps it can through mum.
vention approved the establish­ very ably assisted by the Bro­ ated with the Trades and Labor national and international agen- Space is provided on each bal­
ment of the Maritime Trades therhood of Railway Clerks. The Congress of Canada rendered
lot for write-in votes.
(Contmmd on Page 3)
Department. At that time, the situation became so serious that valuable service to the Ameri­
convention paid tribute to these the American Federation of La­ can Federation of Labor and the
men for fighting for "not only bor as a whole became active in Trades and Labor Congress of
their own economic betterment the fight.
Canada in this connection.
* «
but even more in fighting for
The Seafarers International
make special note of this
The next regular member­
the security of our nation." The For several years, the Execu­ Union and th§. International ship meeting in the Port of
switch. Remember, that's the
convention held that "no group tive Council of the American Longshoremen's Ass'n affiliated New York, scheduled for Nov.
next meeting—Nov. 9. The
in our America has had to fight Federation of Labor was con­ with the American Federation 9. will be held in the SIU
place is the SIU Hall at 51
more determinedly against the cerned about the development of Labor have succeeded in elim­ Hall. 51 Beaver Street, in­
Beaver Street. Time as usual
Communists than have our mar­ and growth of Communist influ­ inating the Communist-domin­ stead of Roosevelt Auditor­
is 7 PM.
itime unions." What was said ences within the Trades and La­ ated Canadian Seamen's Union ium. The change in meeting
The following meeting, on
then is even more true today. bor Congress of Canada and in Canada, and we look forward
places was made necessary
Nov.
23. will i be held at
These men have just won an­ these developments were the to continuing growth and devel­ because of a previously
Roosevelt Auditorium, at
other tremendously impor^nt subject of discussions and con- opment for these free, demo­
scheduled commitment by
100 East 17th Street.
battle in. our war against Com­ 'erences with the Executive cratic trade unions in the Do­
the operators of the Roose­
P.S. Please tell your Un­
munism. From Halifax as a cen­ Board of the Trades and Labor minion of Canada.
velt
Auditorium.
ion
Brothers that the next
ter the Coriimunists sought con­ Congress of Canada.
On all fronts the anti-Com­
New
York meeting will be
All
members
in
the
Port
« * *
trol of the seas and of the ports.
munist forces have won in this
held
in
the Union Hall.
of
New
York
are
urged
to
The Communist dominated After securing all of the facts fight. Our labor movement, our
maritime unions were ordered bearing on this fight, the Exe­ nation owes much to these men

Next New York Meeting In SIU Hall

.1

�Page Two

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, I^orember 4, 1949

SEAFARERS LOG
Published Every Other Week by the

SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor
At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Reentered as second class matter August 2, 1949, at the Post
OSice in New York, N.Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267"

Boss-Paid Pensions
Employers of American workers are gradually being
awakened to a responsibility of long Standing. Recogniz­
ing that the future security of its members must be
permanently established, labor unions currently conduct­
ing negotiations for new contracts are pushing for,pension
plans—entirely paid for by the employers.
The campaign for employer-paid pension plans is
based on the correct contention that men who spend
a lifetime in an industry helping employers to amass
wealth and increasing security are entitled to a guarantee
of decent living when they are no longer able to work.
Putting it in terms the bosses can understand, the
unions are demanding that provisions for the security
of the employee's old age be made in the same manner
that provision is made for the depreciation of machinery.
Funds are regularly set aside to take care of worn
down equipment. Yet industry has shown an almost uni­
versal disregard for the future of workers whose physical
strength is spent on the job. When the day arrives that
a worker can no longer keep pace with the physical
requirements of his-job, he is shown the door.
Workers who contribute their brains and skill to the
building of corporations should have some equity in the
product of their efforts. The employer-paid pension plans
are the answer.
Although the government's old age security program
has provided workers with some income, it is entirely
inadequate to take care of even one individual, much less
a man and his dependents.
The politics involved in attempting to improve the
government's old age benefits is so complicated that even
the winning of a slight improvement requires years of
fighting.

Udea Now h The Mmwe Hespitiik

These are the Union Broihen curaently in the marine hospitals,
as r^rted by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging
Besides, under the government pension systems, the heavily on their hands. Do what you can to cheer them up by
worker contributes a substantial share of the money which writing them.
ANDREW AHLSTROM
MOBILE HOSPITAL
is to be given him on retirement. This system relieves
WILLIAM ROACH
industry of its full responsibility.
J. CURTIS

Oddly enough, industry now finds itself the victim of
its own shortsighted policies. When social security and
old age pensions were first established by the government,
big business fought bitterly against the program. When­
ever attempts are made to increase the benefits or to lower
the age of retirement, big business roars its opposition.
Now, because of the inadequacy of the governmentadministered pensions, industry is being forced to make
direct provision for the old age security of its workers.

H. E. BONEWALL
R. R. SIERRA
SIDNEY SWITZER
CARLOS MATT
M. J. LUCAS
R. L. LAMBERT
JOHN B. DOLAN
FRANK NEARING
A. M. KASAITIS
IVAN A. THOMAS
ft 4 t
NEW ORLEANS HOSPITAL

L. HOWARD
J. STEWART
D. MILLER
D. CARROLL

t t 4. .
BOSTON HOSPITAL
JOE GREENBAUM
PETER KOGOY
FRANK ALASAVICH
VIC MILAZZO
R. BOLDUC

R. CRONIN
E. E. GROSS
J. CALDWELL
J. DENNIS
F. LANDRY
H. F. LAGAN
C. ELLARD
L. LANG
L. WILLIS
R. L. McCOMBS

The resistance of Big Steel to setting up an employer•V
"V
financed pension plan is already cracking. This week, the STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
workers of Bethlehem Steel returned to work, when the
BERNARD JURROWSKI
company capitulated to the union's demands for pensions ARCHIE KING
paid for entirely by the company. The other big operators FRED VYKRUTA
will probably fall in line one by one, now that the pattern SAL MANCINI
MICHAEL ARMANDO
Las been set.
Several weeks ago, the Ford Motor Company granted
the same demand made by its workers. And last week,
the AFL longshoremen cracked the ice and secured a
pension plan, financed by management.
At Jong last it appears that Big Business is learning
that its workers are as important as its machines.

WILHELM PIETERS
JOSE REYES
ROYAL HARGRAVES
J. F. GAMBLICH
JOHN C. LONG
JOE HERNANDEZ
R. G. ANDERSEN
P. ALBANESE
RICHARD GRALICKI

B. D. FOSTER
c. R. HUNEYCUTT
P. ROBERTS

F. B. CAILLOUET

:

. A. MAUFFRAY
O. HOWELL
L. LORD

^ - - •. • - '

V. L. COASH
A. PANEPTINTO
J. E. TASSIN
C. BROWN
D. PITMAN
V. LAWRENCE
F. JACOBSON
R. REED
F. ELLIS
J. H. MCELROY
A. LOPEZ
4. 4 1
BALTIMORE HOSPITAL
R. M. GREEN
E. S. GAME
L. G. LARONDE
A. L. MASTERS
C. P. THOMPSON
D. H. COLLINS
G. D. REAGAN
J. BROWN
E. CLDELL
V. D. WILLIAMS
H. STARCKY
D. McCORKINGDALE
J. B. BUHL
W. KENNELLY
M. HAGERTY
G. A. CARROLL
E. LYNCH
W. L. AKINS
D. H. BRUNIE
A. THOMPSON J. M. BERGERI A
R. McCULT,UCK
L. B. SMITH
P. B. DARROUGH
J. YUKNAS
4&gt; 4&gt;
JSAN FRANCISCO HOSP.
SAM DRURY
E. DiPIETRO
I. ISAKSEN
J, KEENAN
4
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL
E. D. SIMS
^....,
A

�Friday. November 4, 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

L O'G

Page Three

SlU Organizer Answers CS lies Cities Service Still

Trying To Keep Crews
From SiU Protection

The following is a transcript of portion of a CTMA (company-con­
trolled "union") meeting held aboard the SS Chiwawa on Oct. 18, during
which crewmember Eddie Bobinski answered the company-manufactured lies
and distortions fed to .CS tankermen. Most of the questions were posed by
the company "union" representative who is the Chiwawa's Steward. Four
days after the meeting, Bobinski, a volunteer SIU organizer was fired off Few American corporations today are as viciously anti-union
the ship.
as is the Cities Service Oil Com­
The data in bold type has been inserted by the LOG to provide CS pany, which enjoys the privil­
men with a more complete picture, as Bobinski had to reel off his answers in eges and fabulous profits of do­
ing business in the US, but
the space of a few minutes in order to report on time for his watch.
which refuses, to recognize the

slow and that' I was incompetent.
"When he was firing me he
told me he did not like the idea
of firing
me but that he had
received orders from the Chief
Engineer. He said that he could
law-given rights of its employees not do anything but carry out
Meeting held on S/S Chiwawa by CTMA Tuesday, Oct. 18, started 7:00 P.M.
CTMA Representative—Pumpman John Traubel CTMA Organizer and Chairman—Freddie Grissuble to organize for the purpose of the orders."
collective bargaining.
The meeting at which Bobin­
Questions asked by Chairman and answered by S.I.U. Organizer:
On two occasions, the employ­ ski recorded some of the pro­
A. All beefs are settled by union patrolman ees of Cities Service have over­ ceedings was held on Oct. 18. A
1. Q. The S.I.U. has more men in the Union
before ship even pays off and the Sea­ whelmingly designated the SIU notice of the meeting had been
than there is jobs. .
farers' Log proves it.
A. No. We have about the same amount of
as their collective bargaining posted by a CTM;\ stooge. No
men as we have jobs, Permitmen are not (Union contracted vessels are always boarded agent in secret elections conduc­ one tore down this notice, not
by patrolmen at payoffs and sign-ons to settle all ted by the National Labor Rela­ even the Skipper. After all, it
considered full-pledged union members.
(The SIU is the only maritime union which has crew beefs. Each issue of the LOG carries in­ tions Board. Despite these man­ was the company that was be­
consistently nlaintained a job ratio of one to formation regarding shipboard disputes and the dates, Cities Service has con­ hind this "union," was the way
ne. In other words, there is approximately one manner in which they are settled. This can be sistently resorted to all sorts of he probably reasoned.
job for every man holding a Union book. This found in the Port reports. The Money Due subterfuges to prevent their tan­ The meeting was opened by the
is the result of fax-sighted Union policy adopted columns are also an indication of the Union's kermen from getting the benefits Steward. He started off by say­
in the boom years, when the 'Union refrained constant and successful efforts to insure that of genuine Union representation, ing that he would not run down
from issuing books in wholesale fashion, a policy each SlU^man gets what is coming to him which they so earnestly desire. any union. Then he proceeded
other unions did not pursue and as a result have under the contract in force. The best testimony Certification of the SIU to to run down the SIU, Bobinski
to these facts is the SIU membership itself.)
overloaded memberships.)
represent the Cities Service men recalls. The Steward told those
2. Q. New York has three thousand men on the 7. Q. In the S.I.U. as soon as a ship pulls into has been held up by the legal present not to interrupt the pro­
dry dock all men are laid off.
beach that can't ship out.
flim-flammery of the company ceedings.
A. No, only some ships lay off crew but lawyers, but the NLRB is now At 7:30, Bobinski got up and
A. No. The Seafarers' Log proves it's not true.
men laid off have first preference to come reviewing the company's final announced that he had to go on
(Each issue of the LOG carries the registration
back on.
'
and shipping figures in each SIU port during
objections and the day of reckon­ watch in 20 minutes and began
answering the company-manufac­
the previous two-week period. This issue shows (Bobinski's answer to this one is about all there ing is imminent.
tured lies which the Steward had
that 1.433 men registered, while 947 were shipped is to it.)
Meanwhile, life aboard Cities
out. A month ago. in the issue of Oct. 7. the 8. Q. An S.I.U. seaman stole line from a Cities Service ships is as miserable as been parro^ting for a half-hour.
Service ship.
Bobinski hastily answered the
registration figure was 1.468r the number ship­
ever. Intimidation, mass firings,
questions
raised by the Steward
A.
There
was
no
proof
and
besides
the
Citco
ped out weis 1.089. This would show approxi­
an intricate spy network foster­
in
the
coiurse
of his speech and
Representative
(Pumpman)
was
caught
go­
mately 400 to 500 men on the beach, which is
ed by the company and its ilothers
which
were thrown at
ing
thru
Edw.
Bobinski's
(Organizer's)
about 2500 less than the CTMA's false figure.)
,,
, .,.
...
,, legitimate offspring, the Cities
him.
The
transcript
appears else­
3. Q. Tankermen only get 14 days' vacation
locker looking for inforination that would gervice Tankermen's Association,
where
on
this
page.
convict
men
of
signing
Pledge
Cards
and
a year.
face all men who go to work
Like hundreds of Cities Serv­
thus be fired. (He didn't deny his guilt) aboard a CS vessel.
A. No, they get 28 days (as was shown in
but when he was asked by a person why And although, the CS men ice crewmembers, Edward Bob­
Agreement).
he didn't deny the statement he said he have openly repudiated the com­ inski dared to exercise his right
(The SIU tanker agreement speaks for itself. Any
didn't hear it. CThis was after meeting was pany controlled "union"—CTMA to freedom of speech and thought
man can check and learn that SIU tankermen
over) even though he was not more than —the company still attempts to aboard a Cities Service ship.
get 28 days a year as vacation.)
two feet from me but only about twenty- force this monstrosity down the Like hundreds of other Cities
4. Q. S.I.U. positively cannot promise anything,
five other men heard it all over the mess throats of its crewmembers. Service men he believes that the
especially a full book.
hall. (Thus he immediately became un­ CTMA meetings are held aboard rotten abuse poured on the com­
A. They promise each and every man a book
popular).
that walks off during strike or to men who
every ship but their effect on pany's tanker men, the lack of
(We think the Citco (CTMA) representative ought the men is nil. CS men know security and self-respect felt by
organize C.S. ships. '
(In addition, these men are given 30-day back­ to answer this one. as soon as he stops blushing that CTMA is the sneaky mouth­ all hands can only be wiped out
by genuine trade union represen­
and spluttering.)
dated shipping cards to offset the time lost.)'
piece of the company and they
tation
— representation by the
5. Q. Why did the Log publish the firing of A1 9. Q. Why should men be laid off a ship after want no part of it.
SIU.
only six months' service?
Litwins because of organizing when ac­
A sample of the manner in
A. It is not definite yet but the time limit is which CTMA stooges attempt to
tually, the whole crew knew he was drunk
one year, so that other men on the beach deceive CS men at shipboard
and refused to work?
can get a chance.
y
A. The Union is not responsible because a
meetings has been recorded by
(Actually,
there
is
no
limit
to
the
length
of time Edward Bobinski. Bobinski sail­
man did hot tell the truth about himself.
(Because of Cities Service's refusal to recognize a man may stay aboard an SIU ship. Some men ed aboard the SS Chiwawa from
their employees' demand that the company bar­ have been aboard SIU ships for two and three August 19 until October 22, 1949,
gain with the Union and its repeated refusal tc years. At present, the subject of "homesteading" when he was fired for daring to
cooperate, the SIU is naturally unable to check is being discussed throughout the Union, as are announce that he was a volun­
with the company—as it can with contracted all matters affecting the general welfare. Letters teer organizer for the SIU.
operators—to determine cause of dismissal. In­ to the Editor appearing in almost every issue Bobinski posted a notice to
{Continued from Page I)
sofar as drinking and performing aboard ship of the LOG show pro £md con viewpoints on that effect on the ship about cies, public and private to as­
aro concerned, the membership of the SIU has this issue. Those against unlimited stays urge Oct. 15. "Actually I had to post sure the stopping of the transfer
repeatedly demonstrated its intention and ca­ that men aboard SIU ships for one year be about 10 notices," he said, "be­ of the registry of our ships to
pacity to discipline foul-ups whose actions might required to take their vacation pay and get off cause every one I posted was nations whose standards of work­
jeopardize the security and welfare of the the ship. The pu^ose is to permit greater job ,torn down." One of them was ing conditions are lower than
turnover and to equalize employment opportuni­ ripped down by the Skipper.
membership.)
ours.
6. Q. When the S.I.U. crews have meetings on ties for all hands. When this issue is put to a "The day after, the First As­ Then, too, in an entirely dif­
board their ships no beefs are settled when question by the membership, the decision will sistant told me that I was being ferent way, we may further sup­
the ship pulls into Port, everything is be made by referendum vote in secret balloting, fired," Bobinski related, "giving port the men who sail our ships
as per SIU constitution.)
forgotten.
I as the reason that I was too in the fight to be and remain
free. At present they are sub­
ject to the control and discipline
of the U.S. Coast Guard, a
quasi-military organization.
As
a
final
word
of
advice
to
a
demand
for
a
filing
fee,
re­
eers
and
chislers
gyp
you
out
While we honor the glorious
{Continued from Page 1)
able, we hope that they will be tainer, or an excessively high prospective claimants. Chairman of any of the money due you. record the Coast Guard has
simple enough so that no help percentage agreement. There is Cleary said, "Wait until you re­ Your war claim is based on the made, we wish to record our
&gt; will be needed in filling them no charge for filing claims with ceive our forms through proper months and years you spent as strong objection to placing any
out. No claims will be processed the War Claims Commission or channels. Then fill them out and a prisoner of the enemy. You group of our civilian workers
for payment unless they are sub­ for any part of the processing return them to us. Any "help you deserve it. You'll get it. We hope under military or quasi-military
mitted on the official forms ap­ of claims payable by the Com­ may need will be available free you'll get all of it without cost supervision in time of peace.
of charge. All of the major vet­ to yourself."
proved by the Commission. These mission.
Your committee shares with
All evidence indicating shady erans' organizations stand ready At SIU Headquarters, Union the men who sail our ships, a
official forms will be free and
will be made available to all operations with respect to war to render any assistance you may officials repeated an announce­ deep conviction that they, be­
eligible claimants under the War claims is being referred by the require. If you feel you must hire ment made recently that the cause they are civilian workers,
Commission to the US Depart­ an attorney, be sure he is a repu­ Union stands ready at all times should be immediately removed
Claims Act."
from any form of military or
Chairman Cleary revealed that ment of Justice and US Post table member of your commu­
in most cases of exploitation of Office authorities for appropriate nity. You need not have any to give assistance and advice to quasi-military supervision or
claimants uncovered to date the investigative action anil prosecu­ dealings with people who solicit members eligible for compensa­ control and placed back undej:
your business. Don't let racket­ tion under the War Claims Act. civilian supervision.
offer to help is accompanied by tion.

AFL Convention!
Votes To Back
SIU Campaigns

War Claims Commission Warns internees Against Phonies

�THE

Page Four

Getting Replacements To Jax
Poses A Problem To Savannah

SEAFARERS

Coffee Time

LOG

Friday, November 4, 1949
By F£LIX J. CURLS

By JIM DRAWDY

By BEN LAWSON

SAVANNAH—This port is no see, is a little on the laew side
exception to the rule, so the best down hyar.
we can say fbr the past two
ON THE BALL
weeks' shipping is that it has
Just to mention a few of the
been slow.
Brothers currently making eight
Our payoff activity took place
hours daily at the Hall, there
aboard the SS Jean, Bull, and
are W. Mulling, J. H. Maxey, C.
the SS Southport, South Atlan­
A. Gardner, J. T. Moore. We're
tic. There were no beefs aboard
happy to" be able to say that
either of these vessels. Both
only one Seafarer is in the loca!
signed on again.
marine hospital this' week. He's
We had a few visits from ves­
E. D. Sims and he's having his
sels that included Savannah as tonsils taken out.
a port of call. One was the SS
Argobec, contracted to the SIU The National Labor Relations
Canadian District. The others Board hearing on the case of
were the SS Greeley Victory, the Retail Clerks Union vs. AdWaterman; SS Steel Advocate, ler's Department store came out
Isthmian; and the Twin Falls favorably for the union people.
Management has to reinstate five
Victory, Waterman.
employees and reimburse them
REPLACEMENT NOTE
for back wages amounting to
In connection with the matter $10,000. They've found out that
of getting replacements from the unfair labor practices don't pay.
Union Hall, which has been dis­ Another union note: Don't for­
cussed in this column for the get to ride Garden City cabs in
past few weeks, here's another Savannah. They're operated by
bit of advice.
AFL cabdrivers.
We recommend that the Water­ And that about winds it up
man Steamship Company be no­ for this trip, except to say that
tified to instruct their Skippers Savannah is cool and comfort­
to get in touch with the com­ able. Indian summer, as the yanpany agent in Jacksonville via kees call it.
radio whenever they need re­
placements from Savannah.
The company agent can then
communicate the needs to the
Hall here. It is important that
The SIU is on record that charges will be placed against
the ship's radio be used to ad­
men guilty of being the following:
vise the agent of the need for
replacements. It takes about five
PILFERERS: Men who walk off ships with crew's equip­
hours to get to Jacksonville from
ment or ship's gear, such as sheets, towels, ship's stores, cargo,
Savannah by bus, and the coast­
etc.,
for sale ashore.
wise ships touching Jax are only
in for a few hours, so "speed is
- WEEDHOUNDS: Men who are in the possession of or
essential.
who use marijuana or other narcotics on board an SIU ship
Here's a romantic note. The
or in the vicinity of an SIU Hall.
Bosun on the S^ Jean fell madly
in love with Savannah this trip.
GASHOUND PERFORMERS: Men who jeopardize the
Consequently, he paid off and
safety of their shipmates by drinking while at work on a ship
at this writing is undoubtedly
or who turn to in a drunken condition. Those who disrupt the
hitched for life.
operation of a ship, the pay-off or sign-on by being gassed up.
Without fear of bragging we'd
like to state that we have one
This Union was built of, by' and for seamen. Seafarers
of the cleanest Union Halls in
fought many long and bloody fights to obtain the wages and
the business. The deck is fresh­ conditions we nOw enjoy. For the first time in the hutory of
ly painted and our furniture is in
the maritime industry a seaman can support himself and his
tip-top condition. All we need to
family in a decent and independent manner. The SIU does
round out the comforts is a tele­
vision set.
not tolerate the jeopardizing of these conditions by the actions
of irresponsibles.
If jmu walk down the streets
here, you can barely avoid bump­
In any occupation there is a small group of foulballs.
ing into a crowd looking into
While
the Union has been fortunate in keeping such characters
some store window demonstrat­
ing television. Television, you
to a minimum, we must eliminate them altogether from the
SIU.

Unhtt Wreckers Are Warned

Port Frisco Looks
To Coining Weeks
By JEFF MORRISON

All Seafarers, members and officials alike, are under
oblig^ion to place charges against these types of characters.
Any man, upon being convicted by a Union Trial Com­
mittee of actions such as outlined here, faces Union discipline
up to and including complete expulsion from the Seafarers.

SAN FRANCISCO — Shipping
has been somewhat on the slow
side in this port during the past
two weeks, but the prospects for
the coming period are brighter.
Men shipped from this port
went to vessels calling in-transit.
These v/ere the Loyola Victory,
By CAL TANNER
Waterman; Fairland, Waterman;
MOBILE—The drop in ship­
Steel Admiral, Isthmian; Santa
ping,
which has been made more
Clara Victory, Isthmian; Alamar,
acute
by the coal and .steel
Calmar, and the Seamar, Calmar.
strikes, is being felt in Mobile,
Beefs were of a minor nature with the past two weeks being
and they were settled without especially quiet.
any difficulty.
Ships paying off-for the pe­
Bucking the elements in Fris­ riod were the Alcoa Clipper and
co are Brothers Fred Hethcoat., Corsair, and the following Wa­
H. F. Wilma, C. Doroba, and P. terman ships: Monarch of the
O'Neil. They're all waiting to Sea, Morning Light, Antinous,
ship, of course.
Wacosta, Wild Ranger.
In addition, we have a few The sign-ons for the two
men in the San Francisco Mar­ week-period werp the Clipper,
ine Hospital. These_ Brothers are Corsair, Monarch of the Sea, An­
Sam Drury, E. DiPietro, I. Isak- tinous, Lafayette, Morning Light
and Wild Ranger.
^
sen and J. Keenan.

Shipping Still
Slow In Boston

-10109

Dies In Accident

BOSTON — No change was
noted in shipping here during
the.past fwo weeks. Two vessels
paid off, then signed on again,
and several ships called in-trans­
it.
The ships paying off and sign­
ing on were the Alexandra, a
Carras tanker, and the New Lon­
don, a Mathiasen tanker.
The in-transit callers were the
Robin Doncaster, Robin lines;
Bessemer Victory and Greeley
Victory, Waterman; Meredith
Victory and Steel Architect,
Isthmian.
An overtime beef was report­
ed on the Meredith Victory and
it will be carried to the port of
payoff for settlement.
Among the Seafarers in the
Beantown at present are Morris
Norris and W. Sullivan. Norris
is anxious to go anywhere. Sully,
who just got out of the hospital,
is also raring to go. He's a real
cook who goes in for fancy bak­
ing that always please his ship­
mates.
At the New London payoff
we were surprised to run into
Bob Fisher, who was a crewmember. Only a few weeks "back
Bob got out of the hospital after
undergoing a couple of opera­
tions.^ We thought he'd be home
recuperating. Instead, Bob head­
ed direct for New York where
he caught a ship.

NY Expecting
Slight PIck-Up
By JOE ALGINA

James E. Naylor, popular
Seafarer who had been a Un­
ion member for nine years,
was killed aboard the SS Al­
legheny Victory, when a heavy
sea struck the ship and threw
him into the No. 1 winches.
Naylor, who sailed as AB
and held Book No. 20327, is
survived by his wife, two
children, his mother, a bro­
ther and two sisters. Funeral
benefits were paid by the
Union. Burial .took place in
North Carolina.

Steel And Coal Strikes Attest Mobile
Three ships called in-transit. In addition, some of our mem­
They were the Chickasaw, Bes­ bers are in the Mobile Marine
semer Victory and Ganton Vic­ Hospital. Among them are J.
tory, all of Waterman. .
Curtis, L. Howard, J. Stewart,
D. Miller, and D. Carroll.
ALL OKAY
Installation of the air-condi­
All payoffs and sign-ons were tioning unit for the Mobile Hall
smooth, with only a few minor is expected to start in the very
beefs, on any of the ships. All near future and should take
were settled to the complete sat­ about three weeks to complete.
isfaction of the crews concerned. In fact, in another three weeks,
Some of the members now on the Hall will be completely
the beach in Mobile include ready as the alterations are now
Curly Moyd, Jughead Parker, in the final stages. It certainly
Tom Gould, Francis Brozak, J.
L. Webb, Clarence Morse, H. shows signs of being able to
Carmichael, J. Austin, B. P. Mc- provide the maximum of com­
Nulty and O. Brooks.
fort for Seafarers.

NEW YORK — Despite the
number of ships which cama
into this port during the past
two weeks, shipping has been
anything but good. Sign-ons did
not equal the payoffs, most of "
which were on nearby foreign
articles.
Getting down to the payoffs:
Cornelia, Elizabeth, Evelyn, Kathyrn, Beatrice, Suzanne, Puerto
Rico, Bull; Seatrains Texas, New
York and Havana; Meredith Vic­
tory, Steel Traveller, Allegheny
Victory, Isthmian; Bull Run, The^
Cabins, Mathiasen; Gateway City,
Azalea City, Chickasaw, Water­
man; Trinity, Carras; Cape Mo­
hican, Mar Ancha; Sweetwater,
Sea Trade; Taddei, Ship Enter­
prise; Southstar, Swan, South
Atlantic; Colabee, American Ha­
waiian; Gadsden, American East­
ern; Mankato Victory, .Victory
Carriers and Massmai', Calmar.
All of the ships on nearby
foreign articles went out again.
These included all Bull Line
payoffs, the Colabee and Seatrains New York, Havana and
Texas. None took very many
replacemepts.
In addition, those going out
were the Southstar, Yorkmar,
and Robin Goodfellow, which
were signed on during the pe­
riod.
While we don't expect ship­
ping to pick up to any satisfac­
tory degree for a few weeks, at
least, we do expect it to be bet­
ter during the period immediate­
ly ahead.
New York's schedule shows
that a number of ships coming
in for payoffs- are due to sign
on again. Added to these should
be several of the ships that paid
off during the past two weeks
but which haven't as_ yet called
for crews to sign on.

�Friday, Novtnibet 4, 1949

THE SEAFARERS LOO

Pago Firo

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings In Brief
BOSTON—Chairman. T. Flem­
ing, 30821; Recording Secretary,
M. Norris, 5725; Reading Clerk,
B. Lawson, 894.
Minutes of other Branch meet­
ings read and accepted, except
for motion 'to non-concur with
San Francisco New Business.
Agent made his shipping report.
Four members were excused
from meeting after membership
accepted their reasons for being
unable to attend. Motion carried
to accept Credential Committee's
report on candidates for Union

amples of this need, it was re­
called that New York is the
only port where the member­
ship meetings have to be held
in an outside auditorium, while
SHIPPED SHIPPED TOTAL the rest of the Branches meet
ENG.
STWDS. SHIPPED in their own buildings. Also
8
4
20 that rent now being paid by
82
67
251 Union in New York is between
19
17
68 $700 and $800 a month, as com­
37
40
109 pared to the little more than
3
9
16 $100 monthly rental paid by the
9
0
17 Baltimore Branch. Charges read
_ 9
11
26 and accepted, with recommenda­

MC Shipping From Oct. 12 To Oct 26
PORT

REG.,
DECK

REG.
ENG.

REG.
STWDS.

Boston....
New York
Philadelphia
Baltimore
Norfolk
Savannah
Tampa
Mobile
New Orleans
Galveston
West Coast

19
123
37
116
41
11
18
54
62
64
15

•13
81
26
99
35
10
17
47
57
46
16

12
77
24
76
21
17
12
36
109
29
8

44
281
87
291
97
38
47
137
228
139
39

560

447

431

1,438

:...

GRAND TOTAL..

TOTAL
REG.

SHIPPED
DECK

-

8
102
32
32
4
8
6
36
83
5
12
328

34
77
8
14

39
122
6
4

109
282
19
30

300

319

947

vestigate feasibility of working gin on Nov. 1. Meeting adjourned
out a credit plan for SIU mem­ at 8 PM, with 250 members
bership. Meeting adjourned at present.
elections. Headquarters' and Sec­
8:30 PM, with 285 members in
4 4 4
retary-Treasurer's reports read
attendance.
MOBILE
—
Chairman, Louis
and approved. Motion carried to
4. 4 4
grant W. Sullivan, Book No.
SAN FRANCISCO—Chairman, Neira, 26993; Recording Secre­
20549, a 30-day shipping card.
Jeff Morrison, 34213; Recording tary, E. D. Moyd, 10829; Reading
Meeting adjourned at 8 PM, with
Secretary, P. M. Robertson, Clerk, Harold Fischer, 59.
151 members present.
30148; Reading Clerk. J. FarMotion carried to concur in
4
t
Oath of Obligation administer­ quahar.
report of Credentials Committee
GALVESTON —Chairman, ed to Arthur Chason, Frank
regarding election of officials for
Minutes of previous meetings 1950. Minutes of other ports read
Keith Alsop, 7311; Recording Clawson, Chang Jar, A1 DemSecretary, R. Wilburn, 37739; ery, O. A. Nickle. Other Branch in all Branches read and ap­ and approved. Port Agent stated
minutes read and approved, ex­ proved. Agent reported that that during next two weeks only
Reading Clerk, J. Ranieri, 50272.
cept for that part of San Fran­ coming two weeks look better ships on coastwise and Puerto
Motion carried to approve ac­ cisco new business dealing with for shipping than period just Rican runs were due to hit port.
tion of membership at special extension of shipping cards, in
He also said that building reno­
meeting in Galveston re: Cre­ which membership non-concur­
vations are nearly completed.
dential Committee's report on red. Communications requesting
Membership was reminded of the
candidates for forthcoming Union permission to be excused from
importance of
registering as
elections.
Minutes
of
other meeting were referred to Dis­
qualified voters for city, county
Branch meetings accepted as patcher. Port Agent's report ap­
and state elections. Agent an­
read. Reading of Credential Com­ proved. Motions carried: To in­ past. Several ships were in port, nounced that on orders from Ex­
mittee's report on eligible candi­ struct Agent to purchase tele­ but they were in-transit callers. ecutive Board ©f the Interna­
dates for election; motion car­ vision set for use'^n the Hall. He said that the shipping situa­ tional that he had gone into
ried to accept report. Agent dis­ After much discussion, motion tion looks a bit better in Seattle, Mississippi this week to help in
cussed shipping in this port. Sec­ carried to allow bookmen and too, and added that there were organizing and voting of 8,000
retary-Treasurer's financial
re­ permitmen laid off from Ore some job possibilities up thief®. fishermen
who are trying to
and Secretaryport and Headquarters' report to ships as result of steel strike to Headquarters'
come
into
the
International. He
the membership read and ap­ return to their jobs when strike Treasurer's reports to the mem­ concluded his report by announc­
proved. Motion carried that Dele­ ends. Motion carried that a com- bership read and approved. Mo­ ing that he was going to meet
tions carried to concur in re­
gates on Seatrain ships check
ports
of Headquarters reinstate­
their departments before sailing
ment
committee
and Credentials
and notify the Hall if replace­
Committee.
Several
members
ments are needed. Motion car­
were
excused
from
meeting.
Un­
ried calling for anyone with one
der
Good
and
Welfare
several
year of continuous emplosmient
mittee and Port Agent work out members expressed the opinion
on any one vessel to get off and
plan to raise funds for a Thanks­ thdt the Union should purchase with Organizing Director Lindsey
take hig vacation. Meeting ad­
giving Dinner for membership Halls in all ports where they are Williams and New Orleans Agent
journed at 7:40 PM.
in this port. Meeting adjourned presently rented, as soon as pos­ Sheppard at Louisiana State
i 4- 4.
at 8:15 PM* with 453 members sible. If necessary to accomplish Federation of Labor convention
to discuss problems of organiza­
SAVANNAH —Chairman, Jim present.
this, an assessment was recom­
tion.
Secretary-Treasurer's finan­
Drawdy, 28523; Recording Sec­
mended. It was pointed out that
» 4 &amp;
cial report read and approved.
there should be a better build­
retary, E. L. Baker, 30907; Read­
NEW ORLEANS —Chairman,
ing in Galveston, and in New Under Good and Welfare, Bro­
ing Clerk, 25808.
J. P. Shuler, 94,—Recording Sec­ York especially. Meeting ad­ ther Neira discussed need of or­
retary, Herman Troxclair, 8743; journed at 8:20 PM, with 26 ganized labor activity in politi­
Secretary-Treasurer's financial
cal' field. Meeting adjourned at
report and Headquarters' report Reading . Clerk, Bill Frederick,. bookmen present.
7:45 PM, with 253 members
to the membership read and ap­ 94.
4 4 4
present.
proved. Agent reported that a
PHILADELPHIA — Chairman,
Previous
meeting's minutes
couple of ships had paid off and
4 4 4
C. L. Cousins, 38685; Recording
signed on during the past two read and accepted. Motion car­
NEW
YORK
— Chairman, L.
ried to accept report of Creden­ Secretary, James Sheehan, 306;
J. Williams, 21550; Recording
tials Committee on nominations Reading Clerk, William Glick,
Secretary,
Freddie Stewart, 4935;
for Union office. Port Agent re­ 48741.
Reading Clerk, Eddie Mooney,
ported that shipping was fair
Minutes of previous Branch
during past two weeks, with
46671.
number of men shipping exceed­ meetings accepted as read. Read­
ing of minutes of special meet­
Minutes of previous Branch
weeks, and that three in-transit ing those registering. Since last
ing
of
Oct.
19,
in
which
mem­
meetings
in all ports read and
ships visited the port. Minutes' meeting, there were seven pay­
bership
voted
to
accept
report
approved.
Motion carried to non­
of other Branch meetings read offs, eight sign-ons and approxi­
of
Credentials
Committee
on
concur
with
that part of Balti­
mately
25
ships
in-transit
com­
and accepted. Motion by Brother
nominations
of
candidates
for
more
New
Business stressing
ing
into
port.
He
revealed
that
Searcy carried recommending
Union
office.
Secretary-Treasur­
need
for
new
Hall in Baltimore.
eight
payoffs
are
scheduled
thus
that Headquarters send circular
er's
financial
report
read
and
ac­
Under
discussion,
members point­
far
for
the
coming
two
weeks.
letter to all SlU-contracted ships
cepted.
Charges
were
read
and
ed
out
that
Halls
are purchased
He
added
that
the
steel
and
coal
calling at Charleston and Jack-j
referred
to
Trial
Committee.
Ex­
in
areas
where
the
needs of the
strikes
have
begun
to
affect
this
sonville informing delegates to
cuses
were
referred
to
Dispatch­
membership
are
the
greatest. It
port,
with
our
affiliate,
the
Mg^
immediately
notify Savannah'
er.
Port
Agent
reported
that
all
was
emphasized
that
there
is no
Hall of any job vacancies aboard. rine Allied Workers, feeling the
beefs
aboard
ships
coming
into
objection
to
Baltimore
getting
a
Motion pointed out that failure brunt. Coyle Tugboat Company
port
were
settled
to
crew's
sat­
new
Hall,
but
that
the
member­
to follow this procedure had re­ will begin today to tie-up its
sulted in several jobs being entire fleet due to the lack of isfaction. Men were urged to ship is on record, as a result of
taken as pierhead jiunps, jeopar­ steel and coal movements. Eight live up to Si^ipping Rules by be­ unanimous action in all Branches,
dizing democfatic rotary shipping men took the Union Oath of ing ready to turn to four hours to purchase the next Hall in
system of Union. Motion carried Obligation. Motion carried to in­ after being shipped. Members the Port of New York, where
to accept report of Credentials! struct Secretary-Treasurer to in­ were reminded that elections be­ the need is the greatest. As ex­
Committee on candidates in
coming election. Meeting ad­
journed at 7:45 PM.
t, i
BALTIMORE—Chairman, Wil­
liam Rentz, 26445; Recording
Secretary, G. A. Masterson,
20297; Reading Clerk, A1 Stansbury, 4683.

tion that they be turned over
to an elected trial committee for
hearings.
Secretary-Treasurer's
financial report accepted as read.
In Headquarters' report, Secre­
tary-Treasurer reported that de­
spite unfavorable shipping situ­
ation, condition of the Union is
sound. He pointed out that ^ as
result of intense efforts of the
organizing
department,
jobs
have steadily been added and
have acted to offset those lost
as result of lay-ups. Many of
the newly-contracted companies
start out on a small scale, but
if operations prove successful
they acquire more ships and pro­
vide increased job opportunities
for the membership. For this rea­
son, he stressed the necessity of
crewmembers aboard these vessei^to man them in ship-shape
fashion. Any fouling up aboard
these ships constitutes harm to
the rest of the membership. The
Secretary-Treasurer warned 'men
who will not carry out the let­
ter of the Union agreement to
stay off these ships so that the
serious - minded,
conscientious
members may take the jobs and
demonstrate that the SIU can
supply first-class
crews. The Di­
rector of Organization also took
the floor to support this view.
Several members took the Union
Oath of Obligation. Meeting ad­
journed at 8:15 PM.
4 4 4
NORFOLK — Chairman, Ben
Rees, 95; Recording Secretary,
J. A. Bullock, 4747; Reading
Clerk, G. Lawson, 35980.
Motion carried to accept ac­
tion of Norfolk special meeting
on Oct. 19, concurring in Cre­
dentials Committee's report on
candidates for A&amp;G offices. Min­
utes of Branch meetings accept­
ed as read. Headquarters' report
to the membership read and ap­
proved. Agent discussed shipping,
which has been hit hard by the
coal and steel strikes. Motion by

R. Miller carried to instruct Ag­
ent to inquire as to the eligi­
bility and status of D. E. (Casey)
Jones for a place on this year's
ballot. Meeting acted on re­
quests to be excused from meet­
ing—five members excused, two
were not. Under Good and Wel­
fare, there was discussion on the
payoff of the SS Taddei and on
the forthcoming elections for of­
ficials to serve in 1950. Meeting
adjourned at 8:20 PM, with 92
members present.

�Page Six

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday! November 4, 1949

SEATTLE: STUDY IN UNION - BUSTING

By PAUL HALL and MORRIS WEISBERGER,
Vice Presidents. SIUNA
Out in Seattle, Washington, a miniature civil
war is being fought.
On one ^ide is the Sailors Union of the Pacific.
On the other side is the strangest collection of
anti-labor forces that ever slept in one political
bed. These characters, who are suing the Union
and publishing a slanderous, lying anti-Union
sheet called "The Defender," are banded to­
gether in temporary alliance to do one basic
job — to so disrupt the SUP that they can step
in and take over.
The group is fronted by John Mahoney, who
was expelled from the SUP after a long series
of a,nti-Union acts.
It is spearheaded by the Trotskyites (Socialist
•Workers Party) who make no bones that their
only reason for trade union activity is to "under­
mine" the existing trade unions.
It is composed of would-be "labor leaders,"
gashounds, apple polishers, and some local boys
who want "Seattle jobs (the Alaska ships) for
Seattle boys."
It is backed by two captains of the Seattle
city police force, brothers of John Mahoney,
who intimidate the SUP membership by warning anti-Mahoney, pro-SUP members to "get out
of town or else—" and by sending police squad
cars to park before the Seattle SUP Hall on
meeting nights.
This group is being aided by dual and hostile
Unions—the commie-controlled Marine Cooks and Stewards, Bridges' Longshoremen and the Marine Firemen, Oilers and Watertenders — who

see an opportunity, if the SUP is destroyed, to
pick up jobs which, because lack of program,
penny-pinching and sheer inefficiency, they are
unable to get through their own organizing
efforts.
We intend, later on in this article, to take
these characters apart and see what makes them
tick. But first we'd like to give a brief history
of the Seattle beef, so that you will be better
able to understand the nature of these charac­
ters who are out to disrupt and smash the most
militant Union on the West Coast—the SUP.
The Seattle beef had its beginning during the
time the Seafarers International Union (and its
component parts, the SUP, A&amp;G, etc.) was put­
ting its entire organizational efforts into beating
back the commie Canadian Seamen's Union,
when that outfit called a phony strike against
ships contracted to the Canadian District of the
SIU.
If you remember, the commies got no place
in Canada, because all legitimate Unions backed
the SIU. Therefore the comrades turned their
attention to the various foreign countries where,
due to the' distances involved, they were able
for a while to get away with their lies and
phony propaganda, and tie up a few SIU contracted Canadian ships. The SIU then was forced
to fight the comrades' goon squads in Canada
and this country. The SIU fought the commie
propaganda in practically all maritime countries
throughout the world.
Remember, this Canada beef was an import­
ant beef for the commies, for it meant, if the
SIU won, the commies would be wiped out as
a force in Canadian maritime. At this time, it
was important that all sections of the International, that every member in every District of
the International do what he could to repel the

Some of you may have heard or read of the
beef that the Sailors Union is having out in
Seattle with a bunch of union wreckers. Up to
now. the SEAFARERS LOG has not mentioned
the case because, first, it was strictly an internal
SUP affair; and, second, the expulsion of a disruptor and union-wrecker is not particularly
newsworthy, as every union has a right to pro­
tect itself from its internal enemies. Now, how­
ever, the situation has changed. Two new ele­
ments have pushed themselves into the beef: the
Trotskyites (the Socialist Workers Party) who
hope to capture control of the SUP. and several
dual and hostile unions, old enemies of the Sail­
ors Union, who want to smash the SUP. Because
of this, the Seattle beef is now properly th% con­
cern of the entire International, not only of the
SUP. Therefore, because of this reason, the LOG

is offering this full account of the beef and the
^ longtime aufi-unlon records of those involved, so
that the membership will know the true score,
and so that they will recognize these disrupters
and wreckers wherever they are, no matter what
'militant" phrases they hide behind. The writers
of this article are veterans of the Seafarers In­
ternational Union's fight against the commies,
Trotskyites and other political and power-hun­
gry groups within the International, the Dis­
tricts, and the trade union movement. It is to
be expected that the Trotskyites will respond
with personal blasts against Hall and Weisberger. That is the way these would-be commisars
operate, on the Hitler-Stalin-Trotsky theory that
if a lie is repeated often enough, some people
will believe it. But, as this article shows, such
tactics very often backfire—as it has on the West
Coast, when the true facts were made known.

'
CSU and drive the commies from the waterfront, 23 meeting in Seattle on a point of information,
It is important to remember, too, that the de- "wanting to know who gave the piecards the
cision to help the SIU Canadian District was authority to engage in strikebreaking activities,
voted unanimously by the International's con- and how come the membership of ihe organiza­
vention in Baltimore, March 28-April 2, and con- tion were not kept advised of this." This was 12
curred in subsequently by all ports of all Dis- days after Seattle had concurred in our report
tricts including Seattle and printed in both the on the Canadian situation! At the June 6 Seattle
SEAFARERS LOG and the WEST COAST meeting, Mahoney repeated this statement before
SAILORS (official publications of the A&amp;G ancL the membership.
SUP).
On June 26, after Mahoney refused to appear
Furthermore, after this we were instructed by before an investigating committee to prove his
SIU President Lundeberg to go to Halifax to charges as requested by the Wilmington, New
protect the interests of the International in the York and Headquarters meetings, seven mem­
Canadian Field. After an investigation, when bers at a San Francisco Headquarters meeting
we had seen at first hand the goon tactics of the filed charges against Mahor^y because of "scur­
commies, we sent the following report to all rilous and defamatory remarks" which violated:
Branches of the A&amp;G District and the SUP:
1) the Oath of Obligation; 2) Article III,.Section
The following wire was read to the member­ 4 of the Constitution; 3) Article V, Section 1 of
ship:
the Constitution. In accordance with the ConThe Marine Cooks and Stewards (MCS) the ""stitutional provisions, Mahoney was requested
commie front union in the U.S. in an attempt to appear on July 5 before a Headquarters trial
to protect the interests of the kremlin has taken committee because of the seriousness of the
the position against the Seafarers International charges.
Union of North America in their present struggle
A special meeting was called in Seattle, on
against the communist' party in Canada and it' July 1, dominated by the Mahoney-Trotskyite
was learned today that the American represen­ gang, which requested SUP Headquarters to
tative of the MCS in New York advised all ^Ca­ postpone the trial, as Mahoney was "unable"
nadian Seamen's Union in Canada to assault to be in San Francisco on the date set. This
any representative of the SIUNA or any of their request was granted, and Mahoney was notified
affiliates whom it may encounter in American to appear on July 12. This gave Mahoney 16 days
ports. The MCS further advised the Canadian in which to prepare for the trial, instead of 5 as
Seamen's Union in Halifax to terrorize any and provided by the Constitution.
all seafarers in that port as a method of driving
This same Seattle special meeting demanded
the anti-communist seafarers out of Canada.
This is in keeping with the direct order from the that the trial be transferred to Seattle, and asked
communist international to all of its front or­ the official Seattle minutes of May 23 and June
ganizations such as the MCS surrender all pos­ 6 which recorded Mahoney's anti-union remarks—
sible support to the communist party in Canada and which had been accepted by the Seattle
in their life and death struggle with the SIU. Branch, with Mahoney as chairman on June 13
Through the efforts of the communist party in meeting — be changed. Both of these requests
Halifax several members of the SIU have been were in violation of the laws of the SUP.
Then, evidently afraid to let the case go to
severely beaten c^d six SIU men are now in
a
fair and open trial, Mahoney and his gang
jail in Halifax on trumped up charges brought
about by lying commies in this area. Although tried another unconstitutional trick. At the July
the SIU is now in a fight-to-the-end
struggle to
•/X
beat the pommies in Canada, we shall be success­
ful in doing so. Once this defeat of the commun­
ist party has been accomplished here in Canada
the MCS will then have full opportunity to an­
swer to the Seafarers for their finky Stalinist
stab in the back to our Union. The Seafarers are
now establishing permanent offices in Halifax
and are in Canada to stay. We advise all Sea­
farers in all American ports to be guided by 5 meeting in Seattle, which was again under the
this message.
control of the Mahoney-Trotskyite gang, the
Signed, MORRIS WEISBERGER,
meeting voted itself as a "committee of the
PAUL HALL,
whole" for the purpose of white-washing Ma­
Vice Presidents, SIUNA
honey. This was a violation of the Constitution,
because
the July 26 Headquarters meeting elected
This report was concurred in by all Branches
a trial committee to try Mahoney at the place
of both Districts, including ^eattle. '
It was at this crucial time that John Mahoney, where the men who preferred the ^charges were
»
who had a long record of disruption in the SUP to be found.
(as will be brought out later), rose at the May
This Trotskyite-rigged Seattle meeting (al-

�Friday. November 4, 1949
though warned by the Seattle SUP Agent that
the action was unconstitutional) completely
whitewashed Mahoney. At this meeting, Mahoney
declared that he had no intention of going to
San Francisco for trial. This in spite of the fact
that on July 1, this same Mahoney had asked
for an extension of time from Headquarters.
This made it pretty evident that request for
postponement was merely a maneuver for time,
and that Mahoney never had the slightest in­
tention of conforming to the Constitution and
membership action and attending the legal trial
as set by the membership.
At a subsequent meeting, July 18, the Seattle
Branch elected a committee of five to "review"
the case, a procedure that is not sanctioned in
any way by the SUP Constitution. It was simply
a case of finding a way, no matter how illegal,
to cover up their previous illegal action in white­
washing Mahoney. Frank Lovell, the chief Trotskyite hack, managed to capture the chairman's
^ob of the committee.
Meanwhile, the legal SUP trial committee met
in San Francisco from July 12 to July 14, taking
testimony from various witnesses. Each day the
trial committee called out for Mahoney or for
any witnesses he may have sent in his behalf,
but none appeared. On July 18, the committee's
report and recommendations were read to the
membership at Headquarters for action. After
reviewing the facts in the case, the committee
pointed out that the SUP as an organization
unanimously went on record in New York, Wil­
mington, San Francisco, Portland and Seattle,
on April 18, 1949 to "give the Canadian District
of the SIU 100 percent support" in its fight
against the communist-dominated CSU.
"... There can be no question in anyone's
mind" the committee's report went on to say,"
that the membership of the SUP had not estab­
lished a policy on this subject, and we further
find that all the legitimate trade unions, such as
the AFL Executive Board, which in its meeting
at Cleveland, Ohio, backed up the Canadian Dis­
trict, SIU, also the AFL Teamsters, Boilermakers,
Brotherhood of Railway Clerks, Longshoremen,
International Transportworkers Federation, and
all legitimate AFL unions in Canada... on the
other hand the only ones supporting the comintmist-controlled CSU was the National MC&amp;S
(CIO); the communist party's official organ, the
"Daily Worker;" the "Industrial Worker," official
organ of the IWW; the "Mili^nt," the official
organ of the Socialist Workers Party (Trotskyites), which publications have repeatedly at­
tacked the SUP and its officials and backed up
the communist-led CSU of Canada in this beef.
"As a matter of information, the communistled MC&amp;S have issued bulletins and leaflets at­
tacking the SUP officials in this fight and this
organization (the MC&amp;S-CIO) has been branded
by the membership of the SUP as dual and
hostile to the SUP."
The SUP trial committee's conclusions were
as follows:
"1. That John Mahoney violated the obligation
of the SUP which states:
"'I pledge my honor as a man that I will
be faithful to this Union and that I will work
for its interests and will look upon every mem­
ber as my Brother.'
"2. That John Mahoney violated' Article III,
Section 4, of the Constitution, as follows:
"'Any member who advocates and/or gives
aid to the principles or policies of any organi­
zation hostile or dual or gives aid or comfort
to such shall be denied further membership
in this Union.'
"While the committee makes no charge that
Mahoney is a member of any dual or hostile or­
ganization, nevertheless the statements which he
made in connection with the Canadian situation
are certainly the same statements made and pub­
lished by the communist party sheets, and the
MC&amp;S leaflets and bulletin and their official
paper, and as such did give aid and comfort to
a dual and hostile organization.

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

"3. We find John Mahoney guilty of violating
Article V, Section 1, as follows:
" 'It shall be the duty of every member to
be true and loyal to the Union and the labor
cause and to endeavor to put into practice the
principles laid down in the preamble. Members
shall treat the officials of the Union while dis­
charging their duties with due respect and
consideration and yield strict observance to
such rules as the Union may see fit to adopt.'
"It is the firm opinion of the committee that
it is the duty of the membership of the SUP'to
protect its duly elected officials in their task
of carrying out the policies laid down by the
membership, and certainly to term them 'strike­
breakers' is a direct reflection on the whole
membership because the men who act as the
officials of the SUP are elected by the member­
ship every year, through secret ballot, and they
carry out the policy of the organization as a
whole, and are entitled to due respect and pro­
tection from the membership, which HIRES
them when they elect them.
"If the membership does not give such protec­
tion, the orgamzation will not be able to get able
and conscientious men to run for office, and the
organization will gradually deteriorate.
"We, therefore, recommend that John Mahoney
be denied further membership in the SUP."
Put to a standing vote of the membership at
Headquarters, the committee's report was car­
ried by a vote of 313 to 1. The report was later
concured in by the Wilmington, New York,
Honolulu and Coos Bay Branches of the SUP.
At the July 25 meeting in Seattle, Agent Dombroff declared that the meeting would be un­
constitutional, unless Mahoney left the meeting
hall. Tfiis Mahoney refused to do, and the meet­
ing proceeded under the domination of the
Mahoney-Trotskyite group. A motion to adjourn
the meeting because of Mahoney's presence was

UNION HALL

lost by a vote of 63 for to 77 against adjourn­
ment. Approximately 40 members present did
not vote. In connection with this, it is interest­
ing to note that about 8 police squad cars were
parked outside of the meeting, headed by Ma­
honey's brother, a police captain. How many of
these forty sailors who did not vote were resi­
dents of Seattle and were reluctant to publically announce their opposition to Mahoney, who
was in a position to finger them to the cops—
especially in view of the fact that it is always

Page Seven

open season on seamen as far as the police in the
Port of Seattle are concerned.
It was obvious even to a first tripper that the
cops were there to back Mahoney, and to see to
it that the meeting did not bar him.
During all the time of this beef, the MahoneyTrotskyite gang have not been able to get sup­
port outside of Seattle, where, with their goon
squads and the Seattle police force they were
able to imtimidate the membership. True, the
Portland Branch did support these buzzards for
the first few meetings, primarily because the
Mahoney-Trotskyites sent their men in there to
pack the meetings and to distort the issues. The
most noted disruptor who invaded the Portland
meetings was none other than Seattles' Dick
Christian, a disgruntled, would be "labor leader"
who is up on charges for carrying on his dis­
ruptive role in the SUP.
However, it didn't take long for the member­
ship in Portland to see through these phonies,
and the Portland membership has consistently
opposed the Mahoney-Trotskyite gang ever since.
The "Seattle Committee" elected at the pre­
vious meeting to "investigate" the whole affair
then reported, and in a lengthy document (19
legal size sheets), typical in words and expres­
sion due to Lovell's influences to a Trotskyite
manifesto, not only completely exonerated Ma­
honey, but found the majority of the member­
ship who filed the charges and voted Mahoney
out of the SUP and the elected officials "guilty"
of crimes against the membership. That is, they
found the overwhelming majority of the mem­
bers guilty of crimes against themselves, while
only Mahoney and his Trotskyite, and gashound
cohorts were innocent.
Leon Trotsky, or for that matter Joe Stalin
himself, could not have done a better job of
misrepresentation and distortion of facts than
Lovell and his "committee" did.
From this time on, the Mahoney-Trotskyitegashound Brigade really went to town. They
started to throw their weight around, and openly
intimidated the membership.
The August 1 meeting was run by strong arm
methods. Pro-SUP members at this meeting were
told to sit down and shut up—or else. As a
clincher, the motorized division of their outfit—
Captain Mahoney of the police force and his
squad cars—was again parked outside of the
meeting, ready to clean out the loyal SUP men.
The Seattle officials again notified the mem­
bership that the meeting was unconstitutional,
inasmuch as Mahoney was present. But the
Mahoney-Trotskyite gang, thanks to the presence
of the police cars, was firmly in the saddle and
they proceeded to go on with the illegal meet­
ing.
On August 8, the Seattle SUP Agent posted a
notice on the bulletin board, stating that no
further meetings would be held in Seattle, until

�Page Eight
the provision of the Constitution, that no one but
SUP members in good standing be at the meetin, was lived up to. This was done under the
instruction of the membership at the August 1
Headquarters m,eeting, by a supreme quorum,
the highest authority of the union, and also con­
curred in by the majority of the Branches of
the SUP.
Despite the definite instructions of the sup­
reme quorum, the Mahoney-Trotskyite union
wreckers proceeded to hold a rump meeting that
night. Under the chairmanship of Frank Lovell,
the local Trotskyite fuehrer who was and is
directing this revolt against the SUP, the wreck­
ers adopted two resolutions.
One set up an "Emergency Committee to ac­
quaint the entire membership of the Sailors
Union with the unconstitutional and undemo­
cratic action of the officials of our union and to
take all steps possible to see that our Constitu­
tion is lived up to."
The other instructed the "Committee" to issue
a publication to pass on their lies and distor­
tions to the membership.
These two resolutions definitely set up un­
constitutional and dual bodies, inasmuch as these
groups are in direct conflict with constitutional
provisions. The first is illegal because, even if
the Mahoney-Trotskyite disrupters were right,
they had not exausted the constitutional provis­
ions that govern appeals from expulsions. In­
stead of conforming to the Constitution, they
were ignoring the votes of the membership and
setting up a committee to fight the member­
ships' wishes.
In the second, they were authorizing a paper
which, since it was purporting to be the voice of
the Seattle Branch of the SUP, was dual to the
"West Coast Sailors," the only Union newspaper
authorized by the SUP Constitution.
The paper, "The Defender," hit the streets the
very next day. Since the writing, typesetting,
and printing of a four-page paper is a job that
requires much more than one day, it is obvious
that these characters had moved in accordance
with a carefully plotted timetable, and had the
whole thing set up and printed in advance, with­
out even waiting for their own "official" ap­
proval.
"The Defender" proved to be a typical Trotskyite-commie sheet. It used every trick that
these unscrupulous would-be "revolutionaries"

had ever used before—outright lies and distor­
tions, half-truths, innuendoes, character assassin­
ation—in an effort to blast the Union and the
elected officials.
It was "The Defender"—of which four issues
have so far appeared — that turned the tide
against the Mahoney-Trotskyite disrupters. In­
stead of pleading Mahoney's case, and trying to
show that he was "illegally" expelled, the sheet
was devoted to al all-out battle against the SUP.
In its pages, the Union and its elected officials
were accused of every crime in the books. With
each issue, the support that Mahoney and the
Trotskyites had gotten from an uninformed
membership—men who had just gotten off ships
and had only heard the Mahoney-Trotskyite dis­
tortions—began to dwindle, as the members were
able to see the job that these characters were
out to do.
Attendance at the Seattle rump meetings be­
gan to fall off. For example, there were about
250 in attendance on the meeting of August 8,
and on^y 70 at the August 16 meeting, although
later meetings did pick up somewhat^ But when
they did it was not to the benefit of the disruptors, as more and more, the membership was

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

learning the score and becoming resentful of the
Trotskyite tactics against the Sailors Union.
More and more of the membership was turn­
ing against them and at the October 17 meeting
in Seattle, Frank Lovell, the Trotskyite water­
front section "leader" and the brains of the antiSUP campaign, was defeated for election for
chairman by a rank and file SUP member. This
is the first time that this had happened since
Mahoney, Lovell, and the Trotskyites had come
out into the open.
Buf to return: the "emergency committee,"
having issued a dual, slanderous anti-union pa­
per, then took the next logical step in its antiSUP campaign. At their August 22 rump meet­
ing, they decided to sue the Union, and hired a
Seattle legal beagle to sue the SUP on two
counts: 1) To force the SUP to reinstate Ma­
honey; 2) to force SUP to pay Mahoney $450 per
month from time he was expelled.
In the meantime, the Trotskyites were begin­
ning to tip off more of their hand. They opened
one of their hole cards, when Lovell began tell­
ing the members that it might be necessary for
the "Emergency Committee" to affiliate the
Seattle Branch of the SUP with Bridges' Long­
shoremen, the Marine Cooks and Stewards or the
Marine Firemen and form an Alaska Sailors
Union. (Interestingly enough, the MFOW, at
their August 25 meeting voted to form a threedepfirtment organization.)
The Trotskyite strategy was becoming clear:
to split away what they could from the SUP
and start an organization which they could dom­
inate. But at the same time, they were alienat­
ing those uninformed, members who because of
the one-sided story they got, honestly thought
that Mahoney may have been unjustly treated
and that he was a bona fide "labor martyr."
At this point things began to move more quick­
ly. Although the Emergency Committee still
continued to publish their scabby sheet, "The
Defender," they could see the handwriting on
the wall. Mahoney, whose record stamps him as
a guy who is strictly out for power, saw himself
being outmanuevered by the Trotskyites, who
controlled a majority of the Emergency Com­
mittee. Seeing himself being used as a pawn, and
his support dwindling, Mahoney sued for peace
and petitioned Headquarters for a new trial, of­
fering to come to Headquarters for that purpose
—which he refused to do at the time he was
first charged.
His letter was read to the September 12 Head­
quarters meeting and rejected by a vote of 580
to 3. The following week, the other Branches al­
so rejected the appeal by the following votes:
New York: 143 to none in favor.
Wilmington: 132 to 2.
Portland: 98 to 11.
The total votes, in Headquarters and Branches,
showed that 953 were against giving Mahoney a
new trial, while only 16 were in favor.
This should give a definite picture of what
the SUP membership, who were freely*" propa­
gandized by Mahoney and the Trotskyites, think
of the letter's disruption and splitting tactics.
As matters stand now, the swing in Seattle is
more and more against the Mahoney-Trotskyite
gang. The membership, having had a chance to
see how those birds operate, and for what pur­
pose, and coming in possession of the true facts,
have rallied to back the SUP against the dis­
ruption of these political hacks an dtheir stooges.
At this writing, the suit against the SUP has
not been dropped, and the Emergency Committee
is still putting out their scab sheet, "The De­
fender."
On the other side, the SUP has pushed its
fight against the political hacks who are trying
to take over . the SUP a-la-commie-Trotskyite
style. The Headquarters meeting of September
26 took two steps against them. One instructed
the Secretary of the Sailors Union to prefer
charges against the Emergency Committee and
the publishers of "The Defender" unless they
ceased their anti-Unidri activity.
The other classed the Socialist Workers Party

Friday, November 4. 1949
(the Trotskyites) with the communist party as
dual-and hostile to the Sailors Union, and de­
clared that charges would be placed against
members of these "degenerated political arms
of the Soviet Union" if they continue their dis­
ruption. Both of these were concurred in b^ the
membership in the ports of New York, Wilming­
ton, and Portland.
Under these resolutions, the leading Trotsky­
ites and disrupters have been brought up on
charges for 1) violation of the Obligation; 2)
not being true and loyal to the Union, and
following the rules adopted by the member­
ship; 3) refusing to abide by Section 1 of
Article 17 of the Constitution, which states:
"All Branches shall be under the immediate jur­
isdiction of Headquarters, and no rule adopted
or any action taken by any Branch shall be con­
sidered valid or binding upon the membership
or upon'the Unioiji until endorsed by the meet­
ing at Headquarters."
The Trotskyites and disrupters on charges are:
Sam Bayspoole, Aubrey H. F«irchild, Richard
Christian, Eugene Paff, and Frank Lovell.
(Editor's Note: As the LOG goes to press, we
are informed that the trial committee found

sup
/y\EMe£fiSH(P

these disrupters guilty, and that their report was
concurred in by the Headquarters meeting of
October 31.)
This is a brief history of the beef up to now.
All indications are that the SUP membership
will get rid of these cancerous characters and
will be stronger than ever for doing so.
Meanwhile, let us see just who and what these
characters are. What has Mahoney's record in
the SUP been up to now? Just who and what
are the Trotskyites, and what is.their role in
the trade union movement? Let us lift the rock
under which they have been hiding. It will be
very revealing.

Mahoney's Record Of
Disruption In SUP
John Mahoney's record in the Sailors Union
is a long and dishonorable one. The minutes of
the Seattle Branch overflow with instances of
disruption, disobedience of membership de­
cisions, wilful sabotage of the SUP, and a dis­
graceful exhibition of office-grabbing after hav­
ing been defeated by a referendum vote of all
Branches.
Let's go through the record, and see what
have been Mahoney's past actions in the Sailors
Union:
Mahoney ran for Patrolman in 1946 and was
defeated by the membership in coastwise secret
referendum ballot. When results were announ­
ced, Mahoney and his Seattle cohorts rigged a
job for him as "special" Patrolman in Seattle,
which he took over on March 4, 1946, despite the
membership's disapproval. ^
Shortly after the disruptive group put Ma­
honey in as Patrolman, an independent deal was,
rigged in the Port of Seattle to tie up all Alaska
Steamship Co. vessels. This irresponsible stunt
jeopardized the Union and the security of the
membership by laying them open to lawsuits by
the company. The Seattle disrupters refused to
follow out the Constitution or to consider the
membership's welfare, and disregarded Headquarter's order to settle the beef through regular
channels provided for by the agreement. When
Headquarters dispatched the Assistant SecretaryTreasurer to the Seattle Branch, he was met by
process servers.

�"V"

Friday, November 4, 1949
On May 20, 1946, Mahoney and the Seattle
Trotskyites, in a grandstand maneuver went on
record to demand overtime for all work done
by coolies in the Orient and to insert a rider in
the Articles to that effect—which was already
established SUP policy. It was also a Union rule
that no member had a right to hire a coolie to do
his work in the Orient. Despite his "militant"
pose, Mahoney ignored the membership mandate
while aboard an American Mail Lines ship this
year, by taking up collections from the crew to
pay coolies for doing sailors' work while in the
Orient.
In December, 1946, in the midst of the SUP
elections, Mahoney's clique attempted to rig a
deal on the Assistant Secretary-Treasurer by
proposing a phony resolution demanding his re- &lt;
call. The SUP membership overwhelmingly de­
feated the resolution.
In 1947 Mahoney again ran for Patrolman.
Again he was defeated. Brother Laslo was elect­
ed off the Deck as Patrolman for Seattle and
Headquarters ratified his election.
After the 1948 election, the Mahoney clique
rigged a deal on Laslo and substituted Mahoney
for Laslo, in spite of the fact that Laslo was
liked by the membership and was doing a good
job. Headquarters and the various Branches re­
fused to concur in making Mahoney a Patrol­
man. But again the Mahoney-Trotskyite machine
ignored the majority rule and the provisions of
the SUP Constitution.
April 12, 1948, the Union's Steamschooner Ne­
gotiating Committee reviewed the question of
wages, and recommended that the membership

vote on the steamschooner agreement. All the
Branches voted on the agreement, with the ex­
ception of the Mahoney machine-controlled port
of Seattle. Mahoney and his clique forced
through a motion that the Seattle Branch abstain
from voting and that the ballots which had been
cast in the meeting be destroyed. Thus the
Seattle membership was denied its right to vote

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

on proposals affecting their livelihood in direct
violation of the Constitution.
The SUP instructed Seattle to allow the mem­
bership there to vote, but this order was ignored.
In the April 26 meeting, Mahoney packed the
minutes with lies and distortions on negotiations.
Headquarters then went on record to notify Ma­
honey to appear before the Investigating Com­
mittee to explain his actions.
Mahoney ignored j;he Committee's notification
and refused to appear.
On Sept. 27, Mahoney went to bat for an ex­
pelled SUP member who was suing the Union.
The expelled member, Ben Weinberg, had been
found guilty of working with enemies of the
SUP. Mahoney and his group moved to non­
concur with the Trial Committee's report.
On Sept. 29, at a Seattle special meeting, and
on Oct. 4, at a regular meeting, Mahoney and
his Trotskyite disrupters—the same group that
is now actively fighting the SUP membership—
went on record to non-concur with the member­
ship's decision to man the vessels of the Union
Oil Company. Refusing to accept the majority
ruling, the Mahoney clique refused to handle the
company's ships when they arrived in the Port
of Seattle.
(The SUP had gone on record in 1935, after
losing the tanker strike, to consider the tanker
companies—including the Union Oil Company—
as unfair to the membership of the SUP until
such time as they were brought'under contract.)
On Dec. 13, Mahoney made a motion to non­
concur with the issuing of probationary books to
permitmen who had served as volunteer organ­
izers on the Union Oil Company's ships.
On Dec. 6, Mahoney and his Seattle clique
sought to split the Union by taking still another
unprecedented step that was absolutely con­
trary to membership policy. They attempted to
segregate members of the Black Gang and Stew­
ards Department, in a ruling that these men sit
in separate, specially designated places at the
Seattle meetings.
The pattern of disruption and the campaign
to wreck the security of SUP membership fol­
lowed by Mahoney and his group was also evi­
dent in the Rolando beef—a beef of vital concern
and major importance to the SUP membership.
Here again, Mahoney and his men ranged them­
selves on the side of the Union's outspoken en­
emies and against the membership of the SUP.
In addition, Mahoney (aided by the Trotsky-

Page Nine
ites) gave aid to the "home port" boys, who's
slogan is "Seattle ships for Seattle boys." They
acted as though Seattle was an autonomous ^
Branch, instead of being part of the Sailors
Union. Indeed, the only time they seemed to
consider themselves part of the SUP was when
they needed help. The rest of the time the
Seattle clique would non-concur with the other
Branches and refuse to follow Union policy.
Other Unions have had cases of "home ports"
and all have discovered that it cannot work.
But Mahoney and the Trotskyites—those "lead­
ers of the revolution"—continue to support this
policy.
This, then, is John Mahoney as far as the SUP
is concerned. One thing the record makes clear:
That far from being a "martyr" persecuted be­

cause he believes in trade union democracy, as
the Mahoney-Trotskyite gang claims, Mahoney
has a long record of going against the -decisions
of the membership; that, if anything the officials
of the Sailors Union have stretched the con­
cepts of Union Democracy to the fullest possible
extent, since charges could have been placed
against him for any number of previous uncon­
stitutional acts. Indeed, because they didn't, a
disservice was done the SUP, as the present dis­
ruptive acts of the Mahoney-Trotskyite gang
proves.
Once and for all his ov/n record smashes
Mahoney's claim that he is a "militant" sailor
who is being jobbed by the "reactionary leader­
ship of the Sailors Union."
Instead, Mahoney emerges for what he is: A
power-hungry guy who has consistently gone
against the membership's decisions; who has
placed the SUP in dangerous positions; who has
helped dual and hostile organizations attempting
to smash the SUP; and who has sabotaged the
Sailors Union at all turns.
This is the record of the man who will bring
"democracy" to the Sailors Union—the TrotskyStalin style. Judge for yourself.

Trotskyism: Enemy Of Democratic Unions
What are the Trotskyites? What do they stand
for? What are they trying to do in the labor
movement? Many of us have at one time or an­
other come across some of these characters, and
have heard them spout the "party-line" like an
evangelist giving out free passports to heaven.
You may have read some of their literature,
promising you the "better life" if you follow
their leadership.
You may even have met some on the picketline, because Trotskyites make it a point to be
very active in whatever Union they happen to
be in-^as a matter of fact, the party forces them
to get jobs in basic industries, to join and be ac­
tive in the unions—they do this so that they can
"stand out" before the membership and, if at all
possible, be elected to positions of authority.
In view of the SUP Seattle beef it would be
very interesting to examine these Trotskyites a
little more closely to see just what they are, and
if their union-busting role in Seattle is the ex­
ception to their general trade union policies. Let's
take a look at the record—at their record, as
they themselves wrote it.
First of all, the, Trotskyites are a splinter
group of the communist party, formed 'in 1928
when Leon Trotsky and his followers were kick­
ed out of the communist international by Joe
Stalin.
Their position then, as it is now, was that Rus­

sia is a "workers' state" and must be defended
at all costs. Their beef against Russia is not that
it is run by the commies—but rather that it is
not run by the right commies. They believe that
if the present "degenerate bureaucrats" were
thrown out and replaced by Trotskyite commies
then everything would be okay.
For the first five years of their organization,
they were content to snipe at the commies, and
they even called themselves "a faction" of the
communist party and of the communist interna­
tional. They used all the tactics they had learned
when they were Stalin's buddies to lop off a
member here and there from the commies. They
made no attempts to get other rq^ruits, because
the "masses" (meaning the average working
stiff) were "undeveloped, unorganized and un­
educated" while the commies were the "van­
guard" or so-called "leaders" of the working
class.
"Then in the early part of 1933," writes James
Cannon, the Trotskyite fuehrer in America (His­
tory of American Trotskyism, page 104), "we
began to intervene more actively in the general
labor movement . . . We did not engage in ac­
tivity merely for the sake of activity ... We
were prepared to enter the mass movement with
a clearly defined program and with methods
calculated to bring the maximum results to the
revolutionary movement ..."

The "revolutionary movement," of course, was
the Socialist Workers Party, the Trotskyite or­
ganization. So from the very beginning, when
they decided to enter into "mass" work, their
purpose was clear—to work in the trade unions
as a political organization, for their own inter­
ests.
There is no point in going any further in the
history of the Trotskyite party. It is enough to
show that they were conceived in the commun­
ist party, were raised on the same disruptioni^
tactics and, like the cotnmies, were determined
to try to capture the trade union movement for
their own political benefits.
What we want to show, through their own
official records and words, is what the Trotsky­
ites are, what they are trying to do, and expose
them for the menace they are to the free, demo­
cratic trade unions.
First, just what kind of organization is the
Socialist Workers Party, the Trotskyites? The
following quotations from resolutions passed by
the party's convention on April 8, 1940, make
this very clear.
"The Socialist Workers Party is a revolution­
ary Marxian party, based on a definite program,
whose aim is the organization of the working
class in the struggle for power and the trans­
formation of the existing social order. All of
its activities, its methods and its internal regime

�Page Tea

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, November 4, 1949

are subordinated to this aim and are designed
to serve it."
»

*

»

"The struggle for power organized and led by
the revolutionary party (that is, the Trotskyites:
Ed.) is the most ruthless and irreconcilable in
all history. A loosely-knit . . . undisciplined, un• trained organization is utterly uncapable of ac, complishing such world-historical tasks as the
r proletariat and the revolutionary party are con{.fronted with in the present era . . . From this
; follows the party's unconditional demand upon
J all its members for complete discipline in all
public activities and actions pf the organization."
XT.

•

•

•

,

. ji "Party membership implies the obligation of
. pne hundred percent loyalty to the organization,
.;.the rejection of all agents of other hostile groups
,4n its ranks, and intolerance of divided loyalties
in general. Membership in the party necessitates
ijja minimum of activity in the organization, as
established by the proper unit, and under the
jdirection of the party; it necessitates the fulfillyment of all the tasks which the party assigns to
;;each member. Party membership implies the
obligation upon every member to contribute
xpaaterially to the support of the organization in proletarian milieu (that. Brothers, means 'me­
dium or environment:' Ed.) and to attract to the
^.accordance with his means."
party worker militants shall be transfered from
*
•
*
party
membership to the ranks of sympathizers.
"The decisions of the national party conven}:tion are binding on all party members without Special organizations of sympathizers may be
. exception and they conclude the discussion of all formed for this* purpose." (Special emphasis of
^.these disputed questions upon which a decision this paragraph was given it by the Trotskyites.)
These paragraphs make it clear that the Trot­
(has been taken. Any pafty member violating
s the decisions of the convention, or attempting to skyites, no matter what they say about the dic­
jjevive discussion in regard to them without tatorship of Stalin over the communist parties
.formal authwization of the party, puts himself all over the world, are themselves organized in
(thereby in opposition to the party and forfeits the same way, and exercise the same iron-hand
control over the membership as the Stalinist
his right to membership."
commies
do.
^ In other words, when a man joins the Trotsky­
They also make it very clear that their first
ites, he has signed himself over completely to
target
is the free, democratic trade unions of this
the party. He must do those things that the
party tells him to do. He cannot question any country to take control of them for the Trotsky­
policy of the party unless the party gives him ites' political advantage.
But perhaps more proof is needed. Have a
permission, and there's no chance of that. In
look
at something that Leon Trotsky himself
addition he must give "materially" to the party
wrote about their attitude toward trade unions.
^and that means heavy financial support.
In
a pamphlet called "Their Morals And Ours,"
Does that give you an idea? Well, here are
I more quotes from the 1940 Trotskyite convention: on pages 32-33, Trotsky has this to say:
"In 1935, through a letter to my Belgian
. "The Bolshevik party of Lenin is the only
friends,
I developed the conception that the at­
party in history which successfully conquered
tempt
of
a young revolutionary party to or­
I and held state power. The Socialist Workers
i Party, as a combat organization, which aims at ganize "its own' trade unions is equivalent to
achieving power in this country, models its or­ suicide. It is necessary to find the workers where
ganization forms and methods after those of the they are. But this means paying dues in order
Russian Bolshevik party, adapting them, natur­ to sustain an opportunist apparatus? 'Of coursei'
ally, to the experience of recent years and to I replied, 'for the right to imdermine the re­
formists it is necessary temporarily to pay them
.concrete American conditions."
a contribution.' But the reformists will not per­
mit
us to undermine them? 'True,' I answered.
"To transform the SWF into a proletarian
party of action, particularly in the present pe­
riod of reaction, it is not enough to continue
iPropagandistic activities in the hope that by an
automatic process workers will flock to the ban­
ners of the party. It is necessary, on the con­
trary, to make a concerted, determined and sys­
tematic effort, consciously directed by the lead­
ing committees of the party, to penetrate the
workers' movement, establish the roots of the
^arty in the trade unions, the mass labor organi"undermining demands conspirative measures.
isations and in the workers' neighborhoods and
Reformists are the political police of the bour­
'.tecruit worker militants into the ranks of the
geoisie within the working class. We must act
party.
without their |(ermission, and against their inter­
, "To proletarianze the party, the following steps
diction ..."
*
are imperative:
That's pretty cle^, isn't it? Comrade Trotsky
"1. The entire party membership must be di­
doesn't mince any words, or hide behind the
rected towards rooting, itself in the factories,
fancy double-talk phrases that'those long haired
inills, etc., and towards integrating itself in the
boys like to use. They're out to "undermine the
unions and workers' mass organization^
reformists" (a "reformist" is any trade union
"2. Those members of the party who are not official or rank and file leader who isn't a Trot­
workers shall be assigned to work in labor or­ skyite; unless he's a commie, and then he's a
ganizations, in workers' neighborhoods and with "Stalinist betrayer"), and "undermining demands
the worker-fractions of the party—to assist them conspirative measures," because the damned re­
and leam from them. AU unemployed members formists won't permit themselves to be xmdermust belong to and be active in organizations of mined.
the unemployed.
In the face of this statement, it's impossible to
Y "Those party members who find it impossible put any sort of belief in any Trotskyite state­
after a reasonable period of time to work in a ments when they talk of fighting
for democ­

racy in trade unions, when they talk of fighting
for the protection and advancement of the workingman. By their own words (which the ordinary
working stiff seldom sees, because they are
generally written for the long hairs and are full
of specialized "Marxist" phrases) their aim is to
capture control of the labor movement for poli­
tical purposes, and by using every conniving
trick in the books.
In the book mentioned above, on page 30,
Trotsky, with an approving comment, quotes
Lenin, the founding father of both communism
and Trotskyism, as saying:
"It is necessary to be able ... to resort to all
sorts of devices, maneuvers, and illegal methods,
to evasion and subterfuge, in order to penetrate
into the trade unions', to remain, in them, and
to carry on communist work in them at all
costs."
In carrying out their "conspirative measures"
and "maneuvers and illegal methods," they draw
no line. They would just as soon as not destroy
a union, if they cannot capture it. (The record
of the communist party in this is much hiore
evident, but that is only because the Trotskyites
are a younger, weaker organization. Give them
time, Brother.)
What they are doing now in Seattle—working
with dual unions, and an expelled member and
the Seattle police force, in an effort to weaken
and split the SUP—is living proof of this.
The Trotskyites' union record is studded with
instances where they worked hand in hand with
the commies (whom they call "betrayers of the
working class"X with fascist elements and rack­
eteers, in order to defeat the "reformist" union
leadership. In recent years they banded with
those groupings in the United Automobile Work­
ers, International Ladies Garment Workers
Union, The United Steel Workers, and many
others. Most recently, at the convention of the
National Maritime Union, they even lined up
with the Stalinist commies to try to take a piece
of that union for themselves.
Their present role in the NMU is interesting
in view of their history in maritime. Originally,
on orders from the party, the Trotskyites flocked
into the Sailors Union, on the theory that it
offered, as a union with no established "bureau­
cracy," an excellent opportunity for these hot­
shot "militants" to take over. Then, when the
A&amp;G District was chartered by the Seafarers
International Union, a group of them were or­
dered by the party to transfer to the East and
Gulf Coasts.
There for some years, they di^ their best,
using their grandest "conspirative measures" to
gain control. They used individual against in­
dividual, group against group, port against port,,
in their attempt to capture the A&amp;G District for
the "revolution." They did not hesitate to spread
lies and slanders against anyone who fought

�Friday. Noyember 4. 1949
them and their political propaganda in the union.
Perhaps one example will illustrate the depths
to which these disrupters will sink in order to
carry out the Trotskyite party line. During the
1946 General Strike, when the SIU tied up the
waterfront of the entire nation to keep the freely
negotiated wage increases that the Washington
bureaucrats tried to take away, a few Trotskyites
were on the Headquarters Strike Committee,
True to the Trotskyite line as published in their
scandal sheet, the/'Militant," they proposed fhat
the NMU, then controlled by the commies, be
invited to a joint strike committee.
This the strike committee voted down. Imme­
diately the Trotskyites began a vicious campaign
of character assassination and deliberate lies
against one of the officials who had been partic­
ularly active in opposing their "united front"
proposition. In gin mills and even on picket lines
Trotsky Hacks spread the word that this official
was an oldtirne anti-labor goon; that he had been
one of the ringleaders when the Ku Klux Klan
fatally flogged Joseph Shoemaker, a labor or­
ganizer, in Tampa in 1935.
That this scabby lie did not go over was not
the Trotskyites* fault. Certainly they did their
best, during an extremely dangerous time for
the Union—when it was important that the
Union be united in action and high in morale—
to disrupt the strike apparatus by casting re­
flections on the pro-unionism of a leading figure
in the strike in precisely the same manner as
they had done in other strikes in other fields.
This finky tactic did more than fail—it back­
fired against the Trotskyite plotters. An alert
membership began to see them for what they
were: a conspirative group which put their Trot­
skyite party far above the interests of the Union;
a group that was out, not to win higher wages
and better conditions for the membership, but
to make the SIU a jiawn in their plot to estab­
lish their "bolshevik" dictatorship over the peo­
ple and maritime workers of the United States.
From that time on, whatever small influence
they had got as "militants" in the organization
began to fall. They were through in the A&amp;G
District, and. they knew it.
Then when Joe Curran began to turn against
his former commie buddies in the NMU, Myers,
Smith, et al., and asked for help, they flocked to
the NMU. Among the well-known Trotskyites
who went to the NMU were such party hotshots
as Ray Sparrow, Harry Becker (now an NMU
Patrolman, he left the SIU sometime before the
other Trotskyites,) Sam Shatovnick and Tom
Kerry.
Why Curran, after his long experience with
the Stalinist commies, should have welcomed
these Trotskyite commies is something that only
he can explain, and he hasn't found a good
answer yet.
But Curran soon found out. No sooner had the
Trotskyites gotten into the NMU .to "help" throw
the commies out of office and weaken the com­
mie group in the NMU, than they (the Trotsky­
ites) joined up with the commies and a few
would-be "labor leaders" to throw Curran out
of the NMU.
Why? Well, key NMU officials would not let
themselves be" controlled by the Trotskyites.
They wanted -to do all the controlling them­
selves. But why did the Trotskyites line up with
the commies and the strictly-for-pie guys? Well,
the commies were weakened and could not cap­
ture the entre organization. If Curran's machine
could be defeated, then some of the power would
fall into the Trotskyites' hands.
A few weeks after the convention, Charlie
Keith, an expelled commie, appeared at the Bal­
timore NMU meeting with two commies and
two Trotskyites. These four phonies worked to­
gether as a bloc to try to defeat the convention
decisions. On the face of it, this is a queer
coalition. But it is not queer, once you realize
that both the commies and Trotskyites hold m
common one basic belief-"we will work with
anyone on any issue, as long as we stand to
gain, no matter what happens to the union."

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

No matter that the commies "betrayers of
the working class" would also get some power.
What mattered was that ihey, the Trotskyites,
would have some power, and could try from
there on to work to consolidate control. To hell
with the union, or the welfare of the member­
ship! Political control of the union was more
important!'
In "The History of American Trotskyism,"
James Cannon tells (without apologies—on the
contrary, with pride) of the time the Trotskyites
sold a strike down the river and smashed a
union, all in the name of "party discipline," and
to save the party's face. But let Cannon tell the
story (pages 126-134):
"At the turn of the eventful year of 1933, an
organizational movement began among the hardpressed hotel workers in New York City, who
had been without union protection for years . . .
This revived organization movement offered us
(the Trotskyites) our first big chance in the mass
movement since 1928. We had an opportunity to
penetrate this movement from the beginning, to
shape its development, and eventually to have
the leadership of a general strike of hotel work­
ers in New York. The affair ended in a disgrace­
ful debacle through the incompetence and treach­
ery of" some individual members of our move­
ment who were placed in key positions . . .
"... By chance, a few members of our party
belonged to this independent union which be­
came the medium for the organization campaign.
As the hotel workers began to turn toward
unionism in a big way, this handful of Trotskyists found themselves in the midst of a swirling
mass movement. We had a comrade, an old-time
militant in the trade, and after years of isolation
he suddenly found himself an influential figure.
Then we had in the party at that time a man
named B. J. Field, an intellectual. He had never
been engaged in trade union work before. But
he was a man of many intellectual accomplish­
ments, and in our general push toward mass
work, in our drive for contact with the mass
movement. Field was assigned to go into the

hotel situation to help our faction and to give
the union the benefit of his knowledge as a
statistician, an economist and a linguist.
"It happened that the most strategically im­
portant sector in the hotel situation was a group
of French chefs . . •. (who) played a predominant
role. Many of these French chefs could not speak'
or discuss things in English. Our intellectual
could talk French with them till the cows came
home. This gave him extraordinary importance
in their eyes. The old secretary was leaving of­
fice, and . . . the French chefs insisted that Field
should be secretary of this promising union, and
he was duly elected ..."
Cannon goes on to relate how the Trotskyites
went all out for the strike. They "poured every­
thing we had into the task to make it successful.
The whole New York organization was mobilized
..." The strike had a promising beginning, but
then began to encounter some difficulties. The
Trotskyites tried to advise Field how to deal
with the government agencies.
But Field had ideas of his own. "He disregard­
ed the fraction (caucus: Ed.) of his own party in
the union—which is always the sign of a manwho has lost his head . . . Field began to dis­
regard the militants of his own party fraction
who were right there by his side and should
have been the machine through which he car­
ried out everything. Not only that. He began to
disregard the National Committee . . .
"Each day that went by, our heedless intellect­
ual pulled farther away from us . . . We begged
him to consult us, to come and talk to the Na­
tional Committee about the policy of the strike

Page Eleven
which was beginning to sag because it was. being
directed wrongly . . .
"Eventually the hotel strike bogged down . . .
Meanwhile our enemies were waiting to say: 'We
* told you so. The Trotskyists are nothing but
sectarian hair splitters. They can't do mass work.
They can't lead strikes.' It was a heavy blow to
us. We had the name of, leading the strike but
not the influence to shape its policy, thanks to
the treachery of Field. We were in danger of
having our movement compromised. If we should
condone what was being done by Field and his
group we could only spread demoralization in
our own ranks ...
"We had before us a fundamental problem
which is decisive for every revolutionary poli­
tical party: Shall trade union functionaries de­
termine the party line and lay down the law to
the party, or shall the party determine the line
and lay down the law to the trade union func­
tionaries? The problem was posed point-blank
in the midst of this strike. We did not evade the
issue. The decisive action which we took at that
time colored all the future developments of our
party in the trade union field and did a great
deal to shape the character of our party.
/
"We put Mr. Field on trial in the middle of
the strike. Big as he was, we brought charges
against him for violating party policy and parly
discipline ...
"We proceeded resolutely to expel Field and
all those who solidarized with him in that situa­
tion. We threw them out of our organization in
the midst of the strike." (Emphasis ours: Ed.)
There is the whole sordid story. Because they
had lost political control of a union, they sold
10,000 strikers down the river. Because they no
longer could direct the course of the strike, they
pulled out their support (whatever that was—
but every man counts in a strike situation) so
that the Trotskyites would not be "compromised'*
if the strike was to be lost.
Yet this is not an isolated incident. Their finky
action in the hotel strike follows very definitely
from their program, from their concept of trade
unionism. The Trotskyites believe, as they have
made very clear, that a union cannot exist mere­
ly for the improvement of working conditions
and the raising of wages. In that case it would
be "reformist." It must be under the control and
direction of a "revolutionary" party (the Trot­
skyites, of course), and the union's program and
actions must be subordinated to the political
program of the Trotskyites.
If it is politically important for the Trotsky­
ites to call a strike—say, for example, in a de­
fense plant during wartime, in order to weaken
or overthrow the "ruling class"—they will not
hesitate to do so, even thought the workers and
the country stand only to lose. The unions
are important only insofar as they can be used
to carry out the overall strategy of the Trotsky­
ites. Nothing else matters. If necessary, they will
not hesitate to smash a union, if by doing so
they stand a chance to pick up the pieces.
Lack of space is the only thing that keeps
this article from being three or four times as
long. The Trotskyite record, like that of the
commies, is a stench in the nostrils of the labor
movement. But even this brief article is enough
to hang these political finks
by their own
record. There is no place in the labor movement
for characters who place the interests of a poli­
tical party over and above that of their trade
union which puts the bread into their mouths
and gives them job security.
The Trotskyites have gotten no place in the
A&amp;G District—the membership never went for
their line of hokum. And as far as the SUP is
concerned, the few Trotskyites there have dug
their grave themselves—as they had to, inevit­
ably. They are on their way out of the "reform­
ist" labor movement, along with their co-con­
spirators, the commies, so the chances are that
you won't come across very many of them. But,
if you should by chance, let them know very
definitely that you don't go for their kind of
disruptionist bull.

�THE SEAFARERS

Page Twelve

LOG

Friday, Koi^ber 4, 194d

NEWS
Seatrain NJ Crew Sponsors
Frolic In Louisiana Port

SEAFARERS PULL TOGETHER

Down in Belle Chasse, Louisiana, the word Seafarer
packs a lot of good will among the local folks. And you
can thank the men aboard the Seatrain ships, especially
those on the Seatrain New*
Jersey, for creating a con­
siderable measure of this
good will.

The deaths of two Sea­
farers, Charles A. Miller and
Lester K. Hodges, were" re­
ported to the LOG this week.

Brotherly Spirit
Works Overtime
On a recent. stopover at Belle
Chasse, where Seatrain ships
tie-up and which is sort of a hop, On Steel Worker
skip and a jump from New Or­
leans, the crew of the railroad
car carrier New Jersey played
host to the community for an
evening's fun and frolic.
Scene of the gambol was
Belle Chasse's Spotlight Tavern
where the boys set up a full
three hours of motion picture
entertainment, amateur vaude­
ville and dancing. The carnival
atmosphere was enhanced by the
customary popcorn, potato chips
and cokes, also supplied by the
boys from the New Jersey.
The number one spot of the
film presentations, went to the
SIU's documentary of the famed
Wall Street beef, "The Battle of
Wall Street," which created a
considerable stir among the Belle
Chasse audience. Seafarer Rob­
ert Lester, motion picture hobby­
ist on the New Jersey, furnished
the sound projector and screen.
Brother Lester also brought
along a dozen musical and short
features, which he ran off after
the "Battle," including "Show­
boat," featuring the Andrews
Sisters and "New England Holi­
day."
For the rest of the evening
Bill Grey was at the helm as
master of ceremonies.
When the session ended, the
New Jersey's Delegates reported
that there were no beefs, either
from the" good people of Belle
Chasse, or the sound Union crew
of the New Jersey. In fact, they
said everyone was downright
happy about the whole thing and
was looking forward to a repeat
performance.
-

The boys aboard the SS Steel
Worker, Isthmian, keep the old
Union spirit working overtime.
Not long ago the Steel Worker
Seafarers bought a nevv wash­
ing machine and up c.nme the
question: "What to do with the
old one?"
In typical Union style, the
crev^ decided at the Sept. 25
shipboard meeting to turn it
over to another SIU ship.
Indirectly, the purchase of a
new washing machine also had
recreational benefits for the Steel
Worker crew. The $13 that was
left over from the original col­
lection is to be used in getting
additional athletic equipment
^r the crew, it was decided at
the shipboard session.

The Steel Rover attempts to refloat the Beaver Victory (rear).
Despite two days of tugging
and straining, the Steel Rover
was unable to budge the ground­
ed Beaver Victory more than a
half-degree from the shore
of the East African coast and
the Isthmian Steamship Com­
pany dispatched three tugs from
India to refloat the helpless ves­
sel. They failed too, and the

ship is being unloaded at the spot.
Russell Lund, Utility, on the
Steel Rover, reported that his
ship passed the Beaver Victory
while proceeding from the Ara­
bian Sea to the Red Sea on
Sept. 9. The attempts at refloat­
ing the Beaver Vic were made
several times at high tide, with
steam up high.

Voice Of The ,Sea'
By "SALTY DICK"
Although practically every
Seafarer who has been elected
to a Port Agent's job has served
as a Patrolman, it might be a
good idea to add the following
to the requirements for the im­
portant Agent's posts: That all
candidates have at least one
year's experience before being
eligible for the higher job.
Mfchael Kolonik has a problem concerning love. He" plans
on saving some money and then
asking the girl to become his
one and only... The recent ac-

HITTING THE ROAD IN HONG KONG

Brothers Miller,
Hodges Die
In US Hospitals

Brother Miller died on Sept.
23 at the US Naval Hospital,
Long Beach, Calif., after being
removed from the Isthmian ship
SS Meredith Victory, on which
he had been employed as Sec­
ond Cook and Baker.
Burial services, arranged and
paid for by the Union, were held
at Westminster Memorial Park
in Long Beach. Meredith Victory
crewmembers H. Lanier, R. D.
Ewing, M. Pasquale, J. Paerels,
N. W. Kirk and R. J. Cella serv­
ed as pallbearers. Flowers were
sent by crews of the Santa Clara
Victory and the Pennmar.
Brother Miller, who resided in
Providence, R. I., was born in
New York Nov. 20, 1912. He
joined the SIU" in New York
May 25, 1943 and held Book
No. 25904.
Besides his mother, Mrs. Mary
J. .MiUer, of 254 Lenox Ave.,
Providence, R. I., he is survived
by a sister.
HODGES DIED IN BALTIMORE
Brother Hodges died sudden­
ly in the Baltimore Marine Hos­
pital on Aug. 2. He had been
an SIU member since May 18,
1944, when he received Book
No. 33962 in New Orleans.
The body was brought for
burial to Lake Luzerne, N. Y.,
where Hodges lived with his
family.
An Oiler, Brother Hodges
made his last trip on the SS
Southwind. He was born in Sara­
toga Springs, N. Y., July 19,
1893.
Surviving are his mother, Mrs.
Josephine Gilroy, of Lake Luz­
erne; two sons, Lester K. of
Milwaukee and Edward A. of
the U. S. Army; five brothers
and five sisters.
Brother Hodges was also in
good standing and the Union
paid burial benefit.

tion of the Alcoa Ranger crew Annual SIU elections are com­
willing the shipboard washing ing up soon. A good Union man
machine to the nearest Union will always have "Voted" stampHall in the event the ship is ' ed in his membership book —
ever laid-up or transferred to unless, of course, he was at sea
another flag sounds like- smart during balloting.
thinking. Maybe other crews will Sorry to hear 4hat "Red" Honfollow suit.
neycutt is in the New Orleans
Ivan Duming of the SS Ca­ Marine Hospital. Maybe some of
valier is waiting on tables . . . you guys can find time to drop
Some men say that our publica­ him a line. It'll make Red aw­
tion, the SEAFARERS LOG, fully happy . . . Some time ago
should be financed by an annual Bob Creel said he was figuring
assessment. Others prefer the on staying'ashore for awhile. But
present voluntary method of do­ Bob's apparently like all seamen
nations. What do you think? ... and can't get the salt water out
Some of the boys who have been of his mind. He's back at the
calling at Trujillo City are buy­ Union Hall in New Orleans wait­
ing beautiful salad bowls for ing for a ship. But then, who
their wives.
takes an oldtimer seriously when
Jack Nagler would rather he says "no more sea for me."
look at a race horse than a
beautiful woman. Don't ask me
why. I can't see it myself...
Fred -Barthes may have to
leave his ship soon because of
a broken finger . . . Jack DoThe experience Henry C. Sanabria got while shining
len is heading for the Staten
Island Marine Hospital for a brass-as a Deck Gang man aboard SIU ships ought to
spell. But he plans to head for prove mighty valuable to him one of these days. The one­
old New Orleans as soon as
time Seafarer is now attend-*
'
rz:
he recovers.
iHg the United States Naval Sa-abna began saUmg as an SIU
permit man. He remained in the
Regardless of when you run
Academy
at
Annapolis,
Md.,
Union until late in 1948, when
into John Ulas, he's dressed to
and
who
can
say
that
Hank
he rejoined the Navy in Balti­
kill. Right now, John is- waiting
for a job as Bosun—prefers a won't .some day make his more.
He took the Naval Academy
long trip ,.. Irving Blumenberg star as a ranking Navy
examinations for enlisted rrien
is reading the New York Times brasshat.
in April 1949 and shortly after
while he nurses a charley horse.
Sanabria
entered
the
Academy
was
informed that he had made
He got it roUer skating . . .
this
month
as
a
plebe—the
Navy
the
grade.
Tommy Horan just left the East
Among the SIU ships Sanabria
Coast. About 30 years ago, he term for a first-year man—after
a
stint
as
a
seaman
at
the
Naval
sailed
were the SS Mooring
danced in all the night clubs
Station,
Bainbridge,
Md.,
accord­
Hitch,
Alcoa;
SS Steel Designer,
of Europe, but always managed
ing
to
Anthony
Stanton,
FOW.
Isthmian;
SS
Overling Victory,
to be aboard ship and working
and
the
tanker
Nathaniel Pal­
Discharged
from
the
Navy
in
the next morning. He recently
mer,
Palmer
Shipping
Company.
1947
after
a
four-year
hitch.
celebrated his 58th birthday.

-Brass-Polishing May Help
Seafarer Now Academy Man

Michael Kolonik believes in riding in style when he sets
out to see the sights of the town. This photo was taken
vhoi he was working as Chief Electrician aboard the SS
Steel Executive.

�Friday, November 4, 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Thirieen

Digested Minutes Of Sill Ship Meetings
INES, Aug. 27—G. Quinones,
ALLEGHENY VICTORY, Sept.
Chairman; F. Loriz, Secretary.
17—F. Beers, Chairman; E. Au
Few hours disputed overtime in
busson. Secretary. Ship's Dele­
Deck Gang, dispute over ^ two
gate reminded delegates that all
dollars in lieu of linen in Black
contested overtime should be
Gang and no. beefs in Stewards.
turned in to him before ship's
J. Soto elected Ship's Delegate.
arrive in Los Angeles at which
Deck beef on equalization of
time he will send copies prop­
overtime was squared away in
erly written up by Captain to
typical SIU style after a dis­
headquarters. Under Education
cussion of matter. Steward said
crew discussed topics from Un­
he will issue linen to men in
ion's Bulletin, including Pana­
amount turned in. Recommended
ma boycott question, sending, of
that the cold water shower be
arms aid in US ships, and Un­
checked.
ion's fight to protect indemnity
rights of injured seamen.
^
%
TRINITY, Sept. 9—J. Bolz. ter to Ore SS Co., re: food sit­
4. 4, 4.
Chairman; J. P. Mason, Secre­ uation. Same to be referred to JEFFERSON CITY VICTORY,
tary. No beefs in any of the de­ Patrolman. No major beefs. Sept. 4—R. Sweeney, Chairman;
ELSCTtON
partments. Motion carried to try Ship's Delegate brought up J. Riley, Secretary. Motion car­
Black
Gang
beef
regarding
pro­
to get second pumpman added
ried to excuse Bosun and Deck
to manning scales. Under Ed­ longed watches occasioned by Maintenance. R. Sweeney elect­
ucation, the Union and its prob­ time changes at Sandy Poiht. ed Ship's Delegate. Chief En­
\9BO OPFiaAl^
lems were discussed. All hands To be referred to Patrolman up­ gineer is to be asked to replace
agreed that the new overseas on arrival. Suggested that U- whistle in engine room with
Bulletin that is mailed to each brary be replenished while ship, something less.noisy. One min­
ship is just what we needed as is in drydock. Steward will take ute of silence in memory of Bro­
it gives members the up-to-date care of this.
thers lost at sea.
S. t. X
goings on in our organization;
X X i
STEEL VENDOR, Sept. 18 — ROBIN GRAY.
Motion by J. Crowley, seconded
Sept. 4-.Tex
by J. Bolz, carried calling for Wiley Parrot, Chairman; Vincent Morton, Chairman; R. Oden, Sec­
vote of thanks for the Stewards Orencio, Secretary. Delegates re­ retary. No beefs in any of the
Department in appreciation of ports accepted. Brother Maher departments. Jack Heacox elect­
its fine work in feeding the moved and it was carried that ed Ship's Delegate by unani­
letter be sent to Headquarters mous vote. Suggested that Ship's
crew. stating that crew is wholeheart­ Delegate see Captain about
edly in favor of the new General painting PO mess and about get­
Fund assessment. Motion carried ting water cooler fixed. Steward
that new members of crew who sent report on shortage of meat
have not contributed for pur­ stores to New York Hall to see
chase of washing machine should if something cannot be done
t.
t
give
$3.00, out of which Ole about this situation.
JAMES T. RENARD
visit him at his home at 1059
WILLIAM H. ALLEN, Sept. 4
Hanstvedt
is to be reimbursed
Anyone knowing the last ad­ Flushing. Ave., Brooklyn, N. Y.,
—John Morris, Chairman; John
dress of Brother James T. Ren- as soon as possible. Very im­
Jakubawszek. Secretary. All del­ for the sum of $8.00, which he
ard, whose death in Bremen, portant.
egates' reports accepted. The laid out. Remainder of contribu­
Germany, while a crewmember
Ship's Delegate said that Union­ tions are to go into ship's fund
4 4 4
of the Ames Victory, has recent­
GEORGE MELTZER
ism should not be .preached after deducting cost of films and
ly been reported to his family, The material which you re­
from the barroom floor. Charges developing to reimburse Brother
XXX
will please forward it to his quested has been forwarded to
to be filed against crewmem- Joe Dioquino for pictures taken.
BEATRICE. Sept. 16—A. Lob- brother Louis J. Renard, 6149 the New Orleans Hall from New
S' SI jt&gt;
bers accused of slanderous re­
MONROE VICTORY, Sept. 11 bregt. Chairman; G. Clark, Sec­ 62nd Ave., Maspeth, L.I., N.Y. York.
marks against Union, for mak­
ing statement to communist —E. F. Spear, Chairman; H. Lea, retary. - No beefs reported; all The family is anxious to get
4 4 4
newspaper and for hiring a com­ Secretary. Serano elected Ship's overtime okay. After discussion James' personal belongings, and HORATIO ALVES DeSILVA
mie lawyer to pay off despite Delegate. No beefs reported. Sail­ of -the matter all hands agreed will be grateful for any assist- Get in touch with Frank Co^
sentino, 198 Bond St., Brooklyn,
advice against this. Motion car­ ed- out of Frisco short a Chief that ' supper should be served'
N.Y. He has important informa­
ried that no one is to pay off Cook, who is to be replaced in at 4:30 PM on Saturdays and
4. 4- 4.
first port of call on East Coast. Sundays in port. There was also
SOL MARICINO
tion about your citizenship pa­
until beefs are settled.
Wages to be divided between discussion on the problem of ob­ Please get in touch with Mrs. pers.
it 3^ ifc SEATRAIN NEW JERSEY, galley crew and Steward. Mo­ taining fresh milk in San Juan. Warren, 915 St. Paul St., Balti­
4 4 4
Aug. 29—John Jellele, Chair­ tion carried that all beefs, no Delegates are to see Patrolmen more, Md. Very important.
WALTER CHAMBERLIN
man; Secretary Si Magnan. No matter how small, be submitted about this. Steward recommendVery urgent that you contact
4 4 4
beefs. Ship's Delegate reported in writing to Ship's or depart- ed that delegates see the Port ALFRED L. GRAHAM, JR. your son at 209 Pelton Ave.,
that repairs had been caught up ment delegates. Amendment to Steward ..about supplying more You are requested to get in Staten Island 10, N.Y.
with in New Orleans. Bill Cham- motion carried that if beefs con­ fruit juices in port.
touch with Herman Rabson or
4 4 4
plin. Deck Delegate read four cern only one department it
DAVID HERON
Benjamin Sterling, 42 Broadway,
XXX
sections of agreement pertain­ should be handled by that de­ INES, Sept. 17—G. Quinones, New York 4, N. Y., regarding Get in touch with Mr. &amp; Mrs.
ing to discrimination, duties, partment. Members reminded Chairman; F. Loriz, Secretary. the injuries you sustained aboard Wm. Riebenstein, Apt. 7, 1408
working by Mate, and time off. that Union pamphlets are avail­ Ship's Delegate will see the Pa- the SS Helen on or about Dec. Logan Ave., N.W., Canton, Ohio.
trolman about getting the foc'sles 7, 1947.
Deck Delegate requested meet­ able in recreation room.
4 4 4
painted.
Few hours disputed ov­
ing of Deck Gang immediately
EDDIE BURNETT
4 4 4
4. 4&gt; 4'
after this meeting to elect new
Get in touch with Benjamin
MARION E. MOODY
SEATRAIN NEW JERSEY, ertime in Deck and Engine De­
delegate. Steward will order new Sept. 27—Bill Champlin, Chair­ partments, everything else okay. Will you please get in touch B. Sterling, 42 Broadway, New
coffee pots for Deck and Black man; W. R. MacDonald, Secre­ Lengthy • discussion about whose with Herman Rabson or Benja­ York.
Gangs. At Deck Gang meeting tary. Ship's Delegate reported job it is to clean recreation room. min Sterling regarding accident
4 4 4
Bill Champlin was re-elected man missed ship in New Orleans, After majority of Brothers blew aboard the SS A. P. Hill on or
MELVIN JONES
Deck Delegate and given a vote forcing other two Oilers to stand their tops, it was agreed that about Nov. 10, 1947, in which This injured Brother is in the
of confidence.
extra sea watches. Motion -by the three departments are to John J. Blair was injured and Garga Hospital, Ancon, Canal
Zone, and would like to hear
which you witnessed.
Jellelte carried recommending rotate on the job.
from his friends.
that maintenance of SEAFAR­
4 4 4
JOHN NOVAK
ERS LOG be put on assessment
4 4 4
BILL DORAN
Get
in
touch immediately with
basis and that membership to
the office of Richard M. Cantor, Your Aunt Mary died. Get in
vote on this in referendum vote.
XXX
Room
1109-1111, 51 Chambers touch with your Aunt Ann.
PONCE DE LEON, Sept. 5— Cab situation in Texas City dis­
St.,
New
York 7, N. Y.
cussed
and
Beulah,
who
is
an
Whidden, Chairman; Tindell,
JOE STACOWITCZ
4
4
4
AFL
member
was
commended
Secretaryv- Ship's Delegate re­
Get
in touch with Tommy
SEATRAIN
TEXAS,
Sept.
18—
ALEXANDER
MENDICINI
to
membership.
ported that Captain had lifted
Griner,
at the New Orleans Hall.
Your
mother
is
anxious
to
hear
Frank
Prazler,
Chairman;
John
XXX
all logs. All okay in the depart­
from
you
and
asks
that
you
write
Messick,
Secretary.
No
beefs
in
DEL
MAR,
Oct.
2
—
Harold
ments, delegates reported. Mo­
THOMAS B. GRINER
tion carried to post minutes of Tennani, Chairman; Robert Cal­ any of the departments. Motion to her as soon as possible.
Write
to your mother at Coracarried
that
Headquarters
take
lahan,
Secretary.
Ship's
Delegate
4
4
4
last meeting on bulletin board.
zal.
Canal
Zone.
up
with
Seatrain
Line.s
the
ABRAHAM
WERMICK
read
letters
sent
to
the
LOG
and
Motion carried recommending
Get
in
touch
with
your
mother
that we do not turn in for the SS Puerto Rico Advocate. question of having an escape
THOMAS W/HARRIS
launch service in Genoa due to No beefs to report. Treasurer hatch cut or installed in after at Swan Lake Road, Ferndale,
Contact
Richard M. Cantor, 51
N.
Y.
She
is
worried
about
you.
passageway
of
the
crews'
quar­
fact thqt Captain paid for same. reported that $27 was on . hand
Chambers
St.,
New York, as soon
ters
on
starboard
side,
also
cut­
4 4 4
Discussion on ship laying up in ship's fund after purchasing
as
possible.
GEORGE
WADE
GENTRY
ting
a
door
in
forward
end
of
for repairs and if laid up, wash­ Union films. R. B. Callahan elec­
4 4 4
ing machine be left on ship ted Ship's Delegate by acclama­ passageway, and that they take Get in touch with your mother,
JOHN
P. DI DIO
Mrs.
C.
R.
Gentry,
5815
N.
Mili­
up
with
company
installation
of
tion.
Rodrique
elected
Treasurer
for next crew.
Your Brother, Dominic, wants
tary St., Oklahoma City, Okla.
square
windows
in
wheelhouse
by
acclamation.
All
hands
were
X. X X
you to get in touch with him
4 4 4
SANTORE, Sept. 5—L. Brll- instructed to return cups to mess- so quartermaster may be able to
^
RAY
RINGO
at
700 Highland Blvd., Brook­
see
out
when
steering
on
orders
hall
and
not
to
leave
towels
in
hart. Chairman; L. V. Beaulyn
7, N.Y.
Johnnie
Scialpi
asks
that
you
of
a
pilot.
showers.
champ, Secretary. Reading of let-

cRieta-rermnder.

CiQmwfK?

�Page Fourteen

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, November 4. 1949

THE MEMBEBSHIP SPEAKS
SIU Home For Aged, Infirm
Called 'Impractical Idea'

SAND-TRAPPED IN TOKYO BAY

Vacation Issue
Should Be Put
To Vote, He Says

maneness of such an idea, if the
majority do not benefit from it,
To the Editor:
The proposal made at a meet­ it is not practical, for the ma­
ing aboard the Seatrain New jority must pay for whatever
I have read with interest
Brother Frank Meo's letter, and
Jersey by Brother Jellette, for an benefits the minority get.
several others, in the Oct. 7, is­
establishment for "the care of
As I'm writing this letter in
sue of the LOG written about
aged and infirm Seafarers,"
the recreation room Bosun A.
members staying too long on
seems to me at this time to be
Wassfrom and AB F. . Serrahn
one contracted ship.
inopportune and impractical.
are expressing themselves on the
There are too many other is­ welfare needs of seamen. One
I fully agree with him and I
sues, vital and paramount that of Wassfrom's views is that sea­
think this matter should be
hold the majority of Seafarers' men should assess themselves
brought to the members and
interests, such as the continued five dollars- a year towards a
voted on. There are lots more
fight against the Taft-Hartley la­ pension fund so that when a
than some of our Brothers think
bor law, the oppressive Coast seaman has, say about twenty
who have spent two or three
Guard authority over the sea­ years service at sea he would be
years on certain ships without
men, a welfare plan, tentatively entitled to a pension.
putting their heads inside of a
advocated by the SIU early this
Hall
to attend a meeting.
This of course would be un­
year and to be made the object
feasible unless the shipowners
NOBODY WANTS IT
of a thorough study for the wel­
This is how the Citrus Packer, Waterman, looked on the
did most of the contributing to
fare of the membership, etc.
twenty-sixth day after being driven aground by a typhoon.
It may very jvell lead to, and
this pension fund. Serrahn, who
It's regrettable that Brother is in his early twenties, believes Reports from crewmembers painted dismal picture of life encourage,
apple-polishing. I
Jellette, when he proposed this a fellow should save when he's aboard the beached vessel. With the fresh water supply almost am sure that no Brother wants
plan, did not have some facts re­ young for his old age. This is gone and the plant shut down, men washed out of buckets this kind of a situation aboard
lating to these "aged and infirm a commendable view, ^ but if the and prepared food on deck. ' Ship's Delegate R. E. White SIU contracted ships.
Seafarers," for I believe it's seaman saves his money it will submitted hpoto. So far, the Packer has been on the beach
So I agree fully with Meo
more than two months, having ran afoul of the typhoon on
reasonable to surmise that "aged be for nearer goals than his own
that
the membership do some­
Sept. 1.
Seafarers" are in the minority physical decline.
thing
about it. There is no doubt
in the SIU, and infirm or dis­
These
are
divergent
senti­
in
my
mind about the outcome
abled seamen but a small frac­
ments,
but
what
these
men
are
if
the
issue is brought before
tion of the total membership of
emphatic
about
is
there
is
no
the
membership
for action.
the Union.
need for a Seafarers Home at
This is an important issue at
This idea of a home for the this time. It would seem reason­
the
present time. Other import­
old arid infirm is idealistic in able, therefore, that if a Seafarer
content and does not take stock had a pension coming to him You can hear the cry aboard know, let's pass our information ant issues have been settled byof existing realities. The aver­ after his sailing days were over some ships: "Why hold educa­ on to the others who don't. And membership votes. I recommend
age seaman does not have any he wouldn't give a damn about tional meetings aboard ship? I if we don't know all about it, the same action on compulsory
vacations.
notion of getting decrepit and a convalescent home. If he were have a full book, I know all we can sure learn.
Frank Rose
even those whom I've met and too sick, or enfeebled to enjoy about the Union."
George L. Midgeft
sailed with who are old in years, his pension he could still have But bookmen certainly should
do not regard themselves as , access to the Marine Hospital understand and be familiar with
candidates for a convalescent
^
^gifa^e every feature of their Union as
home.
plan for the seamen he would the permitmen. Union policy
It may well be when the SIU be entitled to full medical care, is a flexible thing and changes
has fully studied the social as-1 despite a long period away from from time to time to meet new
conditions. In order to protect
pects of a seaman's life ashore the sea.
in order to foster a welfare plan, A subject as vast as the wel­ yourself and your Union you Clinging steadfastly to the
which would include a pension fare needs for seamen could be must keep up witl\ these hope that their son, John P.
Floyd, who disappeared from the
for the seaman, medical care written about almost ad infinitum changes.
SS
Gateway City shortly before
for himself and his family at all —I hope I've 'done at least some Take the Taft-Hartley law as
the
vessel docked in Tacoma,
times, etc., that we will have small justice to this subject. an example. A few years ago
Wash.,
on April 1, is still alive,
learned enough to set up the When and if this home for actions that • were taken for
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Floyd have
delicate apparatus for the care, "aged and infirm seamen" comes granted as standard union pro­
of the aged and infirm, when up at a meeting ashore let us cedure are today a violation and appealed to Seafarer.s for aid.
such a time comes that is pro­ hope those in favor of it have punishable by fines and are open The missing man's father ap­
peared last week at the office of
pitious enough to warrant it.
some concrete facts to offer why t^ law suits.
the SEAFARERS LOG and ask­
But what I'm stressing here is it should (30 instituted.
ed that the appeal be published.
GET THE WHYS
that despite the worth and huJohn J. Flynn
Mr. Floyd urged that anyone
Union education meetings with information that might be
aboard ship are necessary to ex­ helpful in locating his son should
THE PASSENGER
UNION, TOO
plain why your Union aids other write to him at Route 2, Box
unions. They also provide you 163, Fairmont, No. Carolina.
with an opportunity to offer con­
SEARCH FUTILE
structive criticism on any phase Floyd's parents were notified
of the Union policy.
of his disappearance by the Wa­
The Union education meeting terman Steamship Corporation.
is also the proper place to air He was first missed at 6:15 PM
your views—not in the gin mills on April 1, when the ship dock­
JOHN T. FLOYD
where you give outside groups ed at Tacoma. He was last seen
like the commies, wobblies and by his shipmates at 4:30 that lina 26 years ago and spent his
other supermilitants who have afternoon. A $50" draw requested early life in Fairmont, where
no interest in your union, but by Floyd was found with other he attended school. He worked
only their own political inter­ possessions in his quarters. An in the Wilmington shipyards
ests, a chance to poke their noses intense search by the Gateway prior to 1942, when he joined
in your affairs.
City and the Coast Guard proved the'' Navy. After serving about
three years, he was released and
The place to find
out why futile.
your Union takes certain stands The Gateway City's iSkipper began sailing on merchant ves­
and policies is at the educational told relatives of the missing man sels.
meetings, where you can ask that he was a quiet person who Brother Floyd sailed in the
questions and give answers to got along very well with all Deck Department. He served as
your shipmates who have the hands. He was known as a sober, Deck Maintenance aboard the
same problems as you and where' serious person. His father told Gateway City. He became a full
"Sir Charles" Oppenheimer shows this picture of some these problems can be solved the LOG that quite often John bookmember of the SIU on Oc­
shipmates and H. W. Nixon (center), AFL railroad man from for the benefit of all concerned. would stay aboard ship in pref­ tober 2, 1946, when he was issued
Atlanta, taken aboard the Alcoa Polaris. Others in photo are
So let's attend those meetings erence to taking liberty in ports Book No. 46175 in the Port of
New York. Before receiving his
Hank Henry, James Harris, T. E. McHenan, Russell Manieri, Brother—and take part in them, of call. .
Paul Bulerson and Harry Swift,
too. If we know all there is to Floyd was born in North Caro- book, he sailed as a permitman.
To the Editor:

Education Sessions At Sea
Held Vital For All Hands

Parents Maintain Vigil
For SIU Man Lost At Sea

�r^gyrr'T---" Friday, November 4, 1949

THE SEAFAREHS t OG

SPARKLING IS THE WORD FOR THIS CREW

Page Fifleen,

SIU's Legislative Program
Endorsed On Allegheny Vic
To the Editor:

tion of this money in the USA.
We are anxiously awaiting the
commencement of this boycott,
and the sooner the quicker.
Regards to all the beachcom­
bers in New York, and tell all
the spots on 47th Street to get
ready. We are homeward boundf
Jimmy Naylor
SB Allegheny Victory %

In our most recent shipboard
meeting we discussed the new
Bulletins which are being posted
to all ships, and the various
items contained therein. We
should like to bring the results
of these discussions to our Bro­
ther members through the medi­
um of the SEAFARERS LOG.
We feel that, through these Bul­
letins, we have taken another
decided step forward and knit­
ted our Union into a more com­
pact and efficient organization.
The crewmembers of the Alle­
gheny Victory wish to give it
a definite vote of commendation.
Four items contained in the Bul­ To the Editor:
letin were discussed in our re­ I have been in the Atlantic
cent meeting. Namely: $10.00 and Gulf District of the SIU for
General Fund Assessment, At­ a little over six months after'
lantic Pact Aid in U.S. Ships, quitting a well-known West
Seamen's Claims Bill, and the Coast union, of which I waa^
Patrolmen paying off the Steel Vendor in Staten Island, N. Y., on Sept. 29, reported back Panamanian Boycott.
a member for some years. I.
to the Hall with praise for the "clean ship." A glance at the above photo, taken by crewThe $10.00 assessment to the would like to state a few things
member Joe Dioquino, Messman, shows the redson why. A good SIU crew, like this one. makes General Fund was put to a vote that I think are worth letting ,
the difference, every time.
and carried unanimously. The everyone know.
First, let me say I am an"
activities in Washington of our
representatives regarding legis­ American. What I wonder is how
lation affecting directly, or in­ can any sailor want to be a
directly, our profession is heart­ commie after he has seen what
ily endorsed by the entire crew.^ the rest of the world has to
Various steamship companies: offer. That's something I can't
affect the family's .economy? The LOG is a fine publication certainly retain lobbyists in see.
To the Editor:
'
There would.be expenses at both and is read here from cover to Washington, and it is only na­ One of the luckiest breaks I'
As a constant reader of the coasts, which just couldn't be
cover. It is really a Seafarers tural that we should fight fire
have ever had in my life came
LOG, wife of an old time sea­ managed at .allotment rates over
"Bible" and should receive the with fire. To our competent Un­ when I got my pro book in the
man, and the mother of two a long period.
support it earns. We read of the ion officials we say, "Keep up SIU as a result of my organizing '
teen aged children now in high
constant effort to protect our
activities in Cities Service.
school, I am vitally interested Before compulsory vacations men. wherever their ships carry the good work!"
COMPARE
in the compulsory vacation ar­ are voted in, it might be well them, and the families of SIU In order to protect our country
from retrogressing to a mediocre After years in another union,
to check on the impact of them
ticles.
men have confidence in the Bro­ maritime power we believe the I find that I value membership
When one is buying a home, on men-of-family, who are good therhood and its strength.
SIU should throw all our guns in the SIU for several reasons:
the payoffs are budgeted out to Dads, and there are many in
in
the battle for carrying all At­ 1. The officials of the SIU are
Mrs. Evelynne Y. Siebert
the cent, the food bill is ever the SIU, for they are friends of
lantic
Pact Aid cargo in Ameri­ never too busy, or think they're
Long Beach, Calif.
present, and all other family this family.
can
bottoms.
We have the ships! too good to see a rank-and-filer.
cbsts must be met. Some of the
We
have
the
men! Let's use (That is something you just
recent articles seem to give the
don't find in a lot of unions.)
'em!!
impression that the writers have
2. There is a strong unity (on
BOYCOTT
APPROVED
no dependents to worry about,
which
good unionism is based)
The
one
item
in
the
Bulletin
but family men who are respon­
existing
throughout the organi­
which
was
viewed
with
most
sible providers, are concerned
zation,
in
all departments.
approval
and
enthusiasm
was
about the money they may send
3.
The
accommodations
and ^
To
the
Editor:
blame
for
their
spineless
effort
the
pending
boycott
of
Panama­
to their families.
services
which
the
SIU
offers
to
face
life.
nian ships. We are all cognizant
If my husband had to be on I want all my shipmates and
the "beach" for much more than friends in the maritime industry There is ho absolute perfection of the fact that a great deal of its membership are something
two weeks, we, likely, would be to know that I was not expelled in any man. We have all made American shipping is being sail­ which I am enjoying very much..,
back on the "dry cereals" diet from the Marine Transport Work­ mistakes in this life, and we ed under the flags of foreign (I am referring to mailing serv-...
which has been our lot several ers of the I.W.W. I tossed in my know that all organizations have nations, when a great majority ices, representation, recreation,
times. This was before we;-were Red Card January 5th, 1949, be­ good and evil men within their of these ships would provide halls second to none, and the.
rest. And I just had 10 AM
jobs for our own SIU men.
SIU people.
cause I tired of an organization ranks. These half-baked emanci­ These ships are operated un­ coffee in the Hall.)
that preached class solidarity pators should remember that the der sub-normal standards for the May I say in closing, thank
FACE TWO PROBLEMS
and
practiced racial hatred and only perfect man who lived on
Further, if a seaman were
earth was crucified and I'm sure profit of some of our wealthiest Clod I'm in a Union that fol­
class
segregation.
paid off in New York, and lived
these people can not liken them- steamship companies; but do they lows real union principles. It
out here, just how would this Such action on the part of se^ves to him.
bring wealth to our country? gives me the feeling that I have
these people was a direct viola­
They deprive our own men of a real friend.
Robert E. Hostler
tion of their own constitution. I realize these people will rant jobs arid thus • prevent circula-!
Looking Ahead
These are the people who could and rave, but they should
realize I've walked through this
do no wrong.
A SEAFARER TAKES A HOLIDAY
labor movement alone, and have
I challenge these people to de­ yet to see the day when I feared
fy this statement. It's about time to write what I thought was
w^ in the maritime industry be­ necessary to defend my Union
gan to clean out the dirty linen Brothers from exploitation.
closets of some of these halfbaked emancipators who insist It's about time some of you
upon calling every one phony emancipators learned to face
who don't agree with their ma- some of the tirade of abuse
you've been handing out to other
larky.
people..
Some of these half-baked
emancipators should remember Remember, my ex-fellow work­
that when jmu become a petty ers, that "Truth has no Parties."
cockroach business man^ you
Joseph Buckley
have left the workers class and
(Ed. Note: The above letter
are seeking to become a two-bit was written by a man whose
capitalist.
opinions of the Wobblies are
A genuine active merchant sea­ important because of his long
man is never afraid to use the experience in the IWW. Bro- .
right of free press to express .his ther Buckley's conclusions bear
opinions openly, nor does he re­ out the contention of many in
main ashore when shipping is the trade union movement that
good to prey upon his fellowmen the Wobblies no longer occupy
Harry Wplowite, FWT, on who toil for their daily bread. the proud position they once
the Del Alba, stows that clean A good Union man tires of the held among workers many
The straw-hatted gent in this happy scene is no farmer.
gear in anticipation of time endless tales coming from weed- years ago and have deterior­
He's "Reds" Rinehart, SIU Deck Engineer, as he appeared
off in those South American heads, gashounds and goof-ball ated to.the point where they
with his family during a recent vacation on the Eastern
ports. Photo by Harry Thomp­ addicts who constantly whine are now a hindrance to the
that the capitalist system is to labor movement.)
shore. The Rineharts make their home in Baltimore.
son, FWT.

SIU Gives Most
To Members, Says
Waterfront Vet

Compulsory Vacation Would Work Hardship
On Family Man, Seafarer's Wife Declares

Buckley Hits 'Emancipators'
As Being Far From Perfect

.-M

�•w
Page Sixteen

THE S E A F A R E A S

LOG

Friday. Noyember 4, 1949

The 'Hog' - The Seaman's Favorite Ship
I-'''
If s-

f

1

Retired Seafarer John Bunker, a frequent contributor to
the LOG seems to regard the old Hog Islander ships with
a great deal of affection. He suggests that the LOG solicit
contributions from the membership on subjects tike *'The Hdg '
I Remember Best," "My Most Memorable Trip On A Hog,"
etc. Well, you write them. Brothers, and we'll print them.
Let's hear from you.
By JOHN BUNKER

•'I

As I stood on the deck of a West Coast ships. They were al­
ship the other day, a youthful most as well known as Hogs
member of the crew beside me and are often, like the Kearny
pointed to an old freighter steam­ and Pascagoula ships, mistaken
ing out to sea.
for the Hog Island type.
"There goes an old Hog," he Slightly longer than their con­
said.
temporaries from Philadelphia,
This particular ship wasn't any the West Coasters had about the
more like a "Hog" than a collier same tonnage and accommoda­
is like a tug, except that she tion.?, Among them were such
had a hull and a funneL But well known freighters as the
it emphasized how fleeting is West Caddo, West Camargo, West
fame, even for ships.
Lashaway and West Chetac.
• The old Hog Islander, famous
among American sailors a gen­ SIMPLIFIED CONSTRUCTION
This is the SS Schodack. typical of the Hog Islanders which were famous among American
eration ago, is all but unknown In designing the "Hog," the
seamen
of a generation ago. A product of World War I. the Hog has almost disappeared from
now to newcomers at sea. To Emergency Fleet Corporation at­
the
seas.
Younger seamen, however, refer to any old ship as a "Hog."
them any old ship is a Hog.
tempted to have a ship as sim­
For the benefit of these young­ plified as possible, with all un­
sters, and the rest of the mari­ necessary curves eliminated — United States Lines operated a War II, when they were put Moore-McCormack Lines alsoi
time fraternity who may not a ship that could be manufac­ fleet of them on their service under the Belgian flag.
They had a fleet of converted Hogs on
know the story of the Hog, here's tured in hundreds of factories all to England and Ireland, with were (all with the prefix "Ameri­ their Scandinavian service, in­
some facts about that rugged over the country and assembled conversion for passengers.
can" to their name) the Press, cluding the once well-known
These
were
successful
ships
ship, of prewar days.
Shipper,
Farmer, Importer anc Scanmail, Scanpenn, Scanstates,
as quickly as possible.
and
ran
until
the
start
of
World
Traveler.
Scanyork and Scantic.
Consequently, the Hog Island
WORLD WAR I BABY
freighter was straight and square,
All of these ships ~ that re­
It was in World War I that a ship that could be turned out
mained under the American flag
the Hog had its origin.
by December 7, 1941, saw ex­
a4 well by a bridge builder as a
tensive service in carrying the
The demand then, as it was shipbuilder.
cargoes of war to the fighting
in 1942, was for ships. Any kind She was a strange looking ves­
fronts.
of ships, but especially ships that sel, sporting a flat deck without When oldtimers get together, when old hands are at the bar.
could be mass-produced.
A number of them made the
camber or sheer. She had virtu­ When the talk drifts 'round to shipping wherever seamen are.
The Emergency Fleet Corpora­ ally no deadrise (the upward They will praise the tankers and admire the trim C-2
run to Russia, including the
tion purchased a 900-acre tract slope of the hull from keel to the And give credit to the Liberty, where credit may be due;
Schoharie of South Atlantic, a
hard-fighting Hog that shot her
in Philadelphia for a yard in sides) and no "tumble-home. But" there is one thing certain—as sure as "channel" fog—
which to make ships en masse, The midships section was' almost That when the toasts are offered, the oldtimers hail the Hog. way through t o Murmansk
against subs and planes in fa­
and the naval architects design­ as square as a box.
mous convoy PQ-18, Sept., 1942.
ed a standardized type that could
Distinguishing feature of the Wherever seamen gather and "oldtimers drink their beer
be turned out on a, mass pro­ Hog were sharp, straight lines, You will hear them tell the praises of that ship without a sheer.
WAR SERVICE
She isn't much to look at—she isn't trim and fine
duction basis.
without the usual flare at the
For
the
architects
had
made
her
too
darn
straight
of
line.
A total of 58 Hog Island ship9
Built at a cost of $60,000,000, bows common to most ships and
were sunk in World War II, and
the yard didn't get into full the traditional sheer along the But she's good in heavy going, and she's steady down below.
And she rides like a liner in a North Atlantic blow.
of the remaining Hogs still in
swing until after the Armistice, sides.
service 56 survived. 1940 saw a
but the hulls were finished any­
She carried coal to Rio and went to Trinidad for ore;
DEPENDABLE SHIP
OSS of four; nine went down in
way and a sturdy little freighter
She freighted tea from Ceylon and hemp from Singapore.
1941 and 32 the next year. Thir­
resulted that was to become the She was criticized at the time
Every pilot knew to see her from the Hudson to the Clyde,
teen more were sent to the bot­
backbone of the American mer­ of her building for not being a
For there's not a dock the whole world 'round she hasn't been tom before the end of the war,
chant marine 'for 20 years.
beautiful ship, but the Hog was
beside.
[n addition, 37 were transferred
Appropriately enough, these dependable and seaworthy, nonThe 'mamselles in the Skipperstrasse, in Limehouse and Marseilles, to foreign flags; 11 to Brazil and
Ships were known as Hog Island- theless, and veteran seamen will Knew her like the girls in Shanghai half the world away.
10 to Great Britain.
&amp;s and, among seamen, more vouch for the fact that she was
Most famous of these old
intimately as "Hogs."
|a better seaboat for smooth rid- Y'es, wherever sailors gather and oldtimers quaff their beer
'reighters
were the Robin Moor
Hog Island was a marvel of ing qualities than Victories, Lib- When the talk drifts round to shipping, many stories you will hear.
and
the
City
of Flint, the latter
American industrial technique,' erties, C-3s or any of the mass- —How they sank her short of Murmansk, how they bombed her
lecoming
a
cause
celebre after
probably the first shipyard for built ships in World War II.
How she took the cargoes over till new ships were on the way. it was captured by the German
tiie mass production of freight- Few ships have ever been
battleship Deutschland in 1939,
ers that the world had ever built that were drier at sea in Aye, they'll sing the praises, as they gather 'round the bar.
and
interned for a long time in
seen, and the inspiration by a heavy blow.
Of the C-2 and the Liberty and other ships at war.
•which Liberty ships were mass- Hogs were considerably alter­ But of this you can be certain—as sure as English channel fog— Norway. The Robin Moor was
torpedoed in May, 1941, long be­
built for World War II.
ed in later years for various That when the toasts are offered, the oldtimers hail the Hog!
fore
our formal entry into the
The first keel was laid Feb. routes and shipping services.
war.
12, 1918, and the first ship, the
Quistconck, was launched Aug.
5, 1918. The last vessel was fin­
ished Jan. 29, 1921, the 122nd
ship to be delivered.
A total of 956,750 tons of ships The
The following
follnwino' item
HOTVI H.OC
T_ i-i,
...
was ....i.
sub­
In
line with
SIU policy
to pass on to the membership and wad_ it up in balls bout the
were turned out on this one­ mitted by members of Local
the latest developments in Maritime the following, taken size of your hed. You should git
time salt marsh. Fifty ways were Union No. 126 for "educational
from
the BAKERS' AND CONFECTIONERS' JOURNAL — bout 3 bolls. It shood rize'agin,
used during the peak of pro­ purposes:"
which
in turn swiped it from the AMERICAN BAKER — is then its redy to eat after you
duction.
As a baker in the Navy, I ran directed this time to the Stewards Department men, more
bake it sum. If you cant find
across the oddest formula for speciiically to the Bakers.
NOT THE SAME
iny bred pans you can mash up
making bread that I have ever
We hope the Bakers and the membership all benefit sum tjn cans and use them. You'll
A large number of ships simi­ seen. It was given to me in the
find that the bottums will burn
lar to Hog Islanders, such as the Philippines and was said to have from this astounding recipe.
furst
so about % way thru you
well known Waukegan and been used by an infantryman
gotta
turn them over. The furst
Westmoreland, were built at when the regular baker was is to much an then agin it aint. its done. The mixln, that is.
time
you
make this bred it mite
Kearny, N.J., but these were wounded. It looked to me like a If its rainin you gotta use more. Now it will start puffin up.
not
be
so
hot but its eezy after,
larger than the Hogs by several gag. But gag or no gag,here it 1 helmit of water, size 7y4. If (if it dont that wont hurt it nun),
a
while.
This
resapee is by radio.
hundred tons and had a. deeper is, verbatim:
using swamp water boil furst. Us bakers calls this fermentin. This is anuff stuff fer bout 50
draft by three feet.
RESAPEE FOR BRED
If using helmit that sniper saw,That a mess of little bugs inside
Hogs measured 390 feet over Furst you take 5 handfulls of furst, afor you saw him, hold ^making alcahol, I think. Inyway, min but if the furst few min in
all, with a 54 foot beam and a sugar. Enuff lard to make hevy like a bowling ball. Directions from this point on you gotta start chow line duz a lot of bichin
27 foot draft, being propelled by paist when you mix it with su­ fer puttin all this tagether: It beun more carefull cause this you'll have anuff^ for the hole
iland. O yes, if your making
2,500 h.p. turbines.
gar. 4 or 5 good pinches of salt. dont make much diff. how you doe is reel delicut. After it puffs this for the C'O. it gotta be
Also built by the Emergency If you use seawater forgit the mix this but do it fer quite up reel big, nock it down. SumFleet Corp. for the United States salt. 5 helmits of flour. Handful awhile. It will git real thick.* times it will fall all by itself and nicer and richer so thro in an
extra handfull of suger.
Shipping Board during World of spud yeast (which you gotta When it gits to where you cant save ^you the truble. Cut it off
—By W. H. Ormsley in the
War I were a fleet of so-called make yourself). Sometimes this hardly git your hands out, then j in chunks with your bayonett
American Baker.

li'

To The 'Hog*

Upgrading Course For Stewards Department Men

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9936">
                <text>November 4, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9996">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 30</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10017">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10038">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10098">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10116">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10176">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
INTERNEES ARE WARNED OF PHONY 'AID'&#13;
SIU BRANCHES REPORT BIG VOTE TURNOUT&#13;
AFL CONVENTION VOTES TO AID TWO SIU CAMPAIGNS&#13;
BOSS PAID PENSIONS&#13;
SIU ORGANIZER ANSWERS CS LIES&#13;
CITIES SERVICE STILL TRYING TO KEEP CREWS FROM SIU PROTECTION&#13;
SHIPPING STILL SLOW IN BOSTON&#13;
NY EXPECTING SLIGHT PICK-UP&#13;
STEEL AND COAL STRIKES AFFECT MOBILE&#13;
PORT FRISCO LOOKS TO COMING WEEKS&#13;
MINUTES OF A&amp;G BRANCH MEETINGS IN BRIEF&#13;
SEATTLE: STUDY IN UNION-BUSTING&#13;
TROTSKYISM: ENEMY OF DEMOCRATIC UNIONS&#13;
SEATRAIN NJ CREW SPONSORS FROLIC IN LOUISIANA PORT&#13;
BROTHERLY SPIRIT WORKS OVERTIME ON STEEL WORKER&#13;
BROTHERS MILLER, HODGES DIE IN US HOSPITALS&#13;
BRASS-POLISHING MAY HELP SEAFARER NOW ACADEMY MAN&#13;
THE "HOG" - THE SEAMAN'S FAVORITE SHIP&#13;
UPGRADING COURSE FOR STEWARDS DEPARTMENT MEN</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10177">
                <text>11/4/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13068">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="971" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="975">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/a7c87ca3a8eaf02143cf9b5f75101073.PDF</src>
        <authentication>6d1e9747903457721e47eabf74322092</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47451">
                    <text>SlU DEMANDS END TO MWED

Records Union's Opposition
To Government InteiTerence
in Coiiective Bargaining

WASHINGTON—^The Seafarers International
Union stood hard by its strict trade union position
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf District, Seafarers International Union of NA at a hearing before the Maritime War Emergency
Board here early this week, and voiced vigorous
No. 31
NEW YOHK. N. Y., FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 18. 1949
VOL. XI
opposition to continuance of the board's existence.
"We wish to return to fr-ee collective bargain­
ing, without being hampered or interfered with by
government agencies or boards," SItJ representa­
The article in the last issue of the SEAFARERS LOG, tives declared at the hearing.
The hearing was attended by Matthew Duexposing the Trotskyites (Socialist Workers Party) for
the anti-union wreckers that they are, was long overdue. shane, SlU Legislative Representative; Paul Hall,

Talks Stalled,
SUP Takes
Strike Vete

The threat of a tie-up on the
West Coast developed this week
as the Sailors Union of the Pa­
cific began taking a strike vote.
Results of the'balloting will be
made known on Monday.
Meanwhile, SUP men held
stop-work meetings in West Coast
ports to jliscuss the status of
the union's negotiations for a
new contract with the operators.
No date for a strike has been
set, but will be decided upon if
the vote authorizes a strike.
•Negotiations have been imder
way for three months, with the
SUP demanding a pension and
welfare plan, wage increases from
$10 to $25 a month, and reten­
tion of union jurisdiction on
coastwise yissels in the Alaska
trade.

Enemies Of Labor

Considering that the Trotskyites have been around for
some twenty years, the job should have been done long
ago. But, as the letters that have been coming into the
I.OG office from all over the country and all segments of
the labor movement show, it was a job that was apprecia­
ted by all who have ever come in close contact with these
self-styled "revolutionaries." Our only regret was that
lack of space prevented us from an even longer study of
their scabby organization. We should have liked, particu­
larly, to have recounted the story of the Kronstadt sailors,
an episode which the Stalinists and Trotskyites have never
been able to live down.
The Kronstadt sailors — 2J,000 strong — were the
backbone of the Russian Revolution and the civil war
against the reactionaries in the years that followed. Trotsky
called them the "flower and pride of the revolutionary
forces."
When the fighting ended, in 1921, the Russian work­
ers called upon the communists to ante up on the promises
they had made. Particularly they wanted the wartime
restrictions abolished. They demanded freedom of the
{Continued on Page 2)

Sectetary-Treasurer of the
lantic and Gulf District and
First Vice-President of the In­
ternational; and Morris Weisberger. East Coast Representa­
tive of the Sailors Union of the
Pacific and SIU Vice-President.
The other AFL seagoing un­
ions at the hearing—the Mas­
ters, Mates and Pilots, and the
Radio Officers Union—supported
the SIU stand.
The position of the SIU and
the other AFL maritime unions
is based on the confident feeling
that, they can secure more for
their membership in war bonuses
and risk insurance, through imrestricted collective bargaining,
than would be obtained from ar­
bitrary awards made by the
Board.
At the hearings, however, the
CIO maritime . unions — the Na­
tional Maritime Union, Marine
Cooks and Stewards and the Ma-

Seafarers Asks NLRB To Speed Certification
Of Union As Bargaining Agent For CS Seamen
' Citing the' Cities Service Oil Cities Service Oil Company and To date, 185 Cities Service em­ fused to sign are among the 185
Company's brazen defiance of the American Tankermen's Asso­ ployees have been fired by the dismissed to date.
the laws governing labor-man­ ciation—^both of which were pre­ company because they were sus­ The company's policy has been
agement relations and its policy viously ruled illegal by the pected of Union sympathies and to openly ignore the democratic
activities. Charges of unfair la­ processes and has blocked le­
of mass firings and coercion of NLRB, the SIU recalled."
employees with Union sympa­ In urging the Board to speed bor practices have been filed gally-guaranteed rights of its
thies, the SIU Atlantic and Gulf action, the Union said that the against the company by the men personnel to choose their own
District this week called upon company must be made to real­ involved with the NLRB region­ collective bargaining agent free
the National Labor Relations ize that the law governing labor- al office. Yet dismissals continue from cooericion and reprisals.
The Cities Service Tanker
Board to speed action on certi­ management relations "is not a at an accelerated rate.
Men's Association is a continua­
fication of the SIU as collective mere scrap of paper." It must
COMPANY THREATENS
tion under another name of the
bargaining agent for CS tanker- also be demonstrated to the com­
Unlicensed
Employees Collective
Cities
Services
also
is
attempt­
, men.
pany's employees that the com­ ing to force company-dominated Bargaining Agency of Cities Ser­
In a telegram to tlie Board in pany is not all-powerful and ex­ union (Cities Service Tanker vice Oil Company which the
Washington, Secretary -Treasurer empt from the law the Union Men's Association) on its em­ NLRB ruled was company-dom­
Paul Hall pointed out that "de­ said.
ployees and threatening repris­ inated, and of its successor the
spite designation of the SIU by The complete text of the Un­ als to those refusing to sign American Tankermen's AssociaCities Service employees in two ion message, addressed "to Frank pledge cards. Men who have re­
(Contimied on Page 3)
NLRB elections, the company Kleiler, Director of the NLRB,
brazenly refuses to answer the follows:
Union's repeated requests to en­
TEXT
ter collective bargaining nego­
tiations."
The SIU A&amp;G District re­ One hour before the scheduled extended until 12:01 AM, Dec.
The telegram revealed that 185 spectfully urges the NLRB to deadline, the-AFL Masters, Mates 16.
Cities Service crewmen had been speed action on its pending cer­ and Pilots last Tuesday post­ The threatened strike would
fired to date by the company be­ tification as collective bargain­ poned for 30 days a strike call have tied up tight all shipping
cause of their Union sympathies, ing agent for unlicensed per­ which would have tied up all on the East and Gulf Coasts im­
and that dismissals vfere contin­ sonnel in the Cities Service Oil Atlantic and Gulf coast shipping. mediately. The member unions of
Company to halt company's con­ The strike deferment was made the powerful AFL Maritime
uing daily.
tinued flagrant disregard of pro­ at the request of goverrunent Trades Department announced
CTMA PHONY
visions of the Labor-Manage­ mediators, who are attempting to that full support would be given
Moreover, the Union message ment Relations Act.
settle the dispute between the its affiliate, a decision reached
declared, the company is attempt­ Despite designation of SIU by officers union .and the operators at a meeting in New York early
ing to force CTMA, the company Cities Service employees as col­ over a new contract.
this week.
dominated "union," down the lective bargaining agent in two The peace plan is subject to Attending the MTD meeting
throats of its personnel, threat­ NLRB elections — the company approval of the MM&amp;P mem­ were representatives of the SIU,
ening reprisals to those refusing brazenly refuses to answer Un­ bership and the employers. Both SUP, ILA, ROU and the MM&amp;P.
to sign pledge cards.
ion's repeated requests to enter sides have until Monday, Nov. The principal stumbling block
The CTMA organization is a collective bargaining "h e g o t i a- 21, to approve or reject the in the dispute is the MM&amp;P's
replica of two other Cities Serv­ tions. More than that", company truce. If approval is -given, the demand for rotary hiring of all
ice dominated company unions^ continues its policy of mass fir­ terms of the contract between the men below First Mates, to aid
the Unlicensed Employees Col­ ings and cooercion of employees deck officers and the operators, in spreading employment among
lective Bargaining Agency of suspected of Union sympathies. which expired Sept. 30, will l?e its members.

MM&amp;P Delays Strike For Month

Engiheera Beneficial Asaoelation — sided with the ship­
owners and favored continuance
of the board to settle disputes
over war risk bonuses and in­
surance. The ClO-shipowner's
view was also shared by the in­
dependent Marine Firemen's Un­
ion.
Dushane, in presenting the po­
sition of the SIU and the other
AFL unions, pointed out that
the Board was originally "set up
to provide machinery for the
settlement of disputes" during
the war. But the war is over,
and the Board no longer has
valid reason for existence, he
stated.
TO IGNORE BOARD
Therefore, the SIU spokesman
said, the Union wished to record
the fact that it does not recog­
nize the board's jurisdiction over
bonuses to be paid seamen trav­
elling in waters where floating
mines and other war hazards
may exist.
The SIU is anxious for a re­
turn to the procedure followed
before establishment of the Mar­
itime Emergency War Board,
when it negotiated the highest
bonus scales in the industry for
its membership.
In the famed War Bonus Strike
of 1941, the SIU negotiated pre­
cedent-setting bonus payments
after a government board at­
tempted to arbitrarily establish
rates of payment. The govern­
ment stepped in when negotia­
tions between the SIU and the
operators were stalemated, and
recommended payments that the
Union regarded as being entirely
insufficient.
The strike was called despite
warnings from the government
mediators that it would recom­
mend nationalization of the mer­
chant marine. As a result of the
Union's militant stand, the mem­
bership won a 100 percent bonus
for travel in war areas, plus five
dollars for every day spent in
ports in combat areas, plus $150
for every time they entered war
zones. This later became a pat­
tern for the industry.
The SIU's insistence upon un­
fettered negotiations was again
proven successful in 1946, when
it called the general strike in
protest against the War Stabil­
ization Board's ruling that raises
won from the operator in col(Continued on Page 3)

New York Meeting
The next meeting of the
New York Branch will be
held once again at Roosevelt
Auditorium, 100 E. 17th St.,
corner 4th Avenue, on No­
vember 23, 7 PM.

�THE SEAFARERS

Page Two

SEAFARERS LOG
, Published Every Other Week by the
SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District

LOG

Friday, November 18, 1949

"Ttoiee c£.akind

Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor

At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Reentered as second class matter August 2, 1949, at the Post
Office in New York, N.Y., under the Act of August 24. 1912.
267

Enemies Of Labor
(Continued from Page 1)
press, speech and assembly, "liberation of all arrested
socialist and non-partisan workingmen." "They don't want
to live by the decrees of the Bolsheviki," said one of their
leaflets; "they want to control their own destinies."
The Kronstadt sailors, "the flower of the revolution­
ary forces," backed these demands, and gave support to
a group of striking workers who were, locked out of their
factories by the Lenin-Trotsky-led communists.
Immediately Lenin and Trotsky labelled them "inter­
ventionists" and tools of the French. Trotsky, as chair­
man of the Revolutionary Military Soviet, threatenec
to "shoot you like pheasants."
And he did. Within two weeks, the Kronstadt sailors
were "liquidated," many of them — including women and
children — shot down ia cold blood. The rest of them
were sent to prisons and concentration camps as punish­
ment for daring to raise democratic demands against the
communist dictatorship.
The Kronstadt story is not an isolated incident. So­
viet history is full of cases of "comrades" who were eased
out of the communist party by bullets carefully inserted
into their skulls.
There is no integrity, no morality, no principle in
the communist movement — whether Stalinist or Trotskyite — any more than there was in Hitlerism. They are
C. BROWN
both enemies of the American worker, and must be driven
E.
CHATTERTON
out of the trade union movement.
M.
DIKUM
Not all our enemies are on the "left." The fascists
F. JACOBSON
and other would-be Hitlers, too, would like to smash our
R. REED
trade unions. But whereas the Stalinists and Trotskyites try
J. H. MCELROY
to Vbore from within" the unions, the fascist finks try to
A. LOPEZ
. ,
T. DALLEY
destroy them from the outside, so the chances are that you
won't meet any organized group within labor organiza­
XXX
tions. But it is a good idea to know what these organiza­
BALTIMORE HOSPITAL
tions are, and not to be taken in by their phony slogans.
E. GAME
Here are some of the worst ones:
R. PEARSON
Christian National Crusade, Christian Nationalist
W. L. ADKINS
These are the Union Brothers ourrently in the marine hospitals,
Party and Patriotic Tract Society are all run-by the no­ as reported
N. T. TALA
by the Port Agents. These Brothers find time hanging
L.
G. LARONDE
torious rabble-rouser, Gerald L. K. Smith. Smith also heavily on.their hands. Do what you can to cheer them up by
K.
PUCHALESKI
publishes the violently anti-Semitic Cross and the Flag writing them.
D.
H.
BRUNIE
magazine.
MOBILE HOSPITAL
H. E. BONEWALL'
E. LYNCH
Citizens Protective League is a rallying .point for
R. R. SIERRA
E. R. IDELL
F. T. REYNOLDS
German Bund and native Fascist elements. SIDNEY
SWITZER
P. E. DARROUGH
L. HOWARD
CARLOS MATT .
E. F. PAUL
Constitutional Educational League publishes thousands J. C. STEWART
M. J. LUCAS
W. J'. KENNELLY
of pamphlets which it sells at high profits.
D. H. MILLER
R. L. LAMBERT
R. W. BELL
Loyal American Group Union primarily promotes a
4" 4"
JOHN B. DOLAN
E. W. HENDERSON
BOSTON HOSPITAL
hatemongering paper called Common Sense.
FRANK NEARING
L. HEALY
Lutheran Research Society has no connection with JOE GREENBAUM
A. M. KASAITIS.
L. R. TICKLE
IVAN A. THOMAS
E. WATERMAN
any official Lutheran church but has sponsored speeches PETER KOGOY
A.
L. MASTER
it
X
it
FRANK ALASAVICH
by members of Gerald L. K. Smith's organizations.
J.
M.
BERGERIA
VIC
MILAZZO
NEW ORLEANS HOSPITAL
National Blue Star Mothers is another violently antiJ.
HARRIS
R.
BOLDUG
Semitic group.
R. CRONIN
R. H. GRAF
it
it
National Economic Council is an outlet for much
J. DENNIS
J. YUKAS
F. LANDRY
reactionary business propaganda. Its leader, Merwin K. STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
••XXX
H. F. LAGAN
BERNARD JURROWSKI
Hart, has a long anti-Semitic record.
SAN FRANCISCO HOSPITAL
C. ELLARD
Nationalist Action League works closely with the ARCHIE KING
L.
WILLIS
FRED VYKRUTA
SAM DRURY
National Blue Star Mothers and Gerald L. K. Smith.
L. LANG
SAL MANCINI
ALTON
LEACH
Pro-American Information Bureau is a clearing house MICHAEL ARMANDO
C. R. HONEYCUTT
A. LOMAS
for hate literature.
P. ROBERTS
WILHELM PIETERS
WILLIE WATSON
A. MAUFFRAY
JOSE
REYES
Protestant War Veterans is a one-man organization
R. SALDANA
W. J. WOLFE
J. KEENAN
publishing anti-Semitic and anti-Catholic papers and ROYAL HARGRAVES
B. K. JOHNSON
J.
F.
GAMBLICH
THOMAS ISAKSEN
magazines.
F. B. CAILLOUET
JOHN C. LONG
XXX
If you come across any of these outfits, tell them off. JOE HERNANDEZO. HOWELL
W.
K.
SUTHERLIN
Tell them -that you classify them along with the Stalinist R. G. ANDERSEN
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL
H. REMME
P. ALBANESE
and Trotskyite commies as enemies of labor.
R. W. CARROLTON
V. L. COASH
RICHARD GRALICKX
/
They are three of a kind, and deserve to be handled ANDREW
0.
A. GARDNER
A.
PANEPINTO
AHLSTROM
the same way.
J. ACKERMAN
J. E. TASSIN
WILLIAM ROACH

Men Now h no Mmmo Hos/utak

�Fddayt Noirwnbet 18, 1849

TOE

SEAFARERS

MWEB Interferes
With Free Collective
Bargaining, Says SIU

Visitors At Shipboard Meeting On SS Puerto Rico

Congressmen and BIU crewmembers of SS Puerlo Rico give John Forsylhe, General Coun­
sel lo Ihe House Education and Labor Committee, a big hand as he addresses shipboard meet­
ing en route to Puerto Rico. Seated at table at which Forsythe is standing, from left to right,
are Congressmen John Lesinski, of Michigan, committee chairman; Carroll D. Kearns of Penn­
sylvania, Charlies Howell of New Jersey, Augustine B. Kelley of Pennsylvania, and Harold Velde
of Illinois. In dark suit and standing behind Congressman Kelley is Walter J. Mason, AFL
legislative representative, who also spoke at the shipboard session.
At the meeting, the Congressional delegation viewed the SIU films, "Battle of Wall Street,"
and "This Is the SIU."
The members of the House Labor Committee travelled aboard the Bull Lines ship to Puerto
Rico lo investigate labor conditions there and in the Virgin Islands.
In letters to the SIU and the Bull Lines, the Congresismen lauded the "excellent service
provided to the passengers of the ship by every member of the ship's company." They added
that the manner in which SIU crewmembers performed their duties was a "credit to them­
selves and their Union." •

Seafarers Hits
'Brazen DefnuKe'
jemce
(Continued from Page I)
lion, likewise declared illegal by
the NLRB.
Current policy of company is
nothing but extension of acts
previously ruled as unfair labw
practices in the matter of Cities
Service and the National Mari­
time Union. NLRB in this in­
stance issued a cease and desist
order directed at company and
was upheld by US Circuit Courts
in an enforcement order.
We feel this continued defiance
of the law must be halted once
and for all and that the company
must recognize that the law gov­
erning labor-management rela­
tions is not a mere scrap of pa­
per.
,

MEN ARE VICTIMS
In behalf of the CS employees
who are Victims of this gross
violation of law we ask that the
Board take steps to speed action
on certification of SIU as collec­
tive bargaining agent on com­
pany vessels. Company must be
made to understand it is not
exempt from responsibilities and
obligations of the law in the
democratic community. Its per­
sonnel must be shown that com­
pany's masquerade of omnipo­
tence in ignoring the laws of oyr
land is without substance and
that they are entitled to protec­
tion within the full meaning of
the laws.
Therein lies our reason for this
request that action on certifica­
tion be expedited. May we have
an early reply from you in this
regard^
PAUL HALL,
Secretary-Treasuzer
Atlantic and Gulf District
S^farers International Union

(Continued from Page I)
lective bargaining could not go
into effect.
On the tenth day of the beef,
the government agency reversed
its stand, and the raises were
allowed to go into effect. Once
again the rest of the maritime
unions profited by the SIU's
militant stand.
The Union's opposition to con­
tinuance of the Maritime War
Emergency Board steihs from its
traditional policy of dealing
straight across the table with
the shipowners, free from gov­
ernmental interference, in all
matters involving the welfare,
wages and working conditions
of its membership.
The correctness of this policy
has been demonstrated in ajl
comparisons of gains made by
free collective bargaining and
those awards granted by gov­
ernment agencies.
Although the CIO unions and
the Marine Firemen supported
continuance of the MWEB, the
fact that the Board could be
an instrument for setting lower
bonuses and insurance payments
is borne out by the united stand
of the shipowners alsn favoring
the board's continued existence.

MAJORITY MEMBERS:
JOHN LXtlNtKI, MICH.. CHAIRMAN
ORAHAM A. SARDCN, N. C.
AUCUtTINC 0. KCU.CV. PA.
ADAM C. ROWCLL. JR.. N. V.
JOHN •. WOOD, OA.
JOHN r. KCNNEDV, MASS.
WINOATC H. LUCAS. TCX.
CLCVCLANO M. BAILCV. W. VA.
LEONARD IRVINO, MO.
CARL D. RCRKtNS. KY.
CKARLU R. HOWELL, N. J.
HUOO S. SIMS. S. C.
ANDREW JACOeS. IND.
THOMAS H. BURKE. OHIO
TOM STEED. OKLA.
ROY W. WIER, MINN,

Page Three

LOG

MINORITY MEMBERS:

EIGHTY-FIRST CONGRESS

Committee on education and ICafaor
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

Congresisi of tfje ?Hni'tcb States:
raasljinBton 25, 0. C.

JOttPH ROSKI.
CHIEF cum

SAMUEL K. MCCONNCLL. JP.. PA.
RALRH W. OWINN. N. Y.
WALTER e. BREHM. OHIO
WINT IMtTH. KAHS.
CARROLL D. KEARNS. PA.
RICHARD M. HIXOH. CALlP.
THRUSTON BALLARD MORTON. K
THOMAS H. WERDCL. CALIF.
HAROLD H. vELOe. ILL.
JOHN O. GRAHAM,
MINORITY CLERK

PROFESSIONAL STAFF
JOHN S. FORSTTHC
GENERAL COUNSEL
JOSEPH S. JAROSZ
RESEARCH SPECIALIST
FRANK E. BOYER
INVESTIGATOR

San Juan, Puerto Kico
November x4,
Mr Paul Hail, Secretery-Trcaaurer
seafarers Internetlonal Union
51 Beaver Street,
New York, New York
Dear Mr Bail:
The undersigned members oi a subconin.ittee or the Committee
on Education and Labor recently visited Puerto Hlco anc tnc
Virgin lalanas for the purpose or investigating the cricct or
the Fair Labor Standards Act upon those Islands.
We traveled from New York to Puerto Rico on the s. s.
Puerto Rico, one of the Bull Insular line ships. We wish to
t^c this opportunity to compliment you of the exccnent service
provided to the passeng'rs of the ahlp by every member of
the ships company.
Without exception they pcrformeo their auties in a manner
which waa a credit to themselves and to tneir union. Every
employee appeared to take a personal Interest In insuring
that the passengera should have a pleasant voyage.
Sincerely yours.

In fact, at the hearings, which
were held to determine the ad­
visability of continuing the board
and its functions, the shipowners
called for decreases in the pres­
ent war bonus payments.
The board will render an opin­
ion on the opposing views early
next year, after conducting fur­
ther hearings in December and
January.
We ai-e here representing the
Seafarers International Union of
North America and its affiliates
who are signatories of the State­
ment of Principles.
We wish to inform this newly
constituted board that we are
opposed to the continuance of
the Maritime War Emergency
Board.
The text of the SIU statement:
We wish to return to free col­
lective bargaining without being
hampered or interferred with by
Government Agencies or Boards.
Even though the Statement of
Principles, which established this
board, guaranteed that collective
bargaining would in no instance
be impaired or restricted, we find
instances where shipowners have
refused to negotiate with some
of our affiliated unions, using the
Maritime War Emergency Board
as an excuse not to negotiate on
our bonus demands.
This, in spite of the fact of
the very grave and increasing
dangers in certain areas at this
very moment.
Further, the Maritime War
Emergency Board was set up to
provide machinery for the settle­
ment of disputes without inter­
ruption of service or stoppages
of work during the period of
the war.
We contend that we are now
in a different era.
PROFIT MOTIVE
Our contracted operators ^re
not now engaged in any so-call­
ed war effort. They are instead
now sending vessels into danger
areas for profit motives and
nothing else.
The shipowner today, in the
main, is not bound by any rules
as to where he sends his vessels,
what cargoes he carries, or what
he can make in the way of
profit.
We. therefore, strongly con­
tend that we should be free in
the same manner, so as to bar­
gain for the best contract we
can make with the shipowner
and not have any outside inter­
ference by Government Agencies
and Boards which, to put it
mildly, are not only cumber­
some in operation, but in no way
protect the working seaman's in­
terests.
We finally
contend, and we
want the record to show, that in
so far as the Seafarers Interna­
tional Union of North America
and its affiliated unions are con­
cerned, the Statement of Prin­
ciples is no longer a legal and
binding document on our organ­
izations.
Statement issued by and in
behalf of the Seafarers Interna­
tional Union of North America
and its affiliates:
MATTHEW DUSHANE,
Legislative Rep., SIU
PAUL HALL.
Vice President, SIU
MORRIS WEISBERGER.
Vice President, SIU ^

�Page Four

I;!

W,r

in

1

San Francisco
Has Two Good
Shipping Weeks

THE SEAFARERS

Friday. November 18, 1949

LOG

THE BATTLE OF WALL STREET" STILL A SMASH HIT

f*

G€N€RflL DRIVERS &amp; HELPERS
LOCALUNiON N! 554

By JEFF MORRISON

AttUi(rt«&lt;l wMt UM

SAN FRANCISCO —The past
two weeks showed some fairly
good shipping here. We wish we
could report that the next two
weeks look as good, but there
are nothing but in-transit ships
scheduled so far.
Oiu: payoffs were the Young
America, on the Far East run,
and the Monroe Victory, an intercoastal job. Both of these Wa­
terman ships signed on again.
A number of vessels called at
Frisco, these being the Fairland,
a Waterman intercoastal; the
Loyola Victory, also Waterman
and intercoastal, and two Isth­
mian ships on the Far East run,
the Steel Rover and Steel Ven­
dor.
The payoffs were clean and
the in-transit ships only had a
few routine beefs which were no
particular trouble. All were set­
tled in SIU style.
The San Francisco Marine Hos­
pital lists seven Seafarers as pa­
tients this week: Sam Drury, Al-

AMERICAN FEDERATION OF LABOR
PHONES;
WE 4484
WE 4485
WE 4486

OMAHA Z, NE81IA8IA

November 12, 1949

Albert A. Bernstein
Educational Director
Seafarers International Union Of N. A,
51 Beaver Street
Now York 4, New York.

- .V
,

Dear Sir &amp; Brother: ^

"

We are returning to you
Wall Street". We did not issue
papers or otherwise relative to
but rather confined the showing
ship.

your movie "The Battle of
any publicity in the news­
the showing of this picture,
exclusively to our member­

The members of our Joint Council were impressed
with the picture and as a result we had a showing of the
picture in each of our local meetings affiliated with our
Joint Council, Because of the showing of this film the
attendance at each of our meetings increased and a great
deal of ccmiment was made by our members.
Because of the interest expressed we would
appreciate it very much if you would send to ua your
other film entitled "THI3 IS THE SIU". Our meetings
start the 28th of November and we have a meeting each
night for approximately 10 days. Thanking you in
advance I i^emai.i
Praternally yours,

JL
GOjraw
ton Leach, A. Tomas, Willie Wat­
son, R. Saldana, J. Keenan and
Thomas Isaksen.
Scheduled to call in the next
couple of weeks are the Jeff
Davis, Twin Falls Victory, Hast­
ings, Gateway City and the Kenyon Victory. We don't expect
mcare than a few replacements
to be called for by any of these
vessels. There are few men on
the Seattle beach right now, but
this is fortunate in view of the
fact that no payoffs are sched­
uled.
The weather is lousy here and
the fish, according to reports, are
not biting. But then, we don't
have any time to fish, anyway.
So it really doesn't matter.

Omaha Teamsters join other unions in praise of 'The Battle of Wall Street," SIU mm Of
the 1948 strike against the New York Stock' and Curb Exchanges.

By JAMES SHEEHAN
PHILADELPHIA — Shipping
smiled on Seafarers in the city
of Brotherly Love during the
period just ended. A sharp im­
provement was noted in the num­
ber of men shipped compared to
the port's figures during the pre­
vious two weeks.
The vessels paying off here
were the Bienville, Warhawk
and Golden City, Waterman; Arlyn, Rosario, Bull; Alexandra, J.
M. Carras; The Cabins, Mathiasen; Northwestern Victory, Vic­
tory Carriers, and the Robin
Trent, Robin.
FEW BEEFS
Most of the payoffs were hand­
led without any difficulty, the
ships having come in clean. The
Golden City has some disputed
overtime beefs but this-money
was collect^ for the men in­
volved at the payoff.
The Northwestern Victory had
one major beef. The ship spent
18 days in Cuba during which
time no launch service was pro­
vided by the company for the
crew.
This beef was settled at the
payoff, with each man in the
crew getting two dollars per day
for the 18 days, as provided in
ou^ agreements.
The sign-ons came off well,
too. Here are the ships that sign­
ed on:
Warhawk, Bienville, Azalea
City, Waterman; Arlyn, Rosario,
Bull; Northwestern Victory and
The Cabins.
We're hoping that we can re­
port that shipping continued
along these lines, when we put
in our appearance in the next
issue of the LOG. See you then.

Jifew York Shipping Hoids Up Weii Despite Conditions

By JOE ALGINA
NEW YORK—Considering the
general situation in the maritime
industry at present, shipping in
this port has been fairly good
during the past two weeks.
There was a fair amount of
activity here, including port pay­
offs and sign-ons. In the payoff
column we had the following
ships:
Andrew Jackson, Claiborne,
Beauregard, Warrior, Waterman;
Ann Marie, Kathryn, Evelyn,
Elizabeth, Puerto Rico, Carolyn,
Suzanne, Frances, Bull; Steel
By JIM DRAWDY
Age, Steel Mariner, Steel Ap­
SAVANNAH — Not much to prentice, Isthmian; Seatrain New
report from this point this week. Jersey; New London, Bull Run,
Shipping has been slow. The Julesberg, Mathiasen; Cecil Bean,
weather has been cold. And Dry-Trans; Cape Mohican, Mar
those are the highlights for the Ancha; Ames Victory, Victory
two-week period just ended.
Carriers; Colabee, American Ha­
The Cape Nome, South Atlan- waiian; Christine, Carras; and
tic, came in for a payoff and a the Crysstar, formerly the Evisign-on and the Greeley Victory, star, Triton.'
Waterman, paid the port a visit.
NO TROUBLE
Neither of these ships had any All of these payoffs were dis­
beefs aboard.
posed of in good shape; what
Three of our members are in beefs there were have been set­
the local Marine Hospital this tled to the satisfaction of all
week. They are R. W. Carrollton, concerned.
C. A. Gardner, J. Ackerman. We Sign-ons during the past twothink it would be a nice gesture week period took place aboard
if their former shipmates would the following-named ships:
drop them a line.
Allegheny Victory, Steel Na­
That's about all we have for vigator, Steel Flyer, Steel Trav­
this issue. We hope there'll be eller, Meredith Victory, Steel Ad­
an upswing in shipping and a vocate, Isthmian; Massmar, Callittle more activity on the local mar; John B. Waterman, Water­
front so that we can give you man; Robin Locksley, and the
something to read.
I Michael, Carras. The appearance

Shipping, Weather
Chill Port Savannah

George 0%ara
Recording Secretary

ShippingFigures
Rise Sharply
In Philadelphia

of the Michael was a welcome DuPonts. With all the hollering pected to perform his duties, and
sight, since this ship just came these guys have been doing if he falls down on the job, he
out of lay-up. We're always hap­ about being driven against the can't very well expect the Union
py, of course, to see one of the wall by employee demands, they to go to bat for him.
ships come back into the fold.
now find
that ^ they are more This doesn't mean that a
Just in case any one still prosperous than ever.
Steward has to do any appledoubts the potential harm exist­
REMINDER
polishing with the company. He
ing in the atmosphere created by I think this is a good time to simply has to know how to run
the Taft-Hartley law, he has only remind the Stewards aboard his department and do so effi­
to take note of the news out of SlU-contracted ships that they ciently. In other words, he
Washington this week. The fines have a job to perform, just as should know and do his job
imposed on the United Mine do the rest of the crew. A Stew­ just as the rest of the men are
Workers and its president, John ard going aboard ship is ex­ expected to.
L. Lewis, were upheld by the
high courts and this week the
Union had to pay over a million
dollars. Lewis himself was fined
$20,000.
Br CAL TANNER
SOAK THE UNION
It appears obvious that the MOBILE—No sign of improve­ the slowest we have had for
purpose of these heavy fines is ment in shipping was noted dur­ quite some time, and we hope
to weaken the union. About the ing the past two weeks in this that the next two weeks will
only conclusion that can be port, and activity must be re­ show some improvement.
drawn from this horrible state ported as slow.
All payoffs and sign-ons were
of affairs is that the efforts of
smooth,
with only a few minor
There were eight ships paying
organized labor to have the Taftbeefs popping up on some of
Hartley law repealed must and off, along with six sign-ons and these ships. However, these were
one ship in-transit.
settled to the satisfaction of all
should be redoubled.
While workers are being tossed Those paying off were the Pur­ hands.
on the unemployed heap and big due Victory, which went into Again, we're asking the Bro­
business is crying that it can't layup; the Andrew Jackson, thers to have just a wee bit
afford anything that would make Fairisle, M Tning Light, Alcoa more- patience. The Hall will
the working man's lot a bit more Cavalier, IV-rville, Fairhope, soon be ready for all-around use
pleasant, the financial
pages Monarch of he Sea, and the Al­ and if we must say so ourselves,
we think all hands will agree
show that the giant corporations coa Clipper.
are doing all right for them­ On the si^n-on side, we had that this has been soi):iething
the Fairisle 'Morning Light, Ib­ worth waiting for.
selves.
erville,
Mon ch of the Sea, Fair- Just wait until you see the
General Motors has announced
hope,
and
f^e Clipper.
results of our new alteration job.
an eight-dollar dividend for each
share of stock in the outfit, one- The Bessc ler Victory was the Seafarers stopping by in Mobile
quarter of which — 10 million vessel whic'i called in-transit. will find the comforts available
shares — 'isr controlled by the Shipping on these vessels was here hard to duplicate elsewhere.

Mobile Shows No Improvemeiit

�Friday, November 18, 1949

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Five

Never To Say Goodbye
By EDWARD R. KAHRS

Sailing notice was posted for
Slim was already in the messsix o'clock Friday morning. Ste­ haU drinking coffee, when the
You would have known Slim wards stores were taken on; Sea. four to eight watch called the
' for ^ sailor the moment you se' watches were set for midnight. deck gang to stand by at six
eyes on him. He was a natural Union delegates were elected. o'clock. The sun, just above the
as the theatre people would s%y. Most of the crew went ashore horizon, was squinting a red
Instinctively, you knew he was for their last chance at America eye, trying to see through the
more at home in dungarees anc before sailing time. Only the reddish haze covering the river
checked red shirt than in the few men on watch and Slim re­ and the bay beyond.
finest suit money could buy.
mained aboard.
STAND BY
Slim would wander from the
He walked with the sligh
The haze was beginning to lift
weaving gait common to sailing messhall to his forecastle to the
when
the Chief Mate stuck his
gangway.
On
some
of
these
fre­
meni His eyes spoke a purpose
head
in
the messhall door and
quent
trips,
he
would
talk
for
in life but, try as you might,
told
the
Bosun
to stand by fore
you could never fathom this
and
aft.
purpose. His glance would flick
Slim drifted back aft with the
over you, then move on to
rest
of the twelve to four watch.
something else, constantly search­
The Second Mate was already
ing.
warming up the winch. A tug
You knew you could follow
was standing by in the river.
in Slim's footsteps, but you
The Captain shouted from the
knew also that you could never
bridge to let go all but the stern
get the full meaning from life
line aft. All but the stern line
as Slim did.
was pulled in and fiaked
on
deck.
CASUAL-LIKE
Slim leaned on the rail to
The way Slim casually drag­
rest for a minute when he saw
ged a cigarette from a pack, and
the girl. She didn't see him
paused amidst the jostling awhile with the gangway watch, though, for she kept looking
throng on the main street to on others he would stand look­ back and forth along the length
light up, you knew nothing ing up and down the dock, say­ of the ship's rail.
would disturb him very much ing nothing.
BUSY TIME
—or, almost nothing.
Finally, in the wee hours of
The
order
came to let go all
Sailors are quite immune to the morning, when the last of
lines
aft,
and
Slim was busy for
the unusual. In fact, it wouldn't the straggling crew had headed
a
few
minutes
flaking the line
surprise one sailor to find an­ for their bunks, Slim stretched
on
the
deck.
other sailor behind the Presi­ out on some tarps by number
Free from the dock, the ship's
dent's desk in the White House. three hatch. He was still awake
bow
began swinging toward the
It didn't surprise anyone that when the watch changed at four middle of the river.
Slim met the girl in an art gal­ o'clock, gazing up at the starry
sky.
The Pilot was turning the ship
lery. It just never occurred to
anyone to ask how he came to
be in an art gallery. He was just
there, that's all.
The girl must not have been
surprised, either. If she was, no
one ever heard her mention the
fact. She seemed to take Slim
as he was, without bothering to
wonder or worry about the past,
or future.
They were the well balanced
couple. Her quiet, dark beauty
and lively manner made the
perfect lace border for the Irish

The ship was almost loaded
now. Number one hatch boards
were in place. Numbers four and
five hatches would be finished
tonight. Numbers two and three
would be finished tomorrow
night.
It wouldn't take long to take
on bunkers after the hatches
were finished, so the ship would
probably sail early Friday morn­
ing.

(EDITOR'S NOTE: We enjoyed reading this story,
and we feel sure that all of you did. too. However, in
the interests of keeping this tale on an even romantic
keel. Brother Kahrs did not write the true ending to
Slim's adventure. This is what happened: Slim and the
girl got married, but when his shipmates came back to
the States, they promptly filed charges against him. and
Slim was fined $50 by the membership for jumping ship.
Sailors may be "quite immune to the unusual." but not
when the unusual involves breaking Union regulations
and jeopardizing their organization. Slim and the girl
are still married — and Slim has never jumped ship
since.)

"CONGEESSIONAL RECORD—APPENDIX
Seafarers International Union
EXTENSION OP REMARKS
OP

HON. LOUIS B. HELLER
OF NEW TORK

NEAR FINISH

to head down the river to the the handkerchief and began us­
oil docks. This turning threw ing it on her eyes.
Under the fantail, the screw
was churning the mud and wa­
ter into a reddish foamy mixture,
and .shooting it out behind the
ship in a steady stream.
DECISION MADE
A tug snuggled up close to the
ship, much as a baby pig snug­
gles up to an old sow. Several
birds were making early morn­
ing practice raids on some gar­
bage floating in the river.
Slim stood for a while deep
the fantail in full view of the in thought, watching the dock
dock. Then the girl spotted Slim. where the girl stood dwindling
The distance was too great to in size.
Suddenly, he shucked off his
hear what she was shouting. She
must have realized this, for sud­ coat and, shoes and dived into
denly she stopped shouting, and the muddy water to begin the
stood there waving a white hand­ long swim back to shore.
kerchief in her outstretched
Only a landlubber would have
hand. Finally, she quit waving asked him why.

What A Congressman Thinks Of The SfO: From The 'Rerord'

IN THE HOUSE OP REPRESENTATIVES

linen Slim. They walked through
the park or went to a picture,
sometimes holding hands, al­
ways smiling or laughing, but
never angry or moody.
She gave Slim a large picture
which he hung under the mir­
ror in his locker. He slipped
ashore one night with a large
manila envelope. Those who saw
him go didn't ask him if he
was carrying his picture to the
girl.

a short story

Wednesday, October 5,1949
Mr. HELLER. Mr. Speaker, a couple
of weeks ago an Invitation was extended
by Mr. A1 Bernstein, international repre­
sentative, Seafarers International Union,
Atlantic and Gulf district, to myself and
other Members of the House to visit the
Atlantic and Gulf dutrict headquarters
of the Seafarers International Union in
New York. As a Congressman from the
Brooklyn district embracing part of New
York's waterfront, I felt it was my duty
to accept the invitation.
This union of seafaring men, through
Mr. Bernstein, expressed a desire to build
greater understanding between the leg­
islative representatives of the people and
their representatives on the economic
front. Desirous of improving that un­
derstanding and because I wanted to see
how a maritime union, whose members
are so vital a part of. our economy, func­
tions. I am glad I made that visit, and
I wish to review it for the benefit of my
colleagues.
The SiU headquarters is located In
New York's financial district in the heart
of the shipping center. The six-story
building also houses the New York
branch of the union.
Perhaps the most striking thing aoout
this particular union to an outside ob­
server, is the air of informality, the manto-man relationships between the ofiBr
cials and the membership. I. should
imagine this is the kind of relationship
that exists among seafaring men aboard
ship, and the union has admirably trans­
ferred it to its shore-side apparatus.
Proip this relationship stems the dem­
ocratic- process, which the' union reMgiously adheres to in every phase of its
activities, as T observed in the course of
my visit.

The union oflBcials bypassed nothing
in the visit.
I saw how the seafarers maintain their
records, with their complete data on the
» membership and the finances.
All of the union records are available
for inspection by thp membership. In
fact, the union encourages interest in
these aspects of its operations. Elected
committees of members inspect the books
every week.
At the Seafarers I had an opportunity
to see the hiring hall, backbone of today's
free maritime trade-unionism, in opera­
tion. Here is where the democratic,
equitable system of rotary shipping is
utilized every hour on the hour. This
method of dispatching men to jobs—on a
first-come-first-served
basis—represents
the greatest single attainment in the in­
terest of maritime labor and I learned
that it has proved beneficial to the em­
ployers as well as the workers.
It is the militant desire to protect this
system of employment, from which the
SIU's principal objection to the TaftHartley law arises. For the SIU, and the
other maritime unions, asserts that the
Taft-Hartley law places this precious
symbol of free trade-unionism in jeop­
ardy.
The SIU's desire to acquaint its mem­
bership with the structure and function­
ing of their union i$ well demonstrated
in a movie called This Is the SIU, which
I took 20 well-spent minutes to witness.
The movie, while' high-lighting the attdlnments made by the union in the field
of wages and working conditions for the
membership, also shows the members
why they pay dues. The spending of
each dollar, as the movie points out, is
calculated to make the SIU membership
the best represented seamen in the world.
I would heartily recommend this movie
to all who are interested In knowing how
a sound union functions.
I also learned that the SIU operates
on the theory that a well-informed mem­
bership is the greatest insurance for con­
tinued democracy. The union publica­
tions, notably the official organ, the Sea­
farers Log, are black and white examples
of the practice of this theory, I dai'esay
that few publications reveal so great a

^ I• •

% * t"

OCTOBER 5^

degree of membership participation. . in
Its pages any member can—to use one of
its colorful figures of speech—"blow his
lid" on any matter in which the welfare
qf the mei-Tbership is concerned. The
pagSs of the paper are sort of a testing
ground, and niany ideas expres.sed in it
by Individual members later emerge as
union policy.
Another and interesting phase of the
union's activities is the providing of
recreation for its members while they .,
are on the beach, waiting for jobs via
the rotary shipping board. Seafaring
unions, like the SIU differ from shoreside unions in se^ral respects. The
recreation hall offers one example. Un­
like shoreside workers, the men who sail
our merchant fleet are dependent upon
their union almost .24 hours a day. Not
only for economic representation but for
a means of recreation and relaxation.
This need the SIU meets foursquare.
Comfortable lounging facilities are
available. Checker and chess games are
in constant progress. Radios and tele­
vision work around the clock. On the
walls are displayed samples of members'
talents and craftsmanship—paintings,
unusual examples of rope splicing, and
the like.
Briefly, I would say that the SIU is a
good example of clean, sound tradeunionism. Its members, most of whom
are now young, vigorous Americans who
wish to make seafaring a life-long
career, practice democracy in peace in
their union, just as most of them fought
to preserve this precious heritage in the
recent war.
Such trade-unionism can never harm
our country. Rather it is essential that
it continue unfettered if democracy is to
grow and develop as an instrument of
free men.
'
I ask no one to accept my observations
as the gospel truth.. Instead I would
recommend that my colleagues avail
themselves of the opportunity to witness
a democratic trade-union in action and
see for themselves.
It is one way in which we Representa­
tives can learn the needs, problems, and
accomplishments of a section of our
constituency.

�Page Six

THE S E A¥ ARE RS*L O Q

Grand Dame 'Murphy'
Mourned By Friends

Friday, NoiNlmber 18, 1949

South Atlantic SS Co. Praises Crew For Aid
In Making Good Will Program A Success

SIU Stewards Department men
aboard South Atlantic Steam­
The death of the grand old lady and staunch Union ship Company vessels are con­
supporter, affectionately called "Murphy" by her legion tributing' in no small measure
of friends in the SIU, was reported last week to the LOG to the success of the company's
by Bill Gray, Ship's Delegate aboard the Seatrain New "Good Will Dinners" in foreign
ports.
Jersey.
®
Few of Murphy's countless ad­ was good and that he needn't go Testimony to the efficiency of
mirers knew her by her real without fo"bd as long as the gen­ the Seafarers comes from a
name of Mrs. Mae "Montault. erous and understanding lady source that ought to know—the
company office in Savannah. Re­
There was no rigid formality was around.
Any
SIU
beef
was
Murphy's
ports
concerning the dinners are
about the lady and it was this
quality, along with others just beef, as well, and she pitched very complimentary, says the
as endearing, that won her the in with as much vigor as the company.
sterling and unquestioned reputa­ most died-in-therwool Union The "Good V/ill Dinners" are
tion as a genuine friend of sea­ member. During strikes conduct­ part of South Atlantic's program
men, and SIU members in par­ ed by the Seafarers, Murphy gave for building good will among
the men" on the bricks seeming­
ticular.
customers of the line in Europ­
ly unlimited supplies of cigar­
ean
ports. Shilling men, export­
In New Orleans and elsewhere ettes.
ers and civic officials are amongin the Gulf, Seafarers are mourn­
ing the passing of Murphy as an Mrs. Montault also turned over those invited to the dinners
irreplaceable loss. As Brother her car to the Union men to be when the company's vessels tie
Gray put it. Murphy's "love for used in the prosecution of the up abroad.
the SIU was shown in practical beef whenever it was needed.
Especially active in the good
Here are four of the SS Southland's "good will ambassa­
ways all through our
'y days
NEVER SAID "NO"
will^ effort has been the SS dors" whose ^ing room savvy has been winning complimexits
and whenever we really needed It is said that Murphy never Southland, whose crew recently for the South Atlantic Steamship Company in foreign ports.
the aid that only true friends turned down any Seafarer and drew the company's praise. Rec­ No identification accompanied photo but ye Editor hazards
could give."
this guess—the third and fourth men from the left are A. W.
it is reported that a heap of tes­ ognizing the crew's contribution,
P.
P.
Imlay,
personnel
manager
timony
to
this
fact
was
uncov­
Mackin and D. Picaxelli, Messmen. Are we right or wrong,
SHE REALLY CARED
for South Atlantic, sent the fol­ gentlemen?
ered
at
her
death.
Brother
Gray
Mrs. Montault, or Murphy was
lowing
° . letter to
-- the
— SIU Port
the proprietor of a restaurant said that hundreds of unpaid bijls i
of
Seafarers
who
lost
their
lives
-^Sent
in
Savannah:
concerning dinners held aboard his department contributed in a
located next to Joe's place on
Iberville Street in New Orleans. in the war years were kept by "We desire to express apprec­ are very complimentary, espec­ large measure to the excellence
Here it was that she catered to the old lady as personal memen­ iation to all for the efforts made ially in regard to the .prepara­ of these dinners.
toward making the "Good Will tion of the food and the manner "A continuance - of this fine
seamen and demonstrated time tos.
Dinners"
a success. Reports re­ in which it was served. The performance will bring credit
Jim
Sistrunk,
Chief
Cook,
for
and again that the troubles and
ceived
from
the SS Southland Steward and the members of to our ships and to their crews."
whom
Murphy
had
a
special
cares of Seafarers were also mat­
place
in
her
heart,
notified
New
ters of grave concern to her.
Orleans Port Agent Bull ShepAt Murphy's, a seaman finding pard of the grand lady's passing.
himself in tough financial straits Among the many floral pieces
would always find that his credit
at the funeral parlor where the
By "SALTY DICK"
body lay was a beautiful wreath i
from Murphy's lads on the Seatrain New Jersey.
A short time ago I saw a flock,... It would, be a good deal if behind the bar at the Blue
The sentiments of the Seatrain of birds flying south. I decided all SlU-manned passenger ships Heaven is our friend Lee J.
If you don't find
linen
men were expressed by Bill Gray to join them and here I am in could get out a crew news sheet. Harvey. He's also attending
when you go aboard your
New, Orleans. No, I didn't fly. . . A few guys can swing it with classes in air-conditioning and
this way:
ship, notify the Hall at once.
"Murphy is now on her way Jack Parker has quit his job and a little effort. Most ships have refrigeration. . . Jim Collins is
A telegram from Le Havre or
to meet the boys she loved, the is entering the bar business. His a mimeograph machine, and cer­ waiting for a Far East run,
Singapore won't do you any
boys whose sacrifices paid off in new place, the "Sea Hawk," is tainly most of the guys have where he figures on running into
good. It's your bed and you
the form of freedom for all of a couple of blocks from the Hall something to say that we're all Julala, reputed to be a snake
«have to lie in it.
and Jack would like his buddies interested in.
us."
charmer of sorts. Jim is crazy
to stop in. . . E. Reyes just told
Billy Roach is in the Marine about snakes.
men that you can get 15 pesos Hospital, that's bad. But he'll Zeke ^ablonski's girl flew
HE CHASES THOSE BLUES AWAY
for a dollar in B.A. In Brazil be leaving soon, that's good.
over to New York from England
they're giving 31 cruzeiros.
Frank Cacioppo, 47, is search­ and she's waiting there for him.
Leroy Clarke seems to be gain­ ing for a rich widow. Must be He's also the lucky one who had
ing weight. On him it looks good under 80 though. . . The man his money transferred to New
York before the pound was de­
valued. . . The head waiter on
the Del Sud is none other than
Woody Woodpecker, who left
Kentucky where he manfactured
mountain dew.
Pelting the old apple almost at will, the SS Del Norte Tom Kotalik is expecting a
Softball team registered a 6 to 2 victory over a Buenos junior about the end of January
. Smithey Smith parks his
Aires school aggregation on the latter's home grounds United Cab in front of the Hall
diuring a recent stopover in thet
for each call. He swore he'll
Argentine port. Three home nms some pretty red faces in the never go on as a gloryhole
from the bats of Seafarers Peter­ outfield, when a passing female steward again . . . William Scott.
son, Tucker and Boyd were suf­ took thfeir eyes off the ball and QM, has been married for six
ficient to put the game on ice their minds off the game.
months to a~ Buenos Aires girl.
The reporter for the English He plans on bringing her to the
for the visitors.
Interest in the game was step­ language Buenos Aires Herald States and, if possible, building
ped up when the teams discarded has this to say of the embarrass­ a love nest in Florida.
the rule that pitchers must toss ing incident:
Since the lid has been down
the ball underhanded, and al­ "One of the college runs was on horse racing, Pete Garza
made while several of the ship's spends his time ai the Hall wait­
lowed overarm throws.
Held scoreless in their first inn­ team were lost in admiration of ing to ship out. . . Sometiijie ago,
ing at bat, the »SIU team found the local scenery. The 'scenery' I wrote that Tony Alleman and
its batting eye in the next frame in question had auburn hair and Davis Danos were in love. with
Crewmembers aboard Ihe SS Puerto Rico get a big lift and began building up the lead was wearing jodhpurs. Unfortu­ the same girl. The affair has
from the cowboy ballads of "Dangerous Dallas Dan" Morin. which they held safely through­ nately for the college, the Ameri­ -been climaxed by a guy from
who strums a mean guitar. Dan, an Engine man, can sure out the contest.
cans recovered their poise be­ California who came along and
build a fire under those blues, it is reported by his podnera~One of tlTe two rims given up fore further inroads on their took over. Both lads plan to take
shipmates, thai is. The photo Is by Jim Colder.
a long trip to forget.
by the Del Norte boys caused lead could be made."

'Voice Of The Sea'

AHENTION!

SS Del Norte Softballers
Rout Buenos Aires Outfit

�Friday, November 18, 1849

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Seven

Digested Minutes Of Sill Ship Meetings Ssafiorr Sam Stgs•

DEL NORTE. Gel. 12—C. A.
Union property, with bill of sale
Hancock, Chairman: T. J. Lewis.
to be held by New Orleans
Secreiary. The meeting opened
Branch and "machine to be put
with considerable discussion on
ashore in Union Hall in case
the problem of reducing the
of ship laying up, sold or other­
noise ^coming from the Wipers'
wise taken from SIU manning."
quarters, so that the Watchmen
4 4 4.
could sleep undisturbed. Several
ALCOA CORSAIR, Oct. 2—L.
Brothers
including
Gordano,
Cleirke, Chairman; R. Slough.
Briant, Hancock, Lyle and King
Secretary. Delegates' reports ac­
spoke on the beef and offered
cepted. Motions carried: That air
ways of solving it. A motion car­
condition failure be investigated;
ried recommending that, if sat­
that safety mat be placed in gal­
isfactory to parties concerned,
ley for waiters. Tony Bourgot
the Watchmen and Quartermas­
elected treasurer for baseball
ters change foc'sles for a trial
x .u
•
u i
team and that he be empowered
unUl .arrival in New Orleans; 11
.1"" It-®:?!!®?-! to make purchases of gear need­
this arrangement is not satisfac­ of $102; $59 is in the washing ed. LeRoy Clarke elected Ship's
machine fund. Motion carried Delegate.
tory, then officials are to be
that
Chief Stewardess be made
asked to intervene to help vis
4 4 4
Treasurer of ship's fund. Bro­
arrive at a workable solution.
FRANCES, Oct. 3—W, Janisch.
ther Heilly accepted librarian's
Brother Banning urged all to
Chairman; M. Olson, Secretary.
show consideration for their ship­ job.
Big discussion in regard to fans
4, t 4,
mates. The meeting chair-man in­
for Wiper's foc'sle. It was decided
SANTA CLARA VICTORY,
structed the Ship's and Engine
to» refer matter of additional fans
Sept. 18 — Jack Wooten, Chair­
Delegates to ask the Wipers to
to Patrolman. Vote of thanks was
man; Jack Christy, Secretary.
try to keep the noise down in
given to Chief Baker for im­
Engine Delegate reported that provements in baking. No beefs
their foc'sles.
Chief Electrician had missed ship
in Steward's Department; few
S. 4. S,
%
CHICKASAW, Oct. 8 —Mike in Wilmington. " No beefs in hours disputed overtime in Deck,
Zelonka,
Chairman;
William' other departments. J. Smith el- four hours cargo time for Fire­
Hughes, Secretary. No beefs. Ac-lfotfd Sh^P^ Delegate. Patrolman men disputed.
tion to be taken on recommenda- is to determine cause of Electri4 4 4
tion of Ship's Delegate in refer- "an s failure to make ship. Pa- RAPHAEL SEMMES, Sept. 25
By HANK
ence to OS who was to have ap-'trolman to take action, if possi- —L. Eisele, Chairman; F. S. Sipeared for duty at 8 AM, Oct. 4 ^e, on needed, repairs in Wil- mone. Secretary. Crew refrigeraFlash News—Jack Parker just opened up a bar down in New
in Baltimore. Letter to be writ- "Kington. (Note: After meeting
was to have been repaired Orleans. Next year we might hear of Brother Parker installing
ten to Baltimore Hall to find Chief Mate gave us talk on
Bremen, but part was not an ice skating rink!...Joe Pendleton, who said he would be
out if job was taken and sug- safety. Repairs subniitted on ^st
there. Will be repaired splicing a belt out of square knots, grabbed a job last week on
gesting that man be fined if he have now been made.)
in New York. No beefs reported. the same day he registered. That's not only good shipping but
had missed ship through his own!
4 4 4
Library is to be exchanged. Bal­ it's a long trip, too. Bon splicing, Joe... Ray Queen, the poet
negligence. Man to answer for
ance of $21.45 reported in wash­ who doesn't write any poetry anymore, wants it to be known he's
himself in regular manner be­
ing machine fund.
not on any other ship but the SS Warrior!... About a month ago
fore a trial committee. OS who
Vince "Kelly" Keller said there were twelve Ore ships tied up
4 4 4
joined ship in Jacksonville paid
TWIN FALLS VICTORY, Sept. down in Sparrows Point, Maryland, because of the steel strike.
his own transportation from Sa­
25—Bud Bryant, Chairman; Lee Looks like they should all be sailing out soon... From Houston
vannah. Union to find out if
PENNMAR, Sept. 11 ^Donald de Parlier, Secretary. No beefs
Brother "Rocky" Milton writes that any deck ape yearning for
company will reimburse him.
Chairman; Edward Mc- reported. Bill Lamb elected
some learning, a la knots, can forget just one two-hour "bender"
Ship to organize softball team Cormick, Secretary! All unlicen- Ship's Delegate by acclamation.
and splurge eight bucks for a book called "Encyclopedia of Knots
and challenge other ships or sed personnel present except A short discussion on members
and Fancy Rope Work." All you need with it, if we're not too far
teams the weekend our vessel those on watch. Motion by Frank of Engine and Deck Departments
Peskure that messhall and rec­ sougeeing officers' rooms pre­ wrong, is a Bosun... A favorite spot for SIU guys is the Roosevelt
is in Mobile.
reation room be painted. Amend- paratory to painting. Deck Dele­ Bar in Tabooria, Piraeus—in Greece. The guys can buy stamps and
4 4 4
JOHN CULLEN. Sept. 26 ^E. ment carried to also paint quar- gate Mitchell brought up a ques­ mail their letters there as well as picking up copies of the LOG
from now on.
Molina, Chairman; J. Rudolph. ters, heads and passageways, with tion about members getting time
4
4
4
Secretary. Delegates' reports ac- messhall being painted first. Rec­ off in their home port. Mention
Be^t of luck to John Holm, the oldlimer, now headed for
reation
room
is
to
be
cleaned
repted. Motions carried: All dele­
was also made about an inequal­ Sailor's Snug Harbor in Slaten Island... We'd like to hear from
gates to make repair lists and by each department in weekly ity in Deck Department over­ all SIU ships whether they've been receiving the various issues
turn them over to Patrolman; rotation.
time.
of the Headquarters Overseas letter which is air-mailed all
to attempt to get Wiper's logs
4 4 4
4 4 4
over the w.orld... Alonzo "Mitch" Milefski, the cook with a
r^uced. Discussion on coopera­ SEATRAIN NEW ORLEANS, HASTINGS. Oct. 2 — Mosely
mustache, wrote to Charlie "Dutfh" Palmer, here in New
tion aboard ship and the im- Sept. 14—B. Brown, Chairman; Chairman; Gunn. Secretary. No . York, that he's hit Japan, Hawaii and is due for a West Coast
portance of helping shipmates inlA. Capote, Secretary. Delegates beefs in any of the departments.
performance of their duties. Al-jreported; four hours disputed Lou Cauble elected Ship's Dele­ sign-off... Johnny Parsons with his pipe and his shipmate,
BO, all hands were urged to give overtime in Engine Department, gate. Suggested that dirty cups Steve Pitiak, are in town right now. When in Singapore
with the Alleghney Victory they received a clipping about
assistance when necessary to men no beefs in Deck or Stewards, be left in pantry and that messthem in this column which someone mailed from the states
who may not fully understand Ship's Delegate refused offer of room be kept absolutely clean
...
"Duke" Wade made the Cook's job a few weeks ago for that
crew to make voluntary contri­ at all times. Washing machine is
nature of job.
tanker
in the Mediterranean... Jake Fediow, a guy full of
butions to pay his dues in rec­ to be used only when needed.
smiles
all'
of the time, is waiting anxiously for a ship. No
ognition of his services and the Ship's Delegate is to see Master
kidding,
ask
him... Brother Carroll Quinnt, the oldtimer,
expenses he has incurred while about putting a clock in crew's
sailed
in
recently
from the Gulf* after mucho tanker-tripping.
holding the job. Motion carried recreation room.
The
crew
he
was
with really appreciated picking up some
to boycott radio operator's per­
LOGS,
even
though
about a month old, in the Pacific Bar in
sonal slopchest for his anti-Union
the
"Chinatown".
section
of Rotterdam, Holland. The good
remarks.
people
operating
this
bar
keep
their landlubbing eyes peeled
4 4 4
for
those
who
either
ask
for
LOGS
or happen to be wearing
4 4 4
SEATRAIN NEW ORLEANS.
SIU pins. Otherwise the LOGS are saved until SIU ships come
ALCOA PLANTER. Sept. 11— Oct. 9—M.'H. McKay. Chairman;
in. That's sure swell of these people, indeed.
Joseph Shaughnessy. Chairman: Adolph Capote. Secretary. Ship's
4
4
4
'
Arthur Rummel, Secreiary. Dele- j Delegate reported that he had
Brother
Nicholas
Dorpmans,
Steward
and
oldtimer,
informs
gate reported that ship's fund is contacted Agent regarding milk
4 4 4
now at $30. No beefs. Discussion' situation and that Agent would CHICKASAW, Oct. 23—Arthur us that Steward Mike Pappadakis is drydocked in Puerto Rico
on -Mobile proposal that men'meet ship on arrival; the;re will Collett, Chairman; W. R. Hughes. and wishes him swift recovery. The address—Clinica Dr. Pila,
with one year of continuous ser-^be better understanding on milk Secretary. Ship's Delegate re- Ponce, Puerto Rico... Weaver Manning, champion cribbage and
vice on ship should accept vaca- question in future. Motion car-"ported that letter to Union offi- checker player, is slowly recovering from an injury which kept
tion pay and sign off. Crew is ried naming Adolph Capote and cials mailed in accordance with him off the SS Puerto Rico... From Saudi Arabia in the Persian
in favor of this proposal and Eddie Metros, Steward and Deck motion of lasting meeting. En- Gulf, Brother V. Perez, the oldtimer, writes about their shuttling
would like to hear further com- Delegates, respectively. Motion gine Delegate reported that ship between France and the Gulf aboard the tanker SS Petrolite...
ments and opinions. Have been carried to take up collection for left Jacksonville short two men. Eddie Eriksen writes from the SS War Hawk hitting various
receiving Bulletins at regular in-jgick member to pay up his past,Union Hall in Savannah was no­ German ports. Eddie says the crew is happy about the issues of
tervals and crew thinks this is a dues as he is not in good finan- tified by Engine Delegate, and the air-mailed SIU Overseas Bulletins they've been getting over
fine way in which to keep up cial condition. Steward asks that Union then called Waterman in there. Say, Eddie, have you been having any smorgasbord in
to date on Union activities.
all excess linen be turned in. Jacksonville to see if order had those ports?
been placed for these men. Delay
^44
4
4 4 4
4 4 4
A letter requesting a change of address for the LOG says
and
fault seems to be with com­
DEL SUD, Sept. 18—J. D. Mc- ALCOA ROAMER, Sept. 25—
Lemere, Chairman; F. G. Beat- A. L. Hatch, Chairman; Frederick pany in Jacksonville. Deck Dele­ that Brother L. B. Morgan is voyaging on the Steel Voyager
rous. Secretary. A. Conti elected Willis. Secretary. Six hours dis- gate said that overtime was end hitting the port .of Basrah, Iraq... One of the best Western
records we have heard (although we have never heard even
Ship's Delegate by acclamation.' puted overtime in Deck Depart- equalized. Community Chest
half of them) is an Ara record called "Hominy Grits" with
He asked . full cooperation from' ment, 65 hours disputed in En- pledges taken by Master. Men
entire • crew in making this a gine Department. No other beefs. warned that no joe is to report Smiley Burnette and his Sunshine Girls singing. What a darn
good'tirip.^ Delegates' reports ac­ Motion carued to purchase wash- for work under influence of al­ good record... About a month ago Norman "Red" Kirk, from
Baltimore, and Danny Merrill, from Mobile, were in town.
cepted. Recreation committee ing machine. Machine to become cohol.

tjoacfu
boaudVoUutie^
of -fHe leg
livntrq?
nedacuuMiers -fb*'
aear&amp;
i9A6^l94&amp; ai-^i.Sq p3r SijCifour
noiAJ •

CUT and RUN

�Page Eight

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. November 18. 1949

TBE MEMBERSHIP SPEAKS
We Won Vacations With Pay
—Take Them!Says Ropeyarn

A ROUND TABLE CONFERENCE

our members were required to
take their vacation, plus the
There seems to be a great deal fellows who only want to make
of discussion these days about one trip, there would be plenty
coal strikes, steel strikes, wel­ of shipping and at the end of
fare plans, etc., being the cause two weeks there would be suf­
of so much unemployment among ficient jobs on our contracted
seamen.
ships to go around.
. -There is no doubt but iwhat
WEAK. TOO
the shut-down of our two ma­
jor industries have a great deal Another argument is that those
to do with the slacking off of fellows with families and obli­
shipping, and should the mines gations can't afford to get off
and mills open up tomorrow, and go in the red. In my esti­
shipping would pick up and a mation that is another, phony
lot of us fellows on the beach argument. It would seem to me
would soon find ourselves back that any seaman would ride,, a
on watch. However, in our own ship and look at the same mugs
Union there seems to be one for 12 months could put aside
thing that is making shipping enough cabbage to allow him to
tough, and that is HOMESTEAD- stay on the beach for two weeks
and enjoy himself with his fam­
ING.
In a majority of our SIU con­ ily and friends, as well as it
tracts there is a clause stating might enable some of them to
that when an employee has been attend the Union meetings and
The Bzemerhaven USS Club is the scene of this off-duty get-togethei; of SIU cxewmembers
in the employee of the company brush up a little on what is go­ from the SS SQufhland. Aronnd the t(d&gt;lew left ta right: Clark Medley. AB; Lew Nihern. MM;
for a period of 12 months he is ing on in the labor movement.
Rosalind Schmidt, club hostess; Joe Goude. AB: F. T. Coxwell. MM: A. W. Mackin. MM; R. Lee.
entitled to two weeks vacation What some of the fellows mean
OS. Standing are Paul Schmidt (rear), club manager, and D. Picarelli. MM.
with pay. If I remember right, by obligations, I have learned&gt; is
many resolutions- and motions that they are trying to get ready
were passed asking our officials to buy an interest in the steam­
to negotiate a vacation clause ship company, perhaps, or a
farm, or a railroad. However, I
with pay.
am sure that our Union does not
HELD FAST
want to be accused of stiffing To the Eklitor:
would expedite the inauguration he feels as though he is an in­
Our offifcials, abiding by the initiative. But Tdo not think we
of the plan. It would be for the truder.
rank and file's desire, himg tough can allow men to ride the ships After reading some of the ar­ advantage of every one Concern­ This practice should be dis­
and wouldn't put their "John- for a longer period than one ticles which have been published ed.
couraged by aU good Union men.
Henry's" on the dotted line un­ year, thereby making a farce out in the LOG concerning the pro­
DEMOCRATIC
If we could put this one year
til John Shipowner said "Okay, of the "VACATION CLAUSE" posal to limit our membership The principles x»f the SIU have limit question up for a* vote for
to one year of employment on always been, and still are, de­ three months, practically every
boys, I'll give the boys two weeks in our agreements.
vacation with pay."
I think that we go by oiu one ship, I should like to voice cidedly democratic, and it must member could have the oppor­
Please tell me, some of you agreements, and when a man has my opinion on the subject.
be remembered that what is tunity to participate in settling
feUows, who have been in favor been on a ship for twelve months
I am 100 per cent in favor of good for one member is good for this issue on*ce and for all.
of homesteading the ships and require him to get off, otherwise the idea' and as a result of num­ all members.
How about it. Brothers?
not taking your vacation, what the shipowners may not be so erous shipboard discussions on
There are cliques existing on
Fred T. Miller
was the sense of taking up our hasty in negotiating the next this subject, I am inclined to some ships on well-established
Standard, Calif.
Negotiating Committee's time agreement or be willing to give think that a majority of our runs. Occasionally these ships
and putting the heat on them us two weeks vacation with membership are in favor of the call for a replacement and when
and then turning around and not cabbage.
idea. And I would like to see the new man reports to the ship
taking the vacations?
"Rope-yam" some form of action taken which and meets his new shipmates.
If you did not want the va­
cation, why didn't you say so,
and maybe the Negotiating Com­
mittee might have been able to
get us the four-watch-system or, To the Editor:
In the air-mail edition of the serve them. That is the opinion To the Editor:
had it been in the agreement that
Bulletin, it seems there was a of various members of this crew
It gives me great pleasure to
the Old Man be required to I realize that this letter might motion to extend shaping cards who discussed the situation.
inform
you that upon our ar­
be
a
little
late
in
coming,
but
serve the "Quartermaster" a
another
30
days
in
the
Port
of
Every
one
is
hoping
that
we
rival
here
in Piraeus, Greece,
drink before he goes on watch. it will have to be excused.
Galveston^
get
to
the
States
in
time
to
vote
we
found
among
our personal
I have heard a number of ar­ The original idea of this let­
mail
two
copies
of
the Bulletin.
in
the
elections
before
they
How
is
this
possible
when
the
guments for and against the tak­ ter was to let you know that we
The
crewmen
could
not wait
close.
But
if
we
lay
here
in
shipping
rules
say:
"All
officials
ing of vacations. One of them is have received four copies of the
their
turn
to
peruse
the
Bulletin
Beira
any
longer
than
is
exand
members
must
observe
and
that if a man gets off and takes air-mailed Seafarers Bulletin.
such
was
their
surprise
and
joy
pectedj
we
doubt
if
we'll
make
respect
these
shipping
rules,
in­
his vacation he loses his job and Article 8 (a) of the Shipping
at
the
sight
of
news
from
their
it.
Most
ships,
are
staying
here
fractions
of
which
will
not
be
has to look for another ship at Rules states that a shipping card
about a month, which is what Union and their port of origin,,
the end of two weeks. That ar­ is only good for three months tolerated."
which was Galveston. There
gument seems phony to me, for and after that one must re-reg­ These rules are' made for we also expect.
were
discussions as to who would
J. Heacox
everyone's protection. Let's obthe simple reason that if all of ister.
read
it
next.
SS Robin Gray
SPURRED DISCUSSION
(Ed. Note: Insofar as exten­
There were several articles
sion of shipping cards is con­ that moved the Brothers to make
cerned, it has been the policy
Quite a few of the boys visit­ interested and wanted to know of the membership to permit comments, pro and con.
To the Editor:
Among the crew on this ship
ed Blarney Castle, where the how they could get some future
This last run was quite a famous Blarney Stone is lo­ issues. I am enclosing an ad­ ports experiencing dead ship­ are several of the older SIU
change from the bauxite trail. cated. They returned to the ship dress which you. can place on ping to extend the 30-day pe­ men, including A. A. Ellis, FWT;
riod. if the members there so Bob Hunt, Steward; Hill, Bosun^
The first stop was in Brigh feeling sure their wishes would the LOG mailing list.
decide.
The justification for Beale, Third Cook; J. Polaski,
Castle, about 15 miles from Lim­ come true.
So much for that trip. We are this policy lies in the state of Oiler, and yours truly.
erick, Ireland. Some of the gang
back in Trinidad to load baux­ shipping in the particular port.
IN CORK. TOO
"We have a fine crew, a Stew­
went ashore only to come back
ite for where we don't know In Galveston, for example, ards Department that knows its
with disappointed looks on their
We were in Cork, where the at this writing. Some of the shipping, was at an absolute job and puts out food a la hotel
faces.
Boston Pilgrims came through lads aboard are Red Sully, standstilL By extending the style, and no performers so far.
Then we went to Cork, which enroute to Durban. There was
We have 25 books and three,
is a real jiice city. The gang quite a welcome for them there. Bosun, Jack Bates, Baker; Mil­ cards the members there pro­
ton Mouton, Chief Cook; BUI tected the men registered permits on board and all are
thinks so, anyway. Everybody
Only one thing was missing Hayes, Steward; Harry Ponson, longest from having to re­ good Union men.
was aboard at midnight each
S. J. Smith
and
that was the LOG. We had Messman; and E. Jarrosko, AB. register behind the men who
night claiming that the Yankee
Ship's Delegale
had
come
in
just
before
a
few
back
issues
which
we
pass­
Bill
Story
line does not phase the Irish at
SS
John Hanson
sHipping
jpicked
up
again.)
ed
around.
The
people
were
very
SS'
Alcoa
Pioneer
alL
To the Editor:

Referendum Vote Seen As Democratic Way
To Resolve Current Homesteading Issue

Robin Gray Crew Eying Election Deadline

Colleens Refuse, Pioneer Lads Kiss Blarney

Bulletin Adds
Right Touch To
A Right Ship

�-•'S
-5?

Friday, November 18, 1949

THE SEAFARERS

TWO SMILING QUARTETS

LOG

Seafaring Viewed As Colorful Occupation
But Fiill Of Dangers To Life And Limb
To the Editor:

Just to prove that Seafarers and taxi drivers are on the
best of terms, these Monroe Victory crewmen and a female
cabbie get real snuggly for the camennnan. Left to right—
Harry' Lundquist, Ship's Delegate: Jimmie ^itchell, AB; the
curvesome cabbie, and Jack, Messman.

Page Nine

The SS Edith^ a bulk cargo
carrier, was in transit from Claymont, Del., through the D&amp;M
Canal to Baltimorer-1 was on
the wheel. The Chief Mate, Mr.
Howell, was speaking to the
Pilot.
"The work on here isn't com­
plicated, but I have to watch
several things at once—a guy
has to keep his eyes open all
the time when -he's working the
hatches—Wfe've had quite a num­
ber of accidents in the past."
The Pilot nodded absently,
keeping his eyes fixed ahead.
Mr. Howell, a short agile man,
probably in his early forties, con­
tinued:
"We had an Ordinary killed
only last July. He was in back
of the watertight door, but right
inside the bight of the cable as
we were raising the hatch. The

snatch block gave way, the wire
wound like a whip breaking
against the door, catching the
kid on the head—^he was dead
in a half hour."
The Pilot looked a little in­
terested, "Yeah," he said and
waited for the Mate to say some
more.
"Carrying sulphur has its haz­
ards too. Working No. 4 last
May the hatch fell back on the
hole and the concussion started
a fire, the combustion knocking
the hatch back again and again."
The Mate then broke off on
this topic.
i inquired from Louis Rizzo,
Steward, who has seen the long­
est service on this ship, about
some of the accidents that occured on the Edith. Rizzo, as
meticulous as he is in making
up his succulent menus, has re­
corded on his calendar, the dates
of unusual happenings aboard the

Discussion Of Credit Union
Recommended To Members
To the Editor:

You eat well on .board the Monroe Victory, the crew
testifies, and these are the men who see to it that you do. Left
to right—Herman Bolst, Baker; Earl Spears, Chief Cook; Pete,
3rd Cook; and Eddie. Bolst's hiking was especially lauded'
by the crewmembers.

The strength of any organized
body of people with a goal to
reach lies, naturally, in their
faith in the purposes of their
organization. But being realistic,
as well, we know that it is
money at hand or ready assets
that steady us on the road to
achievement of our , purpose,
gives encouragement and boosts
morale.
Presenting various ideas and
plans to the membership by way
of the LOG helps to give a
clearer understanding to all
hands, and aids in. the selection

Paf Wants 'Shipping Guide' As Refresher
To the Editor:

Thanking you in advance for If you wish to print this let­
any consideration you can show ter in the LOG it is okay with
In the Sept. 23rd issue of the me in this matter.
me.
LOG, I read an article that was
Here's to a better and bigger
of considerable interest to me. LIKES MEMBERS' COMMENTS
Seafarers International Union.
It was the article about the As an added thought, I'd like
Patrick J. Denehy
Union putting out a green cov­ to say that I look forward to
Tiverton,
R.I.
ered booklet with the title receiving the LOG every week
(Ed. Note: The Shipping
^'Shipping Guide for Seafarers." and think that the comments by
Guide has been shipped to
As I intend to take out my the members, both retired and Seafarer Denehy.)
book again and sail over the active, are the most interesting.
bounding main, I think that it This last vote on the assessment SS YOUNG AMERICA
will be of considerable interest interested me very much. I sup­
to me. Could you forward this pose that you would call me one SEAFARERS GET
booklet to me? If there is any of the oldtimers, not so much in PAT ON THE BACK
charge for the booklet just let age, but I did retire Book No.
jne know and I will forward the 139, and hope to get it back To the Editor:
fimount to you.
shortly.
My family and I had been on
the SS Young America for over
three weeks and I should like
to commend the work of the
Steward's Department, particu­
larly. that of Chief Cook,' Michal Michalik, and his assistant,
To the Editor:
the Patrolman would not have Donald Forrest.
to appear as though they were Our missionary travels have
I would like to offer a sug­ panhandling.
taken us around the world, and
gestion, which if adopted, would
facilitate the handling of LOG I think this method would also we are delighted with the de­
eliminate chiseling on the part licious food we were served on
donations by the Patrolman.
of
some men who don't contrib­ the voyage. These men are not
_ I think that each Patrolman
ute
their share for the support only doing superior work but
should carry a Union stamp bear­
of
the
LOG. Some of these guys their friendliness and congenial­
ing the words "LOG Donation,"
knowing
that a Patrolman doesn't ity cdded distinctly to the plea­
or just the initials "L.D." Then
have
time
to check over all sure of the trip.
when a man makes a donation
receipts,
claim
they have already I am sure you will be inter­
to the LOG, the Patrolman can
made
a
donation.
If their con­ ested to know how we appre­
Stamp in the member's book the
tributions
Were
stamped
in their ciate Michalik's and Forrest's ef­
amount of the donation opposite
books,
there'd
be
no
question
forts.
the month in which it was made.
The money collected could about it.
Sincerely yours,
then be put into the LOG fund. I think this suggestion is
Rev. Harold 'Voelkel
In this way our paper could be worthy of consideration, and fur­
American Presbyterian
supported from its own fund in­ ther discussion by the mem­
Mission
stead of depending on the Gen­ bership.
136-7 Yun Chi Dong
eral' Fund for maintenance. Also
E. Anderson
SeouL Korea

of those which are fitted to the
needs of the seamen of our Un­
ion. For that reason I would like
to offer the possibility of a cred­
it union.
SAW IT WORK
Personally, my knowledge of
credit unions is small, but I
have seen the oredit union on
the West Coast work. And since
it is connected with the Credit
Union of North America (CUNA), with headquarters in Min­
neapolis, I think it might be ad­
visable for us to look into its
possibilities.
After examining the CUNA
plan, one can see the security
it provides for the individual as
a bulwark against economic em­
barrassment and actual want.
I hope to see a Seafarers cred­
it union operating soon—for pro­
gress, independence and finan­
cial strength. I'm remembering
that "a bird in the hand, etc."
certainly proves to be true when
a strike hits. It pays to be pre­
pared for a rainy day.
By the way, I've read that
the credit union kicked the com­
mies out as fast as they came
into it.
E. U. Stanton

Edith. He elaborated on these
and I herewith summarize.
On March 3, 1948, an OS was
drowned when somehow, while
a lifeboat was being lowered in
Port Sulphur, he was handling
the forward falls and was swept
overboard when the falls jam­
med and a four-knot current
swerved the boat suddenly from
the ship's side.
Four days after the great Tex­
as City conflagration, a sulphur
fire broke out in the Edith's No.
4 hole. Luckily, it didn't get so
much of a start before it was
brought imder control.
On November 13, 1948, the
Edith struck a submerged rock
and was grounded for two days.
On December 17, 1948, in
Boca Grande, the ship was
grounded again on a sandbar
and stayed there for two days
and only an extremely high tide
enabled the ship to get off.
It is manifest, therefore, from
this account that the occupa­
tional hazards run pretty high
for a seaman. Sometimes, he is
at fault, but more often than not
it is faulty gear and circum­
stances which no skill and alert­
ness could contend with at the
time.
An accident happened, and, as
usual after the dire results are
known, some sage conclusions
are made. A person is blamed
or a condition corrected, but
ironically the high rate of ac­
cidents persists.
Insurance companies rate the
Merchant Marine as a danger­
ous occupation. The cost of a
policy for a seaman is on par
with that of the occupations of
riggers and steeplejacks, two
other equally dangerous types of
work.
A moral that can be drawn
from the occupation of seafaring
is that despite the outward color­
ful life a seaman lives and sup­
posedly good money he makes,
he has his tribulations at sea
and ashore. But now they don't^
afford the romantic trappings
enough that once moved a gov­
ernment and people to be en­
raptured by their saga in the
war, and to again take an in­
terest in the seaman's welfare.
John J. Flynn

SAID THE CAPTAIN TO THE COOK

Suggests Donations To Log
Be Stamped In Union Books

"Happy Birthday" is written all over the faces—and cakes
—of the SS Carolyn's Third Cook (left) and Skipper as they
celebrated their anniversaries jointly. Special event pastries
were the handiwork of able Baker Charley Gann. According
to Duane Fisher the Carolyn payoff in Philly on Oct. 10 was
as smooth as one of Gann's creamy icings.

n

&gt;9
fl

�Page Ten

THE

SEAFARERS

Friday. Nc^ember 18, 1949

LOG

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings In Brief
GALVESTON — Chairman,
Keilh Alsop, 7311; Recording
Secretary, R, Wilbum, 37739.

outside city for passengers, a
man without his own car would
find it impossible to get to town.
XXX
NEW YORK—Chairman, John
SHIPPED SIHPPED TOTAL Arahasz, 29836; Recording Secre­
STWDS. SHIPPED tary,
piG.
Charles Haymond, 98;
5
17 Reading Clerk, Robert Matthews,
6
270 154.
70
88

JlSff Shippmg from Oct 27 To Nov. 9

Minutes of previous meetings
in other Branches read and ap­
PORT
SHIPPED
TOTAL
REG.
REG.
REG.
REG.
DECK
DECK
proved. Agent reported on the
ENG.
STWDS,
status of shipping in this area.
Boston
46
6
II
16
19
Patrolman and Dispatcher reports
112
263
New York;...
74
80
109
accepted. Motion carried to pur­
39
37
138
63
140
39
Philadelphia58
43
chase a wreath for the Thomas
Minutes of other Branch meet­
77
96
290
,117
^4
90
Baltimore
100
94
F. Meagher. One minute of sil­
0
0
2
2 ings read and approved. Under
121
29
44
Norfolk
48
ence in memory of departed Un­
5
8 discussion of motion in New Or­
28
2
1
10
9
9•
ion Brothers. Meeting adjourned Savannah
leans minutes, asking for check
NO FIGURES RECEIVED
Tampa.
at 7:40 PM.
into
feasibility of setting up a
26
66
17
23
131
44
40
47
Mobile
X t
credit
union, a motion carried to
78
85
244
81
'249
92
73
84
NEW ORLEANS — Chairman, New Orleans
36
8
refer
the
subject to the Editor
12
16
107
31
33
43
Galveston
Z,indsey Williams, 21550; Record­ West Coast
34
118 of the LOG who should. publish
48
36
130
37
48
45
an informative article in a forth­
ing Secretary, Johnny Johnston,
367
1,190
368
455
1,499
468
469
562
coming issue so that the mem­
53; Reading Clerk, Buck Ste- GRAND TOTAL
bership may study it thopughly.
phens, 76.
Also carried was a motion re­
tum for better during past two garding Galveston proposal call­
Motion carried
to accept and those of other Branches in this port dqring the coming two
weeks,
with in-transit ships call­ ing for compulsory vacations.
weeks.
Motion
by
Neira,
sec­
charges read against member meetings of previous week. Ag­
ing
for
quite a few replacements. Motion^ recommended full dis­
onded
by
several,
carried
that
who missed SS Suzanne in San ent discussed shipping in Bos­
Secretary-Treasurer's
financial
the
regular
order
of
business
be
cussion of issue in SEAFARERS
Juan. Financial reports read and ton, followed by Patrolman-Dis­
report
and
Headquarters
report LOG as a forerunner to further
suspended
and
that
the
shipping
approved. Minutes of other ports patcher's reports. Communica­
to the membership read and ap­ membership action. Headquar­
read and accepted. Motion car­ tions read from members seeking cards of those present be picked
proved. Trial committee elected ters' report to the membership
up
and
stamped
with
the
meet­
to
be
excused
from
the
meeting.
ried to refer part of Galveston
to hear charges. Fred Hethcoat read and approved. Secretarying
"date.
Charges
read
and
moCharges
read
against
member
ac­
minutes regarding getting off
excused from meeting. Motion Treasurer's financial
report apship after one year to Headquar­ cused of being drunk and dam­
carried to ccmcur in Headquarters
aging
mess
room.
Motion
carried
ters. Agent reported that busiReinstatement Committee's re­
to accept the charges and refer
port. Charges read and commit­
the matter to a trial committee
tee's
findings Were accepted by
to be elected in the morning
motion.
Under Good and Welfare,
from the floor. Headquarters re­
tion
carried
to
elect
trial
com­
a
loan
plan (credit union) was
port to the membership and Sec­
mittee
to
hear
the
charges.
discussed
and members were of
retary-Treasurer's financial
re­
Amended
by
motion
offered
by
opinion
that
if something could
port read and accepted. One min­
J.
^Carroll
recommending
that
be
worked
out
for some type of
ute of silence in memory of de­
balloting
committee
be
authorize
plan,
it
would
be
of great bene­ proved as read. Charges read and
parted Brothers. Several men
ness affairs of port were in very discussed gashounds and per­ ed to serve as trial committee. fit to all. Also discussed was the accepted; motion carried to refer
good shape. Since last meeting formers. Meeting adjourned at Motion and amendment carried. shipping problem on West Coast these to an elected trial com­
there were nine payoffs, five 7:40 PM, with 163 members pre­ Meeting adjourned at 11:30 AM, as it affected SIU members. Meet­ mittee. Port Agent discussed
with 240 members in attendance. ing adjourned at 8:35 PM, with shipping in this port. Excuses re­
sign-ons and 23 ships in port in- sent.
ferred to the Dispatcher. Motion
transit, he said. Prospects for
* % It
25 bookmembers present.
4. i
carried to excuse all permitmen
PHILADELPHIA
—
Chairman.
coming two weeks don't look
$i
$1
X
NORFOLK — Chairman, Wil­
inasmuch
as meeting was held
too good as there are only five
James Sheehan, 306; Recording BALTIMORE—Chairman, Wil­
ships scheduled for payoff, but liam Harrell, 100468; Recording Secr^uy, George H. Seeburger, liam Rentz, 26445; Recording in Union Hall, where facilities
were not adequate to accommo­
regular amount of in-transit ships Secretary, J. A. Bullock, 4747;
6932; Reading Clerk, L. Barcu- STCretary, G. A. Maslerson, 20297; date all hands. Meeting adjourn­
should help matters some. Agent Reading Clerk, B. P. Rees, 95.
Reading Clerk, A1 Stansbury, ed at 8 PM, with 830 members
zeivaki, 6525.
also announced that ILA in Tex­
Other
Branch
minutes
of
pre­
present.,
as had signed agreement with
Minutes of previous meetings 4683.
the operators and had won their vious meetings accepted as read. in Branches read and approved,
XXX
demands. It is expected ILA in Motion carried to accept and except for motion to non-conciir Motion carried to suspend reg­ SAVANNAH — Chairman, Jim
New Orleans will win similar de­ concur in Headquarters report with Baltimore on instruction to ular order of business and- go Drawdy, 28523; Recording Sec­
mands. He brought out that the to the membership. Agent made purchase television set. Agent into obligations and charges. Fol­ retary, S. Colcock, 38407; Read­
AFL was conducting extensive his report, as did Patrolman and made his verbal report, notipg lowing took oath of obligation:
ing Clerk, J. B. Davis, 50453.
campaign to beat those in Sen­
that shipping had been fairly
ate and Congress who had hurt
Reading of other Branch minr
good during the past two Weeks
labor in last session. Director of
utes.
Secretary-Treasurer's finan»
in this port. Secretary-Treasm:Organization Lindsey Williams
cial report read and approved.
er's financial report and ifteadalso spoke, outlining the or­
Agent reported that Cape Nomd
quarters report to the memb^erganizational gains made by the Dispatcher. Motion by Stancil
had
paid off without any beefs,
ship read and approved. Patrol­ G. Crabtree, D. T. Yiakas, J.
'Union since. 1945. He expressed
Greeley
Victory was in port ifl'i
.
Hunter, seconded by William man-Dispatcher's report accepted Suyeler, W. H. Pierce, J. H.
confidence m the final victory Kieswetter, carried, that Secrc- as read. Motion carried to per­ Roberts, R. L. Fernon. Charges transit. Another payoff and an
over Cities Service. Communica­ tary-Treasurer be instructed to
read. Minutes of other ports read in-transit ship are scheduled thus
tion read from Holt Ross of the pay to order of Judge W. L. De- mit three men tp change to other
departments. Excuses for absence and accepted, with exception of far to come into port in the next
International Hod Carriers Union, vany the sum of $142.09 as per
two weeks, he said. Motion carr
thanking SIU for support given agreement with Port Agent on from meeting were referred to motion to non-concur with Nor­ ried for three-man committee to
them recently which enabled that reduction of taxes for Norfolk the Dispatdier. Onc.'AMiinute of folk New Business concerning go aboard ships calling here to
union to win an NLRB election. Branch building. Motion carried silence for departed • Union Bro eligibility and status of D. E. set up plans for a Christmas din­
Charges and trial committee re­ to refer written excuses for ab­ tbers. Meeting adjobSied a't 8:20 Jones in regard to being placed ner for men on beach in Sa­
on this year's ballot. Communi­
ports read and accepted. Under sence from meeting to the Dis­ PM.
cations
read from men seeking vannah. Motion carried calling
i
X
P
Good and Welfare there was con­ patcher. Communications read:
for 30-day vote on question of
siderable discussion on standby From Judge Devany on Building SAN FRANCISCO—Chairman, to be excused from meeting. Mo­ compulsory vacation , after one
jobs and the practice of some Tax reduction; from Donald Jeff Morrison, 34^1|^yRecording tion carried to refer them to year aboard a single ship. Mo­
men in working for an hour or Shriver, city real estate assessor, Secretary, P. M. R^rtson, 30148; Dispatcher. Headquarters' report tion to adjourn carried at 7:30
two, then leaving the ship. Men allowing $5,270 reduction in Reading Clerk, John Bilinski, to membership and Secretary- PM.
Treasurer's report read and ap­
building appraisal on Branch 49263.
proved. Port Agent reported on
' V' -.;
Hall; from Donald Shriver de­
shipping
and other matters in­
clining to make any further re­ Minutes of pi%vjous Branch volving the port. Motion carried
duction in appraisal of building. meetings in aB"®-ports accepted to accept Hospital Committee's
The transportation rule
Motion carried to adjourn at as read. In regard to Norfolk report. "Motion by H. Fowler,
now in effect reads:
8:10 PM, with 122 members pre­ minutes, motion carried to ac­ seconded by several, carried, rec­
taking these jobs were cautioned sent.
"When transportation is
ommending that all members
to stay on them or they will
due a crew under the terms
i t t
wishing to ship when jobs are
jeopardize time off for crew- MOBILE — Chairman, D. L.
of the contract, those men
called shall throw in registra­
members. Also discussed was the Parker; Recording Secretary,
who desire to stay on board
tion cards at once. When Dis­
necessity fW all qualified voters
the
ship can' do so, provid­
patcher says "This is final," no
in Louisiana to register so that and Reading Clerk, Harold J.
ing
they
do not collect trans­
cept minutes with exception of other cards are to be honored.
they could help put men friendly Fischer,
portation.
Those men desir­
Meeting
adjourned
at
8:15
PM,
New Business dealing with eli­
to labor in office.
ing transportation can collect
Meeting called to order at 11 gibility of D. E. Jones. It was with 382 members present.
X It
same and upon receipt of
AM by Port Agent who inform­ pointed out under discussion that
XXX
BOSTON—Chairman, T. Flem­ ed membership that meeting had
Committee on Credentials had TAMPA—There was no meet­ the money shall get off the
ing, 30821; Recording /Secretary, to be moved up in order to per­ acted on this matter and mem­ ing' in Tampa because of the ship and replacements for
those vacancies shall *be ship­
B. Lawson, 894; Heading Clerk, mit painters to continue working bership had already accepted §trike in the transportation sys-r
ped from the Union Hiring
on
Hall.
After
explaining
pur­
tern.
With
most
of
the
member­
committee's
report,
and
that
no
W. Prince, 30612.
pose of early meeting, Agent dis­ further action was necessary. Ag-' ship living in outlying districts Hall."
HeadiBg bf Boctoa minutes cussed the shipping prospects for ent said that shipping had taken and cab drivers refusing to go

The New Rule

�THE

Friday, November 18, 1949

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Eleven

Thought Control In Russia
J-'-

By GEORGE S. COUNTS '
In the late summer and early| The attack of the Party on
autumn of 1946 the American the literary arts was the beginpeople began to receive brief ning of a campaign to bring the
dispatches from Moscow report­ entire cultural apparatus to the
Vero Beach, Flofida, asks ynu ing that certain writers, drama- vigorous and unqualified support
RUSSELL E. LUND
GEORGE STRAPICK
tists, and moVing-picture direc- of the aggressive foreign policy
Contact your mother, 2082 to write her.
Call at the LOG office for your
'which the Politburo was matur­
tors were in trouble.
4 4 4
baggage receipts for souvenirs Golden Gate Ave., San Fran­
It appeared that the Central ing as the war drew to its close.
HUBERT ANDREWS
cisco, Calif.
checked with customs.
Your mother has had an acci­ Committee of the Party of Lenin . Apparently the first object of
4 4 4
4. 4. 4.
dent.
She would like you to con­ and Stalin had pointed the finger the attack was to erase com­
ANGEL
FERNANDEZ
DANIEL A. HUTTO
tact
her
at Route No. I, Barnes- of criticism at these people and pletely from the mind of the
Get in touch with your wife
Contact Danny Bruce at 626
had asked them to mend their Soviet people all favorable im­
ville, Ga.
Dauphine St., New Orieans, con­ at 402 Pacific St., Brooklyn, N.Y.
pressions of the West and par­
ways.
4 4 4
4 4 4
cerning your claim.
ticularly
of America gained dur­
Since
most
Americans
were
EARL GONYEA
DRUY K. WATERS
ing the struggle.
wholly,
unfamiliar
both
with
the
4 4 4
Your mother is sick. You are
Your wife gsks that you write
A. J. TASINLEE
names mentioned in the dis­
But the controlling purpose
wanted
home immediately.
her at 604 Chatt Ave., Dalton,
patches
and
with
the
role
of
the
apparently
was and is the supGear shipped to this man at Georgia.
4 4 4
Party
in
the
Russian
state,
they
|
port
of
a
stupendous
and coor825 S.E. Green St., Portland,
PABLO ORTIZ
4 4 4
t^ded
to
dismiss
the
reports
as'dinated
effort,
armed
with the
Ore., is being held in express HERBERT JOHN DONELAN
Please communicate with Her­
beyond
their
comprehension
or
full
might
of
the
Russian
state
office. Get in touch with Ex­
Write your mother at 33 Union man N. Rabson or Benjamin B. to regard the events incclved as and the Third International, to
press Company in Portland as
St., City CI, Auckland, New Sterling of 42 Broadway, New humorous episodes to be treated'stir people to revolt everywhere.
soon as possible.
York 4, N.Y.
Zealand.
with levity.
to extend the Soviet system to
They
failed
utterly
to
sense
the utmost, and to fulfill the
EDDIE (Mc^y)^ DEVLIN
FRANK^MOHER
EMANUEL ERAZO
the personal tragedies lying be-'promises of the Bolshevik revoContact Mrs. Lilliam Guydes, hind the news stories and the lution at home and abroad,
Contact Tom Coyne, SS Gree­
Please leave camera at N.Y
1213
Common Street; Chester, world tragedy implicit in these
ley Victory, c/o Waterman SS Hall.^
A. W. Weir
INSPIRED BY LENIN
Pennsylvania.
Co., 19 Rector St., New York
4 4 4
strange actions of the All-Union
' City, regarding money due you.
The
theoretical foundation of
4 4 4
NICK BIGNEW
Communist Party.
REWARD I
this action of the Party was laid
Write to Walter Mrozinski, 393
4 4 4
ALEXANDER DYKO
If the party who found the ATTACK ON LITERARY ARTS by Lenin.
16th St., Brooklyn, N.Y.
As a matter of fact, the dis­
Write to NelTy Vignaud, Box
Standing on the Marxian con­
4 4 4
, camera I mislaid on the Purdue
patches
were reporting the first ception of the state, with all of
Victory will return it, I will be
WALTER ROBERTS
175, Post Office, Hyde Park 36,
Contact George W. Miller. glad to pay si reward of thirty Jiattles in a gigantic and care­ its organs and powers, as the
Boston, Mass.
Cdlden, New York — he is an­ dollars. I would be glad to cor­ fully planned offensive against instrument of the ruling class.
4 4 4
respond with them from the Bal­ the ^ West and the entire free
proceeded logically to the
xious to hear from you. •
OSCAR FIGUEROA
world.
timore
Hall. Conrad Tylenda.
doctrine that the first
duty of
4 4 4
Contact Florence Joseph, Ass't
THOMAS HAWKINS*
every division of Soviet culture
Supervisor, Melrose Center, 266
Get in touch with Melvin
is the education of the people
•East 161 Street, New York 51,
Fontenot,
437 Richard St., Lake
in Party doctrine and policy.
.N.Y.
Charles, Louisiana.
In a passage which is quoted
f
4 4 4
4 4 4
SS LUCY STONE
more widely today than in Len­
NORMAN M. BAKER
in's time he expressed himself
WILL CREWMEMBERS of this
Your mother is ill. Get in
as follows: "In tlte field of pub­
•«hip on or about Dec. 12, 1946,
touch with your sister, Mrs. B.
lic education the Communist
who witnessed the accident to
H. Emerson, 2926 N. 28th St.,
Party sets itself the aim of con­
Joseph H. Lewark, please get in
Milwaukee. Wis.
cluding the task begun by the
-touch with Herman N. Rabson
October Revolution of 1917 of
sor Benjamin B. Sterling, 42
JOHN TURNER
converting the school from a
Eroadway, IJew York.
Please write your mother at
weapon for the class domination
Portsmouth, Ohio.
of
the bourgeoisie into a weapon
C. Ibrain. $2.00; A. Pappas. $2.00; P.
SS CAVALIER
L. C. Knowles. $2.00; F. S. Stevens. Gay. $2.00; V. McCloskey. $2.00; W. for the destruction of this dom­
EDWARD LYNCH
$2.00; A. F. Kethe, $1.00; B. W. Ar­ Zaleski. $2.00; J. Vilasis. $1.00; C. ination. . . . The school must be­
SS SEATRAIN NEW YORK
Now in dry-dock in the Balti­ nold, $2.00; C. B. Wiggins. $1.00 J. P. Oliver. $1.00; C. Stephen. $1.00; J. C.
come a weapon of the dictator­
The following have retroactive more Marine Hospital wishes to Wise. 42.00; E. Schiwek. $2.00; J. E. McCarthy. $1.00; R. J. Zumkley. $1.00; ship of the proletariat." (Lenin,
clothing allowance due them for say "hello" to all his friends Ward. $2.00; J. P. HewUt. $2.00; W. J. N. Raymond, $1.00; E. Cromwell, Works, Vol. XIII, p. 63.)
M. Faulkner. $2.00; C. R. Morton, $1.00; R. Pelasoja. $2.00; J. J. Dothe period July 17-21, 1949 which and shipmates.
$2.00; R. D. Curtis. $2.00; W. J. herty, $ 1.00.
,
Stalin, as is his habit, puts the
may be collected by submitting
Creenevela. $1.00; A. C. Kimberly.
SS
KATHRYN
matter
even more bluntly in a
$2.00; T. R. Terrington. $2.00; C.
MICHAEL W^PPADAKIS
proper identification at either
J. Pasapera. $1.00; J. Bernard. $1.00; conversation with H. G. Wells.
Breaux.
$2.00;
R.
H.
Sheffield.
$2.00;
Get in. touch with H. Parness,
of Seatrain offices in New York,
S. Evanchuck. $1.00; A. Soto. $1.00;
R. L. Butler. $2.00; T. B. Hutchinsen.
"Education is a weapon," he
N.Y., New Orleans, La., or Hous­ 92 Liberty St., New York.
$2.00; T. Wrena. $2.00; R. P. Marion. W. Fontan. $1.00; O. H. Lopez. $1.00;
said, "whose effect depends on
ton, Texas:
$1.00; K. Lewis. $1.00; O. M. Mani­ L. Gulleritz. $1.00.
who holds it in his hands and
fold. $2.00; C. C. Rayford. $1.00; C.
JOHN pfvHLLlAMSON
SS AFOUNDRIA
Manuel J. Pedraza, Walter W.
P.
Wilson.
$2.00;
S.
Z.
Campbell.
$2.00;
P.
Rasmussen.
$5.00;
S.
W.
Carlisle.
at
whom it is aimed."
Your sister, Mrs. W. C. Harde­
Wise, Thomas A. Foehand, and
i. W. Drost. $2.00; O. M. Winfree, $5.00; O. F. Bodden. $1.00; C. K.
man, Walker Ave.," Rte. No. I, $2.00; J. L. Langley. $1.00; T. O. Kearn. $5.00; R. Llauger. $2.00; K.
Earl T. Brown.
And when the term "educa­
Nilssen. $2.00; P. Samuelson, $2.00; A. G. Sivertson. $3.00; J. J. Radecki. tion" is employed in the Soviet
K. Miles. $2.00; J. U. Hanley. $2.00; L $2.00; M. Santana, $1.00; B. D. Elliot. Union today it is made to em­
D. Lae. $2.00; G. Lawrence. $2.00; V. $4.00; J. M. Lennon. $3.00; C. Nelson.
brace all the infiuences and ag­
J. Vaucem. $1.00; R. L. Jones. $2.00; $4.00; C. Micallef. $2.00; E. Szarythe.
encies for the informing, and
W. J. Smith. $2.00; J. C. Brannan. $1.00.
$2.00; i. A. During. $2.00; C. Slater.
P. J. Wilkerson. $3-00; J. F. Kozar, molding of the mind.
$2.00; J. O. Manning. $2.00.
$2.00; O. B. Wrenn. Jr.. $5.00; E.
In the measure that these in­
Shipp. $3.00; A. P. Lazzaro. $3.00; fiuences and agencies can be or­
SS ALCOA PARTNER
16 Merchant St
BALTIMORE
14 North Gay St. HONOLULU
J. Pewitt, $3.00; H. Hicks. $3.00; F. Jeffords. $2.00; W. D. Hamilton.
Phona 8-8777 C. Spinks. $1.00; J. Elliott. $1.00; B. $3.00; J. M. Bergeria. $1.00; F. A. ganized and controlled, they con­
William Rentz, Acent Mulberry 4S40
BOSTON
276 State St. PORTLAND
Ill W. Bumside St Amserry, $5.00; W. Yarbrough. $1.00; Burke. $2.00; G. Abbema, $2.00; F. stitute a weapon oi a battery
Ben Lawson, Agent Richmond 2-0140
Beacon 4336 C. ivey, $2.00; P. Willoughby. $1.00; Judah. $2.00; M. Rzenkowicz. $2.00.
of weapons of fabulous power
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141
RICHMOND, Calif.
..287 Bth St. M. Jones. $2.00; S. Kolina, $1.00; R.
which the Communist Party
SS
SUZANNE
'GALVESTON
308'/4—23rd St.
Phone 2899 Littleton, $3.00; W. Coleman. $1.0.0;
A.
I.
Reyes.
$1.00;
R.
Pedro.
$2.00;
holds
in its hands and points at
JCeith Aisop, Agent
Phone 2-8448
W. Candler. $1.00; E. Mayo. $1.00; E.
N. F. Nielsen. $2.00; H.-W. Freidman. whomsoever or whatsoever it
89 Clay St
MOBILE
1 South Lawrence St. SAN FRANCISCO
B. Hayes. $1.00; C. F. Nelson. $2.00;
$2.00; J. Denopra. $1.00; Harold Sutts.
Douglas 2-8369
Cal Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-17S4
F. P. Drozak. $2.00.
wishes.
$2.00; E. R. Rosado. $1.00; A. Molina,

^IJO&amp;

Money Dno

Directory Of SIU Halls
SUP,

SIU, A&amp;G District

-NEW ORLEANS
823 Bienville St.
E. Sheppard, Agent Magnolia 6112-6113
NEW YORK
81 Beaver St.
Joe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784
NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St.
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
"PHILADELPHIA
337 Market St.
J. Sheehan, Agent
Market 7-1638
SAN FRANCISCO
88 Third St.
Jeff Morrison, Agent
Douglas 2-8478
SAVANNAH
2 Abercorn St.
Jtm Drawdy, Agent
Phono 3-1728
SEATTLE
2700 1st Ave.
Wm. McKay, Agent
Seneca 4870
TAMPA
1809-1811 N. Franklin St.
Ray White, Agent
Phono M-1323
WILMINGTON, CaUf., 227% Avalon Blvd.
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Terminal 4-12874
HEADQUARTERS. .81 Beaver St., N.V.C.
SECRETARY-TREASURER
Paul Hall
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
Lindsey Williams
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURERS
Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
Joseph Volpian

SEATTLE

86 Seneca Si
SS EVISTAR
$1.00; B. O. Reece. $1.00; M. Sanchez.
Main 0390
D. K. Waters. $2.00; C. Stilley. $1.00i
$2.00; T. M. Murray. $2.00; C. B.
WILMINGTON
440 Avalon Blvd M. Dusevitch. $1.50.
Wamsley. $1.00; Richard Diaz. $1.00; R.
SS HILTON
Terminal 4-3131
Ramirez. $1.00.
G. P. Rosario. $1.00; Adolfo AnaviSS AZALEA CITY
tarte. $1.00; J. F. Vandessppooll. $1.00;
J. Pasinosky. $1.00; Ernest D. MaJ. Winfield. $1.00; E. Padillo. $3.00;
W. Stewart, $1.00; F. Bloom. $1.00; bee. $2.00; H. W. Ehmsen. $1.00; Mariand Seano, $1.00; J. P. Baliday. $1.00;
MONTREAL
404 Le Moyne St S. Crespo. Jr.. $1.00; O. Aquinones.
1. Flaherty. $2.00; Rdiac, $1.00; F.
Marquette 8909 $1.00; E. Bonecont, $1.00; E. Badual.
$1.00; J. M. Landron, $1.00; E. S. Webb. $2.00; R. Ruppert. $5.00; J.
FORf WILLIAM.. 118% Syndicate Ava
Alvarez. $1.00; S. Bell. $1.00; Michael Lukacs. $1.00; A. Heljo. 1.00; G.
Ontario
Phone 3-3221
Paraschiv, $1.00; S. C. Segree. $1.00; Stromback. $1.00; F. Rothmeir. $1.00;
HAUFAX
128% Hollls St J. Bryant. $1.00; A. Francis. $1.00.
L. A. Yiartlunen. $1.00.
Phone 3-8911
K. V. Zeits. $1.00; V. Miguel. $1.00;
SS HELEN
PORT COLBORNE
103 Durham St
E. Glasforl. $1.00; G. Ortiz. $5.00; C. Misak. Jr.. $1.00; J. Camporeale.
Phone 6891 L. Jones. $1.00; C. Negron. $1.00; A» $1.00; H. J. Principe. $1.00; C. Long,
TORONTO
lllA Jarvis St Guzman, $1.00 C. Bonafont. $1.00; P. $1.00; T. V. Ulinski. $1.00.' L. Dewolff.
• t
S71S Weinman. $5.00; L. Martindale, $1.00; $1.00; S. Foscols. $2.00; A. Kavel,
Jr.. $1.00; Lieber Fowin, $1.00; F.
VICTORIA, B.C
602 Bough ton St L. Gardier. $1.00; T Brown. $5.00.
Roman. $1.00; L. Franken, $1.00.
Empire 4831
SS HASTINGS
SS SANTA CLARA VICTORY
VANCOUVER
865 Hamilton St
J. Sharp. $1.00; D. H. Buckley. $3.00;
Pacific 7824 F. J. Bradley. $2.00; C. Storey. $1.00:
T. Canfield. $1.00; A. Freund. $1.00;
J. J. Noonan. $1.00; A. J. Stephens® A. Carpenter, $1.00; S. Requites, $2.00;
HEADQUARTERS
512 McGUl St $2.00; A. Montemarano, $2.00; W. E. Johnson. $3.00; L. Blankenbeckler.
Montreal
Plateau S7C Hinch. $1.00; 1. Sieger, $1.00; G. W. $2.00; C. J. Huebner. $3.00; L. Hce.
Ehmsen. $2.00; G. P. Kosmas, $2.00;'$1.00.

Canadian District

RESOLUTIONS ON IDEOLOGY
The process of shifting the aim
and of adjusting the sights of
this powerful battery of weap­
ons began in earnest on August
14, 1946, with a resolution of
the Central Committee of the
Party on two literary journals
published in Leningrad.
This was the most famous of
all the resolutions, because it
was the first and therefore set
the pattern. It was followed by
resolutions on the drama, the
cinema, music, genetics, humor,
and other phases of cultural ac­
tivity. Taken together they are
known in the Soviet Union as
the "resolutions on ideology."
They reveal clearly the Soviet
system of thought control.

�t

Page Twelve

'•

T H E S E AF ARE AS LOG

•

.

'

Triday, November 18, 1949

Two Years Before CS Mast-Then The Axe
By ROY LUNDQUIST
I sailed two years before the
Cities Service mast. For my
steady, faithful service I got
Cities Service's special treatment.
I was fired for daring to exercise
iny law-given right to choose a
genuine collective bargaining ag­
ent—^the SIU—to represent me.
Now I'm more convinced than
ever that the SIU is the only
way to economic freedom and
self respect for any man who
sails aboard a Cities Service
tanker. The fleet reeks with a
spy system operating through
the company dominated front or­
ganization known ds CTMA,
headed by a group of self-seek­
ing hatchet men who are flunkeys
for the company. They hop from
ship to ship at the company's
bidding to needle men into sign­ that would mean only one guy
ing pledge cards and they prom­ is not CTMA. But outside of the
paid company flunkeys probably
ise you a pot of gold.
all of these receipts are held by
PURE BUNK
men with SIU sympathies.
And they can sign pledges
But it doesn't add up, because from now until Doomsday — it
the company shows less concern will never mean a thing. For as
for its personnel than it would fast as they fire men for "union
for a bunch of dogs. More im­ activity" there are new ones to
portant to Cities Service are
profits. And, of course, the com­
pany figures that, if the men are
given better working conditions,
overtime pay and better chow,
the difference will come out of
WE AT SEA, by Capt. Nicholas
their swollen profits.
Manolis. 188 pages. Anatolia
My service with Cities Serv­
Press,
$3.00.
ice began and ended on the SS
Council Grove which I went
At long last a book has come
aboard on Nov.^ 7, 1947. I worked off the press that properly eval­
conscientiously at my job. I gave uates the essential role of the
no one any trouble, but I saw American seafaring man in an
that I could never be rated a highly important segment of the
human being under the set-up nation's economy in both war
existing on CS ships. I looked and peace.
forward to the day—as 1 -Still do And the seafaring man, for a
—when the SIU would be certi­ welcome change, is accorded re­
fied as collective bargaining ag­ spect and admiration by a practi­
ent and Cities Service men would cal seagoing man, who possesses
attain the respect, decent condi­ the all-too-rare qualities of deep
tions and top wages that SIU understanding, warmth and kind­
men enjoy aboard their con­ ness, along with his expert
tracted ships.
knowledge of the merchant ma­
rine.
SIGNS UP
I

come aboard and take their
place. Cities Service knows it,
too. That's why it's so desperate
and is working its CTMA flun­
keys to the bone.
Only one thing gets my goat—
and the rest of Cities Service
men are interested, too. What­
ever happens to the money we
paid into CTMA as dues? It
runs into thousands of dollars.
Yet we've never seen anything
produced f;:om it. Unless, of
course, the company's stool pig­
eons in CTMA are getting it.
AMERICAN WAY?
That's certainly no way for
a nice big company, that raves
about doing things "the Ameri­
can way," to show its mien its
concern for them.
It's bad enough that they un­
derpaid us, cheated us out of
overtime, shoved sloppy grub in
front of us and treated us like
dogs generally. They shouldn't
filch us out of our money, too.
But speaking for myself, I'll
say it's all worth it—^just let the
SIU get that certification. There'll
be a new day for CS tankermeri.

"

t

»

Ciliet Service has created a tremendous list, of employees
fired for having pro-Union sympathies. Above are three of the
hundreds who are victims of CS hysteria. Left to right: Ben
Talburt, OS; Willard Parks. AB. and Remus Hall. MM. They
were booted off the Salem Maritime recently in the company's
continuing "witch hunt."
All are now happily sailing aboard SlU-contracted ships
—under the best conditions in the industry. ''And speaking
their minds out in the open, too..

New Book Shows Keen Understanding OfSeamen

1 even joined the CTMA, in
June 1949, paying four dollars
in dues and getting receipt No.
280. But the lies and dirty tac• tics employed by CTMA in de­
ceiving the new men coming
aboard were too much, and in
August 1 began talking openly
about real trade unionism. 1 ac­
cepted pledges for the SIU and
distributed LOGS.
Cities Service and its illegiti­
mate offspring CTMA don't go
for independent action, and they
went to work. In September of
this year, the Mate warned me
to lay off.
1 didn't "lay off," because 1
•still figure freedom is an Ameri­
can word. Cities Service doesn't
think so, though. So on October
25, in Portland, Me., 1 was fired,
just 10 days short of two years
after 1 went to work for this
wealthy oil empire.
NO ONE LASTS
1 didn't get any vacation for
the second year .1 spent aboard.
As a matter of fact, vacations
don't bother Cities-Service. Only
paid flunkeys
ever survive a
couple of trips to be eligible for
a vacation.
Cities Service, or CTMA, pub­
lishes a little sheet. It never says
anything; just makes jokes. Like
the latest one which says that
"CTMA membership receipt No.
511 went out today." That-would
be nice, because with 16 ships
blithe fleet and 32 men on each.

undoubtedly come away with a
feeling of admiration for this
man of human and technical un­
derstanding. Seamen, in particu­
lar, will find the author the kind
of guy they'd like to find on the
bridge of their next ship.
BEGAN AT 11
Capt. Manolis, who began go­
ing to sea when he was '11 years
old, is now employed in an ex­
ecutive capacity by the Orion
Steamship Company. He obtain­
ed his master's license in 1925
and for a time served as marine
superintendent for the US Dis­
trict Engineers. Capt. Manolis
attended Steven Polytechnic In­
stitute in New Jersey and has
devoted considerable time to
study of English and foreign
languages.

SAGA OF HEROISM
In his book, the author, Capt.
Nicholas Manolis, deals principal­
ly with the World War 11 period
and the heroic efforts of the men
of the merchant marine as they
kept the sea lanes open in the
violent struggle against fascism.
He dedicates his book to the
"least sung heroes of all who go
down to the sea in ships"—the
unarmed but courageous fighters,
untold numbers of whom gave
their lives "that we may live in
a world of Four Freedoms."
Capt. Manolis writes with a
convincing reverence and sincere
affection for the men of the sea.

CAPT. NICHOLAS MANOLIS

(Ed. Note: Capt. Manolis'
book is on sale at most book­
stores. The SEAFARERS LOG
will be glad, however, to ac­
cept orders for the book. In
ordering, enclose check or
money order for $3.00 and ad­
dress to which book is to be
sent.)

Despite the seriousness with and industrial education so that
which Capt. Manolis has tackled seamen can improve their effi­
this tribute to the men who are ciency and discipline." On this
possibly the most misunderstood latter view, the record shows
and neglected group of American that the SIU membership and
workers, the book is not without Capt. Manolis see eye. to eye.
its lighter moments.
HAS A MESSAGE
High point of these is a se­
quence in which Capt. "Manolis is "We At Sea" has a message,
The AFL believes the most
revealed as sailor with an eye too. The Captain pleads for a practical approach to current un­
for romance. And he is not be­ strong merchant' marine, with employment is to spread the
TORPEDO VICTIM
yond telling a yarn at the ex­ faster, medium-sized vessels. He
work load among a greater num­
"We At Sea" gives a thrilling pense of his own dignity. But c^lls for a program of shipbuild­
ber
of wage earners.
ing
to
stabilize
the
employment
account of the toi'pedoing of his then, the Captain has a sense of
of
seamen
and
technicians.
As
a
humor.
ship, the Caribsea, which was
The 68th AFL convention re­
great industrial nation, the US affirmed its endorsement of the
shot from under hirn In 1942. His
UNIONS AID SEAMEN
is entitled to a large share of principle of shorter hours for
vivid tale of the encounter with
a U-boat and the rescue of the
A particularly striking phase of world ocean commerce, although the sole purpose of protecting
seven survivors out of a crew "We At Sea" is the Captain's Capt. Manolis makes it clear that the nation's workers in declin­
of 28 is gripping.
recognition of the unions as a he doesn't favor monopoly of the ing periods of production and
"
Perhaps less exciting, but of force in improving the lot of sea­ seas.
consumer income.
vital interest are the chapters men, an admission seldom, if
In support of his plea, the It directed the Executive Coun­
sketching the origin and devel­ ever, made in other tales of the author offers a concrete set of
cil to continue research in the
opment of the American mer­ sea.
proposals which are workable field of shortening the work day
chant marine. Capt. Manolis "No one questions the value of and within reach.
and week without reduction of
shows keen understanding of the organization in the betterment
real earnings.
RECOMMENDED
READING
American seamen in explaining of working hours, living condi­
Institution of the 40-hour week
their atti-action to the sea and tions, wages 1 and recognition of
Capt. Manolis' book is recom­
their behavior.
seamen's rights," says Capt. Man­ mended reading for anyone con­ on the nation's railroads waa
"Seafaring at best is not easy," olis, And he asserts that progress nected with maritime. Even land­ praised and special attention
he writes. No man goes to sea has been made by the unions in lubbers will find it extremely il­ urged for those unorganized
workers still working long hours
in peacetime because he wants pursuing these objectives.
luminating.
—as many as 12 per day—with
Capt. Manolis suggests that ima soft job or physical safety, says
ions develop programs "of moral' Readers of "We At Sea" will j low pay.
the Captain.

AFL Convention For
Shorter Werk Week

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9938">
                <text>November 18, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9997">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 31</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10018">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10039">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10099">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10117">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10178">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
SIU DEMANDS END TO MWEB&#13;
TALKS STALLED, SUP TAKES STRIKE VOTE&#13;
ENEMIES OF LABOR&#13;
SEAFARERS ASKS NLRB TO SPEED CERTIFICATION OF UNION AS BARGAING AGENT FOR CS MEN&#13;
MM&amp;P DELAYS STRIKE FOR MONTH&#13;
SAN FRANCISCO HAS TWO GOOD SHIPPING WEEKS&#13;
SHIPPING FIGURES RISE SHARPLY IN PHILADELPHIA&#13;
NEW YORK SHIPPING HOLDS UP WELL DESPITE CONDITIONS&#13;
SHIPPING, WEATHER CHILL PORT SAVANNAH&#13;
MOBILE SHOWS NO IMPROVEMENT&#13;
NEVER TO SAY GOODBYE: A SHORT STORY&#13;
WHAT A CONGRESSMAN THINKS OF THE SIU: FROM THE 'RECORD'&#13;
GRAND DAME 'MURPHY' MOURNED BY FRIENDS&#13;
SOUTH ATLANTIC SS CO. PRAISES CREW FOR AID IN MAKING GOOD WILL PROGRAM A SUCCESS&#13;
SS DEL NORTE SOFTBALLERS ROUT BUENOS AIRES OUTFIT&#13;
MINUTES OF A&amp;G BRANCH MEETINGS IN BRIEF&#13;
THOUGHT CONTROL IN RUSSIA&#13;
TWO YEARS BEFORE CS MAST - THEN THE AXE&#13;
NEW BOOK SHOWS KEEN UNDERSTANDING OF SEAMEN&#13;
AFL CONVENTION FOR SHORTER WORK WEEK</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10179">
                <text>11/18/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13069">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="972" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="976">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/630b6d783fe4e179078639cd3f0bc88c.PDF</src>
        <authentication>7d8380fbac33579d9c5b8e206b72cd0c</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47452">
                    <text>•

.ir.3 Vi-rr/r

Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Golf District, Seafarers International Union of NA
VOL. XI

NEW YORK. N. Y.. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1949

No. 32

Comments Invited On Vacations And Credit Unions
The A&amp;G District has gone on record to throw open the pages of
the SEAFARERS LOG for full discussion on the two topics which are
currently being debated by the membership. They are;
1. Whether men who have spent a year aboard one ship, and are
entitled to vacations, should be forced to get off the ship and take their
vsicfl-tions
2. The advisability of setting up a credit union or unions within
the Atlantic and Gulf District.
After both matters have been thoroughly discussed pro and con,
they will go to a vute of the membership, if it so desires.
Letters on the vacation proposal have been appearing regularly in
the LOG for the past few months. It is hoped that the motion for fur­
ther discussion will bring comments from others not yet heard from.
On page 12 of this issue, there is a brief article on credit unions,
stating what they are and how they are fun. Comments are invited from
the membership.
Meanwhile, any motions at the present time calling for immediate
action on these two matters are out of order, until the motion for full
discussion has been complied with.
Let us hear from you!

SlU To Demand
Shipowner-Paid
Weifare Fund

NEW YORK, Dec. 2—The SIU Atlantic and
Gulf District's plans for the establishment of a
welfare fund for its membership, financed solely by
the shipowners, moved ahead today when the Head­
quarters Negotiating Committee called for reopen­
ing of the contract on the subject of wages.
Notification of the Union's desire was sent by
telegram to all contracted operators. The Negotiat­
ing Committee requested the discussions in accord­
ance with a contract provision which permits the
Union to reopen the contract on wage issues at

any time. The SIU is the only*:
to the operators is the outgrowth
maritime union whose agree­
of a comprehensive study of
ments contain this unique pro­
pension and welfare funds made
vision.
by the SIU this year and which
The text of the wire sent to­
appeared serially in the SEA­
day by the committee follows:
FARERS LOG.
"As per the preamble of our
The exact form of the welfare
agreement, this is to notify you
fund the Union is seeking will
that we wish to open negotia­
follow the lines of the plan
tions immediately for an increase
worked out jointly by Headquar­
iti wages for all ratings in the
ters officials of the Atlantic and
unlicensed personnel. An early
Gulf District and the Sailors Un­
reply is requested."
ion of the Pacific at a meeting
The employer-financed Union
held recently under the auspices
welfare plan which the Nego­ of the International.
tiating Committee will present
This plan for establishment of
, welfare benefits for the SIU's
seagoing affiliates has as its fore­
runner a policy adopted at this
year's SIU convention, which
went on record in favor of an
When you go to wot-k for all-out effort to secure greater
You have probably heard how
An unsolicited letter received Back issues of the DOG will
the company has put electric Cities Service, you might just economic protection for the mem­
this week from a Cities Service supply evidence of that.
bership.
tankerman who is not a mem­
When I first
came on the dishwashers on all its ships, as well put the word "overtime"
As agreed at the joint SIUber of the SIU reveals the tech­ CS tai\ker, the company un­ therefore doing away with the out of your vocabulary. They SUP welfare discussions, the
nique employed in building up ion, the CTMA came into be­ Pantrynian^nd causing the Mess- simply laugh at you if you ask SUP was to spearhead the move,
the. so-called membership of ing. At first the comf^ny didn't men to work ten and eleven about it.
inasmuch as its contracts ex­
We, the crew on the SS
C.TMA, the company-dominated push the issue and most of us hours a day without being paid
pired on September 30 of tbi&gt;
overtime.
%.
, wish to thank the SIU year. The strategy adopted by
thought it as a big joke.
"union."
for
the
splendid fight they are the SIU-SUP representatives met
What
you
probably
don't
know
But
during
the
past
few
weeks
^
"Sign*up or else!" is the ul­
putting
up in order to bring with success this week, when'
is
that
these
dishwashers
are
far
there
has
been
a
kind
of
reign
timatum delivered to CS tankerus
into
the
"Brotherhood of the the SUP successfully concluded
from
being
the
best,
and
they
of
terror
on
Cijies
Service
ships:
men by the company agents
Sea."
simply
don't
get
the
dishes
clean.
either
pay
six
dollars
and
join
• aboard the vessels. Thus the
its negotiations for a new
membership rolls of CTMA prove up or "your services are no About half of the dishes have .We realize that this is inevit­ agreement, which contains pro­
nothing more than the fact that longer- needed." This is certainly to be washed by hand after com­ able and we. will soon be able visions for the welfare plan.
to act like free men.
so many men have signed the both un-democratic and un-Am­ ing out of the washer.
Under terms of the contract,
company's pledge cards under erican.
the employers will begin con­
The childish way the company
duress.
tributing orr January 1, 1950 the
tries
to tear down the SlU is
sum of 25 cents for each man
In a secret ballot, the company
for each day worked to a wel­
would have virtually no support­ really quite amusing to the crew.
This
is
proved
by
the
fact
that
fare and security fund, "to be
ers at all anywhere in the fleet,
Oswald C. Stone, a Seafarer
everyone
on
the
ship
except
two
collected, administered and ap­
as was proven in two NLRB
since the inception of the Union
plied in accordance with a Sup­
elections won overwhelmingly of the crew is strong for the in 1938 who served for many
SIU and have signed pledge years as a Dispatcher in the
plementary Agreement which
by the SIU.
the parties shall negotiate
The text of the letter, which cards.
Port of New York, died of a
promptly after execution of this
, CTMA FOUL-UP
is on file in the SIU organizing
heart ailment in Kings County
agreement."
department, foUows below^ The
A few trips ago we had a Hospital, Brooklyn, on Nov. 24.
names of the correspondent and CTMA organizer on board. Boy! He would have been 65 years
SUP STRIKE VOTE
the tanker and the port of .call What a fine example he was! old on Christmas Day.
The SUP agreement with the
have been deleted to safeguard He went ashore in Trinidad,
operators was reached after ne­
Floral tributes were sent to
the jobs of the entire crew.
gotiations had been stalemated
missed three watches and came Brother Stone's funeral from all
and the union conducted a strike
back to the ship gassed to the SIU ports in the Atlantic and
vote, in which 97 percent of
You have probably heard my gills. But was he fired? Oh, no, Gulf District. His body reposed
those voting favored a walkout
story quite a few times. I sign­ although , quite a few of my at the A.- Q. Martin Funeral
to win their demands.
ed on the Cities Service tanker, friends have been fired just, for Home in Brooklyn and was-bur­
Other provisions of the new
SS
, six months ago. having pro SIU ideas.
ied on November 29 at Evergreen
SUP
agreement include liberal­
The company union has prom­ Cemetery.
Since then I have learned quite
ized
conditions
on certain penala lot about pities S^vice policy. ised us vacations, a raise in pay
A seafaring man for most of
ty-type
cargoes,
and also spells
and
last—but
not
least—^job
se­
The first example of Cities
his years, Brother Stone sailed
out jobs .within the SUP's juris­
curity. Job security — what a as Steward aboard vessels that
Service treatment came in
diction to prevent any attempts
while loading. During laugh! They have kept «one of once pliejj regularly up and down
at raiding by Harry Bridges'
the day we were loading at a their promises.
the Atlantic coast but which dis­
CIO longshoremen.
When you come to the sub­ appeared with the decline of indock and those of us who were
OSWALD STONE
At A&amp;G Headquarters today,
not on watch, could go ashore. ject of food, the grub on here tercoastal trade. Among these
Union officials pointed up the
But late in the afternoon we is almost as bad .as some of the were ships of the Eastern, Sa­
moved out in the stream and windjammers of , two centQries vannah, Old Dominion and Clyde New York Branch in March fact that "from here on in,
1944, a position he held untTl more and more attention wUl be
tied up to a mooring buoy to ago., We have some bacon on Mallory lines.
paid to the future security of
the early part of this year.
here that is over a. year old.
load from a submarine hose.
Born in the British West In­ Quiet and unassuming. Stone seamen.
As long as I've been on here,
Although we were there for
dies, on Dec. 25, 1885, Stone'ob­ was weU-liked by the member­
The SIU has consistenl^y led
twelve hours, bumboats came out I have never seen anyone eat
tained United States citizenship ship and had a wide friendship the way in establishing top
it.
It
is
just
cooked
and
thrown
to take Us ashore. Fof some
in his youth.
wages and working conditions in
throughout the Union.
strange reason the Captain would over the side.
He joined the SIU Atlantic A widower. Brother Stone, re­ the maritime industry. It will
The last fresh meat we have
not grant shore leave. Since then
this has happened several times. had on board came on six months and Gulf District in the Port sided at the home of his daugh­ now push ahead to achieve the
I need not go into the sub­ ago, and the Steward told me of New York on Nov. 19, 1938, ter, Mrs. Olive Bennett at 491 same success in setting up and
Madison Street, Brooklyn. Two broadening welfare and other
ject of what happens if you talk himself that it is the company's receiving Book No. 484.
Brother Stone was el«ted to sons, Randolph B., and Knea- security benefits for the Ameri­
to the wrong persons about un­ policy to take on meat only
can seamen."
serve as a Dispatcher in the land C., also survive.
ions or against the conditions. every six months.

Cities Service Forcing Men Into Company Union

Seafarers Mourns Oswald Stone

�Page Two

THE

SEAFARERS
Published Every Other Week by the

SEAFARERS

LOG

i

Friday, December 2, 1949

'^AHHands TumTo Hlf

SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor
At 51 Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Reentered as second class matter August 2, 1949, at the Post
Office in New York, N.Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

Midway Mark
The democratic processes followed in the operation
of our Union are clearly set forth in the SIU Constitu­
tion. One of the provisions of this important document
gives every member the right to choose directly, by secret
vote, the men whom he wishes to administer the affair
of the Union during the coming year.
Seafarers have the opportunity to exercise this pre­
cious right every 12 months, and every member who is
interested in effectively participating in the administra
tion of his Union should get out and vote—and vote for
the candidates he thinks are the best qualified to protect
our gains and to pursue a course that will provide even
greater protection for the entire membership.
How a member arrives at this decision and who his
favored candidates for the Union posts are are his business.
It's not how he votes that we are concerned with, rather
we are interested in seeing that he accepts his responsi­
bilities as a member of a democratic organization. And,
of course, one of-the first of these responsibilities is that
.he take an active part in all Union activities, including
the elections.
That more and more Seafarers are becoming duly
conscious of their obligations as members of a Union of
seafaring men is indicated by the large numbers of men
who have already cast ballots in the current elections. It
is not unlikely, on the basis of the total registered so far,
that a record vote will be cast.
But the total vote should be large enough to show
that every man who was physically able to get to the
polling places did so and thus had his say.
Right now we've just turned the half-way mark in
the balloting for next year's officials of the A&amp;G District.
The last voting day is Dec. 31, which concludes the 60day period required by the Constitution. Those who
haven't yet had their say owe it to themselves and their
Brother members to vote before the deadline date.
The ballot lists all the candidates who have offered
to serve the Union and who have met the constitutional
requirements.
Polling places are open daily from 9 AM to 5 PM in
every Atlantic, and Gulf District port.
Make it a point—you men who still have not attended
to this matter—to head for the nearest Branch ^polling
place—and vote!
Now is the time! After Dec. 31, it will be too late.

What Do You Think?
m

Elsewhere in this issue are invitations to the member­
ship to participate in the discussions on two topics cur­
rently of Union-wide interest. Because we're anxious for
all hands to pitch into the debate centering around the
compulsory vacation question, we're again soliciting opin­
ions, both pro and con, for publication in the LOG.
Differences of opinion have also been expressed on
the advisability of setting up a credit union, the structure
and operation of which is explained on page 12. Members
should air their views on this subject, top.
A thorough discussion on both these topics before
any definite action is taken is the best means of obtaining
a thorough understanding of what's involved. Let's hear
tvhat you think about them?

Seafarers Members New In The Marine Hospitals
BALTIMORE HOSPITAL
W. H. POWELL
W. L. AKINS
R. B. PEARSON
L. G. LARONDE
L. E. HEALY
C. TINGLE
_ ,
N. TALA
A. L; MASTERS
E. LYNCH
E. WATERMAN
F. CHRISTY
P. M. McCORKINGDALE
H. LANIER
E. IDELL
J. M. BERGERIA
J. HARRIS
G. D. REGAN
D. WILSON
E. JOHNSTON
J. YUKNAS
E. L. GAME
C. W. HENNIS
F. KORVATIN
E. F. PAUL
C. GOODWYN
P. E. DARROUGH
R. A. GRAF
W. J. KENNELLY
i&gt;

iif

tr

NEW ORLEANS HOSPITAL
J. DENNIS
F. LANDRY
H. LAGAN
L. WILLIS
L. LANG
J. SMYTHE
H. H. SCHULT-Z
P."ROBERTS
A. MAUFFRAY
»
F. CAILLOU|:T .
v
O. HOWELL,
H. REMME
-:
J.APPLE
J. GRANGER
J. TASSIN
C. BROWN
- , ^ '

E. CHATTERTON
H. PENTON ,

R. REED
-SHAFFER
J. H. MCELROY
B. EANS
W^M. ROBERTS
A: LOPEZ
T. DAILEY
C. BERNARD
T. CIESLAK
tr
iMOBILE HOSPITAL
W. T. PRESLEY
J. L. WEBB
J. C. STEWART
P. HENDERSON
J. B. DIXON
L. HOWARD
R. FOSTER
E. COLLINS
F. SPRUILL
TIM BURKE
t.
SAN FRANCISCO HOSP.
JAMES HODO
JAMES R. LEWIS
WILLIE WATSON
T. ISAKSEN
J.&gt; KEENAN
RAFEL SALDANA
X X
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL
R. W: CARROLLTON
F. BRUGGNER
XXX
STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
H, E. LOGE
HARRY R. JOHNSON
JOHN tJLAS
HENRY WATSON
M. J. LliCAS
' J. F. GAMBLICH
LARRY MOORE
CHARLES H. HAWVER
E. A. GREAUX - .
NICKOLAS CORATTI
JOHANN KALLASTE

FRANK NEARING
JOSEPH AREAS
JOHN F. MARKEL
T. F. ROZUM
V. M, ESCOBAR
M. C. GADDY
G. P. KOSMAS
JOSEPH P. JULIANO
DUKE O'CONNOR
GERALD DE MEO
ROBERT L. CASTEUN
JACK TURNER
ANDREW AHLSTROM
M. N. PETERSON
PAUL COONE.
MOSES MORRIS
XXX
BOSTON HOSPITAL

W. J. BLAKELY
H. NONGEZER
R. BOLDUC
E. COTREAU
-^
J. VIERA
F. ALASAVign
VIC MILAZZO
XXX
NEPONSIT HOSPITAL
WILLIAM PADGETT
MATTHEW BRUNO
JOSE DE JESUS
J. M. LANCASTER
R. E. LUFLIN
ESTEBAN P. LOPEZ
CHARLES L. MOATS
PEDRO G. ORTIZ
R. REDDEST
R. A, RATCLIFF
THOMAS WADSWORTH
R. A. BLAKE
L. BALLESTERO .
JOHN T. EDWARDS
iv f;
E, FERRER
I. H. FRENCH
JOSEPH SPATJLDING
JOSEPH SILLAK
•vi
LUIS TORRES
•t\
L. TULL
•rlJ
FRED ZESIGER
i

M

�fH^day, Decembar 2, 1949

TBE SEAFARERS LOG

Page Three

Commies, Trotskyites Put Boots To NMU
It's pretty near assure -thirig
that, if you let the commies and
Tfotskyites , alone, they will
- eventually convict themselves
- as enemies of labor who are out
for their -own political advan­
tage. The danger is, of course,
that they will wreck the union
in the process.
,
In the November 4th issue of
the SEAFARERS LOG, we pre­
sented the story of the SUP
Seattle Beef, where a handful of
Trotskyites (the Socialist Work­
ers Partjr) spearheaded the at­
tempts of local malcontents, per­
formers and expelled members
to put the SUP out of business.
For a while, the membership
did nothing—under a mistaken
interpretation of "union democ­
racy"—while the Trotskyites and
their cohorts stepped Up their
disruption and anti-union activ­
ities. But when the membership
did move in, it moved fast, and
before long the Trotskyite "revolution'- was put down,
AIDED BY CP
We mentioned then that the
Trotskyites were being aided on
the outside by their sworn en­
emies, the Stalinist commies
(there are^ no commies" in the
SUP) in the form of money and
propaganda.
The article proved that the
Stalinist commies and" the Trot­
skyite commies are two of a
kind—no matter what they say
about each other—the only dif­
ference being that the Stalinists
run Russia and the communist
international and the Trotskyites
wish to hell that they did.
We proved that these charact­
ers will always work"' together
against their common enemies in
the trade union movement—and
these "enemies" are any noncommie union officials. The art­
icle cited the present working
agreement between these two
"bolshevik" parties in the fight
against the leadei'ship of the
National Maritim^ Union.
Since then, things have been
happening in the NMU, which
The above carloon from the "West Coast Sailors" is the SUP's nose-thumbing answer to
once again prove the dangers
the
most recent of the commie-like attempts at character assassination. At the present trial of
of having anti-union power
Harry Bridges for perjury, Vincent Hallinan (Bridges*, attorney) asked a prospective juror the
groups within a union.
following question:
Curran and his gang, having
"If it can be shown that witnesses who will testify here do so at the guidance and direction
eliminated from most of the top
of
Harry
Lundeberg and Dave Beck (of the West Coast Teamsters), and if we show that Harry
offices of the NMU his once up­
Lundeberg has so sought the destruction of Harry Bridges that he has literally hired murderers
on a time buddies, undertook to
to kill him, would that influence your opiiuon?"
complete the job and suspended
the New York Agent and 13
Federal Judge George B. Harris quickly put an end to that type of vicious questioning. Lun­
Patrolmen and brought charges
deberg immediately branded the personal attack upon himself as "psychopathic lies." and chal­
against them. 'Seeing the hand­
lenged Hallinan to call him as a witness, "so 1 can answer these charges."
writing on the wall, the commies
Sly insinuations of att^pted murder are, of course, among the mildest of commie attacks.
and Trotskyites went into action.
When the going gets tougher for them—and it is, every day—their personal attacks will get
nastier and more vicious. It is a good thing that the American workingman has more sense
MOB TAKES OVER
than
the commies give him credit for, because he has never faUen for their manufactured lies
On Wednesday, November 16,
and
slander.
But some day will be Judgment Day for the commies, and when it .comes...!
the commies and Trotskyites led
a mob of about 400 and in good
old commie style took over the instituted a reign of terror. They rank and, file member, who was mies and Trotskyites—or those
NMU Hall.
threatened to beaf up the 12 not part of either side, was get­ miserable hate groups that build
up racist and nationalist pre­
(Incidentally, not all these men girls in the accounting office, ting it in the neck as usual.
judices for their own personal
are commies or Trotskyites by and to throw the chief book­
SEE-SAW BATTLE
gain—to
remain in an organiza­
keeper
out
of
the
window.
They
a long shot. Many of them are
At
the
present
writing,
the
tion
and
disrupt.
refused
to
allow
the
elected
of­
honest men who, because of
pro-administration
gang
is
once
It
is
important
that the mem­
ficials
to
leave
the
building
in
the low ratio of jobs to mem­
more
in
control
of
the
building,
bership
of
a
union
maintains the
the
normal
pursuit
of
union
bership in the NMU, are taking
out their resentment on the only business. They dumped Adi'ian but_^ the dumpings still go on. greatest vigilance against these
ones they know whom to blame: Duffy, a vice-president and Jos­ The commies and Trotskyites threats to the security of their
the officials. Others have been eph Moutal, a patrolman, send­ rushed into the "capitalist" courts union, and at the first sign of
taken into the anti-administra­ ing them to the hospital, and and have applied for- injuctidns anti-union activity bring these
tion camp by racist and national­ several other rank and file sea­ which would tie up the union characters before the' judgment
funds and bring the machinery of the membership.
istic propaganda of the two men.
political groups. ^The commies, The other side, of course, re­ of the union to a complete stand­ Fortunately, the SIU is little
both Stalinist and Trotskyites, taliated," and soon the red blood still. There is no doubt that Cur­ bothered by these forces. There
have never hesitated to set one of the. commies and Trotskyites ran and his, men will win eventu­ are some malcontents, as in any
race against another, or national mingled in the street with the ally, but it's a sure thing that organization, but the member­
ship has little respect for them.
group against national group. not-so-red goi-e of the Curran the membership will lose.
The NMU situation is a per­ The secret of this is not hard to
"Divide and rule" is their slogan gi-oup.
Meanwhile, of course, the NMU fect example of what will in­ find. These malcontents thrive on
as much as it was Hitler's.)
But to return to the "revolu­ was at a standstill. It could not evitably happen to an organiza­ hard times, on lack of jobs and
tion": the commie-Trotskyite perform even the most routine tion which permits conspirator­ poor conditions. The A&amp;G Dis­
mob took over the building and of union business. The ordinary ial political groups like the com­ trict several years ago limited

the books of the Union to the
number of jobs available to the
membership and today a book­
man in the A&amp;G District does
not have to wait long for a job.
His contracts are the best in
the industry, giving him the best
conditions and the highest wages
on the waterfront. He is assured
of representation at sign-ons and
payoffs, to take care of his beefs
and to see that the shipowners
live up to all provisions of the
contract.
NO FRONT FUNDS
His Union's money is not
squandered on the many hun­
dreds of commie organizations
and fronts. He knows that the
Union will go down the line for
him, and that is why he goes
down the line for the Union.
In an atmosphere like that it
is understandable why there are
no political groupings in the SIU.
And why when they dare raise
their head from the outside and
try to inject themselves into SIU
affairs, the membership ^ gives
them a fast brush off.
The SIU is now in a position
which insures it relative easy
sailing through the stormy seas
now raging about the maritime
industry.
The solid backing and endorse­
ment of Union policy by the SIU
membership guarantees the Un­
ion a future dedicated to ad­
vancing the - cause of the men
aboard the ships.
SIU DEMOCRACY
Dissension within an organiza­
tion serves to advance no one
except the enemies of labor. The
SIU method of thrashing out
problems at membership meet­
ings or through the ballot box
is democracy in action. And no
one can question the democracy
of the SIU.
However, once the will of the
organization is shown, the Un­
ion's course is set. Bickering,
haranging, power groups and
splinter factions are not part of
the SIU's make-up. Democracy
is wonderful, but giving away to
mob rule is death. It's suicide to
put a gun in Vour enemy's hand.
This the National Maritime "Un­
ion has done.

Hiring Hail
Inquiry Begins
A fact-finding survey covering
union hiring halls for unlicensed
seagoing personnel is being con­
ducted by a staff of a Senate
sub-committee on Labor-Manage­
ment Relations in preparation for
the reconvening of Congress
early next year, it became
known recently.
Bills specifically exempting
the maritime industry from the
Taft-Hartley ban on hiring halls
were introduced in both houses
at the last session by Represen­
tative John Lesinski of Michi­
gan and Senator Warren G.
Magnuson of Washington, Demo­
crats, and are still in committee.
Others in the subcommittee—
Senators Claude Pepper of Flor­
ida, Matthew M. Neely of West
Virginia and Hubert H. Humph­
rey of Minnesota, Democrats, and
Robert A. Taft of Ohio, H. Alex­
ander Smith of New Jersey and
Irving M. Ives of "New York,
Republicans — have indicated a
willingness to take up the prob­
lem when they return to Wash­
ington.

]

�Page Four

PR, Coastwise
Runs Help Keep
Mobile Going

^ THE SEAFARERS LOG

REP. DOLLINGER LEARNS AgOVT ROTARY SHIPPING

Friday. December 2, 1949

Port Wiimington
Is Happy Ovor
Good Shipping
By E. B. TILLEY .

By CAL TANNER

WILMINGTON—We're mighty
MOBILE—Since our last re­
happy over the pick-up. For the
port, shipping has been prac­
last two weeks shipping has been
tically at a standstill here, with
good out here and we're hoping
almost all the jobs confined to
it
will reihain so, at least until
vessels on the Puerto Rican and
Christmas.
coastwise runs.
During the tvvo-week period
Ships paying off were the Anjust ended, we paid off the SS
tinous, Maiden Victory, "Wild
William Tilghman, Isthmian; the
Ranger, Monarch of the Sea,
SS
Citrus Packer, Waterman;
James W. Cullen, Wiiliam Gillis,
and
the
SS Thomas Cresap, Isth­
all of Waterman, and the Polaris
mian.
and Cavalier of Alcoa. Of the
All three of these ships reships paying off, three headed
crewed and signed on for return
for the lay-up fleet. These were
voyages to the Far East and the
the Maiden Victory, William
Persian Gulf. However, the mem­
Gillis and the James W. Cullen.
bership should know that the
SIGN-ONS
five Liberty ships that the Isth­
The sign-ons took place aboard
mian Steamship Company had
the Antinous, Wild Ranger, Mon­
on the pipe-line run are being
arch of the Sea, all of which are
tied up and put in the honeyard
on continuous articles; the Alcoa
on the East Coast.
Polaris, which headed down to
New York Congressman I^idor Dollinger accepts SIU's invitation to learn the facts abput
TRANSIENT PORT
the bauxite run, and the Mobilrotary
shipping.
At
left
is
Dispatcher
Paul
Gonsorchik
who
answered
Congressman's
questions.
ian, bound for Japan and Korea.
With the tying up of these
ships and the schedules on inTwo Alcoa ships, the Pilgrim
tercoastals being changed around,
and the Roamer, called in-trans­
this port will become a stopover
it to wind up shipping activity
for transients, unless we are
for the two week period.
lucky enough to get some new
Seafarers
making
•'
pay­
LAST TOUCHES
runs.
ments to Union' Patrolmen
The major alterations on our
We think it appropriate at
By JOE ALGINA
building here have been com­
and other authorized SIU
this time to give thanks to the
pleted and all that remains is
representatives should make
Tap Inn here in the Port of
NEW YORK—Conditions in' cate or affidavits from five perthe cleaning up and minor
certain
the receipts they re­
Wilmington for the fine dinner
the
maritime
industry
being
sons
who
know
them
and
can
touches here and there, such as
that
it served to all of our mem­
what
they
are,
this
port
*has
testify
to
the
place
where
they
ceive
specify
the
account
to
tiling the deck and getting the
bers
on the beach on Thanksgiv­
been
doing
fairly
well
in
ship­
were
born
and
the
approximate
which
the
money
is
to
be
recreation gear up to the second
ing
Day
—» and served free of
date.
ping
activity.
We're
not
getting
deck. Then the Hall will be in
credited. *
charge.
calls
for
jobs
in
the
numbers
When
they
have
obtained
this
first-class shape.
For example, receipts
we'd like, but our organization data, they should take it to the
And while on the holiday sub­
The membership in the Port appears to offer considerably Coast Guard and have new pa­
made for LOG donations
ject,
here are our very best
of Mobile is urged to register so greater opportunities for em­ pers issued, properly showing should have SEAFARERS
wishes
to all the SIU members
they will be eligible to vote in ployment to bookmen than any them to be US citizens. This is
and
officials
for a Merry Christ­
LOG written clearly along­
the local elections next year. other outfit in the field.
impo^nt and there is no excuse side the amount. The same
mas and a Happy New 'Year.
The deadline date for registra­
Getting down to payoffs, here for men born in this country
1 would also like to remind
tion is Feb. 1.
applies to receipts for dues,
are the ships in that category carrying seamen's papers that
the membership of our Union
If any of the men want infor­ for the past two weeks:
do not credit them with the fact. assessments, and other pay-" that we are in the midst of our
mation on" this score they can
ments.
yearly elections, and this is the
Beatrice, Puerto Rico, Suzanne, We're now in the middle of
contact anyone in the Hall, where
our annual elections, and all
Careful attention to this
time for those who haven't yet
Angelina,
Elizabeth,
Evelyn,
all
the procedure for registration
hands are reminded that the detail will enable Headquar­
voted to do so. The polls are
of
Bull
Lines;
Bessemer
Victory,
for eligibility in the city, county
best time to cast their ballots, if
open in all Halls from 8 AM to
ters to keep its records acLa
Salle,
Choctaw,
Chickasaw,
and state elections will be ex­
Raphael Semmes, Waterman; they haven't already done so, is. "curate in crediting income 5 PM, so that fvery member
plained gladly.
now. Go -to the polling place in
can get a cKance to cast his
to the various accounts.
The time has come when the Winthrop Marvin, Steel Maker, the nearest Branch and register,
ballot.
Steel
Designer,
Steel
Scientist,
vote of labor will play an im­
get
your
ballot
and
vote.
portant part in the coming elec­ Steel Chemist and Queens Vic­
Voting is a privilege and a
tions and it is very important tory, Isthmian.
right,
and you should take an
to yourself and the Union that Also the Crysstar, Triton; The active part in designating the
Cabins, Mathiasen, and the Seayou register and vote.
officials who will serve your
train Havana.
By JIM DRAWDY
Sign-ons took place aboard all Union in the coming year.
SAVANNAH — Slow shipping R. C. Grimes, D. L. Martin, J.
the Bull Line ships, in addition
is
the way we sum up the re­ E. Floyi^, R. Flagler, L. C. Cole,
to the Steel Maker, Steel Direc­
port
of business in this port for C. A. Gardner, W. J. Groover
tor and Queens Victory, Isth­
and R. Hall.
the
bast
two weeks.
mian; Stony Creek, Mar Trade,
Fortunately,
a
South
Atlantic
By BEN LAWSON
and the Robin Tuxford.
LOOK FOR THE LABEL! vessel arrived here for a payoff
All payoffs and sign-ons were
While
we're talking about Un­
BOSTON — We haven't been fairly smooth, with only a few
to keep things moving a bit. She ion members, here's a reminder
able to crack the ice up here. minor beefs, which were settled
was the SS Cape Race, and she to all hands: Ride union-operat­
By JAMES SHEEHAN
Several vessels came into port satisfactorily.
signed on again. Things were ed cabs, use union-operated laun­
during the past two weeks, but
PHILADELPHIA — Shipping pretty smooth aboard this ship. dries, and don't forget to vote in
There is a matter that should
almost all were in-transit.
be called to - the attention of has dropped below what it was
In-transit ships came and the coming elections.
The lone payoff was the Ann those members who got their a couple of weeks ago, with
went,
too. Among them were, the Proof that the SIU member-'
Marie, Bull. There were some seaman's papers 10 or more years only a few payoffs and sign-ons
SS Topa Topa, Waterman; SS ship doesn't go for performere
overtime beefs in the Deck De­ ago and who did not present taking place during the twoJean, Bull;
Greeley Victory, seems to be quite evident around
partment and a few instances of birth certificates or similar doc­ week shipping period just ended.
Watei-man, and the SS Alawai, this Hall, at least. Rarely do any
shipping rule violations. The uments to the Coast Guard at There were only a few men
also Waterman.
gashounds show up anymore. If
overtime beefs were settled okay, the time.
on the beach here that were
any
drinking is being done, it's
SMOKED UP
and the violations resulted in
Men who had their papers is­ broke when Thanksgiving Day
sure
taking place a good dis-"
some charges being placed sued to them, without having rolled around, so the A&amp;G Dis­ The Jean had a beef over the
tance
from here.
against the offenders.
shown documentary evidence of trict and jthe SUP in this port need for an exhaust fan in the
Only
two Seafarers are in the,
That was approximately the birth, had their papers marked got together and tried to make galley. Stewards Department
Savannah
Marine Hospital this
extent of shipping activity in with a question mark opposite the holiday pleasant for them. men say the smoke and soot is
week.
R.
W.
Carrollton and F.
terrible because soft coal is used.
the Beantown, and there's little the line on citizenship. This
FEED ON
Bruggner
are
the two hospital­
else to report.
But despite this smoky situa­
means that these men are re­ Between' Ray Gates', William
ized
Brothers.
Oh, yes, John (iFish) Rubery garded as aliens until they es­ Glick, SUP Agent Jerry Licht- tion, the Jean crew is very
just got back from Japan, and tablish that they were born in 'man and myself we fed 25 men happy. They've got a new Skip­ The AFL Labor's League for
he's rarin' to go again.
this country.
in a local restaurant. Then they per who is very obliging when Political Education in Savannah,
Seven Seafarers are. currently
It is therefore suggested that all came up to the A&amp;G Hall it comes to getting'draws. And, is going all-ou&lt; to get people to
in the Boston Marine Hospital. men who were born in this where refreshments were served. of course, there's is still plenty register for the coming elections.
These men are W, J. Blakely, country, but who did not have We had quite a few favorable of Tum and coke down in the The LLPE is doing the same in
H. Nongezeri R. Bolduc, E. Cot- their seamen's papers marked comments on the behavior of Islands at the other end of the Jacksonville, where Senator
Claude Pepper has been assured,
reau, J. Viera, Frank Alasavich "US citizen," should act to our boys around here. The folks run.
of
the labor vote. He will be in,
The
Savannah
beach
has
it§
and Vic Milazzo.
straighten this out.
in this area think our men are
On the weather up here, all
They can ^o so by either ob­ a swell bunch of fellows, a bit complements of Seafarers at the that town on Dec. 12, the. date
we can say is "Wait a minute!" taining a copy of their birth cer­ of news I'm sure everyone of j present time and they're waiting on which, officers of the LLPE.
for jobs—what else? There are will be elected.
Anything is likely to happen. tificate, or a baptismal certifi- us is glad to hear.

New York Can't Make A Squawk:
Shipping Is Pretty Fair There

Far The Records

Shipping Shws h Pwt SnvanmA

Shipping, Weather
Are Besten Headaches

PbHadelpiiia Throws
Thanksgiving Feed
For Men On Beach

I

�Friday, December 2, 1949

THE SEAFARERS

Page Five

LOG

SS Puerto Rioo Crew Puts Out Own Paper
An example for all SIU ships which have the facilities
is the shipboard paper put out by the crew of the SS Puerto
Rico, the Bull Lines cruise ship. Called the "Advocate." this
newsy little sheet (not so little at that: the latest issue had
6 mimeographed pages) gives the crew the latest maritime
news (through the cooperation of Sparks), shipboard gossip
eind news, poetry a,nd educational articles.
The "Advocate" is staffed by the following crewmembers:
Kenneth Eckholm, editor; Hilda Revesz. associate editor; Jim
Colder, managing editor; Stanley Hawkins, executive editor;.
James DuBose, art and poetry editor; Eddie Gladzer, director
of publications; Eddie K. Mooney. Tiny Mease, and Nick
Wuchina are the editorial staff members.
We take the extreme pleasure of reproducing some of the
items that appeared in the latest issue of the "Advocate."

Coast Guard Fight To Continue
By EDDIE X. MOONEY
Ship's Delegate

This trip has been instrumental in showing us how interested our Union is in na­
tional and local politics, and how interested politicians are in our Union as an organiza­
tion. Some of us wonder why the Union has taken definite stands in politics, as not so
very long ago it was the policy of the Union to have nothing to do with it. The reasons
for this are obvious, when one realizes the tangibility of government sanctions, pro and
con, over our way of life.
When a bill-was introduced in The House of Representatives for postwar rights
for the men of the merchant marine who sailed during the war, it met with a great deal
of opposition. Instrumental in this opposition were powerful political organizations such
as the American Legion. Consequently the bill was placed in committee, after being
read on the House floor On introduction, and without ever being debated on the floor of
the House, died a natural death when that session of Congress ended.
At that time our organization*
^
;
was playing a hands-off policy
with national politics, arid we
did little to protect that issue.
Other issues came up: the
Taft-Hartley Act which was an
instrument to break all - unions;
the Hoffman Bill which would
have given all the Marshall Plan
cargo to foreign flag vessels and
laid our merchant fleet in the
boneyards; the action to revoke
the right of the merchant sea­
men to file suit for injuries as
outlined in the Jones Act of
1920; and the attempts of the
Coast Guard and other govern­
ment bureaus to damage us.
FIGHTING REPLY
If the SIU had sat back and
allowed these men and brganiza. tions to fulfill their promises,
and see through ideas without
fighting the issues tooth and
nail, it is easy to see that we
would have no Union, no rights,
no jobs and would have been
placed in a position of virtual
job enslavement, such as seamen
bave not experienced since Brit­
ish impressment.
. '
So you see, when the Union
asks you to contact our Senators
and Representatives, as individ­
uals, on important maritime is­
sues it is your duty and respon­
sibility to do just that,
Let's not forget the lesson of
the Seamen's BiU of Rights.

Ever since the early days of
the# war, when the Coast Guard
Hearing Units were given au­
thority over the lives and actions
of the seamen by reason of the
"War Emergency" excuse, the
SIU has fought hard against that
control.
But, while we were battling
against these Hearing Units and
the. dictatorial control being ex­
ercised, the NMU was playing
"post office" and "spin the
bottle" with the Hooligan Navy,
and encouraging them to hogtie the seamen so that they could
hardly call their lives their own.
Don't misunderstand us, we
believe in giving credit where
credit is due. We give all due
credit to the Coast Guard for
their war . record and their peace­
time work of patrolling the sea
lanes.
Our beef was—and is—against
the Hearing Units specifically
and those Brass Hats who wanted
to see the seamen as another
branch of the Armed Forces.
To prove the NMU's friendli­
ness for the Coast Guard, we
quote from the minutes of their
1945 convention: "In the en­
forcement of wartime discipline,
the Coast Guard has established
an advanced and liberal record,
as against the injustices imposed

CONGRESSMEN VIEW SIU FILMS

by the Department of Commerce
during peace.
"We pledge to continue the
friendly cooperation between
our union and the Coast Guard
for... a safe and efficient post­
war merchant marine."
Contrast the finky NMU stand
on the Coast Guard with the
militant position of the SIU in
our battle against Coast Guard
regimentation of seamen. We left
no doubt as to our position with
such articles in the SEAFARERS
LOG.
We will fight against the Coast
Guard until all forms of that
control are finally removed from
the lives of American seamen.
American seamen must be free
from dictatorship of all kinds.

Corsair, Dei Mar
Hail Advocate'
Editor
SS Puerto Rico "Advocate"
Dear Sir and Brother:
Received the copy of the SS
Puerto Rico ship's newspaper and
posted same on the crew bulle­
tin board of this vessel.
Nearly every one on here has
read the paper and the com­
ments are all in praise of your
paper.
On behalf of the crew of this
vessel let me convey their thanks
for your sending us this paper,
and wish you all of the best in
your future handling of the
paper.
Many thanks for the paper.
By direction of the crew of the
SS Alcoa Corsair.
Fraternally yours,
Leroy Clarke
Ship's Delegate
%

On the agenda of a recent Union meeting aboard the SS Puerto Rico attended by members
of the Hguse Education and Labor Committee was the showing of the SIU films, "This Is The
SIU." and "Battle of Wall Street."
Committee members shown watching the Union movies aloi^ with Seafarers in photo above
are Congressmen John Lesiniski of Michigan, committee chairman; Carroll D. Kearns of Penn­
sylvania; Charles HoweU of New Jersey; Augustine B. Kelley of Pennsylvania. Harold Velde
of Illinois. John Forsythe. committee counseL and Walter Masoiv AFL legislative representative.
The committee was aboard the Bull Lines ship en route tp Puerto Rico and the Virgin
Islands for a study of labor conditions there. "
-Photo by Jim Colder

%

Sf

Editor
SS Puerto Rico "Advocate"
Dear Sir and Brother:
This is to acknowledge that
the SS Del Mar has received
your first, two editions. On be­
half of the crew and myself, I
would like to take this oppor­
tunity to say that the "Advocate"
is a wonderful idea, a newspaper
comparable only to the SEAFAR­
ERS LOG. It is unique among
SIU fleets.
It shows our whole Union
membership the spirit of union­
ism aboard the SS Puerto Rico.
1 hope the "Advocate" will
grow and its idea and principles
spread to other SIU ships. If it
meets with the response that it
had aboard this ship its future
is assured.
Yours for a bigger and better
"Advocate."
Harold Tennant
Ship's Delegate

i

�Page Six

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. December 2. 1949

SHIPS' MINUTES
Grain Barge Is Beached After Collision
With SS Coral Sea In Mississippi River

NEWS

THEIR SHIP CRASHES WITH BARGE

A grain laden barge had to be beached after colliding with the Seafarer-manned
SS Coral Sea in the Mississippi River off Napoleon, Avenue in New Orleans on Armis­
tice Day, Al De Forest, Steward on the SIU ship, informed the LOG this week. There
•
4 SEAFARING ARTIST
"'were no casuakies on either
vessel. The mishap was blam­
ed on poor visibility caused
by drifting patches of fog.
MOVING SLOWLY
Both the Coral Sea and the
barge, which was being towed
along with two oil barges, were
moving slowly when the collis­
ion occured. Only slight damage
was sustained by the Coral Sea,
but the grain barge didn't fare
so well. It began to sink imme­
diately after the crash and a tug
towed the crippled craft toward
the west side of the river.
Stewards Department men who were aboard the Coral
The barge was beached neiir
Sea
when it collided'with a barge in the Mississippi River on
Gretna, which lies opposite New
Armistice
Day. Front row, left to right: Scotty McMenerny.
Orleans.
Baker; Red Fitzsimmons, Utility; Walter Dashinsky, MM. Rear:
Following the collision, the
Gene Gatmaitan, BR; Bob Wallace, 3rd Cook, and Al De
Coral Sea continued to the cot­
Forest, Steward.
ton warehouse at the foot of
Napoleon Avenue, where it was
to be loaded with a cargo of
cotton.
EARLY MORN CRASH
According to witnesses, who
placed the time of the crash at
Gerald William Beardsley, who would have celebrated
7:45 AM, the Coral Sea, inbound his fourth year as a Seafarer on Dec. 13, was fatally in­
from Baltimore, was moving up jured in a fall aboard the SS-t
the Mississippi and the tow was Seatrain Havana in Texas City A native of Finlay, Ohio, Bro­
heading downstream.
on Nov. 16.
ther Beardsley was born on Feb.
The rest of the tow, operated
Beardsley, a member of the 5, 1901. He joined the SIU's At­
by the Butcher and Alford Tow­ Seatrain Havana's Stewards De­ lantic and Gulf District in the
ing Company of Houston, pro­ partment, fell from the vessel's Port of New York on December
ceeded to the" Harvey Canal.
top deck to the bottom of a hold, 13, 1945, where he received Book
The Coral Sea is owned and it was reported to the LOG.
No. 48182.
operated by the Coral Steamship The late Seafarer signed on
Records in the SIU Headquar­
Company of New York.
the Seatrain ship on Nov. 2.
ters listed him as a Second Cook.

G.W. Beardsley Dies In Fall
Aboard, SS Seatrain Havana

Tex Boillin and one of his recent paintings.
Tex Boillin may have the sea watch partner on the Allegheny
in his blood, but it's easy to see Victory.
that painting is closest to his A Gunner's Mate, Second
heart. The youthful AB, who Class, in the Navy during the
hails from Houston, says he's go­ recent war, Tex has been sailing
ing to keep on plugging away on merchant ships off and on
with brushes and canvas until since his discharge. He spends a
he can break into art work, pre­ good deal of his time off aboard
ferably illustrations.
ship recording his impressions
Tex broke out a couple of his of seafaring life.
vivid watercolors of life at sea
Boillin attended Pratt Institute
in the LOG office the other day, in New York and plans to re­
but not until he had practically sume his art studies next fall.
been dragged up by John Par­ Meanwhile, he will keep on
sons, OS, who was Boillin's sailing.

Voice Of OLe Sea
by "SALTY DICK"
Frenchy Michelet and Uncle Otto are both on the beach and
trying to ship out together.... Bob Williams has switched to the
Black Gang and he wants to head south. He's troubled by a rash
that keeps him scratching overtime
J. P. Shuler is on the high
seas aboard the Del Oro. He's the Steward
The "Count of
Bourbon Street" is none other than Boujeoues, the Waiter.
George Noles is back in New Orleans after having been
drydocked in Venezuela, where he sustained a head injury....
Two beautiful butterfly trays have been given to the New
Orleans Hall by the crew of the Del Norte.... Fred Schr.oeder
is in the electrical business in New Orleans and is making
out pretty well.
Joe Seaver and his assistant, Frank Ploppert, were the official
photographers at the opening of Jack Parker's "Sea Hawk." Chief
Steward Powers sent flowers and his best wishes for success....
Eddie Westphal took a job on the Corsair but I know his heart
is in New Orleans. The beautiful green convertible Buick you
-see near Poydras Street belongs to Frank Fernandez, probably
better known as Mr. Johnson.
Jesse Cerda is heading for Genoa and glad of it
Heard that
Don Strong is up in a Canadian hospital and may have to remain
there for one year
Speaking of patients. Red Honeycutt is in
the New Orleans Marine Hospital for a spinal operation. He'll
probably remain there until Dec. 15.... The rumor about Bill
Champlin trying to get the peanut concession at the New Orleans
Mardi Gras is not true. That rumor fbrced him to leave town.

Operation At Sea Saves Noonday Man's Eye
An emergency operation performed aboard an Army transport ^t sea was credi­
ted with having saved the eyesight of Seafarer Pete Melish, Deck Maintenance, on
the SS Noonday. Two pieces of steel were removed from Melish's left eye, after he had

been transferred in a lifeboat tog^..
the transport.
tion was necessary, the Captain
A communication from the radioed for aid.
Noonday received this week said
Fortunately, the transport R.
that the Captain and the Mate M. Blatchford was only a few
tried desperately to remove the miles away and she answered
steel fragments from Melish's the call immediately. A lifeboat
eye. As soon as it became ob­ was lowered from the Noonday
vious that skilled surgical atten- and Melish was taken to the

Lifeboat zelurns to Noonday from army transport, where
Pete Melish (arrow) had two steel fragments removed from
his left

Blatchford, where the operation was performed in the ship's
hospital.
It took the ship's doctor 45
minutes to extract the steel par­
ticles from Melish's eye. The
Noonday communication, signed
"Burhead," praised *he doctor
for his skill.
While the Noonday's lifeboat
lay alongside the transport, the
Army men served the Seafarers
crew with coffee.
Burhead said the Noonday
crew deeply appreciated the ef­
forts of Captain Samuels and
Chief Mate Hansen, of the Noon­
day, and of the "boys, officers
and doc-of the transport for look­
ing out for our men."
HEADS FOR BREMEN
As soon as the lifeboat return­
ed, the Noonday resumed her
voyage to Bremen. Leaving
Bremen, she headed for Bremerhaven, where she tied up along­
side the SS Maiden Creek, a vic­
tim of a recent encounter with
a floating
mine. The Maiden ,
Creek's cargo was transferred to
the Noonday.
The report said the Maiden
Creek was expected to remain in
Bremerhaven for two months
while the mine-inflicted damage
was repaired.

�I,'.

THE

|?riday« December 2, 1949

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Seven

Digested Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings
beefs
settled
before
payoff.
CAPE ^ MOHICAN. Oct. 2 —J.
—-Everything
reported
running
Sellers, Chairman; Mel Brown.
smoothly in the three depart­
Secretary. Ship's Delegate re­
ments. Sir Charles Oppenheimer
ported that Deck Department
of.-Tv^e
isooelected Engine Department Del­
foc'sles have been painted and
egate
by
acclamation.
Joseph
D.
ihat Black Gang's will be taken
McPhee. Deck Delegate, and
care of soon. Steward announced
August Fahrner, Ship's Dele­
that more rice and black-eyed
1 • 1,
gate. Brothers Johnes and Sir
peas will be served in the fu­
Charles will conduct one educa­
ture to. comply with wisljes bf
tion meeting a week when Deck
several Brothers. Bosun inform­
Department is not working over­
ed Brothers that writing tables
time. Several matters of ship­
requested for foc'sles will be •in­
board interest' were discussed
stalled when ship returns to
OP JOft •
under Good and Welfare,, with
Puerto Rico. Wipers who recent­
meeting adjourning at 7 PM.
ly repaired washing machine re­
DEL SUD. Oct. 30 — Keith
ported that trouble resulted from Winsley. Chairman; John D. McA A *
TRINITY, Oct. 23—J. B. Baroverloading and warned Brothers
Lemore. Secretary. Ship's Dele­ nett. Chairman; Peter Piascik,
to avoid this in future.
gate reported on loggings. Mo­ Secretary. No beefs in depart­
4
tion carried to accept agenda ments. Ship's Delegate sent let­
ROBIN LOCKSLEY. Cel. S—
presented and to use it- at all ter to men who missed ship, no­
..L. Keyes, Chairmart; J. J. De future shipboard meetings inas­
tifying them when we would ar­
Vito, Secretary. Delegates made
much as it suits needs and is rive in Providence so they .could
their reports. Motion carried to
drawn from Robert's Rules of
have draw list made up by each Order. Deck Delegate reported pick up their gear: He also spoke
department delegate. Motion car­ that one man had been fined with Captain about repairs and
ried to let the elected delegates and that there were 25 hours was assured that those not taken
and the Patrolman settle the disputed overtime in his depart­ care of at this date would be
beefs without interference from ment. Engine Delegate said that attended to as soon as possible.
the members. Meeting with Pa­ all donations had been turned Vote of thanks given to Stew­
trolman to be held to get Chief over to ship's treasurer, and that ards Department for efforts in
Mate straightened out on work­ 46 % hours were being disputed satisfactorily feeding and serv­
ing the crew. A special vote of
ing rules and agreement.
in Black Gang. Steward's. Dele­ thanks was given to Second
gates also reported. All reports Cook and Baker for his untiring
were approved. Financial and efforts in helping to make this
Auditing
committees'
reports voyage a pleasant one.
were approved. Motion carried to
4&gt; 4&gt; $
elect Emil Hereck chairman of
DEL NORTE. Oct. 30—Branrecreation committee. Motion de­ nan. Chairman; Bradley, Secre­
feated which would have return­ tary. Minutes of previous meet­
4, 4.
ed room now used by Electri­
There are about 23 shopping and shipping days til good old
JULESBERG, Oct. 22 — Joe cians to reefer engineer. Motions ing read and approved, and mo­
Merry
Christmas. No doubt most Brothers are expecting shipping
Penner, Chairman; V. Meyer. also carried to turn $50 over to tion carried to .print sufficient
before
Christmas out of New York to be darn good
Any day
Secretary. No disputes existing chairman of recreation commit­ copies to post in all lounges.
can
be
Father's
Day
and
so
it
is
to
a
few
Brothers.
Down
there
In any of the departments. Ship's tee for purchase of equipment, Ship's Delegate reported that bal­
in
good
old
New
Orleans
congratulations
are
in
order
to
Brother
ance
of
repairs
would
be
taken
Delegate to see Captqin about and to incorporate washing ma­
getting new screens for ports. chine fund with that of ship's care of on next trip. He re­ James "Sloppy" Creel who became a proud "poppa" of a baby
quested full cooperation of all boy. The best of everything to Brother Creel, the wife and baby.
Motion carried to have man im­ fund.
department
delegates in settling ... And now up here in New York (where a container of coffee
mediately discharged in next port
minor
shipboard
squawks and costs twenty cents) Brother Henry Bonk is smiling like he never
if he does not stand watch ex­
beefs
•
before
vessel
arrived in smiled before. We don't blame him. He's a proud daddy of a
cept for medical reasons. GenNew
Orleans.
He
explained
to baby boy—weighing 9 lbs. % ounces. Well, the best of everything
er^ discussion on keeping mess-,
to all, Henry
That well-known ambassador of good will and
new
crewmembers
that
depart­
hall clean. Each watch is to see
good
unionism,
Charles
Oppenheimer, dropped in for a visit.
ments
rotate
in
assisting
Electri­
that hall is left clean before be­
cian in setting up and stowing Charlie, who is Engine Delegate aboard the Canton Victory and
ing relieved. One minute of sil­
movie gear at shipboard show­ constantly doing as much as he can for the educational program
ence in memory of , departed
ings. Ship's Treasurer reported in shipboard hieetings, has already finished
writing hundreds of
Brothers.
% % %
that
$104.49
was
in
ship's
fund
Christmas
cards
to
shipmates
and
hospitalized
brothers wishing
ALCOA CORSAIR, Oct. 23—
4, i S;
SEATRAIN
NEW JERSEY. R. E. Slough. Chairman; L. and that $45.60 had been ex­ them a cheerful holiday, swift recovery and smooth sailing. The
Oct. 25—A. Sistrunk, Chairman; Clarke. Secretary. Delegates and pended for athletic equipment, same to you, Charlie, indeed.
AAA
H. V. Newberry, Secretary. Treasurer of ship's fund made leaving balance of $58.89. Report
From a letter we are informed that Brother Gordon Peck
Ship's Delegate reported that their reports, which were ap­ accepted. Brother De Dominicis
of Washington is on the Japanese shuttle-run with the SS
every man, except the four to proved. Motion carried to ac­ reported on condition of athletic
gear
and
asked
all
ball
players
Afoundria.. •. Now that Gerald O'Rourke grabbed a ship his
eight "watch, is to receive two cept Treasurer's resignation and
to
meet
with
him
during
com­
shipmate
Frank Brown will no doubt be grabbing the first
hours overtime for late sailing to hold new election. Motion car­
ing
week
so
team
could
be
or­
one
he
can....
About a month ago three oldtimers dropped in
from Texas. Every man is to ried to elect Clarke by acclama­
ganized
to
play
in
Buenos
Aires.
off
their
ship.
There
was Foster Grant, after some recent hospi­
see the Patrolman at the payoff. tion. Motion defeated 22 to 8
talization, and E. L. Bates and D. D. Storey. Smooth sailing
No beefs ^were reported by the to have duties of Treasurer's post
to you Brothers.... Now that we know there were some swell
department delegates. Motion by performed by the Ship's Dele­
musical sessions aboard the SS Colabee with six brothers
John Jellette that a man desir­ gate. Under Good and Welfare,
playing harmonicas and four guitars banging away we are
ing to take a trip off for vaca­ it was suggested that stores be
anxious
to know the names of these sea-going musicians.
tion, or other reason, be permit­ checked before sailing and that
AAA
ted to do so and that upon his drinking fountain and messrooms
AAA
Congratulations to Brother Wilbur Dickey—who happens to be
return, he be reinstated in his be kept clean, with everyone co­
DEL VALLE, Oct. 23—Barllett,
job, with relief to get credit on operating.
Chairman; Ryan, Secretary. No a stamp collector with an amazingly descriptive knowledge of the
his shipping date. Motion rec­
beefs in Deck or Engine Depart­ history of any stamp. Right now Brother Dickey is anxiously
t i, i,
ommended that this be referred
DEL ORG. Oct. 16—Dick Hunt. ment. Stewards Department beef waiting to sail to Bremen, Germany, to marry the girl in whose
to a Shipping Rules Committee Chairman; Tex Gillespie. Secre­ about garbage was referred to home he found, while visiting her parents, the latest copy of—
and if approved to be voted upon tary. Few minor beefs have been Good and Welfare. J. A. Wilkie yes, indeed, you guessed it—our SEAFARER'S LOG. The reason
by the membership.
squared away and repair list elected Ship's Delegate. Bartlett the LOG was there is because her brother is a seaman and re­
is to be typed up, Ship's Dele­ reported washing machine cost, quested to be placed on the mailing list for our newspaper. This
Has anybody aboard ship played
gate reported. Deck Department $76.05, including transportation seafaring world is small indeed
reported few hours of disputed and that $21.95 was now on hand that new card game called Canasta? Is there any Brother who has
overtime,
other
departments in ship's fimd. Communication been fortimate enough to have sailed into New York and have
okay. Motion (by Gillespie) car­ from Fort Stanton tabled for seen some successful play called "South Pacific."... Thanks to
ried calling for thorough check further clarification. Letter sent Brother T. Andy Anderson and Tex his pal for the poem they
BIENVILLE. Oct^ 14 —Noble. of lifeboat equipment as most of to Headquarters and New Or­ wrote praising our column. They also mentioned Louis Azrel of
Chairman;
Brady,
Secretary. it is in need of repair or re­ leans in regard to crewmember Baltimore. Is he a Walter Winchell, too?
4.
4*
4*
Brother Slilley elected Ship's placement. Clyde Lewelyn sug­ who left ship owing large sums
The SEAFARERS LOG will be sailing free of cost to the
Delegate. Delegates' reports read gested that Ship's Delegate check of money to his shipmates, and
homes of the following Brothers: Frank Guitson of New York.
and approved. Motion by Dro- with Patrolman about clarifica­ who also took minutes of pre­
James Moore of Georgia, D. S. Hair of South Carolina, Thomas
lak. seconded by John Prescolt. tion of draws for men who have vious meetings and all communi­
Keyser
.of Alabama, Philip Archilles of Massachusetts, Leonard
carried recommending that all allotment. Suggested that loud­ cations with him. Under Good
Spivey
of
Maryland, Raymond Frye of California, Jack Gridley
repairs be completed before ship speaker for radio be returned and Welfare, the garbage situa­
of
California,
Thomas Gower of Virginia, Otis Canada of
tion was discussed and • a settle­
leaves port. Discussion on the to the crew messroom.Virginia,
S.
W.
Lind of Massachusetts, John Newman of Cali­
ment of the dispute made. Letter
purchase of a washing machine,
A A t
fornia,
Joseph
Wendt
of Florida, Frank Wesley of Florida,
CANTON
VICTORY,
Oct.
24—
to
be
sent
to
Headquarters
ap­
with several speakers suggesting
George Richley of New York, L. Kristiajisen of Georgia.
methods for collecting the neces­ H. E. Martin, Chturman; Sir proving appointment of commit­
William Meagher of New York, Carl Jackson of New York,
sary funds. Suggested that Dele­ Charles Oppenheimer, Secretary. tee to investigate establishment
Martin Nilsson of California, Frank Schumacher of Connecticut.
gates go to the Union Hall to Previous minutes read and ap­ of sailors' home. Next meeting to
Patrick Delaney of Maryland, Charles Frey of Louisiana, Odis
get a supply of agreements and proved. Repair list. Ship's Dele­ be held on the last Sunday of
Dedeaux of Alabama, Edward Pritchard of California.
gate advised all hands to have the month at 1 PM.
Union literature.

-i::

&lt;5^ r;

W
h

msil

�THE SEAFARERS

Page Eight

Friday, DecenU&gt;«r 2, 1949

LOG

THE MEMBERSHIP SPEAKS
He's Soft On The Old 'Hog'
Cause She Done Him Right
To the Editor:
Reminiscing about death isn't
very pleasant, but in a manner
of speaking, "she" is still alive
in my eyes.
In many cases, first impres­
sions are lasting and I assure
you that this impression is an
excellent example. "She" was
my first berth the "mother" of
all my voyages.
•There were times when "she"
was gentle and kind, and at
times, severe and punishing. But
as all mothers do, "she" brings
you home safely with protection
and that feeling of security.
We sailed on—of all days—
Friday, the 13th of Januarydestination unknown. The first
four days we were blessed with
perfect weather, but on the fifth
day a storm hit us, breaking
the convoy into all directions.
HALTED
Just as the storm blew itself
out our tubs started to leak,
causing us to stop engines. It
• took us about six hours to re­
pair and put under way again.
By this time we had missed
rendezvous and started to re­
ceive messages of sub attacks on
the remainder of our convoy.
The famous City of Flint was
one of the ships sunk. On the
third day of being alone, we were
going half speed, quarter speed
and stop. We spotted another
lone vessel, the SS Pinkerton.
It was decided that the two ships
would make the rest of the voy­
age together.
Two days later our tubs be­
gan leaking again. The Pinkerton
went on alone. The next day we
heard a distress call from the
Pinkerton. She was sunk that
night.

Our Skipper changed our
course, and the rest of the trip
was uneventful. We reached Safi
ahead of what was left of the
convoy. From Safi we proceeded
to Glasgow and picked up a
cargo of Scotch and brought it
to Pier K, Weehawken, N.J.,
with the usual experiences.
SEES HER AGAIN
If my memory for dates doesn't
fail me, it was in October' 1946
that my wife and I were at­
tending the local movie theatre
when the newsreel flashed on
the screen. One of the items
startled me, for there, before
my very eyes, was my ship the
Alcoa Banner bein^ towed out
to sea loaded with enemy poison
gases.
Then right in front of my
eyes I saw her sunk with shells
from one of our country's war­
ships. I assure you that it took
quite a few hits to put her to
rest in a glory comparable to
any of the deaths of the more
publicized warships.
Without shame, but with a
swelling of pride I am proud to
state that tears forced their way
to my eyes and a lump in my
throat—about the size of Gibral­
tar—emerged.
In my heart, in my mind, my
"she" isn't dead, but is just tak­
ing .a well-deserved rest in the
quiet depths of the seas that
she once so freely sailed. In the
memories of her many crews, she
wUl return again' and again to
relive her past.
By way of closing these lines,
I wish to say "Good-night to
you, SS Alcoa Banner. Rest
well, my Hog."
BUI Hanold

Plush Shipbuilder's Tears
Wasted On This Union Man
To the Editor:
"Decline in Shipping," says
the lubberly Herald Tribune and
goes on to blame the seamen for
their 40 hour week. The exshipbuilder, who wrote the let­
ter printed im the paper, would
want us to return to the "good
old days," to the 98-hour week,
to the 14-hour day, to the dog
watches at sea.
Meantime what will he do?
He'll build ships. Yes. He'll ap­
pear at his office at 10 AM; he'll
sit at his desk till noon, then
go out for his lunch till two,
drinking cocktails; and, return­
ing to his office for a couple of
hours, will disappear, at 4 PM.
Thus, from Monday till Fri­
day, he'll work (like hell) build• ing ships and putting in 20 hours
a week at a salary of $20,000 a
year. Then, at the launching of
the ship, his wife or private
secretary, the sponsors, will re­
ceive a gift, a wrist watch stud­
ded with diamonds and worth
at least $3,000.
Not so long ago—^in 1917—I
as Chief Mate of US bark Callao,

ABOARD THE SS TWIN FALLS VICTORY

at $125.00 a month, had to work
the ship and do navigation. The
captain (Mont Eton) being.hard
of hearing, I had to run the
bark at sea working on deck
from 16 to 18 hours a day un­
der the dog-watch system. The
men, the crew, toiled by day
and, standing watch at night,
fought against falling asleep on
their feet. Where was the exshipbuilder then?
In the last war, when I was
Master of the Liberty ship, Al­
exander R. Shepherd, I, together
with crew, saved the vessel and
her cargo valued at $3,000,000,
without even a "thank you"
from the Maritime Commissioffr
Where was the ex-shipbuilder
then? Featherbedding himself,
perhaps.
Today, we need a merchant
marine, do or die. But we don't
need to turn the clock back
because of the need. It won't
be long now when our men in
dungarees will have to stand
watch at sea, attentive and ser­
ious.
H. J. Peterson

On deck as the Isthmian ship passed through
the Panama Canal are Stewards Department
members, (left to right) A1 'Heurris, 3rd Cook:
Edward Baeron, MM; Mike Delaney? - UtiL;
and W. J. Walsh, Steward. .

This photo and' rest in group were taken by
Twin Falls Chief Electrician Merwyn E. Wat­
son. He says two men shown above—M. E.
Watson and Ernest Mett4, both Electricians—
were paying passengers on ship.

Beyer Runs Afoul
Of 'Moon Again
To the Editor:
The biggest blowup of the
Moon I have ever seen happen­
ed once upon a time, when Moopi
Kouns was the proud owner of
an overcoat (first and last).
The-coat was long and green^
It looked something like a' doz­
en flour sacks that had been
sewed together. And it seemed
that like the doggone thing grew
a little each year.
Here's the Deck Gang. From left to right, seated, are Jack
So one day Moon told me to
MitcheU, DM; Jacfc Mauer, OS; M. Hansen, AB; BUI MUlison,
stop
at the tailors on my v^ay
Bosun; Karl Hellman, AB; Harry Mauren, OS. Standing: Gerald
home
and get two inches off
Dwyer, AB; A. Swenson, DM; Russell Slagle, OS; Stanton
the
coat.
The next day I stopped
Sowa, Wiper; James McLinden, AB; VirgU Caudell. DM. and
by
the
tailor
shop, picked up
Jean Conrad, AB.
the garment and brought it
home to Moon.
He unwrapped it immediately
and tried it on. Then all hell
broke loose. Boy, oh boy, did he
rave. It seemed that somebody
made a mistake.
No spoon, no knife, no fork, and
To the Editor:
Instead of taking off two
inches, they took off 22 inches.
Read and take heed, as this no coffee.
Percy Beyer
Wake up Brothers, ^do your
article pertains to you, your
(Ed.
Note:
Are
you sure
home, your job, your family, and bit. Vote right, do right, don't
you
told
the
tailor
to
take off
your security. In order to pro­ get drunk, and be right.
two
inches,
Percy?)
William
J.
McKay
tect all of these, it is advisable
to do some deep and serious
thinking. For instance, when
voting, a vote for the honest
experienced candidate, regard­
less of whether it be a xmion
or government election, is the
building of a bigger and better
By BOOK NO. 34568
foundation. A strong foundation
can carry more weight in that it
Are you an active member,
prevents selfish political big-shots
who pass laws that permit our
The kind that's liked so well,
ships to sail the seas under for­
Or are you just contented
eign flags. Such cases not only
With
the emblem on your lapel?
take our jobs, they take away
Do you attend the meetings
our dollars as well.
Voting- is a valuable privilege.
And mingle with the flock.
Millions of people in other coun­
Or do you stay on board*
tries are begging, wishing, and
And criticize and knock?
hoping for these wonderful pri­
Do you take an active part
vileges we aU have here in the
good old U.S.A.
To help the work along.
Or are you satisfied to be
On the ether hand, by doing
justice in all our xmdertakings
•
y.\.
Like those that "just belong?"
we not only help- build good
Do you ever make suggestions
minds, but likewise build a big­
To the officers you pick.
ger and better Union.
Or do you leave the work to a few y
In writing this I can't help but
And then talk about "that clique?" )
think back 42 years. A deck
hand's working hours were four
Come to the meetings always
j
hours on, four hours off, day
And
help
with
hand
and
heart,
in day out, Sundays included for
Don't be just a member$25 a month. No grub to speak
Take an active part!
of, only a dish pan of rot-gut.

Take Balloting Seriously,
Is Advice Of SIU Oldtimer

Log-A-Rhythms

WHEN IT'S MEETING NIGHT IN PORT

V. v.,

�Piiday/ December 2, 1949

Crew Of OS Ship
Is 90% B'or SIUl
Graven Declares

TBE SE A FARE RS

LOG

Page Nine

Should VuiatiMS Be. Comf^ory? Father Of Five Advocates
Compulsory Vacation Rule

Judging by the letters coining to the LOG and the motions
being offered at Union meetings asea and ashore, there is a
growing interest in the question of whether or hot men who
have sailed continuously aboard one vessel should be required
to accept their vacation pay, to which they are entitled under
Union contract, and get off the ship. Although no tab has been
kept, opinions expressed have been almost/ evenly divided.
However^ issues involving changes in the shipping rules
can only be resolved through the medium of a union-wide
referendum ballot, as per Constitution.
Because of the far-reaching effect of any decision which
may be made, the Union heu: recommended that ample time
and opportunity be allowed all hands for thorough discussion
and understanding of the entire question. The LOG. therefore,
welcomes letters of opinion from the membership on both sides
of the question for publication on these pages.

in good standing my little blue
book will take care of my wife
Just a few lines in regard to and kids, as long as I'm able to
'To ihe Editor:
the letter from the Seafarers breathe that fresh salt air.
wife who wrote to the LOG in
In regard to the Cities Serv­
Any man who treasures a book
opposition to compulsory vaca­ in the SIU need never stay on
ice matter you are printing,
tions.
here's something I would like to
the beach longer than two
First . let me state that her weeks, unless he is waiting for
contribute, if I may.
reasons are sound, but I would some particular ship or job. And
I just got off the SS Paoli
like to clarify her suggestions. when a man stays on a single
here in Charleston on Saturday.
I am a married man with a wife ship one year and hasn't been
She is on" her way to San Pe­
and five
children, ranging in able to save up enough money
dro, Calif. The reason is the same'
ages
from
six
to 17 years. I have to provide for his wife and fam­
as you have heard so many
been a member of the SIU since ily (especially when he gets two
times: "incompetency."
May 1942.
The Chief Engineer on the
weeks vacation pay to start him
I have shipped in all depart­ off), while he is on the beach—
Paoli was the bull. He didn't let
ments and as of now am per­ well. Brothers, there must be a
anyone say anything. If you
manently entrenched in the leak somewhere.
would try to suggest • anything,
Stewards Department. I have
he would raise hell, threaten to
It's either that he gambles,
supported my family comfort­ drinks or supports someone on
fire you, and'then tell you: "I'm
ably since I have sailed the sev­ the other side of the pond. When
the Chief Engineer on^his ship!"
en
seas—thanks to the condi­ you are a married man with ob­
You had to do what he said
To
the
Editor:
more
than
200
members
at
the
tions
that the SIU has won for ligations, you must sacrifice some
you should do.
most,
who
stay
aboard
a
vessel
all
of
us seamen.
I got on here in Charlestown
After reading several articles,
of the pleasures that your single
about five weeks ago. We went both pro and con, on the home- longer than 12 months and pos­
Brothers partake of.
•
HIS
CHECK
BOOK
,
to Aransas JPass, Tex. One of steading beef and also the min­ sibly less than half of these stay
Regardless of the rating you
Now
I
haven't
any
cash
cach­
the Wipers got off, so we sailed utes' of several branches on this more than 18 months—about a ed away in the banks. But my ship in, have you ever taken into
back to Boston with just two matter, it seems as though the hundred, then.
Next, let's take' a look at the check book is the little blue consideration the amount of jobs
Wipers. When ^e got to Boston, time is drawing near when def­
expenditure of time and energy book that the SIU issued to me that would rotate from year to
we signed on foreign articles to inite action wiU be taken.
it would require to make a rule in 1942, and as long" as I remain year. Jobs would rotate more
go to Aruba. He still hadn't or­
But before this action is taken, that would force these men to
frequently. Cliques couldn't be
dered a Wiper, so we sailed short I would like everyone who is
formed.
Some Brothers stay
accept vacation pay and get off
again.
interested to make a careful an­ the ships.
aboard a ship so long they don't
alysis of the situation because
know what the inside of a Union
ROUGH DEAL
First, it must be offered in
this
is
a
matter
that
will
have
Hall
looks like.
the form of a resolution, then
In the meantime, he had taken
"definite
bearing
on
our
organi­
UNIONISM?
voted on up and down the coast,
us off sanitary work in the
zation
in
the
future.
I
personally
know of a Chief
a procedure which would take
morning and we weren't even
It
seems
that
there
are
cer­
Steward
aboard
an Alcoa pas­
time at each meeting. Second, the
supposed to make coffee. During
tain
members
clamoring
to
have
senger
ship
who
hasn't been to
question must then be placed To the Editor:
those trips, the Aead upon the
those
men
aboard
a
ship
for
12
the
New
Orleans
or
Mobile Hall
on a referendum ballot, copies
Oiler's deck got dirty and no
months
to
accept
their
vacation
since
1947,
and
I
can
prove this
Here
are
my
views
on
the
of
which
have
to
be
mailed
to
one would clean it. One of the
pay
and.
get
off.
This
group
wants
statement.
Do
you
call
this un­
question
of
whether
vacations
each port. Third, a balloting
Oilers said something to the First
this
•
issue
to
be
placed
before
ionism?
should
be
made
compulsory
af­
committee must be paid meal
Assistant and he told the Chief
the membership on a referendum money for the 30-day period. ter one year aboard ship. I am
I was storekeeper aboard the
about it.
ballot
so
that
the
compulsory
Alcoa
Clipper for 11 months and
against
such"
a
rule
for
two
rea­
Fourth, a tallying committee
- The Chief asked the Oiler to
vacation
rule
can
be
adopted.
17
days.
I saved enough to get
sons:
must be paid meal money. Thus,
clean it when he was off watch
I
believe
that
this
would
be
off
and
five
weeks later shipped
1.
Having
to
get
off
a
ship
the whole procedure would prob­
•—without overtime. He refused.
a
vast
waste
of
union
funds,
and
on
the
Cavalier
on the same
after
putting
in
a
year's
time,
as
ably cost the Union some* five
He also got fired when we got
energy,
which
are
now
needed
job.
I
stayed
one
trip, got off
I
see
it,
is
going
against
what
to seven thousand dollars.
to Texas again. Before the Oiler
in the organizing field.
and
grabbed
the
Del
Sud for
our
Union
stands
for—Job
se­
left the ship the Chief Engineer
I wish to ask the members of
three
trips
to
South
America,
curity.
FEW
MEN
STAY
told him to tell all his SIU
this organization, in all sincerity,
2. A man having a family to then got off her. I've been on
friends in Baltimore about it. I First, let us look at the situa­ do you really believe that in a
support
has to keep working if the beach since Sept. 6—not be­
don't even think he belonged to tion, as it stands. The A&amp;G Dis­ time like this when our organi­
he
ever
wants to get ahead. If cause I couldn't ship, but because
the SIU. He almost fired me in trict has in the neighborhood of zation is in an all-out drive to
he
has
to
get off a ship after one I am attending to a personal
Texas but I finally
pulled between 350 and 40Q. dry cargo economize it would be worth the
year,
he
must
wait seven to eight legal matter.
through to come home on the and tanker vessels and, for an expense required to make this
Brothers, this letter might
weeks
before
getting another
average, I would venture to say a rule?
ships.
pinch
some of the homesteaders,
job.
Meanwhile,
his
savings
must
I know that if a vote were that no more than half of these
OFFERS
ALTERNATIVE
but
I
am taking the liberty of
go
to
keep
his
family
alive.
By
taken right now, 90 percent of ships have men who have been
expressing
my views openly. I
the
time
he
gets
another
job
his
Woyld
it
not
be
much
simpler
the boys on the Paoli would aboard them for a period of 12
want
all
of
my
Brothers to knowsavings
are
gone
and
he
must
to
educate
the
men
on
the
de­
months or longer.
vote for the SIU.
that
I
am
100
percent in favor
start
all
over
again.
sirability
of
taking
vacation
pay
In other words, there are no
Jack W. Craven
of
compulsory
vacations.
I hope more Brothers see the
and getting off the ships after
Let's put it to a vote and let
one year aboard? This could be issue as I do. Think of the man
done through discussions on with the family. Vote against the, majority speak. And don't
forget to vote.
ships. Should the so few men it.
Vic Miorana
F. A. Savoie
involved be allowed to create
confusion "Qmong so many. I say
no.
BROTHER 10 MONTHS IN ARREARS
FRISCO HALL GETS ART GIFT
I am of the opinion that we
WANTS INFO ON REINSTATEMENT
who are sailing the ships should
\
get our heads together and
To the Editor:
handle this matter ourselves, in­
I would like to know what steps I have to take in order to stead of crying to the officials
get my book back up to date. I am 10 months in arrears in dues every time some minor difference
and assessments.
arises aboard ship.
I got married and wanted to settle down ashore but as I
Our officials need all the time
have no vocation other than seafaring I was unable to find a job
and
energy they can muster to
that would support my family.
cope
with _the companies, the
I would have paid my dues before how, but I have been in
problems
posed by the Taftthe hospital here in my hometown for an operation on my back
Hartley act and th^ big job of
and have been in tough financial straits as a result.
Could you please advise me as to what course I should take, trying to organize the unor­
ganized outfits to secure addi­
as I would like very much to return to the sea. This is the only
vocation that I know. I would appreciate advice on this in the tional job opportunities for us»
Tex Sail
next issue of the LOG, if possible, please.
"A Brother in Distress''
Attention: C. A. Gimenez
ANSWER: The SIU Constitution states that when a man
is six months in arrears he is automatically regarded as having
To Carlos A. Gimenez:
dropped out of the Union. However, reinstatemeni is possible.
The letter of inquiry, which
. Therefore, it is recommended that, you write to the Headquar­
you
recently" mailed to the SEA­
ters Reinstatement Committee, SIU. 51 Beaver Street, New
FARERS
LOG has been turned
York 4, N. Y.. giving all the details of the situation you have
over
to
the
Records Department
outlined above. You should do this at the earliest possible
at
Union
Headquarters.
• moment.
'
•
Ross O. Brewer (right) presents a paunting to SIU San
The Department is checking
Problems like this can be avoided if members deciding
into
the
matter
and
you
shotild
Francisco
Port Agent Jeff Morrison as a gift to the member­
. to stay ashore for any length of time would follow the Union's
ship. The painting has been hung in, the Hall and Morrison
: advice and retire their books. Reactivating their membership receive an answer in the mails
in the very near future.
has stated that talented Seafarers should be encouraged to
. then becomes a simple matter for these men. ,
display their efforts in the Union Halls in all ports.
The Editor
To the Editor:

Suit Regards Homesteading
As No Cause For Excitement

Vacation Rule
Seen As Tough,
bn Family Men

THE BEEF BOX

�'l' Jl,-E

S E d F A B. E R S
·

..

L 0 C

fore

ters'

unable to
report

·

ship.

to

the

Headqi'(at­

h

members ip

read and approved. Robert Q.
Smith,
Julius
E.
Parks
and

/

Minutes 'bf

previous

meetings

Agent

discussed

PORT

in other Branches read and acBo ston
cepted.

Port

REG.

maritime· industry

present time.

at

the

Secretary,. Treasur;..

e r s financial report approved as
'

DECK

SHIPPED SHIP.P:.£D

ENG

5

•

.

STWP�·

TO"FAL

SHIPPED
12

5

2

New· YOl'k. ..........................

9

11

l1

125

31

86

100

27

308

:Baltimore..............................

22

97

87

24

23

170\

82

352

127

106

74

3u7

24

5

4

3

J2

...................................

shippipg, which he said was not
Phila delphi a ..........·.·-······:....
.
tQO bqd considering···the. state of

the

ENG.

DECK

51!1PPED

TOTAL
REC.

REG.
STWDS.

REG.

Norfolk..................... ; ...

38

.. .......

Savannah..............................

Ta

pa

m

.

.. ..

. . . ..
. . . . ..

. . . . . .. ..

read. Charges read and referred
Mobile... .. . , .. .. . ... . . .
to a trial rommittee. SecretaryNew Orleans......................
Treasurer, in report to the memGalvesro n . . .. . . . . . .. . . . . .
bership,
discussed the present
West Coast .. .. .. ... ... . . ..
..• -

.

........

.

....

. .

. . .

.

. ...

. .

..

GRAND

.

stake

..

... .

.. ...

..

so

10

11

10

·52

38

7
50

98

99

U8

37

17

5J9

before Febru-

forthcoming

in the

in

315

42

32

19

88
234

171

52

78

45

175

448

439

407

1,289

and

of

'12

104

Meehan

me,n?rY

37

16

64

1,562

minute

69

66

461

One

22

21

552

J.

302

106

4S

Caµ.sey,

elec-

140,

�

as labor has an important C?.hoon.

14

&gt;';;'

28

198

102

NO FIGURES RECEI VED

4

52

54

..

TOTAL...............

be sure to ·do
ary,

...

10

92

Dennis were

of

15

12

read

silence elected

and

trial

referred

committee.

to

in

the

NMU,

Frey

took

Obligation.

the

Union.

Motion·

by

Bankston carried, recommending

that

Brother

Sheppard

eni­

be

po-wered to set up committee to

J

investigate quarters of new Mi ­

sissippi

ship to

be

built.

discussions under Good and
meeting adjour ned at

After

fare

Wel­

8:30

PM, \vith 380 members P.�esent�

';\.

t

�

.

an

Motion

regarding
Christmas
tions here. Motion carried to Brot}J.ers. �eting adjourned at Business
send message of condol�nce and 8:23 PM, with 143 members pre­ dinner, and refer motion on com­
Headquarters building has been
tloral wre ath to the funeral of .sent
pulsory vacations to Headquarseized by communist and trot­
Port Agent Tanner's father. The
t�rs wi th - recommendation that
;t. ;i. �
skyite groups. The entire func­
P'.aix..iQ:&gt; ELJ&gt;IU,A .
CJiairr:nan. question be -put on ballot w1th
following reports were read and
tioning of the NMU has thus
accepted: Patrolman'.g,. Dispatch- J� $Juaeb� 006: :Beco�ng voting for 30 days. Port Agent
been throttled and police, called
William V. GUclc, reported that affairs of port were
er's, Secretary-Tr�asurer's �ta.te- S�r�tary,
conflict

of

48

Union carried to accept Savannah New

departed

Charles

Oath

into

whose

·

/

--

in by the officirus, are maintain­

ing a 24-hour guard' in and out­

side the building. The Secretary­

Treasurer

tus

and

of

also

the

discussed the sta­

Cities

Service

issue

made several recommenda­

tions on . the future handling of

this matter. The report was con­

� �

in good shape, but that shipping bickerson and
bram Davis too
had fallen off quite a bit since the Union Qath of Obligation.
Reading of minutes of previous
last meeting. The coming two Charges
a
permitman
against
meetings in other Branches. All
weeks look slow, but activity and trial committee's . find��,_
.:;
concurred in, except part of Sashould pi�!&lt;: up a bit as the holi- re�d and concurred in. : Port!s "1
day season approaches. Since the and SecretarY'-Treasurer's, 'nan­
.
last meeting 21 ships were in cial reports !ead and ap1.n: ved.

ment of finances, Balloting Com-

48741; Reading Clerk, Ha.x.i e

mittee.'.s. Motion carried that trial

committee meet Friday morning
at 10 AM inasmuch as tomorrow
is

a

Meeting

holiday

(Thanksgiving).

adjourned

at

7:35

with 255 members present.

PM,

A

• .

k

port as callers, along with nine Reading
other
of minutes of
paying off and six signing on. Branches. Motion carried to non­
tees were referred to the Dis­
Sweeney, 1530; R.ecording Secre­
The Agent said that the Sea- concur with ·that part .pf Phil­
patc._her. Meeting adjourned at
tary, W. P-rince, 39427: Reading vannah New Business on which train New Orleans had gone in- adelphia and Galveston minutes
8:;W PM.
Clerk, R. Murphy, 306J2.
membership requested clarifiea- to drydock . for alterations that that non-concurred with Ba.lti­
the
improve
comforts more motion, calling :for PM¥·
will
Hon. Agent r,ewrted on
curred

in.

Excuse

from

absen­

BOSTON

�

�

;.\;

- Chairman, J.

�
:::_

·

in' th

Seer

tary - Treasurer•s

if{epott,

;He:ad:qUarters'

st\ipping
·to' c p aboa�: .A.ll:. :Jr:;tn ds w er,� '. .urg�&lt;f
eJ.iMibl to vot
financial to re ister fo
itF Eoui iana' when

report '/ to

and Headquarters' report to the

journed

.

other Branches, which
tary-Treasurer's

membership

were

p��­

and

and accepted.

Motions carried to accept reports
of special -meetings, Port Agent's

report,

Coast

West

and

Great

Lakes minutes. Patrolman's
Dispatcher's

departed

reports

read

and

arid

approved. One minute of silence
in memory of depa rted Brothers.
·Meeting adjourned at 7:15 PM.

Bro�hers.

at

·M:eeting
with

PM,

7:�0

mem,bers in attendance.

�

�

of.
n

.televisi.on

wh�

the

coal

and

steel

MOBILE -

�

i

Chairrn11.ll,

D. L.

strikes.

trolmen's reports read and �cQ�
Dispatcher's.
cepted, ·also

Jim
296 members present.
Recording Sections. Minutes of meet
_ ings
-.
t
ex
o
arried
n
a
c
t i i
Mo�io
cher.
t
p
�
rei••y
Serency: Readm
. · g Cl ei-k
other Branches read and apSAN FRANCISCO-No
tend shippin g cards of two Bro-·
_
J 7'.- 15• 50453
.J.Ja.V
Proved, except for moti. on ito
thers taking out-patient treat- ing wa�... held because of
non-concur with Sav.annah moReading ?f Savannah Branch ment at local -hospital and there- of a quorum.
tion requiring men aboard .ship minutes
previous
meeting,
of

$,AYANNAH-ChairJniln,

in Drawdy,

�

'

•

Meet- '.
wititj
.

29523;

•

..

0¢f'

minute of silence in memory ·9f
departed Union Brothers.
1ng adjourned at 8:10 PM,

�

,

: ��'\i_.;·�

aiter presenti ng

··.

•

·

·,

··

one yea:i; to. accept vacation pay

Secretwy-Treasurer's
financial
on re por t, . and . Headq:uarters'
re ­
the status of shipping in this port ro the
all
of
Parker, 180; Recording Secretary,
port. Patrolman's and Dispatch- which wer-e
in. ,Agent
. By JE:FF MORRISON
.J. Carroll, 50409: Reading"" Clerk.
er's r.,eports read and approved. reported that Cape Race had paia
H. J. Fischer, 59.
SAN FRANG:ISCO - Thou gh for thi.s we�k,
G. Kerr, J. Hubbard, R. Walker , off in Ja,cksonville� Also t])ere
Mjnutes of previous Br,anch R. Bridge and A- Kuciar�ki e�.� we.re the Greel�y Victory .anp not as good as it -could be, ship­
·
meetings :read and approved. Due cused from the' meeting. Head- ss J.ean. The Cape Race wm ping for the past two 'weeks
'
to absence of Port Agent Tan- qu�rters' rep.ort to the me mber- be in here tQmp�ow mornil'):,g was ·better' than had been .ex­
ner, who was out of town at-· ship read and J\ecepted. :Motion and the Alawoiii is .Gom�l)g fr.om .pected-thanks to calls fO'r re­
with the plaeeinents from the Jefferson
tending funeral of his father, carri d to conc;u:r Jn Secret�y- . .New Yorl,c . to loa d

;to

st=t'.'

cu�s�d Baltimore shf ing
has picked up since the end

ad-

250

a

cuses, which were refer'red
·�.
the Pisp$icher. Po.rt.

perro�t

c�n.:.

report

finaneial

read

. "'·t;,��i;'(•

e

tne eleCtiOns" attendance

curred in by voice ·vote.' Secre­

of ,,'minutes of
.vious meetings· in Galv�stori.
·:

h

_

·

the .members.bip•and. Patrolman- begin, so that labor's enemies
be defeated.- CommunicaDisp.atc��r�.s i:.�pqrt. Motions car- can
t'A\o men to tions -from v ari'ous members askried, to
meetchange their de!J{ir.txnents. One -ing to be excused from the
the Disminute of silel).ce -in- memory of ing were ref�rred to

Reading

·

''Port."· M6tions'

·

and

get off.

Agent 'reported

memben;hip,
c.oncurred

·

although

·

1

e

Brother FiS(?�e.r, Dispatcher, gave Tteasurer's.�financiaL re.J\lort. '.Mothe A,gent'.s report. He reported tion carried t.o increase hospital
on ·the prospec:ts t-or shiJ!lping in bene:fi.t.s to $5 a week ·'to .offset
the coming two weeks and sta ted high cost of living. One rpinute
.

tb�t the following ships were
due to hit port: Monarch of the
Se�. '"��obilian, DeSoto, Bessemer

of silence in m�mory of departed
Union Brothers. At 7:50

PM

mo-

tion carried to adjourn with 134

members in attendance.

;to

1-

;t.

NORFOLK-Chairman. William
Harrell, 100468; Recording Sec­
retary, J. A. Bµlloek, 4747: ·Read­

Victory, . Kyska,
Morning

Light,

S.

Jackson,

ing C l erk,

J. Lupton, 7736.

Other Branch meetings' min­
Iberville, Mad­
aket... Pilgrim and Alcoa Corsair. utes read
and
eoncurred
in.
Fi!leher alSQ reported that the Headquarters' report read and

/

air-conditioning unit and heati�g approved. Port Agent reported
fa�Hities for the Hall w.ere being that shipping was dead slow. in
installed and should be com­ this port and that the prospects,
pleted by next meeting. He re­ for the next tWQ weeks are poor.
ported on the possibility of sev­ Dispatcher gave his report. Mo­
eral dead tows within the next tion carried to refer .excuses of

iwo weeks .. He concluded the re­ fallowing ''llr others for absence
port by asking all members who from meeting to Dispatcher: H.
have not registered to vote to 0.
Cooper, Mike Brinson,
R.

c
sched- Davis and·· the Twin Falls Vi ­
tory.., ooth Waterman.
e
He S;3.id that a fw,:i.{i �s b�i11g· colIn additi.en to these �wo v s­
Iecied for a Chri�tmas dinnei·. sels, in-transit. callers included
Minutes of other Branch meet- the Hastings, Waterman; Willh�.m
the
an,
ings read and approved Motion Tilghman, ' Isthmi
and
an.
carried asking all hands to stay Kenyon City, Isthmi
The Gateway City also came
out of Agent's office unless they
af ter a 24-hour delay in ar.in
o
U
.
Go
d
ss
there
nder
have busine
l. The Tilghman hadn't been
a
.
riv
and Welfare there was much dis­
for a call at this . port,
scheduled
cussion pro and con about peI'­
was found for her and
cargo
but
mitmen belng issued full books.
Meeting adjourned at 7 :30 PM, she picked it up.
The coming two wee ks won't
with 105 members present.
see any boom in shipping, but if

s�uthport -and

,��ih�iml

ule.d in here in ea,rly

December.

�

·

�

�

t

�
accumulate any more·
Lewis, Willie Watson, T: Isaksen,.
the beach, things shouldJ. Keenan and Rafael Saldana.
Jack Parker. 27963:· Recording n't go too badly. Here's the
Brothers
th�se
sUl'e
am
Troxclair, schedule of in-transit vessels due
Secre:tary, _ Her man
visits from a.ny .
te
apprecia
wou!d
6743; Readiug Clerk. Buck Ste­ in:
shipmates. Oi· if.' ,
Hurricine, Gateway City , Twin of their former
p:Qens, 76.
drop them·
them,
visit
can't
you
WaterTopa,
Falls Vktory, Topa
Kenyon a card and let them know- ,you
Motion carried to accept min- man;· Steel Traveller,
,
thinking about· them and''
utes of previous Branch meet- Victory, Isthmian, and a Calmar are
us
with
be
that you hope they'll
ings, Port and Headquarters' fin- ,ship.
do.
all
we
as
soon,
ain
g
a
news.
Not 1 he·· least important
ancial rep9rts as read. Charges

NEW

we

ORLEANS - Chairman,

men

1

don't
on

·

�THE SEAFARERS

Friday' Decomber 2, 1349

LOG

Del Sud Plays Traffic Cop, Santa For Lost Schooner

A hardy band of 110 men, wo­ around this far off the coast,
men and children, seeking a bet­ so, the Second Mate called the
ter life in the New World have Captain to the bridge for a looksee.
probably landed by now some­
"All the time the schooner
where in South America, car­ was trying to signal us but
rying with them memories of showing nothing unusual. The
a' timely and helpful meeting Mate finally saw a man go up
with the SS Del Sud in South the mast and wave frantically,
Atlantic waters.
so the Captain stopped our ship
Her human cargo" packed to investigate. Thi§ is what hap­
tightly on deck, the two-masted pened:
k:hooner Saturnine, out of Da­ "The name of the ship was the
kar, was groping almost blindly Saturnine, bound from Dakar,
in the direction of French Gui­ Africa heading in the direction
ana in the early morning of No­ of French Guiana, without any
vember 18.
charts or instruments of any
Her water supply was almost kind to navigate with. Here is
depleted. Food was about gone. the first message sent from the
Of charts and instruments for schooner to the Del Sud's Cap­
tain E. F. Jones:
navigation she had none.
• But good fortune, in the sleek " 'Will you please tell us the
form of the SlU-manned SS Del next port on the coast of Brazil,
Sud, a Mississippi Shipping Com­ latitude and longitude. With de­
pany p^issenger-cruise ship out sire to arrive at the same, we
of New Orleans, was riding near­ have no charts or instruments
necessary for navigation.'
by.
Let Seafarer Jack R. Hartley, "Then we sent a supply of
Ship's Delegate on the Del Sud, water and provisions in our boats
pick up the story from this to the schooner. The following
message was received, after the
point:
first
load of water and provis­
"On the morning of Novem­
ber 18, 1949, at 6:45 AM, the ions were taken aboard the Sat­
4-8 watch sighted a two-masted urnine:
schooner under full sails. It " 'In the name of 110 men,
seemed kind of strange for a women and children we are in­
boat that size to be sailing finitely grateful for the services

Directory Of SIU Halls
SUP

SIU, A&amp;G District
BALTIMORE
14 North Gay St.
William Rentz, Agent
Mulberry 4540
BOSTON
;.276 State St.
Ben Lawaon, Agent Richmond 2-0140
Dispatcher
Richmond 2-0141
GALVESTON
SOSJ/j—23rd St.
Keith AIsop, Agent
Phone 2-8448
MOBILE
1 South Lawrence St.
Cal Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-1754
NEW" ORLEANS. :
823 Bienville St.
E. ShepTard, Agent
Magnolia 6112-6113
NEW YORK
51 Beaver St.
Joe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784
NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St.
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
PHILADELPHIA
337 Market St.
J. Sheehan, Agent
Market 7-1635
SAN FRANCISCO
.85 Third St.
Jeff Morrison, Agent
Douglas 2-5475
SAVANNAH
2 Ahercorn St.
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728
SEATTLE. .. .
2700 1st Ave.
Wm. McKay, Agent
Seneca 4570
fAMPA
1809-1811 N. Franklin St.
Ray White, Agent
Phone M-1323
WILMINGTON, Calif., 227 Vi Avalon Blvd.
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Terminal 4-2874
HEADQUARTERS. . 51 Beaver St., N.Y.C.
SECRETARY-TREASURER
Paul Hall
• DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
LindseV Williams
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURERS
Robert Matthews " J. P. Shuler
-Joseph Volpian

Ir

rJ

HONOLULU

16 Merchant St.
Phone 5-8777
PORTLAND
Ill W. Burnside St.
Beacon 4336
RICHMOND, Calif. ....
257 Sth St.
Phone 2599
SAN FRANCISCO
59 Clay St.
Douglas 2-8363
SEATTLE
......86 Seneca St.
Main 0290
WILMINGTON... ...440 Avalon Blvd.
Terminal 4-3131

Canadian District
MONTREAL

404 Le Moyne St.
UNiversity 2427
FORT WILLIAM.-rl 18'/, Syndicate Ave.
Ontario
Phone 3-3221
HALIFAX
128 •/, Hollis St.
Phone 3-8911
PORT COLBORNE
103 Durham St.
Phone: 5591
TORONTO
Ill A Jarvis St.
Elgin 5719
VICTORIA, B.C. ....602 Boughton St.
Empire 4531
VANCOUVER
565 Hamilton St.
Pacific 7824
HEADQUARTERS.
Montreal

.512 McGill St.
Plateau 670

you have rendered. Pace Fierro,
Captain.'
"After the food, water and
cigarettes were loaded aboard
the schooner raised full sails
again and went in the direction
of South America.
"As the Del Sud's engines
went full ahead, the crew felt
a glow of satisfaction, because
they felt that they played a
small part in saving the lives
of 110 men, women and child­
ren."
Last year; incidentally, the
then SlU-contracted Isaac Singer
encountered a schooner carrying
refugees from Spain to Vene­
zuela under almost identical cir­
cumstances in the South Atlantic.

Page Eleven

Pay Cash For Xmas Gifts
And Save Yourself Money
Wage-earners don't like to had the boy's signature on a con­
haggle over Christmas. That's tract. They finally did, but only
just why many traditionally get after the father threatened to
clipped for a lot of extra money call the Better Business Bureau,
when they go to buy gifts. They the newspapers and "the mayor.
haven't got the cash so they
One of the most shameful
buy on credit. When they do, gouges some credit stores per­
they let themselves in for a petrate upon working people is
double squeeze play:
to hoodwink them into unwit­
1—Not only are prices of gift- tingly signing contracts.
type goods higher at Christmas In one case of which this wri­
than any other time of the ter knows, the store each Christ­
year. But the installment stores mas would send its salesmen out
that every Christmas plug the to nearby factories and docks,
idea of buying presents on cred­ carrying watches and jewelry
it charge highest prices of all with him. The salesmen persuadfor many gift items.
,ed wage-earners to take watches
2—Besides the excessively high home on approval and asked
price tags on gifts bought on them just to sign a paper which
installments, the charge for the they said was a "receipt."
credit itself mounts up faster
BILLS OF SALE
than you think.
But later when the men tried
SLIGHT OVERCHARGE
to return the watches, they
One union printer learned last found that those receipts were
Christmas how stores that sell actually bills of sale complete
chiefiy on credit overcharge for with wage garnishee clauses.
gifts. This man's son went out Either they had to pay for those
to buy his girl a diamond ring watches, or the jewelry firm
for Christmas. He found one would go to the boss and col­
with a nice big stone at a cer­ lect the debt out of their wages.
tain New York credit jewelry Best way to avoid fixes like
store. The price was $240. But that this Christmas is to save
the salesman assured the boy up the cash beforehand for the
he could pay it off $2.50 a week gifts you want to buy, and shop
around in cash stores for the
—^for two years.
The boy decided he could lowest prices.
handle $2.50 a_ week all right. Cash saves you a lot more
But when he got home, his dad, money in the long run, both in
a seasoned trade unionist, was' the price of the article and the
cagy enough to have the ring credit fees, even though it may
appraised by a neighborhood be painful to part with a lump
jeweler. The ring turned out to of jt at one time.
Christmas may come only once
be worth just $180.
They had the devil's own time a- year. But that doesn't mean
making the credit store take it you have to play Santa to the
back, since the store already installment merchants.

JAMES McCAFFERY
man is requested to contact his thank Duke Livingston and crew
Two suitcases belonging to you mother, Mrs. Minnie Carney, 111 on SS Steel Flyer for taking
were sent to the New' York bag­ Wright Street, Wilmington, N. C. care of his gear after his acci­
dent.
4. 4. 4.
gage room from the SS Evistar.
Pick them up as soon as possible.
4 4 4
GOMAIR BLOEMAN
iir
Your seamen's papers and un­
HERBERT G. WHITE
ion book are being held on the
JOSEPH O'NEIL
Dorothy and your folks are
6th
Deck, SIU Hall, 51 Beaver worried and ask you to write.
A suitcase belonging to you
was sent to the New York bag­ Street, N.Y.
4 4 4
4» 4* 4*
gage room from the SS ChrysJOHN
T. SHAW
anthystar. Pick it up as soon
JOHN TURNER
Communicate with B. Mcas possible.
Your family is worried about
Bryde,
McBryde's Opticians, PO
4* 4* 4*
you and asks that you write.
Box
792,
Fayetteville, N.C.
HENRY A. MANCHESTER
XXX
4 4 4
Your package left at Pier 6,
REGINALD R. PASCHAL
JAMES
M. MULLIGAN
Bush Terminal, has been turned
Contact your father as soon
Contact Edna T. French, Clerk,
over 'to the SIU. Call for it at as possible. Your stepmother is
the New York baggage room.
Selective Service, Local Board
critically ill.
No. 20, 1910 Arthur Avenue,
4-^4.
4 4. 4.
Bronx 57, N.Y. "
RICHARD P. JONES
JOHN D. LIVINGSTON
4 4 4
Your mother is anxious that
You are asked to contact B.
B. rMozee, U. S. Marshal, Nome,* you contact her at 612 Hay
CHARLES WHITE
Alaska. This pertains to the dis­ Street, Fayetteville, N. C.
Get in, touch with John B.
XXX
position of the estate of your
Schiappacusse, Estuary Service
late sister, Luella.
McKENZIE WANTZLOEBER Co., Corner of Lafayette &amp; 13th
You are asked to contact Rich­ Streets, Tampa, Fla.
X X
ard
M. Cantor, 51 Chambers
JOSEPH HERMAN FUSSELL
4 4 4
Mozell asks that you return Street, New York.
BERNARD MACE
to Slocumb immediately. Your
4 4 4
Mrs. Anna Marsinnoco, 1054
mother has died.
ROBERT D. FLOOD "
Lowell
Street, Bronx, asks that
Your
brother,
Tayland,
asks
X 4* 4you
pick
up your gear.
you
to
write.
Important
matters
EDWARD CHARLES DACEY
4 4 4
You are requested "to get in await your action.
SS RANSOM A. MOORE
touch with Mrs. Frances E. Col4 4 4
gan. Supervisor, American Leg­
ROBERTO PRINCIPE
Men who served aboard this
ion Hospital, Newark, New Jer­ Juan S. Rueda, who is sick, ship between June and Septem­
sey.
asks that you contact him at 67 ber, 1947, are asked to correspond
East 106 Street, New York, N. Y. with Pfc. H. O. Crook, 1st Tank
XXX
Bn., Hqs. Co., 1st Marine Divi­
LEE O. CARNEY
4 4 4
Anyone knowing the where­
sion, Camp Del Mar, Oceanside,
SS STEEL FLYER
abouts of the above named sea­
Nicholas Cocatti wishes to Calif.

�Page Twelve

THE

SEAFAREHS

LOG

Friday. December 2, 1949

The What, Why And How Of Credit Unions
PURPOSE

The maximum size of a secured loan is 10
The following article gives the background of percent of capital and surplus. Security for a
A federal credit union is a cocJperative asso­
what constitute credit unions and how they are loan inay include the assignment of shares of
ciation organized to. promote thrift among its
run, information necessary for intelligent discus­ endorsement of a note by another.
members and to create a source of credit for
sion by the SIU membership. Comments — pro
useful purposes.
and con—are asked from the membership on
DIVIDENDS
It- is chartered and supervised by the Federal this, the latest of proposals for a better, stronger
Dividends on shares, up to a limit of 6 per­
Government through the Federal Deposit In­ union. Until the matter has been fully discussed
cent
may be paid each year from the balance of
surance Corporation.
by the membership in the LOG and at member­
ship meetings, any motions for immediate action earnings remaining after expenses have been
ORGANIZATION
paid and 20 percent of net earnings for the fiscal
are out^f order. Sound off, .BrothersI
year have b^n set aside as a reserve for possible
Federal credit unions may be organized to
bad loans.
serve groups of people having a close, common the credit union who are the president, the viceDividends are recommended to the members
bond of occupation, association, or residence, president, the treasurer, and the clerk.
by the board of directors and authorized by a
such as employees of a company, members of a
The credit committee of three or more mem­ majority of the members voting at the annual
church, teachers of a school system, residents of
bers considers and passes or rejects loan appli­ meeting.
a small community, and the like.
cations.
The object of the credit union is not profit,
The group must have a membership of at
It inquires carefully into the character and but service to its members.
least 100 persons and have been in existence
financial condition of each applicant for a loan
Dividends are paid on each ^share -outstanding
sufficiently long to insure its permanency.
to ascertain his ability to repay fully as well as at the end of the year in proportion to the num­
Members of the group must be prepared to to determine whether the loan is for a provided
ber of preceding, consecutive, whole months for
work together with a genuine desire to be of or a productive purpose and will be of benefit
which it has been paid in full.
^
assistance to their fellow members. Officials of to the borrower.
Dividends may be paid direct or credited to
the credit union must be willing to give suffi­
The supervisory committee of three members the members* accounts at the discretion of the
cient time to their duties to handle the affairs must audit the books of the credit union at least board of directors.
of the credit union efficiently.
quarterly.
The first step in organizing a Federal credit
It also reports to the members annually as to
SAFETY
union is to fill in and return to the Credit Union the condition of their credit union and the man­
There are a number of provisions in the Fed­
Section of the Federal Deposit Insurance Cor­ ner in which their interests have been safe­
eral Credit Union Act and the standard by­
poration, Washington, D.C., a preliminary ap­ guarded.
plication form.
The educational committee is the public rela­ laws that protect the funds invested in a Fed­
If, after this preliminary application is review­ tions unit of the credit union and is the most eral credit union. Some of these are:
ed, the group's qualifications appear to warrant effective medium through which active mem- . 1. Funds of a Federal credit union must be
deposited promptly in a bank designated
further steps toward organization, .a field repre­ bership participation may^ be obtained. The
by the board of- directors, the deposits of
sentative of the Federal Deposit Insurance Cor­ method of selecting this committee, its size, and
which must be insured by the Federal De­
poration is assigned to make an additional in­ its program are left entirely to the discretion of
posit Insurance Corporation. Exceptions are
vestigation and, if the group wishes, to help in each Federal credit union.
allowed only with the specific written per­
making a formal application for a Federal chart­
mission of the Federal Deposit Insurance
er.
LOANS
Corporation.
When the charter is approved, operations may
Loans, except those made to other credit
2. The treasurer must be bonded for the faith­
begin. An organization meeting is held, officials
unions
for
investment
purposes,
are
made
to
ful performance of his duties, and all perelected, and preliminary business affairs are
members
only.
"
sons
handling or having custody of credit
transacted.
The
interest
rate,
including
all
costs
incident
union funds must be bonded.
The field
representative then instructs the
to
making
the
loan,
must
not
exceed
1
percent
3.
The
act and the bylaws provide for the
. members of the managing staff in their duties.
per
month
on
unpaid
balances.
Small
fines
may
setting aside of a reserve for bad loans.
A.fter the officials become familiar with their
be
assessed
if
payments
are
not
made
when
due.
4.
Adequate security is required on all loans
duties, they manage the association alone; how­
Loans
may
be
made
for
provident
or
produc­
in excess of $100.
ever, . the field representative periodically visits
tive
purposes
only.
5.
Officers ,and directors of Federal credit
the credit union to supervise its activities and is
A
provident
purpose
generally
is
regarded
as
unions are not permitted to borrow from
available between visits if the group needs ad­
one
which
would
be
of
immediate
service
to
the
their associations in excess of their share­
ditional instructions or assistance in operating
member
borrower
or
his
family
in
meeting
un­
holdings.
their organization.
expected emergencies.
6. The surplus funds of the credit union may
A productive purpose is regarded as one which
be invested only in obligations of the Fed­
MEMBERSHIP
would aid the member borrower to save through
eral Government or in securities fully
To become a member of a Federal credit union the wise use of credit.
guaranteed as to principal and interest by
one must belong to the group which it serves
Under the Federal Credit Union Act, the term
the Federal Government; in loans to other
and must be elected to membership by the board of a .loan may not exceed 2 years. The custom­
credit unions up to 25 percent of the un­
of directors of the credit union.
ary practice is to require repayment at regular
impaired capital and surplus; and in shares
A membership fee of 25 cents is charged each intervals, usually each pay day.
or accounts of Federal savings and loan"
new member. No other fees are charged. Each . The maximum limits on secured arid unsecured
associations.
member agrees to save at least 25 cents per loans are fixed by the board of directors, but
7. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
month toward the purchase of a $5 share.
according to law, an unsecured 'loan may not
makes a periodical examination of the
In most instances savings may be withdrawn exceed $400.
books and records of the credit union.
at any time, but 60-days' notice may be required
fi:om the members by the board of directors if
it is considered necessary.
While in debt to a credit union, a member
may not withdraw^ an amount greater than that
Seafarers aboard vessels of the Isthmian
If this procedure is followed, the Union said,
by which this savings exceed his loan, except Steamship Company who require medical at­ the company's liability for providing proper
with the written consent of the credit committee. tention should make certain they clear through medical care is therefore properly established.
Each member is part owner of his credit union. the ships' Masters, a memorandum issued at
The Union also advised Isthmian crews that
Its success depends on the manner in which its Union Headquarters this week Stated.
"any^ time a Skipper of any vessel refuses re­
members fulfill their agreements.
The company has called attention to the fact quests for medical treatment, or refuses to issue
that some crewmembers have been neglecting to the proper. certificate_ for such treatment, the
MANAGEMENT
follow this procedure, and instead have gone to nearest SIU Hall should be notified immediately"
The business affairs of a Federal credit union their personal doctors and then submitted the for corrective action by the Union.
are handled by a board of directors, a credit bills to the company for payment.
If this procedure for securing medical service
committee, and a supervisory committee, se­
The Union pointed out that in order to obtain is followed, disputes which arise on this issue
lected by and from the members in annual reimbursement of money spent for medical can be settled without further argument.
elections.
In addition to reducing contract beefs to a
treatment, it is "absolutely necessary for all
The boarcil of directors of at least five members crewmembers riding Isthmian_ ships to first re­ minimum, the procedure is also highly import­
directs the operations of the credit union. It quest such treatment through the medium of ant from the standpoint of protecting the health
elects from its own membership the officers of the Skipper on board their particular vessels." of the crews, the Union explained.

Clear With Skipper When Needing Medltal Care

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9940">
                <text>December 2, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9998">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 32</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10019">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10040">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10100">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10118">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10180">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
SIU TO DEMAND SHIPOWNER-PAID WELFARE FUND&#13;
COMMENTS INVITED ON VACATIONS AND CREDI UNIONS&#13;
CITIES SERVICE FORCING MEN INTO COMPANY UNION&#13;
SEAFARERS MOURNS OSWALD STONE&#13;
MIDWAY MARK&#13;
WHAT DO YOU THINK?&#13;
COMMIES, TROTSKYITES PUT BOOTS TO NMU&#13;
PR, COASTWISE RUNS HELP KEEP MOBILE GOING&#13;
NEW YORK CAN'T MAKE A SQUAWK: SHIPPING IS PRETTY FAIR THERE&#13;
PORT WILMINGTON IS HAPPY OVER GOOD SHIPPING&#13;
SHIPPING SLOWS IN PORT SAVANNAH&#13;
SHIPPING, WEATHER ARE BOSTON HEADACHES&#13;
PHILADELPHIA THROWS THANSKGIVING FEED FOR MEN ON BEACH&#13;
SHIPPING SLOWS IN PORT SAVANNAH&#13;
SS PUERTO RICO CREW PUTS OUT OWN PAPER&#13;
GRAIN BARGE IS BEACHED AFTER COLLISION WITH SS CORAL SEA IN MISSISSIPPI RIVER&#13;
G.W. BEARDSLEY DIES IN FALL ABOARD SS SEATRAIN HAVANA&#13;
OPERATION AT SEA SAVES NOONDAY MAN'S EYE&#13;
PAY CASH FOR XMAS GIFTS AND SAVE YOURSELF MONEY&#13;
THE WHAT, WHY, AND HOW OF CREDIT UNIONS&#13;
CLEAR WITH SKIPPER WHEN NEEDING MEDICAL CARE</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10181">
                <text>12/2/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13070">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="973" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="977">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/5f517df3ea1d5aaf28637b51b170a072.PDF</src>
        <authentication>a3ae4cbc351252519509125afbd27506</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47453">
                    <text>NLRB CERTIFIES SEAFARERS.
HITS CITIES SERVICE TACTICS

Hard on the heels of its certification by the
National Labor Relations Board as collective bar­
gaining agent for nine Cities Service Oil Company
tankers, the SIU's Atlantic and Gulf District called
upon the company last week to enter negotiations
for a contract covering the company's unlicensed
personnel.
The certification order brought one step closer
the Union wages, conditions and security that thei
Official Organ, AtUmiic &amp; Gulf Diatrid, Seafarers International Union of NA SIU set out to obtain for Cities Service seamen
when it launched its organizing drive more than
No. 33
N^:W YORK. N. Y.. FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16. 1949
VOL. XI
two years ago.
Throughout the entire history of the campaign,
the Cities Service company conducted a reign ol
terror among its unlicensed personnel in a vain
effort to stop the landslide of sentiment in favor
of the SIU as collective bargaining agent for the
Heet.

Seafarers Presents SUpewners
With Deammf For Welhire FumI
^NEW YORK-

-Contract-

ed operators are studying
the SIU Atlantic and Gulf
District's demand for an em­
ployer-financed welfare plan
presented to them by the
Headquarters
Negotiating
Committee at a joint meet­
ing here last Friday, De­
cember 2.
The Negotiating Committee
laid before the shipowners a
welfare fund proposal calling
for contributions of 25 .cents for
each man for each day worked.
The Union also demanded that
the operators begin contribut­
ing to the fund on January 1,

iko. .
The Union negotiators told the
shipowners that the type of ben­
efits, manner of payments and
other details on the operation of
the fund could be worked out
after agreement had been reach­
ed on the principle of the plan.
In reply, the shipowners said
they would study the Union pro­
posal, and began a series of
meetings on Wednesday to de­
termine
• their position.
The joint meeting came after
Headquarters notified the opera­
tors that it wished to reopen the
contract to discuss wages, allow­
able under terms of the SIU's
agreements.

In fact, after the CS seamen
overwhelmingly chose the SIU
as their bargaining representa­
tive in the first NLRB election
on seven ships last year, the
company stepped up its terror­
istic tactics and began firing
crewmembers by the shipload at
the end of each voyage.
But as rapidly as CS fired men
with Union sympathies, just as
rapidly did their replacements
recognize the need for the soxmd
economic protection and security
offered by SIU representation.
In face of the pronounced sen­
timent of its employes, the com­
pany threw obstacle after ob­
stacle in the path of the NLRB
as it sought to set up the ma­
chinery for the second election,
an attitude that was scored by
the government agency in its
certification order.
(Full text of the NLRB's Or.
der of Certification begins on
page 7.)

In rejecting the Cities Service
company's objections to the elec­
tion procedure, the NLRB state­
ment said:
"In light of the Employer's
refusal to cooperate with an
agency of the Government in
carrying out its statutory fimc—
tions in the public interest, we
believe that, apart from other
considerations, it ill behooves the
Employer to file objections stem­
ming principally from its own
recalcitrance."
The Union's request for con­
tract talks was made in a letter
to M. J. Adkins, CS Marine Su­
perintendent, and was signed by
Robert A. Matthews, Assistant
Secretary-Treasurer.
The letter said in part:
"Pursuant to the Supplement­
al Decision and Certificate of
Representatives in Case No. 2RC-512 of the National Labor
Relations Board, we hereby re­
quest a meeting with responsible
officials of your company who
{Continued on Page 10)

MM&amp;P Extends
Old Contract
The threat of an East Coast
shipping strike, which would
have begun today, vanished
when the AFL Masters, Mates
and Pilots and operators' repre­
sentatives agreed to extend their
present contract for four months.
The contract extension, fourth
since it expired on September
30, was made at the request of
William Margolies, federal medi­
ator.
During the four-month period,
a study will be made of the job
security and seniority issues that
had resulted in the previous
stalemates. The Union will at­
tempt to formulate a workable
plan that is acceptable to both
sides, and will notify the Con­
ciliation Service of its progress.
The new deiadline on the con­
tract is 12:01 AM, April 16. -

t

New York Brands Trotskyites Bual And Hostile'
Termed "dual and hostile" in
a sternly worded resolution
adopted unanimously at the New
York Headquarters meeting on
December 7, Trotskyites and
members of other similar politi­
cal splinter groups this week
faced possible expulsion from
the • SIU. Final action on the
resolution is scheduled to come
in the outports on December 21.
The crackdown on the Trot­

skyites, officially known as the
Socialist Workers Party, came as
the answer to an organized
campaign the group had launch­
ed against the SIU, the purpose
of which was to smear the Union
and its officials, attempt to build
a working clique within the
SIU and, finally, serve as a re­
cruiting drive for the party.
Specifically the resolution
adopted charged the group with

attempting to disrupt and di­ policies of any of these organi­
vide our Union.
zations, be declared an enemy of
In calling for the ouster of the the SIU and be made to stand
Trotskyites and all other types charges and, if found guilty, be
of communists, the resolution expelled from the Union.
asked the membership to go on
Adoption of the resolution will
record to deal with the follow­ clear the way for the SIU to
ers of these political factions as give these people the treatment
enemies of the SIU; and that they so well deserve for their
any man who is a member of, attacks made on the Union
contributes to or, as a fellow- •through leaflets and their newstraveler, knowingly follows the
(Continued on Page If)

�Page Two

THE SEAFARERS tOG

Fri^jT' Decehifier 16,1919

SEAFARERS
'

Published Every Other Week by the

SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor

At 51 Beaver Streetj New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Reentered as second class matter August 2, 1949, at the Post
Office in New York, N.Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

Which Way}
NLRB Certification of the Seafarers as the collective
bargaining agency for Cities Service unlicensed person­
nel—after months of obstruction and delaying actions
by the company—brings to a close one phase of the long
struggle by Cities Service seamen to get for themselves
the top wages, shipboard conditions and job security
enjoyed by the members of the SIU.
The next step—the signing of an SIU contract by
Cities Service—may take as long, or it may be accom­
plished within a few days. It all depends on the company.
If Cities Service chooses 'to flout the law and go
rJong its traditional anti-union path, the Cities Service
seamen and their representative, the Seafarers Interna­
tional Union, will have no recourse but to take economic
action.
However, if Cities Service decides to honor the law
of the land and the mandate of its seamen, and bargain
in good faith with the SIU, the way will be open to
industrial peace in its fleet.
Nine out of every 10 Cities Service seamen stated
unequivocally in the last NLRB election -that they want
to be represented by the Seafarers International Union.
They stated that they want job security.
They^ stated that they want to do away with ship­
board intimidation, and the always present threat of
being blackballed.
They stated that they want SIU working conditions
aboard Cities Service tankers.
They stated that they want fresh vegetables, milk
and meat aboard their ships.
They stated that they want SIU Patrolmen to repre­
sent them at sign-ons and payoffs. '
They stated that they want the full protection of an
SIU contract.
These are the things the Cities Service men want,
and 89 percent of them said it by secret ballot.
The' Seafarers has. already asked Cities Service to
meet to discuss a contract. What happens now is up to
the company. But whatever it is, the SIU, as always, is
ready. What do you say. Cities Service?

Freedom From Fear
The SIU has moved to establish on the East Coast
the welfare plan jointly conceived by the A&amp;G District
and the SUP. The SUP's new contract, signed last week,
contains a provision for the type of Welfare Fund de­
manded by A&amp;G negotiators in last week's meeting with
the operators.
As members of our Negotiating Committee put it:
"From here on in, more and more attention will be
devoted to the future security of seamen."
Seafarers stand on the threshold of a new era, in
which they will not have to face the privations of old age.
The Seafarers are i-eally making maritime history!

To Our Friends
The Seafarers International Union, Atlantic and Gulf
District, extends to all of its friends, at home and abroad,
its very best wishes for a Merry Christmas. May the New
Year bring them greater rewards and security.

Seafarers Members Now In The Marine Hospitals
STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
MOSES MORRIS
H. E. LOGE
J. J. O'CONNOR
C. E. SANCHEZ
SAMUEL JONAS .
L. F. BARNA
D. P. GELINAS
FRANK NEARING
RICHARD GRALICKI '
CRIACO ESOLAN
C. MARTINEZ
DUSAN DE DUISIN
M. J. LUCAS
JOSEPH F. GAMBLICH
NICHOLAS CORATTI
L. F. ROZUM
CHARLES HAWVER
H. J. OUT
V. J. RIZZUTO
JAMES F. MARKEL
EUGENE LADRIERE
HENRY WATSON
HENRY JOHNSON
JOSEPH ARRAS
L. D, DIEUDONNE
i 4. 4BALTI^IORE HOSPITAL
F. W. CHRISTY
L. JUDAH, JR.
E. MATTSSON
R. E. EVERT
G. A. CARROLL
B. H. BRUNIE
A. L. MASTERS
R. W. BELL
G. W. MILLER
P. DARROUGH
H. W. SPENCER
G. D. REAGAN
C. W. HEMMIS
E. S. GABA
J. G. HARRIS
C. J. BISCUP
R. P. PEARSON •
, \
F. KORVATIN
y ^
^
E. F. PAUL
:
'v ' r
A. WRIGHT
L. CRUZ
'
'V '

H. CONNOR
. W. HUNTER
C. W. GOODWYN
G. L. HAND
- 4. 4 4
NEW ORLEANS HOSPITAL
J. DENNIS
F. LANDRY
H. LAGAN .
L. WILLIS .
L. LANG
J. SMYTHE
H. H. SCHULTZ
P. ROBERTS
A. MAUFFRAY
F. CAILLOUET
O. HOWELL '
H.-REMME
J. APPLE
J. GRANGER
J. TASSIN
C. BROWN
E. CHATTERTON
H. PENTON
•
R. REED
SHAFFER
J. H. MCELROY
B. EANS
WM. ROBERTS
A. LOPEZ
T. DAILEY
C. BERNARD
T. CIESLAK
4 4 4
MOBILE HOSPITAL
W. T. PRESLEY
J. L. WEBB
J. C. STEWART
P. _ HENDERSON
J. B. DIXON
L. HOWARD
R. FOSTER
, .
E. COLLINS
/
F. SPRUILL
TIM BURKE
4 4 4
SAN FRANCISCO HOSP.
JAMES HODO •
JAMES R. LEWIS

WILLIE WATSON
T. ISAKSEN
i. KEENAN
RAFEL SALDANA
4 4 4
. BOSTON HOSPITAL '' :'D'z •
W. J. BLAKELY
H. NONGEZER
R. BOLDUC
E. COTREAU
;
V",
Ji VIERA
v,
F. ALASAVICH
/:
VIC MILAZZO
-•"'it-:'..

NEPONSIT HOSPITAL
WILLIAM PADGETT
MATTHEW BRUNO
JOSE DE JESUS
J. M. LANCASTER
R. E. LUFLIN
ESTEBAN P. LOPEZ
CHARLES L. MOATS
• PEDRO G. ORTIZ
R. REDDEST
R. A. RATCLIFF
THOMAS WADSWORTH
R. A. BLAKE
L. BALLESTERO
JOHN T. EDWARDS
E. FERRER
I. H. FRENCH
JOSEPH SPAULDING

I-:-

JOSEPH SILLAK ,
LUIS TORRES
L. TULL
FRED ZESIGER

.v'l .
. '?

ELLIS ISLAND HOSPITAL
BEAU TEAU KNEW .
HENRY P. GALLAGHER
EDWARD SNOWMAN
• 4 4 4 •
•
NOPEMING (MINN.)
%
SANATORIUM
ivwk;
C. HAGBERG
4 4 4 •
VETERANS HOSPITAL
(Manhattan Beach, N.Y.): vvv|j
DOUGLAS CARREIRO

�THE SEAFARERS

I^day, December 16. 1949

LOG

Rotary Shipping Gets G)ngressioiMil Look-See

AFL Meet Sets Plans
Fer Growth In Sentb
NEW ORLEANS—The Ameri­
can Federation of Labor's South­
ern State Organizing Convention
wound up here on December 4,
after three days of activity aim­
ed at expanding AFL member­
ship and to intensify the drive
to defeat labor's enemies at the
polls.
Attending the convention,
which was chaired by E. H. Wil­
liams, president of the Louisiana
State Federation, were 14 presi­
dents and secretary-treasurers of
southern State Federations, and
officials of AFL municipal bodies.
Lew Rhodes, AFL Director of
Organization in the South, called
the convention to older.
Gal Tanner, Mobile Port Agent
and SIU Vice-President, and
Earl Sheppard, New Orleans
Port Agent, were among the
delegates to the convention.
O'REILLY, KEENAN SPEAK

Principal speakers at the con­
vention included Han-y O'Reilly,
AFL National Director of Or­
ganization, and Joseph Keenan,
Director Of the AFL's Labor
League for Political Education.
O'Reilly stressed the need for
ABOVE — Congressman Au­ continuing effort to organize the
gustine Kelley studies shipping unorganized workers in the
board in SIU's New York South and everywhere as the
Branch, as A&amp;G Secretary- only way to insure the security
Treasurer Paul Hall explains of all. He also pointed up the
rotary hiring. Looking on is necessity for political education
Mrs. Kelley. Mr. Kelley was so that workers would be helped
the third legislator in recent to elect candidates with under­
weeks to accept Union's invi­ standing and sympathy for their
tation to see how hiring hall problems.
Keenan outlined the job LLPE
operates.
has performed since its organi­
LEFT—Congressman Kelley, zation, the work it is doing at
Orville Watkins (left) of the present and the task that still
Office of Puerto Rico, and remains if its program is to be
Walter Mason, AFL legislative successful.
representative pause in tour
In behalf of New Orleans May­
of SIU Hall to read SEAFAR­ or de Lesseps -Morrison, Commis­
ERS LOG. Mason and Watkins sioner McCloskey told the con­
accompanied Mr. Kelley and vention that "the Mayor consid­
other members of House Labor ered the job that has been done
and Education committee on toward improving labor-manage­
recent trip to Puerto Rico.
ment relations in this city well
done."

EGA Slaps Penalty On 7 Nations For Violating 50-50 Rnie
The
Economic
Cooperation
Administration has ordered sev­
en Mai-shall Plan countries to
refund about $30,000,000 spent
in the United States for goods
that V.ere shipped in. violation
of the 50-50 shipping- rule.
The penalty was imposed "when
the government agency discov­
ered that about 150,000 tons of
ECA-financed cargo, purchased
here by the seven beneficiary na­
tions, had failed to comply with
the law requiring that at least
•50 percent of all bulk cargoes
must move in Aiherican bottoms.
BOUND BY LAW
Under the law, EGA must dis­
allow all transactions not in
compliance. Since the goods have
already been shipped and re­
ceived, the purchases, therefore,
can not be cancelled. As a re­
sult, the amounts involved must
be paid for in cash, instead of
being charged to the allotments
of the seven governments. When
payment has been made, credit
will be given toward- future al­
locations.
The nations th^t have been
slapped with the penalty are
France,
Belgium - Luxembourg,
the Netherlands, Great Britain,

Ireland, Sweden and Denmark.
The amount which each of these
countries must refund has not
yet been figured out . exactly.
The 50-50 shipping rule was
passed by Congress last spring
after the SIU and other mari­
time interests waged a vigorous
battle to 'insure use of American
ships in the transportation of
cargoes sent abroad under the
foreign aid program.
The fight
for the protective
legislation N^s touched off by
EGA Administrator Paul Hoff­
man's announcement last year
that he intended to ignore the
50-50 provision recommended by
Congress when it appropriated
funds for European relief in
early 1948.
A storm of criticism greeted
Hoffman's proposal and the SIU
immediately launched an allout drive to halt such a move.
TRADE UNION SUPPORT
In its campaign, the SIU so­
licited and received the aid of
hundreds of trade unions
throughout the country.
Appealing to Congress for re­
medial action, the SIU urged
legislators to expressly incorpo­
rate into the EGA appropriation
bill for 1949 a provision ensur­

ing at least 50 percent American
participation in the transport of
Marshall Plan goods.
US SEAMEN ENDANGERED
At that time the SIU pointed
out that the American merchant
fleet was already rapidly declin­
ing and that Hoffman's proposal
would toss scores of vessels into
lay-up and thousands of Ameri­
can seamen on the beach.
The EGA Administrator gave
as his reason for ignoring Am­
erican ships in the carrying of
US-financed cargoes the alleged
lower cost of using foreign ships.
The SIU charged that an at­
tempt was being made by low-

Page Three

standard foreign flag operators
to drop prices until American
competition had been ^ d»iven
from the field.
Then, said the
SIU, they could raise shipping
fees to suit themselves.
All of these arguments carried
weight, and Congress adopted
the Bland-Magnuson amendment,
making the employment of US
ships mandatory for at least half
of the cargoes shipped under
EGA.
The violations of this rule re­
ported by EGA this week are
the first since Congress pro­
vided that the 50-50 rule must
be enforced.

Keep Her Steady As She Goes
We all know that the Seafarers is tops in the maritime
field, and has the best contracts and conditions. We got to be
that way the hard way—and let's keep it the way it is.
Here are some of the things you can do:
1. Hold regular shipboard meetings
2. Attend the shoreside meetings, and take an active part
in them. Bring up your beefs before the membership,
not in a ginmill.
3. Keep those gashounds and performers under control.
They are among the Union's worst enemies.
4. Do your job to the best of your ability.
5. Don't take time off unless you are authorized by the
department head.

A. P. Harvey, a representative
of the Louisiana Labor Commis­
sion, discussed the labor move­
ment in the state and the steps
taken to correct some of the
past errors in dealing with labor
problems.
An insight into the workings
of the National Labor Relations
Board's activities was given to
the convention delegates by Paul
Baker of Washington. The Rev­
erend O'ConneU, Catholic priest
of New Orleans, discussed re­
ligion, ' unionism, and "other
needs of the working man."
Reports made by officials of
the various state and municipal
labor bodies pointed up the fact
that LLPE was making great
progress in communities of all
sizes in the South.
Among resolutions adopted by
the convention was one calling
for intensification of the AFL
organizing drive to bring one
million new members into the
group, as a memorial to Samuel
Gompers, founder of the AFL.
Another resolution urged all-out
support of the LLPE in order to
defeat those people in Congress
who have proven themselves en­
emies of labor. (See page 5 for
a full page of pictures taken at
the convention.)

Anti-Conummist
Unions Fonn New
WorU Croup
The International "Confedera­
tion of Free Trade Unions-:-the
new anti-communist labor or­
ganization representing 50,000,000 members in 53 countries—
was formally established in Lon­
don early this month.
AFL President William Green
was chosen a member of. the
executive board of the confed­
eration, which pledged to fight
for v(iorkers and against totalit­
arianism everywhere.
One of the main purposes of
the new organization is to dem­
onstrate to working men and
women that in democratic coun­
tries they "can have their bread
and freedom, too."
AFL Secretary - Treasurer
George Meany and Irving Brown,
AFL representative in Europe,
were named alternates on the
policy-making panel of the new
group.
Dutch Delegate J. H. Oldenbroek of the International Transportworkers Federation, with
which the SIU is affiliated, was
elected first
secretary - general.
Headquarters of the organization
will be set up in Brussels.
Plans for the new anti-com­
munist body of trade unions
were started about a year ago
when most of the free unions in
the world pulled out of the com­
munist-dominated World Federa­
tion of Trade Unions.
One of the issues at the con­
federation's first session centered
on whether or not unions affili­
ated with the international or­
ganization- of catholic trade
unions should be permitted to
join the new body.
AFL Delegate David Dubinsky,
president of the ILGWTJ, led the
fight to grant membership to the
catholic unions, providing they
sever relations with the religidus
Trade Union International with­
in two years.

'I

�THt S H A F A R E R' S

Page Four

Philiy Reports
Slight Rise in
Port Shipping

Fitda-y. December 16: 1946

LOG

AS eONGRESSIONAL GROUP TOUREO PUERTO RICO

Ti^, ReiRef
Carry Mobile
OYer The Hen^

By JAMES SHEEHAN

By CAL TANNER

PHILADELPHIA—A slight in­
crease was noted in shipping in
the Friendly City during the
past two weeks, but not enough
to call it an upswing. However,
it's always satisfactory to report
an increase in job opportunities,
no matter how slight.
We have had quite a few
ships in here lately with a lot
of beefs about crewmembers
fouling up, not doing their, work
exactly as they should or com­
ing back to the ship late.
It is well, therefore, to stress
once again that we have a con­
tract to live up to. Agreements
are not one-sided affairs, and we
cannot ride along thinking that
only the companies are expected
to abide by them.
Members of the House Labor and .Education Committee, who recently completed a tour
If we are to continue to de­
of Puerto-Rico and the Virgin Islands as part of a- Congressional study of Itdmr conditions,
mand observance of the contracts
were guided in and around San Juan by Sal Colls, SlU Representative in Puerto Rico.
to the letter as forcefully as we'
Above is group as it visited one of San Juan's government buildings. From left to right:
have in the past, and to seek
an unidentified government official. Rep. Ceirroll D. Kearns (Pa.), Rep. Augustine Kelley (Pa.),
more and more benefits for the
AFL Legislative Representative Walter Mason, Rep. John Lesinski (Mich.), committee chairman;
membei'ship, we must keep on
Sal Colls, Rep. Charles Howell (N.J.), Rep. Harold Velde (111.) and John Forsythe, general coun­
demonstrating our responsibility
sel to the committee.
as parties to a contract.
Any crewmember who falls
down on his obligations in this
respect is jeopardizing the se­
curity and hardwon gains of the
Isthmian; Robin Doncaster; Trin­ drinking at the wrong time show
By JOE ALGINA
rest of the membership.
ity and the Colabee.
by their actions that they don't
NEW YORK—Shipping in this
GUYS DON'T LIKE IT
care
about these-contracts and
Other than the fairly satis­
port is maintaining the pace set
A meeting was recently held several weeks ago. Despite the factory shipping situation in what they mean in security to
aboard the Maiden Creek in this tough conditions prevailing in New York there's not much else the membership.
port to straighten a matter that the industry, we have managed to report. One unpleasant affair,
This is not to be regarded as
has direct bearing on what we're to ship a satisfactory number of however, should stir up serious a sermon. It's just a reminder
talking about.
men during the two-week period thought among the membership. that the way to continued job
A couple of guys thought they just ended.
We're referring to the incident security is by sober recognition
could do just as they pleased,
of our obligations. You'll never
Activity on the payoff side aboard the Nathaniel B. Palmer, get it by fouling up;
without regard for the welfare
of the other crewmembers. Their took place aboard the follow­ as the re.sult of four men re­
portedly intoxicated and refusing
shipmates made it clear that ing vessels:
to
turn to. The Skipper came
such stuff couldn't be tolerated.
Puerto Rko, Kathryn, Ann into the picture and, in the fra­
We had quite a few complaints Marie, Beatrice, Bull; Jean Laabout some -of the local ginmills. Fitte, John B. Waterman, Besse­ cas that followed, his gun went
Readers notifying the SEA­
In one of the more popular spots mer Victory and the Yaka, Wa­ off and the radio operator was
slightly
injured.
FARERS
LOG of a change in
here, the proprietor had a couple terman; Steel Worker, Steel Ex­
mailing
address are re­
These
four
men
have
had
of men thrown in the bucket for ecutive, Isthmian; Trinity, Alex­
quested
to
include their old
charges
preferred
against
them
being drunk there.
andra, Carras; Algonquin Vic- and they will have to stand
address
along
with the new.
Our men should avoid these lory, St. Lawrence Navigation;
In addition to making easier
trouble spots, and in this con­ Mankato Victory, Victory Car­ trial before a membership trial
the switch-over it will also
nection, it is suggested that when riers; Southland, South Atlan­ committee.
guar
a n t ee uninterruptedBut the point we're concerned
you're in Philiy stop by the Hall tic, and* the Colabee, Americanmailing
service^
and get the score on which are Hawaiian.
with here is that the memberthe places to avoid.
All notifications of change
All payoffs came off smoothly,
That recent reprint of the re­
of address should be ad­
marks in the Congressional Piec- especially the one aboard the
dressed to the Editor, SEA­
ord made by- Representative Yaka, which came in very clean
FARERS LOG, 51 Beaver
Louis Heller about the SlU made Sifter a four-month voyage.
Street, New York 4, N. Y.
a hit with* a lot of members
The Bull Line ships all signed
here. A good many of them have on again. Other sign-ons in­
written to Mr. Heller, telling cluded the Strathmore, a tanker
him how they liked what he that came out of lay-up; the
said about our Union.
Steel Apprentice, Steel Scientist,

Shipping Holds At Even Keel In New York

Log Sttbseribers

MOBILE—Shipping in Mobile
for the last couple of weeks has
been dead slow, with approxim­
ately foi'ty-four bookmen and
sixteen petmitmen shipped for
the period.
However, we did manage to
ship over a hundred men on re­
lief jobs for the period. These
jobs were shifting gangs, tug­
boat jobs and one day reliefs on
deepsea ships; in fact, the relief
jobs were what kept the port
going and helped ease the pres­
sure on the beach.
.
Ships paying off in this pei'iod
"were the Iberville, Morning
Light, DeSoto, Mobiliah, Wild
Ranger, Loyola Victory, ,Warhawk, all of the Waterman line;
the Corsair, Alcoa, and the SS
Strathcape of the Strathmoi-e SS
Company. All these ships were
in good shape, with only a few
minor beefs on any of them.
Signing on for the period were
the Camas Meadows of the US
Petroleum Carriers, headed for
the Persian Gulf run; the Cor­
sair, headed back down to the
Islands; Iberville, headed on the coastwise run; Morning Light,
going back to Puerto Rico;
Strathcape,. headed for New
York; DeSoto, on the coastwise
run; Mobilian, headed for Japan
and Korea; Wild Ranger, back
to Puerto Rico.
In-ti-ansit during this period
were the SS Catahula, Cuba Dis­
tillery; Steel Inventor, Isthmian
line, and the Alcoa Runner. All
were contacted and necessaiy re­
placements were furnished and
all beefs smoothed out. ,
The biggest thing that hap­
pened around the port was the
visit of the Merchant Marine
sub-committee of the US Sen­
ate, which was -in Mobile for a
three-day meeting. Labor, was
invited to come and givfe" ideas
and suggestions for improving
the" merchant marine.
All, of the Maritime Council
that could possibly do so were
present at the meeting, and each
had ideas of his own for im­
proving the American merchant
marine. A full report of this
meeting will be made in the
near future.

Tampa Mayor Deputizes Finks

dipping Drop Puales Balthime
By WILLIAM (Curly) RENTZ
•BALTIMORE—The local ship­
ping continues slow with little
prospect for an early climb in­
to a more satisfying position.
What few ships have honored us
with their presence have been
easily handled, with not a single
one of them bringing us a beef
of major size. All of the prob­
lems that have come up have
been handled right at the pay­
off.
Naturally the biggest item of
conversation around here is,
what^has happened to Baltimore
shipping? The membership can­
not understand v/hat happened
to suddenly make shipping take
a nosedive here.
Until a short time ago we had
fairiy good shipping—not like a
year, or so ago, but enough to
insure a steady turnover. Now
we^re moving («l the slow, slow

bell. Here's hoping the shipping
is being stored up somewhere
and will soon come steaming in
by the dozens. We could handle
them.
With a drop in the job turn­
over, there is a great deal of
talk about compulsory vacations.
Most of the fellows are waiting
to read__ the arguments for and
against as they appear in the
LOG.
By ihe time everyone has had
his say, there shouldn't be a
guy left in the • Union who
doesn't know what the issue is
in this case.
At any rate, the men are talk­
ing and trying to figure out what
the best way is to spread the
work and make it as fair as
possible to all hands. That's the.
score from here for now.

By RAY WHITE
TAMPA—For the past several
days we've watched our antilabor mayor hard at work doing
snip has time and again demon­ his best to break a strike of the
strated that it is a responsible city's bus drivers. Unfortunately,
body of seamen. And we don't it looks like he has made good.
mean that a guy who takes a 'He did his best to wreck the
drink is not a responsible guy. SIU's strike in 1946, and called
We don't care if a man drinks the cops out later when the
or he doesn't. If he does, the truck drivers and cabbies struck.
place for it is away from the
This time he put an end to
ship. In other words, not on the the 26-day strike of the local
j*ob. It only leads to complica­ bus drivers. The other night Ma­
tions,- such as the Palmer inci­ yor Hixon gave the drivers the
dent proves.
ultimatum that they were to
Again, we've got to say that drive the buses the next morn­
such kid stuff has no place in ing or else.
Most of the drivers took the
our outfit. Incidents like these
tan only weaken our bargaining "or else" and didn't show up, but
effectiveness - and
certainly the police and the finks did.
couldn't be called attractive to At the garage, the entire police
force stood by while the finks
new companies.
We've got contracts to live up took over the jobs.
To be sure the boys did their
to. They've got to -be. renewed
periodically and we fight to raise .jobs right, the Chief of Police
our standards ait each new sign­ gave them guns and swore them
ing. A few guys who insist on in as special police. This man­

euver hit an all-time low for
scabbery.
Hixon stands for re-election in
(951 and, at the rate he is go­
ing. he won't get the vote of
a single union man and woman
in this city, which has the high­
est percentage of union members
in the country. When the time
co.me.s we hope he gets a licking,
and we're going to do all we
can to see that he gets it.
CHANGE OF CREW
On the shipping side, business
has been slow, and that's the
best we can say about that. .
Otherwise, the hunting season
has taken the members far afield.
Some of the boys who took ,to
the timberland have been Paxil
Carter, Paul Brinson, Abie Ellis,
Boss Beal and Polack Poluski.
Beal is the champion, having
killed two deer in the Suwanee
Hammdck. Some marksmanship,
eh?

�Ffidmy, J&gt;9ce!whv 1$^ 1.949

Pfl^e Five

jjrjs S^AJ^.AJREJtS JLOG

Pressing home a point: Delegate Middle, left, tells Aubry
Hurst. Attorney for Louisiana State Federation of Labor, and
Bob Soule, Secretary-Treasurer, New Orleans Central Trades
and Labor Council, what he thinks.

Some of the delegates and guests at the AFL Southern
Slate Organizing Convention in New Orleans. Left to right:
C. Tanner. SIU Mobile Agent; Edwin I. Soule, Louisiana Com­
missioner of Labor; Charles M. Hauk; Louis P. Sahuque, VicePresident, N.O. Central Trades and Labor Council; Earl Sheppard, SIU New Orleans Agent; Hugh Brown, Secretary-Trea­
surer, Alabama State Federation of Labor; Lew Rhodes,
Southern Director of Organization; Charles Howe, Vice-Presi­
dent, Pressmen's Union; Bruce Campbell; Harry O'Reilley,
National Director of Organization; E. J. Bourg, SecretaryTreasurer, Louisiana State Federation of Labor; E. H. Williams,
President. Louisiana State Federation of Labor, and Bill Hines,
President, Mississippi State Federation of Labor.

Meet the ladies who graced the conventiom Seated (left to right): Mrs, R. L, Soule, Mrs. E,
H. Willi^ims. Mrs. F. E. Hatchell, Mrs. E. J. Bourg. Mrs. C. Tanner, and Mrs. E, Sheppard. Stand­
ing left to right: Mrs. Louis Sahuque. Mrs. Charles M. Hauk, Mrs, J. M. Scott. Mrs. J. W.
Parks, Mrs. Hugh Brown, Mrs. Bruce Campbell, (names of the next two were not given) and
Mrs, Tim Odom.

Getting together: Left 16 right: E. H. Williams, President. Louisiana Stale
Federation of Labor; E. Sheppard. New Orleans SIU Agent; Lew Rh^es.
Southern Director of Organizatio?!# AFL; Harry O'Reilley, AFL National
Director of Organization, and C. Tanner,-SIU Vice-President.

Even the most "* serious of conventions must give time
for chow. But that didn'^ stop business—the discussiops went
right on.
-

Left to right: Tim Odom, Organizer for the Laborers" Union; A. Bourg,
Secretary-Treasurer, Louisiana Stale Federation of Labor; L. Sahuque. VicePmsident, N.O. Central Trades and Labor Council: Edwin Soule. Commissioner
of Labor. State of Louisiana, and E. H. Williams, President of the Louisiana

State Federation of Labor, hold a confab.

�Page Six

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Ftiday. 'l&gt;«c»mber 16. 1949

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings in Brief
GALVESTON — Chairman.
period. Minutes of other Branch­
Keith Alsop. 7311; Recording
es read and accepted. At this
Secretary. Mickey Wilbum. 37.point two Brothers, both of
739; Reading Clerk. 38119.
whom were drunk, began creat­
Motion carried to accept Gal­
ing
considerable annoyance and
SHIPPED SHIPPED SHIPPED
PORT
REa
REG,
REG.
TOTAL
TOTAL
veston minutes of pi-evious meet­
DECK
ENG.
STWDS.
REG.
DECK
ENG.
STWDS. . SHIPPED disrupting the meeting. Motion
ing as read. Headquarters report
can-ied that meeting act as trial
.—
8
11
13
32
2
3 committee to deal with these
1 '
and Secretary-Treasurer's finan­ Boston
106
111
87
304
110
128
87325 men. Motion carried that they
cial report read and approved. New York
67
34
43
'
144
32
24,.
80 be fined $25 to be paid upon
24
Minutes of other Branch meet­ Philadelphia
99
92
82
273
73
90
82
254
Baltimore
ings accepted as read. Agent re­
completion of their next trips.
.39
43 24
106
10
9
12
31 They were then removed from
ported on the state of shipping Norfolk
13
6 '
6
25
3
3
3
9 the Hail. H. G. JoneSf Book No.
in this port. Also reported bur­ Savannah
14
'
9
4
27
12
12
15
39
Tampa
1
glars entered Hall over week­
51298, took the Union Oath of
32
91
28
31
•
26
20
70 Obligation. Ag^nt asked to re-,
24
end and stole unemployment Mobile
73
88
65
226
88
75.
98
261 turn all mail sent to members in
checks from Mail Room. Motion New Orleans
29
23
5
57
20
17
"• 59 care of this Hall which had /been
22
carried instructing Agent to take Galveston
62
* 189
59
68.
51
70
' 59
180 held more than 90 days. Meet­
steps toward obtaining a new West Coast
Branch Hall, and that if unsuc­ GRAND TOTAL
• 539
490
445
1,474
473
424
'414
1,311 ing adjourned at 7:45 PM, with
cessful, the Branlh be transfer­
85 members present.
red to Houston. One minute of
4 4 4,
silence in memory of departed these matters were in the dis­ Skipper for the cooperation they gatibn was taken by the follow­
BOSTON—Chairman. T. Flem­
cussion stage only and that any all gave in effecting a smooth ing members: A.'R. Tonon, C- ing. 30821; Recording Secretary.
Union Brothers.
definite action would have to be payoff. Shipping for the next D. Carlow; William F. Hunt, Ben Lawson, 894; Reading- Clerk,
i. 4.
PHILADELPHIA — Chairman. taken through the medium of" a two weeks, he said, does not look Francis A. Murrary, Edward R. Murphy. 30612.
*
Jim Sheehan. 306; Recording referendum vote in secret bal­ good for Frisco and Wilmington. Idell and L. B. Brown. All /nin- Minutes of previous meetings
Secretary. William GUck. 48741; loting up and down the coasts. Reports accepted and concurred utes of previous Branch meet­ in all Branches approved as
Meanwhile, he urged that all in were the Secretary-Treasurer's ings in District were read and read. Port Agent discussed ship­
Reading Clerk. J. Sheehan.
Minutes of all Branch meet­ hands voice their opinions on financial statement. Balloting concurred in. Secretary-Treasur­ ping conditions in the port. Mo­
ings of previous week read and the subjects so that the member­ Committee's, and Headquarters er's financial report accepted as tion carried to accept Agent's re­
accepted. Agent reported that ship would be fully acquainted reinstatement committee's and read. Several members were ex­ port, and Patrolman-Dispatcher's
quite a few ships had come in with the issues, if and when a Headquarters report to the mem- cused from the meeting, and mo­ report. Several ifiembers with
tion carried to so notify the Dis­ valid reasons were excused from
with beefs about some men foul­ decision was made to put them
patcher.
Agent discussed ship­ the meeting. Motions carried' to
to
a
vote.
Fifty-five
members
ing up. He cautioned that this
ping
in
this
port in the past two accept Secretary-Treasurer's and
were
present
when
meeting
was
could not be tolerated, since the
weeks, which he described as Headquarters reports to the
letter of the contract must be adjourned.
not too good. Headquarters re- membership. Ohe minute of si­
observed if we are to be able to
NEW ORLEANS^— Chairman. bership. Motion carried giving poi-t* to the membership read lence observed in memory of de­
insist upon our demands when
we meet with the operators for Bill Higgs, 223; Recording Sec­ Lindsey Williams, Director of and approved. Patrolmen's re­ ceased Union members. Motion
improved conditions and wages. retary. Johnny Johnston, 53; Organization, vote of confidence ports of payoffs and sign-ons earned to adjourn at 7:40 PM,
Reading Clerk, Herman Trox- for his handling of the Cities were also read and concurred in. with 134 members in attendance.
Secretary - Treasurer's financial
Service organizing .drive. Under Motion carried to accept Hospi­
report and Headquarters report clair, 6743.
4 4 4
to the membership read and ap­ Motions carried to accept New Good and Welfare, the subject tal Committee's report. After one
NEW YORK—Chairman. Lind­
proved. Robert K. Holt, Book Orleans financial report and pre- of a credit union was discussed, minute's silence in memory of sey Williams, 21550; Recording
No. 102377, took the Union Oath vious meeting's minutes as read. with most speakers agreeing thgt departed Union Brothers, meet­ Secretary. Freddie Stewart. 4935;
of Obligation. Men seeking to be Charges read; motion carried establishment of such a union ing adjourned at 8 PM, with 300 Reading Clerk. Steve Cardullo.
excused from the meeting were that they be accepted and all would be a worthwhile step. members present.
24599.
referred to the Dispatcher. ports be notified .of this action. Meeting adjourned at 8:04 PM,
4 4 4
Minutes of all Branch meet­
with 29 members present.
. NORFOLK — Chairman. Ben ings read and concurred in, exCharges read. One minute of sir Secretary - Treasurer's financial
Rees. 95; Recording Secretary. J. cect for motion to non-concur
lence in memory of departed report concurred in. Minutes of
4 4 4
Brothers. Meeting adjourned at other Branch meetings read and MOBILE / — Chairman. Oscar A. Bullock. 4747; Reading Clerk, with that part of Boston min­
7:45 PM, with 200 members pres­ approved. Agent reported that Stevens, Recording Secretary. T. Lawson, 4641.
utes pertaining to hospital bene­
all was running smoothly in the James Carroll. 50469; Reading Motion carried to accept all fits. Port Agent discussed ship­
ent.
Branch with no beefs pending. Clerk. Harold J. Fischer. 59.
Branch minutes as read and to ping, which he said had man­
4 t 4
TAMPA — Chairman. J. L. He said that more than 800 votes Motions carried to concur in post them on the bulletin board aged to hold it^ own in this port.
Jones. 2898; Recording Secretary. had been cast thus far in an­ minutes of other Branch meet­ in Hall. Headquarters report to He also mentioned fracas on the
Ray White. 57; Reading Clerk. nual District elections. Shipping ings as read. Agent reported that the membership and Secretary- Nathaniel Palmer, which started
had fallen off a bit, he added, shipping would be''very slow in Treasurer's financial
report ap- when several men refused to
R. H. HalL 26060.
Minutes of other Branch meet­ but job opportunities were still the next two weeks. He also re­ proved as read. Port Agent spoke turn to as ordered. He pointed
ings accepted as read. Port Agent fairly good, with many permits ported that the Cities Service is­ on shipping conditions here and!out that such irresponsible acreported that shipping had pick­ getting a chance to ship out each sue was coming to a head and said that there had been a slight tions hurt entire membership and
ed up somewhat. The Arizpa is week. He said that Christmas told of the program that had improvement in the past two harm Union's prestige. He rescheduled to arrive here and should "help shipping inasmuch been developed tb insure a suc­ wccks. Coal strike has had ported that charges had been inthere i^ a possibility that she as quite a few men were expect­ cessful fight, in the event that marked effect on the port's ac­ stituted against these men, and
will pay off. He added that al­ ed !o hit the beach for the holi­ the situation comes to that point. tivities. Dispatcher's report of that they would stand trial bemost a fuU crew had been ship­ days, necessitating replacement Agent explained purpose of the shipping figures were accepted. foi-e a Union committee. Secre­
ped to the Noonday. The condi­ calls. Communica tions from welfare fund, which the Union Motion cai-ried to refer requests tary-Treasurer reported that Ne­
tion of the Branch is good and members seeking to be excused is now trying to get from the for excuses from meeting to the gotiating Committee had noti­
all affairs are shipshape, he said. from the meeting were referred 'operators and what it would Dispatcher, and that he be per­ fied operators of its desire to
He urged all members who had­ to the Dispatcher. Trial commit­ mean to the membership. He mitted to use his own. discretion reopen contract to discuss setting
n't yet voted to do so as soon tee's report read and concurred asked the membership to expi'ess in judging the validity of the up of a welfare fund and that a
as possible, so that no one would in. Motion carried that Port its views on this matter by writ- excus"es offered. One minute of meeting had been scheduled for
miss the opportunity to have his Agent be empowered to take to ingg their opinions to the SEA­ silence was observed in respect next week. He announced that
say in the selection of the of­ Agent's conference Hhe question FARERS LOG. He informed the to memory of departed Union the NLRB had certified the SIU
ficials to serve in the coming' of four-hour reliefs and matter membership that he would meet members. Motion to adjourn car­ as collective bai-gaining agent
year. Motion carried to accept of raising relief pay. Meeting ad­ with a sub-committee of the Sen­ ried at 7:40 PM, with 131 mem­ for nine ships in the Cities Ser­
journed at 8:55 PM, .with 385 ate Committee on Merchant Mar bers in attendance.
vice fleet and as a i-esult the
rine to discuss .conditions of the
members present.
- 4 4 4
maritime industry. A full report SAVANNAH — Chairman, Jim
4 4 4
SAN FRANCISCO—Chairman. 6f this meeting will be present­ Drawdy. 28523; Recording Sec­
R. E. White, 48314; Recording ed to the membership, he con­ retary. D. S. Hair. 51349; Read­
Secretary. Pat Robertson, 30148; cluded. Motion carried to con­ ing Clerk. L. Baker. 30907.
Reading Clerk, Jeff Morrison. cur in Balloting Committee's ireMotions carried to accept Sec­
port. Motions carried to approve retary - Treasurer's financial
34213.
re­
Minutes of other Branch meet­ Secretary - Treasurer's financial
port and Headquax'ters report to
Secretary - Treasurer's financial
report. Five-man building com­ ings' read and accepted. Motion report, and Headquarters report the membership as i-ead. Port Union now has jurisdiction over
mittee elected at last meeting carried to non-concur with part to the membership. One minute Agent reported that Southwind all CS tankei-s. The company
reported back with bids from of Boston New Business with of silence in memory of depart­ will payoff in Jacksonville on will be requested to begin nego­
contractors and motion carried recommendation that it be re­ ed Union Brothers. Meeting ad­ December 8 and lay up due to tiations for a contract, he added.
to accept the committee's report. ferred to the SEAFARERS LOG journed at 7:50 PM, with 315 lack of cargo. Jean will be in The Secretary-Treasui-er explain­
for payoff and sign-on. Two ed that the reason for the ap­
Patrolman - Dispatcher's reports for full discussion. Agent report­ members in attendance.
other South Atlantic vessels are pearance of several Congressmen
concurred in. Under Good and ed that on last meeting night he
"444
BALTIMORE
Chaitman. A1 also scheduled to come into port. in- the Union Hall during the
Weffare there was considerable was in Port Huernma squaring
discussion on a great variety of i away beefs on working rules Slansbury. 4683; Recording Sec­ Announced that Christmas party past few weeks was that several
subjects, ranging from the high aboard the Citrus Packer which retary G. A. Masterson. 20297; will be held in Hall on Dec. 21, bills, including an amendment to
directly after the regular mem- the Taft-Hartley Act, will come
cost of living to the matter of had been aground in Japan. He Reading Clerk. Leon. Johnson.
bei'ship meeting. A juke box up in .the next session of Con­
Motion
carried
to
suspend
reg­
said
the
beefs
were
understand­
men missing ships. The credit
union proposal and the question able under the circumstances, ular order * of business to hear will be on hand and there'll be gress. In order to win passage
of compulsory vacations were al­ and that in spite of them, the reading of charges. Trial Com­ plenty to eat and drink for all of the. T-H amendment which
so kicked around quite a bit. The payoff was smooth. He compli. mittee's reports were also read hands. Dispatcher reported on' would exempt the- Hiring Hall ..
for two-week I
(Continued on Page H)
Agent reminded the men that mented the delegates and the and concurred in. Oath of Obli- shipping figures

A&amp;G Shipping From Nov. 23 To Dot. 7

�Friday, Pecexnber 16, 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Seven

fsxt Of HLRB Decision Certifying
As Bargaining Agent In Cities Service
Reprinted on this and the following pages is the complete
text of the National Labor Relations Board's final decision in
the Cities Service cose, which designates the Seafarers In­
ternational Union, Atlantic and Gulf District, as the exclusive
bargaining representative for the Gties Service seamen. The
decision clearly shows to what extreme extents the Cities
Service Oil Company went to try to keep its men from the
benefits and protection of on SlU contract. The company
succeeded in stalling certification of the SlU for nine months.

a period in which the CS seamen were subjected to a reign
of terror (turn to page 10 for a CS seaman's account of
this), and endured all of the poor shipboard conditions for
which Cities Service is so well-known, but now the legal
phase of organizing CS is over. The next—and it won't take as
long as the other—is tying Cities Service to on SlU contract,
so that CS seamen will get the same high wages, overtime,
conditions and JOB SECURITY that ail Seafarers enjoy.

Supplemental Decision And Certilicathn Of Representatives
in the Matter of
CITIES SERVICE OIL CO. OF PENNSYLVANIA
(MARINE DIVISION)
Employer
and
SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION OF
NORTH AMERICA (AFL)
Petitioner
Case No. 2-RC-512
Pursuant to a Decision and Direction of Elec­
tion issued herein on December 29, 1948,^ an
election by secret ballot was conducted under
the direction and supervision of the Regional
Director for the Second Region (New York City).Upon conclusion of the balloting, a Tally of Bal­
lots was furnished the parties. The tally shows
that of approximately 225 eligible voters 176
cast ballots, of which 98 were for- the Petitioner,
12 were against the Petitioner, 5 were void and
66 ^ere challenged.
On April 28, 1949; the Employer filed Ob­
jections to the Conduct of the Election and to
, Conduct Affecting the Results of the Election,
hereafter, in accordance with the Board's Rules
and Regulations, the Regional Director conducted
ah investigation, and on August 19, 1949, issued
and duly served upon the parties his Report on
Objections, recommending that the objections
be overruled. On September 2, 1949, the Em­
ployer filed Exceptions to Report on Objections
and Motions by Employer.
The Employer's numerous objections, more
fully set forth below, in substance are based on
the following broad allegations: (1) that the Em­
ployer was not given sufficient advance notice
of the election and therefore was deprived of an
opportunity to have its observers at the polling
places; (2) that the emlployees were not properly
advised of the election; (3) that the Union's
agents coerced employees into voting for the
Union; (4) that the Board agents improperly
conducted the election; and (5) that the Board
agents were uncooperative and biased in favor
of the Union.

the date of our Direction (a delay occasioned in
part by the Employer's motion to the Board for
reconsideration of our Decision), a conference
was held at the Regional Office, with all inter­
ested parties present, for the purpose of planning
the mechanics of the election. Forthwith, the
Employer's representative announced that the
Employer would not cooperate«in the election
unless the Board first consented to vacate two
outstanding Circuit Court of Appeals cease and
desist orders directed against the Employer
based upon prior unfair labor practices,"^ and
unless the Employer was permitted to use super­
visors as election observers. In accordance with
established Board policy, these requests were
refused; whereupon the Employer asked and re­
ceived a 24-hour postponement of the conference
in order to reconsider its determination not to
cooperate.
The conference reconvened on the next day,
Thursday, February 17. The Employer did not
withdraw its demands; instead, it added new
conditions to its willingness to cooperate, in­
sisting that no vessels be polled except at ports
between Baltimore and Boston and that no
elections be held on Saturdays, Sundays, or
holidays, or in any event, before Wednesday,
February 23 because the Employer intended to
operate its offices with a skeleton crew over the
holiday weekend (Tuesday, February 22, being
Washington's birthday). During this conference,
the parties knew that seven of the vessels in­
volved were scheduled to reach American ports
and to depart again before Wednesday, Feb­
ruary 23. In view of this fact and of the uncer­
tainty surrounding maritime employment gen­
erally,^ and because of the delays- already en­
countered, the Board agent advised the Em­
ployer that the Regional Director would pro­
ceed with the election, if necessary, without the
Employer's cooperation. On that same day, the
Regional Director decided to poll the vessels
when they next arrived at American ports.

servers when advised of the time and place of
the election. That same afternoon telegrams
were sent to the Employer and to its attorney
advising that each vessel would be balloted upon
arriving in port. At 5:15 p.m., the Regional Of­
fice telephoned the same advice to the Employ­
er's port steward at its New York office. Of­
ficial notices of election were mailed to the Em­
ployer. The Union notified the employees of the
forthcoming elections by radio messages sent
each vessel while at sea,-"' and by megaphone and
public address equipment as the vessels ap­
proached shore. When the first six ships docked,
each at a different Atlantic or Gulf port, the
Board agents requested, but were refused, per­
mission to conduct elections either on board
ship or on the company's water front property.
As a result, the Board agents set up election
machinery wherever feasible under the circum­
stances and as close as possible to the debarka­
tion points. In some instances, parked cars were
used as voting booths. Official notices of elec­
tion were posted conspicuously at and near the
polling places. The Employer did nothing to in­
form its employees of the scheduled election.
The employees were balloted as they disem­
barked. The first two ships, the SS Fort Hoskins
and the SS Winter Hill, were polled on Sunday
night, February 20, and early Monday morning,
February 21, respectively. No company observers
were present at the balloting of the first six
vessels, and,for this reason the Board agents
challenged all the ballots from the first two
ships. However, at the polling of the next four
vessels they ignored the absence of company
observers and challenged voters in the custom­
ary manner whenever doubt arose as to eligibil­
ity. As the Employer, although requested to do
so, had failed to furnish a pay-roll list ^or any
of the six vessels, the Board agents questioned
all persons appearing at the polls, asked for
identification papers, and required them to sign
factual statements before permitting them to
vote.

At noon the next day, Friday, February 18,
the Regional Office sent a telegram to the Em­
Meanwhile, on the basis of the advice from the
Except for certain events occurring at the
ployer, advising it that the election would be
Regional Office concerning the scheduled elec­
polling of one of the vessels, the facts as re­
held in the near future and that the Employer
tion, received by telephone Friday afternoon
ported by the Regional Director are not in dis­
could use supervisors as observers, and request­
and
by telegram Saturday morning, the Ecpute.
ing the names of the observers. The Employer
ployer on Monday, February 21, instituted a
Our Decision and Direction of Election dele­ replied the same day that it would appoint ob- proceeding in the District Court for the Southgated to the Regional Director discretion as to
em District of New York to enjoin the Board
the exact time, place, and procedure for r»oliing
from
proceeding with the election. An ex parte
3 NLRB V. Cities Service Oil Co.. 122 F. 2d 149
the unlicensed maritime employees on the nine
temporary
restraining order, secured by the Em­
(C. A. 2); NLRB v. CUies Service Oil Co.. 129 F.
vessels included in the appropriate unit des­
2d 933 (C. A. 2).
ployer in that suit, interrupted the election after
cribed therein. On Wednesday, February 16,
This same request had already been considered the first six vessels were balloted. Shortly
J949, after a delay of more than 7 weeks from
' and denied in our original Decision and Direction thereafter, the injunction proceeding was dis­
of Election and agadn in our Order den-ying the missed for lack of merit. However, during the
Employer's motion for reconsideration;
1 80 NLRB No, 235. ^
4 The Regional Director had reasonable cause to
believe that substantial numbers of eligible voters
Si Wherever used herein, the term Regional Director
5 The Union sent 40 radio messages. 5 to each of
would be -separated from the company's employ in
. .. rnesxvi .Acting-Regional Director. , u.u; :
8 ships. No message -was sent to the SS Government
the near future.
Camp, which was being voted by mail.
87 NLRB No. 60.
^

�Page Eight
pendency of the temporary restraining order
and at the request of the Federal District Court
Judge, the Employer appointed observers and
participated in the baUoting of the two remaining vessels.® Although no company observers
had been present at the balloting of the first
Bix vessels, the average turnout of crew members on those vessels compared favorably with
the average turnout on the vessels balloted later,
Upon the completion of the balloting of all nine
vessels, the ballots were counted and the aforesaid tally prepared. None of the challenged ballots was opened.
^ Concerning the polling of the SS Winter Hill
at Braintree, Massachusetts, where all the bal­
lots were challenged by the Board agent, the
Employer takes issue with the Regional Direct­
or's report on the facts. On the basis of his in­
vestigation, the Regional Director reported that,
upon being denied access to the vessel and to
the company-owned pier,' the Board agent set
up election equipment in a parked automobile
on a road near the pier; that due to the extreme
cold, the Board agent-and the Union observer
waited for voters in a nearby tavern, the only
available shelter; that there was no drinking by
anyone connected with the election during the
voting; that no ballots were distributed, marked,
or accepted in the tavern; and that the balloting
took place, not in the tavern, but in the front
section of the automobile, where each voter
marked his ballot privately while the observer
and other voters remained at the rear. The Em­
ployer asserts that balloting was conducted in­
side the tavern, where voters and Union organ­
izers drank together; that organizers told crew
members, that they could vote only for the Union
and promised to each a "full (Union) member­
ship book" if he voted for the Union; and that
at least one of the eligible voters refrained from
voting because of the lack of secrecy in the bal­
loting and the rowdy atmosphere of the tavern.

hhtke To The Employees

THE

SEAFARERS

Friday, Deoember 16, 1949

LOG

necessary pleadings, together with supporting
documents, to apply for an injunction on Monday
morning, February' 21. Further, the Employer
had already been advised 'that it could tise supervisory personnel as observers. Just as the
Union was able to communicate with the ships
at sea to advise the employees of the pending
election, the Employer could easily have designated any of its officers on ship board to act
as observers at the elections and to assist the
Board agents in taking all necessary precautions
to assure proper eligibility. On these simple and
uncontroverted facts, we view the Employer's
failure to have observers at the polling places
as a deliberate refusal to participate in the conduct of the election. Its belated complaint of
being neglected and wronged is not persuasive
now.
In any event, the primary consideration in the
conduct of any election is whether the employees
are afforded adequate notice and sufficient op­
portunity to vote. Although the Employer is
customarily accorded the privilege of having its
observers at the polls, their presence is not re­
quired, nor is the Employer ehtitled to such rep­
resentation as a matter of right.^
Under the entire circumstances of this case,
we agree with the Regional Director's conclusion
that the Employer received sufficient notice of
the election and that its objection in this respect
should be overruled."

Notice To The En^ioyoes
The same reasons which lead us to believe that
sufficient notice was given jto the Employer also
dispose of its objection that the employees were
not given sufficient advance notice of the elec­
tion. Other than having the Union advise ship
personnel by radio, telegraph, and public address
equipment, giving the Employer an opportunity
to do likewise, and posting the regular election
notices at conspicuous places as close as possible to the Employer's waterfront property, we
see nothing further that the Board agents could
have done to ensure widespread publication of
the scheduled balloting among the employees,
There is no substantial evidence to show that
eligible voters did not receive, or were deprived
adequate notice and opportunity to vote. On
contrary, the favorable comparison between
average turn-out of crew members on the
^ix vessels balloted and that of the vessels
pohed with the Emplopr's belated cooperation
presence of its observers is clear evidence that a representative number of employ­
ees voted in the election as a whole. Under these
circumstances, we believe that the employees
were given and received adequate notice, and
we therefore adopt the Regional-Director's rec­
ommendation that this objection be overruled."

The Employer's principal objection to the con­
duct of the election is grounded on the dispatch
with' which the Board agent acted in setting
election machinery in motion, once he was sat­
isfied that further delay meant a long postponement"ifThe de^
in the vessel's personnel. A proper review of the
timing of the election and of the mechanics of
its execution must be made in the light of the
special problems incident to the polling of seagoing vessels and of the clearly dilatory attitude
of the Employer in this case. Considering the
facts confronting the Regional Director on Fri­
day, February 18, we deem his decision to poll
the vessels immediately as entirely reasonable.
The high turnover-rate normal among personnel
in the shipping industry permits, indeed re­
quires, swift decisions of election and the polling
of such employees. Particularly was expeditious
action (appropriate in this case, where the Em­
ployer's only response to the Board agent's re­
quest for cooperation was continued and repeat^ insistence on unacceptable and impossible
The general allegations of coercion by Union
conditions. Such insistence, coupled with the
agents
are based on the assertion that employees
Employer's general hostility tov/ards the election,
reveals an unmistakable determination to pre­ were coerced, tricked, and bribed into voting
vent the Regional Director from carrying out
the Board's direction.
7 Southern Steamship Company v. NLRB, 316 U. S.
Moreover, the facts show that the Employer
31; Burrows 8E Sanborn, Inc., 84 NLRB No. 35.
had sufficient notice of the election and was af­
8 Hoague-Sprague Corporation. 80 NLRB No. 252.
forded ample time to appoint election observers,
9 See Wilson Athletic Goods Manufacturing Co., Inc.,
had it so desired. Thus, notwithstanding its as­
76 NLRB 315.
sertion that notice on Friday, by telephone to
The Employer also contends that eligible voters
its port steward and by telegram to its attorney,
who were ill, on vacation, or temporarily laid off
was not notice to the Employer and that skel­
were not given notice of the election and, therefore,
eton operations ovec the holiday weekend made
denied the right to vote. We agree with the Re­
the designation of company observers impossible,
gional
Director that such employees are customar­
the Employer had ample time to prepare the
ily not given individual notices of election and,
in the absence of a showing of prejudice to em­
6 The ninth vesseL the SS Government Camp,' was
ployees' rights, we. find nd merit in this contention.
balloted by mail in a foreign port.
Cerf Brothers Bag Company, 74 NLRB 1329.

Alleged Coerma
By Uaion Ageots

for the Union, and that balloting took place in
inappropriate places. The incidents referred to
in this objection relate to the polling of the -SS
Winter Hill at Braintree, Massachusetts,' lltie
facts relative to this part of the election, as they
appear to us now from the Regional Director's
report and from the Employer's Objections and
Exceptipns, are set forth ih detail above and
need not be restated.
-j
•
.
.. ^°"sider it unfortOnate, but nonetheless
d, that the Board agent, in the case of this
compelled, after being denied a more
conventmnal and desirable locale for conducting
^'cc'io", to hold the balloting in an automob'le parked so close to a tavern (the clfisest point
Employers pier) in order to ensure maximum opportunity for all eligible voters to cast
ballots. As to the electioneering allegedly carried
on by Union agents, we have long held such
activity not to be coercive.'® In any event, we
deem it unnecessary to resolve the seeming con­
flict between the Regional Director's report and
the Employer's assertion as to the facts rep­
resenting the balloting of the SS Winter Hill.
Under the circumstances of this case', consider­
ing the restricted area in which the alleged
coercive conduct occurred, the geographical
separation of the vessel from the other vessels
that were polled in other ports extending from
Massachusetts to the Gulf of Mexico, the nature
of the maritime industry, and particularly the
fact that the Board agent challenged all ballots
cast at the voting of the SS Winter Hill, we
believe it would not be realistic to assume that
the alleged conduct had any impact upon the
election results or upon the freedom of choice
exercised by the employees on the remaining
vessels as to warrant setting the election aside."
The Employer also alleges as coercive the fact
that notice of the election was given to employees by the Union; that parked cars, particularly
a Union-owned automobile in one case, were
used as voting booths; and that Union representatives and its attorney were present at some
of the polling areas. We do not believe that
these facts, standing alone, show improper interference with the employees' free expression o/
choice. There is nothing improper in a union
publicizing a Board election. In fact, "getting
out the vote" by notifying voters is a traditional
part of election procedure. The Employer was
given equal opportunity to publicize the election, but significantly - failed to do so. While it
is true that in some instances parked cars were
^g voting booths, and that at the balloting
gg
^ Union-owned automobile

bearing no distinguishing marks of ownership
was used, the Regional Director reported that
in no case were ballots marked in a car while
any person other than the voter was present.
Further, absent a showing of improper election­
eering, the mere presence of Union-representa­
tives at or near the polling area is not prejudic­
ial. In view of the foregoing considerations,^ we
agree with the Regional Director's conclusion
that this objection raises no substantial issue
with respect to the conduct of the election. Ac­
cordingly, we hereby overrule it.'^
10 See National Sugar Refining Company of New
Jersey, 4 NLRB 276.
11 Isthmian Steamship Company, 74 NLRB 64.
12 See Craddock-Terry Shoe Company, 80 NLRB No.
185: General Plywood Corporation, 83 NLRB No.
26; and Mutual Distributing Company, 83 NLRB
No. 74.
The Employer also alleges coercion because of
the mail balloting of the SS Government Camp,
on the theory that the Union might have resorted
to "strong-armed" tactics in distant ports. As mail
balloting was authorized in our Direction of Elec­
tion, and as the Regiona^[&gt;irector found no evi­
dence of improper codduct in connection with its
use, we find this argument to hb withbut merit.

�FHday; P»ceinb»r 16, 1949

Alkged ImiH-oper
Conduct Of Board Agents
We have already considered and rejected (in
connection with other objections) several grounds
on which the Employer also charges that the
Board agents improperly conducted the election.
These were: the dispatch with which the elec­
tion wa» held, the limited advance notice given
to the Employer and to the employees, and the
alleged coercive conduct by union agents. We
turn now to further allegations on which the
objection to Board agents' conduct is predicated.

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Nine

(f) Part of the election was conducted outside vessels, both within and beyond the territorial
the regional jurisdiction of the Regional Di­ limits of the Second Region, was in accordance
rector.
with our usual election procedures in maritime
All -the balloting was conducted under the cases, and not. in violation of our Direction of
supervision of the Regional Director for the Election, we find that the Regional Director
Second Region. As the simultaneous polling of acted properly in so doing."* ,

Allegetl Bias Ant! Lack Of
Cooperation Of Board Agents

Finally," the Employer makes a general charge had the Employer elected to extend to the
of bias and prejudicial lack of cooperation by Board agents the cooperation which was
Board agents. The Regional Director reported earnestly solicited to no avail. In the light of the
Employer's refusal to cooperate with an agency
(a) The Regional Director used an eligibility that his careful investigation revealed no evi­ of the Government in carrying out its statutory
date different from that established in our Di­ dence whatever supporting this allegation. Most functions in the public interest, we believe that,
of the specific grounds al^edly supporting the apart from other considerations, it ill behooves
rection of Election.
Unable to obtain pay-roll lists or pay-roll charge, urged also as bases for other detailed the Employer to file objections stemming prin­
period dates, the Employer having failed to fur­ objections, have been considered above and cipally from its own recalcitrance.
nish them on request, the Regional Director set found to be without merit. The two assertions
In view of the foregoing and under all the
December 29, 1948, the date of the Board's Di­ remaining to be considered are that the Board circumstances, we find, in agreement with the
rection of Election, as the eligibility date, al­ agents challenged voters "presumably at the in­ Regional Director, that the Employer's objec­
though the Board's Direction established it as stigation of the Union" and that they "connived" tions and exceptions do not raise substantial and
the pay-roll period proceeding the date of elec­
with the Union to permit non-crew members to material issues with respect to the conduct of
tion, which fell on December 28. We have set
the election orr to conduct affecting the results
forth above the detailed precautions taken by vote in the balloting of the SS Lone Jack.
of the election. Consequently, we hereby deny
the Board agents to ascertain the eligibility of
It is clear from the Employer's statement sup­ the Employer's motion to set aside the proceed­
each voter. It has not been shown, nor is there porting its Exceptions that the first objection ings and to order a new hearing or a new elec­
any evidence indicating, that the change of
refers primarily to the "fact that all votes cast tion herein, and we hereby adopt the Regional
eligibility date prejudiced any eligible voter. On
Director's recommendation that the Employer's
the contrary, it is undisputed that no employee from the two vessels first polled in the election objections be overruled.
actually working on December 28 was denied a were challenged by Board agents. These were
As the challenges can not affect the results
ballot for this reason, and that all persons whose also the first two of the six vessels at which
ofthe election, and as the Union has secured a
ballots were counted were in fact employed by company observers were not present; the Re­
the Employer on December 28. Nor is there any gional Director found that the Board agents majority of the valid votes cast, we shall certify
it as the collective bargaining representative of
showing that eligible employees were thereby
made these challenges because the Employer the Employer's unlicensed personnel in the unit
imable to vote. Under these circumstances, we
deem the Regional Director's use of December had failed to designate observers. None of the heretofore found appropiate.
29 as the eligibility date to be entirely proper.^-' challenged ballots was opened, as they could
not affect the results of the election. The chal­
, (b) The Regional Director permitted aliens to lenges, therefore, could not have prejudiced any
vote.
of the parties. Absent any evidence supporting
The eligibility of aliens to cast ballots in Board this serious accusation and in view of the Re­
elections is too well established to warrant justi­ gional Director's affirmative report as to the
reason for the challenges, we will not presume
fication anew here.'"*
IT IS HEREBY CERTIFIED that Seafarers In­
improper motives on the part of any of the
ternational Union of North America (AFL) has
(c) More persons cast ballots at the polling of participants in the election procedure.
been designated and selected by a majority of
two of the vessels than appear on the Employer's
The
Employer's
observers
were
present
at
the
eligibility list for those vessels.
the Employer's unlicensed personnel aboard the
polling of the SS Lone Jack. Eight persons not
As the Employer's eligibility list undoubtedly oh board ship, but claiming to be employees, re­ vessels SS Royal Oak, SS Government Camp,
reflects its erroneous concept as to eligibility quested ballots; they were permitted to vote SS Fort Hoskins, SS Salem Maritime, SS Bent's
of aliens, we are unable to determine what per­ only under challenge. These facts are not dis­ Fort, SS Bradford Island, SS Winter Hill, SS
centage of employees in fact eligible did cast puted. It is these eight persons whom the Em­ Archer's Hope, and SS Lone Jack of the Em­
ballots. In any event, we are satisfied, from the ployer charges were "imported as ringers" by ployer's Maritime Division, including deck and
uncontroverted facts as reported by the Regional the Union with the approval of Board agents.
engine employees, machinists, and pumpmen^
Director,, that the Board agents were sufficiently As stated above, the Regional Directtf)r found
but excluding stewards, boatswains, pursers,
careful in testing eligibility.
no evidence showing connivance between the
Board agents and Union observers, even assum­ radio operators, and supervisors as defined in
(d) Secrecy of the ballot was not maintained.
ing that the Union was aware of the ineligible the Act, as their representative for the purposes
The Employer asserts that the election results status of these eight voters. If the Board agents of collective bargaining and that pursuant to
were made known premature and that ballots had intended to allow n^on-eligibles to vote, they Section 9 (a) of the Act, the aforesaid organiza­
were cast in automobile voting booths in the would have permitted them to cast unchallenged
tion is the exclusive representative of all such
presence of observers.'" The Regional Director's ballots. We therefore agree with the Regional
investigation r^ealed no evidence to support Director's conclusion that these facts do not employees for the purposes of collective bar­
gaining with respect to rates of pay, wages,
this charge. OrT the contrary, we believe that, prove misconduct by Board agents.
hours of employment and other conditions of
considering the unfavorable conditions under
Apparently, the Employer also views as preju­ employment.
which they were compelled to conduct the bal­
loting, the Board agents' diligence in assuring dicial lack of cooperation the Board agent's re­
Signed at Washington, D.C., this 2 day of
a free expression of choice by the employees fusal to permit the Employer to challenge, be­
fore the counting of the ballots but after the December 1949.
merits commendation.
completion of the election, all votes cast from
(e) The ballots from the first six vessels polled the six vessels polled in the absence of company
Paul M. Herzog, Chairman
were commingled with those cast later.
observers. As the Employer had chosen not to
Janies J. Reynolds, Jr.. Member
In the light of the logical requirement for challenge any of the ballots when they were
J. Copeland Gray, Member
counting all ballots cast in a single election, we cast, the Board agent, under well-established
consider this objection to be frivolous and with­ principles, was bound to reject its belated chal­
National Labor Relations Board
lenges.'^ His decision, therefore, was clearly
out merit.
proper.
It thus appears that all of the Employer's ob­ 16 To the extent that the Employer in its Exceptions
13 See New Era Shirt Company, 79 NLRB 213.
may have objected to those elections held on the
jections to the election are based either on illWashington's Birthday holiday, we find no merit
14 Azusa Citrus Association, 65 NLRB 1136; Logan founded arguments or on factual assertions
therein. Danita Hosiery Manufacturing Co. Inc«
and Paxton, 55 NLRB 310.
which, according to the Regional Director's re­
72 NLRB 162.
15 This objection also adverts to the alleged illegal port, are entirely unsupported by substantial
M balloting inside a tavern at the balloting of the evidence. Indeed, the yery occasion for most 17 A. J. Tower Company. SO NLRB 1414; affirmed
NLRB V. A. J. Tower Company. 329 U.S. 324.
SS Winter Hi^, which we have considered above. of its complaints would never have .arisen

Certification Of
Representatives

- i

�Page Ten

THE S E AF ARERS

IX) G

Friday.. l&gt;«K:ember ,16, 1949

Seafarers^ Certified In Cities Service

no avail," the NLRB continued. Ships involwd in the SIU's The SIU followed up thi^^ ac­ ally came on May 24, 1948. At
(Continued from Page 1) '
"In view of the foregoing and second certification award are tion by filing a petition with the same time the l^RB held
have authority to enter into a
under
all the circumstances we the Royal Oak, Government the NLRB for a collective bar­ that a second election would
binding agreement with this
find,
in
agreement, with the Re­ Camp, Fort Hoskins, Salem Mar­ gaining election in the CS fleet. required' for bargaining';right3
j i Union . . .
gional
Director
that the Empley- itime, Bent's Fort, Bradford Isl­ The company then began a cam­ on ships acquired by the com­
"In conformity with Section
er's objections and exceptions do and, Winter Hill, Archers Hope paign of stalling the election, us­ pany after the election had been
8 (d) of the Act, the Union com­
and the Lone Jack.
ing every legal trick in the book ordered.
mittee is prepared to meet at all not raise substantial and mater­
ial issues with respect to the The seven vessels for which to deny their employes SIU rep­
In June 1948, the SHI filed for
i- reasonable times and confer in
conduct of the election or to con­ the SIU had' previously been resentation.
the
second election. The com­
(" good faith with respect to wages,
duct affecting the results of the certified as collective bargaining
pany
immediately intensified its
CS STALLS
hours, and other terms and con­
election. Consequently we here­ agent are the Council Grove, It was July 28, 1947 before the stalling campaign^ A company
ditions of employment ..."
by deny the employers motion French Creek, Logans Fort, Abi- NLRB could hold a hearing on union—CTMA—^was set up, and
'• The NLRB certification gives to set aside the proceedings and
qua, Cantigny, Chiwawa and the SIU's petition. More com­ all those refusing to sign pledge
the SrU jurisdiction over the en­ to order a new hearing or new
Paoli.
pany film-fiammery followed, but cards_were fired, along with all
tire Cities Service tanker fleet. election herein, and we hereby
Events
leading
up
to
the
com­
on
October 20, 1947, the Board men even slightly suspected of
j|. In May of last year, the Union adopt the Regional Director's ob­
plete
certification
of
the
SIU
as
finally
ordered an election on having SIU sympathies.
was awarded collective bargain­ jections be overruled.
bargaining agent for Cities Serv­ eight ships of the fleet. One, the
The order for the election oh
ing rights on seven of the com­
ice
seamen
^started
on
October
Lone
Jack,
could
not
be
voted
the
nine unvoted ships came oh
CERTIFIES
SIU
pany's tankers, after the crews
because
it
reached
port
after
the
26,
1946,
with
a
letter
to
the
December
30, 1948. The company
"As
the
challenge
cannot
af­
involved voted 83 percent in fadeadline
date.
Cities
Service
Marine
Division
resorted
to
the courts to block
fect
the
results
of
the
election,
iror of the SIU. Early this year,
a second election was held on and as the Union has secured pointing out that the Union was The votes were tallied on Feb­ the election but failed, and vot­
the nine vessels acquired by the the majority of the valid votes the authorized representative of ruary 9, 1948, with the SIU re­ ing began in February 1949.
(Company after the first election cast, we shall certify it as the a majority of the crews on CS ceiving more than 83 percent of Cities Service seamen demon­
strated an even greater prefer­
tras ordered by the NLRB. The Collective Bargaining represen­ tankers and requesting recogni­ the valid ballots cast.
Cities
Service
immediately
be­
tion.
The
letter
came
at
the
end
ence for the SIU than in the
tative
of
the
Employer's
unlicen­
SUU received 89 percent of the
gan
filing
objections
in
an
effort
of
a
vigorous
three-month
or­
first
election, giving the Seafar­
sed
personnel
in
the
units
here­
valid votes cast, resulting in the
ganizing
drive.
ers
an
89 percent majority.
to
stall
certification,
which
fin­
tofore
found
appropriate."
•eoond certification of the Union.
TQie award is dated December
?, 1949.
: In its latest designation of the
SIU as collective bargaining
agent for the Cities Service fleet,
recommendation because my Service fleet. I refused. And I'd
By EUGEN KRISTIANSEN
the NLRB. overruled the com­
work had been "excellent."
do it all over again.
pany's objections to the conduct
I was paid off in New Haven
6f the elections as "entirely un­ Thirteen years of sailing with­
I'm going home to my family
bn December 5, along with six in Portland, Maine, for the holi­
supported by substantial evi­ out ever having been fired by
any company. That was my rec­
other men who were fired for days. Then I'll return to the Hall
dence."
ord as a seamen—until December
having pro-SIU sympathies. Of and register fqr a job and ship
REFUSED TO COOPERATE 5 of this year. For on that day
these six, only one man, M. J. out through thie Hiring Hall. I'm
The NLRB statement pointed the Cities Service Oil Company
Oppedisano, had openly discuss­ a Union man, now. And I'll be
to the company's refusal to co­ told me to pack up and get off
ed the SIU; the others were ready to help in any way to see
operate with the agency in set­ the Council Grove, just as it has
merely suspected of favoring the the fight to a finish. There's no
ting up the election machinery been telling hundreds of others
Union. That, of course, made no way out of Cities Service's slave
and recalled that on the first six of its employees who refused to
difference to the tyrants in Cities conditions than through an SIU
'ships to be voted "the Board alter their beliefs in free col­
Service.
contract, with its guarantee of
agents requested, but were re­ lective bargaining representation,
good wages and working condi­
ANOTHER VICTIM
fused, permission to conduct despite threat of reprisals.
tions
and job security.
It was all hard to swallow. But
Officially, the company per­
elections on board ship or on the
the pain of being-fired was eased .One more thing, I especially
company's waterfront property." sonnel chief will probably say I
by the fact that the company's want to say how much I apprieElection machinery was there­ was discharged for "incompe­
action was no reflection on me. •iate the way I have been treat­
fore set up wherever feasible, tence." But he'd never be able
I was just another victim, among ed at the SIU, by the members
i the NLRB report said. The board to convince anyone of its tru^.
hundreds, of a ruthless reign of and officials. There's no hat-ihalso charged that the company I was fired because I had free­
terror
that has no place on an hand, yes-sir, no-sir stuff like we
"did nothing to advise its em­ ly stated that I believed in or­
EUGEN KRISTIANSEN
American
flag ship.
went through at Cities Service
ganization,
that
no
seamen
could
ployees of the election."
when
we went for jobs.
"Indeed, the very occasion for do anything or say anything to
I found out on October 5 that I knew what I was doing all
' most of its complaints would improve his conditions, unless he
along. I was offered several
But that's just the difference
' never have arisen had the em- had others like him to back him I was one of the victims, when chances to compromise my belief between a free, democratic or­
iployer elected to extend the up. We're no match for multi- the Chief Mate told me to watch in the need for sound trade un­ ganization of seamen and a coth'Board Agents the cooperation million dollar corporations by my step and not to get mixed up ionism for seamen of the Cities pany-sponsored tyranny.
in union activities as my watch
) which was earnestly solicited to ourselves.
partner, Roy Limdquist, had. The
J
WANTS SIU
Chief Mate said it would mean
And I made it clear that the getting fired if I didn't quit my
SIU is the organization that can interest in the SIU.
effectively help CS seamen by,
CITIES SERVICE OIL COMPANY
On November 15, in Jackson­
wiping out the rotten system of
PBOOUCEBS - RCrtNtPS - MABKCTCBS • CKPOPTCB3
spying and intrigue, the abusive ville, Pumpman Harvey Race,
NEW YO^RK 5, N.Y.
treatment, lower wages and in­ the CTMA organizer aboard the
ilVINT, •mi &gt;»lll
ferior conditions that prevail on Council Grove, told me that
Lundquist
and
I
were
known
as
ships in the company's fleet.
That stuff doesn't go on CS actively in favor of the SIU. He
Recommended Reading
ships. Not bven for a guy like said that DeLello had given the
By L. S. (Johnny) JOHNSTON me who had spent one year order for Lundquist and me to
S/S Council Grovo
be fired.
Portland, Me;
aboard
the
Council
Grove
and
.i NEW ORLEANS—I'm not a
Septenbar 13, 1949
^ok reviewer, but if I had to 'was commended—in writing—^by "So watch your step,''' he
warned.
recommend a bit of reading to two Masters for being competent
United States Coast Guard
- members of the SIU I'd head my , and industrious.
SWITCH. OR ELSE!
Bureau Marine Inspection &amp; Navigation
^t with the latest booklet pre- I went aboard the Council DeLello then paid off to head
To Whom It May Concern
jpared by the SIU, called "Food Grove on January 6, 1949. I nev­ for New York to report to the
Dear Sir;
for Thought," which contsiins ar­ er was involved in a single im- company. Lundquist was fired,
pleasant
incident
of
any
kind.
ticles by six of our officials.
but the Chief Mate told Race he
This will introduce Mr. Eugen Kristiansen,
Each of the six covers a mat­ My work was more than satis­ was going to give me another
who
at
the present time is signed on this vessel
factory.
I
got
along
with
all
ter of vital importance to our
as
Able
Seaman.
chance.
If
I
didn't
switch
my
hands—^topside and the foc'sle.
organization.
Union
affiliation,
I
would
be
fir­
The only hitch developed when
There, within the covers of
Mr. Kristiansen is desirous of obtaining a
ed, he said.
Carpenter's
endorsment on his Mariner's Document.
^ this slim little booklet, is sum- the company planted spies from
, med up pretty well the entire CTMA came aboard and report­ On November 18, I got an­
He is sober,reliable and competent; and I
program of our Union. I've talk­ ed back to their office that I other warning from the Mate.
fully recommend him for this additional endorsment.
ed to quite a few Seafarers here was pro-SIU. Then I started get­ This time he said it was known
that I was an SIU organizer.
in the port of. New Orleans, and ting the "warning lights."
That
was the beginning of the
A
guy
by
the
name
of
DeLeUo,
all of them are of the opinion
end.
a
CTMA
organizer,
came
aboard.
.that this is something'every
Very truly,
member should read and pass Immediately all hands became On November 29 I was on the
nervous. They didn't know who bridge on wheel watch. The Chief
along to other SIU men.
They're right. With a mem- was going to get the axe, because Mate told me I would be fired
'A-bership that understands the CTMA stooges are never up to on arrival in port. He said he
i'i. • I
Robert
A.
Levy,
Master
any
good
when
they're
out
on
was
sorry,
that
it
"was
none
of
policies of the Union and the
S^CounclTGrov^
responsibilities of the member­ company missions. Practically his doings, but orders fropri the
This is what the Skipper had to say about Kxistians^
ship, you can rest assured that every man was SIU, but they office or higher officials of the
just before he was fired by Cities Service after 1 solid year
^the SIU will always remain weren't sure which ones DeLello conipany."* He added that he
was putting the finger on.
on the SS Council Grove.
would give me the best possible
•.• •*''I
•.
strong.

Cities Service Stoeges Spy On Pro-SIU Men

The
Patrolmen
Say—

�Friday, December 16, 1948

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Eleven

MINUTES AND NEWS
Seafarer Bell Dead At 65

Fort Bridger Crewmen Eye Holidays
As Prelude To Year On Shuttle Run

Seafarer Herbert R. Bell,
a member of the Union since
1945, died of natural causes
With a year of shuttle runs in the Persian Gulf looming for the coming year,
in Charleston, S.C., on Sept.
28, the LOG was informed crewmen of the SS Fort Bridger, expect to make the most- of a stateside Christmas
holiday. The T-2, a US Petroleum Carriers vessel now en route from the Persian Gulf,
this week. Brother Bell was is slated for arrival at Paulsboro, f
N.J., on or about Dec. 20, ac­
53 years old.

HERBERT R. BELL

2 LOST AS STORM
HITS SS CALMAR
A mountainous wave took the
lives of two men aboard the
• freighter Calmar as the vessel
battled stormy seas off the Co­
lumbia River mouth en route to
Seattle last month.
The Calmar made port listing
badly. The list developed when
a heavy deckload of lumber
shifted during the storm.
One of the - victims was Wal­
ter E. Roberts, 23, SIU crewmember who was washed over­
board by one of the giant waves.
First Mate Clarence Hutton was
crushed between a wheelhouse
and a lifeboat he and Roberts
were trying to make fast. Hutton died shortly before the ship
docked.
Capt. Richard Hughes said
there was no doubt that Roberts
had drowned.

cording to Seafarer M. D. FairBell was being treated in cloth.
Tlharleston's Roper Hospital when
The crew boarded the Fort
death came. He was buried in Bridger at Palermo, Sicily on
Bethany Cemetery on Sept. 30.
Oct. 31, after leaving New York
He is survived by his wife via plane two days earlier. A
Mrs. Floy Sherrill Bell, with scheduled stop at Brussels was
whom he lived at 313 East Bay prevented by fog and low visi­
Street, in Cherleston.
bility and the aircraft put down
at
Ostend, instead.
Brother Bell was in good UnWAIT 12 HOURS
io nstanding at the time of his
After
a 12-hour wait, the Sea­
death and the SIU paid the bur­
farers
proceeded
by bus to Brus­
ial benefits to his widow.
sels, where they boarded an­
Bell was born in Orangeburg,' other skyship for Palermo and
S.C., on Nov. 25, 1895. He joined the Bridger. They landed in
the SIU's Atlantic and Gulf Dis­ Palermo on Oct. 31 and immed­
trict in the Port of Charleston iately boarded the tanker.
on June 2, 1945, receiving Book
All hands turned to for the
No. 45002. He sailed in the En­ job of getting the vessel in
gine Department with the ratings shape and on Nov. 7 the Bridger
of Fireman, Oiler and Water- left the Sicilian port for the
tender.
»
Persian Gulf. From their she
Mrs. Bell, an ardent follower headed for Paulsboro .
of the Union's activities, has re­
The Bridger had previously
quested" that the SEAFARERS shuttled between the Persian
LOG continue to be sent to her Gulf and European ports for 14
home.
months. She was laid up in Pal-

Ft. Bridger Crewmen leave plane in Belgium
ermo last July, when cargoes
The company called for the
became scarce, and the crew new crew after it decided to
was returned to New York by place the' tanker in operation,
plane.
again.

Sail-Makers Give Way To Pants-Makers On Canton Vic
Any crewmembmer who steps
off the Canton Victory looking
like anything else but a seagoing
Beau Brummel will probably
have only hirhself to blame. At
least it won't, be the fault of the
Education Committee, which
scheduled classes on subjects as

diversified and ambitious as ever
graced a shipboard meeting.
Number 5 on the Canton Victoi-y crew's list of educational
subjects, according to a recent
set of ship's minutes, is one lab­
eled "Tailoring 'Men Clothes."
And to get the lads off on the

Robin Hood Men Claim Softball Title

-i liiili

right trouser leg, "Sir Charles"
Oppenheimer, who with Ander­
son Jones, has been sparking the
Canton Victoi-y educational pro­
gram, wrote to the research de­
partment of a men's clothing
union for 'all available data on
the operation.
Pending receipt of an answer
to their query, the Canton Vic­
tory's knowledge-thirsty lads con­
cerned themselves with the rest
of the educational classes, which
were listed in the ship's min­
utes as follows:
1- How to Conduct a Union
Meeting. 2- Marlinespike Sea­
manship. 3- Painting and Decor­
ating. 4- Spanish Le.ssons. 5- Tail­
oring Men's Clothes. 6- Small
fire-arms. 7- Blue Print Reading.

8- Small Craft Boats and Deisel
and Gasoline Engines. 9- Public
Speaking.
The minutes say the sessions'
were so entertaining—one of
them lasted two hours—that
Night Cook and Baker Melvin
Suthei'land caught the teaching
bug, marched up to Brothers
Jones and Oppenheimer and
joined the faculty. Sutherland
will conduct classes in radio
theory and communications, tele­
vision repair and electronics to
all hands interested.
Anyway, to get back to Num­
ber 5—Tailoring Men's Clothes
—remember this: If you ever
see a dream walking, you'll knowhe sat in on those Canton Victoi-y- classes.

Voice Of Oke Seeu
by "SALTY DICK"

These men have maintained an unblemished reco'd throughout all games played to date.
Standing^ left to right: H. Edgren, M. Middleboro, J. Berger. C. GilL F. Mansfield ejid J. Kuberski. Kneeling: S. Karlak. P. Amido. Lopez. Frank Teller and Buckley. Man at extreme right is
unidentified.
Having successfully emei-ged
from a series of hotly-contested
tilts with outfits from other ships
.of the Robin Line and South
African shoreside aggregations,
•the Softball team of the SS Robin
Hood is calling itself "the
. champs." Anyone disputing the
title claim can get in touch with
Frank Teller," Engine Delegate

arid playing.manager, who says
his undefeated squad will take
on all challengers.
"All comers are assured they
will be meeting the champs, as
the badly trounced Robin Goodfellow team wil^ surely attest,"
warns Frank.
The Robin Hood's playing
manager explained that "this
club has taken advantage of the

newly supplied and much ap­
preciated- gear that has been
placed on Robin Line ships."
Teller made it quite clear that
the Robin Hood Seafarers were
the first in the Robin Line fleet
to put a team on the field in
formal competition. That was
back in Sept. 1948, when the
Hood squad lambasted the Mom­
basa Ball Club 27 to 9.

Received a report that Leo ^ lover of food and he ate very
Morrisette never bothers with j well there and the prices were
the fair sex in foreign ports. The I'easonable.
reason is Magge Greenberg. who
Felix Amora spends his time
is also Stewardess on the Clip­ between .ships fishing in the
per. She's Mrs. Leo Morrisette. . bayous. Felix fusses everytime
Francis Flctschinger is meeting he hauls in a catfish, and most
with bad luck. He recently left of the time he's fussing. . . Cur­
the hospital where his heel was rent juke box favorite among
mended. Now he has to return many seamen is "Four Winds
because of a ciiculatory defici­ and Seven Seas."
ency in his left hand.
What tall lanky seaman will
I read a very interesting ar­ always order his Tom Collins
ticle in the LOG (Oct. 22) by "on the sweet side?". . . Many
Frank Bose and I would rec- of the gang can always be found
commend it to all members at Baumer next door to our
who should forward their com­ Hall. . . The other day I went
ments to the LOG. •. . Howard there and played the juke box.
Hutcheson teUing me about the Guess what number I played?
times he spent in "Ybor City You're right. It was "Four Winds
while attending college. He's a and the Seven Seas."

�Cddiiyi JD»c9mb«»r 19,

Jlege Twelirez

fimmm
WHAOVA 1?EAD ?
AAAkE IT A HABIT TO USE THE
LIBRARIES IN THE AQG HALLS
WHILE OH THE BEACH. ITfelH£/&lt;E,
WHATEVER Yt&gt;U WANT- FICTION,
NON-FICTION, AND TECHNICAL

BOOKS . WHV NOT TARE ADVANIASE

OF YOOR LEISURE TIME, FOR
EAnERTAINMEATTORADVANCBMCA/T f

It looks as if tanker shipping has picked up and shipping in
general has that' rosy glow somehow. It must be that plenty of
Brothers are sticking around fiome for the Christmas and New
Year holidays... Congratulations to Paddy McCann, and the best
of luck in his opening a landlubbing business with a candy store
here in New York... Brother Lionel Miller is aboard the SS Del
Monte... We have received a beautiful Christmas card in the
Venezulean language from Ed Larkin, the humorous electrician
who is still working ashore down in a busy Venezulean oil port.
Same to you, Ed... Speaking of Christmas greetings Mike Rossi,
-the Bosun who is always smiling, wishes a Merry Christmas and
a Happy New Year to all Brothers down in New Orleans, including
Moon Kouns and Percy Boyer.
»
»
&amp;
"Blackie" Danny Boyce, who was aboard the Robin Moor,
the first ship to be torpedoed during the last war, writes from
the Marine hospital in Frisco after having to get off the Alcoa
•Puritan hitting West Coast ports and then New York. Blackie
mentions lots of oldtimers and here are the names of some of them.
Leo Silvers, George Blakely, Frank Steavens, Mickey Quinn (here
in New York now) as well as some SUP oldtimers such as Bosun
Bill Carey, Fred Hayes and Jimmie O'Neill. Danny says it sure
would be swell to have all these oldtimers get together somehow
for a photograph. Well, swift recovery to you, Blackie... Flash
News—Aboard the tanker SS Michael when she was in recently
we were informed that Brother John Krewson, who is in his
fifties, is one of the best artists the crew has ever seen. And no
doubt the boys are telling John to send some of those best pieces
of art into the LOG.
XXX
The SEAFARERS LOG will be sailing free of cost to the
homes of the foUqwing Brothers: Audley Chisholm of Louisana,
Rudy Cancela of Florida, Harold?Zum oI Minnesota, Melton Wil­
son of Virginia, Glenious Lawson of Virginia, Richard Maley
. (Of Massachusetts (now here in
iNew York), J. W. Taylor of Vir.ginia, Julian Wilson of Virginia To the Editor:
^teward W. W. Reidy, Black...jt
After 24 years at sea, the
tvos and Red Starns (who
ie Ft^
last
ten of them in the SIU, I
shipped recently inter-coastal)
have
retired my book and am
sure had their sense of humor
going
to try it shoreside, for a
broken up. What happened, fel­
las? ... Steward George Whale is while at least.
In order to maintain the stand­
anchored right now in this town
. . . Lots of Brothers do what ard of living"" that I got accus­
Brother Joseph Lupton of Vir­ tomed to in the Union, I'm going
ginia says he does. He has his into business in a small way,
folks saving all the LOGS they and so I've takfti over a candy
receive so he can read up on and stationery store in New
all the past news of the Union York City, at 447 East €3 Street,
between First Avenue and York
and news of shipmates.
Avenue, and I'd like for all my
XXX
friepds and shipmates to drop
- If there are any SIU ships hit­ in and say hello when they are
ting the island of Guam then in town. Running a store will
they should know that there is keep me tied down somewhat,
a USS club opening there and but then my friends will always
they will be getting a bundle of find me in. Hoping to see you
.
LOGS so SIU crews can pick all soon.
P.
J.
(Paddy)
McCann
vp a copy.

Ol^esbMl Minutes Of SlU Ship Meetings
list had been given to Chief En­
NEW LONDON, Sept. 18 —
gineer and that most of it had
Frank Stokes, Chairman; Fred
been taken care of. All reported
Bruggner. Secretaiy. No beefs
smooth in Stewards Department.
were reported in any of the
Deck Delegate asked all hands
three departments. Motion car­
to return cots to the Steward.
ried (by Bob Fischer) to defer
He added that matter of painting
election of Ship's Delegate on
heads and showers wiU be re­
these short coastwise trips. Mo­
ferred to Patrolman upon arrival
tion (by G. Ranallo) carried to
in port. Recommended thnt
give vote of thanks to Steward
everyone is to chip in' 25 cents
Peter King and entire departs
ment for fine job of storing ship
to reimburse John for sending
of telegram.
and for their fine meqls. Fans in
crew's rooms to be checked by
X X X
GOLDEN CITY (no date giv­
Delegate to see if they cannot
be moved to places where aU against crewmember for neg­ en)—Kelly, Chairman; Donald­
in rooms will benefit. Under lecting duties and for failure to son, Secretary. Deck Delegate
(3ood and Welfare there was gen­ keep pantrv and himself clean. Danzey said that there were ho
eral discussion on pay raise, the All hands registered approval beefs in his department and
questions of adequate cots for and appreciation of the over­ little disputed overtime. Two
all and the fixing up of a spare seas' news bulletin sent to all overtime beefs will "be reported
to Patrolman, Engine Delegate
room for recreational purposes. ships from Headquarters.
said. Stewards Delegate report­
Merchant Marine Library Asso­
XXX
EVELYN. Oct. 30—J. Q. Con­ ed a beef over cooperation. Ship's
ciation is to be contacted for a
rad,
Chairman; Charles Mitchell, Delegate discussed transportation
chest of books. George Lathrop
Secretary.
All four delegates re­ issue, painting of galley and
reported on amount in Ship's
ported
that
everything is in good quarters. Discussion on obtain­
fund—$4.38. This fund i^ main­
tained by voluntai-y contribu­ order. After a discussion on va­ ing new library and it was sug­
a
tions from crew at payoff and cation pay and leaving ships gested that delegates find
is used to pay costs of telegrams after one year of continuous place to set up recreation hall
swvice, it was agreed unani­ and library.
and cable to Union Hall.
mously that this question should
be submitted to a referendum.
Under Good and Welfare, it was
decided to abolish deposit of one
dollar of foc'sle keys, with money
to be refunded to crewmen. jChief
Mate is to be contacted to have
brakes repau-ed on the winches
i
t
midship. Suggested that Chief
STEEL ARTISAN, Oct. 23.^MALDEN VICTORY. Gel. 30— Mate be asked to have Bosun
-Steve
Margold, Chairman; Matty
A. Lucas, Chairman; Andy Ste­ check and repair all door locks.
Culp,
Secretary. Patrolman ^to
phens, Secretary. Ship's Dele­
X X U
be
notified
of Mates doing woi;k
gate reported that only beefs
TWIN FALLS VICTORY. Nov. that normally is defined as over­
arising during trip concerned 1—Jim Drake, Chairman; W. J.
serving' of fresh milk and hav­ Walsh, Secretary. Ship's Dele­ time for unlicensed men. .No
ing bread baked. Both were gate clarifi^ question raised on beefs in Engine and Deck De­
squared away promptly; Outside shifting of ship from Greenpoint partments. Stewards Delegate re­
of few hours of disputed over­ to Bridgeport. No beefs reported ported on beef regarding, divi­
time in Engine and Stewards by department delegates. Depart­ sion of wages for extra meals
departments, there .were no beefs ments are cooperating in main­ for passengers. Motion carried to
to report. Motion carried to turn taining and keeping recreation reconvert PO mess to foc'sle to
list over to Patrolman of Bro­ room and laundry clean. Baker improve living ^conditions. Mo­
thers who have failed to turn promised to improve quality of tion carried to remove book&amp;^
to and the date of their offenses. pastries and pies. Suggested that from crew mess and build .a
A motion to determine time for Wilmington Agent notify Arrow rack elsewhere to hold them- TA..
next meeting was withdrawn af­ Line Port Steward in Frisco so vote of thanks from crew to the
ter discussion. Ship's Delegate that required linens will be sup­ excellent Stewards Department
to see Patrolman to make sure plied upon arrival in that port. and to Baker Ferdinand Szoblik
we are not short-changed a One minute of silence in mem­ for his superb baking.
XXX
day's wages because of a sign- ory of departed Union Brothers.
TOPA
TOPA,
Oct. 23—R. Di
on on August 31.
Paolo, Chairman; C. J. Murphy,
* t- X
Secretary. Brother Thompson
PETHOLITE, Oct. 25—WilUam
was elected Ship's Delegate by
Biskas, Chairman; H. Rosenstiel.
acclamation
to succeed Brother
Secretary. Ship's Delegate Earl
Jones,
who
had been injured.
Gonyea reported that he had
Delegates
reported:
Deck—;Few
spoken to Captain who agreed
hours
disputed
overtime;
Engine
to painting of decks in head
—Disputed
overtime;
Stewardsnd crew's quarters as soon as
Disputed overtime. AU reports
time permits. Washing machine
concurred in. Repair list was
XXX
will be repaired when Engineer
ALCOA
ROAMER,
Nov.
6
—
drawn
up and read to members.has time. Charges to be brought
William C. , Hall, Chairman; All hands instructed to leave
George A. Haynes, Secretary. their rooms ship-shape • and that
Ship's Delegate reported there all linens and cots be turned
were, no known beefs. Every­ in. A vote of thanks to Union
thing okay in departments, with Headquarters for LOGS and lit­
exception of few hours disputed erature mailed to us and received
overtime in Deck and Engine. during current voyage. A vote
Motron carried to dtaw up of thanks given to Stewards De­
statement to effect that washing partment for excellent feeding
machine aboard ship is union and serving of food.
property in event of lay-up or
XXX
transfer. Bill of sale is to be
ALCOA CORSAIR. Nov. 13—
sent to Union, along with state­ W. Higgs, Chairman; L. Clarke.
ment. Letter .'also to be written Secretary. All Delegates' reports
calling for more" adequate stor­ made. and accepted. Motion car­
ing of ship. Water cooler to be ried to contact New Orleans Hall
placed in PC mess and Ship's to get heating system repaired.
Delegate to seq Chief Engineer Motion carried to get new tubes
about installing a fan in laundry for movie machine. "Motion car­
room. Suggested that Ship's ried to table ihdefinitely the mat­
Delegate appoint someone to se­ ter of juke box. Under Good and
cure and/or exchange library for Welfare, there was much dis­
crew.
cussion on keeping messrooips
and fountains clean. There w^s
XXX
ROBIN TRENT.Oct. 30—J. M. also considerable discussion pn
CarroU, Chairman; A. E. Carlson, general matters of Union'intetSecretary. Deck Delegate report­ est. After one minute of silenCe
ed everything okay except for in memory of departed Brothers,
three hours disputed overtime. meeting adjourned at 3 PM, with
Engine Delegate said that repair 60 members present.
PADDY MeCANN

Paddy McCann To Retire;
Will Run Shop In New York

i

�f

«
December 16. 1949

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

BSBSB&lt;8SBS5!7e!C;

\

thirtem-

THE MEMBERSHIP SPEAKS
CREWMEN RELAX AFTER ENCOUNTER WITH MINE

Galley Men Important Cogs,
Not Nursemaids: Prestwood
To the Editor:

The SS Maiden Creek made Bremerhaven under her own power adier striking a mine on
Oct. 15 in the North Sea, off the Holland coast. No one was hurt but all hands were glad of
the opportunity to take it easy while the ship was repaired in drydock. Here are some of the
men at a party at the USS 'Club in the German port, on Armistice Day. Around the table, left
to right: Arthur Cairns, Dick Davies, Melvin Kleiber, Tony Oliva, Charles Mehh Apron Castillo,
Edward Dietrich, Elias Blanco, Mateo Lorenzo, Robert Lansdale, Oliver Oakley, Pablo dortes,
and Roy Atizado. Standing are Paul Schmidt and Ervin Pangallo, club representatives.
The Maiden Creek returned to the States last week.

Shipping Card Extension Puzzles Brother
To the Editor:
I

In issue No. 7 of the air-mail
bulletin, which the boys and my­
self aboard the Robin Gray are
very glad to receive, I see" where
all A&amp;G BrancMes, with the ex­
ception of Boston, concurred in
the. previous Galveston minutes.
Is Boston the only branch where
the membership is on its toes?
In the Galveston minutes ap­
proved by all but one port there
was a motion carried to allow
e.xtension of the shipping cards.
A quick glance at the ship­
ping rules shows that under Ar­
ticle 8 (a) "Any member on the
regular shipping list who has
a shipping card more than three
months old must re-register on
the shipping list and take out
a hew shipping card and date."
The shipping rules also state
that the rules are effective in all
branches of the A&amp;G District,
eflfective May 1, 1948, infractions
of which will not be tolerated.
Why, then,- should one. bi'anch

be allowed to make an excep­
tion from these rules which
clearly state that such cannot be
done?
OFFERED RESOLUTION
Some months ago in the Port
of New York, while I was help­
ing to draft a resolution to make
acceptance of vacation pay man­
datory, I was told by certain
officials that such a change in
the official shipping rules would
have to be passed on by the
membership in a referendum
ballot up and down the coast. Is
this proposed change of the rules
by Galveston not as serious as
the change I proposed?
If not, then are individual
branches to be allowed to change
and construe the meaning and
working of these rules to fit
their own needs at any time they
feel the urge? If this be the
case, every branch will in the
end become a separate Union by
itself, doing as it pleases, when
it pleases, thereby setting itself
up above the district as a whole.

Log-A-Rhythms
i '•

The Seaman
By THURSTON J. LEWIS
I have turned many a wheel.
On many a mighty sea,
I have drifted to a foreign field.
When there was no home for me.
I have sailed in war and peace.
Had four ships blasted high.
But what ever the cost, whatever is lost,
I must sail beneath the sky.
I've been offered shore jobs.
Pushing a pencil or pen.
And I've considered taking them.
But the sea wouldn't let me, men.
I'tn not a romantic fellow
Who goes off in ecstasy
At the sight of a moon thed's mellow.
Or the blue of the Caribbee.
I love my home, my wife and my child,
-And I love my country free;
But the heavy wave and the wind so wild
Always call md back to the sea.

ing to a position where Stew­
ards
Department men will ask
Is the Stewards Department a
that
they
be tried by men of
part of the crew? This is a ques­
their
own
department. Other
tion that flashes througH the
such petty differences will arise.
mind of almost everyone who
Don't get me wrong. I can
works in the Stewards Depart­
see
as well as the other men in
ment. This question also causes
our
department that the watches
quite a few Stewards, Cooks and
Messmen to change departments, much come first, but I can't
and will cause more to do so un­ see why a Stewards Department
less some members wake up to man must get up from a table
the fact that the Stewards De­ to give his seat to someone off
partment is as essential to the watch. I also can't see why
operation of a ship as the other some men continually try to
give the Messmen a hard time.
two gangs.
A favorite trick is to demand
If a Steward, Cook or Utility that the Messman be tried and
sits down to eat during meal­ hanged if be doesn't jump
time, someone always, makes a
through a hoop when the offwisecrack. No matter how small
watch mob enters the messroom.
the slur is, there is always some
narrow-minded person or persons I think it is time to give
to carry it on until it becomes a credit where credit is due. It's
also time for some men to wake
phony beef.
up, because Stewards men are
NO ROOM?
not nursery maids nor the ser­
For example: I sat down to vants of the crew. The Stewards
eat recently, only to have a crew- Department men are good Un­
member come in and make the ion men, - signed on the same
crack that the Black Gang or articles as anyone else and rep­
Deck Gang can't sit down be­ resented by the same Union.
cause the Stewards Department
James Prestwood
was taking all the room. I don't
remember anything in the con­
tract which sets up tables for any Panton Ends Restful
one department or departments Stay In Georgetown
in particular, yet that's the way To the Editor:
some crewmembers feel.
Then there always are the Having received two months'
guys who state that the chow issues of the LOG in this quiet
isn't the way their mother fixed little home far from all world
it. If we could cook like every activities, I want to thank you
guy's mother, we'd be combin­ very much for your kindness.
ation magician and big time And as I'm leaving home soon
hotel chef, instead of being out I'U ask you to discontinue send­
here on the blue, where we are ing them to me.
the last to sign on, last to pay
The LOG is a new thing to
off and first to get a beef.
the people here and, I think, the
first Union paper to be seen by
SEES SPLIT
the many friends of mine. As
This matter, believe it or not, usual, the SIU gets there first.
has become serious to all Stew­
Please put this in the LOG for
ards Department men and can
me,
so as to help me contact
develop into a more serious mat­
some
of the boys I'm supposed
ter than anyone thinks. The SIU
to
meet
on my return.
needs the Stewards Department
Edsel Panton
and the Stewards Department
Georgetown, Grand Cayman
needs the Union. It's fast com­

That's enough of that, but
while -I have pen in hand, I
might as well let loose one more
blast, this time at Brother John
Gillette, who, according to air­
mail bulletin No. 6, made a mo­
tion, adopted by a Seatrain crew,
which called for the setting up
of a rest home for Seafarers.
Though Brother Gillette's heart
is probably in the right place,
his motion appears to be unwise
at the present time.
To set up a home of this kind
suitable to the membership of
the SIU would take thousands
upon thousands of dollars. Money
which we cannot afford to put
into a venture that none of us
deem as absolutely successful.
Though I'm not against a gamble
now and then, I am against
gambling with union funds, es­
pecially in the large sums nec­
essary for this enterprise.
Granted that we have just as­
sessed ourselves an annual ten
dollars, there is no need to
throw it away like the old pros­
PROUD OF ITS GOOD NAME
pector who finally struck it rich.
A project of this kind would not
only swell the Union payroll,
but would also have us buying II
property at a time when we still
do not own the buildings hous­
ing our- union offices in some
ports. If we are going to spend
money for property, let us first
buy halls.
Milton (Slim) Williams
(Ed. Note: Insofar as exten­
sion of shipping cards is con­
cerned, it has been the policy
of the membership to permit
ports experiencing dead ship­
ping to extend the 30-day pe­
riod if the members there so
d^ide. The justification for
this policy lies in the state of
shipping in the particular port.
In Galveston, for example,
shipping was at an absolute
standstill. By extending the
cards the members there pro­
tected the men registered
Dave Zabella, who skippers the tug Seafarer shown here
longest from having to re­
says the craft is 'named in honor of our Union. Operated by
register behind the men who
the A and S Towing Co., of Brooklyn, the Seafa-.er is an
industrious worker which includes light d^aft lowing and
had come in just before
shipping picked up again.)
dredge and construction tending among its duties.

�Page Fouzieen

THE

Suggests 90-Day Balloting
To Settle Vacation Issue

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday. Decem^r 16. 1949

THE "CROOSHAV* GAME IS COMING VP

says a job for eveiy bookman.
To the Editor:
A short time ago, you prob­
I wholeheartedly agree with'
"Ropeyarn," in his letter on va­ ably read in the LOG a letter
cation headlined "We Won Va­ from a wornan, the wife of a
cations With Pay, Take Them. Seafarer, who said she may have
On June 1, 1949, a letter from to go back to a cereal diet for
me was published in the LOG her family if such a ruling went
discussing this same subject. through. Any bookman knows
Since then there have been he can ship out between two
many letters of the same nature. and four weeks, if he is not
Also there has been much ids- waiting for a special job or ship.
cussion in SIU Branches and But other family men have an­
aboard ships at sea. As far as I swered that the ruling would
know, Mobile, Savannah and not hurt them. See the LOG of
Galveston have had resolutions Dec. 2, for example, in which
offered at their meetings on this Vic Moriana, a father of five
children, tells why he favors
matter.
I believe that the membership compulsory -vacations.
SEAMEN HUMAN, TOO
is now ready to act and some of
I'm writing this with the fa­
us members in New Orleans are
going to draw up a resolution milies of seamen in mind be­
calling for the question of com­ cause I know they read the LOG.
Aboard the SS Puerto Rico softball competition Is hot. The Stewards beat the Deck-Engine
pulsory vacations after a man Therefore, here's a question for
team 25 to 9 on a recent trip, then on the last trip the Stewards took it on the chin, 29 to 4.
has been on one ship for a year those who are not seamen. How
The playoff comes on the current voyage. Above is the Stewards aggregation, except for Harry
and entitled to vacation pay. In would you like to be in a fac­
Roe, Wiper, ^econd from left, who appeared in lineup for two iimings until regular man showed
Savannah a 30-day voting period tory or office 24 hours a day for
up.
was suggested. Because of the weeks at a time? The average
very important nature of the shore worker works eight hours
vacation issue, some men with a day, five days a week. He's off
whom I have discussed the mat­ every evening (to spend with
ter think that 90 days would be his family or friends) and Sat­
urdays, Sundays and holidays, to
right to pei-mit all to vote.
go to the ball game or his cou­
OFFERS REFRESHER
For those who may have miss­ sin Hattie's. We seamen are hu­
ed part of these discussions, man, too, and should have suf­
To the Editor:
ficient time off to break the
here's a refresher:
monotony
of
a
job
that
requires
For over six months we have
I'm looking for someone to
been talking about whether one our pi'esence aboard ship 24
give me the correct dope, through
year of continuous service on hours a day, s o m e t i m e s~ for
the SEAFARERS LOG, on the
one ship is enough to warrant a months at a time.
Ordinary Seaman's duties on
I'd like to point out that I
man being required to take a
sanitary work. On the last ship
vacation to which he is entitled have served for a long time on
I was on, I was told " by the
and get off the ship. Bear in one ship and know what I'm
Deck Delegate that I would be
mind that shipping has slowed talking about. I was 16 months
fined asi per shipping rules if
down and the beach is getting on the Del Noi'te. That was the
I did not get the entire Deck
first time and the last.
pretty crowded.
Department's clean linen from
I think the proposed ruling
I know of Captains and Chief
the Steward during linen day.
Engineers who are now sailing would give all hands a better
The. Steward on this ship
in the foc'sle. Now, suppose a break, so if a man is entitled to
would
issue linen only piece for
Steward or a Bosun had to sail vacation pay after one year
piece.
Most
of the time I could
in a lower rating. Would this aboard ship let's make it a rule
not
find
their
towels around,
break him? As we all know, the that he take it and get off the
yet the crew demanded a com­
Here's the squad representing the Deck and Engine depart­
difference in pay isn't too much. ship.
plete set of linen from the Stew­
R. (Sally Dick) Martinez
ments in ship's softball rivalry. Photos by Jim Golder.
And the SIU has a policy that
ard. Sometimes they had their
towels locked up in their lock­
ers.
The 12-4 watch were always
To the Editor:
asleep when I changed the linen
There is a rumor around New and they expected me to change
To the Editor:
his family, for I realize that re­ against him. Failure to do so Orleans and board various ships their linen when they woke up.
moving him from his job to sat­ makes the crew equally guilty. that one "Johli" was involved in
I contend that it is not the
The early part of this year
isfy my selfish interests will
a
confiscation
of
contraband
at
OS's
duty as part of his sani­
I
can
think
of
a
better
idea
saw the membership vote to
work a hardship upon his fam­ to create more jobs for all Un­ Santos, Barzil, aboard the SS tary work to get the entire de­
make the transportation rule op­ ily's economic security.
partment fresh linen from the
ion members: the four watch Del Mar.
tional, thus allowing men to
As I have been asked by Steward, but he may do this as
system.
With
the
four
jwatch
stay aboard the ships if they
UNIONISM WITHIN
system we could increase our many Brothers if I am the John, a gesture of goodwill. I believe
passed up the travel pay. Today
To
say
that
remaining
aboard
manning power and decrease the I should like to take this oppor­ if everyone had his linen chang­
there is a great deal of beefing
a
ship
creates
poor
union
men
hours of labor. We might have tunity to straighten out any pos­ ed individually there would not
because these men didn't realize
be a beef of this nature. What's
is
a
nonsensical
*
argument.
The
to
compromise on certain work­ sibility of mistaken identity.
that.it would work against them.
John Dolan
mere carrying of a union book ing rules, but wouldn't you ra­
I wish to advise all Brothers the score?
Had the membership permitted is not proof of unionism, the true ther do this than create disunity and anyone interested that I was
(Ed. Note: You're right.
the rule to remain as it was, we spirit of unionism lies within within our ranks by attempting not the party involved. I wish Brother. You are required to
would have a better turnover of tBe man. When and if you find to force Union Brothers off the to have my name cleared of any clean up the rooms, that is,
men. The principal beef against a Union Brother aboard a ship job by compulsory vacations? Let connection with this incident.
sweep and mop up, but i£ '
the former rule was that a mem­ failing to hold up the Union us be constructive and not de­
you supply the linen or strip
Jan Zavadil
ber didn't have enough time on principles then it is the duty of structive.
the bunks, that's strictly aChief Cook
a ship to make a good payday. the crew to prefer charges
goodwill gesture.)
SS Del Mar
Joseph Buckley
Today, the members are beefing
that their Union Brothers are
staying on the jobs too long
and must be uprooted, thus the
strong support for compulsory To the Editor:
Another CTMA "criticism" of received the Mate's consent to
^
It seems that one of the ques­
.vacations.
tions asked pf Bobinski concern­ the SIU was the matter of lay­ be ashore with my wife. For
Mighty interesting to this for­ ed the drinking by an SIU man offs. I'd like to ask CTMA ad­ this privilege I had paid $15
REASON FOR VOTE
My contention in this discus­ mer Cities Service seaman was fired fi'om the ship. I would like herents which is better: The for three watches to be stood.
sion is that too many Union the LOG article, "SIU Organiz­ to add that Cities Service of­ rare possibility of being laid off
Later, when I returned to the
Brothers have become job hun­ er Answers OS Lies," wherein ficers aren't angels in this re­ a ship that is being laid up, ship, there was a lengthy discus­
gry, and it's for this reason that Edward Bobinski answered the spect either. Several times I've perhaps sent to the boneyard, sion—about eight' hours, to be
they are demanding a vote be phony questions proposed by a seen them heavy with a load on, following which a man can reg­ exact—as to whether I was to
_
taken to compel their Union CTMA die-hai-d.
but they cover up by bending ister at the Union hall and grab be Deck Maintenance or AB.
%
Brothers to come off the ships.
Brother Bobinski did an ex­ over the tank tops and after a another ship, or being fired for When it was finally decided to
We organized ourselves as a ceptionally good job of putting heavy whiff, claim, "The fumes an unjust reason after thi-ee make me AB, Hurricane Hall
body to create job security. the CTMA stiff straight at that got me."
months of service on a CS ship, made the crack that I would
When we begin to become sel­ meeting aboard the Chiwawa.
I don't hold it against a man practically blackballed forever have to make up the four hour
whatch I had missed during the
fish and individualistic in our Bobinski \yill make a good new for drinking; after all, one day with the company.
discussion. 'Queer logic. Tell me,
WEAK ARGUMENT
thoughts toward each other, then member in our Union. He has ashore out of eleven is little
The latter was my case.^ I was CTMA men, is that what you
we begin to tear down the struc­ shown beyond a doubt that he enough, it's just that I do not
ture of unionism. I sympathize is a fighter for more bearable think it fair to blast the SIU fired for not being aboard to would call the rights of free
with a married member who conditions for all of the men of because a man takes a drink shift ship during November 1949 men?
Rocky Milton'
in Corpus Christi. I had earlier
now and then.
must work Steady to provide for the Cities Service fleet.

Linen Service
To Deck Gang
Prompts Query

Advocates Of Compulsory Vacation Rule
Held Lacking In Cottstructive Ideas

Jan Zavadil Sets
The Record Straight

Scorching Reply To CTMA Applauded By Ex-CS Man

�^tikayrDiMetinber 16; 1949

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Fifteen

Headquarters Meeting Brands
Tretskyites 'Dual And Hestile'
for their vile attack on the -SIU, i "It is necessary to be able.. ^
(Continued from Page 1)
ANTHONY C. DYNARSKI
UNO ROBERT SILVANDER
and it was some of these Sea- to resort to all sorts of devices,
Richard
M.
Cantor,
51
Cham­
paper,
both
of
which
have
been
Please get in touch with your
farers,
loyal to the SIU, who maneuvers and illegal methods
bers
St.,
New
York
City,
asks
mailed
to**
SlU-contracted
ships.
family, 32 Pardee St., Rochester,
were
responsible
for the draft­ to evasion and subterfuge in or­
you
to
contact
him.
On
the
beach,
particularly
in
N. Y. It's a matter of importance
ing
of
the
resolution.
der to penetrate into ttie trade
New
York,
Trotskyite
followers
to you.
In
addition
to
the
word-ofunions, to remain in them, and
in
the
SIU
have
acted
as
lures
JOHN
V^S^^PATERSON
i.
Anyone knowing whereabouts for SIU members. The proced­ mouth smear against the SIU, to carry on communist work in
CARROL QUINT
A1 Gordon asks jmu to con­ of thfs- man please notify R. O. ure was to enlice the member the Trotskyites have been proved i them at all costs."
To this the Trotskyites have
tact him, care of New York Hall. Paterson, 169 Ardmore Dr., •to Trotskyite headquarters with to be the authors of leaflets di­
Ferndale 20, Mich.
the promise of aid in any prob­ rected at the SIU membership, closely adhered in the Sailors
S. S. 4
lem the man may have.
in which the truth had been Union on the West Coast and
AAA
DOUGLAS (Smiley) CLAUSSEN
Actually, men who have fall­ twisted to give a distorted pic- again on the East Coast, where
DAVID C. HASKELL
Your mother is about to go
Contact Howard W. Moore, en for the&gt; "line" have received ture of conditions within the they took part in the raid on
to the hospital, and wants to Pittsburgh Institute of Refrige­ no aid, but instead found them­ Union.
New York National Maritime Unhear from, you first.
ration and Air Conditioning, 570 selves listening to a harangue
In an attempt to further con­ ion Headquarters last month.
. . A." i i
Brushton Ave., Pittsburg 21, Pa. against the SIU, and in the end fuse the picture, the Trotskyites
In that situation the Trotsky­
James B. Callis, Eugene C.
being asked to join the move­ have signed their leaflets "SIU ites joined hands with their bre­
AAA
Glover, Vincent S. Kuhli James
ment.
SIDNEY BERGER
Committee," a vague title diffi­ thren under the skin, the Stalin­
,E. Moore:- Contact Paul C. "Please leave my suit- at the
Unfortunately for the Trotsky- cult to check by crews on ships ist communists, to storm and'
Matthews, 11 Broadway, New Hall the next time you're in ites, several men whom they
at sea thousands of miles from seize the offices of the NMU.
York City.
attempted to recruit did. not go SIU Halls.
New York—Bill."
The strength of the Trotsky­
AAA
A
series
of
articles
in
the
ites
in the SIU, it must be made
GORDON CHAMBERS
Trotskyite newspaper has sub-' clear, is actuaUy very small, but
Write your mother, 1076 Teller
jected the SIU tc a barrage of the imanimous vote in favor of
Ave., Bronx, New York.
lies, distortions and character the resolution indicates strongly
AAA
By JIM DRAWDY
assassination, outdone only for that the attempt by the Trotsky­
JEFF M. BENGE
ites to either increase their
SAVANNAH — Shipping was progresses rapidly, as the ex­ brazen untruths by Pravda.
Get in touch with your sister,
strength within the SIU or, fail­
READY
EXPLANATION
perience
of
the
SIU
has
proven
strictly
on
the
slow
bell
here
Mrs. Carrie Potter, PO Box 173,
ing
to do so, ci-eate bitter in­
The Trotskyites, now that they
Ft. Gibson, Oklahoma. There is during the past two weeks. Those so often.
ternal
fights is not going to be
We probably bragged a little see that their dissension-pedd­
an estate which cannot be set- men who were shipped went
allowed.
aboard in-transit callers, other­ too soon about the absence of ling has not been embraced by
tied without you.
The Seafarers has always
wise things would have been at gashounds in these parts. At the Seafarers, will undoubtedly try
A A A •
last
meeting
a
couple,
of
drunks
a
standstill.
to
explain
away
their
attacks
on
handled
its problems in a direct
LAYMON SEAY
were permitted to remain in the Union as being merely the fashion. By the passing of the
The
vessels
calling
at
the
port
.You have mail and a pack­
resolution against the Trotsky­
the Hall on their promise that
age at 145 Green St., Newark, were the SS Jean, Bull Lines; they would remain quiet. We voice of a legitimate and demo­ ites, SIU members have simply
cratic
union
minority.
N. J. Write your mother at 513 SS Alawai, Waterman, and the tried to be good joes, but it
This line is scotched by ex­ cleared the way for the hand­
following Isthmian line jobs:
Clay St., Lynchburg, Va^
didn't
pay.
amination
of the recent series ling of a beef in a direct man­
Steel Cfiemist, Steel Surveyor,
AAA
These guys became obnoxious of events which have taken ner.
and
Steel
Architect.
WALTER CLOUSE
The Union shall now proceed
The Jean had a beef in the and caused an uproar at the place within the Sailors Union of
, Get in touch with Higgins &amp;
meeting.
The
membership
acted
the
Pacific's
Seattle
Branch,
to
handle those persons who
Parness, 92 Liberty St., New Stewards Department over a as a trial committee and finec
where
the
Trotskyites,
through
fall
within the framework of
suction fan in the galley. How­
York City.
them
each
$25*
for
their
actions
a
series
of
illegal
actions,
seized
the
resolution
in the manner in
ever, the beef was settled okay
AAA
and had them removed fi-om the the facilities of the port and set which they deserve to be treated.
and
the
crew
said
it
would
make
WM. RALPH STONE
Hall.
up business in opposition to the
The screaming attacks that
Your '^mother at Rt. 4, Box another trip, providing a fan is
We're still having mild wea­ rest of the Union, going so far will now probably be unleashed
installed
when
the
ship
returns
3]b'5„ Mobile, Ala., asks you to
ther here and several of the as to hold rump union meetings against the SIU by this organi-.
from its next voyage.
v^rite.
members have been seen around and publish their own newspa­ zation—cries of "red baiting"
As for the rest of the ships, the Hall with their turkey-hunt­ per.
and "they're, hiding their own.
everything was of a routine na­ ing clothes on.
- HEBER^ R^ GUYMON
The entire operation, in viola­ crimes"—will be to no avail, for
Write your parents, Hiawatha, ture. There was nothing unusual
And we're very happy to add
on any of them and all hands that this week there are no Sea­ tion of the SUP Constitution, the membership of the SIU has
Uiah.
was fully in accordance with the been made aware of the true
appeared happy.
- AAA
farers in the local Marine Hos­ Trotskyite code of behavior, purpose of their actions and has
We'd like to suggest that all pital. This is one condition we
EDWARD P. WERDA
which bolshevik leader Lenin taken remedial steps.
Get in touch with Florence Branches observe the education­ hope remains' unchanged for a
laid down forty years ago. Leon
The next step is to deal with
Zi^laskowski, 801 2nd Ave., Al­ al portions of their meetings, so long time to come.
Trotsky quoted this approvingly the Trotskyites for what they
as to allow the membership, to
pena, Mich. Very important.
in his pamphlet, "Their Morals are—crackpot, vicious, lying en­
fully understand the value of
AAA
and Ours," on page 30:
emies of our Union.
good trade unionism on the part
WALTER SZCZEPANSKI
Get in touch with Ben Sterl­ of all.
There is no"^question but that
ing, 42 Broadway, New York
(Continued from Page 6)
an alert membership always from the closed shop ban, the
City.
SIU has invited members of
Congress to observe the rotary
hiring system in action, he point­
ed out. In keeping with tradi­
tional practice' of Union at
SUP
SIU, A&amp;G District
Christmas, Secretary - Treasurer,
..16 Merchant St. recommended that all members
BA4.TIMOR6
14 North Gay St. HONOLULU
Phone 5-8777 in hospitals be given $10. Motion
WJUiam Rentz, Agent
. Mulberry 4540
BOSTON
276 State St. PORTLAND
Ill W. Bumslde St. carried to accept Secretary-Trea­
Ben' Lawson, Agent Richmond 2-0140
Beacon 4336 surer's report. Resolution was ofDispatcher
Richmond 2-0141
SS STEEL TRAVELER
RICHMOND, Calif
257 5th St. f e r e d condeming communists,
,$1.00; G. Lukas. $2.00; E. S. SamU,
GALVESTON
308 Vz—23rd St.
W. Mills. $2.00; R. Garcia. $1.00; $2.0^ F. Bressi. $1.00; R. H. Barnes,
Phone 2599 Trotskyites and other subvei'sive
Keith Alsop, Agent
Phone 2-8448
59 Clay St. splinter groups that have been E. Wagner. $1.00; J. Qrtiejuferra. $2.00; $3.OOF; B. R. Hartzog. $2.00; J. E.
MOBILE
1 South JLawrence St. SAN FRANCISCO
R. Abbey. $10.00; H. Loll. $3.00; W. Rivers. $5.00.
Douglas
2-8363
Cal' Tanner, Agent
Phone 2-1754
sniping at Union and attempting Chigos. $3.00; E. Tonisson. $1.00; J.
SS SEATRAIN HAVANA
-.86 Seneca St.
NEW ORLEANS
523 Bienville St, SEATTLE
to undermine the security of the Kelly. $1.00; C. Bonefort. $1.00; F. A. Olaguibel. $1.00; M. A. Caraway,
Main 0290
E. Sheppard, Agent
Magnolia 6112-6113
membership. Several members Andrews. $1.00; W. Seltzer. $1.00; L. $2.00.
NEW YORK
51 Beaver St. WILMINGTON
440 Avalon Blvd.
$1.00; C. B'user, $3.00; L.
SS ANDREW JACKSON
took
the floor in support of the Spruycer.
Joe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784
Terminal 4-3131
Rhino. $1.00; J. Williams. $1.00; D.
M. Strickland. $2.00; Soiho. $3.00;
NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St.
resolution. A book vote was ta­ Whittaker. $1.00; S. White. $1.00; J. J. F.Soto.
$4.00; M. Farrula. $3.00; Y.
Ben Rees, Agent
Phone 4-1083
ken and the resolution was McNamara. $1.00; L. Cooke. $1.00; H. Y. Song. $4.00; F. H. Fisk. $2.60; A.
PHILADELPHIA
337 Market St.
Canadian District
.
Diaz. $2.00; H. Hernandez. $2.00; J.
adopted overwhelmingly. No Cuinier. $1.00.
J. Sheehan, Agent
Market 7-1635
W. H. Grant. $3.00; C. Sonwald, $1.00;
SS
CORAL
SEA
404 Le Moyne St. books were raised when the no
SAN FRANCISCO
85 Third St. MONTREAL
J. . Rechsteiner. $5.00; E. F. Czos- T. L. Simonds. $3.00; E. Ortiz. $2.00;
UNiversity 2427 vote was taken. Motion by GuinJeff Morrison, Agent
Douglas 2-5475
nowski. $2.00; N. S. Ward. $1.00; M. G. E. Murphy. $2.00; G. J. Clark. $1.00;
SAVANNAH
2 Abercom St. FORT WILLIAM. .118Syndicate Ave. ier, seconded by several, that
C. Riley. $2.00; S. Kwiatkowskl. $1.00; W. R. Mcllveen. $2.00; J. J. McKenna,
Jim Drawdy, Agent
, Phone 3-1728
Ontario '
Phone 3-3221
J. F. Hester. $2.00; R. S. Jonson. $1.00; $1.00; K. C. Crowe. $1.00; F. J. Corio,
resolution
be
adopted
unanim­
SEATTLE
2700 1st -Ave. HALIFAX
128&gt;/z Hollis St.
J. J. Boxley. $4.00; S. Trzcinski. $2.00; $1.00; A. Goldfarb. $2.00; A. Barberd,
ously.
Motion
carried
to
adopt
Wm. McKay, Agent
Senec^ 4570
Phone 3-8911
Goodwin. $2.00; R. LeVasseur. $2.00; $3.00; S. L. Torina. $1.00; B. RoosTAMPA
.T809-1811 N. Franklin St.
resolution unanimously. Motion E.
R. Kelly, $2.00; N. Marovich, $1.00; berg. $2.00; J. Kallaste. $1.00.
PORT
COLBORNE
103
Durham
St.
Ray White, Agent
Phone M-1323
Phone: 5591 by Matthews, seconded by sev­ K. Hansen. $2.00; A. Mino. $1.00;
SS CHRYSAr^HY
WILMINGTON, Calif., 227'/a Avalon Blvd.
I. honripson. $2,00; M. Evans. $1.00.
lllA Jarvis St. eral, that the entire situation re­ A. Rodrigues. $10.00; D. Delgado. $2.00;
E. B. Tilley, Agent
Terminal 4-2874&gt; TORONTO
SS ANNISTON CITY
Elgin 5719 garding resolution and Union's M. 'Zelack. $2^00; R. McCannon. $2.00;
HEADQUARTERS. .51 Beaver St., N.V.C.
F. Lancan. $2.00.
C. L. Gunsett, $1.00; R. Potter, $5.00,
SECRETARY-TREASURER
VICTORIA, B.C.
602 Boughton St. position against communist par­
SS CAPE MOHICAN
SS SEATRADER
Paul Hall
Empira 4531 ty, Trotskyites and other subver­
J. M. Dawson. $1.00; J. P. TuczJ. Kari, $2.00; M. Awall. $1.00; H.
DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
VANCOUVER
565 Hamilton St. sive splinter groups be summar­ kowski. $3.00; E. Tresnik. $2.00; A. Christensen. $1.00; J. Durmo, $1.00;
Lindsey Williams
Pacific 7824 ized in overseas Bulletin and Rivera. $1.00; E. Cintron. $1.00; L. M. Katsimbris. $1.00; H. Sanchez,
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURERS
HEADQUARTERS.......512
McGill St. mailed to all crews on contract­ C. Galinte. $1.00; R. P. Sirois,- $2.00; $|.00; D. Proelezianos, $1.00; E. CarRobert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
Montreal
Plateau 670 ed ships. Motion carried. Meet­ J. D. Halpin, $1.00; E. H. Schinmack-[ reras. $1.00; .R. Collins. $1.00; J. PolJoseph Volpian
er. $1.00; J. Araya, $1.00; D. Alvlno.' uchovlchr $5.00; A. Wiessner. $1.00;
ing adjourned at 8:20 PM.
$2.00; J. Pelusky. $1.00; P. Naujalis. ' R. R. White. $1.00.

Savannah Shipping On Slow Bell

Braadk Meetings

Directory Of SIU Halls

�Page Sixteen

r HE l^EAEA RE R,S L O G

Friday. December 16. 1949

moMmimiApmm/imeffro

werm!

ilbiu "thcrf* are have been certi-Fied bq -fhe AILRB cue
are pressirg) -for a confracj" it) give CSitinkermen +be +op iva^eGy oJDrkin^ condfHons.ancI

nailed doLUin to an GIU a^reenaenrh Vo noi
jeopardire. qour jobs in anoj U^L\. If asKed
io sign a CTM A applicai'r&lt;bn or pe+i+ron^
do so. VVe ore Ovn our a;oc|'——
yr- ^

CfTitS
•' • • • •

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9942">
                <text>December 16, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9999">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 33</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10020">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10041">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10101">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10119">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10182">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
NLRB CERTIFIES SEAFARERS, HITS CITIES SERVICE TACTICS&#13;
SEAFARERS PRESENTS SHIPOWNERS WITH DEMAND FOR WELFARE FUND&#13;
MM&amp;P EXTENDS OLD CONTRACT&#13;
NEW YORK BRANDS TROSKYITES 'DUAL AND HOSTILE'&#13;
WHICH WAY?&#13;
AFL MEET SETS PLANS FOR GROWTH IN SOUTH&#13;
ANTI-COMMUNIST UNIONS FORM NEW WORLD GROUP&#13;
ECA SLAPS PENALTY ON 7 NATIONS FOR VIOLATING 50-50 RULE&#13;
PHILLY REPORTS SLIGHT RISE IN PORT SHIPPING&#13;
SHIPPING HOLDS AT EVEN KEEL IN NEW YORK&#13;
TAMPA MAYOR DEPUTIZES FINKS&#13;
AT AFL SOUTHERN ORGANIZING CONVENTION&#13;
MINUTES OF A&amp;G BRANCH MEETINGS IN BRIEF&#13;
TEXT OF NLRB DECISION CERTIFYING SIU AS BARGAINING AGENT IN CITIES SERVICE&#13;
CITIES SERVICE STOOGES SPY ON PRO-SIU MEN&#13;
SEAFARER BELL DEAD AT 65&#13;
FORT BRIDGER CREWMEN EYE HOLIDAYS AS PRELUDE TO YEAR ON SHUTTLE RUN&#13;
SAIL-MAKERS GIVE WAY TO PANTS-MAKERS ON CANTON VIC</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10183">
                <text>12/16/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13071">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="975" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="979">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/a3d00a34d15161155dd163f29057a885.PDF</src>
        <authentication>e0723e4cbd6dec01dfd1da83c2db3c28</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47455">
                    <text>Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gidf District, Seafarers International Union of NA
1

VOL. XI

NEW YORK. N. Y., FRIDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1949

&gt;

No. 34

NLRB Says 'No' To Stooging CTMA
Printed below is the full text of the NLRB decision, which bitted the
latest? attempt by the Cities Service-controlled CTMA to keep the CS tankermen from the freedom and protection of an SIU contract.
"In response to your letter dated December 16, 1949, this is to advise you
that a Petition for Certification of Representatives was filed
on December 14,
1949 by Murphy, Strasberger and Purcell, attorneys, in behalf of Citco Tankermen's Association, covering a unit consisting of the sailing personnel on the Tank­
ers S.S. Abiqua, Cantigny, Chiwawa, Council Grove, French Creek, Logan's Fort
and Paoli, excluding licensed officers, cadets, pursers, radio operators, bosuns and
, stewards.
"In accordance with Board policy the petition was dismissed on the grounds
that there are now pending charges in this office filed by the Seafarers' Internation­
al Union, AFL, against the Company' alleging, among other things, that the Com­
pany has refused to bargain, and further alleging that the petitioner (Citco) has
been formed in violation of Section 8(a) (2) of the Act.
"Pursuant to National Labor Relations Board rules, fhe petitioner may file
a request for a review of this action, with the National Labor Relations l^ard
within ten days."

Branches And Crews
Cmdemn Trotskyites

Gnlf Fishermen
Group To Join
With Seafarers

Kill a snake, the saying goes, and its tail will
twitch until sundown. And night is falling fast
for the poisonous CTMA, Cities Service-dominated
"union," which, already repudiated by the Cities
Service Tankermen, has just been dealt another
blow by the National Labor Relations Board.
The Board denied CTMA's request for a col­
lective bargaining election on seven of the com­
pany's tankers on Decembejr 16, citing the fact that
the SIU still has charges pending against Cities
Service for refusing to bargain and for forming

a company union in violation of*^———
the company union actually has
the law.
a
single member.
As a result of the NLRB re­
CTMA's request for the col­
jection, the company has one
less trick left to stall collective lective bargaining election was
haigaining sessioris with SIU. made v/ithin a few days after
Thus, Cities Service seeunen the NLRB announced certifica­
moved a step closer to the se­ tion of the SIU over the nine
curity and benefits of a genuine vessels not voted last year.
Union contract.
Having already been rejected
by the Cities Service seamen in
two NLRB collective bargaining
elections in which the SIU was
Heads New Body
overwhelmingly the victor,
CTMA's latest move was obvious­
ly intended to stall bargaining
between the Union and the
The possibility of the Seafarers
company.
ushering
in the New Year with
The ships which CTMA sought
an employer-financed welfare
to have polled were the Abiqua,
plan appeared brighter, follow­
Cantigny,
Chiwawa,
Council
ing a meeting yesterday of ship­
Grove, French Creek, Logan's
owners' representatives and the
Fort and Paoli. The SIU was
SIU's
Headquarters Negotiating
certified as bargaining agent for
Committee.
these vessels in May 1948, after
Although the SIU committee
receiving 83 percent of the valid
still hadn't got the operators to
ballots cast in the NLRB elec­
sign on the dotted line, sufficient
tion.
progress was made in the talks
SLATED FOR HEAP
to warrant optimism. Commit­
SIU organizers pointed out that tee members said after the meet­
CTMA is trying desperately to ing that the area of disagree­
show signs of life, but that it ment over the Union's demand
would wind up on the scrap for the establishment of a Wel­
heap—as did its two predeces­ fare Fund, paid for solely by the
sors, known as the Unlicensed employers, was narrowing down.
Employee's Collective Bargain­
SIU negotiators had laid
ing Agency of Cities Service Oil before the operators a welfare
Company and the American Tan- fund proposal caUing for con­
kermen's Association.
tributions of 25 cents a payrcdl
Both of these company fronts day for each man at the initial
were ruled illegal by the NLRB. session on December 9.
In attempting to revive these
From the tenor of the discus­
J. H. Oldenbroek. executive organizations under the name df sions so far, the SIU Negotiat­
secretuy of the International CTMA, Cities Service has been ing Committee said the reason
Transportworkers Federation— forcing pledges from its seamen no major opposition to the Union
to which the SIU is affiUated by threatening dismissal to those demand had arisen was obviously
—has been chosen to head the refusing to sign up.
that the shipowners were satis­
Except for the handful of fied with the efficient manner in
recently organized, anti-com­
munist International Confede­ CTMA organizers on the com­ which SIU crews were handling
ration of Free Trade Unions. pany payroll, it is doubtfid that their ships.

the same full acceptance in re­
ports i-eceived by Headquarters
to date. However, because of the
great distances and the short pe­
riod of time which has elapsed,
most of the crews are yet to be
heard from.
"DUAL AND HOSTILE"
The resolution, first
adopted
at the New York Branch meet­
ing on December 7, termed Trot­
skyites within the SIU "dual
and hostile" and called for their
expulsion. (Full text of Ihe reso­
lution appears on page 4.) Its
text outlined the' group's aims
against the welfare of the SIU
and made clear to the member­
ship the-danger the group poses.
The proposing of the resolution»and its subsequent adoption
The Seafarers International is the Union's answer to the
Union gave a pre-campaign push Trotskyites' two-month-long in­
to the AFL's drive for a "Million tensified campaign aimed at di­
Members in '50" when it was viding the SIU and turning it to
announced, last week, that 4,000 the ends of the Trotskyites.
Gulf Coast fishermen were join­
POLICY
ing up with the SIU.
With
the
resolution now an
The 4,000-fishermen are mem­
official
part
of
policy, the Union
bers of the Gulf Coast Shrimp­
can,
if
necessary,
take disciplin­
ers' and Oystermen's Association,^
ary
action
against
this group
one of the largest independent
and
its
sympathizers.
fishermen's organizations in the
Despite the relative smallnes?
Mississippi area.
of/the Trotskyite organization,
^IND UP DETAILS
its adherents within the SIU When the SlU-contracted Wa­
Final details of the fishermen have in recent months peddled terman ship SS Alawai pulled
group's affiliation with the SIU a program of dissension which out of New Orleans on Decem­
are now being completed.
was part of a larger maneuver ber 9 for a trip to the Far East,
Cal Tanner, A&amp;G District Port to stir up discontentment within she began what once would have
Agent in Mobile and a Vice- maritime unions on all coasts.
been a three-month blackout of
As" detailed in a recent issue Union news. But the Alawai wiU
President of the SIU, worked
out arrangements for the affilia­ of the SEAFARERS LOG, the now have plenty of light and
tion, along with W. L. Hines, Trotskyites have joined forces learning. Her voyage this time
president of the Mississippi Fed­ with the Stalinist commuijists in will be punctuated regularly by
eration of Labor, and U. C. Bor- the NMU in an attempt to take the arrival of the SIU air-mail
sage and Leon Heira, represen­ over that union, and had recent­ Bulletin, a new feature chock
tatives of the fishermen's section ly created a disturbance within full of Union news which is sent
the SUP for the same reason.
of " the SIU.
to all SIU ships.
The Bulletin, which wings its
While the powers granted the
The new SIU affiliate is head­
ed by Louis Simmons, president; Union under the resolution have way to the Alawai and the hun­
Mackie Fountain, vice-president; not been invoked to date, the dreds of other SlU-contracted
Charles Allen, secretary, and Union expects to swing into ac­ ships every two weeks, is the
Leon Strong, treasurer. Head­ tion against known offenders Union's answer to the problem
soon.
of how to reach the bulk of the
quarters are in Biloxi.
Fully in sympathy with the
Headquarters • Branch resolution
condemning Trotskyites and
their sympathizers for acts
against the Union, Seafarers in
A&amp;G Branch meetings up and
down the coast on December 21
voted for its adoption unanim­
ously.
Crews of SlU-contracted ships,
which received the resolution in
the air-mailed Bulletin, indicated

CTMA's Request
Fer New Election
Denied By NLRB

SIU, Operatws
Neta- Agreement
On Welfare Plan

SIU Bulletin Ends News Blackout
membership — the men on the
ships — with the goings-on of
the Union.
First published last July, the
Bulletin has, in six months, prov­
ed itself to be an indispensable
aid in informing crews of the
policies adopted and the action
taken by the membership ashore.
Equally important, it makes it
possible for the Union to learn
the sentiment of SIU crews
through the response to the is­
sues brought to their attention.
Before the inception
the
Bulletin, crews on foreign voy­
ages often went news-hungry
for months, gleaning what Union
news they could from ships more
recently arrived from the States

and, occasionally, issues of the
SEAFARERS LOG, which are
sent to certain clubs and bars
in foreign ports.
It was because of this long
and complete break with the
Union apparatus that the Union
took under study means to bring
the most news to the members
in the shortest space of time, at
a minimum cost to the organi­
zation.
Out of this study the Bulletin
was born. On July 22—without
fanfare— the first Bulletin was
sent to the, SlU-contracted fleet,
located in every part of flie
world.
Almost immediately, the re(Cotttinurd on Page 3)

�Jin"

THE

Page Two

SEAFARERS

Friday, December 30, 1949

LOG

SEAFARERS
Published Every Other Week by the

SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL UNION
OF NORTH AMERICA
Atlantic and Gulf District
Affiliated with the American Federation of Labor

. At n Beaver Street, New York 4, N. Y.
HAnover 2-2784
Reentered as second class matter August 2, 1949, at the Post
Office in New York, N.Y., under the Act of August 24, 1912.
267

Looking Forward
The end of 1949 brings to a close another eventful
year for the SIU's Atlantic and Gulf District.
Undoubtedly, the most significant events of the pe- riod were the second election in the Cities Service tanker
fleet, in which the SIU was overwhelmingly designated by
the unlicensed personnel as their choice for collective bar­
gaining agent, and the subsequent certification of our
Union by the National Labor Relations Board.
The year 1949 was also significant from the stand­
point of other major efforts made by the SIU, among
them the unprecedented demand, presented to the opera­
tors a few weeks ago, for an employer-financed welfare
plan.
If we were to take all the accomplishments of our
Union in the year now fast drawing to a close—and those
of the past four or five years, if you like—and weld them
all together, they would spell out two words—"Looking
Forward."
And those two words are at the foundation of every
policy formulated by the Union. The SIU ;maintains that
unless an organization has foresight, coupled with suffi­
cient drive and courage, it will soon cease achieving
greater security for its membership. If we may be par­
doned for this bit of immodesty, we think we have those STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL
qualities. And we're looking at the-Pecord when" we say so. MOSES MORRIS

Seafarers Members Now In The Marine Hospitals

H. E. LOGE
J.
J. O'CONNOR
What is responsible for translating these qualities
C. E. SANCHEZ
into achievements?
SAMUEL JONAS
L.
F. BARNA
Simply this: A strong, level-headed membership,
D. P. GELINAS
^united in purpose and of undivided loyalty to their union. FRANK NEARING
Without such a membership, no union can expect m forge RICHARD GRALICKI
ESOLAN
ahead in the face of the many obstacles unions have long CRIACO
C. MARTINEZ
ago learned to expect.
DUSAN DE DUISIN
M. J. LUCAS
When the SIU some five years ago tackled the hercu­ JOSEPH F. GAMBLICH
lean job of oi"ganizing the Isthmian Steamship Company, NICHOLAS CORATTI .
there were sounds of "tsk-tsk," and "they'll never make L. F. ROZUM
CHARLES HAWVER
. it" in some quarters. But our officials and our member­ H. J. OUT
ship meant what they said when they adopted the sloganj V. J. RIZZUTO
.JAMES F. MARKEU
"Isthmian, too, will be SIU."
EUGENE LADRIERE
HENRY
WATSON
It wasn't easy—not by a long shot. But Isthmian
HENRY JOHNSON
Wcame SIU.
JOSEPH ARRAS
L. D. DIEUDONNE
The pollyannas were scattered here and there when
4 4 4
the SIU marked off Cities Service as the next organizing
FORT STANTON
objective almost three years ago. Again, the task was a MARTIN BLUM
JOSEPH LIGHTFOOT
tough one. We've come a long way in the struggle and WILLIAM H. ROBERTS
the final chapter is just about to be written.
CLARENCE D. SHIVELY
P. SMITH
But a lot of hard work lies ahead before the job is GIDLOW WOODS
finished. Notorious anti-union organizations like the DONALD MCDONALD
- Cities Service empire give the workingman nothing. A A. McGUIGAN
4 4 4
showdown fight is generally the only way to a successful
BALTIMORE HOSPITAL
F. JUDAH, Jr.
conclusion.
E. MATTSSON
,
It is particularly appropriate as we swing into 1950 A. WRIGHT
that we restate a previous resol's^: "Cities Service, too, A.- L. MASTERS •
G. A. CARROLL
will be SIU."
i). H. BRUNIE
And—after Cities Service, every other unorganized G. W. MILLER
H. W. SPENCER
outfit. It will sound bold to some, but we of the Seafarers C.
P. THOMPSON
are looking forward.
G. D. REAGAN

W. A. BREWER
J. G. HARRIS
E. F. ACHILLES
W. W. SORENSEN
R. M. SOUZA
P. E. DARROUGH
C. W. GOODWIN
H. HUNTER
G. L. HAND
E. F. PAUL
C. J. BISCUP
F. KORVATIN
W. J. HACKETT
H. L, HORTON, Jr.
4. 4.
SAN FRANCISCO HOSP.
JAMES HODO
JAMES R. LEWIS
WILLIE WATSON
T. ISAKSEN
J. KEENAN
RAFEL SALDANA

t

NEW ORLEANS HOSPITAL
T. W. ULINSKI
J. J. O'NEILL J. DENNIS
F. LANDRY
H. F. LAGAN
L. LANG
L. WILLIS
H. H. SCHULTZ
P. ROBERTS
A. MAUFFRAY
O. RAGLAND
N. I. WEST
J. R, ADAMS
O. HOWELL
J. JUSTUS
W. W. LAMB
SHIMELFEING
J. TASSIN
R. REED
J. McNULETY
W. MAUTERSTOCK
L. TICKEL
L. DANTIN
"C. LYONS

W. ROBERTS
J. H. McELROY
J. P. PHUGH
NEPONSIT HOSPITAL
WILLIAM PADGETT
MATTHEW BRUNO
JOSE DE JESUS
J. M. LANCASTER
R. E. LUFLIN
ESTEBAN P. LOPEZ
CHARLES L. MOATS
PEDRO G. ORTIZ
R. REDDEST
R. A. RATCLIFF
THOMAS WADSWORTH
R. A. BLAKE
^ L. BALLESTERO
- JOHN T. EDWARDS
E. FERRER
I. H. FRENCH
JOSEPH SPAULDING
JOSEPH SILLAK
' LUIS TORRES
L. TULL
FRED ZESIGER
V

4. 4- 4.

i'

.

ELLIS ISLAND HOSPITAL
BEAU TEAU KNEW
HENRY P. GALLAGHER
EDWARD SNOWMAN

•

NOPEMING ?MINN.)
.'I
SANATORIUM
C. HAGBERG
4 4. 4
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL ^
J. J. CERDA
L,. A. BROWN
L. RINECHUCK
4 4 4
MOBILE HOSPITAL
TIM BURKE
m-:
F. BURROUGHS
H. WESTPHAL
R. FOSTER
•••"y Vi-yKjy •,
L. HOWARD *
O. THOMPSON

�Page Three

THE SEAFARERS IOC

Friday. December 30. 1949

Air-Mailed Bulletin Keeps Crews Informed

Accurate delivery of the Over^as Bulletin to SlU-contracted ships throughout the world is made possible by the
day-by-day record of vessel movements kept in Union Head­
quarters. Boards like those shown above contain names of
every Seafarer-manned ship, its ports of call, and dates of
arrival and departure. Inauguration of Bulletin service enables
SIU men at sea to read of Union news shortly after it breaks.

(Continued from Page I)
sponse from tte crews indicated
a hearty reception. Every suc­
ceeding Bulletin, which was
nukde more attractive and- had
a greater news content, brought
more enthusiastic praise^ from
the ships.
One of the outstanding rea­
sons why the crews are unani­
mously in favor of the Bulletin
is because it is the answer to
that old bugaboo; rumors. As
Seafarers well know, rumors of­
ten spread from ship to ship in
foreign ports, gathering new
twists in snowballing along imtil dozens of crews find them­
selves embroiled over a matter
that has no foundation in fact.
Seafarers on unusually long
trips know the disruptive conse­
quences of a rumor campaign,
which they happily report are
now effectively squelched by the
appearance of the Bulletin.
1 For an example of how effec­
tively the Bulletin works in this
respect, take the SS Alawai,
which, after leaving the Canal,
will make its first stop at Hon­
olulu.

Mobile Stresses Importance Of Elections
By GAL TANNER
MOBILE — Shipping in this
port for the last week was fair,
with approximately 129 bookmen
and 28 permitmen shipped for
the period. In addition to this,
we shipped 87 men to relief
jobs on tugboats and shifting
gangs. •
Ships paying off during this
period, all in good shape, were
the Antinous, Monarch of the
Sea, Kyska, Warhawk, Arizpa
and Wacosta, all Waterman; the
Seawind, Seatraders; the Cava­
lier and Clipper, Alcoa.

Signing on were the Madaket,
headed for Japan and Korea;
Monarch of the Sea, Puerto Ricobound; Kyska and the Warhawk,
headed for Europe; Arizpa, for
Mediterranean; Clipper and the
Cavalier, back on the Alcoa pas­
senger run to the British West
Indies. All sign-ons were smooth,
all repairs and beefs having been
taken care of prior to the signon.
In-transit for the period were
the Bessemer Victory, Steel
Scientist, Stonewall Jackson.
The membership is again re­
minded of the importance of

Pre-Xmas Boom Helps Savamah
By JIM DHAWDY
SAVANNAH—We had a preChristmas shipping boom that
lifted 35 men off the beach here
in two days. It was all over on
December 14, however, and at
present shipping is slow.
The vessels responsible for the
pre-holiday lift were the follow­
ing: SS Southwind, SS Southport, both South Atlantic, and
the SS Jean, Bull. These ships
paid off and then signed on.
In addition, we had a couple
of visitors, one of which' was
the SS Steel Fabricator, Isth­
mian. The other was a Cities
Service scow, the SS Bradford
Island.
Biggest event of the holiday
season was the Christmas dinner
and party held in the Hall on
December 21, This affair was
made possible by the generosity
of the crews of the Jean, SouthWind, Southport and Cape Rape.
These" men deserve praise for
their donations.
*
Seventy meals were served to
members, their wives and guests,
and Fred of the Soda Shop here
put out a very fine dinner. After
the meal was over there was
dancing until 10:30 PM.
Thanks are also due the fol­
lowing people and .organizations
for their help in making this
holiday festivity a success: The
Social Club, McDermottSj BoPeeps, VFW, Metaxas, South
Atlantic SS Company and Southem Marine Supply.

Those who were present will
certainly remember the good
time they had for a long while
to come.
A few of our Brothers are in
the local Marine Hospital at this
writing. They are J. J. Carda,
suffering from a broken leg, L.
A. Brown and L. Rinechuck.

turning in jobs in ample time to
secure a replacement before the
ships saiL, shorthanded.
Anyone who takes a job, and
then finds it is impossible-to sail
it, must notify the Hall in ample
time to secure a replacement or
face charges before the member­
ship.
Start the new year off right
by registering and voting in the
City, County, and State elec­
tions. For information on get­
ting registered, contact any of
the officials in the Branch and
they will be glad to give you
the score.
It is your duty to the organi­
zation to register and vote in all
elections, to help elect the
friends of labor and defeat those
who are unfriendly.
The Mobile Branch wants to
extend its best wishes to the
Seafarei's International Union
and their friends, for a Merry
Christmas and a Happy and
Prosperous New Year.

There a Bulletin, mailed a
week after the Alawai sailed,
will be waiting. After the next
port, Yokohama, the ship hits
Keelung," where a Bulletin will
be waiting. The ship will take
a quick bounce to Manila and
when it returns to Japan an­
other Bulletin will be in the
mailbag.
She'll then swing homeward
for stops in Honolulu—another
Bulletin—and then to the Pan­
ama Canal, possibly another
Bulletin, then home for a pay­
off on the Atlantic Coast. Quite
effective in making barren terri­
tory for a rumor to gain nutri­
tion.
The story of the Alawai can
be multiplied by the number of
ships under contract. At almost
evex-y port touched the crew is
given the news of the Union in
capsule form. And if the Union
takes action on a matter of un­
usual impoi'tance, the member­
ship on the ships is made aware
through a special mailing, as in
the case of the Hawaiian Strike
and the chai'tei-ing of the Bro­
therhood of Marine Engineers bv
the SIU.
THE SET-UP
The base of operations for the
Bulletin is, of coui-se, .the SIU
Headquarters at 51 Beaver Street
in New York, where, on a 6th
floor wall, a Sched - U - Gr-aph
contains the names of everj''
company and ship under conti-act
to the A&amp;G Disti-ict.
Each ship has a line of its own,
a transparent tipped flap. On a
card beai'ing the ship's name'is
a description of the vessel and
where it operates in the world.
Next to the name is a per­
forated marker which lists the
ship's itinerary, if on 'a regular
run, with the next port of call
showing through the transparent
tab. (Tramp ships have only the
next port of call given.) A plas­
tic signal tells when the ship is
scheduled to leave the port.
At the right side of the graph,
signals tell whether the vessel
is "company-owned or chartered,
on a regular run or ti-amping. A
black and white striped signal
identifies an idle ship.
Every day the signals are
changed to correspond with the
movement of the ships and the

change in operating status of the
various company fleets.
The positions and expected
movements of the ships are se­
cured from various marine sour­
ces and transcribed to the charts.
For a mailing, the chart is con­
sulted for the anticipated move­
ment of the vessel and its dis- .
tance from Headquarters. *•
A port is then selected for
each ship. The primary aim is to
reach a ship as soon as possible,
and still not figure the time so
closely that the mail may miss
the ship.
Early in the week of a mail­
ing, the charts are checked and
rechecked; each ship marked
down for a particular port. Some­
times it is impossible to assign
a port to a ship, in which case
the Bulletin is sent to the com­
pany office to go out with the
first cx-ew mail.
GOES TO PRESS
After the port is selected off
the graph, the company's list of
agents is consulted for an ad­
dress. The envelopes are then
addressed and stamped.
Later in the week, the edi­
torial board of the Union decides
what items are to be given the
highly valuable Bulletin space.
Almost invariably the set-up
parallels that of the SEAFAR­
ERS LOG.
Once decided, the Bulletin is
written, edited and laid out in
the Union offices. A sensitized
multilith plate is made and the
final product run off on the SIU
multilith machine.
To keep the air-mail cost
down, the news is run off on
tissue thin sheets. The entire
operation costs the Union but a
small fraction of a similar print-;
ing job.
The entrance of the Bulletin
into the field along with the
SEAFARERS LOG and the edu­
cational meetings makes com­
plete the SlU's news-dissiminating set-up.
With almost evex-y ship re­
ceiving the Bulletin regulax-ly,
the member who doesn't know
what is going on in the Union
should be a rax-e bird.
It's like one ship's delegate said
in his comments on the Bulletin:
"If a member is uninformed now,
it's his own fault."

DISCUSS BOSTON'S MARITIME PROBLEMS

Little To Report
From •Pbiladoliriiia
By JIMMY SHEEHAN
PHILADELPHIA — There, is
little to report from Philadejlphia. Shipping has slowed down
quite a bit here, from what it
had been, but those ships that
did hit this port have been pretty
clean.
We had the. Southstar in here,
and had to replace a couple of
men who missed the ship in
Albany, New York. The stoiY
doesn't end her^ however, as
those lads will find out.
Otherwise, things have been
running smoothly, and there are
a lot of new faces here. That
means that many of the old on^s
have gone, and that's what we
like to see here—a turnover on
the beach.
Well, here's hoping that all Of
you had a very Merry Christmas
and the best wishes for a
Happy New Year.

The Senate subcommittee studying the needs of the American shipping industry held con­
ferences in the Port of Boston recently at which AFL maritime unions were represented. In
photo above, left to right, ve Daniel Donovan, iLA vice-president; Capt. John Diehl. MM&amp;P;
Douglas Hartman, agent for iiie Senate subcommittee; Capt. Waller Costello. MM&amp;P Boston
Port Agent, and Ben Lawson, SIU Boston Port Agent.—Photo Courtesy of Christian Science Monitor

�Page Four

THE SEAFARERS

Unanimously Passed
Trotskyites Are
-

Below is printed the complete text of the
recently passed resolution which brands the
Stalinist communists and the Trotskyite com­
munists as "dual and hostile" and "enemies of
our Union."
This resolution was voted on by the mem­
bership of the Atlantic and Gulf Branches at
regular shoreside meetings and by the crews on
every ship at^ sea. THUS FAR, THERE HAS
NOT BEEN ONE VOTE RECORDED
AGAINST THE RESOLUTION, which gives
one a clear picture of what the SIU member­
ship thinks of these union-busters.
Comments on the resolution from the ship­
board meetings will be carried in future issues
of the LOG.
WHEREAS, the Seafarers International Un­
ion since its creation in 1938 has consistently
fought for the advancement of its members'
shipboard and general economic betterment,
having battled for and won increases in wages
from an average of $72.50 per month to the
present high scale, and during the same period
shortened the hours of work, made better the
food and foc'sle conditions; and
WHEREAS, in the process of raising the
living standards of seamen the SIU has suc­
cessfully fought our traditional and open ene­
mies, the shipowners, both across the conference
tables and on the picketlines; and
WHEREAS, at the same time the SIU has
also fought enemies not so obvious as the ship­
owners, such enemies being the Communist
Party and splinter groups originating from the
Party; and
WHEREAS, members of these political splin­
ter groups are more difficult to recognize as
plotters against our Union and all it stands for,
inasmuch as some of them hold Union books
and through activities in the Union subtly at­
tempt to present themselves as good and active
union men; and

WHEREAS, the actions of these disruptors,
aimed at trying to cause seamen to believe them
to be good union men, are in reality a mas­
querade, a cover-up, for the group's real aims,
aims which call for using the trade union
movement for their own ends, these to be
achieved through communist tactics explained
by Lenin and quoted by Trotsky on page 30
^ of his book, "Their Morals and Ours," which
states: "It is necessary to be able ... to resort
to all sorts of devices, maneuvers and illegal
methods, to evasion and subterfuge in order to
penetrate into the trade unions, to remain in
them, and to carry on commuftist work in
them at all costs;" and

Friday, December 30. 1949

LOG

Of Our Union'

Conrniunications have already been received from the following vessels, re­
porting their action on the resolution which condemns the Trotskyite communists
and the Stalinist communists as enemies of the SIU Atlantic and Gulf District.
Although the majority of the arews have not yet reported — their votes
should be in within the next week — not one dissenting vote has yet been cast against
it. This has been, it is obvious, one of the most popular moves taken by the Union.
The crews aboard the following ships have all unanimously passed the reso­
lution condemning the Trotskyites:
SS Seatrain New Orleans
SS Alcoa Cavalier
SS Greeley Victory
SS Chicasaw
SS Steel Flyer
SS Robin Gray
SS Wild Ranger
SS Puerto Rico
SS Steel Voyager
SS Black Eagle
SS Rosario
SS Ann Marie
SS Del Sol
A
SS Seatrain New York
SS Seatrain Texas
SS Antinous
i
SS Steel Surveyor
SS Bessemer Victory
SS Andrew Jackson
SS Canton Victory
SS Mae

SS Alcoa Partner
SS Steel Seafarer
SS Del Sud
SS Alcoa Planter
SS Alcoa Corsair
SS -Fairland
SS Southstar
SS Atiniston City
SS Del Valle
SS Alcoa Roamer
SS Iberville
SS Morning Light
SS Golden City
SS Kyska
SS Yaka
SS Kenyon Victory
SS Southwind
SS Alcoa Pilgrim
SS Del Viento
SS Angelina

we go on record here to deal with the sup-r
porters of these union-busting groups individ­
ually and collectively as enemies of our Union
as well as enemies of all American seamen, and
that any member of the SIU who is a mem­
ber of, contributes to or as a fellow traveler
THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that the knowingly follows the policies of any of the
Communist Party (Stalinists) and all so-called above organizations, be declared an enemy of
splinter parties of the CP, such as the Socialist' the SIU and be made to stand charges, and if
Workers Party (Trotskyites) be declared dual found guilty be expelled from the Union for
and hostile to the best interests of the SIU; and aiding and abetting enemies of this Union; and
BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that in , BE IT FINALLY RESOLVED, that a copy
view of their disruptive record on the water­
front within the NMU and other unions and of this resolution be put aboard every SIUtheir blind following of the anti-trade union contracted ship and be given full publicity
theory advocated by Lenin and Trotsky that throughout our Union.
by these union busters it can be seen that they
have no concern for the. welfare of our Union
nor loyalty to our membership, but instead
would—if they could—destroy our Union and
all it has gained for the membership;

WHEREAS, among the groups endorsing
and supporting the boring-from-within policy
of Lenin and Trotsky described above is the
Socialist Workers Party, better known as the
Trotskyites; and
WHEREAS, this splinter faction, because of
its failure to make any extensive headway in
dhe SIU, is at the present time following the
cwnmunist philosophy of either rule or ruin
by maihng its odorous newspaper to SIU ships
as well as distributing anti-SIU handbills, which
bear the libelous signature^ "SIU Committee,"
the purpose being to first confuse our members
by the use of the SIU's name and then dis­
rupt, divide and take over either some part or
ail of our Union; and
•
WHEl^AS, from their own official records
quoted here and actions presently being taken

. Th® resolution branding, Trotskyites and other commie splinter groups as dual and hostile to the SIU
originated in the port of New York at the regular membership meeting on December 7. In ab^ve photo,
part of the meeting is shown as the mMttbars indicated their desire to acc^t the resolution by unanimotis
vote. Not a note of dissent was beards, as speakers took the Ooor in support of the resolution and urged
a firm stand agaiast the communist fackons seeking to divide and disrupt the .SIU.
,

�Page Five

TBE SEAFARERS LOG

Friday, December 30, 1949

Trotskyites Raise Cry Of 'Sill Goonism'
To Hide Own Reign Of Terror in Seattie
read what the Tretskyites
had to say, on Dec. 19, aheut
the "geonkm" ef SlU effkkds,
after the immh&amp;ship had mmked
them as en&amp;aies of the Uakm

?O0t-3ttWlt9etli:frFri.. Dec.23, 1949

Sailors * Official
Beaten, Badly Hurt

And then read what
the Trobkyfte-Alahoney gang did
to an SUP effkial on Dec. 22,
three days later
TMg MmTAHT

IHONDAY. I&gt;ECEMBER 19^ 1940

SWP Threatened
With Violence
By SlU OHicials

Six Assailants
Recognized
By Robert G. Gummings
Severely beaten by six as»
sailants, an official o£ the
Sailors Union of the Pacific
was in a critical condition in
Columbus Hospital Thursday,,
suffering from a possible;
skull fracture.
He is John Fox, 43, 9501% 21sfe
Ave. N. W., dispatcher for the Se*
attle branch of the American Fed*
eration of Labor affiliate.
The beating was the most se»
vere in a series of outbursts of
violence which have kept the Sc»
attle branch in tifrmoil since last
July.
Fox was so badly beaten that
hospital attendants would not per*
mit police detectives to talk with'
him Thursday afternoon.
The'waterfront was tense mean­
while, awaiting the next move, as
threats of reprisals were freely
bandied about by friends of Fox^

ALL RECOGmZED—

Fox told The Post-Intelligencer
he identified all of his assailants.
All, he said, were supporters of
former members who had been
expelled by the union during the
course of the current rift.
One of them tried to pick an
NEW YORK — Paul Hall, secretary-treasilror of the
argument with him in a tavern,
Seafarers International Union, has responded to The MiK^
but Fox tried to dissuade hinu
tant's exposure of his gangster-ridden regime in the SIU
he said. Finally, after constant
urging, he stepped outside.
by gangster threats against the'
They went tO' a parking lot
Socialist Workers Party. Phone
~
outside the union hall at 1st Ave.
. talis by Hall's agents, and one.
and Clay St.
suspected to have been by Hall
At first. Fox s'aid, he tried ta
himself, have been made threaten­
It would seem that' when
hold his would-be assailant ofi^
ing rs}ids and physical violence
but after the latter "gave him
on the SWP. These calls followed the Trotskyites are weak in
the boot," he "dropped him."
a meeting of the New York numbers they yell, "democ­
A friend of the assailant then
brandh of the SlU where a lynch racy" (that is, the right to
UNION ASSAULT VICTIM-^—Cuts over eye, swollen nose and mouth took up the melee with Foj^
atmosphefe against Trotskyism disrupt and wreck). But when
give mute evidence of the beating John Fox, Sailors' Union dispatcher, and four men came out of an­
was worked up by the qfhcials (as in Seattle) they have
other nearby tavern. One trip­
received from six assailants in union internal rift.
and a motion ^as jamnied through numbers and the cops on
ped Fox. Then ^ all of them
(Post-IntelUsencer
Photo
by
Dick
Cameron.)
declaring the SWP "dual and their side, well—
"put
the boots" to him, while
hostile" tg the SIU.
he was down, he said.
These threats are typical of
Bob Dombroff, Seattle agent
the way the SIU ofhcialdom
of the union, who recently was
practices "democracy" inside and
threatened at gunpoint inside the
outside their union. Out of a clear
union hall, was vehement over
The membership has spoken most decisively A&amp;G District began acting up, and began to
blue sky, the SIU membership
this latest development.
promote
friction
within
the
organization,
the
was presented with a six-page on the question of the Trotskyites. Unani­
tirade against Trotskyism in the mously, thus far, they have gone on record Seafarers took the only action they could to
6 WITISESSES—
protect themselves and their Union — they
Nov. 4 Seafarer's Log, The fol­
He said there were six wit­
lowing issue of the union paper to declare them "dual and hostile" to the SIU -branded them enemies of the Seafarers.
nesses to the assault and addeds
continued with some drivel alraut and "enemies of the Union."
In addition to their disruptive tactics, the
"I have repeatedly reported
:Tt'otsky and Kronstadt and
acts of lioience and threats of
There had been a long series of anti-Union Trotskyites are not above using goon squads
Viciously lumped together the acts on the part of Trotskyites before the mem­ to terrorize the membership, as the above
violence to the Seattle police.
TTrotskyists and the fascists. But bership. acted—notably their war against our clipping proves.
"If the police force won't
no sooner had The Militant picked affiliate, the Sailors Union, in the Port of
preserve
law and order, it will
We are also told that this is not the first
up these attacks, exposing •the. Seattle. The membership saw how these would- incident of its kind, that other members of
become my duty to protect our
reasons behind then;, than the
members as I see fit.''
the SUP have been ganged up on.
The vb e a t i n g occurred. early
SIU ofhcials left the plane of be revolutionists acted in other unions—^par­
We wonder how long they expect to get
Wednesday evening" but Fox did
"discussion" and went over to ticularly in the NMU—combining with the
not report it,to police.and went
methods they feel more at home Stalinist variety of communists in desperate away with this in Seattle; how long a few
crackpots, and their strongarm cohorts, expect
to theJiospital Thursday, only at
with — threats, violence and' rule-or-ruin tactics to capture control.
The membership read, too, what the "frot- to be able to intimidate the entire member­
the urging of friends, after. Jt«
police methods.
!had shown up for work, at th»
skyites had to say about their attitude toward ship of the SUP.
pED HERRING
limion hall as usual.
We also wonder if they have any idea of
unions, and in their own words, saw them
This sequence of events proves admit that all they wanted to do is to control starting the same thing on the Atlantic and
to the hilt that the attack on all unions for their political purposes, using Gulf Coasts. We are not, as the record shows,
Trotskyism was nothing but a whatever means they could: "devices, maneu­ partial to them, by any means. But we'd like
"red herring" drawn across the, vers, illegal methods." . '
to give them some friendly advice.
Don't try it.
So when the few pitiful Trotskyites in the
\*

Just A Thought

A wofd Of Advice To The Trotskyites

.M

�I»age Six

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

SouthwindMen Jump IntoVacationDebate,
Urge Six-Month Limit On Shipboard Stays

Friday. December 30. 1949

OF SEATRAIN CRASH

The current Union-wide debate on compulsory vacations tpok another turn
this week, when crewmembers of the SS Southwind announced that they favored a
rule limiting stays aboard one ship to six months.
The Southwind plan, set forth
in a resolution signed by the 23
crewmen, also recommended re­
negotiation of the contract clause
to give men with six months
service on a single vessel a oneweek vacation with pay, instead
of two weeks at the end of one
year, as agreements now provide.
According to the. Southwind
resolution, the six-month limita­
tion "would insure a much
greater job turnover, thus allow­
ing more and more members to
ship, and give economic rights
to all..."
With damaged piping and bulwark at its side, crimped
The text of the Southwind
Seatrain Texas freight car rests on the ship's deck, having
resolution follows:
been knocked from its cradle by* the force of a collision with
, "Whereas: Due to the fact that
the SS Exefors in New York harbor on December 16. Photo
many of omr contracted compan­
by
Seafarer Glenn Vinson.
ies are now operating fewer ships
and the chances of organizing
the unorganized has reached a
standstill; and
"Whereas: Our membership
has decreased and the available
jobs now are at an all-time low,
Eddie Brett. Ship's Delegate, signs resolution aboard
we propose that the membership
Southwind at sea. as Tony Michaleski. Wiper, smiles approv.^
go on record to remedy this sit­
A twilight collision in New York harbor on Deceny •
ingly. Looking on is Julio Colon. Messman. Photo by "Mac"
uation; and
McAuley.
ber 16 put the Gulf-bound Seatrain Texas back in port.
"Whereas: There is little ship and give economic rights in the event the membership for midship repairs and the American Export freighter
chance of our membership de­ to all; therefore
votes this resolution into effect, Exefors in drydock with her*
—
—
creasing in the foreseeable fu­
"Be It Resolved: That this re­ that officials meet with all con­ bow stove in.
Crewnfen
rushed
from
the
messture, we propose that time solution be voted on for two con­
tracted companies and negotiate
room
onto
the
deck
to
lifeboat
aboard aU SIU contracted vessels secutive shoreside meetings, and
No one was injured on either stations but a quick examina­
a- new contract clause, allowing
be limited to six months; and
if passed, Secretary-Treasurer those men who stay on a ship ship. The accident gave many of tion showed that the ship was
"Whereas: This would insure prepare a referendum ballot for a full six-month period, one the Texas crewmen whose homes in ho danger of flooding
or
are in the New York area an catching fire. Damage was con­
a much greater job turnover, with a 60-day voting period; and week's vacation with pay."
thus allowing more members to
"Be It Finally Resolved: That
Several motions recommend­ unexpected opportunity to spend fined to the ship's side-plates and
ing compulsory vacations after Christmas at home.
a freight car lashed on deck.
one year's service aboard a ship
The
force of the collision also
INTERRUPTS CHOW
to those, entitled to two weeks
twisted a deck cradle, the bul­
vacation have/been carried at
The crash occurred at 5:30 wark and piping.
shoreside meetings. The mem­ i'M, during dinner hour, as the
The more severely damaged
bership, however, is on record Seatrain Texas was making her
Exefors sustained a bashed in
by "SALTY DICK'
in favor of a union-wide discus­ way through, the narrows off
bow and a flooded hold. Exactly
sion of the question before any Staten Island on her regular run
how the crash occurred wasn't
definite action is taken.
to New Orleans and Texas City. immediately known and the re­
Duke (Red) Hall has left the The fellow you see walking
sults of an examination by the
Clipper, and has been replaced down the street with a slight
Coast Guard have not been an­
by Fred Diekow. . . T. E. Dick­ limp and entering the penny
nounced pending completion of
ens and J. P. Shuler are in arcade is Felix Caillovet. He had
hearings.
town. Dickens asked me who trouble with his knee but the
was the uglier. How do I know, doctor took care of it. . . "Dag­
TAKES CRASH PIX
I said. . . A certain Captain ger" wants the membership to
Glenn. "Vinson, crewmember of
is making it tough for himself know "Fat Boy" Hill has finally The" mother, of Walter E.- Rob­
by telling passengers the wait­ retired from the sea and vsdll erts, 23-year-old Seafarer who
the Texas who made snapshots
of the crash damage, held the
ers are well paid and not to tip never return to the salt water. was lost at sea in the storm that
them. . . Ernest Eklund, Cook, Rubin (Born to Lose) Barrett buffeted ;^e SS Calmar in the
view ^that the Texas' troubles
recently left a Marine Hospital lost his car and belongings re­ Columbia River mouth en route
might have been greater but the
and plans to ship out soon.
bulk of the crash was absorbed
cently, yet you'll always see him
to
Seattle
last
month,
thanked
by a pipe-laden freight car on
The Mississippi Shipping Com­ smiling. A member of our Union
his
shipmates
tjjis
week
for
the
deck.
is
often
broke,
but
he'll
be
wearpany celebrated its 30th anniversary recently. A couple of ing his $37.50 alligator shoes. I floral wreath and contribution
Describing the crash, Vinson
parties were held aboeird the hear that when he goes to bed, sent in his memory.
stated that the crew was startled
Del Sud in New Orleans emd he puts these shoes under his
and shaken up by the sudden­
company officials congratulated pillow. . . Kenny Miller is stiU Mrs. I^berts* sentiments were
ness of the accident, but almost
the crew for their fine job. . sailing out of the Gulf, but is conveyed to the * LOG by her
as
one they grabbed their life
"Big Tex" is driving his Ford aiming to go back home soon. son Francis, also a member of
jackets
and rushed to. the main
after a recent operation and is "Big John" Zavadil wants the SIU. Francis was aboard the
deck,
where
they saw the Exe­
everyone to know he was in­ Afoundria in Honolulu when in­
ready to sail.
fors
with
her
bow stuck into the
I'm asking Santa Claus to nocent in the Santos incident. formed of his brother's death.'
Texas'
midships.
bring me a package containing Someone else was caught by the He paid off the Waterman ship
"1 took time to look at the
compulsory vacations. And a Brazilian customs men and the and flew home to Somerville,
WALTER E. ROBERTS
Mass.,
to
be
with
his
folks.
other
ship," "Vinson stated. "Her
culprit
gave
Zavadil's
name.
happy holiday season and New
bow
had
a rip in it from the
Zavadil,
chef
on
the
Del
Mar
"Walter,
who
was
washed
over­
port in the South Pacific' during
Year to all the membership. . .
anchor
down.
As for her crew,
recently
was
married
in
Montev­
board
in
the
storm
that
also
the war,
Ralph Domonici has retired from
all
1
could
see
were boat covers
the sea for a short while. He's ideo. . . Toney Pisano, the Cas­ took the life of First Mate Clar­ A graduate of Somerville Jun­
and
oars
flying
in
all directions."
driving a truck with "Dad's anova of Bourbon Street, is back ence Hutton, joined the SIU in ior High School, Walter resided
Cookies" on it. His son,^ Ralph in New Orleans and spends most early 1947, after having been with ^ his mother at 3 Eliot St.,
Repairs to the Texas were
Jr. is working in a brewery and of his evenings at the Catholic discharged from the Navy. He in Somerville. Three sisters and completed on December 28. The
Maritime club on Camp Street. served on a Navy attack trans- two other Brothers also survive. ship resumes her run today.
liking it.

Seatrain Texas, Freighter
Crash In New York Harbor

Voice Of DL Sea

Mother Of Late Seafarer
Thanks Crew For Tribute

�Friday, December 30, 1949

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Pago Seven

Pigested Minutes Of SI0 Ship Meetings
MARYMAR. Oct. 23 — John
and Welfare it was recommend­
ed that everyone eligible vote
Schwabland, Chairman; Guy
in current Union elections.
Walter, Secretary. Ship's dele­
gate read letter received from
XXX
EDITH, Nov. 18—Vincent GenSeattle Agent on Wiper who
co. Chairman; Pittman. Secre­
ipaid off in Tacoma. No beefs in
tary. Steward claimed; tliat he
Deck and Stewards Departments;
has right to equal overtime.
eight hours of disputed over­
Three department delegates in­
time in Engine Department. Mo­
spected meat boxes and passed
tion carried to turn all disputed
on their cleanliness. There were
overtime over to Patrolman at
no signs of overtime work hav­
payoff. Ship's Delegate said he
ing been done in the meat box
would be glad to answer. any
as the Chief Cook claimed. As
questions concerning Union and
to dii-ty galley, there are heel
after brief discussion, motion
marks where the Cooks put
carried to, go, into Good and
change
books
in
ship's
library.
their
feet and they are supposed
Welfare. Discussions on condi­
Vote
of
thanks
given
Stewards
to
clean
that themselves. Mo­
tion of shower heads in Deck.
Suggested that sardine cans be Department for excellent food tions carried: to have Steward
and service throughout the tiup. Department
Patrolman
come
used to feed.
aboard
t'l
settle
the
beef:
to
have
4. 4.
CAROLYN. Nov. 5—C. Gann, FRANCES. Nov. 13—Bill Jan- all thrci delegates and Patrol­
YOUR PICTURE IN YOUR MBMBERChairman; D. McCracken, Secre­ ish. Chairman; Luis -Ramirez. man check the stores. Vote of
SHIP BOOK, SO THAT IT CANNOT BE
tary. Delegates reported that no Secretary. Motion by Carr. sec­ thanks*given to the Cooks.
4.- 4. X
beefs existed in any of the de-. onded by Olson carried that re­
MISUSED INCASE YOU LOSE IT. BRING
moving gangway ladder before
DEL RIO. Nov. 19—Sidney
partments. Each delegate is to
IT DOWM TO THE SlYTH FLOOR AT H£ADtake care of repairs in his de­ the sailing time posted on-bul­ Turner. Chairman; Leonard Crad» QUARTERS AND A PATROLMAN WILL
letin board should be stopped. dock. Secretary. Minutes of last
partment, with repair lists to be
SUPERIMPOSE THE UNION SEAL, AS
Chairman will refer matter to, meeting read and accepted. Del­
posted. If permissible, crew
AN ADDITIONAL SAFEGUARD. •
Patrolman. Engine Delegate Ram­ egates reported everything okay,
would like Steward to go as
irez suggested that men wishing with only Engine department
Chief Cook on next trip, as he to make noise should confine
having three hours disputed overis doing Chief Cook's work any­
themselves to their own quar­
way. Steward would like to ship ters where they cannot disturb tirne. Discussion on fans for
as Chief Cook himself. One min­ i-est of crew. Discussion on beef crew mess, with suggestion that
ute of silence in memory of de­ concerning Steward's cleanliness they be put on repair list. Vote
of thanks given permit men for
parted Union Brothers.
and supervision of the galley. good work done on this trip.
4&gt; 4. t
LOYOLA VICTORY. Nov. 13—
by Hank
J. Kase. Chairman; Curley Welch.
Secretary. Ship's delegate report­
Full of that happy-to-be-back-before-Christmas-holiday-spirit
ed that beefs had been settled
"Bing"
Miller and Bob Thorhmen sailed in wishing the best to all.
to crew's satisfaction on West
XXX
We're
kinda
sure Bob and Bing were still steering a straight course
4. 4 4.
Coast. Each delegate to get a STEEL SEAFARER,
Nov. 20—
BESSEMER^ VICTORY. Nov. draw list and repair list. Brother
back
for
another
trip to those swell ports they hit. Next time,
13—F. Starkey, Chairman; L. R. Welch pointed out reasons why Charles Burns, Chairman: J. though, we're gonna ask them what ports? ... Two Seafarers from
Waller, Secretary." No beefs to we should be vigilant in pre­ White. Secretary. Department Reading, Pennsylvania, were in town. John "Brush" Buzalewski
report, according to Ship's and serving Union gains. Discussion Delegates reported. On point of and Bob Kreml. The nickname "Brush" means John's mustache
the Department delegates. Mo­ on transportation. Electrician information member asked and we're also sure we've spelled Bob's last name correctly, too
tion (by John Duffy) carried or­ agi-eed to repair radio in mess- whether one department may ... Brother James Helms is still building himself a home out in
dering resolution to be drawn room. F. E. Gardner, Steward, hold a meeting to take action Queens, Long Island, and being that he's also in the business of
up and sent to Headquarters has promised to give Brothers against member of that depart­ roof sidings and repaiis he said he could use one or two skilled
ment. Chairman ruled that this
recommending that a member a big. Thanksgiving dinner.
was
possible. Motion carried to guys- on the beach who are having it rough... Swift recovery to
who stays aboard a ship for one
Duke O'Connor, turning to for some weeks of convalescence out in
have all crewmembers chip in
year and is entitled to vacation
Staten
Island. By the way, Duke has a mustache. (Hardly anyone
at end of voyage to purchase
pay is to get off and take this
comes
into
New York with a beard. Could be too many guys read
spare parts, or trade in, wash­
pay. The motion carried after
that recent book telling all about what different beards mean.).
ing machine. Delegates are to
much discussion. Brother Charles
4.
4X
collect money. All hands caution­
i,ee spoke on the procedure for
Back
from
Antwerp
this
week
was
the SS Black Eagle.
ed to take good look at sailing
introducing a resolution and its
Fred
Kleiber.
who
sure
goes
for
Western
records,
is one of the
board before going ashore and
subsequent handling. Member­
crew-members^
who
has
been
volvmtarily
helping
address or
to live vip to agreement by re­
i X
ship was reminded to return all
mail
envelopes
and
other
things
for
many
weeks.
Also
aboard
STEEL DESIGNER, Nov. 13— porting back one hour before
cups to the pantry. Suggested
is
Pete
Gvozdich,
Deck
Delegate,
who
told
us
that
his
ship- M. Beck, Chairman; B. Schmilz, scheduled sailing.
that Patrolmen do business in
mates,
Les
Ames
and
Whitey
Tesko
were
on
the
hot-PersianSecretary. Motion by Keane, sec­
XXX.
the recreation room, rather than
Gulf run with the Steel Artisan. Hey. Pete, another shipmate.
onded by Nugent that petition MAIDEN CREEK. Nov. 24—
messhall during meal times.
Pete
Karas. was asking for you recently here in New York...
be drawn up to obtain wages Charles Wells, Chairman; M. C.
Either
up in Massachusetts for the holiday stretch or but on a
* t- tfor Wiper Bumalay from Man- Kleiber. Secretary. No beefs re­
trip
is
/ Richard Maley—a fair guy with a typewriter.
THOMAS CRESAP, Nov.
iila to New York, as he had been ported in any of the depart­
Charlie Norris, Chairman; K. M.
in Manila on previous trip ments. Suggested that unsatis­
XXX
Nesheim, Secretary. Agreed that Q£ vessel and is now returning factory medical treatment aboard
Happy New Year to oldtimer Earl Spear up in Portland, Maine
cold drinks will be served twice
workaway and is be called to Patrolman's atten­ ... The same best wishes to all the crew and Donald Fisher of
a day while ship is in the trop- j.gqnij,g^
gggj^
tion. Motion carried to have all Ohio and Richard Ransome of California aboard the Steel Navigar
ics. Motion carried instructing game as other Wipers. Steward water tanks cleaned, scraped and tor recently hitting Colombo, Ceylon. Ceylon, fellas, Ceylon...
Delegates to see Old Man about Syzmanski explained that Bum­ cemented. First-aid kit needed Charlie Davis, oldtimer and Texan, didn't come a-visiting with
sougeeing the foc'sles. Motion alay had been left at Cebu be­ for engine room and galley. Dup­ any true long-spun yarn about how big Texas is or carrying his
carried that Skipper issue item­ cause no sailing board was post­ licates of repair list are to be famous sea-going shipmate of a rabbit as he did several years
ized list of all wages at payoff. ed until 5:30 Simday night and placed in messhall to insui-e ago. Charlie drawled in with another swell Seafarer, Bill Gray,
Suggested that crew keep mess- ship sailed early Monday. Man action.
who in his salad days, as we like to express it, corresponded inter­
room cleaner at night. One min­ is day worker and left ship Sun­
nationally with people in the architectural business. Charlie and
ute of silence in memory of de­ day to go to his home in Cebu,
Bill spun us the news about how everybody, from topside to
parted Union Brothers.
below, were making a happy ship out of the Seatrain New Jersey
with intentions of returning to
—and
that they had a Christmas tree, all the trimmings and cigars
work Monday morning. Chau-to
enjoy.
They also had special praise for Chief Cook A. Sistrunk
man Beck spoke on proper con­
XXX
who
bought
in Havana, Cuba, hand-painted menils for all the
ROBIN TUXFORD. Nov. IB—
duct aboard ship, duties and
tables
with
a
picture of the New Jersey on top. They must be
J.
Connell,
Chairman;
James
Encleanliness of foc'sles. Suggestion
by Tilley that all crewmen do­ sor. Secretary. Only one beef— beauties and only cost a buck apiece.
nate five dollars for new wash­ regarding feeding of animal—
XXX
XXX
ing
machine
at
first
American
reported.
This
a
Deck
Depart­
Albert
Lavoie.
one
of the many brothers - volunteering to
SEATRAIN TEXAS, Nov. 11—
ment
beef.
Motion
by
Stanley
help
out
whatever
there
is to do—filling up envelopes, framing
port.
Harry L. Franklin. Chairman;
Evenchuck.
seconded
by
Henry
photographs
of
various
beefs
we won. etc.—dropped into New-_, ,
John Messick. Secretary. Harry
XXX
York happily yakata-yakating about the swell crew and officers
Franklin elected Ship's Delegate PENNMAR. Nov. 13 — John Shepeta that more frozen vegaboard the Waterman scow. SS Yaka... Two coffee time toasts
and Edward Jones elected Stew­ Marshall. Chairman; Edward Mc- tables be stored inasmuch as
to the crew of the SS Puerto Rico! (1) Never having beefs
ards Department Delegate. Mo­ Cormick. Secretary. Motion by fresh supplies are not available
since her first trip under the SIU flag. (2) Putting out the best
tion carried to request Union of­ George, Finklea. seconded by in East African coast ports. Mem­
newspaper afloat, the Advocate. Blackie Colucci proudly stated
ficials • to investigate establish­ Fred Donaidson thai? beef on bership was reminded that Union
that the only reason the soft-ball team of the Robin Hood
ment of certified hospitals on stevedores doing sailors' work literature is prominently display­
ed
in
PC
and
crew
messhall
for
in
Vancouver
should
be
turned
challenges
all softball teams to beat is because they're only in
all Seatrain ships. Motion car­
use
by
all
hands.
Under'
Good
over
to
Patrolman
for
settle­
South
African
waters. Because of this situation, Blackie no
ried to install "square windows"
and
Welfare,
it
was
suggested
ment.
Motion
by
Flaherty,
sec­
doubt
will
immediately
expect the soft-ball team of the Robin
in-, wheel house to allow Quarter­
that
Softball
equipment
supplied
onded
by
Davis
that
Steward
Hood
to
concede
defeat
by proxy—via air mail!... To every
masters better view. A proced­
SIU Brother, ashore and afloat, we wish a happy and healthy
ure for education meetings is Marshall, Cooks and Messman be by Robin Line be returned to
New Year and good will to all the. people in the ports of
to be planned and executed. thanked for efficient and cheer­ Mate in good condition for next
the world.
Louis Swan volunteered to ex- ful service rendered. Under Good crew's pleasure and recreation.

fwMYdmsevF

CUT

zn&amp;

RUN

�THE S EA,F ARERS

Page Eight

FHde7' Dteemb«r 30, 1949

LOG

THE MEMBERSHIP SPEAKS
A NEXT-GENERATION SEAFARER

Oldtimer Miffed By Critic.
Of Off-Hour Splicing Class
To the Editor:
I have a beef in the form of
a question. I have been going
to sea for a long time. On every
ship I have been on I have made
it a point to teach the younger
fellows a little of what I have
learned in my 28 years at sea
whenever they come to me. I
figured this was my duty to
my Union Brothers, as long as
they are willing to try.
As you know the closing days
of a trip keep the Deck Gang
pretty busy and me being a
Deck Maniac, I don't get too
much time between eight and
five, so here's what happened:
BY SPECIAL REQUEST
On a Friday at 6 PM, the 12
to 4 OS and the sanitary man,
also an OS, came to me /&lt;and
asked me to open the "Rum and
Coke Splicing Academy." I did
and we held a session in the
carpentry shop for an hour. The
sanitary OS practiced what I
had taught him for an hour and
a half one night.
When we knocked off, I was
in the pantry getting coffee and
the 12 to 4 OS came to me and
said one of the younger ABs
told him he ought not to be do­
ing that kind of stuff on account
of the union was against that
practice as wire splicing is a
FACTORY job.
When I heard that, it took the
heart right out of me. It makes
me wonder sometime, what the
hell i^ the use? It's true these
two kids were unfortunate in
having to learn on their own
spare time, while I was able
to help the others during my
regular 8 to 5 working day.
My idea is that if everyone
helps the other fellow, we will
be able to produce more pro­
ficient sailors and in turn be
able to demand better contracts.
Now my question is this: Have
I done wrong in showing these
fellows some.of the ropes in my
off hoiurs? If I have, I am will­
ing to stand corrected. and take

Merry Xinas To All
Greetings from members,
crews and various organiza­
tions have been received by
the SEAFARERS LOG wish­
ing the membership and offi­
cials best wishes for the
Holiday Season. Those who
extend their best for a
Mferry ChristmaO' and Happy
New Year are the crew of
t^ie SS Ponce DeLeon, Al­
bert F. Mazarelle. Dr. Joel
Dasch. Apostleship of the
Sea. the crew of the SS Can­
ton Victory, Charles Oppenheimer, James and Johaima
Purcell, John Jellette, Luis
Ramirez, Mitch Zankick,
Henry. Beckmann, George H.
Seeberger and Mitch's Top
Inn.
The, SEAFARERS LOG
hopes that all hands enjoyed
a good Christmas and ex­
tends its best wishes for a
Happy New Year.

any consequences, but if I have­
n't I would like to know about
it.
G. L. (Jerry) Thaxton
SS Monroe Victory
(Ed.' Note: We think Bro­
ther Thaxton's conscientious
efforts to teach younger men
some of ^the essentials of good
seamanship are commendable.
His spirit is the kind that
makes for a greater Union ot
better'^ seamen. Certainly any
sailor worth his salt would
want to know how to splice.
The LOG would like its read­
ers to submit their comments
on the question raised in this
letter.)

Williams Seeks
Buyer For Paint
Shop Near Frisco
To the Editor:
Would you mind me telling
the Brothers about a painting
business that I am forced to sell
because of a note falling due.
It is located in a prosperous
and growing city of 20,000 people
near San Francisco. The shop
is the largest of its kind, for
which I pay $100 a month rent.
It has aU the latest equipment,
including a truck, sprayers, mix­
ing machines, etc., enough to
handle the biggest jobs in town.
ESTABLISHED 1937
This is a going concern, es­
tablished jn 1937 and is managed
by the same superintendent who
worked for the former owner.
I will sell it^for $5,000, half
the price it is worth. And I
wiU take a note to cover the
large stock of paints.
Brothers who are interested
in this offer can write to me
at the address below.
Incidentally, I have been a
member since 1941 and am paid
up to 1951.
R. L. Williams
Box 7205
Seamen's Unit
Rincon Axmex
San Francisco, Calif.

RAILROAD WORKERS
LIKE LOG ARTICLE
ON TROTSKYITES
To the Editor:
I would appreciate a couple
of extra copies of the LOG
(Nov. 4) containing the article
in which you told of a very
small part played by the finky
Trotskyites.
Quite a few men out at the
C&amp;O freight car repair shop here
just outside of Toledo are inter­
ested in the article and in pass­
ing it around.
I think it was a very good ar­
ticle and that' there should be
more of them exposing such or­
ganizations for what they really
are. Thanks very much.
Robert Squire
Toledo, Ohio "
(Ed. Note: The copies re­
quested are on the way.)

Ship's Book Fund
Gets $10 Boost
From Shipowner
To the Editor:

We crewed up the SS Mother
ML, of the Eagle-Ocean Trans­
port Company, with a 100 per­
cent SIU crew in New Orleans
and left that port on November 17. While enroute to Charlestori
for our cargo of super-phosphate
destined for Fusan, someone sug­
gested that we chip in for some
'reading material.
The result of the collection ex­
ceeded our expectations, with
each member of the crew and
every topside man donating a
dollar. The Skipper gave a five
spot. The Skipper is Thomas
Mazzella, who is well known
around
SIU halls.
Meet three-year-old John Stm Miguel, sturdy son of Mr.
While making my rounds to
and Mrs. P. San MigueL John accompanied his. Dad, a Deck
swell the fund I was stopped
man on the SS Puerto Rico, on visit to New York Hall recently
by a well-dressed elderly gen­
to extend holiday greetings to all hands.
tleman who asked me what I
By the way, the LOG welcomes photos of Seafarer's chil­
was doing and who I was. I told
dren. How about sending in a pic of your pet.
him and he immediately handed
me a ten dollar bill with his
blessings. He was, I later learn­
ed, Marcus Lyras, president of
the company. The total collection
amounted to $51, which enabled us to buy a wide variety of
take any action against them books and ma'gazfties.
To the Editor:
On some ships these days we becai^e outside of his occupa­
BREAKS LEG
occasionally find a man sailing tional maladjustment, he may
During our stopoff in Charles­
as a Cook-or a Baker who is not be a good shipmate.
I would, like to offer the sug­ ton we had a bit of bad luck.
qualified for those ratings. Dur­
ing the war, there were occa­ gestion that whenever a crew Brother - Jesse J. Cerda fell off
sions when ships were ready to decides a man is not qualified the gangway and fractured a
sail but were short a Cook or to sail as Cook or Baker,' they leg in two places. He is in Ro- .
Baker. Any Messman was hur­ record their reasons for his not per Hospital, Charleston and, due
riedly given an endorsement and being qualified and then turn to complications, will be there
dispatched to the ship to fill that them over to the boarding Pa­ for some time. All of his friends
trolman, who, in turn, should are urged to write.
vacancy.
Some of these men continued forward them to Headquarters. Aboard the ship every man is
There a master record could doing a bang-up job, especially
sailing in those ratings, although
they know little about the work be kept and when sufficient evi­ old "Cinnamon Roll" Pappy
involved, and in some cases, dence has been presented to the Reed, famous for his cream puffs
membership, the man who is on Sunday. Pappy's got to watch
cared less.
We would like • to see some found to'be incompetent should out though, for Chief Cook John
form of acticHi taken to correct be compelled to sail in a lower Knowles is giving him some
this situation. As a rule, the rating, until such time as he strong competition.
Little Johnny Mahoney
crewmen who are shipmates with establishes his competency.
Ship's
Delegate
Fred T. Miller
such characters are reluctant to

Competency Rule For Cooks,
Bakers Urged By Seafarer

oCog. -

To Tlie Perpetual Beefer
by Lige
But a slug of rum will make him 'think
He's boss with all his might.

This is the daily sing-song.^
From s&lt;»ne rummy sailing souls.
Who always crowd the Stewards gang.
From the ramparts to the poles.
This
He's
He's
He's

No angels, we, the Steward clan.
We try to do our work.
Along he comes-, this beefing man.
This foolish, gabby jerk.

beefing boy who ne'er lets up.
always like a gnawer.
always wanting just "that thing."
batty in^the drawer.

There's nothing right to hear him teU,
The steak is always tough.
But when he hits the beach—"oh boyi"
Ifs hot dogs in the rough.
The Boston Baked are hard as hell.
Yet he orders a full house:
He stows away the food pell-mell.
And calls the Cook a louse.

•

He never sailed in Ye Good Olde Days.
He never ate beef stew.
He's used to one-arm doughnut trays.
Bui now he'll mew and mew.
He's quiet as hell without his drink.
Then everything is always right.

He sneaks ashore, returns too late.
To help his pal get through.
But he'll harp like hell about his rate.
And about you, and you, and you.
''' Beware this jerk, this beefing bum.
He's out to do us harm.
To burn within when full of rum.
So send him back to Marm.

- --U,"

r- '•
V'-'

Fardwell you jerk, performer, too.
We know your kind from scratch.So bide your time, we say adieu.
We've locked the union latch.
Some beefs are just—^there is no do
While others are so phony.
So take a lesson from that tout:
Be right, and that's no baloney.

mi•'1i4

�.•:«l

December 30. 1949

THE SEAFARERS

A HEJtDS'UP ISTHMIAN CREW IN INDIA

jliPlisiil

illpi

iiilii
lill

Expected to arrive in the US shortly, the Steel King crew
was still many weeks away from home when photographed in
Calcutta. Here at coffee time are—standing. 1. to r.—John
Muno, Carl Fransom. Paul Hellehrand and C. Terry. Front
row: Charles Armstrong. Marvin Blizzard and John Stanford.

The Black Gang hits the deck for a bit of
evening air and the usual exchange of hot air.
Z.eft to ^right: Van Allst, George Hale, Bertil
Svensson and C. Terry. Photos were submitted
lo the LOG by. C. Dunn.

LOG

SIU Favomble Job Ratio Doesn't Warrant
Compulsory Vacations, Seafarer Asserts
To ihe Editor:
The statement made by a
Brother in a recent LOG article
attributing the presem *une,iiployment in the SIU to home­
steaders is, I believe, very mis­
leading and should be refuted
in order that a responsible and
sober segment of our member­
ship, even in the minority, should
not be unjustly blamed for some­
thing' that does not even exist
—unemployment among the book
members of the SIU.
Even if it exists, that state­
ment is misleading, because it
implies that there are over three
million unemployed Americans
because factory workers, farmers
and other wage and salaiy earn­
ers are staying on their jobs af­
ter a year's en\ployment and not
quitting, as is being proposed

Occupying what must be the favorite hang­
out for the Steel Kingers, a quintet of Sea­
farers face the camera apd bare their teeth.
Left to right, the men are: Y. Talberg, Leo
Dwyer. Paul Hellebrand. C. Terry and Gordon
Anderson (seated).

Brother Labels Charge That Homesteaders
Can't Be Good Union Members As 'Nonsense'
To the Editor:
. I wasn't going to take either
side of the compalsory vacation
issue, but I feel I must answer
my old shipmate. Brother (Salty
Dick) Martinez' article on this
subject.

Page Nine

but that the SlO has a job for
every bookman. We all know
that the only reason a bookman
able to ship happens to be on
the beach is because he either
doesn't want to ship or because
he is pretty fussy as to which
DISAGREEMENT
ship, where it's going, who he
If this is so, and I believe it can ship with, and how much
is, the beach can't be getting too overtime he can make, keeps
crowded, that is. Brothers, if him there.
you really want to ship. I also
NO REASON FOR RULE
disagree with the Brother's state­
ment that "the SIU has a policy
As long as the SIU has a job
that says, a job for every book­ for every bookman, there is no
man."
reason why any member should
says "shipping has slowed down
and the beach is pretty crowd­
ed." Then a little further on he
admits "any bookman knows he
can ship out between two and
four weeks."

Brother Martinez writes very
well as a rule but in this par­
ticular article he does not give
juiy concrete reason why the
compulsory vacation rule should
^ adopted by our membership,
jn fact, the Brother contradicts
ibis argument for it.
The ti-uth is not that the SIU covet or try to deprive another
. In one paragraph Martinez says a job for every bookman. memb^ of his job, w^hether he
has had that job a month, a
year, five years. Providing, that
is, that the Brother has been
and is living up to his Union
agreement, constitution and by­
laws.

by many labor economists in the
One aspect that we should
consider is, what effect will the
SIU.
The membership should find policy or rule of making one
a better solution than depriving give up his job after a year have
any one of our members of his on our organizing efforts. (The
fundamental and constitutional present shipping rule v/hich aprights to work as long as he plies to men taking vacations
wishes if the current unemploy- amounts to this; giving up his
ment in our Union is to be al- job.) Will crew members of unleviated. By forcing one to be organized ships, especially those
unemployed so another could be who have long service with the
employed does not solve the company welcome this system?
I believe not.
problem in the least.
HAVE TRADITION
ALTERNATIVES ,
During the last war, when the
To ease the unemployment in
very existence of our country our Union which exists mostly
was at stake, our Union clung among the permitmen, I believe
strongly to our traditional policy the following suggestions would
in not approving many proposed be of great help:
rules which would force them
1. Intensify our drive in or­
to take any job against their ganizing the unorganized com­
will." We should continue that panies.
policy and disappiove any rule
2. Make an all-out demand for
that would force anyone to take a welfare fund which of course
or quit any job against his own will include the permitmen. Inwish, provided he abides by all 'lensify our campaign to liberal­
Union rules and contracts.
ize the present unemployment
A man knows, more than any­ insurance systems of several
one else, his own or his families States so that unemployed sea­
needs, and when he can afford men may obtain unemployment
to be out of a job without plac­ benefits with little restrictions
ing his dependents in dire need. and red tape.
It is not evei-y member who has , 3. Clamp tighter on the is­
a large family that can, after a suance of Union books. Absol­
year's employment, save enough utely no book should be issued"
to tide him over while he waits except to men who are aboard
indefinitely for another job. His an unorganized ship who had
rating aboard and the run his been fired for his union efforts
ship is making will determine to at organizing and those who are
a large measure his take home aboard at the time of the elec­
pay and his saving.
tion when the SIU won.
NO JOB PROBLEM
4. Modify the present vacation
Is the unemployment among
rule in our Shipping Rules-where
the SIU book merpbers so ser­
a man taking his vacation may
ious or alarming that we should
return to his ship after a vaca­
even consider a i-adical change
tion. This will give it the real
in our traditional policy? The
meaning of VACATION. I know
answer is NO. According to the
of several men who would take
"State of the Union Report" of
their vacations yearly if they
1949, we have 10,523 book mem­
could go back to the same ship
bers. Total jobs available on
after their sj'acation instead of
contracted ships are 10,021. This
going to the bottom.of the ship­
leaves only 502 book members
ping list.
unemployed at any given time
Let us preserve our tradition.
if all the jobs available are fill­
Let us maintain our policy. Let
ed by book members.
The number is so small and- every member keep his right of
inadequate' to provide the nor­ choo.sing to stay or quit a ship
mal replacements that we have at his own convenience, provid­
to take in and maintain over ed his presence aboard a ship
4,000 permitmen. The presence is satisfactory to the Union and
of permitmen on practically evep' the company. Let us keep un­
contracted ship proves this con­ changed our Union's excellent
tention and supports our official record and prestige in the realm
claim that we have a job for of trade unionism.
Joseph Blake
practically every book member
Philadelphia. Pa.
of our Union.

IT MAKES A NICE CHRISTMAS GIFT

Citrus Packer Got Off Easy
In Mine-Loaded Tokyo Bay

To the Editor:
In reference to an article in
the LOG and shipboard news
pulletin concerning war bonuses
and mines, I would like to tell
you of an incident that occured
on this ship, the Citrus Packer.
As you know, we were washed
abound in Tokyo Bay on Sept.
1, 1949.
• During the , .same typhoon,
three mines were washed ashore,
within a radius of 800 yards
from our ship. The Army sent
men to. explode .these, mines and
we - watched the operation, so
.we. know they , were not duds.

If these mines were found in
this manner, how can we be
sure that there aren't more?' It
was just a miracle that one of
them did not hit our ship dur­
ing the storm. We will never
know how close they came, but
I know that , many a prayer was
said after we saw them. And
the crew realized how lucky
we were that we Trusses these
mines during the storm.
It certainly looks as though
there is still plenty of argument
to support payment of war bonr
uses.
R. E. WhiKT
Ship's Delegate

The old cry that homesteading
causes a man to become a poor
Union man and, a company stiff
is a lot of nonsense. You are
either a good Union man or not
—no job or coridition changes
you.
Therefore, Brothei-s, when the
resolution is voted on, I shall
vote no, and I hope the majority
of our membership does likewiset'^ I agree wholeheartedly
with Brother Joe Buckley that
a four^watch system would be
much more constructive and
would insure the job security to
which every member is entitled.
. Drank Bose

M. D. Faircloth (rightj shows Brother R. (Salty Dick)
Martinez an ash tray made from an elephant's foot. Faircloth
said he was giving the foot to one of his friends. Martinez
is now in New 6rleans waiting lo ship; Faircloth is on the
Fort Bridger.

�Pag* TMI

TUE SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, Daeember 30, 1949

MOBILE:—Chairman. J. Park­
cilities clean in the Hall. Meet­
er; Recording Secretary, J. Caring adjourned at 8d0 PM, with
roU, 50409; Reading Clerk, Har­
362 members present.
old Fischer, 59.
4 4 4
Minutes of meetings in other
NEW
YORKP—Chairman,
LindPORT
REG.
REa"
REG.
TOTAL
SHIPPED SHIPPED SHIPPED TOTAL
Branches read and concurred in.
DECK
ENG.
STWD8.
REG.
DECK
ENG;
STWDS. SHIPPED sey Williams, 21550; Recording
At this point Port Agent Taimer
Se^etary. Fr^die Stewart, 4935;
9
13
19
41
13
8
7
28 Reading Clerk, Eddie Mooney.
introduced Brother Gartman of Boston.
138
138
134
410
122
101
77
300
the Radio Technicians Union, New York
Minutes of other Branch meet­
64
39
Philadelphia.
43
146
32
13
26
71 ings read and approved, with
Local 1284. Gartman discussed
106
69
61
236
54
53
52
159 exception of Tampa New Busi­
the strike his imion is conduct­ Baltimore
48
50
33
131
2
1
3 ness containing committee rec­
ing against Station WABB. His Norfolk.
19
12
7
38
19
9
9
37 ommendations for renovation of
talk was well taken by all pres­ Savannah
14
11
9
34
16
18
15
49 building. Motion carried to non­
ent, and Brother Tanner urged Tampa.
78
53
Mobile
59
190
62
51
44 i
157 concur with this report in view
that we go on record, to support
70
72
92
234
87
78
95
260 of previous membership action
the Technicians Union in their New Orleans
47
37
Galveston
47
131
29
27
14
-• ^70 naming New York as next port
beef. The Agent also discussed
35 •
29
19
83
30
27
15
,
the status of shipping and named West Coast
.72 whose building is to be improv­
the vessels scheduled to arrive GRAND TOTAL
628
523
523
1,674
466
386
354
1,206 ed. Port Agent said that ship­
in port .during the next two
ping had been holding its own
weeks. He also reported on the
here, and that most sliips we;re
progress of the Union negotia­ on charges until all involved member-ship read and approved. tion. Motion carried to have oof- coming in shipshape. He also
tions for a Welfare Fund, and of can appear at a hearing at this Motions carried to ' accept and fee set installed here, as it is in cautioned men against fouling
the apparatus ^eing set up in Hall. One minute of silence in concur in minutes of other New York. Amendment recom­ up or drinking aboard- ship.
connection with the Cities Ser­ memory of deceased Union mem­ Branch meetings. Port Agent mending that coffee-making be Communications from men wish­
vice beef. Agent concluded his bers. Meeting adjourned at 7:30 said that shipping had been slow, taken care of by volunteers also ing to be excused from meeting
report by announcing - that the PM, with 134 members present. although a number of vessels carried. Meeting adjourned at were referred to the Dispatcher.
official reopening of the Hall
4i 4"
8125 PM with 375 bookruembers Secretary - Treasurer's financial
NORFOLK—Chairman, J. A.
would take place some time after
present.
report accepted as read. In re­
the first of the year, the exact Bullock, 4747; Recording Secre­
port
to the membership, Secre­
4 4 4
date of which would be set tary. J. L. Hodges, 50555: Read­
tary-Treasurer
discussed the sta­
BALTlMORE-^Chairman, Rex
shortly. Motion carried to adopt ing Clerk, B. P. Rees, 95.
tus
of
negotiations
with the op­
resolution on expulsion of Trot- Motions carried to accept as called on in-transit status. He Dickey, 652; Recording ~ Secre­ erators on the Union demand for
skyites and commie splinter read all Branch minutes of pre­ also named the ships scheduled tary, G. A. Masterson, 20297; an employer-financed welfare
groups. Motion carried that we vious meetings. Headquarters to arrive here during the next Reading Clerk, A1 Stansbury. plan. He said the Union negotireport to the membership read two weeks. He mentioned the 4683.
a'ting -committee was sticking to
and approved. Motion carried to Christmas dinner to be given in Motion carried to suspend, reg­
concur in Headquarters Rein­ the Hall on the holiday eve. ular order of business and go
statement Committee's report of Motions carried to accept Head­ into Obligations and charges. F.
November 23—December 6. Mo­ quarters Reinstatement Commit­ E. Walker, Macon Welsh and
tions carried to accept following tee's report and Balloting Com­ Paul D. Lawrence took the Uny
committee's reports: Port Bal­ mittee's report. Resolution to ex­ ion Oath of Obligation. Charges
loting Committee, Donations pel Trotskyites and other com­ read' and approved. Trial com­
donate $50 to Radio Technicians Committee and, the Tampa mie factions for their disruptivq mittees' decisions concurred in.
for use in their strike. Secretary- Branch Building Committee. Mo­ maneuvers was-adopted unanim­ Minutes of all Branches meet- its demand for one fund admin­
Treasurer's financial report and tion carried to adopt and .concur ously. Under Good and W^are ings-&gt;ead and approved, except istered by a committee reprO-.
Headquarters report to the mem­ in resolution calling for expul­ a rising vote of thanks was given for motions to non-concur with senting the Union, the operators
bership read and approved. Mo­ sion of Trotskyites for their dual to Mrs. Robertson, Mrs. Levy, Savannah and Galveston new and one impartial member. He
tion to adjourn carried at 9:45 and hostile activities within our Patrolman Robertson and Agent business. Resolution recommend­ reported that some operators
PM, with 255 members present. Union. Port Agent discussed the Morrison for their efforts in pro­ ing expulsion of Trotskyites for stressed a preference for their
status of shipping in this port, moting the Christmas dinner to their disruptive tactics was un­ own individual funds (.and were
SAVANN.lU»-^l^rman, Jim stating that this week a sharp be given here in the Hall. Meet­ animously adopted. Communica­ unwilling to contribute to an in­
Drawdy. 28523; Recording Sec­ drop was noted in the number ing adjourned at 7:20 PM, with tions read from several mem­ dustry-wide plan. The Secretarybers seeking to be excused from Treasurer stated that this would
retary, J. H. Babson. 31845; Read­ of job calls.. Communications 46 members in attendance.
meeting
were read and referred not be agreed to by the Union,
read from several members seek­
ing Clerk, J. Floyd, 50633.
4 4. 4
to
the
Dispatcher.
Headquarters because of the unnecessary ex­
Secretary-Treasurer's financial ing to be excused from meeting. NEW ORLEANS — Chairman.
report
to
the
membership
ac­ penses involved in duplication of
report read and approved. Port Motion carried to refer requests Major Costello, 114; Recording
cepted
as
read.
Port
Agent
spoke
detail work. He pointed out that
Secretary.
George
Allen,
114;
Agent said Southland was ex­ to Dispatchei'. One minute of
on
the
state
of
shipping
in
this
this would sap the reserves of
Reading
Clerk,
Buck
Stephens,
pected to payoff in Charleston silence in memory of departed
port.
Motion
carried
to
accept
the
welfare fund, which should
76.
December 22 to sign on foreign Brothers. Motion carried to ad­
Hosjiital
Committee's
report.
One
be
operated
with the least pos­
Minutes
of
previous
New
Or­
articles. Until the first of the journ at 8 PM, with 161 mem­
leans meeting and financial re­ minute of silence in memory of sible adn^inistrative expenditure.
year, shipping is expected to be bers present.
port read and accepted. Charges departed Brothers. Under Good Seveial members took the Union
slow, he said. Minutes of other
4. 4. 4.
Branch meetings read and ac­ PHILADELPHIA— Chairman. against crewmember of Del and Welfare there was discus­ Oath of Obligation. Meeting ad­
cepted, except for motion to non­ J. Sheehan, 306; Recording Sec­ Norte read and concun-ed in, and sion on keeping the sanitary fa­ journed at 8 PM.
concur with Galveston New Bus­ retary, C. Kimball, 52; Reading motion carried that all ports be
notified that these charges are
iness. Under Good and Welfare Clerk, William Click, 48741.
several questions were asked in Minutes of previous meetings pending in this port. Minutes of
regard to the Christmas, party in other Branches read and ac­ meetings in other Branches read
to be held in the Hall after the cepted. Motion carried to write and approved, with exception of
regular membership meeting. Mobile for clarification of motion Savannah New Business. Port
SIU, A&amp;G District
SUP
Motion carried to adjourn at made under New Business. Agent Agent said that shipping was
BALTIMGRE
14 North Coy St. HONOLULU
.16 Merchant St.
7:45 PM, with 75 members in at­ reported that shipping had slow­ slow but that affairs of port are William Rentz, Agent
Mulberry 4540
Phone 5-8777
tendance.
ed down quite a bit. Ships com­ in good shape. For the coming BOSTON
276 State St. PORTLAND
Ill W. Burnside St.
ing in were pretty clean, he said. two weeks, 10 payoffs scheduled Ben Lawson, Agent Richmond 2-0140
t
Beacon 4336
DispatcherRichmond 2-0141
BOSTON—Chairman, T. Flem­ The business of the port is in thus far. A new Hall has been
RICHMOND, CaUr.
257 5tll St.
308Vg—23rd St.
ing, 30821: Recording Secretary, good shape and the Agent added opened in Lake Charles, he said. GALVESTON
Phone 25^
Keith Alsop, Agent
Phone 2-8448
B. Prine; Reading Clerk, B. Law- that, a lot of new faces are be­ The address is 1419 Ryan Street MOBILE
59 Ciay St.
1 South ' Lawrence St. SAN FRANCISCO
Douglas £-8383
son, 894.
Phone 2-1754
ing seen in the port. Secretary- and Brother Johnny Johnston is Cal Tanner, Agent
NEW
ORLEANS.
823
Bienville
St.
SEATixE
86 Seneca St.
in
charge.
The
Agent
invited
all
Minutes of previous meetings Treasurer's financial report and
Main 0260
in all Branches approved as report to the membership read members, their wives, and fam­ E. Sheppard, Agent Magnolia 6112-6113
NEW YORK
.51 Beaver St. WILMINGTON...... .440 Avaion Bivd.
read, except for motion to non­ and approved. Motion carried to ilies to the Christmas Eve- party Joe Algina, Agent
HAnover 2-2784
Terminal 4-3131
concur with new business of adopt resolution branding Trot­ to be held in the Hall here. NORFOLK
127-129 Bank St.
Phone 4-1083
Savannah Branch. Motion car­ skyites and commies as dual and Communications from Brothers Ben Rees, Agent
337 Market St.
Canadian District
ried to concur in Agent's report hostile and calling for their ex­ asking to be excused were re­ PHILADELPHIA
J. Sheehan, Agent
Market 7-1635
in which the status of shipping pulsion to prevent their further ferred to the Dispatcher. Reso­ SAN
404 Le Moyne SL
FRANCISCO
:.. .85 Third St. MONTREAL..
in this port was discussed. Sec­ attempts to divide our Union. lution to expel Trotskyites and Jeff Morrison, Agent Douglas 2-5475
UNiversity 2427
SAVANNAH
2 Abercorn St. FORT WILUAM. .llS'/g Syndicate Ave.
retary-Treasurer's report and Brother Joseph P. Merkel, Book
Jim Drawdy, Agent
Phone 3-1728
Ontario
Phone 3-322t
Headquarters report to the mem­ No. 32519, took the Union Oath
SEATTLE
2700 Ist Ave.
HAUFAX
iZBVt Hoilis St.
bership read and approved. Mo­ of Obligation. Motion carried to
Wra. McKay, Agent
Seneca 4570
Phone 3-8911
tion carried to adopt resolution refer communications from ab­
TAMPA
..1809-1811 N. Franklin St.
PORT
COLBORNE
103
Durham St.
calling for expulsion of Trotsky- sentees to the Dispatcher. 250
Ray White, Agent
Phone M-1323
Phone: 5591
ates and other commie splinter members were present when a commies was read. The resolu­ WILMINGTON, CaUf., 227 »/g Avaion Blvd.
lllA JarvJa St.
E. B. Tiliey, Agent
Terminal 4-2874 TORONTO
igroups which have been seeking motion carried to adjourn.
tion was adopted by a unanim­ HEADQUARTERS. . 51 Beaver St., N.Y.C.
Eigin 5719
4o undermine the Union's con­
4 .4. 4'
SECRETARY-TREASURER
ous. vote. Headquarters repdrt to
VICTORIA, B.C. ... .602 Boughton St.
tinued drive for gi-eater security SAN FRANCISCO—Chairman. the membership read and ap­
Paul Hall
Empire 4531
-DIRECTOR OF ORGANIZATION
for the - membership. Charges M. Bernstein, 2257; Recording proved. Motion carried to. reac­
VANCOUVER.
568 HamUton Sfc
Lindsay WUilams
against member accused of being Secretary, P. M. Robertson, 30,- tivate books of Melvin Schrade
' Pacific 7634
ASST. SECRETARY-TREASURERS
drunk on gangway watch and 148; Reading Clerk, Jeff Morri­ and Salvatore Candela." George
HEADQUARTERS.,... v .512 McGUl St.
Robert Matthews
J. P. Shuler
pilfering stores were read, and son, 34213. ^
Montreal
Plateau 676
. Joseph Voipian
Duxworth and Thomas Hyde
a motion carried to hold him Headquarters report to the took the Union Oath of Obliga-

A&amp;G Shipping From DOG 7 TO Dot, 21

Directory Of SIU Halls

�THE SiEAFARERS LOG

Fxiday, December 30, 1948

Page Fleren

la

I

WIMT
tttllMK.,

•

1

QUESTION: The membership has called for discussion on the advisability of setting
up a credit union within the Union. What do you think of the plan?

JOHN JELLETTE, Sleward;
We seamen are quite apart
^•rom the rest of the world beicsuse of the nature of our work.
We're in a port for a payoff, then
out. We don't get to banks be­
cause we don't have time or be­
cause we're not ^ure when we'll
^et back there. I think that it is
fitting and proper that we have
^ banking system of our own
which will permit us to save
conveniently and to draw such
funds as we may need at any
|&gt;ort where the SIU has a
Branch. It would encourage us to
accumulate money. Then, when
we're in need, the rest would be
ioasy. I'm for anything that builds
security fpr seamen.

-LAN MACDONALD, AB:
There are plenty of factors in
favor of such a plan. A credit
union is protected by a Federal
Agency, just like banks are. If
we had such an organization, it
is likely that-'we could borrow
money at a rate of interest con­
siderably lower than that charg­
ed by commercial banks. It
would provide an incentive for
seamen to save money by mak­
ing deposits at the payoff. He
would then have a xtaeasure of
security in the event of need
during a strike, lockout or per­
sonal emergency. It might even
be possible to make allotments
to personal accounts in the credit
union, an excellent way-.of saving.~ .

W. J. HEIDY, Steward:

ROBERT MCNAY, FWT:

ORLIE PRICE, Bosun:

MARJAN REINKE, DM:

A good idea, I'd say. I'm in
favor of a credit union which
a man can join by buying shares.
As a responsible member, he
would then be entitled to bor­
row if he needed money. But I
don't think anyone should get
the idea that a credit union is
just an easy way to make a
touch. If everyone favoring the
idea understood that he would
have to contribute his share, and
participate in its administration,
there would be little confusion.
And it could be made to work
with a minimum of effort. It all
depends on the guys who join
up. If they are serious and con­
scientious the plan can work.

I first saw mention of this
topic in the SIU Overseas Bul­
letin while 'I was aboard ship,
and it was roundly discussed by
the crew. The consensus was that
we didn't think it could work.
The majority of men were afraid
that a lot of guys might think
they could make a good' thing
out of a credit union, and thus
spoil its chances for success.
They might borrow whether they
needed money or not, and too
many loan ai^lications would
pile up. I want to say that the
fact that this matter was' brought
to our attention by the Bulletin
proves the value of this over­
seas news sheet.

I think that if it were possible
to get a credit union working,
it would give a man a chance
to fall back on something when
the going got a bit rough finan­
cially. Speaking for myself, I've
found that I could use a few
bucks to tide me over until the
next ship currives; because I
didn't put some cash away after
a payoff. Somehow, a guy doesn't
always get around to sticking a
buck in the bank. If we had a
credit union and I could bank
at the port of payoff, I'd salt
something away. Then, if I
needed some dough, I'd have
something to' fall back on. I
think it's a pretty good idea.

If a fellow should need money
immediately—maybe for medical
expenses for his family — the
credit union could be a big help
to him. It is much better than
having to rely on loan sharks
or the pawn shops. I know fel­
lows who had to put everything
in hock when such an emergency
came up in their families. We dis.
cussed the idea aboard the Steel
Voyager, and I believe most of
the crew was in favor of such
a plan. In the ouiports, a credit
union would make it possible for
a man to get his money without
a long wait, and he could de­
posit it in any port he happened
to be in.

PETER KARAS, AB:

CLARENCE SANSOM, Steward:

DON WILLIAMS, MM;

JAMES DUBOSE, AB:

The credit union sounds like
it means the end to red tape in
getting loans for seamen. A man's
financial status is easily known
and his ability to pay can easily
be determined through the gen­
eral shipping picture. The low
rate of interest—about one per­
cent—sounds very attractive. I
would join such a set-up with­
out hesitation. With a credit un­
ion a fellow can bank in his
Union Branch, without having to
run all over town to find a reg­
ular savings bank. All of his
business could be transacted in
one port under one roof. Bank­
ing in the Union Hall would en­
courage thrift among Seafarers
—a good idea in itself.

A credit union has a* particu­
lar appeal to me, and it will ap­
pear attractive to a majority of
members. For example, we are
all acquainted with that uncom­
fortable experience of riding a
train across the country after a
payoff, with a big roll of bills.
If we had a credit union, all
we'd have to do is stop in at
the nearest SIU Hall in the pay­
off port, unload our cash and
pick it up when it is needed in
another port. Under such a set­
up, there'd be no more need to
chase around for a d&gt;ank and
travellers checks. And better
still, there'd be no more un­
necessary risks in. carrying pay­
off money around.

While I don't understand the
idea of credit unions fully, I
have a pretty good idea of how
they work and setting one up
within our Union sounds like a
good idea to me. As I see it, a
credit union would mean that
a man belonging to it would
have a branch office of his bank
in every port where there is an
SIU Hall. I'm from New Orleans,
but ship out of New York, and
I would have real trouble trying
to cash a personal check in a
city wliere no one knows me and
I have no bank 'account. This
sounds like the answer to a
seaman's money problems, that
arise as he moves -around the
counh^. ..

1 have discussed this idea of
establishing a credit union with­
in our org'anization with a num­
ber of people. As a result, I
learned that several other unions
have tried out such a plan, wiih
disastrous resuLts. Should we set
up a credit union and something
goes wrong, it would cast a re­
flection on our Union and not
on the guys in charge of the
credit union. The point is that
credit unions are one thing—^ruu
by members who join them vol­
untarily. They are the ones re­
sponsible. I am against anything
thai mii^it met turn out well andi
reflect wffairly on ffie BIU.

�Page Twelve

THE

SEAFARERS

LOG

Friday, December 30. 1843

&amp;^ort Of four SfU Affiliotes
Buoys Spkits Of Betoil Clerics
Ami Streugtheus Pkketiiues
Their spirits buoyed by the presence of crewmember3
off the SS Florida and members of the SIU's affiliated
unions, AFL Retail Clerks are funding the picketlines
in Miami, Fla., determined to win a bitter fight for decent
wages and conditions for the employees of the Tip-Top
grocery stores.
The support the seafaring and allied workers of the
SlU are giving the Retail Clerks Union springs from their
conviction that the legitimate economic beefs of one AFU
pnion are the concern of all.

Miami is witnessing a sound demonstration of AFL trade union cooperation in Retail
Clerks' strike, as shown by pickets signs in photo above.

These-picketing men of the SIU's Atlantic and Gulf
District, Sailor's Union of the Pacific, Marine Allied
Workers and Brotherhood of Marine Engineers know that
a defeat for the Retail Clerks would be a defeat for the
cause of trade unionism everywhere. In short, they know;
the score.
Most of the SS Florida crewmembers, whose vessejl
runs between Havana and Miami, are veterans of im­
portant SIU beefs, among them the P&amp;O strike and the
1946 General Strike. Sparked by Ship's Delegate Mario
Reyes these Seafarers volimtarily turn to on the RetaU
Clerks picketlines everytime the ship hits port.
Christmas being a particularly tough time for a man
to be on the bricks, the Florida crew held a tarpaulin
muster, the proceeds of which were turned over to the
Retail Clerks to enable them to have as decent a holiday;
as possible under the circumstances.
The Retail Clerks Union representative in Miami haS
expressed deep appreciation and high, praise for the Sea­
farers' support in the Miami^ beef. He said that if other
unions in Miami would lend one-tenth of the aid given
by SIU men, the strike could be won in 24 hours.
As several SIU men on the Retail Clerks' picketlind
put it: "The fight for union conditions should be the
business of every man and woman who enjoys the advan­
tages of working under a union contract.

Christmas trees stand outside struck Tip-Top market but that's as close as the store
owners come to demonstrating good will to all men.

Signs of Iwo pid^bls maicWiig in front of the anti-union
Tip-Top shop toU passorsby of the MJLWs and SUP's support.

"And if working people who need a helping hand in'
an important beef can't turn to their brother unionists,
where else can they expect to get support?"
,

Identification of men did not accompany these photos, but all of these pickets were out on
the line in the name of gpod trade unioxdsm.
Retail Clerks are asking people of Miami not to patronise Tip-Top groceries because pro­
prietors refuse to bargain in good faith with the union.

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="6">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42897">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1939-1949</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42898">
                  <text>Volumes I-XI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42900">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42901">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="9944">
                <text>December 30, 1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10000">
                <text>Vol. XI, No. 34</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10021">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10042">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10102">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10120">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10184">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
CTMA'S REQUEST FOR NEW ELECTION DENIED BY NLRB&#13;
NLRB SAYS 'NO' TO STOOGING CTMA&#13;
BRANCHES AND CREWS CONDEMN TROTSKYITES&#13;
SIU, OPERATORS NEAR AGREEMENT ON WELFARE PLAN&#13;
GULF FISHERMEN GROUP TO JOIN WITH SEAFARERS&#13;
SIU BULLETIN ENDS NEWS BLACKOUT&#13;
LOOKING FORWARD&#13;
MOBILE STRESSES IMPORTANCE OF ELECTIONS&#13;
PRE-XMAS BOOM HELPS SAVANNAH&#13;
LITTLE TO REPORT FROM PHILADELPHIA&#13;
UNANIMOUSLY PASSED RESOLUTION DECLARES TROTSKYITES ARE 'ENEMIES OF OUR UNION'&#13;
TROTSKYITES RAISE CRY OF 'SIU GOONISM' TO HIDE OWN REIGN OF TERROR IN SEATTLE&#13;
SOUTHWIND MEN JUMP INTO VACATION DEBATE, URGE SIX-MONTH LIMIT ON SHIPBOARD STAYS&#13;
SEATRAIN TEXAS, FREIGHTER CRASH IN NEW YORK HARBOR&#13;
MOTHER OF LATE SEAFARERS THANKS CREW FOR TRIBUTE&#13;
SEAFARERS HELP STRIKE OF MIAMI CLERKS</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10185">
                <text>12/30/1949</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13072">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="65">
        <name>1949</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="976" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="2326">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/3df30c09d2cbcffad639c2a191071f3a.pdf</src>
        <authentication>545af2b388c529682d1834175a835801</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="48526">
                    <text>Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf  Disiricf, Seafarers International Union of  NA 
VOL.  XII 

NEW  YORK,  N.  Y.,  FRIDAY,  JANUARY  13,  1950 

No.  1 

Talfyb^ Committee Cheeks Votes

SlU Welfare Plan; 
Pattern Is Set 
NEW  YORK—The  Atlantic  and  Gulf  Oistrict 
of  the  Seafarers  International  Union  became  the 
first  seamen's  organization  on  the  East  and  Gulf 
coasts  to win a company­financed  welfare plan  foY 
its  members  in  an  agreement  signed  with  nine 
steamship companies on December 28. 
Although  Seafarers  will  not  contribute  to the 
welfare fund,  the agreement  calls for  joint admin­
istration  by  a  committee  representing  the  Union 
and  the  operators. 
" 
Under terms of  the contract, each operator wi!! 

contribute  into  a  common  fund®­
the  sum  of  25  cents  per  day  for  pany,  Seatrain  Lines,  Waterman 
each  man  employed  aboard  its  Steamship  Corporation  and  Sea­
vessels.  Payments  to  the  fimd  traders,  Incorporated. 
oecame  pay&amp;ble  as  of  January  After  representatives  of  the 
nine  companies  had  signed  on 
I  of  this  year. 
Subcomjmittees representing the  the  dotted  line,  the  Unim  Ne­
Union  and  the  shipowners  wfll  gotiating  Committee  pointed  out 
meet  within  the  next  few  days  that  the  ice  had  been  cracked 
to  work  out  details  of  the  plan, 
(ProTlsIcns  of  the  recently­
including  the  types  of  benefits, 
signed 
welfare  plan  agreement 
method  of  administration  and 
and 
the SIU 
Negotiating  Com­
eligibility  requirements  for  ben­
mittee's 
analysis 
begins  on 
eficiaries. 
page 
3.) 
Companies  which  signed  the 
welfare  agreement  are  the  Alcoa 
Steamship  Company,  A.  H.  Bull  and  that  the  rest  of  th^ SIU's 
Steamship  Company,  Construc­ 52  contracted­companies  could 
tion Aggregates  Corporation,  Cu­ be  expected  to  follow  the  pat­
ba  Distilling  Company,  Seas  ton. 
Shipping  Company(  Robin  Line),  Arrangements  have  already 
South  Atlantic  Steamship  Com­ been  made  with  the  remaining 
companies  for  further  meetings 
on  the  Union's  welfare  plan  de­
In  photo  left,  taken  at  the  mand.  The  Negotiating  C(»nmit­
January  4  meeting.  Stewards  tee  will  donand  that  all  pay­
Department  nominees  line  ments  will  have  to  be  retroac­
stage  as  tilers  count  raised  tive  to  January  1,  so  thqt  &lt;^)e­
books  'for  Jack  (Ausisie) 
rators  will  have  no  incentive  to 
Shrimpton,  who  identities  him­
delay  in  agreeing  to  the  plan. 
self  by  holding  up  his  hand. 
Basing  its  estimate  on  the 
The  same  procedure  was  fol­
number  of  jobs  now  being filled 
lowed  for  each  department,  as  by  the  SIU,  Headquarters  said 
commiiiee  was  elected  from  that  close  to  $1,000,000  would  be 
among the  13  nominees. 
paid  into  the  fund  by  the  end 
of  the  current  year. 
The  agreement  signed  by  the 
nine  companies  stipulates  that 
»•  

Members  of  the  TaUying  Commitiee,  elected  from  Ihe floor  of  the  regular  Headquarter! 
membership  meelng  on  January  4,  as  they  checked  over  ballots  In final 
of  annual 
A&amp;G  District  election  results.  Around  the  table  from  left  to  right:  M.  Colucd  (Deck),  Charles 
Kimball  (Deck),  Lars  HiUerts  (Engine),  Donald  Mease  (Stewards),  Edward  Mcteney  (Stewards) 
and  Frank  Rose  (Engine). 
­ft 

A&amp;G  District 
Backs Annual 
Polio  Drive 
•   The  SIU  is  again  backing  the 
annual  March  of  Dimes  drive  of 
the  National  Foimdation  for  In­
fantile  Paralysis,  and  has  joined 

' 

J 

vvcuuc: 

lij 'iG  rt^if^in'' 

iuciiib6i.ahip support  of  the Foun­
effect  for  not  less  than five 
dation's  appeal  for financial  con­
years. 
tributions. 
In  announcing  the  new  agree­
A&amp;G' District  Secretary­Trea­
ment,  members  of  the  Negotiat­
surer  Paul  Hall  is  a  member  of 
ing  Commitee  repeated  a  belief 
the  Foundation's  Labor  Commit­
expressed  earlier  that  the  ship­
tee,  in  the  campaign  which  con­
owners  obviously  were  satisfied 
tinues from  January  6  to 13. 
with  the  efficient  handling  of 
their  ships  by  SIU  crews  and 
Last  year's  record  epidemic 
therefore  offered  no  major  op­
has  virtually  exhausted  the 
position  to  the  welfare  propos^ 
Foundation's  funds  in  caring  for 
infantile  paralysis  victims,  and 
it  is  hoped  that  the  drive  will 
be  sufficiently  successful  to  en­
able  the  important  work  to  be 
carried  on. 
NRW  YORK,  Jan.  11  —  The  Secretary ­ Treasurers,  10  Port  membership  meeting  of  Jan.  4.  not  have  been  as  widely  known 
The  Foundation's  Labor  Divi­ elected  officials  who  will  admin­ Agents,  and  15  Port  Patrolmen.  Thirteen  nominees  competed  for  as  others. 
sion  informed  the  SIU  that  it  ister  the  affairs  of  the  SIU's  At­
Among  the  incoming  office­ the  six  committee  posts. 
Preparation  for  the  election  of 
maintains  a  year­round  sbrvice  lantic  and  Gulf  District  were an­ holders  %re  one  new  Assistant 
officers  for  1950  got  imder  way 
Committeemen 
and­the 
depart­
for  members  of  organized  labor  nounced  today  by  the  Tallying  Secretary­Ti­easurer,  three  new 
last  September,  with  the  adop­
and  their  families  in  the  event  Committee  in  its  report  of  re­ Port  Agents  and  five  new  Port  ments  they  represented  were  tion  of  the  customary  resolution 
Charles 
Kimball 
and 
M. 
Colucci, 
polio  strikes. 
sults  of  the  election  concluded  Patrolmen. 
Deck;  Lars  HUlertz  and  Frank  calling  for  Union­wide  nomina­
This  service'  includes  paying  on  December  31. 
Bose, 
Engine,  and  Donald  Mease  tions  and  designating  the  posi­
for  hospital  costs,  transportation, 
Of  the  29  Union  positions fill­
and 
Edward 
Mooney,  Stewards.  tions  to  be filled  in  the  balloting. 
(The 
complete 
list 
of 
suc­
purchase  of  equipment,  medical 
ed  in  the  election,  nine  will  be  cessful  candidates,  the  of­
Of  the  54  men  nominated  be­
treatment,  wheelchairs  and  other  taken  on  by  men  who  replace 
Continuing  the  practice  start­
fore  the  deadline  date,  seven 
"  orthopedic  appliances. 
ficial 
vote 
tabulation 
and 
the 
ed 
several 
years 
ago, 
the 
SEA­
present  officeholders. 
Calling  for  increasing  financial 
FARERS  LOq  of  October  21  were  disqualified  by  the  Creden­
Tally  Conunittee's  report  be­
The 
committee's 
report, 
which 
help  for  the  Foundation,  AFL 
printed  the  biographical  sketch­ tials  Conimittee  for  failing  to 
gin  on  page  6.) 
will 
be 
submitted 
to 
the 
mem­
President  Green  cited  the  fact 
es  and  photographs  submitted  by  meet  the  Constitutional  require­
bership 
at 
all 
Branch 
meetings 
that  the  number  of  polio  victinrs 
the  candidates  for  office.  Tliis  ments  for  candidates. 
on 
January 
18, 
contains 
the com­
had  skyrocketed  in  the  past 
Serving  on  the  Tally  Commit­ feature  was  adopted  ar a  means  Throughout  the  elections  the 
yeai'j  with  "many  of  the  chil­ plete  vote  tabulation. 
tee  were  six  i*ank  and file  Union  of  aiding  the  membership  in  ac­ SIU  urged  menib^  to  exi&gt;r«;isfr 
dren .of  working  people"  among  Polling  began  on  November  1,  members,  two  from  each  of  the  quainting  themselves  with  the  their  voting  rights,  so  that  the 
the  afflicted. 
with  the  ballot  listing  47  candi­ three  departments  —  Deck,  En­ candidates  and  their  qualifica­ final  results  woul^  as  near  as 
He  said  "the  need  is.. very  dates  for  office,  The  ballot  called Igine  and  Stewards — who  were  tions,  particularly  those  who  possible,  indicate 
preferences 
great"  to  help  the  victims  of  this  for  the  aiectibff  of  one  Secre­ elected  by  a  "sho\y­of­book vote"  were  running  for  office  for  the  of  the  majority  of  the  active 
disease. 
tary ­ Treasurer,  three  Assistant  at  the  regular  Headquarters  first  time  and  consequently  may  member^p. 

Tally Committee Annouaces A&amp;G Officials For 1950

I. 

A'.­, ­V.­?vV 

: 

�rrg:,; "vi"• ­. 
"'St  . 

Two 

SEAI'ARERS  LOG 
Published  Every  Other Week  by  the 

SEAFARERS  INTERNATIONAL  UNION 
OF  NORTH  AMERICA 
Atlanticr and Gulf  District 
Affiliated  with  the  American  Federation  o£  Labpr 
. At  51  Beaver  Street,  New York  4,  N. Y. ' 
HAnover  2­2784 
Reentered  As  second  class  matter  August  2,  1949,'at  the  Post 
Office  in  New  York,  N.Y.,  under  the  Act  of  August  24,  1912. 
267 

Building  Together 
No trade  union  can  build  a  strong  organization  cap­
able  of  paying  o|F  for  its  membership  in  terms  of  good 
wages,decent  working  conditions  and  increasing  job 
Security,  unless  these  same  members  are  interested  and 
active  in  building  a  better  future  for  themselves. 
Sure,  a  union  can  muddle  along  from  year  to  year, 
picking  up  a  gain  here  and  one  there  without  the  active 
help of  its members.  Maybe  that  kind  of  "progress" suits 
some  but  it  is  an  injustice  to  the  membership,  and  most 
certainly  hoc  in  strict  accordance  with  the  needs  and 
purposes  of  a  labor  organization.  Under  such  policies, la 
union  membership  must  eventually  say:  "Just ^ where  are 
we  going—^if  we're  going  anywhere?" 
^ 
When  a  union  membership  reaches  that  state  of 
bewilderment,  they're stagnating. Brother. 
In  the  Seafarers,  our  policies  are  based  on  the  in­
disputable  fact  that,  unless  a  union  is  alive  and  kicking, 
it's  not  going  to  be  able  to  build  anything  in  the  shape 
of  a  better  living  for  its  members.  In  short,  we  Seafarers 
believe  that  a  union should  be dynamic.  And  we  not only 
believe,  we  also  know,  that  it  is  the  membership  that  is 
ultimately  responsible  for  building  the  dynamic  machine 
a  union  should  be. 
Anybody knows  that  a  Skipper, can chart  a  beautiful 
course,  but  that's  as  far  as  he'll  get  to  anyplace,  unless 
he has a heads­up crew  to move his ship. 
/  Getting  right  down'to it,  wc  of  the  Seafarers  have 
­tv the kind  of  membership  which  sees  to it  that  their ^Unioh  NEW  ORLEANS  HOSPITAL 
J.  G.  HARRIS 
eRIACQ  ESOLAN 
C. 
BISCARL 
C. 
MARTttEE^ 
J.  J.  O'NEILL 
goes  ahead  and  in  the  right  direction. 
E. 
ACHiLLEa 
DUSAN 
DE  DinSIN 
We are endowed  with a  membership that  ranks at  the  J.  PENNIS 
F. 
CAMPELL 
M. J. LUCAS 
LANDRY 
top of  any  list  of  hep  trade  union  people.  Our  member­ F. 
E F. MeGOWAN 
jbSEPH  F.  GAMBLICH 
H.  LAGAN  . 
V  ­
%C;MELOY 
NICHOLAS 
CORATTI 
ship  is  a  smooth  blenp  of  alert,  aggfessiv^ yoimgsters  and  D.  LANG 
. 
i 
H.  L.  SOUZA 
L. E ROZUM 
• 
seasoned,  sharp  oldtimers—both  vitally  interested  in  pre­ L.  WILLIS 
C. 
W. 
GOODWIN 
CHAR7JSS 
HAW\^R 
serving  and  developing  the  Union  that  is  their  comipon  P.ROBERTS 
P.  E.  DARRQUGH 
H. J. OUT 
A.  MAUFFRAY 
:  " 
bond. 
V.  J. RIZZUTO 
'G.L.HAND 
N.  I WEST 
­­
• p vrvPTrA'TTKr  _ 
And  our  guvs  believe  in  oaviog  more  than 
JTA.mrPg  P  • MAPIK­PT 
rvicft 
W.  J,  HACKETT 
EUGmE  LADHIIRE 
to  the  principles of  trade  unionisAii.  X^y  m  a»»d  dsy  out,  O.  HOWELL 
E. 
F. 
PAUL 
HENRY 
WATSON 
they give  evidence  of  the  fact^ that  they don't  want  poli­ J.  JUSTUS 
/ 
­
HENRY 
JOHNSON 
R. 
C. 
PIEHCE 
R, 
HOLLAND 
cies*  of  the  muddling  kind  that  get  you  nowhere  in  a 
JOSEPH 
ARRAS 
* 
% 
burry.'They  wa^it  to  move  ahead  themselves^and  they  lA  LACHAPELL 
L D. 
DIEUDONlfE 
MOaaE  HOSPITAL 
MINKLER 
want  the  rest  of  the  trade  union  movement  to  move  Hr 
ft. ft 
W.  HUNT 
O.  THOMPSON 
ahead so  the sledding will  be easier  for all  working  men. 
NEPQNSiT  HQSPn'AL 
W..­LAMB 
J.  STEWART 
If  you  need  any evidence of  the Seafarers'  conviction  F.  SHIMELFEING 
WILUAM  PADGETT 
/ 
P.  BURROUGHS 
MATTHEW  BRUNO 
: 
that they're hitched up with the destiny of  organized labor  J.  TASSIN 
R.  FOSTER 
JOSE  DB JESUS 
L.  HOWARD 
OYerywhere,  just  take  a  look  at  their  record  of  support  of  S.  L.  GRICE 
J. M. 
LANCASTER 
K.  LEE 
H.  WESTPHAL 
other unions  in  New  Yorkj'Tampa, Mobile,  New  Orleans,  L.  TICKEL 
B. E, 
LUFLIN 
^ ­
T.  BURKE 
pn  the  West  Coast,  in  Canada  and  elsewhere ­r­ unions  L.  DANTIN  " •   • 
EST^^ P.  LOPEZ  " 
A.  BRYANT 
wliose  affiliation  they don't  question, eitheir,  be  they CJQ,  R.  MORTON 
CHARLES L,  MOATS  :  i 
.  % 
DANZEY; •  " 
PEDRO  G.  ORTIZ 
AFL  or  independent. 
W.  ROBERTS 
ft 
R. REDDEST 
J. 
MCELROY 
And  if  you  need  any evidence  of  Seafarers'  penetrat­
SAVANNAH  HOSPITAL 
R.  A. RATCLIFP 
W.  MAUTERSTOCK 
ing interest  in their  own Union,  just  look at the way  they  J. 
J.  J.  CERDA 
THOMAS  WADSWORTt 
SYNNOTT 
A.  T.  MOLAN 
have stepped  up participation  in  all  phases of  the  Union's  J.  P.  PHUGH'  •  
R. A. BT«Alh&gt;JB&lt; 
W/ GENTY 
a^airs  in  the  past  few  years.  L&lt;wk  atf  the  pages, of  the  H.  FLUENCE 
L. BALLESTEBO 
CLYDE  LASETER 
JOHN  T. EDWARDS 
J 
SEAFARERS  LOG  and  see  how  members  are  discussing  C.  LYONS 
ft ft ft 
E. FERRER 
the  issues  aflfecting  the  general  welfare,  discussions  that 
SAN  FRANCISCO  HOSPITAL 
lir 
L H. FRENCH 
•  •   • •   ..1 
ultimately  provide  the  base  for many  union  policies.  . 
BALTIMORE  HOSPITAL 
J.  KEENAN 
JOSEPH SPAULDING 
Or observe an even more accurate indicator—the vot­ E.  HARRISON 
J.  BARNHART 
JOSEPH  SILLAK 
ing results, always  a good  barometer of  membership inter­ W.  A.  BREWER 
A.  CAUDRA 
UHS  TORRES 
ii 
T.  ISAKSEN 
L; TULL 
est.  New  Orleans,  for  instance,  this  year  registered  more  G.  W.  VINER  .  ­
FRED  ZESIGER 
T  ^ 
ft ft ft 
XJnion voters in the recently­concluded election  than  were  A.  WRIGHT  * 
STATEN  ISLAND  HOSPITAL  '  . 
L. 
HIGHSMITH 
•  .  ft  Z, ft  •   •   ­
polled  in  the  entire  Atlantic  and  Gulf  District  back  in  F.  JUDAH,  JR. 
• I  f 
MOSES 
MORR 
I
S 
1944.­­ 
' 
W.  D.  WARMACK 
H.  E.  LOQE 
MARTIN  BLUM 
^  ^  ^ 
Maybe Seafarers are not always  aware of  it but, in the  D.  H.  BRIJNIE 
^ 
J.  J.  O'CONNOR 
JOSEPH  LIGHTFQOT  •   ^ 
course  of  expressing  their  day­to­day  interest  on  immed­ a MATTSSON 
C.  E.  SANCHEZ 
::WILLMM 
­
J. 
MALINOWSKI 
, 
SAMUEL 
JONAS 
iate  issues,  diey  have  been  budding  the  kind  of  union 
CLARENCE  D.  SKILLY 
F CHRISTY 
L.  F. BARNA 
'  : 
P. SMITH 
that is  strong enough  to bring  them  the economic  benefits  A. 
V/ATEMVIAN^  •  
D.  P.  GBUNAS 
CHDLOW 
WOODS 
that are tops in the maritime industfy. 
&gt; 
•  :G: . A^ CARROLL: • 
^ 
FRANK' NEAKNG^^' 
DONALD MsdaONALD  ^ 
­ 
It's  no  wonder  that  Seafarers^are  mnving  aherdl  •   , 
'MASTERS:?:;: 
''RICHARD' QRALlCKr 
"• A; McGUICfAN  '  :  '  . 

Htm In The Marine Hospitate 

r. 

.;.t'r .  •  

r' ;•   ' 1,'. 

�2rilf­s«4f 4I8|^«S 

lHTROO.yCTiQN:  If  ^ fp.  ij^f  P^i9ff4 
tfcfff  f|ie ffa#  eMl^ed woM on IAIS Welfare P/oe end Aos finally negotiated
«fc»?es  o/  Me  V^/fore  Pteii 
9^19^99%  ^cus$ed  9f  o«r  fba t^^yfin,^ r^on,frasf,.
- l^r b.ryyify, as wall as for clarity, this report shaH be
Ififoraoflonai Cenireafi'on &gt; 
o#  fW, 
dealf y^lfb seriafum, and each secflon of the contract itself
If  wee egreed  by  ydri^J^tM^p, gi o«f  felereg^iigf  shaU be falliowed by. an anakysh by the committee.
The committee emphasizes the fact that the Welfare
Maf  we  would ooiqmeeee  MN 
ew  «e«P  le&lt;||Mle« 
Plan Is to b^ entirely paid for by the companies. Not one
In  //no  with  this  pro^||^, 
CominlMee  cent Is contributed by the Union or the membership.
PPNTRACT 
resentatives  of  the  Union  will  meet  at  regular 
Agreement  made'this  28th  day  o£  Deeember  "«®'wal»  »»  times  and,  phtees  mutually  ^tlsfac­
1949  by  and  between  Seafarers  Int^tati,^  SrtieLtT  ?v. T rf  ,'n  P, ''  °1 
U^iion  of  North  America,  Atlantic  and  Gulf  Dis­  Pa^ticipatrng  in  the  Plan;  how  the Flap  shall  be 
%ict,  hereinafter  referred  to  as  "Union,"  and  administered,  i.e.,  through  a  trust  agreen\ent,  or 
company;  provteions 
Alcoa  Steamship  Co.;  A.  H.  Bull  Steamshin  Ca­  a  trust  or  insurance  aimpany; 
provBion  for 
__ 
Baltimore­Insular  Line;  Cuba  Distilling  Co.;  Seas  non­^«Pli&lt;»tion  of  benefits;  and  such  other  mat­
Shipping  Co.;  Seatraders,  Inc.;~Seat?air'Lkie7 
necessary  and  appropriate  for  the 
South  Atlantic  Steamship  Co.;  and  Waterman / 
^ 
Welfare  Plan. 
Steamship  Co.;  hereinafter  jointly  and  severally 
COMMITTEE'S  ANALYSIS  ' 
9aj[led  "Company.' 
It  is to  pointed out  once again  to  the member­
COMMITTEE'S  ANALYSIS 
ship  that  your  Negotiating  Committee's  fl^t  ob­
The  membership  will  note  thai  this agreement  jective  in  these  negotiations  was  to  have,  the 
shipowners  agree  to  the  actual  payment  of  a 
ds  Signed  with  onl^  nine  SIU  contracted  cgm­ Vy^lfare  Fund. 
panlMr  even  though  the  UnSpn  has  under  con­
XW  Committee  felt  that  once  we  had  estab­
tract  approximately  5ft  off­shore  steamship  com­
lish^ the  principles of  a  Welfve  Fund  and  the 
ly "panlea.  The  membersh^ is  toj be  made awa?re.  of 
bad  actually  commenced  paying  into 
Aa fact  that,  in  line with previous l^nl^a action 
­.U, 
th,^ the 
details of  the  Welfare  Ftmd,  Le.,  the 
when  negotiating  with  steamship  cony^l^ 

COMMITTEE'S  ANALYSIS 
^ay  shall  not  be  frosen  for  the  Hee­year  term 
of  the  Welfare  Plan.  T* 
It  means,  instead.,  that  the 
25c  shall  only  remain  frozen  until  Sept.  30,  1951, 
On  that  day,  we  shall  be  able  to  re­negotiate  on 
the  matter  of  the  25c  if  we  at  that  time  desire 
an  increase  in  same.  In  any  event, ^regardless  of 
the  fact  we do have the right  to re­negotiate  ihe 
25c on  Sept. 30,  1951,  the  Welfare  Plan  itself  and 
the  benefits  derived  from  it.  shall  remain  in  ef­
fect  for  the  full  5­year  term.  The  last  seulencf 
in this clause means  that  once the  Union and  opr 
erators  heve  agreed  that  certain  items,  such  aa 
death  benefits,  etc..  shall  be  paid  from  the  Wel­
fare  Fund,  that  the  Union  will  not  in  addition 
attempt  to  force  the Company  to pay  other  Wel­
fare  matters  direct  from  the  Company  itself* 
I 

CONTRACT 

Ota. th. Vnlon  ha. .«««d  tha  flra  a«i»B  .f 
.? 
^  4.  In  the  event  a  Welfare  Plan  is  not  agreed 
cnpanlo.  uadn  Igaatu,.  «. a»lle«^TSt,«. 
upon  before  April  30,  1950  the  services  of  the 
ftactual  and  mowlary  n»««a,  fh, &gt;«f  of  the  '""''"4 &lt;&gt;»«  • » deUIl  at  lalar  negollalu,n  penoffa.  Federal  Mediation  and  Conciliation  Service  shall 
Sm  contracted  operators  generafty  follonr  fhe 
CONTRACT 
be  requested.  If  a  Welfare  Plan  is  formulated 
same pattern. 
prior  to  September  30,  1950,  contributions  there^ 
­ Your  Negotiating  Committer,, 
a&lt;dV&gt;»^  by 
Plan  shall  be  for  a  period  of  to  by  the  Company  shall  be  retroactive  to  Jan­
the membership on this report snd  Welfare Pion 
subject  to  the  lim­ uary  1,  1950.  Within  thirty  (30)  days  of  the  sign­
i^tion;^ 
herein, 
shall 
contain 
provisions  for  in­ ing  of  tins  agreement  the  Company  shall ­post 
shall  then  preeenf  the  same  conisaci  la  other 
creasing  or  decreasing  the  amount  of  ai^  pi;e­ a  bond  for  the  payment  of  its  obligations  hereip 
sm operators  for  agreemmit. 
smbed  Ipenefit.  ^e Pl^  shall  contain  4  P?9^  set  forth. 
vision  for  npn­d.uplication  of  benefits  for  wWch 
CONTRACT 
the  Compgaifty  majy  d^ectly  or  indirectly  con­
COMMITTEE'S  ANALYSIS 
WHEJIEAS,  there  is r^pw  in existence  between  tribute,  but  non­diipUcation  of  benefits  shall  not 
This clause  of  the contract  is  to be  interpreted 
^ 
par^.^s  a  yahd,  gollective  bvgaining  ag^ee­  bjj.  construed  to  mean  any  benefits  which  are 
as  a  guarantee  to  the  Uni^.  In  other  words,  if 
^ 
IS  not  dpe  to  expire  until  Septem­  or  may  be furnished  solely  by  the  Union, 
y feer 30,  1950.  and 
the  actual  details  of  the  Welfare  Plan  arc  not 
WHEREAS,  the  Union  has  formally  notified  the 
COMMITTEE'S  ANAL YSIS 
agreed  to by Sept.  30,  1950,  then  the  Union shall 
Company  9f  its  desire  tp 
negotiations  for 
he iu, the position of  being able to force  the  Vifql­
To  hav,a  a  succaimfni­ WaHarA  Plan,  vnur  Gam­
Vtkn  to  a  successful  con^i^^oh '^^^ 
mittee  feSSt  that  the  longer,  within  reason,  ihe 
the  said  agreement,  and 
of  economic  action  on  and  after  Sept.  30,  1950. 
/WHEREAS,  the  Umon  hps  proposed  that  the  term  the  Welfare  Plan  itself  ran,  the  greater 
The  membership  will  note  that, under  Section 
Company  grant a  Wefiare  Plan  in lieu of  a  wage  the  period  of  time  to  work  it  out  to  perfection.  6  of  the  Welfare  Contract,  as  signed,  there  is a 
Therefore,  it  was  decided  that  a  five­year  plan 
WiCf?ase,  and^ 
provision  that  once  we  sign  a  Welfare  Fund, 
the  (JJompany  has  consented  to  ne­ would  provide  such  necessary  time. 
The  nomduplication  of  benefits  referred  to  in  then  the  collective  bargaining  contract  is  ex­
gotiate  regarding  %  Welfare  Plan  ip  Uep  of  ne­
this  clauise  shoidd  be  interpreted  to  mean  that  tended  to Sept.  30,  1951.  In  the event  that  we  do 
gotiating  in regard  to. a  change  in wages,. 
inasmuch ^s the operators  are now  paying  m^in­ not  successfully  complete  the  negotiations  of 
fenance  apd  cure  of  $6.00  per  day  to  a  Union  this  Welfare  Fund,  then  the  collective  bargain­
COMj^ITTEE'S  ANALYSIS 
member  who is injured  aboard a  vessel,  the Wel­ ing  contract  will  expire  Sept.  30.  1953.  This 
y As was previously  reported by  the  Negotiating  fare  Plan  would  not  either  accept  this  respon­ would  therefore  in  turn  put  us  in  the  legal  pos­
Committee,  the XTnion,  although  desirihg'to open  sibility  of  the  payment  of  the  $6.00  per  day  ition,  if  necessary,  to  use  strike  action  to  force 
aogotiations  for  a  Welfare  Fund,  was  restricted  maintemrnce  and  cure  or,  for  that  inatter,  dup­ final  settlement  of  the  Welfare  Plan  itself. 
by ^ the terms of  our contract  to wages and mone­ licate  the  same  payment.  This,  in  effect,  would 
Your  Committee  feels,  however,  thai  this  will 
tary  matters  only. 
prevent  abuse  of  the  Welfare  Fund  and  provide  not  be  necessary.  It  is  felt  that  the  hardest  part 
Therefore,  in  order  to  legally  open  negotia­ for  a  greater  protection  of  the  money  oq  hai^ 
of  this entire  Welfare  Plan  was  to  get  the  oper­
tions  for  a  Welfare  Fund,  your  Committee  com­ in  the  Welfare  Fund. 
ators  to*  agree  to  the  payment  of  the  money. 
plied with  the terms of . the contract  by first  pre­
This  they  have  done.  The  negotiations  of  detail 
CONTRACT 
senting  a  wage  demand  and  then  upon  meeting 
to govoyrp  the  fuud should be  simple. 
with  tho,  operators,  informed  then^  Hie  Union  '3. During  the  t^rm  of  the  (^lective  b^­gsdn­
preferred  a  Welfare  Fund  in  preference  to  a  ing  agr^ment  the  per  capi^ contributioii  of  the 
CONTRACT 
\ 
wage  increase.  This plan  worked,  as  tlm  Welfare  Company  toi,  the  Plan  shall, be  a  maximum  of 
5.  The Welfare  Plan herein  contemplated shall, 
Agreement  itself  proves. 
25c  per  day  per  unlicensed  seaman  employed  on 
when  formulated,  be  submitted  to  the  Bureau 
CONTRACT 
'  vessels  mapned  by  the  Company  and,  actually  of .  Internal  Revenue  and  shall  not  become  ef­
working  thereon.  In  formidating  the  Plan,  negor 
.NOW,  THEREFORE,  IT  IS  MUTUALLY  tiations  shall  include  consideration  of  all  l^fte­ fective  until  the  contributions  thereto  by  the 
AaHREP  AS  FOLLOW?: 
­
fits  of  aU  descriptions  and/there^'ore,  it  is  spe­'  Company  shall  have  been  approved  by  the  said 
1.  That  immedla,tel^  upon  ratification., of  tips  cificaily  agreed  that  duriii^. t^e  •   «istence  o^  the  Biureau  "as  jiroper  current  deductions  for  tax 
a^^nient  negotiatimis  wrli ibe  started ­ for ­  ihe  Plan  ho  demand  shall .be  made  upon  the  com­ pvuposes. ;^he  Company  and  Union  agree  to 
j»rmulation  of  a  ihutuaRaf  sAt.is|ai^ry 
/,pany .for; pejnsions  or  aiiV  other  welfare  benefits .  work hut a  Plan  that  will receive such approval. 
II  Plan.  Representatives  of  the 
an^ r^.^..^7| 
in  the  said  Plan. 
. v / 

�THE  SEAFAkERS  LOG 

Steady  Shipping,  Minor  Beefs 
Mark S­Week Period In New York 

.  «• :'.  '.• . 

CHRISTMAS DINNER IN  FRISCO 

By  JOE  ALGINA 

l9if^ 13.  1930 

In­Transit Vessels 
Keep  Pert Savannah 
A  Going Concern 

By  JIM  DHAWI^ 
NEW  YORK—This port  sw\mg  question of  who makes the  coSee 
SAVANNAH  —  Thanks  to  a 
Into  ihe New  Year  with shipping  at  10  AM  coffee  time. 
few  in­transit  ships  during  the 
holding  at  a  pretty  even  keeL  This  is  the  Stewards  Depart­
past  couple  of  weeks,  shipping 
In  fact  there  has  been, little de­ ment's  job  and  the  honors  gen­
was  saved  from  the  dead  slow 
belL  Th% few  jobs  that  came  in 
viation  in  job  activity  here  dur­ erally  go  to  the  crew  Messman. 
At  3  PM  coffee  time,  the  java 
were  from  these  vessels  alone. 
ing  the  past  four  to  six  weeks,  is made alterhatingly  by a  Wiper 
,  There'  were  no  beefs  aboard 
t  .Outside ^ of . a'couple  of  minor  and  an  Ordinary  Seaman. 
any  of  these  callers,  which  were 
b^fs  aboard  two  Cahnar  ships,  ­  At . any  rate,  this  should  not 
the SB Jean, Bull; SS Strathcape, 
which wa% subsequenUy squared  be  a  difficult  matter  for  tie 
Strathmore,  and  SS  Steel  King 
and  SS  Stwl  Flyer,  both  of 
aw^,  there  was  nothing  to  mar  crewmen  to  get  straightened  out 
among 
themselves. 
Isthmian. ;  . 
the  paydSs  and  sign­ons  during 
Talk  about  the  radio  give­
the two­week  period  juk ended. 
MATTER  FOR  PAYOFF 
away shows, 
some of 
our nation's 
These  bee&amp;  involved  disputed 
Several  men  aboard  the  Steel 
overtime  for  the  Carpenters  on  lawmakers  don't  do  bad  them­
Seafarers  dig  into an  enticing  menu,  topped  off  by  turkey  King  had  been  logged,  but  this 
selves. 
Senator 
Brewster, 
for 
in­
the  SS  Yorkmar  and  the  SS 
and  all  the  trimmings,  vditch  graced  a  neatly  set  table  on  matter  will  be  settled  at  the 
Seamar,  but^  were  settled  on  stance,  the  other  day  suggested 
payoff  in New Orleans. 
that 
ships 
in 
our 
layup fleet 
be 
Christmas 
eve  in  the  A8tG  District  Hall  in  San  Frandsco. 
l^ursday  at  a  meeting  betv^een 
given 
to 
Germany. 
Four  of  our  men  are  in  the 
company  representatives and  As­
Savaimah 
Marine  Hospital  this 
That may  be aU  well and  good,' 
'Sistaht  Secretary­Treasurer  Rob­
week. 
They 
are  Brothers  J.  Ji 
• ert  Matthews,  Patrolman  Carl  but  while  he's  showing  concern 
Cerda, 
A. 
T. 
Molan,  Clyde  Lase­
(Red)  Gibbs  and  myself,  repre­ for  that  country's, merchant  ma­
ter, 
and 
W. 
Genty, 
rine,  how  about  getting  inter­
senting  the  UnioxL 
By  JEFF  MORRISON 
The  weather  here  right  now 
ested  in  our  own. 
MONEY  COMING 
these  hospitalized  men.  a  line  is  what  the  Yankees  call  Indian 
S.^ 
FRANCISCO — Although 
The  Arnold  Bernstein  Ship­
siunmer.  The  hunting  season  is 
As  a  result  of  the  successful  ping  Company  has  been  trying  shipping  has  been  fair  here  for  now  and  then. 
over  and  the  men  on  the  beach 
Christmas 
for 
the 
Seafarers 
on 
the 
past 
two 
weeks, 
the 
best 
session,  the  Carpenters  of  the  for  a couple  of  years  now  to  get 
are  looking  for  jobs  to  hold 
the 
beach. was 
a 
gala 
event. 
A 
we 
can 
report 
for 
the 
coming 
two  vessels  may  collect  their  going  with  two  passenger  ships 
them  over. 
^ 
period 
is 
that 
It 
looks 
lousy, 
v 
money  at.  the  company's  office,  by  purchasing  two  former  iarmy 
The  SS  Jeff  Davis,­  a  Water­
on  the  thirteenth  floor  of  25  transports.  We  don't  hear  Sena­
Broadway,  in this  city. 
tor  Brewster,  or  anyone  else  for  man  scow  paid: off  here  and  the 
The  ships  paying  off  in  the  that  matter,  saying  that  Bern­ SS  Yomig'America,  of  the  same 
past  two  weeks  were  the  Clii­ stein  ought  to  be  given  some  company,  signed  on  after  paying 
Because  of  previous  com­
bomo,  Bessemer  Victory,  Gate­ help  in  accomplishing  his  ob­ off  in  Seattle. 
jective, 
which, 
by 
the 
way, 
In 
addition 
to 
this 
activity, 
we 
milment. 
Roosevelt  Auditor­
way  City,  Bienville  and  City  of 
would 
produce badly 
needed 
jobs 
had 
calls 
from 
the 
Topa 
Topa, 
ium on­  East  17th  Street  will 
Alma,  Waterman;  Kathryn,  An­
John  B;  Waterman  and  the  Fair­
gina,  Elizabeth  and  Puerto  for  Americai^ seamen. 
not  be  available  to  the  SlU  ' 
land,  all  of  Waterman,  and  the 
Rico,  Bull;  Anniston  City  and 
for  the  next  regular  New 
WORTHY  ­CAUSE 
Steel 
Designer,  Isthmian. 
Steel  Ranger,  Isthmian;  Lilica, 
'York 
membership  meeting 
One  word  on  the  March  of  What  beefs  existed  on  these 
Dolphin;  Mankato  Victory,  Vic­
on  January  18.  The  meet­  ^ 
tory  Carriers;  Seatrains  New  Dimes  drive  beii^ conducted  by  ships  were  only  of  a  routine 
ing  wiU  therefore  be  held 
Jersey,  New  York  and  Texas,  the  National  Foimdation  of  In­ hatiu­e. 
fantile  Paralysis.  We  don't  go 
and  the  Robin  Trent 
in  the  Branch  Hall.  51  Bea­  * 
AROUND  TOWN 
flne  holiday  dinner  was  served 
«  . 
Signing on were  the Steel Voy­ for  any  can­shaking,  but  this  is  GU3^  interested  in  knowing  in  the  HaU,  and  with  the  help  ver  StreeL 
ager,  Steel  Architect  Anniston  one  cause  that  rates our  support.  who  among  Seafarers  is  on  the  of  many  of  our  friends  on  the 
All  hands  are  urged  to 
City,  Mankato  Victory,  Seainar,  The  Fotmdation's  Labor  Divi­ Frisco  beach  this  week  should  beach  and  smne  of  the  Brothera  ' make  a  note  of  this  change 
Calmar,  Bienville,  Steel  Survey­ sion  offers  year­round  ^ervic^||^  cast  on eye on  this list:  M.  Bum­ the  affair  was  something  to  be  in  meeting  places.  The  time 
or  and  the  Robin  Kettering,  members  of  organized  labor  and  stine,  W.  McCuistion,  Pete  Dre­ proud  of. 
will  be.  as  usual,  7  PM.  The 
iilong  with  the  Bull  Line  ships  their  families,  including  pay­ vas,  A.  HeUmuth  and  C.  Mize. 
place, 
again,  the  New  York 
President  Lundberg  came  over 
ment  for  hospital  costs,  medic^  Of  course,  several  of  the  lads  and  joined  in  wishing  all  hands  HalL And  the  date^  Wednes­
that  had  paid off. 
services,  wheelchairs,  transpor­ are  in  the  local  Marine  Hospital, 
a  Merry  Christmas  and  he  gave  day.  January  18. 
COFFEE  TIME 
tation  and  other  aid  needed  in  they  be^ J.  Keenan,  J.  Bam­ out  somo  spirits  that  were­weU­
The  fbllowing  session.,  on 
•   One  of  the  beefs among  crew­ the  event  polio  hits  them. 
h­Trt,  A.  Caudra  and  T.  Isaksen,  taken.  It's  an  understatement  to  February  1.  will  take  place 
members  that  appears to  be con­
Do  whatever  you  can  to  keep  Brothers  interested  in  cheering  merely  say  that  everyone  had  a  in  Rposevelt  Audiloriiun.' 
stantly 
brewing 
centers 
on 
the 
this 
excellent  seryice  going. 
them  up  would  do  well  to  drop  good  time. 
la&gt;:&gt; 

"i- .

2 Good Weeks'For San Francisco 

New  York  Meeting 

t Nea^t'Stisss CsnssHittm's And
(Continued  from  Page  3) 
COMMITTEE'S  ANALYSIS 
,  The reason  your  Negotiating Committee  agreed 
io  submit  this  negotiated  Welfare  Plan  in  its 
final  draft  to  the  Bureau  of  Internal  Revenue  is 
due  to  the  fact  that  the  funds,  which  are  con­
tributed  by  the  steamship  companies,  should  be 
Jkandled  in  a  manner  so  as  to  be  tax­exempt.  If 
ihls is not  done, then  the  tax  will  be  taken  from 
Ihe  2Sc  contribution.  This  would  result  in  less 
benefits for  the  members. 
CONTRACT 

the  parties  hereto  shall  be  extended  to  Septem­
ber  30,  1951.  ^ 
COMMITTEE'S  ANALYSIS 
Your  Committee  felt  that  by  extending  our 
present  colloctive  bargaining  agrsement  to  Sept­. 
30,  1951,  it  would  allow  for  a  period  of  contract 
stability  in  the  industry,  during  which  time  the 
tinion could  use  a  greater  part  pf  its stren^h  to 
iron  out  ^ny  beef  arising  from  administration 
of  the  Welfare  Fund.  The  administration  of  th^ 
Welfare  Plan  itself  thus  could  be  perfected  more 
quickly. 

•   6.  Upon  the  adoption  of  a  Welfare  Plan  the 
It  should  be  pointed  out  to  the  membership 
existing collective  bargaining agreement.between  that  the  operators  proposed  to  the  Union  at  one 

hiB Plm 
point  during  negotiations­Ihat  the  existing  agree­
ment  be  extended" to  Sept.  30,  1952.  This,  your 
Committee  did  not  do,  believing  that  by  extend­
ing  the  contract  to  1951,  it  will  be  of  greater 
protection  to  fhe  membership  in  the  event  the 
membership desires  that  date  to change  any  part 
of  the  regular  SIU  contract. 
Further,  it  is  to  be  pointed  out  to  the  ipein­
bership  that  although  the  collective  bargaiaiiig 
agreement  itself  is  extended ^ to  1951,  we  Stfll 
have  Qur  clause  in  effect  in  th^  contract  to  re­
open  wages  at  any  time  we  desire  during  the 
life  of  ^he  SIU  contract.  This,  as  all  Seafarers 
are  aware,  is  a  clauTO  in  the  maritime  industry 
that  only  the SIU  has. 

CONCLUSION: The Committee feels that this Welfare Plan
Therefore, this Committee recommends to the membermarks a big step forward for the membership of our Union, ship that they concur In this report and all recommendation^ - 0
if marks a big step forward not so much qs fa what If will contained therein. '
-'it
mean Immediately for our membership, but what If will mean
In the long run. Although we have gorren the shipowner to
fraternally  submitted, 
'•  
agree fa the payment of the fund Itself, there still remains the
PAUL HALL, Secretary'Treasurer 
^381 
lab of negofrating the details of how the funds are to be
handled. There Is still a lot of work to be done on this matter.
LLOYD GARDNER, Assistant Secretary'Treasurer
Once this report Is acted an and concurred In, the bulk
ROBERT A, MATTHEWS, Assistant Secretary^reasurdt^... 
df the detail work Is still left. Nevertheless, we can be sure
that we: have taken a step la the right gf/recffon—o step that
JOSEPH VOLPIAN,  Assistant Secretary'Treasurer 
wH! eventually mean the freeddm of seamen from fear of
JOSEPH 
^ 
kmecqrifY fo thaMe of us who may gef put out of
because of InluHes, or of aid age.
tmuskr WfLUAMkWmcfot  Org^imidn  ^ 

­'• nm 

9m:­

'i" 

�T  B IE  S  B  AT  Ak E  R S  10^ 

iSAN  FRANCISCO—Chakman. 
cent,  R.  Williams  and  R.  Rough­
Jafi  Morrison,  34213;  Recording 
ton.  Motion  to  adjourn  carried 
Seereiary.  P.  M.  Roberison, 
at  7:45  PM. 
30148:  Reading  Clerk,  2257,  ^ 
4  4  4 
Motion  carried  to  concur  in 
NEW 
YORK—Chairman, 
Lind­
REG. 
REG.­
REG. 
TOTAL 
SHIPPED  SHIPPED  SHIPPED  TOTAL 
Headquarters  report  to  member­
PORT 
DECK 
ENG. 
STWDS. 
REG. 
DECK 
ENG. 
STWDS.  SHIPPED  sey  Williams,  21550;  R^ordihg 
^ip 'as  read.  Minutes  of  Branch 
20 
47 
16 
ir 
9 
10 
5 
24  Secretary,  Freddie .rStewart,  4985; 
meetings  read  and  approved.  Boston.  ; 
107 
101 
335 
96 
69 
85 
250  Reading  Clerk,  Robert  Matthews, 
Agent  reported  that  shipping  New  York. 
29 
88 
32 
27 
14 
15 
9 
38  154. 
hadn't  been  too  bad  for  the  past  Philadelphia 
Minutes  of  meetings  in  other 
Baltimore. 
111 
99  .  92 
302 
,  56 
50 
32 
138 
two  ^weeks,  as  the  Jeff  Davi$ 
Branches 
read  and  approved. 
— 
Norfolk.,;. 
49 
45 
36 
130  ' 
1 
1 
? 
came  in  for  an  unexpected  pay­
Port 
Agent 
stated  that  shipping 
— 
6  ­
11 
5 
22 
7 
4 
11 
• ^off.  Several  vess^  are  expect­ Savannah..... 
was 
fair 
in 
the  port, and  th^| 
Tampa. 
............. 
14 
15 
37 
'  8 
11 
13 
11. 
35 
ed  to  call  in­transit  during  the 
most 
ships 
were 
coming  m  ship^j 
49 
Mobile 
34 
30 
119 
17 
26 
12 
55 
next  two  weeks! although  on  the 
shape. 
A 
Union 
committee, 
... 
76 
76 
89 
'  241 
81 
88 
102 
271 
whole shipping  does  not look  too  New  Orleans..... 
said, 
would 
nieet 
tomorrow 
wi1 
Galveston.....!.... 
22 
13 
12 
47 
54 
12 
19 
85 
good­ ahywhere  on  this coast,  he 
representatives 
of 
Calmar 
over 
West  Coast..! 
39  , 
40 
34 
113. 
35 
42 
31 
108 
said.  Motions  carried to  accept 
a  beef  regarding  Carpenters  ott| 
Headquarters Reinstatement Com­ GRAND  TOTAL 
547 
483 
451 
1,481 
381 
325 
311 
1,017  a  couple  of  the  company's ships*| 
mittee's  report  and  Branch  Bal­
Otherwise,  he  said,  there 
loting  Committee's  report.  Mo­
no  beefs  pending.  He  also  spoke' 
tion  on  Trotskyites  and  commie  to  vote  in  their  home  communi­ this  port  recommend  to  Head­ said  he  fejt  that  at  least  the  on  the  March  of  Dimes  drive! 
groups  read  for  second  time  and  ties  during  election  time  as  this  quarters  Reinstatement  Commit­ sum  of  $1,900  should  be  allowed  to aid  victims  of  polio  and  ihen­ ' 
was  concurred  in.  Election  of  is  a  big  year  for  congressional  tee  thkt  Pat.Van  Millican,  Book  to  take  care  of  the  termites  in  tioned  that  it  was  a  worthy 
' tallying  committee to  count  bal­ balloting  and  it  is  our  duty  to  No.  28838,  be  reinstated  and  al­ the  top  part"  of  the  building.  cause  because  every  working 
lots  cast  in  port  during  A&amp;G  defeat  anti­labor  candidates.  Mo­ lowed to  pay  due  assessments  Unless  this  is  done,  he. said,  we  man  and  his  family  would  be 
elections.  Communication from  tion  carried  to­concur  in  Head­ after  making  one  trip.  Motion  will  have  to  spend  more  in  the  taken  care  of  by  the  foundation 
Secretary­Treasurer  on  election  quarters  communication  regard­ (by  Leslie  Jackson,  Book  No.  long  run.  The  Agent  added .that  if  polio  should  strike.  He  point­
&lt;rf  balloting  committee  was  ac­ ing  election  of  tallying  commit­ 912)  that  we  extend  time  on  all  labor  here  is  getting  closer  ed  out  that  the  A&amp;G  Secretary­
cepted  as read.  Meeting  adjourn­ tee.  A  six­man  committee  —  shipping  cards.  Amendment  to  together  as  the  days  go  by  in  Treasurer  is  on  the  AFL  com­
ed  at  7:25  PM,  with  31  mem­ George  Kelly,  Louis  Nrara,  D.  L.  motion  by  A.  J.  Brown,  Book  pushing  for  the  reelection  of  mittee  of  the ­fund.  Secretary­
Parker, Tom  Goul^,  Charles Fos­ No.  43364,  that  extension  of  30  Senator  Claude  Pepper,  the  best 
bers  present. 
ter and  James  Naylor—was  elec­ days  be  made  on  shipping cards.  friend  of  labor  in  the  state.  He  Treasurer's financial  report  read 
t  t 
and  approved.  The  Secretary­
NEW  ORLEANS —Chairman,  ted.  Headquarters  report  to  the  Amendment  carried  by  vote  of 
Treasurer  announced  that, nine 
39  to  28.  Motion  carried to  elect 
James  Tucker,  2209;  Recording 
contracted 
companies  had  agreed 
tallying  committee.  Electei  were 
Secretary,  George  Allen,  . 114; 
to 
the 
Union's 
demand  for  a 
Glennious  Lawson,  J. R.  Wilson, 
Reading  Clmrk,  Buck  Stephens, 
welfare 
fund, 
paid 
for  solely  by 
J. •   W. • T
  aylor,  Dennis  Cahoon, 
7®­
the operators. 
He 
said 
the  other 
Cyril  Newman  and  Allen  Burke. 
Secretary­Treasurer's  report 
companies 
were 
being 
lined  up 
Under  Good  and  Welfare,  it  was 
and  Branch  minute.«ii  of  ­previous 
and 
that 
meetings 
would 
begin 
recommended  by  Allen  Burke 
meetings  accepted  as  read.  Ag­
next 
week 
to 
work 
out 
details 
that  Headquarters  be  notified  of  also  said  that  the  SIU  is  now 
ent  reported  that  shipping  had 
and  discuss  nature  of  benefits^  ^ 
the fact  that  Milliken, for  whoqi 
not  been  too bad  since last  meet­ 'Inembership  read  and  approved,  reinstatement  is  recommended,  an active  part of  the labor  move­ etc., to  be  included  in  the  plan. 
^ing.  There  were  10  payoffs  and  as  was  Secretary­Treasurer's fin­ went  blind in  Aug. 1948,  but that  ment  in  the  state  and  that,  it  He said  the time  had  come  when 
i&gt;six  sign­ons,  and  the  usual  num­ ancial  report.  Meeting  adjourned  he had  been  pyaid  up  to  date and  will  be  kept  that  way.  Motion  Seafarers  no  longer  need  worry 
ber  of  in­transit  callers  dm­ing  at  7:50  PM,  with  314  members  was  in  good  union standing,  and  carrid  to  accept  and  concur  in  about  being  destitute  when  they 
Headquarters  recommendation  in 
the  past  two­week  period.  So  present 
had  been  active  in  all  strikes.  regard  to  counting  of  ballots.  wore not  physically  able to  work 
far  only five  ships are scheduled 
^ %  t. 
Meeting  adjourned  at  8:45  PM  Under  Good  and  Welfare  there  and  that  the  welfare  fimd  was 
to  come,  into  this  port  for  pay­
a  step  in  the direction  of  great­
SAVANNAH —Chalxman.  Jim  with  140  members  present. 
was  much  discussion  on  the  ne­ er  security.  The  Secretary­Trea­
offs,  he  said.  However,  the  Al­ Drawdy,  28523;  Recording  Secre­
^  »  it 
cessity  of  reelecting  S^ator  surer  added  that  the  Union  is 
coa  Runner  and  the  MV  Del  tary,  S.  M. Lake,  51C26;  Reading 
BALTIMORE—Chairman,  WU­ Claude  Pepper.  Meeting  adjourn­ continuing  with  its  plans  in con­  j 
Viento  will  be crewing  up some­ Clerk,  J.  H.  Babson,  31845. 
time  between  now  and  the  next  Secretary­Trd'asurer's financial  liw  Renlz,  26445;  Recording  ed  with  87  members  in  attend­ nection  with  the  Cities  Service •  
meeting.  Motion  carried  to  sus­ report  accepted  as  read.  Agent  Seereiary,  G.  A.  Maslerson,  ance. 
beef.  He 'stated  that  the  drive 
p^d  regular  order  of  business  reported ^that^since  last«tneeting,  20297:  Reading  Clerk,  652. 
for 
funds  now  being  conducted 
4  4  4 
to  elect  tallying * committee  to  the  Southland  payed  off  coast­
by 
the  Labor  Division  of  the 
Charges  were  read  and  com­
PHILADELPHIA  —  Chairman, 
count  ballots  cast  in  elections  wise  articles  and  signed  on  for­ mittee  recommendations  accepfc­ man,  James  Sheehan,  306:  Re­ Infantile  Paralysis  Foundation  is i 
• lor 1950  officials.  Committee  of  eign  in  Charleston."1*fo  beefs  on  ed.  Minutes  of  Branch  meetings  cording  Secretary,  Paul  Dayton,  the  (Hie  worthy  cause­which, the' 
six  was  elected,  two  men  repre­ the  ship.  Several  vessels  called  in other ports read  and approved.  43889;  Reading  Clerk.  William  Union  lends  its  name  to.  Al­
though  the  SIU  does  not  go  in 
Bwiting  each department. Excuses  in­transit  Shipping  for  the  next  Communications  from  members  Click,  48741. 
for, can­shaking  this  polio fight; 
from  absence from  meeting  were  two  weeks,  he  said,  looks  bad.  seeking to  be excused from  meet­
referred  to  the  Dispatcher.  Wil­ The  charters  for  the  Cape  Race  ing  were  turned,  over to  the  Minutes  of  previous  meetings  is  the  concern  of  aU,  he  said. 
ham  E­ . Roberts. Book  No:  51300. 
Di­spatcher  MofiOP, 
o"­ in  other  Branches  read  and  ac­ Motion  carried  to  apoont  TT^nd­
took  the  Union  oath  of  obliga­ and  they  are  being  turned  over  cept  Headquarters  report  to  the  cepted!  Agerii" cepbrtecf  on  uie  quarters  recommendation  that 
tion.  Meeting  adjourned  at  8:10  to the Isbrandtsen company. Mm­ membership  and  Negotiating  state  of  shipping.  Negotiating  tallying  committee  be  elected 
PM,  with  380  members  in  at­ utes  of  other  Branch  meetings  Committee's  report  on  the  pro­ Committee's  report  read  and  ap­ at  tonight's  meeting  to  count 
proved.  Motion  by.  .Johji  Bron­
tendance. 
read  and  approved.  Motion  car­ gress  of  talks  on  the  welfare  son  to  elect  tallying  commiftee  ^ballots  of  1950  election. ­^Elected 
were  Donald  Mease,  Lars  HiU­
ried  to  concur  in  Headquarters 
carried.  The  following  were  el­ ertz,  Ed  Mooney,  Blackie  Col­
MOBILE  —  Chairman,  D.  L.  commimication  regarding  elec­
ected:  Deck—A1  Vandyke,  Leo  lucci,  Fi­ank  Bose  and  Charles 
Parker, 180: Recording Secretary.  tion  of  tallying  committee.  Mo­
GiUis; Engine—John Shaffer,  Bob  Kimball.  Committee  is  to  begin 
Jauhes L.  Carroll, 50409;  Reading  tion carried  to accept  negotiating 
Graff; 
Stewards==Dan  Piccorelli,  task  toihorrow  morning.  Charges 
Clerk,  Harold  Fischer.  59. 
committee's  report  on  progress 
Bill  Forney.  Motions  carried  to  read  and  referred  to  trial  com^ 
Minutes  of  previous  meetings  of  welfare  plan  negotiations. 
concur  in  Secretary­Treasurer's 
in  all  Branches  read  and  ac­ Committee  elected  to  count  bal­ plan.  Port  Hospital  Committ^'s  report to  membership  and finan­ mittee.  Meeting  adjourned  at 
8:30  PM. 
cepted.  Agent  reported  on  the  lots' cast in general  election,  with  report  accepted.  Motion  canried  cial  report. Andrew  Flaherty  and 
to elect 
tallying 
committee, 
with 
men,  representing  each  de­
4  4  4 
• prospects of  shipping in  the com­
Raymond  Cresiski  took  Union 
BOSTON­—Chairman.  M.  Noi­
ing  two  weeks.  He  informed  p&amp;tmeht  as follows:  Deck—:E.  F.  following  members  elect^  to  oato  of  obligation.  Meeting  ad­
inembers  that  Hall  had  been  McGregor,  W. ft.  Lee;  Engine—  serve:  P.  Lawrence,  J.  Kerrigan,  journed  at  8:30  PM,  with  250  xis,  5725;  Recording  Secretary. 
B.  Lawson,  894;  Reading  Clerk. 
broken  into  on  night  of  Jan.  1,  A.  Dawning,  D.  McDUffie;  Stew­ J. E.  Fisher,  J. T,"Morton,  R.  R.  members  present. 
C.  Dwyer,  46198. 
1950,  and  master­  was  reported  ard—J.  T.  Moore,  H.  W.  McMa­^  Wingert  and  M.  W.  Smith. Com­
4  4  4 
to  police  the  following  morning.  hon.  There  were  85  members^  mittee  instructed to  report  to 
Minutes of  other  Branch  meet­
GALVEBTO N — Chairman, 
Hall 
tomorrow 
morning 
at 
9:30 
A  careful  survey" show^  that  present  when  meeting  was  ad­
ings 
read  and  approved.  .Port 
AM.  Meeting  was  adjourned  at  Keith  Alsop,  7311;  Recording 
^  200  letters  had  been  stolen from  journed  at 7:49 PM. 
Agent 
discussed  shipping  which,  ;; 
ar;05  PM,  with 357  members pres­ Sedrelary  and  Reading  Clerk, 
the  mail  box  and  that  nothmg 
:  t  i i 
during 
the  past  two  weeks,  kept 
Hugh  Roughton, J51121. 
else  had  been  tampered  .with.  NORFCHJC —Chahrman,  J.  S.  ent. 
about the same pace  as  previous­
'  »  k  4­
Secretary­Treasurer's  report  ly.  Headquarters  report  to  the 
The  burglars  entered  the  build­ While,  56;  Recording  Secreia^. 
Ben 
Rees, 
95; 
Reading 
Clerk, 
TAMPA 
—  Chairman,  R.'  W.  and  Headquarters  report  to  the  membership  and  SecretaryTTre®^ 
ing  after  throwing  a  brick 
HaU,  26060;  Receding Secretary,  membership  read  and  accepted.  surer's financial  report concurred  ! 
through  the  glass  door  at  the  4747.  •  
I'^r  of  tlie.  Hail.  Postal  au­
Minutes  of  previous  meetings  Paul  Carter,.  48287;  Redding  Minutes  of  oth^  Branch  meetr  in.  Motion  cai i ied  to  accept 
ings  approved  as  read.  Agent  Headquarters  recommendation 
thorities  are  working  on  the  in  all  Branches  read  and  ?,c­ Clerk,  Ray  White,  57.. 
case with  FBI  as tampering  with  cepted.  Agent  discussed  state  of  Minutes  of  other  Branches  discussed  shipping,  which  turn­ that  tallying  committee  be  el­
mail  is  a  federal  matter.  The  shipiHng  in  this  port  Headquar­ read  and  di^roved.  Agent  re­ ed  over to  be  pretty  good  dur­ ected at  this meeting.  These 
Agent  urgedv  aU  members  who  ters  report  to  the  memberriiip  ported,  saying  th?t  it  was  re­ ing,  the  past  two­week  period.  were  elected:  S.  Greenridge,  S. 
had  mail or were expecting mail&gt;  read  and  approved.  Motion  car­ grettable  that  Headquarters  Communications from  Headquar­ Bayne,  J.  Murphy,  H.  Isaac,  R.  : 
especially  with  chOcks,  money  ried  to  concur  in  communication  meeting  recommended  that Tam­ ters  recommending  election  of  Lee,  D.  Fitzpatrick. Charges  read­.­
orders  or  other  valuables  to  re­ from  Headquarters  recommend­ pa's  request  for  funds to  alter  tallying  committees  in  all  ports  and  motion carried  to refer  them 
port  to  ­  the  Dispatcher,  who  ing  that  tallying  committee  be  Branch  Hall  be  rejected. He said  at  tonight's  meetings  read  and  to an  elected  trial committee.  123 
wotild,  in  turn,  nmify  the  post­ felectcd  at  tonight's meeting.  Ex­ that  if  that  was  the  m«nber­ concurred  in.  Elected  to  com­ members  were  present  wheft 
al  inspector.  He  conclud^­  His  cuse referred  to Dispktoher.' Mo­ ^p's  wishes  then  it  is. okay  mittee  were  Bob  Hunti  Whiter,  motion  carried  to  adjourn  ­at 
ii&amp;igort  by  advisi^  ^ ir,^||ibeys ition  carried  that 
of  with  us., However,  the  Agent  hurst,  J.  Hammond,  Sam,  Yin­ 8  PM. 

IV  V­i:­
;• • .'• '• •  
.*„  /•  

.Page  Five 

1—1 

V 

ASt C Shipping  From  lh€*  21  To  Jan.  4 

• W: 

... 

s«s5" 

�THE  S­E  A  FA REk lS 

LO G 

Complete Tabttlatlon Of 

tAsteriks  (*)  denote  elected  candidates.) 

'Elrotioneering' 
Builds  Interest 
Of  Membership 

Bos.  NY  Phi.  Bal.  Nor.  Sav. Tam. Mob. NO  Galv. 
­  SF  Wilm. 
.  $ea. 

Secretary­Treasurer 
ll#v 
P. Hall, 190 '  ' ^ 
'  174  1700  281  847  161  .144  173  497  1115 
No Votes 
22  58  50  24.  12 
9  ­1 
2  16 
Voids 
0  7  3  4  0  0  2  1 
1 
Write­ins 
1 
8  1 
1 
0  ' 0  0  0  0 
A  letter  from  the  SS  Del  Mar  Sub­Total 
197  1773  335  876  173  153  176  500  1132 
/ 
in  which  the  crew  takes  issue 
Assistant Secretary­Treasurers 
with  the  practicie  of  members  in 
116  1452  265  793  149  105  118  423  994 
boosting  candidates  for  office  in  L. Gardner, 3697 
annual  SIU  Sections  and  which  R. Matthews, 154 
140 •  1463  217  754  147  126  117  420  961 
criticizes' the  accepted  pro  J. Volpian, 56 
116  1197  211  772  147  106  110  382  936 
cedure  of  providing  sample  bal­ No Votes 
219  1180  309  297  76  122  177­ 272  500 
lots  to  the  membership  was  re­
0  15 
3  12 
0  0  6  3 ^  3 
ceived  at  tJnion  Headquarters  Voids 
Write­ins 
0 
0 
12 
0 
d  0  0  0  2­
this  week.  Because  of  its  broad 
Sub­Total 
591  5319  1005  2623  519  459  523  1500  3396 
implications,  the letter  was  turn­
ed  over  for  comment  to  the 
. 
Headquarters  Tallying  Coihmit­ Boston  Agent 
192  1388  280  832 
tee,  then in session in  New York.  B.  Lawson,  894  . 
4  371 
52  40 
In  A  meeting  held  at  sea  on  No  Votes 
December  7  the  crew  of  the  Voids 
0 
6 
3  3 
Del Mar—six  members requested  Write­ins 
18  0 
1 
that  they  be  registered  in  oppo­
197  1773  335  878 
sition  to  the  motion—voted  to  Sub­Total 
condemn  "the  practice  of  sample  New  York  Agent 
balloting  qnd  electioneering  in  J.  Algina,  1320 
169  1430  291  838 
i|.. the  haUs." 
No  Votes 
28  334 
41  33 
The  full  text  of  the  crew's 
Voids 
0 
•
 
7 
3  3 
letter  is  as  follows: 
0 
2 
0  2 
"At  the last  ship's meeting  the  Write­ins 
practice  of  sample  balloting  and  Sub­Total 
• 
197' 1773  335  876 
electioneering  in  the  Halls  was 
thoroughly  discussed.  A  motion  New  York  Deck  Patrolmen 
L.  Goffin,  4526 
122  1322  233  795 
­ was  passed  condemning  it. 
"The  crew  would  like  to  go 
Haymond,  98.^ 
129  1386  235  799 
on  rword  in  the  LOG  as  op­ No  Votes 
­  " 
143  824  198  154 
posed  to  this.  Realizing  that  it is  Voids 
.  r 
0 
12 
4  4 
not  unconstitutional,  nor  against 
Write­ins 
0 
2 
^ 
0­
0 
any  by­laws,  the crew  feels  that 
Sub­Total 
394  3546  .670  1752 
the  practice  should  stop." 
jEhcai^nation  of  the  crew's 
i  . 
complaint  was  made  by  the  New York Engine Patrolmen 
T. Babkowski, 7391 
140 
1101_ 
140  648, 
Headquarters  Tallying  Commit­
tee—a  rank  and file  group  elec­ T. Clark, 25027 
^47  975  84  576 
ted  from  the floor  at  the  Janu­ V. D'India, 20875 
­10  177 '  34  38 
ary  4  membership  meeting—and  J.  Purcell,  7802 
43  538  169  245 
the following  statement  released: 
ft 

C. Seofield, 21536 

38  247 

•  .j 

179­i, 141  51  51 
4.^  7  3  2 
0  •   2  2  0 
0  1 
1:  0 
183  151  57  53 
149 
143 
147 
110 
0 
0 
549 

133 
137 
134 
32 
15 
2 
453 

5514*^­^ 
210' 
22  ..  , .V' 
•  ' 13' •  
5759 
•  ­  . 

40  47 
46  .49 
36  46 
43  17 
6  0 
0  0 
171  159 

4784* 
47201 
. 4340* 
. ..3354;. 
•   •  63­ • •  
.^^16 
17277 

165  137  103  406  1038  147  142  ­49  49 
8  16  66  93  89  36 
1 
5  4 
0  0  2  1 
2  0  8  2  0 
0  0­ .  0  0  3  0  0 ,  1 
0 
173  153  176  500. 1132  183  151  57  53 

. 4933* 
785 
27 
14 
5759­

162  140  115  413  1050  147  142^  48  ­ 50 
11  Xl3  59  86  63  36 
1 
5  3 
2  1  19 
0  0  ' 
0  8  2  0 
0  0  0  0 ­  0  0  0  2  0 
173  153  176  500  1132  183  151  57  53 

^4995* 
713 

­ 5759  .Jpl 

142 
142 
62 
0 
0 
346 

4551* 
4713^ 
2210'­
42 
2 
11518 

154 
154 
9 
16 
72  112  11 
165  85 
0 
6  48­
2 
0  0  0 
670  1752 . 346 

112 
122. 
72 
0 
0 
306 

106  385  956 
127  410  991 
115  203  315 
4  2  2 
0  0  0 
352  1000  2264 

150 
153 
63 
0 
0 
366 

141 
134 
19 
8 
0 
302 

38  162  416  • 796  123 
69  156  406  747  125 
10 
6  8  38 
3 
87  11 V  108  351  " 51 
42­
7  45  171  25 
60  6  5  141  37 
0 '  4  12  20 
2 
0  0  0  0  0 
306  ^52 1000  2264  366 

113 
111 
9 
28 
11 
22 
8 
0 
302 

40 . 
44 
24 
6 
0 
114 

0 
,0 
106 

22 
16 
5 
33 
17 
17 
4 
0 
114 

27 
14 
3 
34 
18 
10 
0 
0 
106 

47 
41 

18  ­

'  • 4  5 • . 

' 

1 

. 

3880* 
3580*' 
350 
1714 
816  . 
1005 
172 
1 
11518 

We,  the members of  the Head­ No Votes 
10  447 
quarters  Tallying  Committee,  Voids 
6  60 
welcome  the  invitation  extended 
0  1 
to  us  by  the  Editor  of  the SEA­ Write­ins 
394  3546 
FARERS  LOG  to  answer  the  Sub­Total 
M 
question  as  to  whether  or  not 
STew 
York 
Siewcirds 
Patrolmen 
the  practice  of  "electioneering" 
70  689  .200 
32  105  281 141  425  66  30  34  39 
shcHild  be  allowed  to  continue.  R.  Gonzales,  174 
2210 
H. 
Guinier, 
478 
. 
158 
1178 
149 
152 
59 
158 
424 
850 
131 
121  33  23 ' 
4075* ;­l 
DISCUSS  ISSUES 
F. 
Stewart, 
4935 
144 
186 
673 
158 
1217 
86 
155 
424 
885 
144 
123 
31 
27 
4253* 
.  In  our  opinion,  this  so­called 
­ 
. 
19  395  129 
79 
4  56 
7  7  80  21  20  12  17 
"electioneering"  should  be  en­ No  Votes 
846  " 
I,V 
couraged,  as  the  record  clearly  Voids 
2 
i.q9. 
66 
0  0  4  4  24  4 
6 
10' 
, ' 8  4  0 
siiovirs  uiac  uie  iiicipase  in "exec­ Write­Iris 
' 
0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0 
1 
1 
0 
­  2 ,•  
tioneering"—^that  is,  the  discus­
Sub­Total. 
394  3546  670 
346 
306 
352 
1000 
2264 
366 
302 
106 
114 
•
. 
11518 
­
siop  of  issues  and  the  recom­
mending  of  one  candidate  or  an^  ?|^iladelphia  Agent 
other  by  individuals—^has  bene­ A.  CarduUo,  24599 
136  1084  113  598  151  54  165  402  730  143  123  31  32 
3762* 
fited  our  Union.  Let  us  see: 
J. 
Sheehan, 
306 
58 
499 
207 
256 
21 
88 
8 
•
87 
 
334 
19 
35 
23 
20 . 
1655  . r 
A  check  into  past  records 
2  150 
5  8  0  10 
3  37 
3  1 
1 
1 
0 •  
shows  that  in  the  1944  A&amp;G  No  Votes 
221 
General  Elections,  the ­number  Voids 
­  •  
1  38  8  14  1 
1  2  8  31 
2  8  2  1 
117^ 
of  full  book  members  was  ap­ Write­ins 
0  2 ­  2  0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0 
• 
• 4;r« 
proximately  18,000.  The  total  Sub­Total 
197  1773 
335 
876 
153 
173 
176  500  1132  183  151  57  53  •  
^5759. 
• 'V 
vote cast for the entire A(^G  Dis­
trict_that  year  was  only  1,117.  It  Baltimore  Agent  . 
/ 
soun^  almost  imbelievable  tliat  W.  Rentz,. 26445 
160  1433  281  847  161  132  138  401  1084  146  141  48  ­49 
4971* K 
just  about  one  man  in  18  was 
No 
Votes 
, 
' 
•
 
37 
329 
­48 
18 
12 
21 
36 
98 
94 
37 
1 
7 
4, 
742 
taking  an  active  part  in  the 
0 
6 
4 
6 
0 
0 
2  14 0  8  2 
0 
Union  elections,  but  it's  in  the  Voids 
3^ 
records at  Headquarters for  any­ Write­ins 
0 
5 
2*5 
0 
0 
0 
•  0  0  0  1  0  9 
­  13 
one'to see. 
Sub­Total 
197  1773  335  876  '  173  153  176  500  1132  183  151 .\ 57  53 
5759 
In  the  years  following  1944, 
the  membership  was  encouraged  Baltimore  Deck  Patrolman 
to  take  a  more  active  part  in  R.  Dickey,  652 
16  24?  79  121"  11  43  ­  2  34  147  14  12  21  12  '  •• • •   • ­760''H||i 
v  the  elections.  Steps  were  taken  C.  Gibbs,  2341 
20  506,  113  '96  12  45 \ 3  52  219  28  15  ^21  19  ­
1149  . ? 
to  whip  up  the  proper  interest 
150 
L. 
Johnson, 108 
108 
606 
150 
,­ 
777 
50 
167 
711 
137 
116 
ii 
19 
­ 
3394* 
'•  
in  this  important  balloting  and 
No 
Votes 
' 
7 
0 
167 
22. 
6 
15 
1 
3 
32 
2 
0 
0 
1 
256 
­
for  the first  time  the  candidates' 
.  0  3  19  23 
,4 
75  13  47  0 
pictures  and  their  biographical  Voids 
2  8  4  2  ­  V  200 
sketches  were  run.  in  the  LOG  Write­ins 
0  ­0 
0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0  0  •  
with  a  sample  baRot  in  order  Sub­Total 
197  1773  335  876  173  153  176  500  1132  183  151  57  53 
^^• 5759"ilif: 
to  better  acquaint  the  members 
with  those,  running  for  office.  Baltimore  Engine  Patrolman 
.  , 
The  result  of  the  change  was  A.  Stansbury,  4683 
150  1324  273  845  150  138  86  373  1007  121  141  ,50.  • "47 
,:,|705*­'^^?­
amazing. 
No  Votes 
47  440 
57 
24 
23 
15 
88 
126 
122 
62  2  5  6 
• ^K)lt 
In 1950 our  Union has  approxi­
4 
Q 
Voids 
0 
6 
4 
0 
2. 
1 
3, 
0 
8 
2 
0 
mately  10,000  full  book  mem­
, 
0 
3 
3 
0 
1 
0  0  0  0  0­*  0  0  0 
vJbersr­'The  total  vote  cast  in  the  Write­ins 
­7 
Sub­Total 
197 
1773 
335 
876 
173 
153 
. 176 
500 
1132 
183 
151 
57 
53 
(Continued  on  Page 7) 

m 

f 

�EldM  Ti^ry  i3»  iSSS^ 

­r HE  St! AP A R ERS  LO G 

Page Seven 

For 

Bos,  NY  PhL  BaL  Nor.  Sav. 
Baltimore  Stewards  Patrolman 
J.  Hatgimisios,  23434 
137  933  128  725  150. 
49 
G.  Hazen,.  4075 
.'  52  586  167  1^ 
22 
83 
No  Votes 
8  225 
36 
6 
0 
21 
Voids 
/ 
0 
27 
4 
19 
1 
0 
Write­ins ­ 
,  " 
0 
2 
0 
0 
0 
0 
Sub­Total 
197  1773  335  876  173  153 
Norfolk  Agent 
D.  Jones,  116 
21  414  149  186 
17 
63 
B.  Rees,  195 
iv 
168  'll09  152  663  149  , 84 
No  Votes 
. 
­ 
6  222 
30 
21 
0 
6 
Voids 
; 
•   2  ,27 
4 
6 
2 
0 
,Write­Ins 
' ' 
0 
1 
0 
0 
5 
0 

r  Sub­Total 

'  ^ 

197  1773  335  876  173 

w 

L.  Johnston,  53 
E.  Metros,  299 
No  Votes 
Voids  •  
' 
Write­ins 

175  1245 
7  285 
13  213 
2 
29 
0 
1 
• I  QV.  17'79 

N®w  Orlaans Engfse  PaSrolman 
C.  Stephens,  76 
150  1459 
47  303 
No  Votes ­
0 
Voids 
10 
Write­ins 
0 
1 
Sub­Total 
197  1773 
New  Orleans  Stewards  Palrolntian 
A.  Capote,  66 
26  345 
A.  Gowder,  36884  ­ . 
34  354 
H. Troxclair,  6743 
128  803 
8  240 
No  ­Votes 
•
m; 
­ l. 
3r 
­  Voids  . 
0 
0 
Write­ins 
197  1773 
Sub­Total 
Galveston  Agent 
&gt; 
•  •   127  934 
K.  Alsop,  7311 
57.  626' 
­R.  Sweeney,  20 
13  191 
No  Votes  . 
0 
22 
Voids 
r 
p 
I' 
0 
0 
m  Wrjte­Ins 
197  1773 
Sub­Total 
­
Galveston  Patrolman 
9  154 
C.  Allen,  21795 
23 
211 
F.  Holcombe,  151 
4  102 
P. , Shauger,  48325 
916 
" 
147 
C.  Tannehill,  25922 
9  170 
J.  Tucker,  2209 
181 
A­
'  No Votes  ,  •  .  ; 
:­• 'jU.' 
••  • • ' 1  38 
Vo^ds 
0 
1 
Write­ins 
yy.,,'  197"  1773 
.  Sub­Total 

209 
78 
45 
3 
0 

752 
84 
22 
18 
0 
.«7« 

157 
15 
0 
1 
0 

275  800  151 
57 
70 
22 
0 
3 
5 
0 
0 
1 
335  876  173 
108  125 
21 
109  138 
7 
74  558  144 
30 
0 
41 
3 
24 
T 
0 
1 
0 
335  876  173 
' 
105  .627  154 
197|  223 
19 
30 
20  ^  0 
3 
S "  b 
•   0 
0 
0 
"335  876  173 

Wilm. Sea. 
24  16 
26  35 
4  2  » 
3  0 
0  0 
57  53 

Totah*­

'Electioneering' 
Buiids  Interest 
Of  Membership 

3687* 
1623 
366 
81 
2 
5759 

140  164.  460  1102  138 
13  10  ­ 39 ' 
25  45 
0  2  15  0 
.0 
0  0  0  0 
153  176  500  1132  183 

(Continued from  Page  6) 
recently­Concluded 
election  was 
21  13 
1273 
5,759—more 
than 
'five 
times  as 
120  33  37 
4077^  much  as  in  1944! 
1 
1 
3 
336  Now,  let  us  take  the  case  ot 
7  2  0 
67  New  Orleans,  the  only  Ameri­. 
0  0  0 
6  can  port  the  Del  Mar  hits: 
57  53 
5759  The  record  shows  that  in  the 
1944  General  Election  the  entire 
118  12  18 
3633* vote  cast  in  the  Port  of  New 
Orleans  amounted  to  the  unbe­
23  42  35 
1711  lievably 
low  number  of  139. 
1 
1 
0 
335  In  1950,  the  total  vote  cast  ins 
9  2  0 
60  the  Port  of  New  Orleans  was; 
0  0  0 
0  1,132.  In  other  words,  in  the 
151  57  53 
^  5759  election  concluded  on  December­
31,  1949,  New  Orleans  nst  more 
votes  than  did  +he  entire  mem­
4^43  48  50 
5148*  bership 
of  the  A&amp;G  District  in. 
0  7  3 
580  1944. 
8  2  '0 
26  So  while  some  of  the  fellows 
0  0  0 
5  may  not  agree  with  the  time­
151  57  53 
5759  honored  American  custom  of 
'electioneering"  for  candidates,, 
it 
142  49  52 
5187*  is  clearly  shown  that  it  has 
stimulated  greater  interest  in 
1 
6  t .1 
­  544  the­  Union,  its  official  elections 
8  2 
0 
26  and  its  policies. 
0  0 
0 
2  To  curtail  "electioneering,"  as 
151  " 57  53 
5759  suggested  by  the  Del  Mar  men, 
would  knock  out one of  the prin­
cipal 
features  of  the  democratic 
130  39  42 
4492* 
electoral  process.  It  would  favor 
138  47  38 
4415* the  incumbent  officeholders  and 
18  22  20 
2527  make  it  extremely  difficult  for 
16 
6 
2 
78  new candidates to  become known 
0  0  4 
6  to  the  membership  and  thus  win 
\ 
302  114  106 
11518  election. 
This  healthy  condition  should ­, 
continue  and  be encouraged.  The. 
142  50  50 
5199* membership  should  be  allowed" 
: 
•   ".'3: 
1 
5 
3 
524  to  continue  full  open  discussion 
8  2  0 
34  of  all  vital issues,  including  elec­' 
0  0  0 
2  tion^  which  are  so  important  a 
151  57  53 
5759  part  of  our  democratic  setup. 

110 
34 
.9 
0 
0 

131 
10 
1 
9 
0 

37 
15 
3 
2 
0 

tsi 

so 

153 

Savannah  Agent 
E.  Bryant,  25806 
V  157  903  130  619 ­ 150 
J.  Drawdy,  28523 
32  '  626  162  236  .  23 
No  Votes 
6  224 
38 
0 
13 
8 
0* 
Voids 
. 
' 
2 
20 
5­
0 
Write­ins 
0 
0 
0 
0 
Sub­Total 
. 
197  1773  335  876  173 
Tampa  Agent  ­  " •  
R.  White,  57  .  " r ^ i  ' 
163  1502  285  831  160 
47  40  13 
No  Votes 
, 
h  265 
0  4  3  3  0 
Voids 
1 
Write­ins 
•  
0 
2  0  2  0 
Sub­Total 
197  1773  335  876  173 
Mobile  Agent 
.  J 
C.  Tanner,  44 
, ­  ' 
152  1539  282  821  159 
No  Votes 
45  229 
50  52  14 
Voids 
, 
' 
0 
4 
3  3  0 
Write­ins 
' 
0 
1 
0  0  0 
Sub­Total  » 
' 
' 
197  1773  335  870 
•  
Mobile  Joint  Patrolmen 
R.  Jordan,  71 
128  127?  217  775  156 
W.  Morris,  264 
.  124  1230  221  737  148 
42 
No  Votes 
142  1014  224  230 
10 
Voids 
^ 
0 
24 
8 
0 
0 
Write­ins 
0 
1 
0 
0 
394  3546  670  1752  346 
Sub­Total 
^  ^ 
New  Orleans  Agent 
, 
E.  Sheppard,  203 
155  ^541  286  818  153 
No , Votes 
42  222 
46 
53 
20 
Voids 
0 
9 
3 
4 
0 
Write­ins 
0 
1 
0 
1 
0 
Sub­Total 
197  1773  335  876  173 
New  Orleans  Deck  Patrolman 

Tarn.  Mob.  NO  Gab 
/ / 
166  399  700  138  122 
5 
98  363 
41 
19 
1 
1  56 
4 
2 
4 
2 
13 
0 
8 
0 
0  ,  0 
0 
0 
176  500  1132  183 

Officials 

.­7  84'  251 
24 
167  409  832  154 
0 
1  40 
5 
2 
6 
9 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
176  500  1132  183 

20  156  430  785 
132 
15 
64  280 
1 
3 
0 
61 
0 
2 
6 
6 
0  '0 
0  ^  0 
153  176  500  ^ 1132 

135 
41 
7 
0 
0 
183 

139  171  443  1052  161 
13 
3  56 ' 77  22 
0  2^  1&lt; 
3 
0 
1 
0  0  0  0 
153  176  500  1132  183 
137  164  480  1063  147 
16  10  19  65  36 
0  2  1 
3  0 
0  0  0  1 
0 
153  176  500  1132  183 
«6 
120 
88 
2 
0 

115 
113 
120 
4 
0 

454  937  126 
459  907  133 
84  418  105 
2 
2  2 
1 
0  0 

306  152  1000  2264  366 

166  449 
2*  43 
5 
8 
2 
0 
1 
0 
snn 
17R 

830  160 
260 ­ 13 
26 .  8 
16  •   2 
0 
0 
1 ISO 

f 

138 
15 
0 
0 
153 

120  451  1100  135  139 
54 
48 
48 
29 
4 
8 
2  ­  1 
3 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
176  500  1132  183  151 
, 
40 
5 
37  207 
19 
11 
58 
5 
59  122 
24  11 
49  162  389  769  125  121 
6 
26 
0 
2 
3 
14 
0 
8 
2 
11  '8 
1 
0 
0 
0 
0 
0 
1 
153  176  500  1132  , 183  J51 

39 
12  ' 
1 
1 
0 
.  .. KO 

49  . 51 
6 
2 
2 
0 
0 
0 
57 
53 
\ 
15 
12 
20 
23 
18  13 
5 
•   2 
2 
0 
0 
0 
57 
53 

V 

63  168  381  767 
89  346 
82 
7 
14 
1  11 
5 
1 
3  19 
0 
0 
0 
0 
153  176  500  1132 

/• 

172  123 
17 
11 
0 
3 
8 
0 
0 
0 
183  151 

86 
8 
54 
8 
7 
68 
19 
4 
6 
82 
79 
3 
7 
33 
2  J8  121 
3 
30  •   5 
33 
21 
4 
3 
7 
1 
67  553  147 
37  162  378  739  ,  136  119 
5 
65 
55  144. 
7 
54 
6'^  46 
4 
0 
40 
5 
20 
0 ­ 10 
6 
8 
1 
8 
51 
5 
0 
3 
13'  22­
1 
2 
0 
0 
1  ^  1 
0 
1 
0 
0 
335  876  173  153  176  500  1132.  183  151 

16 
36 
2 
3 
0 
57 

23 
28 
2 
0 
(k 
53 

9 
10 
5  , 
22  . 
7 
1 
3 
0 
57 

8 
12 
3 
14 
13 
3 
0 
0 
53 

. 

4460* 
858 
354 
85 
2 

Report  Of  A&amp;G 
Tally  Committee 
We,  the  undei­signed  TaUy 
St  " niij 

regular  business  meeting  of  Jan­
5018*  uary  4,  1950,  at  Headquarters, 
submit  the  following  report  and 
705  recommendations: 
34 
All  used  ballots  from  all  ports 
2  were  counted  and  the  correct 
5759  tally  is  submitted  herein.  An  as­
terik  is  placed Jaesides  the  names 
of 
the  candidates  that were  elect­
971 
ed  to  office. 
964 
It  is  to  be  pointed  out  to  the 
3353*  membership  that  this  Commit­
.  377  tee,  upon  checking  various  ports* 
92  taUy  sheets,  found  that  all  re­
2  ports  submitted  by  aU  outport 
were  correct,  and  in 
5759  committees 
nearly  every  case  checked  exact­
ly  with  the  New  York  Head­
3660*  quarters  Committee's final  tal­' 
1735  lies.  In  a  few  isolated  instances 
294  where  the findings  of  the  vari­
70  ous  committees  differ,  the  differ­
ences  were  slight  and  made  no 
0  change  whatsoever  in  the final  , 
5759  results  of  the  election  for  any" 
office. 
Full  copies  of  the rep&gt;orts 
459 
contained 
in  this  document  with 
627 
the  original  signatures  are  on 
221  file  in  .Headquarters  Office  of 
3437*  this  Union. 
585 
D.  MEASE,  100258 
L.  KILLERTZ,  48392 
279 
E.,MOONEY.  46671 
147 
M.  COLUCCI.  38519 
4 
F.  ROSE,  43481 
5759 
C.  KIMBATA^  52 

�Page Eight 

'^'f'jst  S^lEA  fARMRS  too  ' 

1945  Salvage  Claim  Nears 
layoff  For  Hugging Crew 

FridarrJanuttry 13.  I3i» 

PR  Advocate  Editor  Gets  Crew  Award 

J ;f&lt;r 
1­^: 

Ti 

Perseverance, pays  off  and  the  never­say­die  Seafarers 
who salvaged  a  French  freighter  back  in  1941  when  they 
were  crewmembers  of  the  SS  Willard,  a  Galmar  scow, 
are , the  ones  to  prove  it.  "  "  t­
ship  also filed  a  salvage  claim, 
Beset  by  a  maze  of  complica­ an(3  that's  where  the  complica­
tions,  a  ^oup  of  the  Willard  tions  began. 
meh  have  been  doggedly  pul­
As  Lee  put  it,  that  placed  a 
ing  their  salvage  claim  for  more  salvage  claim  upon  a  salvage 
than  four  years,  but  it  wasn't  claim,  although  the  Willard  men 
imtil  last  month  that  the  pros­ had  a  prior  claim  by  several 
pect  of  reward  began  to  look  months. 
;real. 
The  WUlard's  claim  was  also 
j  .  The  story  of  stick­to­it­ive­ complicated  by  the  fact  that  the 
.'jness  came  to  light  without  fan­ de  Champlain  was  an  American 
if^e last week,  when  retired Sea­ ship  under  Frepch  registry  and 
ifarer  WilMam  Lee,  who  has been  since  she  was  turned  over  in 
iworking  shoreside  close  by  SIU  good  shape,  the  US  was  not 
iieadquarters  since  1946,  came  liable. 
Kenny  Eckholm.  SS  Puerto 
Members  of  the  SS  Puerto  Rico's  Black  Gang  present  pen 
to the LOG  office and  asked  that 
and pencil set to  Kenny Eckholm  in appreciation  of  his services 
a  notice  be  run,  teUing  the  old  The  Willard  crew  had filed  its  Rico's  Storekeeper  and  Editor 
as  editor .of  the  shipboard  newspaper.  Left  to  right:  Weaver 
Willard  crew  that  their  claims  claim  with  the  War  Shipping  of  the  Advocate,  ship's  publi­
Administration  and  the  crew  of  cation,  knocks  out  copy  for 
will  be  paid  shortly. 
Manning,  Eckholm,  Vic  D'India,  Harry  Rowe  and  Ed  Saul. 
the French  rescue ship filed  with 
Photos  by  Jim  Colder. 
A  few  probing  questions  and  the  French  govemm^t,  in  ac­ a  forthcoming  issiie.' 
Lee  sketched  the  history  of  the  cordance  with  an  agreement  In  a  simple  ceremony  in  the  crew's  messroom,  his  studies  at  the  University  of  Georgia. 
claim. this  way: 
worked  out  by  the  US Sfate De­ the SS  Puerto Rico's  Black  Gang  presented  Ken­
Gnder  the  new  editor's direction,  the  Advocate 
In  mid­September  of  1945  the  partment­
neth  Eckholm  with  a  pen  and  pIncU  set  in  was  expanded  and  the  Christmas  issue  featured 
"Willard  sailed  from  Pensacola, 
appredaticm  of  his  imtiring  services  as  editor  of  for  the first  time  a  fuU  page  of  pictm­es  taken 
Bla.,  bound for  Algiers. En  route,  The  case  dragged  on  and  it  the shipboard  newspaper,  tha^ Advocate. 
by  staff  photographer  Jim  Golder.  The  Advocate 
the  Willard  met  the  SS  Samuel  was  not  tmtil  early  in  last  No­
Presentation  of  the  award  was  made  during  also  runs  a  page  of  advertisements. 
ven^ber 
that 
any 
heartening 
pro­
de  Chanjplain,  an  American­
the  last  voyage  by  Vic  D'India  as  spokesman 
Eckholm  attributed  much  of  the  success  of  the 
owned ship operating under  bare­ gress  was  made  by  Lee  and  the  for  the  Engine  Department. 
other 
WiUard "crewmen 
who 
had 
shipboard 
publication  to  the  assistance  he  has 
iboat  charter  to  the  French.  In­
been 
pushing 
the 
claim 
for 
the 
received 
from 
the staff.  Hi&lt;fa  Revesz,  Stewardessi 
Eckholm, 
Storekeeper 
on 
the 
Bull 
Lines 
pas­
ternational  code  pennants  were 
four 
years 
that ;had 
elapsed. 
At 
is 
associate 
editor, 
and  Jimmie  DuBose  and  Jim 
senger­ship, 
txx&gt;k 
over 
the 
editor's 
job, 
when 
strung  up  on  the  de  Champlain 
that 
time 
Lee 
communicated 
Golder 
serve 
as 
managing 
editors. 
George 
Boney 
left 
the 
vessel 
last 
faU 
to resume 
" indicating  that she  needed  assist­
i 
• .'­• •••  ance.  The  vessel  had  been  com­ with  all  the  WiUard  hands from 
^ 
' 
the 
skipper 
on 
down, 
teUing 
I^Tj 
pletely  disabled  as  a  result  of 
• a  broken  shaft  and  was  at  the  them  to  get  their  Congressmen 
to  appeal  to  the  Maritime  Com­
'mercy  of  the  seas. 
'  The  Willard  towed  the  French  mission  to speed  bp  the  process­
By  "SALTY  DICK" 
ship  to  Ponta  Delgada.  The  ing  of  their  claim.  Lee  wrote  to 
his 
Congressman, 
Rep. 
James 
Skipper,  Hugo  Kotch,  then filed 
a  salvage  claim  for  himself  and  Mmphy,  a  member  of  the  House  Herb  Knowles  has  changed  to  in  New  Orleans  recommending  sel  and  shaking  it  down. . .  . 
the  Black  Gang  after  20  years  a  committee  of  six,  two  from  Ayala,  already  the father  of  twi^v!^ 
the rest  of  the  crew  and  in  No&lt;­ Merchant  Marine  Ccanmittee. 
Murphy 
got 
in 
touch 
with 
the 
vember  1945,  the  .WiUard  sailed 
of  sailing  in  the  Stewards  De­ each department,  to  study  plans  expects  an  addition  to  his family 
of  ships  to  be  buUt  in  the  fu­ within  a  few . months. 
Commission, 
which 
explained 
back  to  Philadelphia. 
By  the  time  you  read  ture.  In  other  words  to  check 
m:  Meanwhile,  the  tug  Blackmoor  that  only  a  limited  personnel  partment. 
this,  he'll  be. on his  way  to South  the  blueprints  and  suggest  to  What  well­known  character 
'S­ began  towing  the  de  Champlain  was available to process such  ap­ America. 
(age  65)  was  found  in  the  veg­
.  .  Gary  Myrick  is  not 
back  to France for  overhauL  But  pUcations  and  the  delay  was vui­ only  bplning  Paul  Wflrren  on  a  the  .companies  the  advantages  etable  box  eating  carrots  during 
^voiuab.Lti. 
•  
tliii  iiivt»!&gt;iun  or  ine  Normano^"" 
^she  broke" loose  in  a  sibfm' 
very  important  mission,  he  has 
it  wasn't  until  another  French  Shortly  after,  however,  John  started  'a  band­'of  his  own  at  ;Fred  Edgett  finally  changed  beach?  He's  called  Uncle  —" . . 
flag  ship  came  along  that  ^e  Webb  of  Lake  Park,  Fla.,  an­ the  Club  BaUerina  in  New  Or­ his  mind  about  going  to  Iran.  George Foley  stayed on  the beaCh 
Was  agam  put  under  tow  for  otha*  Willard  veteran,  wrot^  to  leans. . .  Let's  give  credit  to  He  missed  his  ship  in  Long  for  over  a  year  but  ^how  hq'c 
France.  The  crew  of  the  rescue  Lee  and  told  him  that  Charles  the  New  Orleans'  HaU.  i would­ Beach,  Calif»  and  has  return­ going  back  to  sea.  He  spent  his 
MarshaU  of  the  Maritime  Com­
ed  to  the  Gulf. . . During  the  time  picking  potatoes  on  his 
mission  recently  informed  him  n't  hesitate  to  say  it's  about  the  last  war  I  sailed  with  an  AB  farm  in  Maine.  He  refuses  to 
within  a  very  short  time  they  most  progressive  one  we  have. 
who  came  from  Tahiti.  He  touch  a  spud,  how. 
would  receive  payment  of  their  I  understand  some  ships  have  claimed  there  were  no  other'  Clyde  Bernard  having  trouble 
the  same  delegates  trip  after 
claims. 
trip. 
May  I  suggest  the  rotation  ports, but  this "island  of  love."  with  this  stern  and  the  doctors 
So  Lee,  who  retired  his  §IU 
I'd  like  to  get  in  touch  with  may  have  to  operate.  . Brother 
book  a few  months  after he paid  of  these  jobs.  Let  everybody  him ^again.  ^  . 
Robertson  lost  his  happy  horhe 
off  the  WiUard  and  later  got  a  take  a  chance  at  shipboard  re­
and 
he's  in  the  market  for  h 
ticket  as  Third  Assistant  Engin­ sponsibility. . . I'd  like  to  state  Reports  are  coming  in  of  Bra­ long  trip.  His  last  ship  was ­the:  •  
Seafarer William H. Dean,  eer,  asked  the  LOG  to  spread  that  I'm  not  anti­homesteaders,  zilian  customs  men  getting 
Seatrain  New  Orleans.  It  .has 
1­­  ^24, died in Charity Hospital,  the good word to his former ship­ I'm  pro­SIU. 
tough,  especially  in  Santos.  They  been  suggested  that  all  relief 
A  motion  wgs  passed  recently  have­a  habit  of  boarding  a  ves­ jobs  should  go  to  permit  men. 
I  New  Orleans,  on  December  mates  and  co­claimants. 
| 
t 16,  shortly "after  being  ad­
What  do  you  think  of  this?  Pete 
Hammel  and  Tony  Alleman  both 
mitted  with  injuries  suffer­
in  Lake  Charles  doing  a  good  ' 
ed  when  the  motorcycle  he 
job  for  the  SIU. . .  A  certain 
was  riding  cracked  up  on 

'Voice  Of  The  Sea' 
' 

I 

Wm. Dean Killed 
In New Orleans 
Motorcycle Crash 

Crewmembers  of  the  iSS  Cape  Nome, South  Atlanpic,  went  on'record in  favor  £guh°^wajs plays'VMule TraS" 
of  compulsory  vacations after one  year  of  employment aboard  a vessel, following a  full  on  the  juke  box. And  he's  ready 
to  ship  out.  Wow! 
His  body  was  sent  to  Galves­
discussion  of  the  question  at  the  Dec.  24  shipb^rd  nieeting  at sea. 
• t  bn  for  burial  in  Memorial  Park. 
The  SS  Monarch  of  the  Sea; 
one of  the city's streets. 

stay  on  for  Results  of  the  Voting  were  22  now  known  as  the  "RockpUe 
A native of  New Orleans, Dean  Opponents  and  backers  of 
proposed 
rule 
gave 
the 
reasons 
for  the  rule,  two  against.  One  Special,"  seemed  t3  be ,  a  good 
the  fuU  year. 
lived  with  his  mother,  Mrs.  Una 
ntian. abstained  from  voting. 
CHhers 
declared 
that 
the 
rule 
ship.  I  understand  it  is  seldom 
M.  Dezin  at  2314  Avenue  O,  for  their ? stand .  on  the  issue, 
The  Cape  Nome  vote,  how­ that  anyone  quits  this  shipi 
would 
prevent 
cliques, 
from 
de­
Galveston. 
which  is  being  widely  debated 
veloping  ajjoard  ship.  Both  the  ever,  has  no  bearing  on  the  which  plies  between  New.  Gr­
; He  joined  the SIU  in  that  pOrt  throughout  the  Union. 
advantages  and  the  '•   disadvan­ final  disposition  of  the  rule  ledns  and  Puerto  Rico. ; ;  Scotl^ 
oh  March  29,  1948,  and  held 
According  to  a  report  reach­ tages 'of  the  rule  to  the  family,  which  would  be  made  by  the  Robertson  going  to  Baltimq^ ^ 
Book  No.  50587.  He  was_ first 
issued  a  permit  in  the  Port  of  ing  the  LOG  this  week  from  the  men  and  others  with  obligations  entire  ipiembership  in  referen­ for  a  gall  bladder  operation.'7.1 ' 
dum  voting.  The  decision  of  the  Every  chance  Kenny  Eckhol^; 
Cape  Nome,  some  crewmen  ex­ were  discussed  fully:. 
New  York  oh  June  1947. 
Brother  Dean  sailed  as  Ordi­ pressed  the  view  that  making  The  effect  of  the  compulsory  Cape  Nome  Seafarers merely "in­ gets to eat  his favorite  dlSh,  pig's 
f 
nary  Seaman,  and  was  in  good  the  acceptance  of  vacations  com­ ruling  on ­ present  job  "security  dicates  th«»ir  sentiment  in  the  knUckjes  and  sauerkraut, he 
Union  standing  at  the  tiine  of  pulsory  would  encourage  men  came  in  for  considerallle  dis­ current  Union­w.vde  debate  ofi  to  an^  uatery'­.near7,fir7;3i^^'7^ 
the  etiir"u2syry  vacation  issue,  Street.  • .  v"'  •  ^ 
who  now  get  cff^a  ship  after  cussioig'  the  iepOii.t  stated. 
S/ .  Bis  death. 

.'li 

�Friday,  Aauaxy  IS*  1980 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Page Iniw 

. y

pgested Minutes Of  SIB  Ship Meetii^ 
ANTINOtfSL  (no  dale)—E.  S. 
to  instruct  Brother  GuUloi  to 
nSgdon,  Chairman:  Kenneth  Lo 
round  up  missing  members;  one 
pel.  Secretary.  Delegates  report­
man  excused  to  work.  Under 
^ all  in  good  order. • E
  ddie  Hig­
Good  and  Welfare  necessity »pf 
don  elected  Ship's  Delegate  by 
members  keeping  alleyway  clean 
acclamation.  Motion  carried  to 
was  discussed.  Brother  W.  Higgs 
notify  all  Halls  of  Inability  to 
pointed  out  that  annual  SIU 
aecure  seamen  in  Baltimore,  as 
ielection  is  on  and  that  eveiy 
bompany  didn't  give  half  enough 
member  should  vote.  Ball  game 
time  to  get  jr  new  man.  Motion 
and  picnic  were  discussed.  Af­
carried  to  get  waste  baskets  for 
ter  ^ne  minute  of  silence  in 
^oc'sles.  Motion  ­trarried  to  have 
i memory  of  departed  Union  Bro­
Water  fountain' replaced  so  tha' 
thers, ­meeting  was. adjourned 
output  of  water  will be  adequate. 
XXX 
IJnder  Good  '  and  Welafre  the 
DEL 
NORTE. 
Dec.  8—Ti  Ban'^ 
following suggestions  were made 
ning. 'Chairman; C. 
Bradley. Sre­
pbtain  sufficient  lighting  for  mously  endorsed  plan  whereby 
retary. 
Ship's 
Delegate 
reported 
Mter  deck, ,^have  cots  put  into  Brothers  on  4­8  watches  will  be 
that 
there 
had 
been, no 
loggings 
storage,  keep  washing  machine  able  to  attend  one  of  two  ship­
on 
current 
trip; 
he 
wished 
all 
board  meetings  per  trip. 
dean. 
hands  a  Merry  Christmas.  Sum 
9 mihrcan-'slusfck^
t,  X 
­ 
XXX 
IBERVILLE.  Oct.  26—Charles  of  $162.89  is  in  ship's  fund. 
ELIZABETH.  Nov.  27 —Anio­
nic  Gonzalei.^ Chairman;  Pedro  Halla.,  Chairman:  Walter  Gros­ Hancock requested  Brother  Brad­
6er^e^ ihS
isnioxt
pel  Valle,  Secretary.  Delegates  venor.  Secretary.&gt;  Delegates  re­ ley  to  read  minutes  of  special 
meeting 
held 
Friday 
night 
in 
reported  everything  smooth  in  ports  accepted.  Motion  carried  to 
ioll  departments.  Motion  by  Bon­ request  volunteers  to  look  after  connection  with  performance  by 
yairalsiSis na^ a tfear­roim^ prgAtsswH 
• fant to  change  all  mattresses.  ship's  library  in  recreation  room  crewmember.  Motion  by  Pere­
dne 
carried 
that 
charges 
be 
aft for 
one trip. 
Palmer 
and 
Per­
Motion  by  Ortiz  to  ask  Patrol­
man  to  instruct  Mate  not  to  in­ alta  volunteered  for  job.  Tom  dropi&gt;ed  as man  is first  offender. 
Bradley  asked  all  men  having 
stall  chipping  machine  around  Crane  elected.  Ship's  Delegate; 
ship's 
athletic  gear  to  return 
house  when  watches  are  set  and  vote  of  thanks  given  to previous 
them 
to 
.  locker  where  Dondnicis 
men  below  are  sleeping.  Motions  delegate  for  job  well  done.  All 
will 
check 
them  in.  More  recre­
earned:  That  Steward  put  in  a  hands  requested  to  take  good 
ation 
gear 
is  to  be  purchased 
requisition  of  new  linen;  that  care  of  crew  equipment  which 
out 
of 
ship's 
fund  for  use  on 
crew's  messrooms,  foc'sles  and  will  make  it  easier  for  Union 
next 
trip. 
Men 
warned,  that  no 
showers  be  painted  and  keys ob­ and  representatives  to  negotiate 
one 
is 
to leave 
ship 
unless  prop­
improved  conditions. 
tained  for lockers. 
erly  relieved  or  ex^sed  by  de­
X  X  % 
partment  head. 
DEL  MONTE.  Nov.  20  —  D. 
Korolia,  Chairman;  H.  Gerdes. 
Secretary. Motion  carried  to rend 
by  Hank 
air­mail  letter  to  LOG  Editor 
expressing  appreciaticm  for  over­
seas  news  bulletin. .Motion  by 
Every  now  and  then  there's  an  SIU  ship  in  the  news.  Recent­
E.  deBaulte  carried  to  seek 
ly  it  was a  Seatrain  ship  and  just  last  week  it  was  the  Antinous. 
% 
X 
means  of  continuing  ROU  news. 
However,  no  casualties  .  .  .  Prom  Port  Said  Egypt,  Brother  V, 
CUBORE,  Nov.  20  —  W.  M.  Suggestion  by  Brother  C.  Habi­
XXX 
Perez, 
the  oldtimer  writes  from  the  SS  PetroUte,  which  is  on  a 
Fields.  Chairman;  W.  A.  House.  ghorst  that  in  future  any  mem­
SEATRAIN  NEW  JERSEY,  Persian  Gulf  shuttle  and  says  he  woxdd  like  to  write  to  a  ship­
Secretary.  Motion  carried  that  ber  found  guilty  of  going  top­ Nov. 22—John  Jellete. Chairman; 
mate  by  the  name  of  "Ropeyarn"  Justice  whom  he  remembers 
new rules  be drawn  up and  post­ side  with beefs,  instead  of  taking  H.  V.  Newbrery.  Secretary. 
ed  in  lounge:  feet  to  be  kept  them  through  proper,  channels,  Ship's  Delegate  said  he  will  since  1926  ... Bill  Gray  and  others  aboard  the  SS  Seatrain  Nevjf 
off  chairs,  no  spitting  on  deck,  be  asked  to  make  a  sizeable  check  with  New  Orleans  Agent  Jersey  regret  to  see  their  happy  ship  lose  a  good  man,  Brother 
John  Jellette,  the  Steward  with  a  mustache  who  was  aboard  ten 
coffee  shack  to  be  kept  clean,  OG  donation.  Crew  was  in  fa­ /to  ascertain  length  of  extension 
happy 
months  and  now  is  heading  for  the  Oregon  trail.  Bill  also 
etc.  Delegates'  reports  read  and  vor  of  this  proposal. 
/  of  Messman,  as  voted  on  at  mentions  a  hospitable  place  in  Edgewater,  New  Jersey,  called' 
accepted—there  were  no  beefs. 
XXX 
^  meeting  in  New  Orleans.  Dis­ John's  Bar  and  Grill  which  receives  a  bundle  of  LOGS  and  is  a 
Jack  Denby  elected  Ship's  Dele­
ALCOA 
PILGRIM. 
Novi 
27—  cussion  on  Brother  Matt  Fields  favorite  lendezvous  for  all  Seatrain  crewmembers. 
gate.  Crew  went  on  record  to 
Clyde 
Lewelyn. 
Chairman; 
BiU  report  from  Seatrain  Texas  by 
XXX 
inform  LOG  that  this  is the  best 
telephone  to JShip's  Delegate  Bill 
Mitchell. 
Secretary. 
Motion 
car­
Here  in  New  York  Jack  Duffy  says  he^s  heard  from  big 
feeding  sliip  in  the  Ore  Line. 
Gray  that  Fields  had  been  over­
Motion  carried  to  start  ship's  ried  to  have  Delegates  check  charged  at  Spotlight  Tavern  in  Dulchy  Bolz  who  is  still  aboard  the  SS  Trinity  and  looking 
fund  for  purchase  of  washing  slopchest  before  sailing  on  next  Belle  Chasse.  Joha^JeUele  read  better  than  ever  . . . Gtorge  Metting  is  on  the  SS  Del  Norte 
machine.  Delegates to collect  two  trip.  Delegates  repoi­ted  every­ an  excellent  Thanksgiving  Day  and  she  too has  a softball  team,  we're  informed  Well,  perhaps 
the  twain  shall  meet  between  the  SS  Puerto  Rico's  softball' 
dollars  from  each  man  in  their  thing  okay  in  all  departments.  message,  which  was  well­receiv­
Under 
Go^ 
and 
Welfare, 
there 
gang and 
the one on the SS  Del  NoHe... We're asking  Kenneth 
departments,  with  machine  to 
ed. 
was 
discussion 
on 
linen, 
sanitary 
Eckholm 
and 
P.  San  Migueh  Who  are  aboard  the  SS  Puerto' 
become  property  of  present  and 
• vv 
'­i*'  rrrcss* 
•
" 
•
 '4« 
4" 
~ 
iiico.'ib 
give 
us 
the  name'ox  iue~"'wooit.  w^to 
aij^  'AUC.' 
future  jcrews. 
Brother  Lswelyn  gave  a  short  YAK A.  Nov.  14—nafOld  Du­
fancy  sauces  and  dressings.  For  example,  making  antipastry 
XXX 
MANKATa  VICTORY.  Nov.  talk  on  the  Union  and  asked  all  Cloux,  Chairman;  G.  L.  Lonski.  (oops,  we  mean  antipasto)  and  other  similar  items.  FLASH 
13—^Bbb  Brock.  Chairman;  Mai­ Brothers  to  perform  their  jobs  Secretary.  No  beefs.  Motion  (by  NEWS—^We  have  been  informed  that  none  other  than  one 
of  the  best  Cooks  in  the  SIU.  Pete  Gonzales,  makes  the  fancy 
Lonski,  seconded  by  J.  Thomp 
lie  Lakan.  Secretary.  Delegates  to  the  best  of  their  ability.  . 
/ 
son)  carried  to  go  on  record  as  stuff  aboard  the  ship  as  Chief  Cook. 
repoitod  that  outside  of  some 
opposed  to  seamen's  anchorage 
XXX 
disputed  overtime'^ there  were  no 
as 
proposed  by  Brother  in  let­
Jot  Prisament  grabbed  the  Steward's  job  on  the  Waterman 
beefs.  Motion  carried  that  cop­
ter  to  LOG.  Motion  (by  Storey,  scow,  SS  LaSalle  heading  for  Far  East  ports... When  the  SS 
tes  of  repair  list  be  given  to 
seconded 
by  Myers)  carried  not  Lojtola  Victory  had  Steward  Frank  Gardner  aboard  the  crew  had 
Patrolman,  department  headS 
to 
use 
laundry 
opposite  Deck  the  following  unusual  items  on  their  Thanksgiving  menu­^stuffed 
and^one  posted  on bulletin board. 
Maintenance foc'sle 
between 0000  Utah  celery  (what  in  the  world  is  that?),  dysteo:  dressing,  cafe 
Suggested  that  books  and  maga 
hours 
and 
0600—17 
for,  three­ noir,  poached  Alaska  black  cod... Congratulations  to  Everisto  and 
rines  in  ship's  library  be  chang­
against. 
Discussion 
on food, 
with  Filomena  Jimenez  who  were  njarried  New  Year's  eve  here  in 
X  XX 
(fid.  Shjp's  Delegate  O'Connell 
Steward 
agreeing 
to 
try 
and  New  York... Saying  the  crew  is  happy  in  continuously  getting 
STEEL  EXECUTIVE.  Nov.  20 
Volunteered  to make  the arrange­
remedy 
matters 
on 
potatoes 
and  those  air­mailed  Overseas  Bulletins,  Eddie  Eriksen  aboard  the 
L. 
Walberg. 
Chairman; 
A. 
D. 
ments.  Suggested  that  one  of 
SS  Southland  says  they  spent  Christmas  in  Charleston  and  New 
the  crew  go  to'New  York  Hall  Brodio.  Secretary.  Minutes  of  night  lunch. 
Year's  in  Savannah  and  are  bound  for  Glasgow,  Liverpool,  Ham­
to  see  if  they  have  available  a  last  meeting read  and  approved. 
.XXX 
burg, 
Bremen,  Rotterdam  and  Antwerp.  , 
Washing  machine  taken  off  an­ Beef  about  taking  care  of  wash­
ALEXANDRA.  Dec.  4—A.  W. 
other  ship.  Brother  Brock  volim­ ing  machine  was:  reported  set­ Gowder. ..Cheurman;  Truman  Pa­
XXX 
teered  to handle  this  assignment.  tled.  Delegates  had  no  beefs  to  troqidn.  Secretary.  Minutes  of 
Waller Gardner,  who has  a mustache  and recently  received 
Motion  to .  purchase  a.  washing  report. Brother  Keely moved that  last  meeting read  and  posted  on  a  telephone  call  asking  for  thirty  dollars,  says  the  dredge,  the 
repair  list  be  started  now  in  all  bulletin  board  Disputed  over­
machine  was  defeated.­  m 
Sandchief. has two excited  treasure­htmters named  Pat Coponiti 
departments so they can be ready  time  in  Engine  Department;  no  and  Bill  Williams  who  are  grabbing  all  those  coins  found  in 
XXX' 
CAPE  MOHICAN,  Nov.  27—J.  for  Patrolm'an  on  arrival  in  New  beefs  in  other  departments.  Mo­
the  sea  bottoms.  Although  the  coins  are  in  such  bad  condition 
jSoUers,  Chairman;  Mel  Brown.  York.  Bosun  will  see  Mate  about  tion  carried  to  instruct  Ship's  that  they're  not  worth  anything  it  seems  George  Harding  still 
Secretary.  Ship's  Delegate  re­ having  messhalls  painted  so  that  Delegate  to  see  Captain  about  wishes  he  was getting  some  of  those  coins,  anyway. 
ported  "*that  conference  with  Stewards  Department  can  take  loggings.  Brother  Pqtriquin  vol­
XXX 
, 
. 
Mate proved  favorable and  Puer­ care  of  it  if  Deck  Gang  doesn't  unteered  to  try  to  get  a  library 
The~  SEAFARERS  LOG  will  be  sailing  to  the  homes  of  the 
Rican shoi­e  gang's coffee  time  have  time.  One ­minute  of  sil­ put  aboard  ship.  Sn^h  suggest­ following  Brothers:  Albert  Hellmuth  of  California,  CJeorge  Peter­
departed  ed  that  we  all  keep  close  watch  son  of­Texas,  Anthony  Guiliano  6f  New;  Jersey,  J.  Taylor  of 
had  been  settled  satisfac­ ence  in  memory 
, 
, 
No  beefs  in  any  of  the  Brothei­s. 
when  near  othel*.  ships  in  port  Pennsylvania,  Walter  Conner  of  Virginia,  Jack  Brown  of  Floridk, 
departments.  Brother  J.  George 
XXX  '  \ 
to  §ee  if  we  xan  trade  books  William  Meyer  of  New  York,  William  Mackin  of  Maryland,  W.  R. 
yolunte^  to, purchase  parts to 
ALCOA  CORSAia  Dre. 
with  thiMn  in  event  Patriquin  Wllkihs  of  Texas," Thomas  Hendricks  of  South  Carolina,  Thomas 
Impair 
Brother  L.  Clarke,  CBiflnnan:  J.  Reb­ is  vmable to  get  library  in  New  Hankins  of  Georgia... Brother  Henry  Bonk,  vdio  just  shipped  out, 
Stopanian  will  order  a  new ­  U­ firit, 
"All  delegates  York.  Steward  asked  all  lapn  to  is  plenty  happy  that  hisl.baby  is  just  two  months  old  and  weighs 
wvy.  After  discussion  by .  Bror  rnisde their  reports;, IVtotion  car­,  cectoerate; by  turning  in aB 
•  Qvec  i^ouatoen  pwutos dlrredy;...'fRed''­R 
is  here Jn  town  and 
tli&lt;?r'  j;  Emtoidci  criew  .unani­ rii^; to  call  roll.  Motion  carried  ed  linens. 
his shipmate  Red Stams  is­ too  since  the  Beatrice' has  been  laid  upw 

c^i£ill'hei&amp;n%eF&amp;­for 
or^cmi/ied la\foraifid'H%e»'­G»miUe&amp;, 
surfp^r THP M4iac/f OF OtMiBS s 

CUT 

L. 

and 

"" 

RUN 

• iiwi«igiassr 

�wamm 

T9. 

EdJIw: 

a  Ipng  foul,  and  then  another  ceeded  to  shellac  the  topside 
screaming  strike.  The  next  one  jgang. 
^ 
On  page  11  oi  the  December  came gating up  like a  big clpud 
Nov? 
that's 
going  back  pretty 
16  issue  of  the  SB^^ARERS 
and,  i couldn't  have  hit  it  with  far  but  1 can  stilt  remember  a 
LOG  h»,  A feom 
Brpther  a  tennis  recquet. 
few  of '  the  gang  who  played, 
^rank 
claiming  the  Rob­
namely  Kep  Ellsworth,  a  guy 
%  Hood  crew  to  be  the  softball 
THAT'S  ALL 
named  Jones,  both  Oilers;  Bill 
champft  o;f  the  i^t. I'm not  dis­ The  ump,  who  happened  t®  Churchill,  AB;  Third  Engineer 
puting  t^ 
i&gt;b.t  Brother  he  Fred  Latrave'rse,  a,  Wipcr 
Pete  Constas  and  First  Engineer 
'filer's  claim  that  the  Robin  from  our  crew,  called: it  a  strike 
jpood  crew  was  the  hrst  to  put  and  yours  truly  slimk  back  to  Matt  McDonough.  I  met  Mcr 
Donough  about  two  years  ago 
; tt  team  on  the field  in  formal  the  ship,  the  object  of  mujh 
in Capetown  and  he still  remem­
competition  is  so.'  mi^. malark­ ridicvile  and  pointed  remarks  ^r 
bered  the  game. 
ey  and  nothing  else. 
many  weeks  after. 
Am  enclosing  a  photo  of  the 
l^rother­ Teller  is  so.  far  be­ We  next  engaged  a  tqam  in  Robin  Locksley  team.  That's  all 
hind  the  times  that  he  qualifies  Morhbasa  which  subsec^uently  for  now,  Ed. 
^ a  claimant  to  the  title  "Fifil  became  the  Mombasa  Softball  Hope  Brother  Teller  reads  this 
Hare  arp  some  pf  the  Robin  Line  ship's  players  who 
intern."  Leave  me  square  him  Club.  That  was  in  August  194^7.  and  also  hope  you  can  get  it  all  shared' Don  Lindex's  grief  whep  he  fanned  in  the  ninth,  with 
away! 
two  put.  ip  mempr^le  contest  with  Robin 
We  played  a  couple  of  games  on  in.  Incidentally,  I'd  like  to  hear  l^ses  loaded 
QoodfeUow squad 
back in 1947. Gop^ellow 
team, thus squeak^ 
from 
any 
of 
the 
fellows. 
the.  ne;xt  trip,  too.  But  wait, 
HERE'S  HOW 
through 
'wifh 
a 
30 
to 
29 
victory. 
Linder 
says  he  and  other 
Don 
Lindef 
that's  not  all. 
He claims  the  Robin  Hood first 
l^cdafers 
a^ard ihe Sea 
Tarppn 
introduced 
softball  in  South 
206­06 
42nd 
Ave.. 
put  a  team  in  action  in  Septem­ Previous  to  the  Locksley,  I 
ip 194^ 
Bayside, 
New 
York 
'^r 19^. la  jCune  1947  I  signed  was  on  the  Robin  Sherwood  as 
on  the  Rohhi 
and  I  an  FWT,  vmder  ''Terrible  Tex 
made  two 
piMn^  off  in  the  Young,  the closest  thing  to  Padr 
piiddle  of 
Qa ,dy  Brennan  ^at  ever  sailed. 
the first  voyage, 
team  from  Oh  yes,  we  had  a  team  on  the 
the  Locksley  engaged  the  teant  Sherwood,  too.  Two  Brothers 
th?  i^bin  Goodfellow  in  who  can  verify  this  ai*e  Toby 
Torbick  and  A1  Hammity,  who  To  the 
Laurenco  Marques. 
the  SIU­  and  it  is  my  intention  the  principles  of  our  trade  un­
A  memorable  occasion  it  was,  are  both  probably  hoipesteadlng 
to  live  up  to  this  obligation.  You  ion? ' 
' 
too.  We  were  losing  36  to  29,  qn  a  Rqhin  Line §^pow.  l^ore yet,  It  had  been  my  hope  Uiat  people  claim  that  an  oath  of  ob­ You  "emancipators"  should  re­ , 
upon  my  public  statement  of  ligation  is  nothing  but  capital­
twa outs, last of  the  ninth,  bases  &lt;^n't  go  ?^way, 
my 
resignation  from  the­Marine  istic  trickery  to  snare  the  work­ meipber  that  no  man  cap  obey; &lt; 
were  loaded  and  yours truly  was 
ANOTlffiR  TEAll 
two  masters.  He  must  hate  W 
•  • •  * 
Trauspprt  Workers  of  the  IWW  er  in  a  trap  of  exploitation. 
at  bat. 
destroy 
one.  You  claim  that 
1 wa^ op  thu Flying  Arrow  lAe  (Ipternatlonjd  Workers  of tike 
^e enemy pitcher  threw  three 
I 
am 
suri^rised 
that 
uniop­
lying 
a red 
card  does  pot  ma^e ; 
last  trip  she  made '  un^et' 
WorWi),  that  these  sorcaUed  de­
baUs,  then  a  fast  one  which  was 
cqnscious 
workers 
as­you 
pro­
you 
a 
dual 
unionist, 
but  it 
fiug  Vapk  i» thp 
feuders  of  indiyidual  rights 
fqss 
to 
be 
would 
involve 
your­
eventually 
give 
you 
a 
dual  PB^0: 
of  1946.  We_had  one  pf fep.  bi^t  would  allow  me  the  privilege. 
selves 
in the 
snares 
of 
capitalism 
sopality 
and, 
with 
time, 
piaib*^: " 
81U 
•   crews  I  ei^r  sailed  with  find  The  past  few  weeks  has  and  permit  yourselves  to  be  ex­ you  a  detriment  to  the  Uniqj^ 
they  played,  ^oftball  also. 
in 
SfcaRtQn 
brought  to  light  the  fact  th^  ploited. 
whoge  purposes  you  promise^'  ­
But 
the 
clincher 
in 
this 
argu­
though 
many  of  these  "eman­
Thank Ship's 
to  uphold. 
Must 
we 
workers., of 
the 
SIU 
ment  gges. way  bgtdf  to  lfi4S,  jugt  cipators"  shout  loudly  for  free­
To  the  Editor: 
after  the  war  was  over.  I signed  dom  they  fail  to  permit  the  in^  apd  SUP  asspme  that  when  you  Ip  my  personal  opinion  it 
dividual  to  enjoy,  such  rights,  entered  our  union  ranks  you  wopld,  be  a  gopfi  idea  tq.  d^qp 
The  m^bers  of  the  SIU  at  on  an  Alcoa  shijP' 
pom  She  made  the  South  Afri­ 'When  I  carried  a  card  in  that  perjured  yourself  in  taking  the  ope  or  the  other  card  before 
Foct  Eftanton  Hospital  wish  to 
tlhibn  oath  of  obligation  and  find  yourself  biting  your  owp 
thank  the crew  of  the  SS  Twin  can  run  that  trip,  chartered  to  outfit  (IWWX  and  believed  in  had  no  intention  of  defending  tail. 
Jqiioph  Buddf^ 
Fa^  Victory  for  their  Christ­ either  the  9obin  Line  or  the  its  program'as  the  only,  means 
American  South  Afriean  Lin,e.  whereby  a  worker­  could  ac­
mas  donati&lt;»i^ 
Ope  day  whne  we  were  in the  hieve  solidarity,  I  could  do  no 
:  At  the  «me  time  we  wish  tq  tropical  hole  of  Beira,  we  nrade  wrong  in  the  eyes  of  these 
1 
A 
cdmes­ine­r^,vdimtiU" °  pfeopieT 
m:. 
for  a  ha^py  Ivfew  Year  up  two  teams,~tne  crew"'^wfsus 
thq  officers.  Out  we  paraded  to  But  wUPh  t  ren.'^h^  U  decision 
ar^  pleasant  sailini^. 
a field  that  was,  nqthipg  but  whqroih  I  ^plt  IhhV  ^bqy  were 
A*  McGuigan. 
soft  sand.  In  the  broiling  sun,  detriniepl 'to  %e,  welfarq,  of  the 
by  RayOTo'iid  J. Marcii\iRk,  Book  No; 289flf4 
Hwp.  DeL 
before,  a  crowd  oP  enthusiastic  rank  and  file  and  openly  pfo­
J. B.  LigbifMjt  but  astounded  natives,,  we  pro­ ciainaed suchl  thou these sp­.caiied 
2fi5t  W­  Belden  Avenue 
defepdP^.  ei 
speech  b.egan  To  the  Editor: 
Chicago  47,  Illinois 
d,eno\mcipg  me  for  dartpg  to 
MIXING  IT  UP 
As  a  retired  seaman  I  look  forward  to  getting  the  .SEA­
• use. that  ireedopi. 
So  agaip  1  aifi  teUipg  these  FARERS  LOG  every  week.  Circupistances  keep  me  ashore  but | 
RepBle:  pleau 
own  house  still  faHq  ap,  active,  interest  in  the  seamen  and  how  things  arq  . 
belpre  yp.U  darp  point  the  finger  gqing.  It filk  me  with  pride  when  I  see  the  gains  made  in, the ' 
of  seorp  against  the  actions  of  past  few  years for  the  Union.  I  would  like  to  express  my  thanks 
the  ­SfU  and  ^;UF,  Tell  your  for  receiving  the  LOG  and  enclqse  an  original  poem  I  wrote,  if 
membership,  thut. wprkers'  solid­ yqu  thmk'if  is.  good  enough  to  print  in  the  LOG  at  some  futun^ ,".;|g 1 
'  y  J 
arity  eannqt  he  created  by  men  date i shall  be  honored. 
who  fill  themselves  with  bpqze 
Where  15  adventure,  Oh  where  can  it  be, 
and  insist  upop  forcing  their 
'  if  no  where  else  thari  on  the  sea. 
ideas  on  workers  who  are  not 
interested  in  the  babble  of  a 
­ 
is  life  cheerfuU  and  sad  ^ c^n  be, 
drunken  mah.  Clean  your  ranks 
tbqix  'ifotirxditlie.point  and  ou;t  on 
sea. 
of  those  who  scream  about  ItEe, 
Oh­when  do  I  miss  you,  my  dearest  heart, 
' i,.  , 
liberty  and  the  pursuit ,  of  in­
then 
when 
miles 
of 
o^ean 
hold 
us 
apart. 
.; 
dividual  priyi^ges  land  deiny 
How much do I miss you  while ori foreign shore,  . ^ 
^ 
those  principles  to  all  workers 
who  seek  such  privilege. 
.  as  each  passing  day mahes  m«:  Want  foxi inore. 
J 
A&lt;%ording  to  the  • c  ohstitutipp 
Athowie bncc  again.gaze ont.^ijo  »pa,  : 
• ij 
of  your  organization,  it  states 
and it shalbbe  w^iting,^^!^;  t^^ fcw  mel 
that  no  one  but  a  wage' earaer 
What 
is  this  power  that  takes  me  away, 
may  be  a ­member.  To  abide  by 
aivif  brea^ the  promisje  I make  every  day, ' 
the coHstitfrthm  why­ not  remove 
firom­yoUr  raoke the. petty  (X&gt;ck­
A 
once ,mbre" fawT­  out on j;he,sedj^; 
roa^'  businemnwp  who  live  o|£ 
thq:. eamiBga  e^.; the  wa^ slave. 
iPMi^  liMd  lb  ihat . caution  sign  op  the  buUthoad 
I  took  ao.  oath  of  qbh^a^qp 
'WtgW'­  ZygpEWSfe!^'  oudt ihA  €?hief­  Ttaiibame  to  the  Upion  and  the  member^ 
Ba^ h;i,.hia  yeuth 
was.a  ship  thatf  I  would  uphold  thh  I ­­vu!:^4t­lbecausef that ­on' th^,''sea3i^.'­:v­'v:&gt; 
ia iire 1W 
^  prhiciples  and  the  interests  of 
€&gt;­hoji:d^ are^^i^;'tp:^ 

Buckley  Asserte  'Emancipators'  Neglect 

lai 

SEA  BREEZE 

:'r

Mii 

�p;.­SBT&lt;f*r'r­r;*;v~­i~^  • '  •  r'  • 'i^r^r^rr^Tp^ 

3"'?  . 

"'  '­{r't 

, 

TME  S'E  AF 4  R E n S  10 G 

Second  Mate,  Now 

Page  E3*wan 

Says Homesteading Violates 
Intent  Of  Rotary  Shipping 

To  the  Editor: 
his  dependents  of  the  necessities 
­Rotary  shipping,  the  basis  of  of  life. 
DOUGLAS  (SmUey)  CLAUSSEN 
JIMMY  SANTELLO 
our  Union,  is  predicated  upon  I've  heard  some  Brothers,  say 
Your  mother  is  about  to  go  Ray  Needen  of  Durban  would 
the  assumption  that  seamen,  un­ that  it  is only  "one­trfp  perform­
to  the  hospital,  and  asks  that  hke . you  to  get  in  touch  with 
like  shoreside  workers,  will  after  ers"  who  are  opposed  to  home­., 
.you  write:  Mrs.  E.  E.  Smith,  you  concerning  your  gear.  Write 
a  period  of  time  get  off  a  ship  steading.  This  is  saying,  in  ef­' 
1118  Gaieninie  Street,'New  Or­ to  him  at  1610  Bushwick  Ave., 
and  take  a  well­earned  vaca­ feet,  that' the  Brothers  in  the 
,le%ns,  Louisiana. 
tion,  permitting  someone  on  the  ports  of  Mobile,  Galveston  and 
Bro^lyn,  New  York. 
Savannah,  who  overwhelmin^y 
beach 
to  ship. 
S.  t&gt;  t 
^  4  1 
MRS.  MARY  RAKAS 
If  homesteading  becomes  the  favored  anti­homesteading  res­
WHITEY  HARRIS 
.  This  woman  has  moved  and  Harry  Judson,  your  shipmate 
rule—anything  being  possible—  olutions,  and  the  hundreds  of 
..^ks  that  her  son  get  in  touch  on  the  Fort  Bridger,  asks  that 
rotai­y  shipping  will  be  a  mean­ Brothers  in  the  port  of  New  Ch­­
;V.w  her  at  250  Water' Street,  you  write  him  at  James  Strf»et, 
ingless  phrase;  there  being  no  leans  who  have  recently  signed 
a  similar  resolution,  are  all  per­­
iBfownsville,  Texas. 
jobs  to  rotate. 
Rosendale',  New  York,  about  the 
formers. 
Today 
we 
are 
making 
good 
tit 
money  that^e  owes  you. 
Brother  Tex  Suit  believes  this^ 
JESS  DAVIS 
money 
apd 
­a 
man 
who 
works 
4,  4,  4. 
is  a  minor  issue  not  worth  the 
Get  in  touch  with  your  law­
a 
year 
on 
a 
ship 
should 
be 
able 
JOSEPH  KOZLOWSKI 
yer,  38  Park  Row,  New  York  7,  Contact  the  Cortina  Academy, 
to  save  enough,  plus  the  vaca­ r^ecessary  referendum vote,  which 
New  York.. 
Like  many  oldlimera,  Mike  tion  money  he'll  get,  to  rest  costs  money.  Brother Suit  should­
r05  West  40  Street,  New  York 
talk  to  more  of  the  member­
Balleslero.  retired  member  pf  awhile. 
t  t  t 
18,  New  York. 
ship, 
particularljr  key  men,  to' 
ELWOOD  BARNES 
the  SIU.  stUl  ttopc  by  the 
We  realize  of  course  that  some 
$•
 
i 
a&gt; 
understand 
how  keenty  they  feel • 
.  Coi^tact  Benjamin  B.  Sterling, 
New  York  Hall  every  time  he  of  us  have  responsibilities,  and 
J.  CALDERON  VIVAS 
about 
shipping 
in  their  rating.  ' 
42  Broadway,  New  York  City. 
Write  to  Eduvigis  Montanez  hits  port.  The  one­time  Quar­ the  previous  paragraph  assumes  1  know  one  key  man  on a  pas­' 
termaster 
sails 
as Second 
Mate 
that 
the 
present­day 
seaman 
has 
^t  t  t 
Rexach,  43  Jorge  Bird  Leon 
JOSEPH  B.  KIDD 
and  holds  a  book  in  the  sufficient  intelligence  to  avoid  Sanger  ship  who  is  making  he 
Street,  Fajardo,  Puerto  Rico. 
'  "Write  to  Norman  A.  Smykow­
the  pitfalls  that  would  deprive  forty­fourth  trip.  That's  right—&gt; 
MMAP. 
&gt;  4.  4.  t 
forty­four  (44)! 
"?ski,  in  care  of  New  York  Hall, 
WALTER  ROBERTS 
• 51 Beaver  Strejpt." 
RESOLUTION  HAS  MERIT 
Get  in  touch  with  Mrs.  Allen 
t  t  t 
• 
Any 
resolution  sufficiently  im­
Miller,  50  Clark  Street,  Orchard 
.  JAMES  P.  CUNNINGHAM 
portant 
to  be  accepted  in  three, 
Park,  New  "i^ork. 
.  ­Write  to  Mrs.  C.  Haussman, 
ports 
and 
which  prompts  the 
4.  a&gt;  4  ­
T719  N;  Lindenwood Street,  West  JOHN  WESLEY  PATERSON 
LOG  to  ask  for  pro  and  con 
'Philadelphia,  Pennsylvania. 
discussion  on  it,  has  plenty  of 
Your  father  wants.^  to  hear  To  Ihe  Bditor: 
to  do  this  one  must  get  off.  the 
t  t  t 
" 
from  you  at  Roosevelt  Hotel,  1  am  cne  of  the  many  Sea  ship. J  hope  our  next  agreement  merit  and  should  be  brought  to 
ROBERT  L.  MORGAN  • . Pittsburgh  22,  Pennsylvania. 
a  vote. 
farers  who  seldom  write  to  the  will  provide  for  vacations  with  The  constitution  represents  the 
*  Write  your  father.  New. Haven, 
4  4.  4  . 
LOG  because  we  feel  our  pen­ pay  every  six  months,  even  if  wUl  of  the  membership  and  can 
Kentucky. 
CHARLES  A,  J,  GEDRA 
cils 
can't,  spell  out  the right  it  is  only  one  week.  And  let 
t  t  t 
Write  to  Joseph  E.  Gedra,  words.  However, for  the past  two  everybody  take that  vacation and  be  amended  as  the  membership 
•  MICHAEL ^EGLEN 
desires. 
Church  of  the  Immaculate  Con­
Write  to  your  parents,  2639  ception,  N  ,  Street  at  Eigh^,  months  1  have  been  reading  I am  sure  there  will  be plenty  of  A  vote  to  discontinue  home­
many  interesting  articles  (in­ jobs  for  all. 
_G]fand  Street,  NE,  Minneapolis,  NW,  Washington  1,  DC. 
steading  will  actually  stiengthen 
cluding  some  ,  from  Oldtimers  1 know  of  many  Brothers  who  the  constitution  by  reinforcing' 
Minnesota. 
4  4  4 
like  "Ropeyam,"  who  1  hope  is  have  never  had  a  vacation  be­ rotary  shipping  which,  in  the 
t  t  t 
JOSE  GONZALES 
the  man  who  was  my  Bosun  ih  cause  they  never  cared  to  waJit  final  analysis,  is  the  foundation 
^  LAWRENCE  .E.r BROWN 
Herbert  H.  Winston,  1214  Ful­
!­  Write  to M.  H.  Walker,  Master,  ton  Street,  Brooklyn  16,  New  1927,  Flynn  and  others)  on  the  out  the  time.  They  always  look  of  our  entire  Union  structure, 
to  the  guy  on  the  beach  and  including  the  constitution. 
'SS  Longview  Victory,  c/o  Gen­ York,  asks  that  you  write  him.  question  of  vacations. 
Let's 
look 
back 
a 
few 
years 
then  get  off.  1  am  now  on  the 
'eral  Steamship  Co.,  San  Fran­
Edwin  Weslphal 
4­4 
4 
and 
remember 
what' 
we 
had 
Persian 
Gulf  run,  but  if  this 
'• eisco, California. 
W.  J.  McNULTY 
then.  Hardships,  abuses  and  ship would get  back  to the States 
t  t  t 
Contact  S.  L.  Wilson,  1705  damned few dollars.  Yet  as  little  now,  you'd­see  Mr.  Serang  smil­
"  WATSON  W.  STOCKMAN 
Belmont  Avenue,  ,  Seattle  22,  money  as  we  made,  how  many  ing as he  walked down  the gang­
:  Get  in  touch  with  Albert  Washington. 
I 
'M 
stayed  a  year  on  one  sjiip­  Few,  plank  looking  for  the Union  Hall 
Michelson,  1650  Russ  Bldg.,  235 
4  4  4 
if  any.  During 
years  1939­ and  home. 
Montgomery  Street,  San Francis­
JAMES  ANTHONY  DOODY  40 we used  to make two  or  three  Yes,  I  too  have  a  family,  but 
co,  Calif(»nia.  Phone:  Yiikon  6&gt;  Will  anyone  knowing  where­
tidps  of  abcHit  40­50  days  and  haying*a  family  is no  excuse for 
6816. 
abouts  of  this  Brother  tell  him  then  get  off,  90  another  Brothe­ homerteadin_£. 
To  ihe  Edizor: 
' 
^ 
t  t  t 
to  get  in  touch  with  his  grand­ could  make  a  few  dollars. 
Here's  wis'ung  all  hands  in 
DAVID  SAUNDERS 
mother,  154^ Manor­, Road,  Staten  Then  ow  Negotiating^ Commit­ our  Union  ^  Happy  New  Year  Well,  Christmas  is  over  ami  I­" 
Contact  J.  May,  President,  Island,  New  York. 
'  ' 
tee  sat  down  with  the  shipown­ and  a  Happy  Vacation  with  pay.  want  to  take  this  opportunity  to 
Morgan  Plan,  P.O.  Box  394,  Mo­
444 
ers  and  dropped  all  anchors  to  Get  off  that  ship,  Brother  and  express  my  deep  ai^ueciation  to 
bile,  Alabama. 
BILL  HOWELL 
get  vacations  with  pay.  We  were  take  the  vacation  you're  entitled  the  members  here  in  New  Or­
* 
* 
t 
leans  who  so  readily  vohmteered 
l^elvin  (Jack)  Hartl^,  311  happy  that  the committee got  for  to. 
RENE  WAUTERS 
their  service  in  making  the 
South  Main  Street.  I.exington, 
XT  t&gt;, 
"  •  
1"  wuci*  WTUx  uUilll  •  il,.  North  Carolina,  would  like  to 
few  homesteaders  are  destroying 
(Ed.  Note:  The  LOG  would  Christmas  ihimer~that  was  hl^ 
Roach,  Franklin  Savings  Bank,  hear  from  you. 
that  work.  Homesteaders  stay  liko  all  Seafarers  to  express  here  in  the  Hall  such  a  greak 
8th  Avenue  and  42nd  Street, 
4 
4 
4 
year  in  and  year  out  becaiise  tiieir  dpiuions  on  any  subject  success. 
New  York,  New  York. 
As  chairman  of  the  Food  and 
FRANK  BRUNSON 
they  are  able  to­ get  a  few  days  of  Union  interest.  The  compul­
,  t  S  » 
Your  old  shipmate  on  the  off  in  their  home  ports  from  the  sory  vacation  issue  is  a time­ Refreshment  Committee,  I would  ' 
. CHARLES  G.  PETERS 
Steel  Advocate,  Chris  J.  Clarke,  heads  of  their  departments  by  ly  one,  so  why  not  let  the  like  to  report  that  we  fed  500 
Write  to  your  mother. 
asks that  you write  him—­25  Ger­ saying  "Yes  sir"  morning,  noon  Brothers know  how  you think?  members,  their  wives,  and  chil­
at  ^ fc 
ard  Street,  Woodmoivt,  Connecti  and  night.  As  long  as  they  have  We  don't  caxe  whethw  you  dren.  There  wras  turkey,  baked 
:  ;  CLAYTON  B.  FROST,  JR. 
cut 
a  job  and.  a  pocket  fiill  of  sea  are  for  or  against  such  a  rule:  ham  and  all  the  txinunings. 
Your  wife  is  at  216  King 
4  4  4. 
grass  what  the hell  do  they  C€u:e  we're,  just  interested  in  en­ There  was plenty  beer for every­
Street,  Charleston,  South  Caro­
A.  HANSEN 
about  the Brother  on the beach.  abling  the rati  '0*  the  mem­ one,  and  everyone enjoyed  theni­
lina,  and  asks  that  you  write. 
Iter.  Mejrz,  Triton  SS  Co.,  80  The 'word  vacation  means' rest,  hefritip  to  get  as  many  view­ selves  and  there  wasn't  a  gas­
.  .  .4 
hound  in  the  entire  place. 
Broad  Street,  New  York  City,  get  away  from  everything,  and  points  as  possUde.) 
MARTIN  SALVADOR 
Cooks  did  a­  wonderitul  job,  and 
asks  that  this  Brother  (Book 
Mrs..; Anna  Collins,  1114  N.  number  34642)  get  in  touch  with 
several  members  , donated  theijr 
American  Street,  Rear  7,  Phila­ him,  ­
time  and  autos  for  the  tedious 
delphia  23,  Pennsylvania,  wants 
job  of,making  all  the  ships  ip. 
4  4  4 
you  to  get  in touch  with  her. 
port. 
R.  H.' COOTE 
My  appreciation  extends  to 
Write  to  Joe  Ventuuiglia,  2052 
the  LOG  was  the  announcement  two  ex­SIU  Brothers,  Lionel  and 
KendaU,  Detroit  6,  Michigan.  To  the  EdiUq*! 
For  about  two  months  I  have  that  several  ships  notified  the  Joe  Acy,  who  are  now  in  the 
4  4' 4 
been  receiving  the  LOG  at  my  Union  that  they  had  received  retail  meat  busine^  Ihey  gave 
THORES  DICKENB 
Get  in touch with  Irving  (jrold­ home.  When  I  came  home  from  the  air •  mail  bulletins  and  en­ us  access  to  their  deep­freeae 
berg,  Asst.  case  Supervisor,  Spe­ a  trip  recently  I  found  aU  &lt;he  joyed  thgm  a  great  deal.  My  box  so  that  our  turkeys  and 
cial  Unit,  630  9th  Avenue^  New  back  issues  waiting  for  n».  1  last  ship  was  the  Del  Aires,  hams  would  not  spoil. 
read  them  from  cover  to  cover  where  we  received  the  bulletins  It  is  heartwairning  to  see  anid 
York  19,  New  York. 
and 
enjqyed  them  very  much.  about  three  times  during  our  realize  the  clcee  concern  ex­  ­
I :  Crew,  SS  Daniel  Willard 
4  4  4 
In 
the  latest  LOG  I  noticed  voyage.  They  were  posted  on  pressed  by  Ihe  Brothers  vriim 
RU8SEL  LUND 
$ee  story  page  8  of  this  issue. 
where 
the  insurance  companies  the  bulkhead,  where  everyone  were  aboard  ships  in  this  port, 
Your 
mother 
asks 
thnt 
you 
4  4  4 
and . 
the 
shipo^nei^  are  trying  got  a  chance  to read  jbhem;  Keep  for  their  less  fortunate  Brothers 
write: 
2082 Golden Gate 
Avenue, 
:  W  holders  of  receipts  num­
to 
get 
the 
war  bonuses  removed.  up  the  good  work.  ­
who"were  broke  and  away  from 
San 
Francisco. 
CaliAxtnia, 
bers  34218,  34221  and  34233  is­
TlwA's 
about 
all 
for 
now. 
I'll 
1 think 
if 
the shipowners %nd in­
home 
on  this  Christmas.  It's 
sued  by  S." Garcia  in  Galveston, 
4  4  4 
please  send  fiill  naimes,  book  KRISTIAN  (Tbw)  THQMSEN  surance  brokers  were  to  sail  on  be  waiting  for the  LOGs  as they  brotherly  love. and  understand­
been  mention^ 
numbers  and  receipt  numbers  to  Write­to  your  aunt,  Diha.  To­ the  shi]^ that  go in^ the  mined  come off  the press.  Incidentally, I  ing  such  as 
SIU 
(Joe  Alginia,  ^1  Beaver  Street,  biassen,  Vigen  Spind  Per  Far­ areas, they  would quickly change  pass  the  LOG  on  to  other  Bro­ above,  that nuOtes ^ 
ship­ their  nundsi  about  the f  whole  thers  aroiind  here  and  we  have  it  is  today­'­the  hrue  Rrotbif?­
New  York  City, so that  your  rec­ sund,. Ncrv/ay.  Any  of 
some  iffeut  discusskms. 
Kood  of  the  Sea. 
ords  may  be . properly  aecredir  mates  knowing  his  wheceabmts,  deal.­
Ciuymn Canltr  Jt. 
a n. McFaB 
are  asked  to  write  to  hi$  punt.V;  .  pother  mutter  I  noticed  in 
ted  with  the  dues  you  paid; 

!v 

Brother Bids Homesteaders 
Quit  After  Year Ou Vessel 

Christmas Party 
M New Orleans 
Was Big Success 

LOG, Bulletin Give Conley 
Score At Home And At Sea 

l.i'.t; 

�.frm 
l^age  Twelve  I 

TME  S  E  AFAR ERE  to G 

'  1^ 

.13,  1050  / 
SBT­

tise Of Sailing Ships As Training Ites^ls 
By  IpHN  BUNKER 

more  thap  1,500  future  pfficerd 
at the  five state and federal  mari­
time  academies! 

1^:3:­
This,is  another  of  a  series  of  articles  on  current  .marl 
time  issues  by  John  Bunker,  retired  Seafarer,  who  is  pres­
ently maritime  reporter  for  the "Christian  Science Monitor," 
i­
one  of  America's  greatest  papers.  His  next  article  will  deal 
£:•  
with  the  importance  of  coastal  and  intercoastal  shipping  to 
the  American  economy.  Slated  for  early  publication  is  a 
three­  or  four­part  story  dealing  with  the  famous  Fourth 
of  July  Convoy,  something  that  all  Brothers  will  want 
to  read.^ 
^ 

LOST  CHANCE 

Incidentally,  not  all  of  us  will  at  all  times^ agree  with 
Brother  Bunkers'  viewpoints  on  any one  topic.  But  for  that 
there  is  one  solution:  Take  pencil  in  fist  (a  typewriter  is 
even  better)  and  a  clean  sheet  of  paper  and  tell  us  what 
you  thinki  It's  as  easy  as  that—and  how  about  starting 
off  on  this  article—the  value  of  sailing  ships  for  training 
saHors? 

A stirring  sight  as she  gets underway  is  the  j295­foot  Eagle, 
which  is  used  by ^ the  US  Coast  Guard  as  a  training  ship. 
Formerly  the  German  Horst  Wessel,  she  was  acquired  by  the 
government  from  the  nasis  as  war' reparations.  The  Eagle 
carries  200  cadets,  and Jhe  Skipper  claims  that,  after  a  week 
of  sea  duty,  a  tremendous  improvement  can  be  noted  in  the 
seamanship  of  the  green  cadets, 

Sad  to  say,  the  Maritime  Com­
mission  had  .an  opportunity  to 
make  use  of  a  good  sailing  ship 
for  training  purposes  a  few)^ 
years  ago  when  John  A.  Far­
rell,  of  the  Farrell  Lines,  gave 
it  the  bark  Tusitala,­which  he 
had  kept  running  between  New 
York  and  Honolulu  with  coni*­' 
naercial  cargoes  out  of  a  senti­
mental  attachment  for  the  age 
of  sail. 
This  irop  bark  was  scrappe&lt;^ 
however.  Many  seamen  will  re­
member  having  seen  this  tall­
masted  ship  during  the  "depres­
sion,"  when  she  lay  at  a  berth 
near  the  ferry  slips  on  Stateh  ­
Island. 
­
In  addition  to  the  Eagle,  thertf 
are  now  a  number, of  other  sail­' 
ing  ships  being  used  for  training 
purposes. 

The  recent  arrival  in  England  She  has  made  several  cruises, 
ef  the  Finnish  barks  Pamir  and  including  two  to  the  United 
Passat,  with  the  accompanying  Kingdom  and  northern  Europe, 
since  being  acquired  from  the 
OTHER  FLAGS 
offer  of  their  owner  to  sell  them  Germans  as  war  reparations  in 
... 
^ 
The  Portuguese  Navy  has to® 
for  any  purpose  other  than  1946. 
bark .Sagres,  an  impressive  big 
scrapping,  arouses  the  interest­
•  
ship  that  paid  a  visit  to  New 
. ing  possibility  of  these  vessels  Captain  Miles  Imlay,  master  of 
being  acquired  for  use  as  mari­ the  Eagle  during  her  sqmmer  berg,  was  a  great  enthusiast  for  dination  of  every  man  aboard,­ it  York,  Boston  and  other ;  porta 
voyages  and  head  of  the  De­
last y  year  pn  a,  trans­Atlantid 
time  training  ships. 
partment  of  Seamanship,  Avia­ the  value  of  training  in  sail.  He  is'  possible  to  arouse  a  sense  of  cruise  with  cadets. 
It  also  brings  up  the  old  argu­ tion  and  Navigation  at  the  Coast  was  very  right  when  he  said,  eooperation  .. and  coordination 
The  full­rigged  ship  Danmarhi 
ment  whether  or  not  the  best  Guard  Academy  in New  London,  "You  can't  make  sailprs  in  a  without  the  military  system  be­
ing  employed. 
now  back  home  after  wprking 
way  to  train  a  young  man  for  is  enthusiastic  about  the  Eagle  year." 
life at  sea  is by sail  or by  steam.  as  a  training  medium. 
' The  cost  of  acquiring  two such  for  the  United  States  (lurhig  the 
SCHOOL  OF  SAIL 
training  ships  and  operating  war, is  training men  for the  Dan­
wS.'. 
^  IRON  BARKS 
He  maintains  that  a  square­
All  advocates  of  windjaihmer  them  for  the  benefit  of  the  Am­ ish Navy.  She was  built  in 1933. 
rigged 
ship 
develops 
the 
ability 
training  for  both  lic«ised  and  erican merchant  marine  could  be  Back  home,  too,  is  the  full­
Both  the  Pamir  and  the  Pas­
sat  are  old  ships  but,  being  iron  of  future  officers  to  think  clearly  unlicensed  newcomers  agree  that  covered  by  a  reductioiT" in  the  rigged  Norwegian  training  ship 
barks,  they  have  plenty  of  years  in  the  face  of  danger.  By  going  the  quickest  way  to  turn  out "a  present  officer  training  program,  Christian  Radich,  carrying  a 
left  in  them,  considering  that  aloft  on  dark  and  windy  nights,  sailor  —  a  sailor  who  has  an  both  in  the  number  of  men  be­ complement  of  99  cadets.  ThJa 
the  purchase  price  would  prob­ laying  on  to  the  thin,  swinging  instinct  for  his  job  and  is  some­ ing  put  through  the  schools  at  192­foot,  all­steel  training  shii^ 
ably  be  small.  It  wotild  seem  to  ropes  high, above  the  deck,  they  thing  more  than  a  glorified  deck  government  expense  and  in  the  :s  only  12  years  old,  and  she  ia. 
be  a  good  way  of  acquiring  get  a  sense  of  conhdence  and  a  hand  —  is  through  the  school  number  of  schools  being  em­ the^ pride of  the  Norwegian  mer­. 
training  ships  at  a  reasonable  feeling  for  the  sea,  he  says,  that  of  sail. 
ployed.  There  are  at  present  chant  miarine. 
no  other  kind  of  training  can 
price. 
It  seems  to  this  writer  that  a 
impart. 
sailing  ship  like  the  Eagle  or 
' Many  of  the  world's  maritime 
NO  BETTER  WAY 
perhaps  even  two,  with  one  sta­
nations  before  the  war  kept  to 
» 
the  windjammer •   method  of  Captain  Imlay  also  claims  that  tioned  on  each  coast,  could  pro­
training  merchant  marine  offi­ no  better  way  can  be  found  vide  a "fine  basic  training "ior  all 
cers  in fundamentals  of  seaman­ than  aboard a  sailing  ship  t6  de­ newcomers  to the American  mer­
ship,  despite  the  virtual  disap­ velop  the  basic  skills  of  seaman­ chant  marine,  whether  they  be 
pearance  from  the  seas  of  the  ship,  the  innate  instinct  that  a  unlicensed  men  seeking  an  AB 
sailing  ship  as  a  cargo  carrier.  good  sailor  has  about  the  winds  license  or  future  deck  officers.  ^ 
Before  the  war,  the  booming  and  the  weather,  and  a  pride  Any  youngster  seeking  a  cer­
Japanese  merchant  marine  had  of  profession  —  a  pride  in  the  tificate  to  Work  oq  deck,  or  anv 
cadets  entering  ^the  state  and 
"TSSfee*"bievi  oavKS  spreauing  id  seaman's  calling. 
square  sails,  three  jibs  and  12  There  are  many,  including'of­ federal  nautical  schools,  could 
• staysails. 
ficers  in  the  Coast  Guard,  who  well  spend  a  six  or  eight­month 
These  were  really  big  ships  argue  that  a  man  at  sea  these  course  aboard  one  of  these  train­
and  the  writer  well  remembers  days  does  not  have  to  /snow  ing  ships,  undergoing  identical 
seeing,  one  outside  New  York  much  about  marlinspike  seaman­ schooling  in  knot  work,  splicing; 
IS'­'  harbor,  standing  to  sea  with  a  ship;  that  science  and  mechanics  canvas  work,  smallboat  handling 
swarm  of  Nips  on  her  yards  have  made  all  but  a  few  phases  and  the  other  elements  of  "old 
spreading  her  canvas  to  the  of  seamanship  hopelessly  out­ fashioned"  but,  withal,  .still  very 
effective  windjammer  training. 
wind.  Each  of  these  ships  car­ moded. 
ried  120  cadets. 
TIME  CREDIT 
However,  it  was  found  true 
time  and  again  during  World  After  this  primary  schooling, 
FAIRLY  NEW 
• War II  that  men  who  had  sail­ the  future  officers  could  go  on 
The,  Japs  also  had  a  big  2,500­ ing  ship  experience,  or  at  least 
ton  steel  barkentine  called  the  a  sound  background  of  training  to  the  nautical  academies  for 
Skintoku  Maru.  All  of  these,  ves­ in  the  elements  of  seamanship,  their  specialized  training,  and 
sels  were  built  in  the  1930s  ex­ came  through  "on  top"  when  th,e  unlicensed  men  could  go  out 
pressly  for  the  purpose  of  train­ ships  were  torpedoed  and  in­ as ordinary  Seamen  through  their 
respective  union  halls,  with  the 
ing  merchant  marine  men. 
genuity  was  required  to  take  time  they  have  spent  at  the 
Germany  was  another  nation  the place  of  engines and  mechan­ school  being  credited  toward 
with  a  big  merchant fleet  that  ical  aids  of  one  kind  and  an­ their  AB  license.  ­­
gave  its  cadets  extensive  train­ other. 
^ system  could  be worked  out 
ing  in  sail  before  they  could  sit 
IMPROVEMENT  MARKED 
whereby 
the  maritime  unions 
• for  officer's  licenses.  xj,ike  the 
could fill 
the  unlicensed  and 
Jap  ships,'  these  training  vessels  The  Eagle  carries  200  ca\lets, 
were  also  relatively  new.  They  and  its  officers  say  that  even  port  of  the  licensed  quotas  for 
were  the  Albert  Leo  Schalgeter,  after  a  week  of  sea  duty  neo­ such  a  training  course." 
the  Gorah  Foch,  the  Schulschiff  phytes,  who  have  never  before  Sailing  ship  training,  it  might 
Deutschland  and  the  Horst  Wes­ trod  the  decks  of  a  vessel,  show  be  emphasized,  accents  discipline 
an amazing  improvement  in their  without  the  use  of  military  drills 
sel. 
know­how 
about  ships  and  the  and  regimentation. 
The  295­foot  Horst  Wessel  is' 
I 
sea. 
Fore 
and 
main  masts  on  When  men 
mow  the  American  training  ship 
are  at  sea,  depend­
Ker  sails  furled,  the  Eagle  shows  her  graceful  lihee  in 
Eagle  belonging  to  the  United  the  Eagle,  incidentally,  reach  ent  entirely,  on . their  own  re­
more 
than ^50 
feet 
above 
the 
silbouHe  against  the  sky.  Whether  or  not  one  agrees  that 
Staites  Coast  Guard  and,  of  all 
sources  for  the  progress  and  na­
deck. 
ships  under  sail  today,  none  pret 
vigation  pf  the  lihip,  with  the  windjammers  provide  the  best  traiidng  for  green  seamen. 
Captain 
Maimberg 
of 
the 
Swe­
maneuvering  of  sails  and  yards  there  can  be  no  question  as  to  their  beauty  pf  form  and  a M 
aehts  a  more,  stirring  sight  at 
dish  training ship  Abraham  Ryd­ dependent  pn  the  skillful  coor­
sea  than  this fine  vessel; 
motion. 

Is 

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="7">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42905">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1950-1959</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44875">
                  <text>Volumes XII-XXI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44876">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44877">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10187">
                <text>January 13, 1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10238">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10290">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10342">
                <text>Vol. XII, No. 1</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10368">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10394">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10420">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
9 OPERATORS SIGN SIU WELFARE PLAN; PATTERN IS SET&#13;
TALLYING COMMITTEE CHECKS VOTES&#13;
A&amp;G DISTRICT BACKS ANNUAL POLIO DRIVE&#13;
TALLY COMMITTEE ANNOUNCES A&amp;G OFFICIALS FOR 1950&#13;
BUILDING TOGETHER&#13;
NEGOTIATING COMMITTEE'S REPORT ON, AND ANALYSIS OF, A&amp;G WELFARE PLAN&#13;
STEADY SHIPPING, MINOR BEEFS MARK 6-WEEK PERIOD IN NEW YORK&#13;
IN-TRANSIT VESSELS KEEP PORT SAVANNAH A GOING CONCERN&#13;
2 GOOD WEEKS FOR SAN FRANCISCO&#13;
NEGOTIATING COMMITTEE'S ANALYSIS OF A&amp;G WELFARE PLAN&#13;
MINUTES OF A&amp;G BRANCH MEETINGS IN BRIEF&#13;
'ELECTIONEERING' BUILDS INTEREST OF MEMBERSHIP&#13;
1945 SALVAGE CLAIM NEARS PAYOFF FOR PLUGGING CREW&#13;
WM. DEAN KILLED IN NEW ORLEANS MOTORCYCLE CRASH&#13;
CAPE NOME MEN FAVOR COMPULSORY VACATIONS&#13;
USE OF SAILING SHIPS AS TRAINING VESSELS</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10421">
                <text>1/13/1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13073">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="64">
        <name>1950</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="977" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="2327">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/418504ef9cdded43a2ba25c0f2ad7f03.pdf</src>
        <authentication>498f41397bcfcfb8a3726a442c7a821b</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47454">
                    <text>NLRB  Puts  Crusher 
On  OTMA's  Desperate 
Bid  Per  Recognltien 
Official Orgaiiy  Atlantic &amp; Gulf  District, Seafarers International Union of  NA 
ypL.  XII 

NEW  YORK,  N.  Y„  FRIDAY.  JANUARY  27,  1950 

No.  2 

: 

Ihmg  SlU  Job  Means  More  Jobs  For  Tbe  SHJ 
Waterman  Steamship  Corporation  has  just  received  the  green  light  from  the 
Maritime  Commission,  and 'will  attempt  1}  expand  Its  operations  In  the  coastal  and 
intercoastal  trade.  If  Waterman  Is  successful,  it  will  mean  more  SlU­contracted  ships 
In  service  and  more  jobs  for  Seafarers. 
The  coastal  and  intercoastal  runs  are  the  toughest  in  the  business,  because 
ships  not  only  compete  with  each  other  but  with  the  railroads  for  the  country's 
freight  traffic.  For^that  reason,  all  crews  are  urged  td maintain  their  usual  efficiency 
aboard  these  ships.  See  to  it  that  none  of  these  vessels  is  delayed  in  sailing  for  any 
reason. 

The National Labor Relations Board has issued 
CTMA's  death  warrant!  In  a  letter  to  the  SlU^ 
CTMA and  Cities Service on January 19, the Wash­
ington office of  the National Labor Relations Board 
denied  the  Cities  Service  sponsored  "union**  a  re­
view  of  its  request  for  certification  as  bargaining 
agent for seamen on seven Cities Service ships. Thei 
decision, in effect, means  the death  of  CTMA. 
In  squelching  CTMA,  the  National  Labor  Re­
lations  Board  went  down  the  line  with  the  New 
York  Regional  Director*s decision  to refuse CTMA 

a  hearing  and  his  opinion  that* 
probable  cause  exists  to  issue  19  letter  is  the  NLRB's  answer; 
a  complaint  in  behalf  of  the  to  CTMA's  appeal. 
SlXTs  charges  of  imfarr  labor  The  NLRB  order  rebuffing 
CTMA's  attempt  to  gain  legal 
practices  by  the  company. 
The  NLRB  letter' pointed  spe­ recognition  coincides  with  earl­
These  vessels  work  under  the  best  conditions  in  maritime,  and  the  crews  are  cifically  to  the  unfair  labor  ier  NLRB  set­backs  given  Cities 
backed  by  tbe  most  rigidly­enforced  contraci  in  the  Industry.  If  any  beefs  develop  charges  pending  against  the  em­ Service's  two  other  sponsored 
at  sailing  time,  don't  hold  up  the  ship—^brlng  them  lo  the  attention  of  SIU  officials  ployer  and  to  the  SIU  claims  "unions,"  the  Unlicensed  Em­
that  the  company  violated  the  ployee's  Collective  Bargaining 
at  the  next  SIU  port. 
^ 
• •  'Z­
Labor  Management  Act  in  at  Agency  of  Cities  Service  OK 
Company  and  the  Americaft 
least  two  instances: 
Under  no  circumstances  are  these  vessels  to  be  delayed  or  forced  to  sail  short­
Tankermen's  Associa^n,  bofb 
1—by  the  formation  of  a  com­v  of  which were  declared illegal hs| 
handed. 
pany  union,  and 
court  orders.  The  two  unions 
2—by  refusing  to  bargain  col­ were  created  to  fend  off  orgaz^ 
lectively  with  the  SIU  as  the  izing  drives  by  •   the  Natkmal 
duly  certified  representative  of  Maritime  Union. 
the  company's  tankermen. 
To  the  SIU  and  the  men 
aboard  the  company's  16  tank­
ers,  the  decision  removes  the 
last  possible  legal  maneuver  by 
Ailer  more  than  three 
NEW YORK—Seven  more SIU­ \vergg  of  signing  are  several  who  through  their,  efficiency  both  the  company  and  CTMA^  years of  battling  through the 
have  shown  the  operators  that  clearing  the  way  for  a  show­
contfacted  operators  have  sign­ iriajor  contracted  operators. 
NLRB  and  the  courts,  the 
ed  the  SIU  Welfare  Plan  and  Apart  from  meetings  with  the  it  pays  to  deal  with  SIU  crews,  down,  either  through  peaceful  showdown  with  Cities  Sov­
several  others  have  given  verbal  52  operators  to  bring  about  sign­ and  that  added  expenses  are  collective  bargaining  talks  or  a  iee  neazs.  The  near  future 
assurance  they  .wiU  participate  ings  of  the  general  outline  of  more  than  made  up  by  efficient  tie­up  of  the  ships. 
will  bring  to  a  climax  the 
.1 
W  k 
in  the  program,  though  formal  the  Plan,  ^e  Negotiating  Com­ workmanship. 
canqHdgB  waged  by  the  SIU 
ELEVEN  DAYS 
; signing  hasn't  taken  place.  The  mittee  has  begun  conferences  on  The  9  shipowners  signed  earl­
to  bring  union  condhioiis 
seven  new  companies  si^ed  specific  details  of  the  plan,  such  ier  are:  Waterman  Steamship  CTMA's  intervention  in  the  and  security  to  tbe  men  of 
bring  to  16  the  total  number  of  as  the  typ^s  of  benefits,  the  Corporation,  A­  H.  Bull  Steam­ case  came  eleven  days  after  th^  the  Cities  Service  ships. 
companies  agreeing  to  the ­ new  amounts.which  will  become  pay­ ship  Corporation,  Seas  Shipping  SIU  was  certified  as  the  repre­
The  full  story  of  ihe SIU's 
pact,  which  calli^  for  employer  able  and  the  requirements  for  Company  (Rubin  Line),  Sea­ sentative  for  tankermen  aboard 
efforts 
to  organize  the  com­
nine 
of 
the 
company's 
tankers. 
contributions  of  25  cents for  each  eligibility  and  the  manner  in  train  Lines,  Incorporated,  Con­
pany 
and 
the  company's 
The 
SIU 
had 
already 
received 
which  the  fund  will  be  admin­ struction  Aggregates,  Seatraders, 
mart  for  each  day  worked. 
stubborn refusal 
to cooperate 
certification 
for 
the 
company's 
Incorporated,  Cuba  Distilling 
With  the  signirtg  of  the  orig­ istered. 
other 
seven 
ships. 
is 
told 
in 
this 
issue 
of  the 
inal  9  operators,  thfe  SIU  be­ .  According  to  present  plans,  ad­ Corporation,  South  Atlantic 
LOG 
in 
a 
special 
section 
came  the  first  maritime  union  ministration  of  the  Fund  will  be  Steamship  Company  and  Alcoa  On  December  13,  CTMA filed 
a  petition  to  the  ­New  York  beginning  on  page  3. 
on  the  Atlantic  and  Gulf  coasts  assumed "^by  a  three­man  com­ Steamship  Corporation. 
Due  to  the  length  of  this 
to  win  a  welfare  plan  paid  for  mittee,  one  representing  the  Un­ The  Negotiating  Committee  NLRB  asking  certification  for 
ion, 
one 
for 
the 
operators 
and 
stated 
that 
the 
' 
membership 
section, 
the  LOG  regretfully 
seven 
i^ps, 
those 
won 
in 
1948 
entirely  by  the  operators. 
one 
impartial 
member. 
This 
pro­
would 
be 
kept 
informed 
of 
all 
had 
to 
omit  the  Brandt 
by 
the 
SIU. 
The 
NLRB 
three 
­!d­
At 
developments 
affecting 
the 
prog­
posed 
committee 
is 
the 
out­
"Xgenis' 
reports. 
But  they'll 
days 
later 
rejected 
the 
petition, 
past  two  weeks  a  good  deal  of 
growth 
of 
the 
union's 
dpmand 
ress 
of 
the 
welfare 
plan 
negoti­
be 
back 
in 
the 
next 
iasu^ 
but 
gave 
CTl^ ten 
days 
to 
ap­
the  hesitancy  on  the  part  of 
that 
although 
the 
fund 
would 
be 
ations 
as 
they 
occurred. 
peal 
the 
decision. 
The 
January 
shipowners  has  evaporated,  .the 
Negotiating  Committee  reported,  financed  etitirely  by  the  oper­
making  the  signing  of  others  but  ators,  it  is  to  be  jointly  admin­
a Tnatter  of  scheduling  meetings.  istered. 
Those  signed  during the  past  Negotiations  for  an  employer­
two  weeks  are:  Mississippi  Ship­ paid  "Welfare  Plan  first  began  Seamen  employed  on  Ameri­ tions  of  the  form.  Officers  and  to tiie  C^sus  Bureau  in  'Wash­
ping  Company,  Ponce  Cemoit  on  December. 2,  when  a  joint  can flag  merchant  ships  will  be  crewmen  of  merchant  vessels  in  ington  for  tabulation. 
Corporation,  Oro  Navigation  meeting  of  the  SIU  and  the  included  in  the  1950  Population  American  ports on  that  date  will 
Fishing  vessels  and  craft  ply­
Company, Carras Steamship (^m­ shipowners  was  held  in  New  Census  even  though  their  ves­ answer  the  complete list  of  ques­
York.  At  that  meeting  the  Union 
ing 
the  inland  waters  other  thgw 
p'any,  Standard  Steamship  Com­
sels  are  on  the  high  seas  or  in  tions.. 
presented 
the 
shipowners 
with 
the 
Great 
Lakes  will  not  receive 
pany,  Strathmore  Steamship 
foreign  ports. 
Officials  of  the  Census  Bureau  the  questionnaires.  Their  officers 
its 
proposal, 
which 
was 
to 
go 
Company  and  Dolphin  Steamship 
into  effect  on  J^inuary  1.  In  The  Bureau  of  the  Census,  have  stres^  the  fact  that  an­ and  crews  will  be  counted  at 
Company. 
contracts 
signed  to  date  the  em­ with  the  cooperation  of  the  swers  given  in  the  questionnaire  their  shore  lodgings  by  the  ai&gt;­
Among  those  who  are  on  the 
ployers  have  all  agreed  to  begin  maritime  unions  and  the  ship,  will  be  used  only  for  the  pur­ propriate  local  census  taker. 
operators,  will  provide  person­ poses  intended—^that  is,  to  count  In  general,  the  type  of  ques­
payments  as  of  January  1. 
Following  the  initial  meeting,  nel  of  all  merchant  vessels  ply­ the  population  of  the  United  tions  to  be  asked  of  merchant 
the  SIU  Negotiating  Committee  ing  the  high  seasj  coastal  waters  States. 
ship persormel  will  be  limited  to 
Answers  given  by  seamen  are  citizenship,  age,  marital  statusi, 
met  with  individual  operators,  and  the  Great  Lakes  with  short­
Don't depend on ggesees or  breaking  the  ice  early  this month  form  questionnaires  to  be filled  to be  kept  in strictest  confidence,  .armed  forces  service,  occupa­
rumors.  Before  going' ashore,  when  9  operators  agreed  to  the  out  on  April  1,  1950. 
and  caimot  be  used  for  purposes  tion,  employment,  education, 
take  a  look  at  the  sailing  proposed  set­up. 
To  prevent  the  job  of filling  of  taxation,  investigatibn,  or  reg­ salaries  and  wages. 
board  so  you'll  know  when 
The  calling  together  of  the  out  questionnaires  from  being  ulation. 
Arrangements  have  been made 
your  ship  is  scheduled  to  operators  for  the  purpose  of  a  irksome,  the  Census  Bureau  has  The  Seamen's  Census  forms  by  the  Census  Bureau  and  the. 
leave  port.  If  the time  is not  welfare  plan  during  the  life  of  prepared  a  form  containing  only  are  equipped  with  gummed  Maritime  Commission  to  have 
posted,  ask  the  Delegates  to  the  SIU's  two­year  contract  was  26  questions,  most  of  which  can  edges,  and  will  be  sealed  by  in­ the  questionnaire  forms  placed 
find  out  the  correct  depar­
made  possible  by  the  exclusive  be  answered  by  check  marks.  dividuals  after filling  them  out,  in  the  hands  of  Masters  of  the 
lure  time  from  the  Mate. 
SIU  provision  allowing  the  con­ Thus  only  a  few  minutes  time  just  as  an  envelope  is  sealed  for  ships  by  April  1,  whether  the 
In  any  event,  don't  leave  tract  to  be  reopened  for  the  need  be  taken  by  any  cx­ew­ mailing. 
ship  is  at  hcnne  or  abroad. 
Th'ey  will  then  be  returned  to  The  forms  will  be  mailed  out 
the  ship  until  you  know  discussion  of  wages  at  any  time.  member  in  answering  his  ques­
the  Master  of  the  ship  who  will  in ample  time  to­be available  on 
In ' reporting  on  tlie  success  tioimaire. 
when  you're  due  back 
Personnel  of  vessels  at  sea  or  mail  them  to the  ship's  operator.  a  vessel,  whether  the  vessel  is 
aboard.  Youll  save  yourself  to  date,  the  Negotiating  Com­
and  your  shipmates  a  lot  of  mittee  noted  that  the  reason  the  in  foreign  ports  on  April  1,  The­  latter  will  forward  the  re­ imderway  to  port,  at  a  foreign 
ircTjble  by checking  with the  shipownoi­s  have  offered  no  ma­ when  the  Census  of  Population  ports to the Census  Bureau. They  port  or  United  States  malT&gt;laT»d 
jor  opposition  to  the  plan  is  td  will  be  taken,  are  required  to  will  not  be  opened,  after  being  harbor,  or  in  a  US  territory  op] 
proper  sourceso 
be  credited  to  the  SIU  crews.  answer  ortiy  tlie first  nine  ques­ sealed,  UTiiU  they  are  returned  island  poaaessioa. 
I' 

§: 

Seven  More  Sip  Welfare  Plan; 
Others  Indicate  Full  Agreement 

Cities Senrlee Stwy 

Ceasffs  Bureau  To  Count  Soumon  On  Ships 

Check  Sailing Time 

�t^age  Two 

,  ­.T(.  ­• 

• THE  SEIFARERS  LOG 

Fridaf, January  27. 1850  ­

• • to. 

SEAFARERS  LOG 
Published  Every  Other Week  by  the 

SEAFARERS  INTERNATIONAL  UNION 
OF  NORTH  AMERICA 
. Atlantic and Gulf  llistrict 
Afiilialed  with  the  American  Federation  of  Labor 
At  51  Beaver  Street,  New  York  4,  N. Y. 
HAnover  2­2784 
Reentered  as  second  class  matter  August  2,  1949,  at  the  Post 
Office  in  New  York,  N.Y.,  under  the  Act  of  August  24,  1912. 
267 

A  House  Divided 
For  some  mysterious  reason,  the  Marine  Division  of 
the  Cities  Service  Oil  Company  refuses  to  recognize  the 
Union  of  its  employee's  choice  and  sit  down  with  it  in 
collective  bargaining  negotiations. 
We  say  "mysterious  reason"  because  other  subsidiar­
ies of  Cities Service,  like  its  refinery  division  and  its  util­
:  ity sections, long ago  recognized  the  principle of  collective 
?  jsargaining  and  therefore  enjoy  amicable  labor  relations. 
In  view  of  the  fact  that  vast  numbers  of  Cities  Ser­
&lt;  vice  employees  throughout  this  sprawling,  giant  corpora­
tion  are  covered  by  union  contracts,  arrived  at  through 
I man­to­man  negotiations  across  the  conference  table,  the 
Marine Division's  archaic  tactics apparently  do not  appear 
to  be  the  policy  of  the  parent  company. 
With  seemingly  fanatical  stubborness,  the  Marine 
.  Division  has  rejected  the demands of  its seapien  for  recog­
:  nition  as  a  unit. The  big  question  is  "Why?" 
All  we  can  do  is  ask  it.  The  answer  should  be  sup­
plied  by  the  Cities  Service  Oil  Company,  which  is  facing 
;  the  consequences  of  the  unrealistic  policy  laid  down  by 
one  of  its subsidiaries. 
The  Marine  Division  of „the  Cities  Service  Oil  Com­
pany does  not  have  a  solitary  support  for  its stand  in  op­
^  position  to  the  wishes  of  its  employees,  who  twice  voted 
overwhelmingly  for  respresentation  by  the  Atlantic  and 
Gulf" District  of  the  Seafarers  International  Union,  Nor 
can  it  legally  or  otherwise  deny  its  Obligation  to  bargain 
collectively  with  the  Union  which  has  been  awarded^, bar­
gaining rights  for  the  tanker  fleet. 
The  Congress  of  the  United  States  enacted  a  law  to 
govern  labor­management  relations.  Whether  Cities  Ser­
yice likes it or  not, it should  recognize that  it is not exempt 
from  the provisions  of  the labor  law  that other sections  of 
industry abide  by. 
Without  a  legal  leg  to  stand  on,  and  this  incapacity 
^ven  the  most  hardened  labor­hater  in  the company's Ma­
"  rine Division  must  admit. Cities  Service  is  precipitating  a 
situation  that  would  be  a  distinct  disservice  to  its  own 
stockholders  and  the  public. 
A  strike  against  the  company  would  naturally  have 
far­reaching  effect.  The  Union  would  prefer  to  resolve 
the  situation  peaceably,  in  collective  bargaining  confer­
ences. 
• 
But  so  far  the  Marine  Division  has  shut  the  door  on 
any. such  conferences.  The  SIU  has  complied  with  every 
legal  requirement  necessary  for. obtaining  a  contract.  Or­
ganized  labor, the Seafarers included,  always refrains  from 
using  the strike  weapon, except  as  a  last  resort. 
Certainly  the  Union  has  demonstrated  a  far  greater 
public  consciousness  than  the  company  has. 
If  the  Marine  Division  of  CS  has  a  public  conscious­
ness, and  if  it has any respect  for the  nation's laws,  it cer­
[i£  tainly has shown  no evidence  of  them. 
^ 
g 

There  is  something mighty  strange  about  the  actions 
this subsidiary of  utility empire  that otherwise  Seems  to 
go  for  good  labor  relations.  Maybe  if  it  were  jerked  out 
of  the dark  alley it  appears  to  be operating  in, everybody 
would  understand  how  tXOTie. 

Seafarers Members Now  In The  Marine  Hospitals 
BALTIMORE  HOSPITAL 
D.  H.  BRUNIE 
A.  TANSKI 
C.  S.  PUGH 
S.  BOJKO 
F.  W.  CHRIST 
G.  A.  CARROLL 
E.  K. BRYAN 
A 

T&gt;  r* A T A T IP A. 
­

J. J. CERDA 
C.  R.  BRACE 
O.  HOWELL 
D.  LAMBERT 
P. M.  ZANINSKI 
O. LYONS 
H.  McKAY 
L. TiCKEL 
m  A 

^ 

H.  R. WHISMAST 
CLAUDE  HAYES 
R.  GRALICKI 
FRANK • NEARING 
CARLOS  MATT 
T. B.  PATTON 
MICHAEL  GOTTSCHALK 
K.  JENSEN 
.,• 7'^  • • • • . T%Tr TTTrrrr* 
*_ 
. . ^ .  .. 

J. SHEA" 
L.  ROBERSON 
E. OJECA. 
J. C.  HENSLEY 
W. BEZANSON 
V.  RIZZUTO 
F.  KORVATIN 
H. MINKLER 
VINCENT  RODRIQUEZ  ­
R.  SOUZA 
T. SCANLON 
XXX 
P. E.  DARROUGH 
W.  W.  LAMB 
BOSTON  HOSPITAL 
'E. F,  PAUL 
W.  HALZELGROVE 
FRANK  ALASAVICH 
L.  YARBOROUGH 
j. TASSAIN 
WM.  E. GANNON 
E.  HARRISON  . 
C. J.  PALMQUIST 
G.  EDWARDS 
J. JUDAH 
X  %&gt;  X 
X  X  X 
J. E.  McCOMAS 
MOBILE  HOSPITAL 
NEPONSIT 
HOSPTTAX; 
A.  MASTERS. 
W.  P. FLYNN 
WILLIAM  PADGETT 
G. WILLOUGHBY 
"  ^ 
E. 
WILLIAMS 
MATTHEW 
BRUNO  ^ 
R.  O.  MELOY  . 
?  . 
A. McNULTY 
. 
v; 
JOSE 
DE 
JESUS 
J.  DAVIS 
G.  DOEST 
; ;'p: 
J. M.  LANCASTER 
S.  BUZALEWSKI 
WM. 
WERNETH 
;  ;  •   R.  K  LUFLIN 
J.  M.  KRUSCZYNSKI 
S. SIKES 
ESTEBAN  P.  LOPEZ 
H.  G..HARRIS 
T. JENKINS 
CHARLES 
L.  MOATS 
C.  W.  GOODYN 
C. 
LYNAM 
PEDRO 
G. 
ORTIZ 
J. YUKNAS 
B.  LOWE  . 
R. REDDEST 
i 
t 
J. FULTZ 
R. A. RATCLIFF 
NEW  ORLEANS  HOSPITAL 
L. 
GALLO 
THOMAS 
W. 
A.  DEFERMO 
J. MILLER 
R. A. 
B 
J. ONEILL 
L. BALLESTERO 
XXX 
J.A.MORRIS 
­
JOHN  T.  EDWARDS 
STATEN  ISLAND  HOSPITAL 
E. J.  NAVARRE 
, 
E. FERRER 
E. J. SPROCH 
J. DENNIS 
'  ^ 
L 
K  FRENCH 
HENRY  WATSON' 
F.  LANDRY 
;:7  t 
JOSEPH 
SPAULDING 
JOHN  SCOTT 
H.  F. LAGAN 
JOSEPH 
SILLAK 
M.  J. LUCAS 
L. LANG 
' 
LUIS 
TORRES 
THEADORE  ROZUM  . 
L.  WILLIS  ~ 
L. TULL 
—CIRNACO  ESOLAN 
E. H. COHOON 
FRED  ^SIGER 
H.  E,  LOGE 
' 
L. BEAUDY 
, 
­
X  X  X 
H. J. OUT 
' A 
­
A.  KELLER 
SAVANNAH HOSPITAL 
L.  D.  DIOUDONNE  H  . 
C.  EZELL 
: 
R.  GARCIA 
P. ROBERTS 
' ,  ' , 
J. J. CERDA 
J. P. FARRELL 
A.  MAUFFRAY 
A. T.  MOLAN 
i 
' J. J. O'CONNOR 
N.  I. WEST 
W. GENTY  •  • 
" F^'DrwALL^^., 
P.  L.  RAY 
'CLYDE I.ASETEE . 

�mmsfMitefaam 
TBE  SEAFAmBBS  tac 

rOy.  • 

P age  TIUM 

HOWOIte COMMNV DFFfES TNT 

Brief  History  Of  Organizing  Campaign 
Certification  of  the  SIU  as 
The  NLRB  in  this  instance 
collective  bargaining  agent  for  For  more  ihaa  three  years,  tho  Marine  men now have charges  of  unfair  labor  prac­ agreed  with  the  company's  posi­
xiine  Cities  Service  ships  Dec.  2 
tion  and  refused  to  reverse  its 
1949,  coupled  with  the  award  Division  of  the  Cities  Service  Oil  Company  tices on file  against  the  company. 
peculiar  decision.  The  Union 
The  SIU  has  withstood  every  protracted  immediately  petitioned  for  rec­
earlier  of  the  company's  seven  has  fought  to  deny  soamon  aboard  its  ves­
legid  maneuver  of  the  company  and  its  ognition  on  the  nine  unvoted 
c^er  ships,  brought  closer  the 
end of  the  SIU's three­year  drive  sels  iheir  legally­guaranteed  right  to  jeto  iHegithnate  front  —  the  company  "union  ships  which  were  as  overwhelm­
to  organize  the  seamen  of  the  a  union  of  their  choice  for  collective  bar­ known  as  CTMA—and  has  been  certified  as  ingly  pro­SIU  as  the  balance  of 
Cities  Service  tanker  fleet. 
gaining  purposes.  Despite  two  National  La­ bargaining  agent  for  the  entire  CS  fleet.  the fleet;  But  there  was  little 
question  but  what  the  company  ) 
The recent  NLBB  award  ruled 
For  some  strange  reason  the  CS  Marine  would  force  an  election  order, 
the  SIU  winner  in  an  election  bor  Relations  Board  elections  in  the  fleet, 
held  in  February ,  and  March  the  company  has  refused  ta recognize  Itoe  Division  still  refuses  to  coniply  with  Sec­ then  stall  the  voting  off  as  long 
of  last  year,  in  which  the  SIU  CS  tankermen's  overwhebniitg  ^slre  to  tion  8  (a)  (5)  of  the  Labor­Msnagement  Re­ as  possible. 
polled  89  percent  of  the  total 
lations Act  and bargain collectively  with  the  At  the  end  of  June,  the  Union 
vote,  and  disallowed  19  objec­ have  the  SIU  represent  them.  The  company  representative  of  its  employees.  Other  svib­ moved  again,  asking  that  the  t! 
tions  made  by  the  company  to  has  employed  every  fom' of  subterfuge  to  sidiaries of  the Cities Service Company  have  NLRB  conduct a  bargaining elec­
#he  conduct  of  the  balloting. 
halt  pro­Union  sentiment  among  the  men,  amicable  contractual  relations  with  organiz­ tion  on  the  nine  unvoted  ships, 
the  Cities  Service  company  hav­
MAJOH  PRASE  ENDS 
to  stall  the  legal  machinery  that  would  ed  labor,  which  puts  the  Marine  Division's  ing  managed  to  stall  for  time  | 
Government  recognition  of  the  bring  certification of  the  SlU,^ and to  evade  position  at  variance  with  company  policy.  through  seven  and  a  half  long 
Snr  as  representative  of  the  its  obligation  to  enter  contract  negotiations. 
With  the  Cities  Service  anti­union  story  months. 
Cities  Service  tankermen  brings  Unable  to  smash  the  tlnimi preference  oi  ^proadiing  a  climax,  this  history  of  the 
OBSTACLE  COURSE 
to  a  plose  a  major  phase  of­the 
its  men,,  the  company  mnbazked  on  a  cam­ case  has  been  prepared  to  acquaint  SIU 
NLRB's  activi^  in  ^ case, 
After  an  informal  hearing 
first  enlisted" when  the  SIU  pe­ paign  of  intimidation  and  mass firings.  As  mMaberslfip  and  their  fellow  trade  unlon­ early  in  July,  the  NLRB  an­
throughout  the  nation,  with  the  facts.  nounced  that  the  voting  unit  in 
titiened  for  an  election  in  July  a  result,  more  than  25fi  Cifles  Service  sea­
of  1947.  The 
entered  the 
such  an  election  should  include 
. natter  nine  months  after  the 
"All  unlicensed  personnel  on 
SIU—holding  pledge  cards  from  maneuver  in  which  a  large  case  the  year  before,  the  Board  eight  ships  had  been  in  the fleet  board  vessels  owned  or  operated 
a fiiajority  ofthe  seamgh  in  the  number  of  crewmembers  were  certified fe«  SIU  as  bargaining  when  the  voting rader  went  out,  by  the marine  division  including 
fleet—^had  requested  the  com­ replaced,  leaving  eidy  seven  el­ agent  for  the  seven  ships which  the  SIU  demonstrated.  Seven  of  deck,  engine  and  stewards,  ex­
had. actoally  been  voted,  but  not  these  had  been  voted,  and  eight  cluding  radio  operators,  pursers 
psBy  to  reeo^nze  it as ccdlectlve  igible  men  aboard. 
bargaining  agent  mi  October  26,  The  Ltme  Jack,  which  was  an  for  the  Lone  Jack  wtoch  had  new  ships  had  been  acquired  and  unlicensed  personnel  aboard 
charter  in the  Pacific,, never  was  been  in  foreign  waters .through­ during  the  voting  period,  the  those  vessels  of  which the Union 
1946. 
out ^the  voting  period,  and  not  Union  showed,  adding  that  par­ has  been  certified by  the  NLRB." . 
rr  In  the  ensuing  three  years  the  voted  in  that  election. 
for  the  eight  iiew  ships  whidh  tial  c«*tification  created  a  house 
company' has  held  firm  in  its 
TIME  STALL  ' 
divided,  in  which  the  employers  After  this  preliminary  meeting; i;!! 
the company  had acquired. 
opposition  to  the  SIU  through 
could  play  one  set  of  ships  the  Cities  Seiwice  company I 
various  legal  stalls,  the  inter­ The  cfempany  demanded  that  ThiSf  meant feat  nine  ships 
found  another  gimmick  under 
against  another. 
:.S 
jection  of  a  company­sporisored  the"  NLRB  extend  the  election  were  not  certified.  And  this  in 
uhion  and  the  entrance  of  the  time  75  more  days  for tiie  Lone  turn  meant  many  other  things. 
National  Maritime  Union,  both  Jack to  vote, and  that the NLRB  It  meant,  to  sight  an  extreme 
directly  and  indirectly,  in  its  revise  its  procedure  for  •   c&lt;m­ possibility,  that  Cities  Sei*vice 
ducting ^ecttons., Other  demands  could  sell  the  seven  certified 
maneuvers. 
Following  the  company's  re­ made  would  have  nullified  the  ships;  replace ­  them  with  seven 
ejection of  the SIU's  letter  asking  electuui.  The  NLRB  turned  the  more  and  say  "Phooey". to  the 
.sscognition,  the  first  obstacle  company  down  and  ordered  the  Union. 
to  face  the  SIU  was  provided  by  votes  to  be  counted. 
REPEAT  BATTLE 
the  NMU,  when  it  filed  charges  On  February  9,  the  vote  was 
. of\ unfair  labor  practices  against  announced,  giving  the  SIU  more  The  order  also  meant  that  the 
the company.  The NMU's charges  than  83  percent  oi fee  men  elig­ men  on  the  nine  un­certified 
were  based  on  an  election  won  ible to  .  vote.  Certification  for  ships  Would  have  to  go  through 
to  1938,  though  the  NMU  had  the  entire fiieet  was  expected to  the  enfee  process  their  Brothers 
TO'ver exercised  its  certification  follow  swiftly,  but  the  company  on  the  ­certified  ships  had  ex­
.and  the  Cities  Service  fleet  was  came  up  with  a  gimmick  that  perienced. 
jrecognized  as  being  unorganized  forced  the  second  bargaining 
.when  the  SIU  commenced  its  election,  although  it  failed  to  Meaqwhile,  the  SIU  protested. 
When  the SIU  was certified  on 
drive. 
block  certification  for  the  ships  Isthmian  ships,  SIU  organizers 
voted.  The  gimmick  was  in  the  pointed  out,  all  the ships  owned 
NMU  BtlLED  OUT 
form  of  eight  new  ships.  But  or  operated  by  Isthmian  became 
The  NMU's  charges  were  "before*  the  question  of  the  new 
squashed  in  hearings  before  the.  bottoms  came  up,  the  company  part  and parcel  of  the bargaining 
NLRB  in  July,  1947,  and  the  protested  the  election  results.  unit.  Yet,  during  the  voting 
period,  Isthmian  had  both  ac­
way,  cleared  for  an  election 
A 
month 
was 
consumed 
while 
quired 
and  gotten  rid  of  a . num­
order. 
the 
company 
and 
the 
NLRB 
ber 
of 
ships. 
On October  20,  1947,  the  Board 
batted 
back­and 
forth 
objections 
ordered  an  election  in  the  eight 
HOUSE  DIVIDED 
sbtos  the  company  then  ow^d,  and  exceptions  tq  the  objections, 
the  voting  to  ba  completed  with­ at' the  end  of  which  the  New  The  Union  filed  a  brief  with 
Two  pro­SIU  victims  of  the  Cities  Service  policy  of  out­
in  30  days.  On  November  20,  York  Regional  Director  of  the  fee  NLRB  petitioning  the  Board 
NLRB 
recommended 
to 
the 
Na­
right 
dismissal  of  those  protesting  intolerable  shipboard  con­
to 
amend 
its 
certification 
order 
.when  the  voting  period  expired, 
tional 
Board 
that fee 
SIU 
be 
ditions 
display  evidence  of  their  satisfactory  job  performances. 
by 
including 
all 
unlicensed 
per­
aU  but  two  of  .the  ships  were 
certified 
for 
the 
searoen­in 
the 
Lowell 
Kelley  (right),  AB,  and  Richard  Broomhead,  AB.  show 
sonnel 
in 
the 
bargaining­unit 
as 
voted,  these  being  the  French 
voting 
unit. 
a 
total 
of  more  than  40  discharges  from  the  Bsnts  Fort,  and 
it 
had 
done 
in 
the Isthmian 
case. 
Creek  and  the  Lone  Jack. 
their 
CTMA 
membership  books.which  like  all  CS  seamen, 
Essentially, 
the 
situation 
was 
the 
It 
was 
May 
24. 
before 
the 
The  voting  period  was  extend­
they 
were 
forced 
to  pay  for  in order  to  stay  aboard  the  ship* 
NLRB 
issued 
its 
certification 
or­
same. 
ed 00 days,  then another  10  days, 
to  enable  the  French  Creek  to  der.  And  it  struck  the SIU  like a  Cities  Service  had  11  vessels  Nevertheless,  they  were  fired  on  Dec.  27.  1949.  They're  now 
when  the  Union first  petitioned  ^^ing  aboard  SJU­coptracted  vessels,  where  they  are  assured 
wte  in  Philadelphia.  The  ship  bonfesfaeil. 
In a ruling which shattered the  for  an  election.  It  had  disposed  of  union  working  conditions and  job  security—things  that  the 
iWas  eventually  voted  in  Jack­
' sonyille,  followiifg  a  ­  company  precedent  set  in  the  Isthrpjan  of  some  and  acquired  others  and  company­dominated  CTMA  cannot give. 

­fe' 

�V 

Four 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Fridays,  Janunry  27« 

but  recovered  from  the  was  not  representative,  and  try  organizer  for  CTMA  who  was  itioned  the  NLRB  in  behalf  of 
iiie  authority  of  the  Taft­Hart­ blow, /, 
.ley  Act,  whose  hidden  dangers  shock  long  enough  to  state  that  to  have  the  result  thrown  out  exposed  in  the  LCXJ  as  a  Cities  CTMA  asking  certification  for 
were  only  just  becoming  appar­ the  company  would  cooperate  if  The  Board  apparently  agreed  Service  frent  man. 
the  men  on  seven  of  the  com­
ent to  organized  labor.  Under  the  voting  were  put  off  until  with  this  point  of  view,  as  vot­ The^  injunction  was  thrown  pany's  ships,  but  their  request 
the  law,  the  company  cls^ed.  February  23. 
*•  
ing  was  ordered  to  begin  Feb­ out  and  the  ballots  coimted  on  was  short  lived.  Three  days later 
Stewards,  Bosuns,  Pmnpmen ant 
The  Board  turned  this  down.  ruary  20.  On  that  date  crews  April  22.  The  SIU  swung  89  the  NLRB  answered  a  flat  "no." 
Machinists  were  supervisors,  ant  The  Board  also  rejected  a  com­ trooped  off  their  ships  and  off  percent  of  the  total  votes  cast.  CTMA  immeliately  seized  on 
i  could  not  vote  in  a  bargaining  pany  proposal  that  all  voting  be  company property  to areas  where  At  the  time  the  votes  were  tal­ the  NLRB  provision  allowing 
election  conducted  by  the  BoartL  done  between  Boston  and  Balti­ the  NLRB  supervised  the  poll.  lied  the  company  was  giveii  five  them  to  request  a  review  of  the 
Two  dajrs  later,  with  six  ships  days  to  file  objections,  if  any.  decision.  The  national  office  of 
At  the  end  of  August  and  more 
N 
voted,  the  company­  went  into  On  the  fifth  day  the  coippany  the  NLRB  made  short  work  of 
s^through  the  early  weeks  of  Sep­
SLICK  SWITCH 
Federal 
Court  and  obtained  a  filed  IS  objections,  aUeging  that  the  CTMA's  case,  issuing  on  Jan­
tember,  sct»­es  of  seamen  v^ho 
What  the  company  was  up to  temporary  injunction  halting  the  the  conduct  of  the  election  by  uary  17  a  denial  of  the  company 
had  sailed  in  th^  disputed  rat­
ings  oa  Cities  Service  ships  ap­ seemed  clear  enough  to  the  election.  At  a  hearing  two  days  the  NLRB  was  "arbitrary,  cap­ unioi.­.'s  request  and  at  thi?  same 
time  pointing  out  that  the  .SIU 
peared  before  the  NLRB  in  New  SIU.  Eight  Cities  Service  ships  later,  the  injunction  Was  modi­ ricious,  illegal  and  void." 
was  the  Union  representing. 
FINAL  ORDER 
York  to  demonstrate  that  they  were  due  to  hit  American 'ports  fied  and  Voting  was  resumed. 
were  not  supervisors  within  the  over the week­end. Some  of  these  The  final  baUoting  came  in  early  It  took  the  National  Labor  Cities  Service  employees.  The 
• oeening of  the  Taft­Hartley  Act.  were  to  run  into  Gulf  ports.  April,  when  the  Government  Relations  Board  ­almost  eight  NLRB  action  closed  .the  final 
Meanwhile,  to keep  the  ball  roll­ Tuesday,  February  22  would  be  Camp  voted  by  mail  from'Mon­ months  to  deny  the  company's  possible  avenue  for  intervention 
objections  and  certify  the  SIU  by  the  CTMA  and  stymied  the 
ing. the  Union  was  making  an  a  holiday.  It  was  entirely  pos­ tevideo,  Uruguay. 
^ort  to  induce  the  company  to  sible  for  the  company  to fce  the  Before  the  votes  could  be  as  collective  bargaining  .  agent  company's  last  hope  for  thwart­
negotiate  a  contract  for  the  crews,  sign  on  new  men  and  get  counted  Cities  Service  was  in  for  the  men  on  the  remaining  ing  the  SIU  drive. 
tie ships  out  before  the  election  court  again.  This  time  12  CTMA  nine  ships,  but  finaUy,  on  De­ With  certification  covering  16 
seven  certified  vessels. 
Both Union and  company  were  deadline.  The  follow­up  on  this  'members"  secured  ^ temporary  cember  2,  the  certification  order  ships  in  its  hip  pocket,  the  SIU 
has  requested  the  company to 
suppjsed  to file  briefs  on  the  would  come  when  the  voting  injimetion  withholding  vote  tal­ was  handed  down. 
laurgaining  unit  issue  with  the  eventually  took  place  with  only  ying  on  the  grounds  that  they  With  the  announced  certifica­ sit  down  and  begin  collective 
handful  of  eligible  men  lad  received  no  notice  of  the  tion,  Cities  Service  was  ready  bargaining  talks.  To  date  the 
NLRB  within  seven  days  after 
aboard, 
which  could  bring  a  election.  Among  the  petitioners  with  another  delaying  action.  company  has  not  replied  to  the 
"the  hearings  ended.  This  gaVe 
company 
protest  that  the  vote  was  David  Furman,  principal  The  Cities  Service  attorneys  pet­ Union's  request. 
the  company  the  opportiuiity  it 
wanted  to  stall  things  along  for 
another  six  weeks.  The  company 
lawyor  wrangled  two  extensions, 
the  second  one  imtil  October  29. 

Cities  Service  Spawns  CTMA 

COMPANY  UNION 
'  By  this  time,  the  Cities  Serv­ The  recent  unsuccessful  effort 
ice lawyer had  thought  of  a new  of  the  Cities  Service­dominated 
In  ihe  dozen  or  so  years  that  the  Cities  Service  seamen  and  to  delay  their  repre­
trick,  a  company  imion.  It  was  company  "union"  to  get  an  elec­
Service 
Oil  Company  has  fought  to  smash  saltation  by  the  SIU.  In  both  of  these  ob­
too  late  for  him  to  get  a  second  tion  on  ships  for  which  the  SIU 
imion  on  the  ballot  in  any  elec­ has  been  certified  as  collective  efforts  of  its  seamen  to  organise  for  col­ jectives,  the  company  has  failed 'miserably. 
tion,  but  he  apparently  thought  bargaining  agent  furtlier  proves  lective  bargaining  purposes,  one,of  its  prin­
The  SIU  has  effectively  and  unceasln'gly 
that,  if  Cities  Service  seamen  the. intent  behind  the  company's 
could  be  lured  by  extravagant  move  when  it  set  up  the  Citco  cipal  weapons  has  been  the  nauseating  de­ exposed  the  phony  and  deceitful  character 
promises  into  supporting  a  com­ Tanker  Men's  Association  vice known as the "company  union." During  of  CTMA  and" those  behind  it  from  the 
pany  union,  they  would  vote  to  (CTMA)  back  in  October,  1948.  the  National  Maritime  Union's  unsuccessful 
start.  Except  for  the  paid  szooges.  few  CS 
reject  the  SIU.  Moreover,  any­
organizing  campaign,  the  company  created 
body  who  failed  to  join  could  For  on  October,  1948,  the birth  and  fostered  two  phony  "unions"—the  Un­ men  were  taken in  by CTMA's  dirty  tactics. 
date  of  CTMA,  the  SIU  had  al­
be  blacklisted. 
No  matter  how  sweetly  CTMA  propaganda­
ready  been  certified  as  agent  licensed  Employees'  Collective  Bargaining 
was  presented,  the  stench  of  the  company's 
The new organization  was call­ for  the  first  seven  CS  ships,  and 
ed  the  dtco  Tanker  Men's  As­ another  election  was  shortly  to  Agency  of  Cities  Service  Oil  Company  and  hand  has  always  been  evident. 
sociation,  quickly  shortened  to  be  held  by  the  National  Labor  the American  Tankermen's Associatioxl.  both 
CTMA  is more than  a story of  illegitimate 
CTMA.  It first  came  into  being  Relations  Board  on  the  fleet's  of  which  were  declared  Illegal  and  dissolv­
£ut&gt;und  October  1,  1948. 
ed 
as 
ordered 
by 
the 
National 
Labor 
Rela­
company 
activity  in  the  fiqld  of  labor­man­
remaining  nine  vessels  on  which 
CTMA's  headquarters  were  in  ^ overwhelming  preferred  for  tions  Board  and  enforced  by  the  Federal  agement  relations—^it  is  a  dassic  example 
a  building  in  Linden,  New  Jer­ the  SIU  had  clearly  been  in­ Circuit  Court  of  Appeals. 
of  how  would­be  union­busters,  like  the 
sey,  where  no one  but  attorneys  dicated. 
The 
currently­active 
Citco 
Tanker 
Men's 
Cities  Service  Oil  Coznpany.  lise  the  fraud­
had  offices. 
Assertion,  known  as  CTMA.  which  pres­ ulent  company  "imion"  to  fight  the  legally 
'BABY'  BORN 
The  SIU  at  once  exposed 
ent­day CS 
tankermen have  learned  to hate  guaranteed  rights  of  its  employees  to  rep­
CTMA  as  a  company  creation,  The­company  was  determined 
and showed  its similarity to  com­ to  have  a  device  available  with  as  a  ruthless  Instrument  of  company­in­ resentation  by  &amp;  bona  fide  trade  union  of 
pany  unions  created  in  the  past  which  to  continue  blocking  its  spired intimidation and oppression, is merely  their  own  choosing.  The  following  article 
by  CS.  In  the  SEAFARERS  employees'  wishes  for  bona  fide  a  reincarnation  of  its  two  unholy  predeces­ me;rely highlight^ the character and  methods 
LOG,  it  was  pointed  out  that  le­ representation  by  a ­  geniiine 
^ 
gitimate  unions  arose  as  rank­ trade  union  when  time  rah  out  sors.  CTMA  was fashioned  to confuse  Cities  of  CTMA. 
and­file  movements.  They  did  on  its  own  stalling  tactics. 
not  have  headquarters  in  the of­ CTMA,  the  company  "union," 
fices  of  lawyers,  the  SIU  peiper  was  that  device. 
organization • a  S  a  seaman's  or­ ed  seamen,  and  that  it  pieant  to  Seafarer  would  imagine ^sicible, 
twid­  but,  fhov  HiH  Vintro 

­  r'.U.ii  .i.u  xlluAlCKI.  Ik"  WtUi  il­

.  ytr,—­­­'­­t 

' '  Jllli 

—A——T,.  ­

Oc.iig"  uTIeleu  uy  Uie 

cratlcaUy  elected  officers,  con­ legitimately  conceived  by  eoln­ the  services  of  a  Steward  named  schemes  the  comi&gt;any  and  its  company  lawyers,  Furman  was 
stitutions  and  regular  meetings,  pany­  officials  and  their  hired  David  Fm­man,  an  old  hand  at  lawyers  concocted,  CS  officials  sent  on  his  first  mission  as  com­
all  'Of  which  was  lacking  in  lawyers,  CTMA  has  been  the  stooging  for  unton­busting  com­ once  again  began  shaping  up  pany  stooge  for  CTMA,  as "auth­
CTMA 
orized  representative."  He.board­
company  mouthpiece,  aided  and  panies.  The  company  authorized  another  phony  front.' 
of 
The SIU  met  the  company  un­ abetted  by  a  handful  of  CS  Furman  to.  use  the title 
ed 
the SS  Winter  Hill as  a Stew­
SHADY  BACKGROUND 
ion  imwaveringly.  All  Seafarers  stooges „on  board  the  company  "CTMA's  authorized  representa­
ard.  He  remained  aboard  for 
or  pro­Seafarers  in  the  Cities  ships  who  are  paid  handsomely  tive." 
So  CS  took"  David  Furman,  two  months,  then  went  ashore 
S^vice  crews  were  directed  to  in money  and  privileges for  their  Cities  Service  itself  h^d  ample  formerly  of  the  Standard  Oil  for  one  trip  to  report  to ­ the 
sign  up  for  CTMA  so  that  the  services.  These  stooges  constitute  experience  in  running  phony  Company  of  New  Jersey,  to  do  company.  Furman  was  sent ^back 
company  would  be  unable  to  the  company's  staff  of  hatchet  company  "unions."  During  the  for  CTMA  what  he  had  once  to  the  Winter  Hill  with  an  ami­
find  who  exactly­was  who. 
men.  "They  ride  the  CS  ships,  as  NMU's  unsuccessful  drive  for  a  done  for  the  company­controlled  Ipad ,  of  CTMA  literature,  all  Of 
sort 
of  a  group  of  political  com­ contract  with  that  company,  CS  Esso  Tankermen's  Association.  which  was  done  up  in  amateur­
ELECTION  CALL 
missars  whose  words  outweigh  set up the  Uulicensed Eniployees'  An  NMU  official  identified  Fui­ ish  style  to  keep  it  from  smeU­
On  December  30,  1948,  over  even  the  Skippers'.  They  report  Collective  Bargaining  Agency  of  man  as  the  "character"  who  ing  too  much  of  the ^  company 
two  years  since  the  inception  of  all  instances  of  pro­SIU  activity  Cities  Service  Oil  Company.  The  helped  develop  the  Esso  outfit  hand. 
the  drive,  the  SIU  received  a  to  the  company  office  in  New  National  Labor  Relations  Board  "and  who has  moved  in to  Cities 
'UNION'  ACTIVITY 
communication  hrom  the  NLRB  York,  finger  the  men  who  are  ruled  (that  it  was  iUegal  and  or­ Service  at  the request  of  the  op­
ordering  an  election  on  the  nine  filed  and  threaten  the  "doubt­ dered  that  it  be  dissolved.  The  erator  to  help  found  the  new  Furman's  first  shipboard  job 
unvoted  ships.  Cities  Service,  fuls"  with  dismissal  and  other  order  was  enforced  by  the  Cir­ outfit  and  prevent  legitimate,  was  to  call  a  meeting  of  the 
I'through  st^,  put  off  pre­elec­ reprisals  if  they  don't  sign  up  cuit  Court  of  Appeals,  a  federal  trade  imionism."  In  addition  to  crew.  Despite  the  company's  bit­
tion  meetings  with  the  NLRB  with  CTMA. 
coiui.  Cities  Service  tried  the  this testimony to Furman's  sliad­ ter  opposition  to  any union  ac­
until  February  16,  at  which  time 
stunt  again  by  organizing  anoth­ o'wy  backgroimd  as  a  "union"  tivity,  the  Skipper  approved­i­
FROITT  SET  UP 
the  Company  refused  to  coop­
man,  the  SIU  has  in  file  other  because  (1)=  CTMA  was  not  a 
er  phony  "union,"  iinder • the 
 
erate  in  any  way  until  the  10­ When  CTMA  first  began front­ less  company­sounding  'name  of  affidavits  attesting  that  he  is  in  union,  but  a  company  front,  and 
year  old  Federal  Court  writ  or­ ing  for  Cities'  Service,  offices  American  Tankermen's  Associa­ the  employ  of  CS  to  assist  in  (2)  the  company  had  oi'dered 
dering  Cities  Service  to  allow  were  established  at  129  North  tion.  Again  the  NLRB  brapded  the  union­busting  tactics  of  CS  full  cooperation  ' with  CTMA 
NMU  organizers  aboard  its ships  Wood  Avenue  in  Linden,  New  it  "phony" and  again  the  federal  officials. 
stooges. 
was  rescinded. 
Jersey,  a  building  whose  only  court'  enforced  the  order  to  dis­ Other many  relevant factors  on  None  of  the  officers  objected 
Here  the  NMU  threw  a  rock  occhpant  was  the  law  firm  of  solve  the  company  puppet  or­ Furman  and  his  "relations"  with  as  Furman  boomed  praise  for 
at  Cities Service's  scheme  to  get  Dvorin  and  Margulies.  The  ganization.  The  NMU's  fight  CS  officials  and  some  few  crew  the  company.  He  made  no  effort 
another  delay.  In  a letter  to  the  CTMA  representative  there  was  evaporated  in  face  of  relentless  members throughout  the CS  fleet  at  that  time  to  conceal  the  com­
ILNLRB  on  Fateuary  1,  the  N&amp;U  a  lawyer  named  Strasburger,  legal  stalling  by  the  company,  are  on  file  and  fully  document­ pany's  connection  ibith  CTMA. 
ofiCicially  withdrew  ^ interest  who  is  a  partner  in  the  New  so  CS  had  no  furjjher  need  for  ed.  Theito  facts  will  be  made  When  a  pro­SIU  crewmember 
in  the  Cities  Service fleet  "in  York  law  office  of  Murphy,  a  company  "union." 
known  during  the  healings  of  blimtly' asked  him  if  Cities  Ser­
the  interest  of  legitimate  trade  Strasburger  and  Purcell  at  217  But  in  1948,  when  the  SIU  the  ui^air  charges  against  CS  vice  was sponsoring  CTMA,  Fur­
,umonism:"  The  company  lawyer  Broadway. 
was showing  that  it  was in there  Ijefore  the  NLRB,  These  facts  toSin quickly  replied: 
/ 
under  this  unexpected  To dress  up  the  company  front  pitching  for  the  company's  abas­ will  show  th.mgs  tliat 
tleeeni  "Yet,  it  is  company  sponeorc;^ 

�Friday.' January  27,  19S0 

THE  SE A¥  ARERS  LOC 

Paga  Flva 

but 
sure  it  wWl  be  a  good 
deal." 
The  company's  tactic  of  em­
ploying  CTMA  solely  as a  device 
for  stalling  final  certification  of 
the  I^IU  as  bargaining  agent  for 
the  ileet  personnel  soon  became 
obvious  to  CS  tankermen. CTMA 
propaganda  promised  that  an­
other  election,  with  CTMA  on 
.the  ballot, ­  would  be  ordered 
shortly  by  the  NLRB,  although 
an  SlU  petition  was  pending 
with  the  Board  and  the  law  said 
that  no  new  action  could  be 
taken  until  peniding  petitions 
^  had  been  disposed  of. 
The company  could never  mus­
ter  more  than  a  handful  of 
stooges  to  spread  its  lies  and 
threats,  but  all  of  them  were 
amply  rewarded  in  one  way  or 
another. Some  ships'  officers  aid­
ed  the  CTMA  stooges  in  threat­
ening  men .who  did  not  sign  up 
with  CTMA. 

ger  and  Purcell  to  act  ^ my  at­ ,•  
torneys..." 
, " 
f 
Around  this  time  the  company | 
also  took  a  direct  hand  in  the 
preparation  of  CTMA  literature. ¥  j 
After  the  SIU  had  been  certified  i 
on  Dec.  2,  1949,  for  the  entire  : 
fleet,  Cities  Service  took  over 
the  "Shipmate,"  an  ineffectiv(^ 
childish,  crudely  mimeographed 
sheet  that  the  company  had  al­
lowed  some  of  its  stooges  to  get 
up in  the vain  hope that it  would 
appear  legitimate. 
The  company  lawyers  and 
other  CS  professionals  became 
the  editorial  staff  of  the  "Ship­
mate"  and  instead  of  mimeo­
graphing  it,  the  company  turned 
it  over  to  a  multilithing  house in 
an  effort  to  get  out  a  profession­
al­looking  sheet.  The first  issue 
gotten  out  by  the  company  offi­
cers  was that  of  January, 1950. 
To  make  sure  there  were  no 
slip­ups  in  distribution  after  it 
had  gone  to  additional  expense, 
CHIEF  STOOGES 
CS  had  its  company  officials 
deliver  copies  of  the  "Shipmate" 
The  principal  sto ages—or_  of­
to  the  ships.  Among  those  who 
ficers—Of  the  company  "union" 
took 
to  running  "company  un­
are: 
ion"  papers  for  the  top*  brass 
President—John Blanchard,­ AB 
were  Mr.  Wiggins,  Port  Engme« 
on  the  French  Creek.  This  man 
for  Cities  Service,  who  carried 
does  not  mix  with  the  crew 
copies  aboard  the  Government 
other  than  to  toss  off  threats 
Camp,  and  Edward  (Murphy) 
of  dismissal  to  those  suspected 
Zamowski,  Assistant  Port  Stew­
of  pro­SIU  sentiment.  He  sleeps 
ard,  who  delivered  a  batch  of 
in  an  officer's  foc'sle  and  eats 
papers  to  the  Fort  Hoskins. 
at  topside  mess. 
On  Jan.  7,  1950,  the  company 
Vice­President  —  Nicholas  De 
issued  a  statement,  which  it  had 
Lello,  FWT  on  the  SS  Winter 
signed  by  Nick  De  Lello,  CTMA 
Hill.  One  of  the  original  CTMA 
vice­president,  but  which  was 
group  who  openly  threatened 
completely  out  of  characteri 
pro­SIU  men,  or  any  anti­CTMA 
loaded  with  legal  language,  and 
roan  with  physical  violence,  not, 
calling  members  of  the  govern­' 
at  the  hands  of  himself,  but  in­1 
ment's  NLRB  liars,  the  ."^De 
stead  at  the  hands  of  company 
LeUo"  statement  ended  with  the 
"strong  arm"  men..  He  confided 
following  get ­ in ­ line ­ or ­ else 
to  crewmembers  that  the  com­
warning: 
pany  pays  him  $500  a  month 
'LOYAL*  TO  CS 
when  he  is  on  the  Beach  for  a 
"Cities  Service  wiU  be  loyal 
vacation.  De  Lello,  like  fhirman, 
to  the  men  who  are  loyal  to  it." 
also  spends  time  going  from ship 
But  Cities  Service  tankermen 
to  ship  to  get  the  lowdown  for  ernors,  a  designation  usually  not  has  any  members—outside  of  its  the  CTMA.  New  CTMA  mem­ know  fuU  weU  that  CTMA 
the  company  on  SIU  activity  employed  by  trade  unions  but  company­paid  gang  of  officers—  bers  can  join  up  at  the  law  of­ speaks  only  for  the  company. 
among CS  tankermen. He  fingers  common  among  corporation  set­ who  would  vote  CTMA  in  a  fice,  where  membership  cards  They  know  that  Cities  Service 
men  ' for  firing,  and  is  the  ups.  In  view  of  the  fact  that  secret  ballot. The  company,  how­ are  issued  by  an  attorney  Or  a  will  be  loyal  only  to  the  Cities 
"brains"'"  of" the  CTMA  goon.C^i^s  Service  lawyers  framed  ever,  doesn't  care  about  that.  In  staff  employee.  Nowhere in  view 
the  organizational  setup  of  the  main,  CS  had  two  purposes  is  anything  that  looks  like  a  Service  Company.  The  evidence 
squad. 
CTMA,  however,  the  Board  of  it  hoped  to  achieve  through  the  seaman  or  remotely  resembles  lies  in  the  fact  that  if  Cities 
Service intended  to  recognize  the 
SPECIAL  PRIVILEGES 
Governors  is  not  startling. 
creation  of  CTMA:'  . 
one. 
rights  and  welfare  of  its  sea­
Upon  joining  CTMA,  CS  crew­ men,  it  would  have  acceded  to 
These  men  are aided  and  abet­ On  the  Board  are  Robert  Hal­ T.  By  circulating  CTMA  pled­
ted  by  two  staunch  company  vosa, Frank Garcia,  Fred  Wright,  ges  among  the  crews,  the  men  members  must  sign  a  statement  their  wishes  for  representation 
who  refused  to  sign  would  im­ giving  the  law firm  of  Murphy,  by  the SIU.  Proof  of  this is  what 
characters:  Earl  Gerald  and  and  Frank  Hoover. 
Thomas  P.  Daly,  secretary  and  Each  of  these  cheuacters  en­ mediately  identify  themselves  as  Strasburger  and  Purcell  the  sole  happened  to  the  majority  of  the 
assistant  secretary,  respectively,  joys  special  privileges  aboard  being  pro­SIU.  Thus  they  could  right  to "bargain"  with  the com­ rank  and  file  CS  seamen  who 
Cities  Service  ships.  They  de­ be  weeded  out  and  blackballed  pany  for  them,  and  authorizing  were  foolish  enough  to  be  taken 
of  CTMA. 
"said firm  of  Murphy,  Strasbur­
v.­r  oe 
In  addition  to  these  "union"  termine  when  they  get  time  off.  in  the''fleet. 
ths 
officers,  there is  a  Board  of  Gov­ They  are  permitted  to  miss ship,  2.  By  introducing  a  new  or­1 
finky company  unions CS  crested 
even  watches. They  transfer from  ganization  into  the  scene  at  the 
in years  gone by,  and  how  many, 
vessel to  vessel in the fleet when­ last  minute,  the  company  hoped 
of  those  fellows  the  company 
ever they  so desire.  Two of  them  to  sway  some  of  the 
Lorn 
was  "loyal"  to. 
have  boasted  that  they  can  have  voting  for  the SIU  in  the  belief 
After  niore  than  a dozen  years/ 
'a  Skipper fired,  and  on  at  least  that  CTMA  would  do  something 
of fighting  genuine  trade  unioniy 
one  occasion  a  Chief  Engineer  for  CS men. 
zation  of  their  seamen,  CS  iL 
was  fired  beca\ise  he  refused  The SIU  took  the second  elec­
'.MM 
still 
dispensing  the  same  oli 
' '­t 
to  intimidate  pro­SIU  men.  ­
tion,  jjespite  the  CTMA­directed 
hogwash. 
­  \ 
intimidations 
and 
the 
company 
CTMA 
is 
nothing 
more 
than 
CTMA  BACKBONE 
strategy—and took  it by  a great­
an  instrument  for  continuing  to 
This ­dique.  Of  company' men  pr  majority  than  it  had  in  the 
crush  CS  tankermen  and  their' 
are  the  backbone ' of  . the  •  CS  first  election. Results  of  the­sec­
chances for  the  improvement rtf 
front  pi^ganization.  To .  secure  ond  decticro  gave  the  SIU  an 
wages  and  conditions  and  job 
pledges roid  .membership applica­ 89  percent  majority'and  the vic­
.w» 
security. 
tions from  personnel, they  threat­ tory  was  announced  by  the 
en  men  with  loss  of fiieir  jobs.  NLRB  in  April,  1949. 
• j.They are  openly  backed  by  in­ As  the  compansr's  l^al  tricks 
secure  company  officera  in  aU  to  stall  the final  certification 
departments. CTMA  membership,  failed  one  by  one,, the  ccwnpany 
With  the^ climax  of  the 
­MBf 
.of  course,  means  nothing.  ThO  became  more  desperate  and 
campaign 
' ii'v^ar,  all  Cities 
men  get  nothing  but  dues  re­ changes  were  made  in  CTMA  to 
Service 
seamen 
are  urged  to 
ceipts. 
bring  it  closer  to  the  company, 
Roy  Lindquist  sailed  two 
stay  aboard  their  ships  until 
The  fee  for  joining  CTMA  Is  both  physically  and  in  the  lang­ years  aboard  the  CS  tanker 
Hoy  Brace  (above)  complain­
otherwise  notified  by  SIU 
$6, 
which  pays  a  member  up  uage  of  its  propaganda. 
ed about  the food  oh  the Cities 
SS  Council  Grove.  "For  my 
organizers.  In  the  meantime, 
Service  ttmker  SS  Govern­ for  three  months.  Thereafter  Dxiring  the  third  wee^i:  in  Oc­ faithful  service,"  he  says,  "I 
SIU  organizers  point  out, 
ment  Camp.  As .a  result,  the  monthly  dues  are  $2.00.  Every­ tober, 1949,  Cities Service  moved  was fired  for  daring  to  exer­
disregard all  rumors and gos­
Mate.  Peter  Viera,  who  was  body  signs  up,  including  the  CTMA  offices  from  Linden  to  cise  my  law­given  right  to 
sip.  Every  new  development 
^so active  as  an  organiser  for  SIU  men  aboard  the  ships,  to  a  suite  of  offices  occupied  by  choose  a  genuine  bargaining 
will  be  brought  to  crews' 
avoid  being  labeled  pro­SIU.  Murphy,  Strasburger  and  Pur­ agent—the  SIU—to  represent 
the  company  "union." fired 
attention  as  soon  as  it 
If  a  CTMA  cardholder  should  cell  in  217  Broadway,  New  York  me.  The  Mate  warned  me  to 
Brace.  Viera  admitted  that  the 
breaks. 
cease 
working  on  a  CS  ship,  City,  about  six  blocks  from  the  lay  off  but  I  didn't  because  I 
.jcompany  had  put  him  ­on  the 
Do  nothing  to  jeopardise 
­Government  Camp  to  clean  or  should  fall  behind  in  dues,  Cities  Service  empire's  head­ still figure  freedom  is  an  Am­
your  job.  If  you  are fired 
: ;ship.  of  those  aboard  for  "a  he  is  immediately  dropped.  On  quarters  at  70  Pine  Street. 
erican  word  . . . The fleet 
from  a  Cities  Service  ship 
v^Ieng  timo."  Hundreds  of  CS  signing  on  again,  he  must  join  During  the  conduct  of  their  re^s  with  a spy  system  ope­
for  any  reason,  report  to the 
Tseamen  were  driven  from  the  the  organization  ^1  over  again.  regular  legal  business.  Murphy,  rating  through  the  company­
nearest  SIU  Hall  at  once. 
[ucompany's  shlpc  in  lha  pus^e. 
It  is  doubtful  whether  CTMA  Strnsbuxger  and  Purcell  act  as  dominated  CTMA." 

Stay Aboard! 

�l»ag» Sbc 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Fftdaj, J»nuaxY*27,  188CK  7 ^  ^ 

Cities Service Makes 'Fine' Art Of Stalling 
The  fat file  on  the  Cities  Ser­
The  NLRB  took  the  two  brie&amp; 
vice­SIU  case  in  the  New  York  For  three  years  the  Mulne  Division  of, ­ The  lengths  to  which  the  CS  company  under  consideration. 
Regional  Labor  Relations  Board  the  Cities  Service  Oil  Company  has  been  has  gone  to  avoid  compliance  with  the  La­
December  30,  1948 
...  » 
bears  mute  testimony  to  the  ex­ driving down  a dead­end  street.  During­that  bor­Management  Relations Act  is a damning 
The  NLRB  notified  the  Unioh 
haustive  lengths  Cities  Service  time  it  employed  every  possible  means  to  indictment of  a giant  corporation,  which en 
Oil  Con^&gt;any  has  gone  to  in  its  shake  off  the  SIU,  twice  overwhelmingly  joys  huge  profits  under  the  benefits  of  our  and  the  company  that  an  elec­
tion  would  be  held  in  the  nine 
attempt  to  deny,  by  every  legal  designated as coUective  bargaining agent  by  democracy,  but  which  refuses  to  rec^ixe  ships  petitioned  for.­­ The  SIU 
and extra­legal  means,  the recog­ the  Cities  Service  seamen  voting  in  secret 
rights  of  its  employees  as  established  would  be  the  only  Union  on  the 
nition  of  the  SIU •  as  collective  balloting  conducted  by  the  National  Lal^r 
ballot,  and  all  imlicensed  men 
by  law.  The  accompanying  chapter  of  the 
except  Bosuns  and  Stewards 
bargaining  agent  for  its  tanker­ Relations  Board. 
men.  Apart  from  the  several  Having  failed  this,  the  company  has  now  Cities  Service  story  shows  how  the  com­ would  vote.  Announceinent  was 
hundred  pages  of  NLRB  records  rim  up  against  the  stonewall.  There  are  no  pany  has  consistently  attempted  to  evade  naade  that  a  meeting  to ..arrange 
voting  procedure  would  be  held 
devoted  to  diarges,  counter­
its  obligations. 
January  5. 
charges,  bbjectuMis  and  briefs  more  legal  detours. 
filed  by  the  company,  the  New 
The  SIU  agreed  to  meet  and 
York  court  records  are  studded  pier  to  vote  the  SS  French  SIU  representatives  repeated  June  22,  1948 
begin  preparations  for  the  elec­
tion, 
i 
with  company­sponsored  actions  Creek,  the  seventh  of  the  com­ their  earlier  position. 
The 
SIU filed'Jor 
an 
election 
taken  against  the  SIU. 
Cities 
Service 
claimed 
that 
hb 
pany's  eight  ships,  the  Cities  The  NLRB  again  denied  the 
to  cover  the  nine  unvoted  ships.  notice  of  an  election  had  been 
In  the  three  years  since  the  Service agent  there flatly  refused  company's  demands. 
received. 
SIU organizing  drive  opened,  the  to  let  either  the  Union  man  or 
company's  anti­union  campaign  the  Board's  representative  near 
July  10,  1948 
The  NLRB  allowed  postpone­
has  brought  it  before  the  NLRB  the  ship.  The  company  agent  March  8.  1948 
ments  until  the  middle  of  Feb­
Tlie  NLRB  began  hearings  on  ruary. 
in  dozens  of  instances,  each  defied  the  NLRB,  acting,  it  was  Undaunted, Cities  Service  pop­
' 
time  with  the  same  objective:  reported,  on  express  orders  he  ped  right  back  with  what  the  what  would  constitute  the  voting 
to  either  knock  out  the  SIU's  had  received  by  telephone"^  from  company  lawyer  termed  "ex­ imit  in  the  second  election  and  Fbbruary  16, 1949 
' 
efforts  to  gain  recognition,  or,  Cities  Service  headquarters  at  ceptions  to  the  order,"  repeating  in  its  proceedings  annotmced 
that  the  voting  unit  should  in­
The  company  finally  attended 
failing thi^ to stall for  time, hop­ 70  Pine  Street  in  New  York. 
all  of  its'  claims  disaUowed  in  clude  "all  unlicensed  personnel 
meeting  arranged  to  settle 
ing to eventually  wear  down  the  The  SIU  and  the  NLRB final­ three  earlier  hearings. 
on  board  vessels  owned  or  ope­ the  voting  procedure,  but  rer 
Union's  energies  and  convince  ly  voted  the  ship  later  in  Jack­
The  SIU  once  more  appeared  rated  by  the  marine  division,  fused  to  cooperate  imtil  the  10­
the  men  in  the fleet  that  the  sonville. 
before 
the  NLRB  to  defend  its  including  deck,  engine and  stew­ year  old  Federal  Court  writ 
company  was  unbeatable. 
victory 
in  the fleet. 
ards,  excluding  radio  operators,  ordering  Cities  SeArice  to  al­
The  following  is  an  issue­by­ January  25,  1948 
The NLRB on  March 23 denied  pursers  and  unlicensed  personnel  low  NMU  organizers  aboard  its 
issue  account  of  the  compan^^s 
. : 
Cities 
Service, 
not 
content 
to 
the  exceptions  sajnng  they  were  aboard  those  vessels  of  which  ships  was  rescinded. 
maneuveimgs,  to  which  were 
the 
Union 
has 
been 
certified 
by 
let 
any 
obstacle 
remain 
unused, 
The 
SIU 
explained 
that 
the 
"duly  lacking  in  merit" The  ex­
devoted  the  full­time  efforts  of 
National  Maritime  Union  in" the. 
a  battery  of  hi^­iaiced  attor­ went  before  the  NLRB  to  ask  aminer  then  recommended­  that  the  NLRB." 
Thfe. company 
lawyer 
at, 
the 
that 
voting 
be 
extended 
another 
interests 
of  legitimate  trade  un^ 
the SIU 
be certified 
for 
the com­
neys.  Each  account  gives  the 
fii^ 
hearing 
walked 
out 
when 
75 
days 
to 
perniit 
the 
SS 
Lone 
; onism 
had 
­withdrawn  all ­inters 
pany fleet. 
­ ^action  taken  by  the  SIU  and 
the  NLRB  refused  to  let  him  ;^est  in  the  case  on  February 
the  rulings  made  by  the  New  Jack,  then  on  charter  in  the Pa­
have  a  stenotypist  take  down  1,  thus  aiding  in  the  removals of 
Yoti  Regional  Labor  Relations  cific,  to vote.  The possibility  that  May  24,  1948 
minutes.  At  a  later  meeting  he  one  more  stumbling  block. 
Board  and  its  national  office  in  the  Lone  Jack  would  not  return 
to  the  States  for  many  months  The  national  office  of  the  returned  with  the  Taft­Hartley  The  NLRB  ordered  the  voting 
Washington: 
—and  could  be  kept  away  indef­ NLRB  handed  down  its  certifica­ Law  imder  his  arm,  which  he  procedure  to  be  set. 
October  28.  1946 
initely—opened  the  way  for  the  tion  order,  giving  the  SIU  jur­ claimed  barred  the  inclusion  of 
The SIU requested  Cities Serv­ company  to  ask  a  succession  of  isdiction  over  the  seven  ships  Bosuns,  Stewards,  Pumpmen  and  February  17,  1949 
ice  to  recognize  it  as  collective  extensions. Coupled  with  this re­ vdted,  but  not  for  the  one  ship  Machinists,  inasmuch  as  they  The  Cities  Service  lawyer  re­
bargaining  agent  for  the  men  quest.  the  company  moved  to  that  had  been  at  sea  nor  the  were­ slipervisory  employees. 
nullify  the  election  by  asking  eight  new  ships  the  company  The  SIU  countered  in  subse­ ported  to  the  NLRB  that  the 
in  the  Cities  Service fleet. 
company  would  cooperate  if  the 
the  NLRB  to  change  the  eligi­
quent  hearings  by  introducing  vote  were  put  off  until  after 
The  company  refused  the  Un­ bility  clause  to  allow  voting  by  had  acquired. 
The  SIU  immediately filed  a  as  ­witnesses  scores  of  seamen 
ion's  request. 
crewmen  employed  immediately  brief  objecting  to  the  order,  cit­ who  had  sailed  in  the  disputed  February  23,  with .no  voting  on 
The  National  Labor  Relations  before"  the  balloting  date  instead 
Saturdays,  Sundays  and  4Ioli­
Board  did  not  enter  into  the  of  as  of  the  original  eligibility  ing  the  Isthmian  case,  where  ratings  on  Cities  Service,  all  of  days. The  company  also demand­
the  Union  ha/4  been  certified  for  whom  demonstrated  that  they 
matter. 
date;  that  aU  proceedings  stop  the  entire fleet  despite  several  were  not  .supervisors  ­within  the  ed  that  aU  voting  be  done  be­
until  the  eligibility  was  chang­ ships  not  having  beai  polled.  meaning of  the Taft­Hartley Law.  tween  Bos^ton  and  Baltimore. 
October  31,  1946 
ed;  that  it  be  allowed  other  re­ The  Union  urged  the  NLRB  to 
The  SIU  quickly  pointed  out 
lief  and  alternative,  a  sort  of  amend  its  certification  order  to  The  NLRB  ordered  the  Union  the  company's  motive:  Eight 
The  Seafarers  petitioned  the  omnibus clause;  that  the original 
and  the  company  to file  briefs  ships were due in  American ports 
KLEB  for  an  election  in  the  CS  election  order  be  rescinded,  and  include  the  nine  excluded  ships.  on  the  bargaining  issue  within  over  the  week­end,  of  which  a 
Fleet.  . 
that  proceedings  be  returned  to  The  NLRB  in  this  case  agreed  70  days  after  hearings  ended.  number  were  hitting  Gulf  ports, 
The NMU  intawened,  claiming  the  pre­election  stage  for  hear­ with  the  company  and  denied  The fcompany  lawyer  stretched  during  which  time  the  company 
the  SIU's  request. 
. 
that  it  represented  the  com­
sc  uie cx tws, 
I&gt;any's  employees.  Its  charges  The  SIU  immediately filed  a 
leral  weeks  imtif  October  29. 
the  ships  back  out. 
were  based  on  an  election  won  counter  brief,  pointing  out  that 
The  NLRB  denied  the  motion 
in  1938,  though  a  contract  was  the  votes  on  the  Isthjnian  ships 
and  voting  began  on  February 
never  obtained  and several  years  had  been  counted  before  all  the 
20th,  a  Sunday. 
]  later  the  NMU's  activity  in  the  vessels  had  been  voted. 
I fleet  ceased.^ 
February  22,  1949 
The  NLRB  agreed  with  the 
The  NLRB  began  investigation  Union and on February 9 ordered 
f  of  the  cliai­ges  and  in  July,  1947  the  tallying  to  begin. 
With  MX  ships  already  voted. 
. ' asked the  NMU to present  pledge 
Cities  Service  went  into  court 
I  cards  representing  5  percent  of  February  12,  1948 
and  obtained  a  temporary  in­
I  the  Cities  Service  seamen  to 
jxmction  halting  the  voting  mid 
I,  support  its  claim  of  representa­ Three  days  after  the  ballot 
impounding  the  ballots  already 
tion.  The  NMU  failed  to"  pre­ coimt  showed  the  SIU  the  win­
cast.­ 
v­
sent  itself  at  the  meeting,  thus  ner  by  a  landslide,  with  83  per­
The SIU immediately  contested 
clearing  the  way  for  the  SIU  to  cent  of  the  vote  in  its  favor, 
the  injufiction  jointly  with  the 
work  on  the fleet  alone.  Later  the  company  was  back  in  the 
NLRB,  and  two  days  later  it 
in  the  case  the  NMU  aided  the  fight,  this  time  with  a  protest 
was  modified; to  resume  voting. 
SIU  campaign  by  withdrawing  to  the  election. 
Shortly  after  the  injunction  was 
all of  its  interest  in  the  matter. 
totaUy. •  dismissed.  ­
The  SIU  contested  the  com­
pany's  position. 
October  20,  1947 
AprillS,  1949 
The  NLRB  denied  the  protest. 
• V* 
• ' 
The  NLRB cleared  the way for 
Cities 
Service 
was 
back 
in 
polling  of  the  company's fleet  February  18,  1948 
court  again  to prevent  the count­
" when  it  issued  an election  order,  The  company  again  appeared 
ing­ of  baUots  cast  on  the  ­ninf. 
calling  for  voting  to  extend  30  before  the  NLRB  to  protest  the 
ships.  This  time  the  court  ac­
days  to  November  20. 
election. 
tion  took  the  form  of  an  in­
Cities  Service  stepped  in  with  Again  the  SIU  appeared  to 
junction  against  the  Regional 
its first  action,  an  action  which  fight  the  company's  position.  . 
Director  of  the  NLRB  by  12 
iwas  to  become  the  routine  pat­
CTMA  men  who  claimed  they 
The  NLRB  dismissed  the  pro­
tern  in the. future. The  Company  test 
had  not.  been ftotified  of  the 
election. 
.  , 
asked  that  the  vote  be  extended 
{mother  60  days.  The  Board  March  5,  1948 
The  SIU  protested  the  action 
agreed.  Another  10  days  was 
to  the  Federal  Court,  being 
For  the  third  time  the  com­
­added  later.  When  the  SIU  rep­
joined  by  the  national  office  of  , 
resentative  and  the  NLRB  offi­ pany's  lawv­rs filed  a  fat  brief 
the  NLRB,  which  dispatched  an 
gelUd  arrived  at. a  Philadelphia  disputing  me  election. 
attorney  from  Washington  tf»v 
I 

TbiiisiSaeaaiiu'm 
gpu alive. 

�Friday.  January  27,  19S0 

T^E  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Page  Seren 

fight  the  company's  action.  The  the  picture  again,  this  time  tak­ pany's  position,  citing  the  im­ terest,  we  believe  that,  apart  closing  the  last  avenue  for  in­
writ  was  thrown  out  of  coiirt  ing  advantage  of  an  NLRB  pro­ cooperative  attitude  of  the  com­ from  other  considerations,  it  ill  tervention  in  the  matter  by 
and  the  counting  of  the  ballots  vision  allowing  either  party  to  pany,  whereby  extreme  hard­ behooves  the  employer  to file  CTMA. 
cast  in  the  second  Cities  Service  file  objections  to  the  conduct  of  ships  were  imposed  on  the  Un­ objections  stemming  principally 
election  began.  The^^SIU  netted  an  election.  On  the fifth  day,  ion  and  the  NLRB  in  the  con­ from  its own recalcitrance." 
Cities  Service  submitted  19  ob­ duct  of  the  voting. 
89. percent  of  the  vote. 
The  SIU  immediately  notified  Thus,  three  years"  and  three 
jections,  terming  the  NLRB's  The  NLRB  in  New  York  for­ the  company  of  its desire  to  be­ months  later,  the  company, has 
conduct  "arbitrary,  capricious,  warded  the  company's  objections  gin  anew  negotiations  for  a  col­ exhausted  every  legal  means  of 
AprU  27.  1949 
illegal  and  void." 
and  the  SIU's  report  to  Wash­ lective  . "bargaining  agreement,  forestalling  the  SIU  in  i(s fleet, 
Cities  Service  ­was  back  in  The  SIU  contested  the  com­ ington  for  a  decision.  The  Cities  pointing  out  that  all  legal  re­ and  CTMA  has  been  stopped 
Service  stall  was  successful,  as  quirements had  been met  by  the  cold  in  its attempt  to  worm  into 
it  was  four'  months  later  on  SIU  and  the  Government  had  the  case.  The  only  road  open  to 
August  19,  1949,  before  the  disallowed  the  company's  coim­ the  company  is  to  meet  across 
the  bargaining  table  with  the 
ter  claims. 
NLRB  denied  the  objections. 
SIU  and  hammer  out  a  contract 
that  wili  bring  to  Cities  Service 
August  31.  1949 
December  16,  1949 
seamen  the  conditions,  wages 
Cities  Service  then  took  on  a  Cities  Service  pulled  a  switch  and  security  that  exist  aboard 
bit of  legal double  talk  and came  in  its  stalling  act  by  pushing  SrU­contracted  taiikers.  Every 
back  for  another  round.  The  CTMA  into  the fight.  The  com­ time  the  company  has  zigged, 
company's  attorneys  compiled  a"  pany  union  petitioned  the  NLRB  zagged  and  dbdge^  the  SIU  has 
brief  in  which  they  listed  "ex­ ^or  certification  as  representative  doggedly  kept  on  its  trail,  re­
ceptions  to  the  objections,"  a  of  the  seamen  aboard  the  7  sisting the  company  and  CTMA's 
stall  they figiu­ed  was  good  for  Cities  Service  ships  voted  in  the  every  attempt  to  discourage  the 
SIU  and  keep  the  company's 
another  whirl. 
first  election. 
tankermen from 
an SIU  contract 
The  SIU  stepped  forward  and  The  NLRB,  three  days  later, 
re­presented  its  case,  pointing  denied  the  CTMA  request,  not­ The  company's  last  maneuver 
out  the  company's fiimsj'^  case  ing  that  the  SIU  was  the  union  has  been  exhaustecJ,  It  must  now 
was  aimed  solely  at  gaining  ad­ for  Cities  Service  employees,  face  the  fact  that  the  SIU  is  go­
ditional  time. 
but  gave  the  company  union  10  ing  to  stay  in  the  battle  until 
The NLRB  took  under  conside­ days  in  which  to  ask  for  a  re­ a  contract  is  won,  and  if  the 
ration  the  company's  "excep­ view  of  the  matter  by  the  na­ company  insists  upon  delaying 
tional  office  of  the  NLRB  in  the  SIU  and  the  Cities  Service 
tions." 
seamen  in  their  relentless  drive 
Washington. 
for  a  contract,  direct  action  will 
December  2. .1949 
be •  employed.  Should  the  Union 
January  19,  1950 
The  National  Labor  Relations 
and  the  seamen  take  steps  to 
Among  the  hundreds  of  victims ^ef  the  Cities  Service  Oil  Board  issued  the  certification  for  Having filed  request  for  a  re­ gain  a  contract  through  econ­
Company's  hysterical  anti­union  purge  are  Paul  Coone  (right).  the nine  ships  voted nine  months  view  of  the  Regional  Director's  omic  action,  it  will  be  after 
Oiler,  and  Anthony  Garcia.  Wiper,  shown, here  holding  their  earlier,  and  blasted  the  com­ denial  of  certification  on  7  Cities  having  complied  with  every  fa­
SIU  membership  books.  Both  of  these  men  were fired  off  the  pany's  "exceptions  to  objections"  Service  ships,  CTMA  was  re­ cet  of  the  law.  Such  a  move 
Royal  Oak  last  June. 
by  stating,  "In  light  of  the  em­ buffed  again  when  the  NLRB  would  have  the  complete  sym­
'  ,  After  sailing  on  the  SIU­contracted  Mankato'  Victory  ployer's  refusal  to  cooperate  refused  to  consider  the  matter,  pathy  of  every  person  who  ­i­
Coone  said  that  for  the  first  time  "J  didn't  have, to keep­my  with  an  agency  of  the  Govern­ notifying  the  company  union  whether  in  maritime "or  hot  —" 
bag  packed  all fiie.  time  for  fear  ef  being  fired  in  the  next,  ment  in  carrying  out  its  statu­ that  the  SIU  was  the  union  for  has  become  acquainted  with 
port  because  of  something  the  company  didn't  like .d30ut  me."  tory  functions  in  the  public  in­ the  company  to  deal  with,  thus  the  facts  in  the  case. 

• J 

i 
I 
''• i I 
i| 

Intimidation, Mass Firing Key CS Poiicies 
When  the  SIU  laimched  its  or­
tail  of  the  application  is  scru­
ganizing  drive  in  the  Cities  Ser­
This  is  the  year  1950.  and  the  Cities  Ser­ charges  filed  by  CS  tankermen  with  the  tinized  and  the  job­seeker  is 
vice fleet  and  began  accepting  vice  Oil  Company'ConducSs  its business  op­
cross­examined  on  every  state­
National  Labor  Relations  Board. 
pledges  from  unlicensed  person­
ment 
he  has  made.  This  pro­
nel designating  the Union as  col­ erations  in  the  modern.,  ttlreamlined  man­
The  conditions  that  gave  rise  to  the  CS  cedure  has  a  two­fold  purpose: 
lective  bargaining  agent,  the  re­ ner.  But  its  Marina  Division,  which  trans­
seamen's  demand  for  representation  by  the  (1)  To  keep men  ­with  pro­Union 
sponse  was  overwhelming.  In  a  ports  the  company's oil  products,  persists  in, 
sentiment from  boarding  CS  ves­
matter  of  weeks,  the  SIU  had  treating  its  seamen  employees  in  the .con­ SIU.  and  the  reactionary  company  policies  sels,  and  (2)  to  terrorize  the 
a  sufficient  number  of  pledges  temptible  fashion  th^t  American  industry,  of  terror,  intimidation  and  reprisals  employ­ successful  applicant  to  the  point 
to  petition  the  National  Labor 
ed  to  prevent  employeees  from  bargaining  where  he  will  not  dare  utter  oi 
Relations  Board  for  a  collective  for  the  most  part,  has  happily  discarded  in  collectively  are an  indictment  agaj^nst  which  indicate  any  pro­Union  leanings 
bargaining  election  on  the  com­ the  interests  of  efficipncy  and  peaceful  la­ the  company  is  defenseless. 
when  he  does  get  on  a  Cities 
pany's  ships. 
bor­managemeht  relations. 
Service  tanker. 
From  the  outset,  the  comnany  Because  of  the  antiquated  labor  policy  of 
The  examples  cited  on  this  page  are  but  If  an  applicant  passes  the 
fought  the  wishes  of  its  em­ the  Marine  Division,  the  company  finds  it­ a  fragment  of  the  injustices  perpetrated  by  "screen  test"  a  company  official 
ployees  tooth  and  nail.  Despite 
takes  him  to  the  railroad  station. 
every company  maneuver  to  pre­
purchases  his  ticket,  then  tells 
vent  its  tankermen  from  obtain­ age  suits  involving  unfair  labor  practice  oppression  and  unionBusiing. 
him  the  name  of  the  ship  on 
ing  the  badly­needed  advantages 
of  an  SIU  contract,  the  Cities  "This  Cities  Service  tanker  to  heat  our  own  water  to  wash  But  every  single  condition  on  a 
Service  seamen  have  stuck 
that  I'm  on  is  a  good  example  or  shave.  In  the  Deck  Depart­ Cities  Service  ship  is  consider­
through  thick  and  thin  to  their  why  tankermen  need  the ,SIU  ment,  there  is  only 'one  tap  that  ably  below  the  standard  estab­
conviction that  the SIU was  their  to  aid  them  in  their fight  for  works  on  each  of  the basins  pro­
lished  by  the  Union  and  effec­
only  way  to  better  sailing. 
better  conditions  aboard  their  vided.  None  of  the  foc'sles  has  tive  on  its  contracted  vessels. 
a  washstand  but  the  Deck  De­
ships. 
DIDN'T  WORK 
In  fact  since  1946,  the  condi­
"Just  to  give  you  a  clear  pic­ partment  is  privileged,  for  the  tions  of  employment  on  CS ships 
Mass  dismissals,  intimidation, 
ture  of  conditions  I'll  start  with  other  departments  have  only  one  have become  progressively worse. 
favoritism  became  company  pol­
the  foc'sle  and  work  up  from  toilet  and  one  washstand  apiece.  Conditions  are  bad,  but  what's 
icies  but  none  of  these  was  suc­
worse,  a  man  dare  not  open  his 
UNFIT  GRUB 
cessful  in swaying the tankermen  there. 
mouth 
in  even  feeble  protest. 
from  their  intention  to  have  the  "Two  watches  and  two  deck  "The  stuff  called  grub  is 
The 
company 
attempts  to  invest 
maintenance  men  are  crowded 
SIU  represent  them. 
.strictly for 
the 
birds. 
We brought 
in 
every 
man 
a 
feeling  of  terror, 
Why  did  Cities  Service  sea­ into  one  foc'sle.  Each  man  has  a  lot  of  good  stuff  aboard  but  so  that  talk  of  unionization  and 
one small  broken locker,  and un­
men flock  to  the  SIU?  Why  are 
we  never  see  it.  The  Officers  the  SIU  will  be  kept  from  the 
they  now  more  than  ever  de­ til  10  days  after  I  joined  the  get  orange  juice  every  morning;  shipxs. 
ship  we  had  no  fan  for  the 
termined  to  be  representeJd  by 
foc'sle—and  as  the  ship's  side  • we  get  water  with  a  tinge  of 
'COLD  WAR' 
the  SIU?  The  answer  is  simply 
is  all  that  is  between  the  out­ orange  juice  every  three  days 
that  cohditions  on  Cities  Service 
When  a  man  applies  for  a  job 
board  blinks  and  the  sea  and  or  so. 
tankers  are  rotten  to  the  core, 
in the 
company  office,  he  is gen­
"They 
were 
only 
setting 
two 
sky,  the  plating  becomes  '  a 
beginning  from  the  moment  a 
erally 
told 
"nothing  doing,  come 
small 
tables 
for 
the 
crew 
at first 
frying  pan from  the Gulf  Stream 
GU  Vila  worked  aboard  Cit­
seaman  seeks  a  job' at  the  com­
back 
again." 
This  goes  on  for  ies  Service's  S§  Fort  Hoskins 
but 
I 
got 
ahold 
of 
the 
Steward 
sun,  and like  a refrigerator  when 
pany  office  in  New  York,  until 
we  are  in  the  North  Atlantic.  and  this  has  been  changed.  The  weeks  and  weeks,  one  of  the  for  eight  months  and  was 
he  pays  off—or,  as  is  more  like­
food  is  thrown  at  the  crew  on.  purposes  being  to  put  the  ap­ highly  recommended  by  the 
ly,  until  he  is fired. 
DIRTY  LINEN 
greasy  tables  and  the  coffee  pot  plicant  into  a  state  of  despera­ Skipper  for  being  "sober,  re­
tion.  At  that  point  the  company  liable  and  attentive  to  duty" 
Back  in  November  of  1946,  "There  are  only  half  as  many  is  more  empty  than  full." 
when­ Cities  Service  tankermen  cots  aboard  as  men  and  the  Some  of  the  sordid  living  con­ considers  him  to  be  less  likely  and  worthy  of  reemployment. 
began  turning  to^the  SIU,  life  linen  fs  dirty  and  stained.  It  is  ditions  prevailing  in  the  CS  to  do  anything  to  jeopardize  his  But  that  didn't  keep  Vila from 
aboard  the  company's  ships  was  not  changed  weekly  but  at  the  fleet  prior  to  the  SIU  organizing  job,  if  and  when  he  gets  one.  being fired  from the same  ship, 
especially  miserable. 
Should  the  applicant  be  called  commanded  by  the  same  Skip­, 
whim  and  will  of  the  Utility  campaign  may  have  been  cor­
Here's  a  report,  published  in  man.  Soap  is  something  that  I  rected,  but  only  because  the  in  for  a  job,  he  is  subjected  per  a  short  time  later.  On  CS 
the  LOG  on  Nov.  15,  1846,  from  haven't  seen  given out  since  I've  company  ^as  frightened,  by  the  to  a  gruelling  screening  ^fore  ships  no  one  is  allowed  to 
overwhelming  sentiment  of  its  several  top  officials  of  the  com­ even  think  conditions  can  be 
Peter  Davies,  a  CIS  tankerman  been  aboard. 
"In  addition  to  this,  we  have  personnel  for SIU  representation.  pany's  Marine  Division.  Each  de­ betteired  by  a Union  contract. 
at  that  time: 
/ 
.'S'V 

^ '  • i'sa I 

�EigU 

Jtf­

TUE  SEAF A REUS  L Q G 

which  he  is  to  work  and  where 
he  is  to  board  ft. 
Once  aboard  the  vessel,  he 
experiences  the  all­around  rot­
CITIE$  SERVICe  OIL  COMPANY 
ten,  abusive  conditions  that  have 
PROOUCCRS ­ RCriNCRS ­ 
MRtWCTCRS ­ CXPOI^RS 
given  rise do  the  present  over­
NEW  YORK  5.  N.Y. 
whelming  pro­SIU  sentiment 
SrVtNn tINI STIIII 
throughout  the  Cities  Service 
fleet.  •  
Conditions,  for  example,  like 
those  on  the  Lone  Jack,  when 
Edgar  Eddy  lost  his  life  because 
S/S Council OroYO
of. lax  preparation  for  foul  wea­
Portland, Ke.
ther  and  inadequate  safety  pre­
Sopteaber 13, 1949
cautions.  The  Lone  Jack  left 
New  York  on  Aug.  g9,  1948,  United States Coast Guard
ydth  no  provisions  made  for  se­ Bureau  ^4lrine  Inspection  &amp;  Navigation 
/ 
curing  deck  gear,  although  top­
To Whom It May Concern
side had  been warned of  a hurri­ Dear
Sir:
cane  sweeping  the  Atlantic  sea­
board.  Two  days  out  of  port  the 
This will introduce Nr. Eugen XriatUnaen,
ship  met  the  full  fury  of' the  who at the present time is signed on this vessel
hurricane  and  all  hell  broke  as Able Seaman.
loose. 
OUT  OF  CRADLE 

Mr. Kristiansen is desirous of obtaining a
Carpenter's endorsment on his Mariner's Document.
He is sober,reliable and competent; and I
fully recommend him for this additional endorsment.

Cities Service  never  had any 
squawk  about  Roy  Leo's  work 
as  a  Bosun  on  the  SS  Salem 
Maritime.  But  the  company 
didn't  like  two  things  about 
him:  (1)  He  did  not  sign  the 
petition circulated  on  CS  ships 
to  get  CTMA,  the  company 
"union,"  on  the  NLRB  ballot; 
(2)  He  was  seen,  by  the  Port 
l^gineer  in  Harbor  Island. 
TOCM  advising  shipmates  to 
vote  in  the  NLRB  election.  So 
the  conqtany fired  him. 

A  letter  from  the  Skipper  of 
the  SS  Archers  Hope,  recom­: 
mending  Edward  Bamberger, . 
FWT.  for  reemployment'  said 
in  part:  "He  has  been  at  all 
times  sober  and  conscientious 
and  a  credit  to  this  ship  .  .  . 
Should  he  desire  to  rejoin  this 
vessel  it  is  recommended  that 
he  be  reassigned  as  Oiler."  A 
few  weeks  after  thaiL  glowing, 
endorsement,  Bamberger  got 
the  axe,  with  eight  other  pro­
SIU  men.  for  union  activity. 

The  125­mile­an­hour  wind 
sent  one  of  the  lifeboats  crash­
'  ing  into  the  bulkhead  of  the 
boat  deck.  Inspection  revealed 
that  the  boat  was  out  of  its 
Very truly.
cradle  and  each  time  it  swimg 
back  and  forth  it  put  bigger 
dents  in  the  bulkhead  and  the 
boat. 
The Mate  then ordered the  Bo­
Robert  A.  Levy',  Master 
sun  to  turn  the  deck  gang  to 
^S^Cgmaci^Cjrove^^^ 
on  deck  to  secure  the  boat  be­
Eugen  Kristiansen  received  this  commendation  from  the 
fore  it  smashed  to  bits.  Appre­
Skipper  of  the  SS  Council  Grove  shortly  before  he  was fired 
hensive,  the  deck  crew  never­
theless  accepted  the  order  and  after  one  year  of  efficient  performance  of  duty.  A  company 
moved  out  on  the  slippery  deck  "union" stooge named  De  Lello  reported  Kristiansen's  pro­SIU 
and  made  its  way  to  the  No.  1  sentiments  to the  company  and his  dismissal  was  then  ordered 
lifeboat. Edgar  Eddy  was making  by  tho "office  or  higher  officials of  the  company." 
his  way  along  the  outside  of  the 
swinging  boat  when  the  ship  Feb.  15,  1949,  when  the  ship 
pitched  and  the  lifeboat  swung  stopped  off  at  Braintree,  Mass. 
out from its moorings  and knock­ The  Port  Steward  met  the  ship. 
ed  him  into  the  sea. 
With  him  was  anotheij  Steward. 
Under  an  SIU  contract,  condi­ Grant  was  told  that he  had  been 
tions  like  those  surroimding  the  putting  out  too  much  clean linen 
death  of  Eddy  would  not  exist.  and  feeding  the  crew  twice  as 
SIU crews can  protest inadequate  much  as  any  other  CS  ship. 
h­\  •  
safety  precautions  and  can  take  Grant says,  "When I asked him 
steps  to  insure  the  safety  of  all  what  the  crews  were  eating  on 
hands.  To  squawk  about  haz­ the other  ships, he  didn't answer, 
it  ards  on  Cities  Service  ships,  but  said  the  food  would  have  to 
means  the  end  of  emplojnnent  be  cut  down. 
» 
,W:  with  the  company. 
Like  the  overwhelming  ma­
Richard  Grant,  Stewards 
"I  replied  that  I  couldn't  face 
h' 
jority  of  Cities  Service  sea­
says:  "For  putting  out  clean 
Another  aspect  of  living  on  the  men  after  feeding  the  lousy 
men  Edward  Bobinsld  believes  sheets  once  a  week  and  feed­' 
Cities  Service  ships  that  is  far  food.  The  Port  Steward  told  me 
that  the  rotten  abuse,  lack  of  ing  the .crew  to  the  best  of  my ­
below  that  enjoyed  by  SIU  men  that  anyone  who  squawked 
security  and  sub­Union  con­
ability.  I  was fired  from  the 
sailing on  Union  contracted ships  about  the  quality  or  quantity  of 
ditions  in  the  company's  fleet  Archers  Hope,  when  the  ship ­
is  the  food.  Himdreds  of  stories  the  food  would  be fired.  He 
can  be­wiped  out  by  genuine  stopped  off  in  Braintree.  Mass..' 
told  by  Cities Service  tankermen  wasn't  talking  to  me  any  more. 
trade  union  representation —  on  February  15.  1949."  Grant i 
in  recent  issues  of  the SEAFAR­ I  was finished.  He  waved  the 
Eugen  Kristiansen,  AB,  who  repveaeotation  by  the SIU.  For  had  also  worked  for  the  com­
ERS  LOG  point  up  the  insuf­ new  Steward  aboard. 
Capt.  R^&gt;ert  A. Levy  of  Cities  holding  this  belief  Bobinski  pany  aboard  the  SS  Cantigny t 
ficient  stores  on  the  tankers, and 
"He  had  stopped  me on  a  pre­ Service  ship  Council  Grove  was  fired  off  fbe  SS  Cfctgr­wa 
ee 
It­ ­11 r 
that  thev  have  been  ViAlnlgcc  in 
viuua 
iJLUiu  requisiuumug  said  was  "sober,  reliable  and 
on  Oct.  22.  1949.  He  has  un­
these  ships,  he  says, "food  wtf ' 
correcting  the  condition. 
fresh  fruit,  juices,  and  vege­ competent/'  was fired  never­
fair  charges  pending  against  kept  to  a  minimum  and  sec­ • ' 
tables.  He  had  also  warned  me,  theless  after  one  year  aboard  CS. 
INFESTED  FLOUR 
ends  were­not  allowed." 
: 
after  I  had  been  tturned  down  the  ship.  Kristiansen  refused 
'
 
'
 
*''•
 
Cities Service  tankerman Rich­ three  times,  not  to  order  milk 
to 
switch 
his 
affiliation 
from 
ard  Adell  tells  of  a  typical  situ­ again. 
the  SIU  to,the  company  "un­ was  just  one  sample  of  the  kind  this  chiseling,  there  is  absoluten 
ation  during  a  trip  on  the  SS 
"Every 
item 
of 
food 
was 
kept 
ion," 
despite  warnings  to  of  treatment  all  hands  got  ly  nothing  a  man  can  do  abou:^_ 
Government  Camp: 
aboard  the rfiip.  The  Chief fired  it—under  present  non­union  con­
"When  I  first  went  abc­»rd  the  to  a minimum,  and  seconds  were  "wafcA  your step"  from  CTMA  one  of  the  Wipers  after  calling  ditions. 
Govemme.^t  Camp,  the  ship  had  not  allowed.  All  this  on  a  ship  organiser  Harvey  Race. 
him  every  profane  name  in  the  No  grievance  machinery  exists^ 
just  returned  from  an  eight­ that  was  supposedly  feeding 
book,  merely  because  he  didn't 
month  trip  and  there ^ were a  lot  twice  as  well  as  the  rest  of  the  pipe  which  was  to  be  placed  like  the  Way  ,a  job  was  done.  for  the  settling  of  such  over­
fleet. 
I 
can't 
imagine 
how 
the 
of  crummy  old  stores  laboard. 
into a fitting.  The  First  Engineer  The  Wiper , was,  knofwn  through­ time  disputes.  If  any  victiirt  , 
other 
crews 
stay 
alive. 
They 
1; "There  were  ovent  200  pounds 
was  standing  below  on  the floor  out  the  ship  as  a  hard  an^ dili­ squawks  about  the  overtime  pay • 
must 
bring 
their 
own 
food 
with 
.of  w^vil­infested  flour,  14  cases 
plates,  gi^dng  instructions to  the  gent  worker.  Overtime,  says  he  was  promised  and  then  chisi/ 
oi  practically  rotten  eggs—^very  them,"  Grant  concluded. 
Machinist  for  guiding  the  pipe  LBremer,  was  non­existent.  Fire­ led  out  of,  he  is fired—without 
getting  his  money. 
noticeable  to  the  nostrils.  The 
CREW  PETITION 
into  ifiace. 
men  were  given  cleaning  sta­
Steward  told  me^  'The  Health 
CREW'S  WORK 
Conditions  on  the  SS  Bents  "The  Chief  .  Engineer  came  tions.  They  had to  paint,  sougee 
Department  Inspector  has  con­
•   Ti.;;;!; 
and 
chip—^without 
overtime. 
Another  overtime  chiseling 
demned  this flour  and  I'd  like  Fort  got  so  bad  last  March  that  along.  He  cajled  the  Machinist, 
telling  him  he  had  another  job  Few  men  come  off  Cities  Ser­ tactic­  is  for  supervisors  to  do 
I' 
to throw  it  overboard  with  a  lot  the  crew  petitioned  the  Co^t 
• V!' 
for 
him to  do.  The  Machinist  vice. ships  with  money  received  much  of  this  work,  which,  on 
of  other  stuff,  but  I've  got  to  Guard  in  Boston to  investigate 
explained 
that  he  couldn't  move  for overtime  work.  The  company  Union  ships,  is  a  crewman's  job­
wait  until  the Port  Steward  says  the  abusive  treatment  w'oich 
because 
he 
was  afraid  of  drop­ makes  sure  that  overtime  work  On  Cities  Service  ships,  for  exi 
they  charged  created  working 
I should.' 
ping 
the 
pipe 
on  the  First  En­ is  done  either  in  regular  hours,  ample.  Stewards,  like  Hans  Pe­! 
"Yet,"  continues  AdeU,  "I  hazards.  The  entire  Engine  De­
gineer. 
or  that  the  officers  do  it—or  if  dersen  of  the  Archers  Hope,  will 
know  for  a fact  that  these crum­ partment  signed  the  petition  and 
the 
Coast 
Guard 
promised 
ac­
no 
other  way  exists, to  .chisel  do  painting  to  deprive  the  mei% 
my 
old 
stores 
continued 
to 
be 
m­.'­y ' 
LUCKY  HRST 
the  men  out  of  the  money  after  from  what  is  legitimately  theiij­
mr  used.  To  the  best  of  my  knowl­ tion­but  apparently  did ­nothing. 
work. 
edge  they  were  all  used  up,  too.  Warren  P.  Bremer,  FWT  on  ­  "The  Chief  insisted  that  his  they  have  worked  for  it. 
The  point I'm trying to  illustrate  the  Bents  Fort  from  March  30  order  be  obeyed  at  once^"  Bre­
It  is  common  for  men  in  su­ V  Work  or  tasks  that  on  SIU 
is  that  you  could  eat  this  stuff,  imtil  May  24,  when  he  was flred  mer  continues.  '"Drop  what  pervisoiy  jobs  on  CS  ships to  ships  are  paid  for  at  overtime 
or  go  hungry—and  do  nothing  for  signing  the  petition,  reported  you're  doing,'  he  said.  The  Ma­ promise  the  crewmen  overtime  rates,  or  double  overtime,  de^ 
one  of  the  incidents  that  lead  chinist had  to let  go of  the pipe.  for  certain  jobs.  But  at  the  pay­ pending  on  tfie  nature  of  the 
about  it." 
Fortunately,  the  First  got  out  off  they  get  nothing—the  com­ job,  are  considered  normal  rpUr 
to 
the  petition. 
The  effort  made  by  Steward 
iRichard  Grant,  who  sailed  for  "During  the  third  trip,"  Bre­ from  under  in  the  nick  of  time  pany  simply  doesn't  pay  for  it,  tine  to  be  performed  during 
over  a  year  on  three  CS  ships,  mer  states,  "the  Machinist  was  to  see  the  pipe  come  crashing  or  the  officer  is  afraid  to  even  regular  watches.  Butterworthing. 
to  improve  feeding  on  the  Ar­ in  the  Engine  room,  standing  up  down." 
put  it  down.  Anyway,  it  isn't  is  practicar a  daily  job  on 
cher's  Hojte  cost  him  his  job  on  on  a  grating  while  he  held  a  Bremts:  says  that  the incident  paid.  Despite  the  frequency  of  shipa  and  there's  no  extra  paj^ 

I:­

• 

• ­Aj­, • •  

m­

I 

,1 

i 

^  't 

�Friday.  January  27,  1850 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Page  Nine 

E.S:; 

for  it.  On  blU  ships  this  is 
overtime  ]jfork. 
On  CS  ships;  supervisors  and 
company  tavorities  hog  the  tank 
cleaning  assignment,  because  it's 
the  rare  opportunity  to  make  an 
extra  dollar.  They're  paid  for  it 
at  straight  pay.  On  SIU. ships, 
tank  cleanmg  is  paid  for  at 
double,  or  triple  overtime  rates, 
according  to  the  type  of  fuel 
carried  in  the  tanks.  In  addi­
tion,  men  on  tank  cleaning 
aboard  SIU  ships  get*  $7.50  as 
,  dothing  allowance  to  compen­
sate  for  the  damage  to  their 
^ar  in  the  course  of  the  job. 

What  SIU  Contract  Means 
To  Cities  Service  Seamen 

Cities  Service  seamen  know  for  /the  best  wages  and  under 
what  they're fighting  for. 
the  best  working  conditions  in 
They  have  endured  the  com­ the  maritime  industry.  The  kind 
pany's  vicious  repressive  tactics  of  food they  eat, their rights  will 
throughout  the  past  three  years  no  longer  be  determirfed  by  the 
because  at  the  end  of  the  battle  whims  of  company  stooges. 
they  stand  to  win.  They  know  Everything  will  be Avritten  down 
what  an  SIU  contract  will  bring  in  black  and  white.  If  there  are 
to  the  Cities  Service fleet.  Many  any  disputes  over  their  treat­
of  them  sailing  on  Union­con­ ment,  they  wUl  protest  and  use 
tracted  ships  today  have  already  the  successful  grievance  machin­
experienced  the  night­and­day  ery  for  settlement. 
REIGN  OF  TERROR 
difference  'btween  the  two  ex­
Wherever  necessary,  SIU  rep­
That  the  working  ^conditions 
tremes  in  conditions  and  wages.  resentatives,  operating  out  of 
aboard  Cities  Service  ships  are 
First  off,  in  place  of  the  Cities  SIU Halls  in every  major port  on 
deplorable  has  been  established 
Service  questionable  hiring  prac­
the  Atlantic,  Gulf  and  Pacific 
without  a flicker  of  doubt.  But 
tices,  an  SIU  contract  will  as­
coasts,  wiU see  to  it that  they re­
far  worse  is  the  repressive  at­
sure  them  of  non­discriminatory  ceive  everything  to  which  they 
mosphere  in  which  CS  seamen 
shipping.  An  SIU  contract  wiU 
haVe  to  sweat  out  their  voyages. 
Inadequate  safety  preparaliosu  resulted  in  the  death  of  spell  the  end  of  favoritism  and  are  entitled  imder  the  contract. 
No man dares  open up his  mouth  seaman  Edgar  Eddy  aboard  the  Cities  Service  tanker  SS  Lone  blacklisting  in  the  CS  tanker  For  the first  time.  Cities  Ser­
in  protest  against  any  form  of 
vice  seamen  will  get  overtime 
fleet. 
abuse  or  unfair  treatment.  Even  Jack  in  1948.  Eddy  was  swept  overboard  when  ordered  to 
pay 
for  all  overtime  work,  as  is 
Under  an  SIU  contract,  Cities 
the  most  feeble  suggestion  that  secure  a  poorly  lashed  lifeboat  during  a  hurricane.  Photo  Service  seamen  will  be  working  the  case  on  all  Union­contracted 
things  inight  be  better  is  not  above  shows the  Lone  Jack'B  No.  1  lifeboat  after  lashing  down 
ships. 
tolerated. 
had  been  completed.  The  bent  was  not  restored  to  its  cradle 
Furthermore,  Cities  Service 
*  Freedom  of  expression  and  job  .and  was  lashed  in  such  a  manner  that  it  could  not  be  freed 
will  directly  participate  in  all 
security  are  unknown  on  CS  in  an  emergency. 
matters  affecting  their  economic 
tankers,  because  of  the  reign  of 
welfare.  They  will  discuss,  pass 
A  Lone  Jack  crewmember  pointed  out  that  the  imsafe 
terror  which  is  a  matter  of  com­
or  reject,  all  rules  governing 
pany  policy.  A  company­fostered  conditions  leading  to  Eddy's  death  would  have  been  corrected 
their  o^ organization—without 
spy  system  prevents  any  discus­
if  the  crew  had  Union  representation  and  thus  been  able  to 
interference  from  the  company. 
sion  of  shipboard  conditions  or  call  for  remedial  action  before  the ship  left  port. 
They  will  elect  their  ovm  offi­
talk  of  imionism. 
cials  every  year  from  among 
their  shipmates  in  secret  ballot. 
Length  of  service  with  the  for  re­6mployment  by  the  com­ resented  by  the  Union  of  their 
company  adds up  to nothing  if  a  pany. 
Under SIU  contract.  Cities Ser­
own  choosing—the  SIU—so  that 
CS  employee  is  even  slightly  But  on  Feb.  9; 1949,  Vila  was  they  may  enjoy  the  same  decent 
vice  men  wiU  have  a  new­foimd 
suspected  of  having  pro­Union  flred,  from  the  same  ship,  com­ working  conditions,  wages  and 
freedom—job  security.  They  wUl 
sentiment. 
not  be  plagued  by  the  ccmstant 
manded  by  the  same  Skipper,  job security  that are possible  im­
need to curry  to  company  favor­
John  Sullivan  was  a  Messman  after  the  comply  learned  that  der  SIU  contracts.  They  have 
ites  in  order  to  keep  their  jobs. 
foi^ four  years  aboard  Cities  Ser­ Vila  had  received  a  telegram  comphed  with  the  laws  govern­
The  Union  wiU  see  to_it  that 
vice  ships—^until  he  was flred  from  the  ­SIU  notifying  him  of  ing  the selection  of  a  bargaining 
every  one  of  their  contractual 
last  spring  from  the  Royal  Oak  the  collective  bargaining  elec­ agent,  and  the  official  govern­
rights  and  benefits  is  fully  pro­
after  the  ship  was  voted  in  the  tion  to  be  held  in  the fleet.  Vila  ment agency,  the  National  Labor 
NLlfe  election  in  the'  Port  of  had  been  on  the  Fort  Hoskins  Relations  Board  has  polled  them 
tected. 
Philadelphia. 
and 
found 
that 
the 
overwhelm­
There  is  not  a  single  aspect 
about  eight  months. 
"You  can't  beat  Cities  Serv­
ing  majority  want  the  SIU.  The  ice  for  the  way  it  treats  its  of  working  aboard  ship  that  wiU 
Ever  since  the  end  of  1944, 
SPY  RING 
SIU  has  consequently  been  cer­ seamen."  says  Richard  Adell.  not be improved by  a Union con­
when  he  first  went  to  work  for  •  
the  company,  "there  had  never  The  anti­union  spy ring  aboard  tified  as  agent  for  the  entire  formerly  of  the  Government  tract  and  Cities  Service  men 
been  a  complaint  about  my  the  Archer's  Hope  ended  the  fi^. 
Camp.  "You  work,  like  I  did.  know  it.  That  is  why  they  have 
work,"  Sullivan  says.  "There  employment  of  Edward  W.  Bam­
No  legal  or  moral  justification  for  the  company  for  8 V?  so  overwhelmingly  decided  on 
wasn't  a  single  log  against  me,  berger,  FWT,  late. last  winter.  remains  for  continuance  of  the  months,  break  your  back  try­ the  SIU  as  the  bargaining  agent 
or  any  other  kind  of  black  mark  The  Chief  Engineer and  the  Sec­ rank,  intolerable  conditions  pre­ ing  to  do  the  job  right,  never 
Any  doubts  that  might  have 
.On  my  record. 
ond  Assistant  passed  along  to  vailing  on  CS  tankers.  The  men  qet  drunk,  never  miss  work,  existed  on this  score  were  wiped 
"The  Captain  said  'he  wanted  the  Skipper  some  statements  want  SIU  representation  and  do  everything  that's  asked  of  away  by  a  comparison  of  con­
to  make  an  example  of  me.'  made  by  Bamberger. 
they  must  get  it.  When  they  do,  you—and  what  happens?  They  ditions  between  those  on  Union­
However,  the  Assistant  Port  "After  months  of  soaking  up  another  rotten  period  in  mari­ fire  you  for  what  you  believe  contracted  ships  and  those  &lt;HI 
Steward  for  Cities  Service  in  their  ballyhoo  about  CTMA,"  time  history  will  have  been  in."  AdeU  believes  the  SIU  Cities  Service  vmorganized  ves­
*New  ¥ork  had  been  Steward  on  says  Bamberger,  "I  told  the  En­ ended. 
sels. 
will  help  CS  seamen. 
the  Abiqua  when  I  was  on  her.  gineers  that  there  was  no  com­
He  and  the  Cook  on  the  Ahiaua 
JKnew  I  was  interested  in  the  SIU. 
SIU. 
• 
"In  my  case  they  made  no 
pretense 
as  to  the  reason  for  my 
The, Marine  Division  of  the  Cities  Ser­ 
The  company  has  now  exhausted  every 
OBVIOUS 
ENOUGH 
I 
discharge  —  I  had  been  found  vice  Oil  Company  has  shaped  a  situation  legal  maneuver  to  prevent  dealing  with 
"So," added  Sullivan, "it  seems  guilty  of  praising  the  SIU." 
fairly  obvious  why  I  was fired."  Bamberger  says  that  at  the  for  which  it  alone  must  accept  full  re­  ij:s  employees.  Even  the  illegitimate  com­
Roy  Brace,  an  AB  on  Cities  payoff  of  the  Archers  Hope  in  sponsibility. In  attempting to get  the com­  pany "union,"  which  it injected  to extend 
Service  ships,  made  the  fatal  Camden  at  Petty's  Island,  near  pany­to  enter  collective  bargaining  nego­  the  stalling,  is  now  locked  up  legally  and 
jpistake  of  beefing  to  the  Skip­ Camden,  he  was  told  that  his  tiations,  the  SIU  has  complied  with  the  can  do  nothing  further  to  block  contract 
jper  about  the  food  on  the  Gov­ services  were  no  longer  needed.  letter  of  the  law  governing  labor­man­  discussions. 
ftrnment  Camp.  The  Mate  gave  "When  I  pressed  him  for  de­
If  the  SIU  calls  a  strike  against  the 
him  his  notice  and  told  him  he  tails,  he  said  'You're  a  little  bit  agement  relations. Twice  the SIU  petition­ 
ed 
the 
National 
Labor 
Relations 
Board 
Cities Service 
company  it  will  be  doing so 
shouldn't  have  talked  to  the  overly  excited  about  union  ac­
for  collective  bargaining  elections,  after  because  the  company  has  closed  the  door 
jgkipper  about  chow.  The  Mate,  tivities'." 
JPeter  Vierra,  told  Brace  that  Prior  to  his  last  trip  on  the  Cities  Service  seamen  expressed  a  desire  on  negotiations. 
the  company  office  had  sent  him  Archers  Hope,  Bamberger  re­
for  representation  by the Union. 
­phe  SIU  will  be  striking  against  the 
aboard  to clean ship  of  all hands  ceived  a  letter  from  the  Skipper 
Two  elections  were  ordered  and  both  company  because  of  its  refusal  to  comply 
who had  been  aboard for  a 'long  recommending  him  for  further 
time."  Brace  had  served  a  total  employment.  The  letter  said  in  times  the  SIU  was  overwhelmingly  des­  with  the  provisions  of  the  Labor­Manage­
of  15  months  on the Government  part:  "He  has  been  at  all  times  ignated  as  the  choice  of  CS  tankermen?  ment  Relations  Act,  enacted  by  the  Con­
Camp  in  1948  and  1949  and  had  sober'  and  conscientious  and  a 
As  a  result  of  the  elections  the  SIU  holds  gress  of  the  United States. 
v­­
done  a  hitch  on  the  Cantigny.  credit  to  this  ship  .  .  .  Should 
two certification 
orders, naming 
it as 
sole 
Specifically, 
the 
strike 
will 
be 
called  in 
Brace  also  tells how  the  Stew­ he  desire  to  rejoin  this  vessel, 
ard,  a  company­sponsored  man,  it  is  recommended  that  he  be  collective  bargaining  agent  for  men  pf  protest  of  the company's  refusal  to recog­
made  rope  rungs  throughout  the  reassigned  as  Oiler." 
the  company's  fleet. 
mze  the  Union  certified  by  the  Govern­
voyages,  seldom  going  to  the 
The  company  filed  objection  after  ob­  nient  agency  as  representative  of  its  em­
NO  END 
* messhall,  but  never  was  cen­
jection  and  exception  after  exception  to  ployees,  and  against  the  company's  refusal 
sured  by  the  Skipper. 
Testimony  pointing  up  the  de­
to  bargain  collective V 
the  represen­
On  Dec.  21,  1948,  Gil  Vila,  OS,  plorable  and  below­Unioh  stan­ the  board's  decisions  throughout  a  three­
received  a  glowing  commenda­ dards  aboard  Cities Service  ships  year  battle  to stave  off  what  any  sound­  tative of  these employees, 
tion  from  Captain  H.  Flaniken,  could  be  cited  endles^y.  They  thinking  management  group  would  have 
The  Cities  Service  Oil  Company  has 
master  of  the  Cities  Service  have; been repeated  so oRen  that  quickly  accepted  as  jxist,  legal  and  reason­  chosen  to  ignore  the  laws  of  this  land 
tanker  Fort  Hoskins.  In  a  letter  they  estabhsh  a  definite  pattern.  able—collective  '• bargaining relations  with  refusing  to  comply  with  the  decisions  of 
to  company  agents,  the  Sk'pper  Cities  Service  seamen  are  not 
said  that  Vila  had  been  "sober,  crazy,  nor  do  they  want  more  its employees  through the medium  of  their  the  National Labor  Relations  Board, 
In  effect.  Cities  Service  will  be  calling 
p­eliable  and  attentive  to  duty,"  than  they  are  entitled  to.  All  legally  designated  representative,  in  this 
therefore  was  recommended  they want  is the  right  to be rep­"  case  the  SIU. 
the  strike  agajnst  itself. 

If  A  Strike  Comes 

�'#»&amp;^' AK^*7 ' a?^ /;!^'' 

1?TAU 

vtoites 

m^­

CAor 

TOTAL 
V^UP 

vbits 

\foip 

cmmim  .VbTES 

VOTES 

VOTES 

PE02EWTASE 

30 

63.6X 

96 

12 

69.9% 

251 

42 

POR 
&lt;SIU 
' 

piRsr 
/yaSELECIlo*' 
SEOCWP 
Afi­fiBE/RTiCW 

190 
I6i 

183 

I 

no 

66 

.»  t,IK:  * 

5  ' 

* 

TOTAliF? 

371 

293 

„» 

67 

ASAlNSr 
S./U 

ft 

I? 
y; I 

m 

In the  first National Labor  Relations Boord eleetiott, con­
ducted before  the creation of  CTMA  (the company  "union"), 
only  one  vote  was challenged by  the  Sill. None  of  the  votes 
was challenged by  either  the  NLRB  or  the compony. 
Ships  voting  in  the  first  election,  results  of  which  were 
announced  on  February  9,  1948,  were: 

The Unfop's  overwhelming mafority in the  second ballot­
ing  is  especially  sf^iflcant  in  view  of  the  unusually  large 
number  of  votes  that  were  chaHenged — 66  out  of  a  totob 
of  181,  cast. 

Because  of  the heavy  vote  cast  in favor  of  the  SIU,  the 
NLRB ruled tbat it was  not  even necessary  to  hold  hearings 
SS  Abiqna,  SS  Cantigny,  SS  Chiwawa,  SS  French  Creek,  on  the  diaWenged  ballots  to  decide  the  outcome.  Even  if 
none of  these questioned  votes  was registered in the  Union's 
SS  Council  Grove,  S$  Logans  Fort  and  SS  Paoii. 
The NLRB issued its order certifying the Sill os collective  cdmnn, the results of the election would not have been alter­
ed, ol^eugh  ft is  a certainty  that  the  majority, if  not  all of 
bargaining agent  on May 24,  1948. 
theni^  wiMild  hove  revealed  a  preference  for  the  SSU,*os 
In the  second  election, held  after  the  creation of  CTMA, 
not  one  vote  was  challenged  by  the  Union., AH  of  the  66  these  company­  and  NLRB­choHenged  votes  undoubtedly 
ballots  questioned  were  challenged  either  by  the  NLRB  or  would have  followed  the pattern  set by  their  shipmates. 
tfie compony. 
Jn other  words,  even  though  well  over  one­third  of  the 
entire 
vote  was  chaHenged  in  the  second  election  by  the. 
The  ships  involved  in  this  election  were: 
company ^ the  NLRB,  the  SIU  stUI  was  far  ahead,  scoring 
SS  Archers  Hope,  SS  Bents  Fort,  SS  Bradford Island,  SS  the  dihoxlng  majority  of  54.1  percent  of  the  total  votes 
Fort  Hoskinsh  SS  Government  Camp,  SS  Lone  Jack,  SS  Roycd  ca$t —faicluding the 66  chaHenged  and five  void ballots. 
Oak, SS  Salem Maritime  and SS  Winter HUL 
The  National  Labor  Rdations  Board  cannot  designate 
The results of  the second NLRB  election were onnounceU  g union as the  winner  of  an election  unless  the  union  scores 
on April 22, 1949, and the final certification order «ras issueil  better than a 50 percent majority of  the vaiid votes cost. As'^ 
by the  government agency  on  December  2, 194P. 
the figures prove, the SIU has mere than met this requirenlent.; 

Of the approximately 500  jobs in  the Cities Service Beet, 
It  is  interesting  to  note  that  the  evidence  presented 
more  than  250  of  the  company's  seamen  have  fHed  unfair  against the company in the five successful NMU cases was not 
labor  charges  against  the  company  in  the  space  of  a  few 
neOrfy ojiiJ strong ai even the  weakest cases  of the more  thdtt^ 
months. 
25() cdtts ponding i^inst the  company  today. 
The  startling  fact  about  these  pending  unfair  labor 
'  Quo of  the conclusions  that can be drawn from this  sit­, 
chorges  is  that,  even if  the  Cities  Service  Oil ^mpany  had 
agreed  to  an  SIU  contract  when it was  first  requeMied,^ the  uation IS  fiiat  the  Cities  Service  seamen  are  not  the  only, 
added cost  to the company  of a  contract with the Secdofers  victims  of  the  Murine  Division's  unfair  labor  practices.  The 
would  have  been  far  less  than  the  sum  the  company  wlH  company  itself.. Is  a  victim  of  the  anti­union  policy  it  hos 
eventuoHy  have  to  pay  for  its  anti­union  fight, this  wHI be  effOOted. 
denuMstrated if  only  a  small percentage  of  thU unfair  labor 
Besides placing  the  company  in the  present Unfavorable 
charges  against  CS  is  upheld  by  the  National. Ldbor  Rela­
tions Board. 
^ecUcament,  the  persons  or  "labor  experts"  advising  CS 
.Marine Division officials wHI be 
responsible  for  the  financial 
There  is  ample  precedent  to  sustain  this  estimate  of 
;soaking 
the 
company 
wiH 
gut 
as 
a result  of  the  pending  un­
heavy  costs  to be borne  by  the company.  In  the  earlier  dfe« 
pute between the Not^nal Maritime Union and the Cities Ser­ 'fair labor  charges. The  company  can add  this.to  the  cost  of 
vice  OH  Company's  Marine  Division,  the  NLRB  he^ sbs?  paying­ professionol union­bustOrs,  whom  these "^cperts"  rec­
cases  of  unfair  labor  charges  filed  by  NMU  nien  ogdinul  ommended be brought into  the field  to work against the  SHL ' 
the  company  for  anti­union  activities.  Of  these  slx^da^ 
The strange aspect of It all is  thot  the would­be  profes­
the  charges^ five  of  the  men  were  upheld  by the  govei^  sioiiai unioii­bustars the compony has employed hove  not  oc­^ 
mUnt Board. 
. r 
complifhedj the job they hove bm poid to do. 
The compony  was ordered to pay  these men bocb wages 
When the chi^ begin  to  falL it would be Interesting tb 
and  subslstenee  for  the  time  they  spent  on  the  beocb an o  Be oround when the Murine IHvlsion ofUciuls of Cities Service 
result  of  their ,  orfoifrary  cHsmissals.  In  addition,  the  ^ard  start expfcdning to the corporation and Its stockholders  fust 
ii: 
mr: fsriM lihpf the men were to be reinstated to their fOrmer  jofos^  exoctiy  whtot happened­* and how. 

�January  27.1960 

rifjs;  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Maven 

Minutes Of A&amp;G Branch Meetings In Brief 
Ndifolk  business  requesting  a 
SAN  FRANCISCO—Chairman, 
30­day  extension  of  shipping 
W.  McCuistion.  23138;  Recording 
cards.  Tallying  Committee's  re­
Secretary,  Jeff  Morrison,  34213; 
port  read  and  accepted.  New 
Reading  Clerk,  P.  Robertson, 
Business: 
Motion  defeated  that 
30148. 
SHIPPED  SHIPPED  SHIPPED  TOTAL 
REG. 
TOTAL 
REG. 
REG. 
at 
every 
meeting, 
after  electing 
Minutes  of  meetings  in  other 
ENG. 
STWDS. 
REG. 
.  DECK 
ENG. 
STWDS.  SHIPPED 
DECK 
PORT 
a  Chairman,  Secretary and  Read­
ports  accepted.  Agent  reported 
24 
6 
6 
.  8 
5 
2 
11 
14  ing  Clerk,  a  Trial  Committee, an 
slow  shipping during  past  weeks.  Boston 
80 
91 
434 
83 
,153 
134 
254 
147 
New 
York. 
excuse  committee  be  elected. 
Communication  received  from 
74 
22 
12 
•   27 
24  t 
15 
49  Membership  stood  in  silence  for 
'  23 
crew  of  SS  Bethore.  Motion  by  Philadelphia 
79 
60 
232 
65 
53 
59 
177  one  minute  in  memory  of  Broth­
93 
Dore,  38091,  carried,  that  the  Baltimore. 
120 
27 
7 
7 
7 
49 
21  ers lost  at  sea.  Meeting  adjovnn­
1 
44 
Norfolk 
"Negotiating  Committee  go  after 
22 
V 
56 
6 
3 
"17 
17 
1 
10 
Savannah.. 
ed  with  126  members  present. 
isthmian  to  sign  the  standard 
11 
9 
34 
12 
14 
11 
37 
.14 
Tampa 
......I 
agreement,  with  emphasis  on  the 
4  4  4 
141 
13 
14 
19 
52 
43 
46 
46 
NEW  YORK  —  Chairman,  1^ 
transportation  clauses.  Good  aind  Mobile 
87 
296 
94 
91 
118 
65 
59 
218  Gardner,  3697;  Recording  Secre' 
Welfare:  General  discussion  on  New  Orleans 
37 
18 
23 
78 
10 
11 
16 
37  lary,  Freddie  Stewart,  4W5; 
Galveston. 
particulars  which  should  be  in­
34 
29 
95 
20 
39 
32 
18 
77 
West 
Coast 
Readily  Clerk,  C. Simmons,  219. 
cluded  in'  agreement  to  be  ne­
gQtiated  for  the  future.  Meeting  GRAND  TOTAL 
Minutes  of  all  meetings  held 
577 
502 
505 
1,584 
306 
302 
332 
940 
adjourned  with  38  membei­s 
in  other  ports  accepted,  except 
present. 
Norfolk,  which  was  rejected  IOT 
to  Rico  be  contacted  by  the  SIU  GALVESTON  —  Chairman,  part  of  Norfolk  New  Business  requesting  a  30­day  extension  of 
t  s. 
SAVANNAH —Chairman,  Jim  representative  there, and  the set­ ,KeUh  Alsop.  7311;  Recording  requesting  30­day  extension  of  shipping  cards.  New  Business: 
Rrawdy,  28523;  Recording  Sec­ up  on  quitting  ships  in  the Is­ Secretary,  J.  Hammond,  24404;  shipping  cards.  Agent  Rentz  re­ Motion  by  Aponte,  102075,  car­
retary, L.  E.  Hodges,  255;  Read­ land  be  explained  to  the  crews.  Reading  Clerk,  R.  Wilbnrn,  ported  slow  shipping.  Volimteers 
who  have  aided  the  Grain  and 
ing  Clerk,  Jeff  GiUette,  37060.  The  motion  also  called  upon  33093. 
~  Agent  reported  on  the  status  Headquarters  to  explain  the  set­ Meetings  of  other  Branches  Mill  Workers  were  thanked  by 
of  shipping  for  the  past  two  up  through  the  air­mail  Bulletin.  accepted  as  read.  Agent,  Patrol­ the  Agent  for  their  good  work. 
weeks  and  the  prospects  for  the  Good  and  Welfare:  Retiring  man  and  Dispatcher  reported.  Motion  by  Rentz,  26445,  carried 
future.  Minutes  of  meetings  held  Agent  Jim  Drawdy  thanked  the  Headquarters  Tallying  Commit­ unanimously,  that  the  SIU  do­
in  other  ports  accepted,  except  membership  for  their  coopera­ tee's  report  accepted  as  read.  nate  $35  to  the  Grain  and  Mill 
those  of  Norfolk,  which  called  tion  during  his  time  in  office,  One  minute  of  silence  for  Broth­ Workers,  who  are  in  tough 
~Ior  30­day  extension  of  shipping  and  asked  the  members  to  give  ers  lost  at  sea.  Meeting  adjourn­ straits  as  a  result  of  their  long 
strike.  Meeting  stood  in  silence  ried,  that  Headquarters  investi­
cards.  Headquarters  Tallying  the  same  cooperation  to  the  new  ed  at  7:40. 
for  one  minute  for  Brothers  lost  gate  Ponce  Cement  Company  on 
4  4  4 
Committee  report  accepted.  Mo­ Agentr  One  minutes  of  silence 
tion  by  Goude,  50999,  carried,  for  members  lost  at  sea.  Meeting  MOBILE—Chairman,  J.  Park­ at  sea.  Meeting  adjourned  with  the  mater  of  imemployment  in­
surance  and  see  whether  or  not 
that Headquarters be  asked  again  adjourned  with ­  80  members  er;  Recording  Secretary,  J.  L.  400  members  present. 
the  company  is  paying  into  the 
Carroll, 
50409; 
Reading 
Clerk, 
to  have  all  ships  touching  Puer­ present. 
4  4  4 
fund  on  wages  earneed  by  its 
Harold  J.  Fischer,  59. 
PHILADELPHIA  —  Chairman, 
Motions  carried  to  accept  min­ J.  Sheehan,  306;  Recording  Sec­ seamen.  Good  and  Welfare:  Dis­
utes  of  meetings  held  in  other  retary,  G. Campbell, 34735;  Read­ cussion  on  men  missing  ship. 
Membership  was  strongly  in 
Branches.  Agent" reported  on  the  ing  Clerk,  A.  Fusco,  42860. 
favor 
of  strong  action  to  curb 
^shipping  prospects  f6r  the  com­
Motions 
carried 
to 
accept 
min­
practice. 
ing  two  weeks.  He  also  reported 
4  4  4 
on  a  meeting  of  5, State  Federa­ utes  of  Branches  in  other  ports. 
Agent's 
verbal 
report 
accepted. 
NEW 
ORLEANS —Chairman. 
tion  Directors  in  connection  with 
C.  Stephens,  76;  Recording  Sec­
the fishermen  recently  brought 
retary,  H.  Troxchiir,  6743;  Read­
into 
the 
SIU.' 
The 
Agent 
con­
ter,^  South  Carolina  at  once.  It 
VINCENT  CELLINI 
ing 
Clerk,  Jack  Parker,  27963. 
cluded 
his 
report 
with 
comments 
^et  in  touch  with  your  sister,  is  very  important. 
Charges 
against  two  men read. 
on 
the 
status 
of 
the 
Welfare 
Mrs.  Beatrice  Schmidt,  1606 
^44 
Trial 
Commitee 
recommenda­
Plan. 
Tallying 
Committee's 
re­
ANTONIO  TEIXEIRA 
Mifflin  Street,  Philadelphia,  Pa. 
tions 
accepted. 
Minutes 
of  meet­
port 
on 
elections 
accepted. 
One 
Your 
wife 
is 
ill 
and 
asks 
that 
Tallying  Committee's  report  read 
' 
t  4  t 
ings 
held 
in 
other 
Branches 
minute­of 
silence 
observed 
for 
you 
write 
her 
at 
once, 
at 
Azara 
TED  DYSON 
and  accepted.  Trial  Committee 
^ Your  gear  is  in  the  New  York  No.  10,  Dept  4,  Buenos  Aires,  Brothers lost  at  siea.  Meeting  ad­ elected  to  hear  charges  pending.  read  and  accepted.  Agent  re­
journed  at  7:30  with  420  mem­ Meeting  adjourned  with  200  ported  business  in  port  as  being 
Republica  Argentina. 
baggage  room. 
in  good  shape,  but  shipping  has 
bers  present. 
members  present 
been slow.  All hands were urged  ji 
4  4  4 
PHILLIP SARKUS 
4  4  4 
to 
register  and  vote  in municipal  II 
TAMPA 
— 
Chairman, 
R. 
H. 
Please get in  touch  wiih  Frank 
BOSTON—Chairman,  S. Green­ elections.  Good  and  Welfare: 
Hall, 
26060; 
Recording 
Secretary, 
E.  Guitson,  409  East  92  Street, 
T.  Tyre,  32746;  Reading  Clerk,  ridge,  1863;  Recording  Secretary,  Lengthy discussion on  Cities  Ser­
New  York  City. 
B.  Lawson,  894;  Reading  Clerk,  vice  and  the  Union's  successful*' 
P.  Carter,  48287. 
»  4  * 
fight  to  bring  the case  to  a  head. 
Motions  carried  to  accept  min­ R. Lee,  47958. 
MORRIS  BERLOWIT2 
Minutes 
of 
other 
Branches 
ac­
Meeting 
adjourned  with  510 
utes 
of 
meetings 
held 
in 
other 
"Please contact,  or send  money 

A&amp;G  Shipping  From  Jon.  4  To  Jon.  1$ 

T4­.. 

1 
­. 

~ 

• 

rpnfpd 

oYrer&gt;t.  that,  ­onrtinn  of  memberg  nrpserif 

ed. Motion  carried  to accept  Bal­
SS  DOROTHY 
Saltimorc  Hall, 14  N.  Gay  Street 
loting  Committee's  report.  Sec­
The 
following 
crewmembers, 
—Gosta  Skyllberg." 
retary­Treasurer's financial 
re­
who 
paid 
off 
in 
New 
York 
on 
it  4  4. 
January  23,  received  overpay­ port  read  and  accepted.  Meeting 
AL  FORQUE 
Write  to  your  old  shipmate,  ment.  Get  in  touch  with  Pay­ adjourned  after  one  minute  of 
ASST.  SECRETARY­TREASURERS 
Harry  Newton,  318  W.  Laurel  master,  Bull  Lines,  115  Broad  silence  for  Brothers  lost  at  sea. 
SIU,  A&amp;G  District 
Robert  Matthews 
Lloyd  Gardnor 
Street,  New  York: 
St.,  Compton  3,  California. 
4  4  4 
Joseph  Volpian 
BALTIMORE 
14  North  Cay  St. 
NORFOLK 
— 
Chairman, 
Ben 
Douis  Cambard,  Bennie  Craw­
4;  J;  4, 
William  Rentz,  Agent 
Mulberry  4S40 
ford,  Walter  Hallett,  Wm.  Healy,  Rees,  95;  Recording  Secretary,  J.  BOSTON 
WM.  grOHN  DARCH 
276  State  St. 
SUP 
It  is necessary  for  you  to' com­ James  Sealy,  Phillip  Snyder  and  Bullock,  4747;  Reading  Clerk,  W.  Ben  Lawson,  Agent  Richmond  2­0140 
Dispatcher 
Richmond 
2­0141 
LaChance, 
46127. 
municate  with  Richard  M.  Can­ Leonard  Toland. 
HONOLULU 
16  Merchant 
308'/4—23rd  St. 
tor,  51  Chambers  St.,  New  York 
Phone  S­STTT 
Headquarters  Tallying  Com­ GALVESTON 
4  4  4 
Keith  Alsop,  Agent 
Phone  2­8448 
Ill  W.  Bumsido  St. 
The  following  men  have  trans­ mittee's  report  read  and  accept­ LAKE  CHARLES.  La.... 1419  Ryan  St.  PORTLAND 
N.Y.  immediately. 
Beacon  4S36 
lk)rtation  money  waiting  for  ed.  Charges  against  one  member  L.  S.  Johnston,  Agent 
4  4.  at 
. 
RICHMOND,  CaUf. 
....257  5th  St. 
1  South  Lawrence  St. 
them  at  the office  of  the  Ponce  read  and  a  Trial  Committee  MOBILE 
EDDIE 
Phone  2599 
Gal  Tanner,  Agent 
Phone  2­1754 
FRANCISCO 
59  Oay  St. 
;,*T  got  off  the  ship.  Write  me  Cement  Co.,  Ponce,  Puerto  Rico: 
NEW  ORLEANS 
323  Bienville  St. 
Douglas  2­8^3 
c/o  Leah.  Everything  okay:  S.  Crespo,  R.  Moran,  A.  Morel," 
E. Sheppard. Agent  Magnolia  6112­6113 
SEATTLE. 
86  Smieca  St. 
R.  Hestres,  J.  Cordero,  F.  Rom­
NEW  YORK 
51  Beaver  St. 
Frank."­
Main  0290 
Joe 
Algina, 
Agent 
HAnover 
2­2784 
bach,  G.  Rivera,  L.  Guatier­ and 
4  at  4 
WILMINGTON. . 
440  Avalon  Blvd. 
NORFOLK 
127­129  Bank  St. 
L.  Cabrera. 
Terminal  4­313^ 
­ ARTHUR  W.  CORNMAN 
Beir  Rees,  Agent 
Phone  4­1083 
Your  wife  is  anxious  to  hear 
4  4  4 
PHILADELPHIA 
337  Market  St. 
Market  7­1635 
from  you  at  2121  Eastlake  Ave.,  SS  THOMAS  WOLFE  (1946)  elected. Resolution  from  the  crew  J.  Sheehan,  Agent 
Canadian  District 
85  Third  St. 
The  men  listed  below  have  of"  the  SS  Bethore ­read.  Com­ SAN  FRANCISCO 
Los  Angeles  31,  Calif. 
404  Le  Moyno  St. 
Jeff  Morrison,  Agent  Douglas  2­5475  MONTREAL 
won  judgment  of  a  month's  munication  requested  that  steps  SAN 
4  4  4­
UNiversity  248T. 
JUAN.  PR 
252  Ponce  de  Leon 
WM.  EDWARD  THOMPSON^  wages.  Contact  Albert  Michel­ be  taken  to  improve  the  quan­ Ssl  Colls,  Agent 
FORT  W1LUAM..11SK  Syndicate  A­M. 
Ontario 
Phone  3­S22t 
2  Abercorn  St. 
Write  your  mother  at  542  son,  1650  Russ  Building,  235  tity  and  quality  of  stores  on  Ore  SAVANNAH 
128 
HoIUs  St. 
Phone  3­1728  HALIFAX 
N.W,  10  St.,  Miami,  Fla.  She  is  Montgomery  St.,  San  Francisco,  ships.  Membership  stood  one  Jim  Drawdy,  Agent 
Phone  3­8911 
SEATTLE 
2700  l»t  Ave. 
"jiiinute  in  silence  for  lost  Broth­ Wm.  McKay,  Agent 
California: 
worried  about,  you. 
103  Durham  St. 
Seneca  4570  PORT  COLBORNC 
Herebert  Bagley,  George  E.  ers.  Meeting  adjourned  with  120  TAMPA 
4  4  4 
'  Phone  SSSS" 
1809­1811  N.  Franklin  St. 
lllA  Jarvia  St. 
Rodriquez,  Joseph  Hassler,  Jr.,  members .present. 
Ray  White.  Agent 
Phone  M.1323  TORONTO,'..... 
ANTHONY  CZECZEMSKI 
WILMINGTON, Calif.,  227 H  Avalon Blvd. 
Eliin  S719 
Contact  jmur  sister,  Mrs.  Fred  Isaac  L.  Jones,  Richard  E.  Hol­
4  .4  4 
VICTORIA,  B.C 
602  Boughtoa  St. 
E. 
B. 
Tilley, 
Agent 
"Terminal 
4­2874, 
Bell,  109  Prospect  Ave.,  Buffalo,  stein,  James  A.  Knittles,  Lee  T.  BALTIMORE  —  Chairman,  A1  HEADQUARTERS.. 51 Beaver St..  N.Y.C. 
Empire  4831 
Devol,  Raymond  R.  Carroll^  Jr.,  Stansbury.  4683;  Recoiding  S«c­
N^  Y. 
y  . 
VANCOUVER 
565  Hamilton  St. 
SECRETARY­TREASURER 
PaciHc  7824 
Franklin  O.  Miller,  Raymond  K  lelary.  G.  A.  Mastenon.  20997; 
Paul  HaU 
ft  ^ 
HEADQUARTi^ 
812 
McGUl  St. 
DIRECTOR 
OF 
ORGANIZATION 
Reading 
Clerk 
Rex 
Dickey, 
652. 
SDV/ARD  B.  YOUNGSLOOD  Schott,  Troy  W.  GsmmelL  Rob­
Montreal 
Plateau  67Q 
Undsey  WUliamil 
Minutes 
of 
meetings 
held 
in 
ert A. 
allee, John S. Ilauser, Ted 
Please  contact  your  brother, T. 
Doug  Youngblood,  Box  30,­Sum­ Boling  and  Ronald  F;  Chandler.  other  ports  accepted,  except  that 
• i 

Directory  Of  SIU  Halls 

�Page Twelve 

I 

T^y  \ 

'^"'^1 wps^­Tt^o|^ 

AFL  Seafarers  Union 
Moving  to  Kick  Out 
Trotskyite  Commies 
Declares  Both  the  Party  and  Splinter 
Groups  Are  Dual  and  Hostile  to  SIU 

t 

Friday.  Janiwry  27,4250 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

SIU 
­K 

UJ 

e 

New York Newspaper  Highlights SIU Fight 
Against Trotskyite Coaimie Disraptors 

By  NELSON  FRANK, 
World­Telegram  Staff  Writer. 
Action  toward  expelling  Trot­ against  the  Communists  among' 
skyite Communists has been taken  the membership. 
by  the  APL's  Seafarers  Interna­ In  the  recent  fracas  at  NMU 
tional  Union.  Significant  is  the  headquarters, all  types of  pro and 
fact  that  the  resolution  adopted  semi­Communists,  including  the 
by  the  AFL  union  lists  as  one  of  real  thing,  were  aligned  against 
the reasons for Its action the "dis­ the  administration  which  finally 
ruptive  record  on  the  waterfront  removed  15  of  them  from  office. 
within  the  (CIO's  National  Marl­ Currently  there are  reports that 
time Union)  , .  of theTrotsky­ Charles Keith, former  head of  the 
'Communist  part^  on  the  water­
ites. 
The  NMU  has  charged  that  front  who  after  being  expelled 
among the leaders  who led the re­ first  backed  Curran  and  more  re­, 
cent  disturbance  at  its'  head­ cently  has  led  the  fight  against 
quarters on  W. 17th St. were sup^  him, is  being  tried  for  his  part  in 
porters  of  the  two  Trotskyite  the  seizure  of  the  NMU  head­
splinter  •  groups,  the  Sdtialist  quarters. 
Workers  party  and  the  Inde­ Mr.  Keith  Is  expected  to  have 
• charges against  him  presented  to' 
pendent Socialiist League. 
By  its  action,  the  AFL  union  the membership at the  next union 
has gone  further  in  opposition  to  membership meeting on Thursday 
he  radical  political  bodies  than 
he  NMU  which  as  yet­  has  not 
(From  the  Congressional  Record) 
ipelled  out  the  names  of  its 
'political opponents. 
Oual and Hostile Body.' 
anything from  the past  conflict. 
proprietors served  as' employment  agen­
Despite  its  failure  to  name 
stability 
of 
this 
Vital 
indus­
ciesTor equally ufiscruptuous shii^Wners. 
Seafarers 
International 
Union 
Communist  splinter  groups  as 
try, and  the  job security of  the workers  Crimps fleeced  their  seamen­guests, 
enemies,  the  NMU  is  expected  to 
'dependent upon it for their livelihoods— 
sinking  them  deeper  and  deeper  into 
be  officially  on rkcord against the 
EXTENSION  OF REMARKS 
and the 
s
ecurity of the Nation—^is threat­
debt,  until  they  were  forced  to  accept 
Communist  party  this  week  when 
OF 
the results of  a referendum on two 
ened because of  a serious shortcoming in  one qf  the jobs offered  them  a means 
convention resolutions and a num­
the Taft­Hartley  law. 
of  getting  out  of  debt.  The  seamen's 
HON. ISIDORE DOLLINGER 
ber  of. proposed  constitutional 
Because of the ban on the closed shop, 
wages were then used to pay off  the debt 
OF NEW 
TORK 
amendments are counted  in union 
the 
existence 
of 
the 
maritime 
unions' 
and, 
In  addition,  the  crimp  received  a 
headquarters. 
IN  THE  HOUSE  OP REPRESENTATIVES  hiring halls Is In  jeopardy.  If  the view  commission from 
the shipowner.  It was 
Under  the  changes,  introduced 
Tuesday, January 17, 1950 
of  the  lower  courts  is  upheld  by  the  a  vicious  cycle  with  the  seamen  never 
at  the  union's  convention  last 
September  by  supporters  of  NMU 
Mr. DOLLINGER.  Mr. Speaker, I re­ Supreme  Court,  the  ban  will  not  only  getting any  more than a sum  necessary 
President  Joseph  Curran,  resolu­
cently 
availed  myself  of  an  invitation  end  the  Current  hiring  hall  procedure  to dispose of  his obligation to the crimp. 
tions  passed  by  the  membership 
Shanghaiing  was  an  even  more  des­
extended to all Members of  Congress by  with  its  democratic  rotary  system  of 
have  the  result  of  establishing 
shipping, 
it 
will 
destroy 
the 
maritime 
picable method of supplying mqn to .^hips 
the  Seafarers  International  Union  to 
official  union  policy.  One,  that 
visit  their  headquarters  branch  at  51  unions  themselves, and  all  their  hard­ in  those  days. &lt;  Manpower  needs  of  a 
NMU  leaders  declare  they  believe 
has passed,  names the  Communist 
Beaver  Street,  New  York  City.  I  was  won  gains  in  behalf  of  their  seafaring  shipowner  were satisfied  by  coercing  or 
party  as  a  body  that  is )dual  and 
kidnapping seamen by crimps and saloon 
pleased to have the opportunity to see the  members. 
hostile  to the  NMU  and its  mem­
It Is possible that failure to exempt the  prcqirietors  who  would  ply  them' with 
hiring hall 
in action, and 
to learn 
what 
bership. 
: Paul Hall, secretary­treasurer of  the At­ union  hiring  halls  from  the  provisions  drugs and liquor,  and  then  hustle  them 
Like  the  resolution  passed  by 
lantic  and  Gulf  district,­ A1  Bernstein,  of  the  Taft­Hartley  law  was  due  to  a  aboard ship. 
the SIU, this  will  make it  possible 
The  union  hiring  hall  wiped  out 
their  international  representative,  and  lack  of  understanding  on  the  part  of 
to  bring  members  up  on  charges 
many Members of Congress as to the na­
crimps' halls 
and  shanghaiing,  and  the 
others, are trying to accomplish. 
that they  are using their mcmbcr­
hip in  the interests of  a  political 
I was convinced, that because of  prob­ ture of  the hiring hall and its manner of  maritime industry is  better off  for it. 
'party  rather  than  for the good  of 
The union  hiring hall  also stepped  up 
lems  peculiar  to  the maritime  industry,  operation. 
the  trade  union. 
As I saw it, the rotary hiring system is  the efficiency  and  stability  of  the  mer­
the imion hiring halls have injected sta­
The  SIU,  under  the  leadership 
bility  into  the industry  and  have  given  the most  equitable method  of  dispatch­ chant marine by ending the employment 
of  its  Atlantic  and  Gulf  Coast 
to  seafaring  men  a  proper  dignity  and  ing  men  to Jobs  that  has  yet  been  de­ of  "summer  sailors,"  generally  well­to­
secretary­tre'asurer, Paul Hall,  has 
consistently  battled  members  of 
. secarlty  that  was  irxipossible  under  the  vised,  with  seamen  registering, for  Jobs  do college students with connections who 
as they come off the ships and then being  were pushed through Coast Guard quali­
the  Communist  party  and  ousted 
previous hiring practices. 
hem  from  the  union. 
Because I was so impressed with  what  dispatched  on  a first­come, first­served  fication  tests  so  that  they  could  go  to 
'Enemies of  Union.' 
sea  for  a  few  months  as  a  lark.  As  a 
I learned during my visit, I wish  to "take  basis. 
Under  the  rotary  hiring  system, sea­ rft­CHK:  nf  t.hls  nrnntl/'a 
Now  it has stated 
that both the 
this  opportunity  to  report  t,n  mv  cnU 
­11 
leagues  on  my.experiences,  and  to  give  "juuTu  wxiu xxavc  uccu ibsued cercmcates oy  who made a career of  sailing and whose 
declared* dual  and  hostile  to 
them the facts which  were ma^e availa­ the United States Coast Guard testifying  families were  dependent  upon  them for 
best interests  of  the SXU. 
to their qualiflcatior s to sail in their par­ sustenance were deprived of employment 
ble to me. 
The  resolution  states  that  be­
ticular 
ratlng.s  obtain  job­s  fairly  and  opportunities.  They  were  forced  to sit 
cause of  their  "blind  following  of 
Woi'ld War II proved conclusively that  squarely. 
When  a  man  want^  employ­ on the  beach until these  part­time sail­
the  antitrade  union  theory  advo­
a  large, strong,  and  efficient  merchant  ment,  he  registers 
cated by Lenin  and Trotsky  we go 
at  the  union  hiring  ors went  back to school. 
marine  is  absolutely  essential  to  our  hall, where  he is issued 
on  record  here  to  deal  with  the 
a shipping  card 
The  union  hiring  hall  not  only  pro­, 
national  security.  Were  it  not  for  the  bearing the date of  his registration. 
supporters  of  these  union­busting 
vides 
fair  treatment  for  the  seamen,^ 
groups  individually  and  collec­1 
fact that we  were able to keep our ships  As jobs come in, they are posted on the 
it has resulted in considerable advantage 
tively  as enemies  of  our  union  as 
[sailing when the vessels of  our allies vir­ shipping board, listing the  vessels, their 
well  as  enemies  of  all  American 
tually  had  been destroyed, it  is not  im­ destinations  and  other  pertinent  data.  to  the^ shipowners  themselves,  for  with 
seamen . . ." 
probable  that  years  would  have  been  In addition, the dispatcher calls out  the  the  innovation  of  union  hiring^ came  a 
Further.  It  declares  that  "any 
added  to  the  conflict.  In  fact,  victory  available  jobs  and  those  men  who  are  stability  that  the industry  never  before 
meniber of  theSlU who is a mem­
enjoyed.  ­
might not  have been ours. 
ber­ of, contributes  to or  as a  fel­
qualified  and  wish  to  apply  throw  in 
The  Seafarers  International  Union 
low  traveler  knowingly follows  the 
It is important here to remember  that  their  cards.  Of  those  throwing  in,  the  maintains—and apparently without con­
policies  of  (the  CP and SWP)  be 
'the  hiring  hall  was  the  backbone  in  men with the oldest cards, or those  who  tradiction—that  the  end  product  of  a| 
declared an  enemy of  the SIU and 
keeping the sihips  crewed and  moving in  have  been  on  the  "belteh"—unem­ strong union an4 the democratically ad­
' be  made  to  stand  charges  and  if 
wartime to all  theaters of  operation. 
found  guilty  to  be  expelled  from 
ployed—the  longest,  get  the  Jobs.  No.  ministered  system  of  rotary shippingJs 
I  the  union ..." 
The  merchant  marine  has  properly  one  is  compelled  to  take  any  employ­ a membership  that is conscientious  and 
The  SIU  declares  that  "while 
been  called  our  second  line  of  defense  ment.  If  an  eligible  seaman  does  not  fully  cognizant  of  its,^esponsibiUtles as 
.the  powers  granted  the  hnion 
by those who shouldered the responsibil­ want a particular Job. he simply does not  an  important  part of  an  important in­
I under the resolution have not  been 
ity for  the successful  prosecution' of  our  throw in for it.  He merely waits for one  • dustry. 
[invoked  to date,­the union  expects 
I to  swing  into  action  against 
.war effort.  Just as we must maintain an  more.^to his liking  to be called out.  The 
The Seafarers  point  out  furthec that; 
'known  offenders soon." 
^Army­ and Navy  strong, enough  to meet  date of his registration mid the fact that  the destruction  of  the union  hiring hall 
Some  Split  With  Curran. 
any  emergency,  so  must  we  take  the  he  is  qualified  are  the  only  considera­ would  wipe  out  many  hard­won  gains 
Within  the  NMU,  a  member  of 
necessary  steps  to  insure  Ihe  continued  tions determining his right to the Job. 
realized  by  organized  seamen  over  the 
[the  orie­time  supporters  of  the 
efficient  functioning  of  our  merchant  I  spoke  with  Paul  HaH,  secretary­ past 10 years,  and chaos,  confusion  and 
'present  administration  have  been 
fieet.  We should  take no false  comfort  treasurer  of  the Atlantic  and  Gulf  dts­ all  the sordid  conditions  that  aire  now 
•  Trotskyites  who  left  the, SJU  to 
In  the  thought  that  Allied  Nations  are 'trlct, and  with his members of  the SIU,  part  of  an  Inglorious  history  would  re­^ 
join  the  CIO  union  when  the 
rebuilding  their  maritime  industries,  and their sentiment in favor of this dem­ turn.  And  there Is sound  basis for  this 
I Curran  forces  were  battling  the 
' Commupist" leadership. 
Constantly changing political alinements iocratlc  system  of  obtaining ^ Jobs  was  prediction. 
'Although  they  made  common 
r mean that the ally of today might well be i  overwhelming.  The older seafarers were 
The Congress of  the United States can 
! cause  with  Cunan  to  oust  the 
the eneny of 
tomorrow. 
especially vigorous In their appi'oval an(^ 
act to avert 
such a  calamity.  I believe 
[communists  from  official  posi­
There  is  no  question  that  the  highly  in  no  uncertain  terms  they  denounced  all  legislators share  with  me. the desire 
l tions, they split with him over  the 
successful  operation  of  our  merchant  the'degrading  crimp  halls,  and  the  to  see  our  Nation  move  forward,  not 
of 
marine  during  the  war  was  duetto  the  shanghaiing  methods  that  prevailed  in  backward.  I believe,  therefore,  that  it 
stability achieved in the maritime indus­ the industry  before  the* advent  of  the  is  incumbent  upon  us  to  exempt  the 
try over  the  past  years.  That stability  union  hiring hall. 
maritime  unions'trom  the  closed  shop 
should  not be  threatened, unle.ss  we are  Crimp  halls  were  generally  seamen's  ban.  It  Is  In  the seamen's,  the indus­
foolhardy  enough  not  to  have  learned  jerding  houses,  whose  unscrupulous  try's,  and  Nation's  interest  that 
do so. •  

Congressman  Dollinger  Says  Hiring  Haii 
Gives Men Sesurity^  Stahilizes  Industry 

M­

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="7">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42905">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1950-1959</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44875">
                  <text>Volumes XII-XXI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44876">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44877">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10189">
                <text>January 27, 1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10239">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10291">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10343">
                <text>Vol. XII, No. 2</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10369">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10395">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10422">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
NLRB PUTS CRUSHER ON CTMA'S DESPERATE BID FOR RECOGNITION&#13;
DOING SIU JOB MEANS MORE JOBS FOR THE SIU&#13;
SEVEN MORE SIGN WELFARE PLAN; OTHERS INDICATE FULL AGREEMENT&#13;
CENSUS BUREAU TO COUNT SEAMEN ON SHIPS&#13;
A HOUSE DIVIDED&#13;
THE CITIES SERVICE STORY&#13;
INTIMIDATION, MASS FIRING KEY CS POLICIES&#13;
WHAT SIU CONTRACT MEANS TO CITIES SERVICE SEAMEN</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10423">
                <text>1/27/1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13074">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="64">
        <name>1950</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="978" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="2425">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/65269a43c0bddcd929d47d8a1ea7232f.pdf</src>
        <authentication>194f603ae3c1382ed01cd8db7e32e9b3</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="48538">
                    <text>UTS HEAT OH CITIES SERVICE 
BUT COMPAHY STALL COHTIHUES 
NEW YORK,  Feb. 9—Less than 72  hours after; 
the SIU presented its case  against  the Cities Serv­
ice Oil  Company  in  full page  newspaper  advertise­
ments  addressed  to  company  stockholders,  the 
company hurriedly agreed  to a meeting with Union; 
representatives. The session  was  held  yesterday. 
Despite the day­long talks, there was no change 
in  the  company's  attitude,  and  the  meeting  ended 
Official Organ, AtlanHc &amp; Gulf  DUtrUt, Seafarers International Union of  NA  with  Marine  Division  officials  still  refusing  to 
enter  collective  bargaining  negotiations  for  a con­
No. 3  tract  covering  all  16  tankers  of  the  CS  fleet,  for 
NEW  YORK,  N.  Y..  FRIDAY,  FEBRUARY  10,  19S0 
VOL.  XII 
: 

AFL  Pkdges Aid 
To  Bmid  World 
Labor  SolhlaritY 

1 
which  the  SIU  has  been  certi­
fied  by  the  National  Labor  Rda­' 
LATEST VICTIMS OF CITIES SERVICE'S UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES  tions  Board. 
The  Union  representatives 
urged  the  comi&gt;any  to  continue 
the  meetings  on  a  daily  basis^ 
saying  they  were  ready  to  ne­
gotiate  at  any  hour  of  the  day 
or  night,  Simdays  included,  but 
the  CS  spokesmen  stated  the 
earliest  date  for  the  next  con­
ference  would  have  to  be  Feb. 
16.  The  SIU  representatives  Kud 
they  would  be  on  hand. 
Prospects  for  genuine  bargain­
ing  appear  very  dim  on  the 
basis  of  yesterday's sessions,  and 
the  SIU  is  continuing  with  its 
strike  preparations. 
The  advertisements  which 
touched  off  the  company's  de­
sire  to  meet  yesterday,  appeared 
in  the  New  York  Times  on  Feb­
ruary  2  and  in  the  New  York 
Herald­Tribune  the  following 
day.  (The  ad  is  reprinted  on 
page  12  of  this  issue.) 
In  the  advertisements,  the 
SIU told  the CS stockholders that 
the  company  "faces  a  paralyzing 
Mass  dismissals  of  Cities  Service  seamen  suspected  of  Union  activity  continue  at  an  ap­
palling  rate.  Men  in  photo  above  got  the  axe  on  the  SS  Government  Camp  on  Jan.  30.  They  and  costly  strike  which  will  af­
were  joined  in filing  unfair  labor  practice  charges  against  the  company  by  seven  crewmen  fect  all  its  operations,  because 
its"  Marine  Division  refuses  to 
bounced  off  the' Fort  Hosldns on  Feb. 3,  and  nine  pro­SIU  seamen fired  from  the  SS Salem  Mar­
itime  on  Feb.  %.  The  Salem  Maritime  victims  were discharged  as company  talked—^but  refused  recognize  and  bargain  coUectiye­
to  bargain—^with  Union  representatives. 
(Contimied on Page 11)

MIAMI,  Fla.—The  AFL  exe­
cutive  council  , pledged  to  "re­
double  cur  efforts"  to  build 
world  labor­solidarity  and  took 
steps  to  make  the  AFL  stronger 
in  the fight  for  a  more  abun­
dant  life  here  at  home. 
As. the council  neared  adjourn­
ment  of  its  midwinter  meeting, 
the  members: 
1.  Voted  an  invitation  to  be 
issued  in  60  days  to  the  Interna­
tional  Association  of  Machinists 
to  reaffiliate  its  600,000  members 
with  the  AFL, 
2.  Urged  aid  to  help  India 
overcome  its  immediate  food dif­
ficulties,  develop  public  educa­
tion  and  improve  public  health. 
3.  Gave  full  backing  to  the 
new  International  Confederation 
of  Free  Trades  Unions  formed  in 
London  last  December. 
;  4.  Opposed  U.  S.  recognition 
for  Franco  Spain  and  Commun­
ist  China. 
5.  Urged  the  U.  S.  Senate  to 
ratify  the  United  Nations  con­
vention ^outlawing  genocide  — 
mass  ki^g  of  national,  racial 
—  and  religious  groups. 
.  6.  Demanded  immediate  con­
Crew  accommodations. 
committee  found  that  (1)  either  with  those  regulations  in  exisfc­&gt;­'' 
Charges  made  by  the  Inter­
gressiorial  action  to  repeal  ex­ national  Transportworkers  Fed­
the  equipment  aboard  was  defl­ ence. 
Hours  of  work. 
cise  taxes  on  transportation,  eration,  that  Panama'^flag  ships  'Overtime  at  sea. 
cieiii,'  \A)  iiTe'"vessei  • was"'iatS"  According to^s ITF, the c&lt;Hn«* 
fneater  ­tickets  and  other­  con­ operate  under  conditions  far  be­
Food  and  catering  on  board  removed  from  the  register  for  mittee  urged  Panama  to enlarge 
developing  defects,  (3)  the  ship  its  consular  ^laff.  Because  mas­
ship. 
sumer  items. 
low  internationally  ..^ccepted 
Certification 
of 
ship's 
cooks. 
had  been  removed  from  the  list­ ters  and  crews  frequently  are 
standards, 
have 
been 
largely 
'HEALTH  PLAN  INFO 
7.  Agreed  to  comply  with  a  substantiated  by  an  investigating  Inspection  of  shipboard  work­ ing  in  default  of  survey,  or  for  ignorant  of  the  provisions  of  the 
ing  conditions. 
non­payment  of  fees. 
request  of  Federal  Security  Ad­ committee  of  the  International 
country's  laws,  it  was  recom­
ministrator  Oscar  Ewing  to  dis­ Labor  Organization,  according  to  Nor" are  there  any  remedies  The  committee  actually  in­ mended  that  copies  of  regula­
tribute  among  AFL  members  an  ITF  report  issued  this  week.  enabling  seamen  on  Panamanian  spected  30  ships of  various  types.  tions  be  given  to  shipowners 
factual  information  on  what  the  The  ITF,  with  which  the  Sea­ ships  to  recover  back  wages,  the  Of  these,  "20  were  built  between  and  masters  in  their  own  lang­
health  insurance  program  sup­ farers  International  Union  is  af­ report  points  out.  No  provision  1881  and  1919,  four  between  the  uages  and  placed  aboard  all 
ported  by  the  AFL  provides. 
filiated,  has  been  threatening  a  exists  for  the  maintenance  of  two  World  Wars  and  six  after  ships. 
Heard  Assistant  Secretary  world­wide  boycott  of  Pana­ seamen  while  they  are  being  1943. 
of  State  Willard  L.  Thorpe  ex­ manian  vessels,  unless  steps  are  repatriated.  . 
In  the  report,  the  ILO  com­
plain  the  scope  and  effects  of  taken  to  raise  standards  to  an  "OlftY  PARTIALLY  MET" 
mittee 
is  said  to  have  pointed 
the  International  Trade  agree­ acceptable  level.­
It  was  also  reported  that  the  out  that  the  Panamanian  con­
ment  entered  into  at  Havana  The  committee's  report  was  coiiimittee  found  that  Panama's 
sular  service  lacked  the  size  and 
last  year. 
said  to  have  been  presented  to  legislation  "only  partially  met  experience  to  efficiently  enforce  If  anyone  is  wondering  about 
The  council  and  its  affiliated  the  ILO's  governing  body  at  a  the  requirements  of  the  Sea­
departments  disposed  of  a  big  conference  in  Mysore,  India,  and  men's  Articles  of  Agreement  existing  legislation  in  regard  to  "what  happened  to  American 
shipping,"  nfiaybe  the  following 
backlog  of  other  important  busi­ was  based  on first­hand  observa­ Convention  and  of  the  Ship­ shipping. _ 
The  vast  majority  of  Pana­ figures  will  prove  interesting. 
.ness  during  the  sessions  here.  tions  of  conditions  aboard  30  owners  Liability  Convention." 
manian ships  do  not  go  to  Pana­
In  reaffirming  the  AFL's  dom­ Panamanian  ships  visited  in 
The 
ILO 
committee is 
reported 
ma  for  registration,  nor  do  they  According  to  a  recent  survei?;  j 
inant  position  in  international  ports  in  the  United  Kingdom, 
America  owns  more  than  one­  f 
affairs,  the  council  made  it  plain  Belgium,  France,  Italy,  Egypt  as finding  validity  in  the  ITF  normally  trade  with  that  coim­ fourth  of  the  12,765  merchant  t| 
charge  that  under  the  Panaman­ try. 
that  the  8,000,000  membeivs  of  and  the  United ^States. 
ships  in  the  world—3,514  pri­  j 
ian" flag,  shipowners  can  evade 
the  AFL  expect  the  United 
NO  INSPECTIONS 
vately­  and  government­owned  &lt; 
established 
safety 
and 
labor 
NO.  REGULATIONS 
States  government  to  stand firm 
vessels  totalling  37,417,100  dead­  l 
As 
a 
result, 
there 
is 
no 
op­
standards. 
What 
standards 
do 
in  its  opposition  to  comniimism  According  to  the  ITF,  the 
weight  tons. But—and  this is  the 
and  fascism  wherever  it  is  mani­ ILO  committee  found  that  no  exist  aboard  Panama­flag  ves­ portunity  for  Panama  officials  rub  ­7­  2,190  government­owned ^J 
sels 
were 
said 
to 
be 
very 
low. 
to 
make 
inspections 
aboard 
the 
regulations  exist  in  Panamanian 
fested  throughout  the  wdrld. 
and  140  privately­owned  ahipsr,^^ 
The  council  elaborated  its  pre­ sea  laws  to­ give  effect  to  the  During  a  study  of  one  lis^  ships  in  their  home  ports. 
or 
two­thirds  of  the  total, arg  in  ' 
vious  approval  of  President  Tru­ Safety  of  Life  at  Sea  Conven­ containing  644  Panamanian­flag  Moreover,  most,  if  not  all own­ the  boneyard. 
fnan's point  4  program  to aid  un­ tion,  held,  last  year,  and  the  ships,  the  committee  could  trace  ers  of  Panamanian  ships,  live 
Only  423  of  them  through  rec­ outside  that  country.. and  are  And  of  the  present fleet  of 
derdeveloped  areas.  It  empha­ Leadline  Convention. 
ognized 
classification  systems.  represented  by  an  agent  in  privately­owned  ships,  only  44 
Specifically  the  report  is  said 
sized  the  need  for  labor  .repre­
Of 
the 
Panama  shil&gt;s  not  mea­ Panama.  Thus  it  is  difficult  to  are  passenger­cargo  ships,  and 
sentation  in  the  formulation  of  to  charge  that  there  are  no 
suring 
up 
to  stand^s  set  by  bring  pr^ure  to  bear  on  an  four  of  these are*laid  up. 
regulations 
to 
cover: 
plans  for  technical  aid  to  these 
­• '"i 
Lloyd's  Register  of  London,  the  owner  who  failed  to  comply  Class  dismissed!­
Manning  requirements. 
underdeveloped  nations. 

Panamanian Ships Found Far Beiow Standards 

US Buneiwds  Own,  ; 
Woild's Largest Fleet  | 

atei' 

�Page 1^0 

tkE iEAfARkks-.\kok '

SEAFARERS  EOG 
,pb' 

fe­'­

Friiiar/Febniary  !&amp;•  

I  DON'T  KNOW 
MUCH  ABOOT 
POLITICS  ­
BUT  I  KNOW  , 

Published  Every  Other  Week  by  the 
SEAFARERS  INTERNATIONAL  UNION 
OF  NORTH  AMERICA 
Atlantic and  Gulf  District 

WHAT  I LIKE/ 

Afiiliated  with  the  American  Federation  of  Labor 
At  51  Beaver  CTeet,  New  York  4,  N. Y. 
HAnover  2­2784 
Reentered  as  second  class  matter  August  2,  1949,  at  the  Post 
Office  in  New  York,  N.Y,,  under  the  Act  of  August  24,  1942. 
267 

Slave Labor Exponents
There is. an embarrassing similarity  between  the  views 
of  two  sometimes  not  so  widely  separated  schools  of 
thought  when  it  comes  to appraising labor. 
­  On  the  one  hand,  you  have  plain  old  Uncle  Joe 
Stalin,  overseer  of  the  slave­labor  camp  known  as  the 
Soviet  Union.  Joe  has  already  succeeded  in  reducing  the 
people  in  his  land  to  the  position  of  serfs,  from  which 
they  thought  they  were  about  to spring no^ too long  ago. 
Stalin's  posters  scream  that  it's  *'all  for  the  Fatherland. 
And  on  the  right  hand,  you  have  that  element  of 
Americatu  businessmen,  who  double  as  supercharged  pa 
triots.  These  are  the  birds  who  never  give  up  the  dream 
that 
one  day  they  may  see  the  American  working  men 
I?'­''" 
and  women  knocked  down  to  the  level  of  Stalin's  un­
fortunate  masses. 
,  ' 
Their  slogans  may  differ,  but  their  objectives  don't. 
I*:,  And  both  have  to  be  watched  with  equal  caution. 
A case  in point  is an editorial which appeared  recently 
in  the  Washington  Times­Herald,  and  which  was  called 
to  our  attention  by  a  heads­up  retired  Seafarer  named 
Edward  McCormick. 
For  the  editorial  in  question,  the  Times­Herald  don­
ned  its  well­worn  patriotic  masquerade  and  started  off 
with a  lament over  the manner  in which  taxpayers' money 
is  spent.  ­ 
­  , 

G.  BELL 
H.  CONNORS 
W.  D.  WARMACK 
Without  further  ado,  it  launched  into  an  attack  on 
A.  TANSKI 
J. MORRISON 
l^hipping  subsidies,  "explaining"  how  they  would  not  be 
G.  CARROLL 
' necessary if  certain  Times­Herald  wisdoms were  accepted^ 
I. F:  WILLOUGHBY 
And  the  Times­Herald  cost­cutting  genius  went  to 
L.  B.  MORGAN 
work  this  way: 
J. SHEA 
T.  MORIARITY 
All  you  have  to  do  to  get  rid  of  shipping  and  ship­
F. 
KORVATIN 
building subsidies is  to put  the two on  a  paying  basis. And 
A.  MORALES 
that  brilliant  deduction,  says  the  editorial,  can  be  realized 
L.  WILLIAMS 
by  cutting  the  cost  of  labor. 
G. REGISTER ­
"These are the  Union  Brothers currently  la the  marine hospitals, 
"The  maritime  unions,  with  the  support  of  the  fed­ as  reported  by  the  Port  Agents.  These  Brothers  find  time  hanging  S. BOZKE 
cral  government,"  continues  the  free­enterpriyng  Times­ heavily  on  their  hands.  Do  what  you  can  to  cheer  them  up  by  S. BUZALEWSKI 
X  ^ I* 
~ 
I  Herald,. "have  "forced  operators  to  employ  three  shifts  writing  them. 
NEW  ORLEANS  HOSPITAL 
j';  working  eight  ho 
•A
  .  DEFERMO 
STATEN  ISLAND  HOSPITAL 
R. A.  BLAKE 
GEORGE 
NOLES 
L. BALLESmtO 
^  ­ 
There's  nothing  to  do  aboard  ship,  says  T­H,  which  E.  J. SPROCH 
J. J. 
O'NEILL 
JOHN T. EDWARDS 
i \  then suggests that  the "Panamanian navy" serve as  a model  HENRY  WATSON 
E.  J.  NAVARRE 
E. FBRRRR 
JOHN 
SCOTT 
;  for US ships. Then  follows some  stuff  about how .in Japan 
J. DENNIS 
I. H. 
FRENCH 
M.  J. LUCAS 
and  elsewhere  you  can  build  ships cheaper  than  in  the  US.  THEADORE  ROZUM 
F.  LANDRY 
JOSEPH SPAULDING 
H. F.  LAGAN 
JOSEPH  SILLAK 
? 
That  ought  to  give  you  the  idea,  if  you  haven't  al­ CIRNACO  ESOLAN 
L. 
LANG 
LUIS 
TORRES 
H. E. 
LOGE 
f '  ready  suspected  it,  that  the  Times­Herald  would  like  to 
L. WILLIS 
L. TULL 
H. 
J.'OUT 
put  American  workers  on  a  daily ^iet  of  rice. 
C.  CHESNA 
FRED  ZESIGER 
­
L.  D.  DIOUDONNE 
A.  PAREK 
•   The  plain  ugly  fact  is  that  the  Times­Herald,  like  R.  GARCIA 
XXX 
R. 
BARKER 
6ther  US business  enterprises which  subscribe  to its vicious  J. P.  FARRELL 
MOBILE  HOSPITAL 
L. 
BEAUDY 
theories,  is  against  subsidies  that  do  not  favor  it  alone.  F.  D.  WALL 
T.  LITTLE 
C.  EZELL 
J. BERRIER  , 
We  don't  recall  the  Times­Herald  denouncing  the  US  R.  GRALICKI 
P. ROBERTS 
CARLOS  MATT 
L.  HOWARD 
government  for  allowing  it  a  subsidy  in  the  form  of  T. 
A. MAUITRAY 
B.  PATTON 
TIM  BURKE 
special  mailing  rates.  As  a  matter  of  fact,  it  is  presently  MICHAEL  GOTTSCHALK 
N.  I. WEST 
XXX.' 
P. L. RAY 
fighting,  amid  screams  of  anguish,  a  bill  which  would  K.  JENSEN 
BOSTON 
HOSPITAL 
J. J.  CERDA 
increase  these  postal  rates. 
J. A.  PILUTIS 
C. R.  BRACE 
FRANK  ALASAVICH 
E.  OJECA 
^  Bear  in  mind  that  the  Times­Herald  has  always  been  VINCENT RODRIQUEZ
C.  F.  PRICE 
F.  BEN  GORDY 
a  vociferous opponent  of  organized  labor  and  is  absolutely 
O. 
HOWELL 
X % %
XXX 
P. 
GAVILLO 
opposejd  to unions. 
NEPONSIT  HOSPITAL 
BALTIMORE  HOSPITAL 
C.  LYONS 
.... 
17­:.!' • •  •  r.'"; 
Don't  forget,  either,  that  the  Times­Herald  is  WILLIAM  PADGETT 
L, YARBOROUGH
H.  D.  MCKAY 
E. HARRISON
inst  advanced  social  security  legislation.  And  the  MATTHEW  BRUNO 
L. TICKLE 
JOSE 
DE 
JESUS 
A.
MASTERS
es­Herald  is  continually  ranting  about  reducing  taxes 
H.  WILLETT 
LANCASTER 
S. ZAVODESON '
R. J.  EGAN 
for  the  millionaires  and  the giant  corporations,  but  not  J. M. 
:"v;, 
R.  K  LUFLIN 
E. K. BRYAN
- ^'
R. I.  VARN 
^for  the  little'guys  who sweat  for  their  wages. 
ESTEBAN  P.  LOPEZ 
J. G. HARRIS
• c. NEUMAIER 
J. DAVIS
V 
Uncle  Joe  Stalin  may  not. be "particularly  interested,  CHARLES  L.  MOATS 
W.  W.  LAMB 
P. E. DARROUGH
^ but there are  big guys on  this side of  the world  who think  PEDRO  G.  ORTIZ 
W.  HAZELGROVE. 
R.  REDDEST 
R. C. MELOY
Vir.  HAYES 
p exactly, as Jie  does  when  it  comes  to  making  serfs  out  R. A. 
A. C. BELT
RATCLIFF 
W. 
WALKER 
llpf  free  working  men.^^; 
. J. MARTINEZ; •  
; 
THOMAS  WADSWORTH 
C.  J. PALMQUIST 

•   ­nm I 

Meff  Now h no Marme Hospitok 

• • • ' 

mmmmm

m 

.mm

�Page  Thra* 

In Bad Slump 
By  JOHN  B9NKER 

and  coastwi^  runs  wou3d  now  ran  between  New  York  and  N.B.  This  is  especially  true  of  New  speed  and  carrying  "capacity y 
be  too  slow  for  the  business. 
for  more  than 50  .  ears;  the Old  England  cities,  and  the  domin­ means  that  a  fewer  number  of 
An  announcement  by  the  F. 
Dominion  Line,  which  served  ance  which  Massachusetts  and  ships  and  fewer  seamen  can  do 
Yet 
the 
cost 
of 
building 
ships 
P.' Grier  Company  of  Norfolk 
rJ'ew  York  and  Norfolk  for  more  Rhode  Island enjoyed for  so long  the  job  of  a  larger fleet  in form­
that  it  hopes  to  start  coastwise  expressly fitted  for modern  needs  than  half  a  century;' the  Mor­ in  textile  manufacturing  came  er  years. 
is 
far 
l^ond 
their 
capacity 
to 
steamship  service  between  the 
gan  Line,  which  operated  be­ about  because  mills  could  be 
Hampton  Rbards  area  and  Bos­ pay  for  tbenselves  under  pres­ tween  Boston  and  Houston;  and  erected  at  any  number  of  ports  Our  domestic  coastwise  lines 
alone,  according  to  the  Maritime 
ton  and  Providence  emphasizes  ent  conditions. 
the  Merchants  and  Miners  Line,  like  FaU' River,  Providence  and  Comniission,^  handed  36,300,000 
According 
to a 
study 
made 
by 
the  present  sad  state  of  our  do­
which  connected  Boston,  Balti­ New; Bedford,  where  cotton  and 
mestic  steamship  services,  and  the. United States  Maritime Com­ more,  Norfolk  and  other  sea­ wool  could  be  cheaply  imported  tons of  cargo  in 1939. 
the^ hundreds  of  jobs  that  have  mission,  the  costs  of  handling  board  points  for  05  years.  This  and  the finished  pn^ucts  sent  After  the  war,  the  Interstate 
been  lost  to  seamen  because  of  cargo  run­as  Idgh  nowadays  as  was  one  of  the  rnany  domestic  off  to  coastal  points  all  over  the  Cotnmerce  Commission  granted 
the  old  War  Shipping  Adminis­
the  postwar  slump  in  coastal  66  percent  of  the  freight  rate  lines  whiclf  w'ent  out  of  business  United  States.. 
that  the  domestic  lines  receive 
tration  a  certificate  to  engage  in 
and  intercoastal  shipping. 
after  the  war. 
A  report  by  the  United  States  coastwise  and  intercoastal  ship­
for  their  services. 
Many  of  the  men  now  sitting 
FINISHED  WITH  ENGINES  Maritime  Cfommission on our  do­ ping  until  Sept!  30,  1946.  After 
around  union  halls  up and  down'  Ibis leaves  from  40  to  50  per­
mestic  shipping  situation  points 
the  coast—waiting  for' a  chance  cent  to  pay  crews,  terminal  Other  coastal  lines which  have  out  the  fact  that  there  were  too  this  time,  it  was  hoped,  private 
operators  could  get  back  in  bus­
charges, 
vessd 
maintenance, 
de­
to ship  out—would soon find  em­^ 
gone  out  of  business  during  the  many  competing  lines  engaged  iness  on  their  own. 
preciation 
&lt;which 
the 
law 
stipu­
ployment  if  some  means  were 
past  20  years,  after  as  much  as  in  the  business  before  the  war, 
found  of  reviving'  the  coastal  lates must  be  taken  care  of  over  85  years  of  operation,  are  the  trying  jo  share  a  decreasing 
CHARTER  FIELD 
a 
certain 
period 
of 
time), 
ad­
lines. 
Clyde­Mallory 
Lines, 
Savannah 
amount 
of 
cargo, 
cargo 
which 
ministrative  expenses,  etc. 
How  o'verly  optimistic  this was 
Line, 
Southerfi 
Steamship 
Com­
was 
going 
more 
and 
more 
to 
CITES  PLANS 
is 
gauged  by  the  fact^ that  al­
Small  wonder,  then,  that  the 
pany,  Los  Angeles  Line  (soon  trucks,  trains  and  even  planes.  most  all  of  the  ships  in  the  in­
domestic 
steamship 
busine§s 
Frank  P.  Grier,  head" of  the 
to  be revived by  Mr.  Alexander);  It  is  doubtful,  therefor,  if 
new  line  mentioned  above,  says  hasn't  attracted  many  independ­ and  the  Bridgeport,  Norwalk,  there  will ever  again be  as  many  tercoastal  trade  are  now  under 
charter  from  the  government^ 
that  his  company  plans  to  pro­ ent  investors! 
New  Londoti,  Norwich  and  Co­ lines  or  as many  ships  operating  with  privately­owned  vessels  no 
Some  hope  "  of  overcoming  lonial  Lines. 
vide  direct  service  from  Hamp­
in  the  domestic  trades  as  there  more  than  you  can  count  on  the 
ton  Roads  to  Ne^  York,  and  these  difficulties  is  seen  if  the 
were 
in  the  1930s. 
fingers  of  both  hands. 
Since  1817,  the  coastwise  and 
from  Hampton  Roads  to  Boston  Interstate  Coihmerce  Commis­
"Th^ importance  of  the  coast­
intercoastal, 
trades 
have 
been 
sion, 
which 
now 
allows 
railroads 
and  Providence. 
HEAVIER  HAULS 
wise 
trade  to  the  national^econ­
restricted to  American  ships,  and 
There  has  been  no  coastwise  to  meet  water  competition­  by  for  over  a  century  many  of  ­our  It  is  pertinent  to  remember  omy  and  to  national  defense," 
steamship  service  out  of  Nor­ charging  rates  less  than  the  ports have  handled  rriore  domes­ that  ships  now  being  used  on  said  the  Maritime  Commission, 
folk  since  before  the  war.: New  steamship  lines  can  quote,  will  tic  than  overreas  cargoes,  with  the  domestic  runs  are  Victories,  "dictates  its  preservation.  The 
York  in  preWar  years  saw  many  reverse  its  position  in  favor  of  not  a  few  of  our  seaboard  cities  Liberties  and  C­4s,  carrying  achievement  of  this  objective 
coastwise fines 
branching  ­  out  ship  operators. 
owning  their  ver.y  existence , and  2,000  tons,  or  more  cargo  than  will  require  the  cooperation  of 
from  its  harbor to touch, seaboard  RATES ALONE NOT ENOUGH prosperity ^to  the  acqpssibility  of  their  predecessors  did  on  the  the  Intei*state  Commerce  Corh­
points  all  over  the  nation,  from 
mission,  the  Maritime  Commis­ • '."i 
raw  materials  ^nd  markets  same  runs  before  the  war. 
A 
Portland,  Maine,  to  Portland,  Even  with  this  advantage,  through  domestic  water  trans­
sion,  the  carriers  involved,  the  M 
They 
are 
also 
from 
three 
to 
however,  it  is  felt  that  radical 
Oregon.  Not  so  today. 
six  knots  faster.  This  greater  labor  unions  and  shippers." 
port. 
.  The  same  is  true  of  Boston,  changes  in  cargo  handling  must 
which  in  1939  had  seven  coast­ come  about  to  make  the  domes­
.ri •  
TWU'CIO  EXPRESSES 'SINCERE THANKS'  FOR  AFL  AID 
Wise  steamship  lines,  with  but  tic  steamship  business  a  paying 
proposition. 
one  in  operation  today. 
Although  there  are  now  more  Some  innovations  have  already 
than  1,200  privately­owned  been  suggested  and  are  in  pro­
freighters  under  the  American  cess  of  being  carried  out.  H.  F. 
flag,  the  number  of  privately­ Alexander,  well­known  west 
Affiliated, with the Congresi  of  Industrial Organizations 
owned  coastwise  and  intercoastal  coast shipping  executive  who  op­
erated the "H.  F.  Alexander" and 
MICHAEL J.  QUILL 
ships  is  almost  negligible. 
UMrullMal PmM«l 
other  famous  ships  in  prewar 
153  WEST  64TH  STREET 
Before  the  war  they comprised  years,  has  been  granted  $10,­
CUSTAV FABER 
NEW  YORK  23,  N.  Y. 
the  greater part  of  our merchant  000,000  by  the  Maritime. Com­
­marine,  numbering 400  vessels of  mission  to  build'  a  fleet  of  pas­
some  2,700,000  deadweight  tons.  senger­trailer* ships  which  will 
Tcu  TRAFALCAB  4­3200 
ifU'L Vke Prendents 
.Those  that  are now operating  in­ carry, highway  trailer  trucks  as 
UCttAHD  D0WNC8 
t^oastal  are  almost  entirely  oh  a means  of  cutting cargo costs. 
WUUAU  CROCAN 
MATTHEW  CUINAN 
charter  from  the  US  Maritime 
lUUUS W. BARVCLL 
Jamary  A,  1950 
AKDRETP  2. 
Commission  and  are  scheduled  The tot  two  of  these,  ships 
MARK JCAVANACK 
will 
soon 
be 
built 
for 
operation 
for  return  to  the  government 
lOHN LOPES 
between  Los  Ahgeles  and  San 
FRANK  OXONNOR  ^ 
next. summer. 
CLUS VAN  RITER 
Francisco.  A future  article in  the 
Mr. .Bay Vhlta, Praaldant 
Our  prewar  intercoastal fleet  LOG  wUl  teU  about  these  ves­
Central Tradaa and Labor Asse&amp;bly of 
Ta^)a 
;­alone  comprised  150  ships  of  sels  in  detail. 
ia^L Executive  Board 
Ta^ia, Florida 
more  than  1,400,000  d.w.t.  Less 
lOUN CABILL 
Another  interesting  proposi­
tium  half  this  number  are  run­
TIMOTHY CRONIN 
Oaar Freaident Whitai 
tion 
toward 
reviving 
the 
coast­
JAMES CONNELL 
ning  between  the ..east  and  west 
LOUia  DWYER 
wise 
lines'has come 
from a ship­
CHESTER EBERSON 
coasts •  today. 
I hava baaa adrisad  CIO Regional Diraetor Cfaarles Gowl as 
RICHARD FISHER 
ping  man  by  the  name  of  W. 
MICBAEL FITZCIBBON 
well aa our International Bepreeentatlvae Jack Ryan amd Villian 
UNPROFITABLE 
H.  Rutland  in  Washington,  D.C. 
ROBERT FRAHKLUf 
' 
Orogan of the aplendid support extended to our striking Local 27A 
DANIEL CILUARnN 
BUSTER GIORDANO 
by the Xxscntive Board of the Central Trades luid  Labor Assanbly 
Even  though  our  domestic  His  idea  is to  have  the  Mari­
ROBERT  A.  HAYES 
of Tai^. 
shipping  is protected  by  law from  time  Commission  sell  21  C­4 
JOHN  HAMILTON 
SAMUEL HfiCHT 
foreign  competition,  and  the  type  vessels  for  eonversion  into 
JAMES aORST 
a 
specialize!^ kind 
of 
freighter 
On bataalf of the International Offloers of our Union, I want to 
PATRICK HYNES 
American flag  has  a  monopoly 
WILLIAM  UNDNER 
soprass to yon, anif  your fallow Board Hembers our sinoera thanks 
for 
carrying 
truck 
contrdners. 
in  these  trades,  the  domestic 
PATRICK  MAHEDT 
for your very 
fine cooperation and public expression in our be­
These 
contaiiiers, 
of.two 
stan­
DAVID 
RiECK 
lines  claim  to  have  lost  money 
PATRICK  ROaOCSON 
iMlf 
•
 
dardized 
sizes, 
50­ 
and 
30 
feet 
ateadily  during  the  ten  years  or 
PRANK SUEEBAN 
JOHN J. SHERRT 
flo before  World  War  I.  And  this  in  length,  would  be  loaded  at 
Thl* instanea of labor solidarity between the AFL and CIO ia nost 
FRED SULLIVAN 
the 
shipper's 
store, 
factory 
or 
JOHN R.  TIPTON 
despite  the  fact  they  obtained 
baax^ning, and synboUe of the neeting of ninda by the AFL and 
WILLIAM 
WRIGHT 
their  ships,  for  the  most  part,  warehouse  and  be  dispatched 
CIO leader* at the r*o*iit world trade union nesting in London* 
from  the  World'War  I fleet  of  right  to  the  pier,  where  it  would 
surplus  freighters  on  very  good  be  lifted  from  the  truck  and 
Again pur vary gratafhl thanks to you.  Ton nay be assured that 
, 
should the occasion arls* idian wa can be helpful to you,^ doing so 
terms  from  the  old  US  Shipping  stowed  aboard  the  ship. 
will give us great plaasur*. 
Board.' 
PROCESS  RisVERSED  ' 
,•  
^ 
High  costs  of  handling freight, 
Fraternally yenrs. 
plus  intense  competition  from,  The  process  would  be  reversed 
at 
the 
other 
end 
of 
the 
line 
and 
trucks,  have  been  given  as  coii­
'  ­•  
tributing  to,  the  imhappy finan­ the  commodities  would  be  de­
­ 
­v­rl/r ^ •
 
livered 
b^ 
truck 
without 
the'ex­
cial'""position  of  the  domestic 
Qttstar  Fiaber 
pensive 
l procedure 
of 
loading 
Intarnatienal  Secratary­J'reaBurar 
lines  before  the  war. 
and  unloading  by  winches,  slings 
CFtdr 
Now  they  have  even  greater  and  hand  labor. 
"twu­lOO­elo 
problems  to  face  in  trying  to  Ml*.  Rutland  would  like 'the 
rewve  prewar  services. 
Maritime  Commission  to  aell­ its 
"High  cargo  costs"  haye  gone  C­4s  for  $500,000,  plus­the  cost 
This  letter  to'the  Tampa  Central  Trades  and  Labor  Assembly,  from  the  CIO  Transport 
even  higher.  The  ships  they  op­ of  ..conversion  and  the . cost  of  Workers  Uidon,  is  visual  proof  of  the  increasing  friendliness  between  the  two  labor  federa­
erated  before  the  war have  been  building  enough  ntandardized  tions.  Although  fhere  have  beetf? instiances  of  inter­organizational  solidarily  before  —  the  Sea­
sunk,  been  scrapped  or  consign­ containers  to  equip  a fleet  of  farers  have  an  oufstapding  record  in  this—only  recently  has  this  mutual  aid lieen  accelerated. •  
ed .to  other  uses. 
The  amiable  relations  in  London,  when  the  AFL  and  CIO  help^ set  up  the  anti­commie  Inter­
21  ^hips. 
ol  free  Trade  Unions,  did much  to foster  this spirit,  and  AFL  unionists  ! 
The postwar  demands for  mov­
Operators  ^'ould  then  use  the  • national 
ing  freight  call  for  greater  ships  to  revive  such  prewar  do­^  are  talking  of  achieving  oirganic  unity  between  both organizations* in  the  near  future.  Toward  f ­  • = 
speeds,  anyway,  and  most  of  the  mestic  steamship  services  as  the  this  end,  the  AFL  General  CoundL  meeting  this week  in Miami  Beach,  Florida,  voted  to author­
prewar  ships  on  the  intercoastal  old  New  Bedford*  Line,  which  ize  its  top  officials  to  approach  the  CIO  on  this ­matter. 

.1 

Iransport  ^K^qrkers  Union  of  y\merica 

�Pag* Four 

TBB  SEAFA]kBRS  LOB 

Tug strike Ends; 
PIck­Up  Looms 
fdr  Baltimore 

DUTCH TRADE UNION OFFICIALS VISIT  SIU 

By  WILLIAM  (Curly)  RENTZ 
BALTIMORE—The  Ore  Line 
'  ships  are  helping  to  keep  things 
moving  in  this  port.  Shipping 
has  been  slow  here,  but  Ore 
ships  have  been  coming  in 
{iretty  steadily,  at  the  rate  of 
about  one  every  other  day. 
The  tug  strike  in  this port  has 
been  settled,  and  we're  glad  to 
r^)ort  that  shipping  is  resum­
ing  normal  proportions.  The 
tugmen,  members  of  the  Inter­
national  Longshoremen's  Asso­
ciation,  with  whom  we  are  affi­
liated  through  the  AFL  Mari­
time  Trades  Department,  are  a 
mighty  important  factor  in  the 
docking  of  vessels,  as  the  strike 
proved. 
Skippers  were, cussing  as  they, 
had  to  Iwing  their  ships  in  with­
W­
p:  out  tugs,  and  vessels  and  docks 
took  a  terrific  banging  in  the 
process. 

iNobiie  invitet^ 
Ail  Seafarers  ' 
To Hail  Opening 
By  CAL  TANNER 

w 
m.. 

te 

Friday.  Fabniary  10.  lO&amp;O 

During  recent  tour  of  New  York  waterfront,  representatives  &lt;»f  Holland's  major  unions  stop­
ped  off  at  SIU  Headquarters  in  New  York  to  observe  Union  Hiring  Hall  and  rotary  system  of 
shipping.  From  left ' to  right:  H.  Kaper,  Secretary  of  the  Building  Trades  Union,  Amsterdam: 
Paul  Gonsorchik,  SIU  Dispatcher;  R.  Laan,  President  of  the  Transport  Workers  Unioh.  Rotter­
dam.  and  J.  veui  Eibergen.  Chairman  of  the  Christian  Building  Trades  Union.  Utrecht.  Visi­
tors  were  here  under  auspices  of  ECA. 

MOBILE—Shipping  in the  Port 
of  Mobile  for, the  last  couple  of 
weeks  was  dead  slow,  with  ap­
proximately  88  men shipped dur­
ing  the  period.  There  were  11 
payoffs,  13  sigh­ons  and  three 
ships  in­transit 
Ships  paying  off  were  in  good 
shape.  They  were  the  Monarch 
of  the  Sea,  .Fairport,  City  of 
Alma,"  Iberville,  DeSoto,  Wild 
Ranger,  Morning  Light  all  Wa­
terman;  Clipper,  Cavalier,  Puri­
tan,  Alcoa,  and  the  Coral  Sea, 
Orion. 
Signing  on  were  the  Clipper, 
Cavalier  and  Puritan,  headed  for 
the  British  West  Indies;  Mon­
arch  of  the  Sea  and  Wild  Ran­
ger,  bound  for Puerto  Rico;  Iber­
ville  and  DeSoto,  resuming  their 
coastwise runs;  City  of  Ahna  and 
Fairport,*  destined  for  Mediter­
r'ean  ports,  and  the  Steel  Inven­
tor,  bound  for  Java. 

MILL  STRIKE 
Other  activity  on  the  Balti­
TAKE  REPLACEMENTS 
more  labor  front  centers  around 
In­transit  were  the  Bessemer 
the  strike  of  the  mill  workers. 
Victory 
and  the  Greeley  Victory, 
The  SIU  is  helping  these  people 
both 
coastwise 
vessels,  and  the 
In  addition,  we  had  the  Ames  We  notice  that  the  Army  and 
By  JOE  ALGINA 
in  every  way  possible,  and  is 
Alcoa 
Ranger. 
All 
of  these  ships 
\'ictory.  Victory  Carriers;  the  Navy  are  still  operating  as 
attempting  to  line  up  the  sup­
NEW  YORK —This  port  was  T  inity,  Carras; The  Cabins  and  though  they  were  in  the  ship­ were  contacted  and  necessary 
port  of  other unions  in this  area.  no  exception  to  what  seems  to 
ping  business.  Ships  operated  by  replacements  furnished. 
This  strike  has  been  in  pro­ have  been  the  rule  for  shipping  I'le  Bull  Run,  Ma^hiasen. 
both 
branches  of  the  service  are  The  Mobile  Marine  Hospital 
gress  for  about  three"  months,  in  the  past  two  weeks.  All  has  The  Dorothy  and  the  Inez 
carrying 
cargoes  in  competition  lists  the  following  Seafarers  as 
went  into  layup  pending  settler 
been  rather  quiet. 
with 
private 
operators. 
patients  this  week:  T.  Little,  J. 
ment  of  the  sugar  workers' 
Not  that  the  Patrolmen  were  ;drike  in  the  Islands.  They  join  Several  months  ago  Senator  Berrier,  L.  Howard  ^nd  Tim  . 
n't  kept  busy,  however.  For  pay­ the  Ann  Marie.  These  vessels  Warren  Magnuson  called  atten­ Burke. 
offs  we  had  the  Seatrains  New  will  be  reactivated  upon  conclu­ tion  to  this  matter,  and  agreed 
Among  those  waiting  to  ship 
Jersey,  New  York,  Texas,  Ha­ sion  of  the  beef. 
with  the  unions  that  the­ Army  from  the  Mobile  Hall  are  D.  E. 
vana;  the  Isthmian  ships  St. 
and  Navy  ought  to  keep  out  of  McNeil,  H.  N.  Eby,  Jack  Adams, 
Augustine  Victory,  Steel  Maker  On  the  sign­on  side,  were  the  the  cargo­carrying  business. 
W.  C. • Smith, Lionel  Jackson,  R.  . 
and  Steel  Rover;  the  Waterman  following  ships:  Frances,  Bull; 
They're 
still 
at 
it, 
however* 
Marquette 
Victory, 
Steel 
Flyer 
Bell, 
C. 'E.  I^ymour,  B.  A.  Dar­
scows  Choctaw,  Fairland  anc 
and 
it 
seems 
that 
legislation 
and 
Steel 
King, 
Isthmian, 
­and 
nell, 
D. 
M.  Saxon,  C.  E.  Long, 
Azalea  City,  and  the  BuU  Line 
should 
be 
enacted 
to 
halt 
this 
the Robin 
Mowbray. 
All 
the 
Bull 
B. 
Veiner 
and  O.  J.  Carr. 
vessels  Dorothy,  Kathryn,  Eliza­
practice. 
Line 
ships 
signed 
on 
again, 
as 
beth,  Puerto  Rico,  Suzanne,  and 
A  new  cbritract  has  been  sign­
did  the  Seatra;ns,  the  Bull  Run,  Oh,  j'es  —'  your  1950  assess­
Inez. 
ed 
covering  the  two  big  tow­
Trinity  and  The  Cabins. 
ments  are  due.  The  wise  thing  boat  companies  in  this  port. 
with  nothing  happening.  How­
There  were  very  few  beefs  on  is  to  take  care  of  this  matter  at  The  contract  will  run  until  Jan­
ever,  it  is  hoped  that  the  com­
pany  will  take  a  different'view­
these  ships  and  all  were  settjed  the  earliest  possible  moment,  so  uary,  1951,  and  is  essentially 
that  yoi^  can  forget  about  it  for  the  same  agreement  obtained 
okay. 
point,  now  that  strike  activity 
the 
rest  of  the  year.  ' 
is being  stepped  up. 
We'd  like  to  issue  an  import­
last  year  which,  incidentally,  is 
. The 
March 
of 
Dimes 
drive 
for 
ri. 
ant  reminder  to  men  sailing  the 
the  best  in  the  business. 
the fight  on  infantile  paralysis 
Robin  Line  ships,  especially. 
At  long  last,  it  looks ^as  though 
By  BEN  LAWSON 
,  is  xmder  way,  and  this  is  one 
Some  of  the  crewmembers  of 
we  will  have  the  formal  open­
outfit  that  deserves  the  support 
these  vessels  have  very  unwisely 
ing of  our renovated  Hall  around 
of  everybody.  The  National  BOSTON—In­transit  ships con­ missed  ships  on  the  African  run 
­4  ' 
February  15,  all  major  altera­
stituted 
the 
principal 
activity 
for 
Foundation  for  Infantile  Paraly­
and  have  ­gotten  "lost"  in  the 
tions  having  been  completed. 
sis  has  done  a  wonderful  job  in  this  port  during  the  past  two  jungles. 
weeks.  Otherwise,  shipping  was 
It  will  take  about  a  week  to 
By  WILLIAM  McKAY. 
helping  out  children  and  adults 
dull. 
get  the  place  cleaned  up  and 
JUGGED 
hit  by  the  disease. 
• SEATTLE —  Seattle  shipping  in  Shape  for  the  opening.  All 
;^
The  callers  were  the­Greeley 
Not  only  are  these  fellows  has  been  fair. 
FULL  HELP 
Seafarers  down  in  this neighbor­
Victory,  Waterman;  Santa  Clara 
subject  to  the fine  imposed  for  We've  been  kept  busy  at  times 
hood  around  February  15  should 
Any  worker's  family  hit  by  Victory,  Steel  Rover,  and  Steel  missing  ship,  ' but  the.  gqvem­
polio  can  get  help  in  the  form  Maker,  Isthmian;  Canton  Vic­ ment  down  in  South  Africa  has  contacting  SlU­contracted  ships  be  sure  to  drop  into  the  Hall. 
of  medical  treatment,  transpor­ tory,  Waterman,  and  the  Doro­ been  making  it  mighty  tough  for  in  the  outlying  ports—the  SS  Word  has  just  been  received 
Mobilian  in  Raymond,  SS  Ponce  from  the  Mobile  Marine  Hospi­
tation,  special  braces  and  any  thy,  Bull.  The  SUP­contracted  them. 
de  Leon  in  Aberdeen  and  SS  tal  that  Brother  Raymond  Fos­
other  kind  of  gear  needed  by  tanker,  SS  Cache,  was  also  here 
Men  have  been  tossed  into  the  Hastings  in  Olympia. 
polio  victims  by  merely  apply­ and  took  a  few  replacements. 
ter,  Stewardj  died  there  of  a 
clink 
fbr  as  long  as  four  months.  In  addition,  we  paid  off  the 
ing  to  the  local  chapter  of  the  There  were" some  beefs  on  the 
heart  ailment.  The  "boys  in  the 
Ater  being  held  for  that  length 
Foimdation. 
Steel  Rover  and  the  Santa  Clara  of  time  they've  been  put  aboard  Citrus ^Packer  in  Portland.  These  JBall  sent  a  floral  wi­eath  t6  the 
are  all  in  the  day's­^­or  night's  funeral.  All  hands  extend  their 
If  we  all  join  the  March  of  Victory.  They  will  be  settled 
the first 
passenger 
ship 
arriving 
—work.  We  got  to  the  Mobilian  deep  sympathy  to  the  family  of 
Dimes and give our  share,  there's  at  the  payoff  port. 
in  port  bound  for  the  States.  at  8  o'clock  at  night  to  investi­ Brother  Foster. 
a  good  chance  that  the fight  on 
And  the  rub  is  that  the  fare  for  gate Hhe  death  of  Brother  Allan 
ON  THE  BEACH 
polio  wiU  be  successfuL 
this  passage  has  to  be  paid  by  McMillan,  Chief  Cook,  who  was 
The  State  of  shipping  in  Bal­
Freddie  Johnson  and  Don  the  ^victim. 
reported  missing  at  sea  after  a 
timore  and  other  ports  ought  Hodge  are  among  the  Seafarers 
to  show  those  in  our  govern­ on  the  beach  in  Beantown  this  So,  watch  oqt. Don't  miss  those  fire  had  started"  in  his  room. 
ment  the  inadvisability  of  giv­ week.  In  the  Boston  Marine  ships. 
STUCK  ON  MOUNTAIN 
Readers notifying the SEA­
ing  our  ships  away  to  foreign  Hospital  are  SIU members  Frank 
We  arrived  back  /n  Seattle  FARERS LOG  of a change  in 
maritime  nations. 
Alasavich  and  F.  ­Ben  Gordy. 
at 
3  AM ^after  being  stuc^  on  mailing  address  are  re­
Foreign  ships  are  becoming  It  was  with  deep"^ regret  that 
\he  mountain  road.  Then  a  quested  to  include  their  old 
more  and  more  active,  and  Am­ we  learned  of  the  passing  of 
erican  ships  are  rusting  in  the  Shipping  Commissioner  Leo 
Membership  rules  require  hurry*  call  frjom  the  Mobilian's  address  along  with  the  new. 
boneyards  and  seamen  are  sit­ Quinn  this  week.  We  feel  that  every  man  entering  the  D^egate,  and' back  we  went  to 
In  addition  to  making  easier 
ting  on  the  beach. 
seamen  have  lost  a  good  friend.  Union  Halls  to  show  his  board­ the  ship  at  11:30  PM. 
the 
switch­over  It  will  al^ 
.  And,  despite  this,  the  govern­
We,  caught  some  sleep  aboard 
We've  had  some  mighty  Union  Book,  ProdBook,  per­
ment  maritime  schools  are  still  strange  weather  up  this  way ^  mit or whitecard  to the dodr*  the  vessel,  then  called  the  boys  guarantee  uninterrupted 
turning  out  thousands  of  guys,  far  this  winter.  The  other  day  man.  This  is  for  the  mem*  to  a  meeting  at  8:30'  AM  the  mailing  service. 
who 
are  only  complicating  the  we  got  an  advance  taste*  of  bershijp's  protection.  Don't  next  mqrmng."  Everything  was 
AU  notifications  of  change*., 
l|v'"  already 
tough  employment  sit­'  summer,,  with  the  temperatme  waste  the  Doorman's  —  or •   straightened  out.  / 
of  address  should fee  ad­; 
uation  for  experienced  seanjen.  bouncing  up  to  71  degrees.  Win­ your  own—time  by  arguing 
At  present,  there  are  13  book­ dressed  to  the  Editor,  SEA­ ^ 
It's  about  time  someone  took  a  ter  was  back  the  next  day  this  point.  Obsfl^e  the  ndes  members ­ and  23  perrhits  regis­
FARERS  LOG,  51  ^yer 
clear  look  at  things  ­r­  and  did  when  a  foot  of  snow  covered  you  make. 
tered  for  shipping  in  the  Seattle  Street,  New  York  4.  N.  Y. 
sometifiing  about  it 
tiie  ground.  ' 
. 
" 
Branch.  . 
"* 

New  York  No  Exroptmn  In Shipping Slump 

Boston  Shipping 
is  On  Duli 

Seattle  Reports 
Fair  Shipping 

Log Subscribers 

Memb'mhlp Rules 

�f^day&gt;  FiilinHUry  liQi,  1950 

Seafarei^ 

World's  Waterfronts 
Almost every  mail  delivery  brings to  the  LOG  photo­
graphs  taken  by  Seafarers  on  Union­cOntracted  ships 
throughout  the  world. A  considerable  portion of  the  shots, 
of  course,  depict  the  photographers'  shipmates  at  work 
or  relaxing  during  time  off.  But  many  of  the  pix  show 
that  SIU  cameramen .have an  eye  for  interesting  sidelights 
of  a  voyage. 
The  photos  on  this  page  are  a  sample  of  the  recent 
observations  made  by  SIU  lensmen  in  far­flung  ports. 

Cargo  handling  methods  here  and  abroad  always  interest  Seafarer  Glen  Vinson,  who  takes 
notM  with  his camera.  In  photo  above.  Glen  shaws  modem  machinery  used  in  loading  coal  on 
vessel  at  Edgewater,  N.J.  Coal  car  has  just  entered  elevator  and  is  about  to  be  lifted  to  point 
where  it  will  be  turned  &lt;m  side  and  contents  dumped  through  shute  into  ship's  hold. 

Vinson  was  on  hand  with  his  camera  when  ship  tied  up 
at  Cherbourg,  France,  where  coal  is  transferred  to  railroad 
cars  in  buckets. 

This man  and  wife  are  longshore  workers  in  Vizagapatam, 
on  the  Bay  of  Bengal,  India,  but  the  feminine  half  of  the 
team  does  the  muscle  work.  While  hubby  does  the  checking, 
the  delicate­looking  lady  unloads  cargo  down  in  No.  5  hold 
—for  12  hours a day,  from  6  AM  to 6  PM.  Each gets one rupee, 
or  two  bits,  for  the  day's  work,  according  to  Seaffurer  Vic_ 
Litardi,  who  took  the  picture. 

y­l 

The  SS^jGolden­City  has  its  complement  of  cameramen­
Here  ship's  photographer  Bill  Bairth  (cenie^r)  reviuses  usual^ 
procedure  by posing himself.  He k flanked by  Barney  McNally 
(left}  apl  Tom  Walker. 
,  ' 

This  quartet  of  Seafarers  from  the  crew  of  the  Alcoa  Clipper  was  photographed  at  the  en!&gt; 
trance  to  the  country  dub  in  Trinidad,  BWI,  duaring n  recent  stopover.  From  left  to  right  are 
Bill  M^on,  Johxmy  Bluelock,  Goodwin  and  Bud  Callahan.  After* obliging  the  cameraman,  the  ­
­ 
lads  centimied on  their  way  to  the  swhnming  pool  where  they  paddled  around  to  keep  waist­
Buss  down.  ZHds  Maztinee  submitted  the  phoht. 
/ 

l 

�Pag* Six 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Friday,  Februfiry  10,  1950 

'ii­

SHIPS' MINimS AMD MEWS 
k 

f 

1942Transfer To Gateway City Opened Way  George  Stevenson,  SIU  Man 
To  US  Citizenship  For  British  Seafarer  Since '43,  Dies Aboard  Yaka 

George  H.  Stevenson,  who  died  of  a  heart  attack 
few  months  of  a  Russian  winter  aboard  the SS Yaka on Dec.  3, was  buried  in Sailor's  jCenie­
in  Murmansk,  the  Gateway  City 
returned «to  New  York  and  pro­ tery.  New  York  City,  on  Dec.  23,  the  LOG  has  been 
vided  Scotty  with  his  first  view  informed.  He  was  61  years  old. 
Brother Stevenson  suffered  the 
of  the  US. 
heart  attack  several  hours  before 
Aubusson  was  issued  SIU  book  the  Yaka  arived  in  Panama,  ac­
No.  24938  in  New  York  on  Mar.  cording  to  Lonnie  Lonski  of  the 
5,  1943  and  has  been  sailing  as  Deck  Department.  The  body  was 
a  Seafarer  ever  since.  Upon  join­ taken  ashore,  where  an  under­
ing  the  SIU,  ,Scotty  took  steps  taker  made  arrangements­  for 
to  the  future. 
to  get  the  citizenship  which  be­ shipment  to  the  States. 
came  final  last  month. 
As  things  developed,  though, 
Another  SlU­contractcd  ship, 
r  the  Gateway  City  opened  the 
After  expressing  his  apprecia­ the  SS  Twin  Falls  Victory,  pass­
r  way  to  a  new  life  for  Brother 
tion  to  the  Union  and  his  Broth­ ing  through  the  Canal  Zone  en 
f  Aubusson.  Last  month,  he  be­
ers  for  their  friendship  and  co­ route  to  Brooklyn,  paused  to 
­  came  a  full­fledged  American 
operation,  Aubusson  had  a  spec­ take  the  casket  aboard, for  de­
s  citizen. . 
if  word  of  advice  to  alien  mem­ livery  to  New  York. 
bers. 
&gt;'  "I'm  happy  and  proud  about 
MADE  MURMANSK  RUN 
"I urge  all  aliens in  the SIU  to 
it,"  says  Scotty,  and  its  easy  to 
make 
every 
effort 
to 
obtain 
their 
Brother 
Stevenson,  a  Chief 
see  he  means  it. 
ERNEST  AUBUSSON 
citizenship  papers,"  he  said.  "I  Cook,  joined  the  SIU  in  April 
r'.  Scotty  is  especially  grateful 
can  assure  them  that  they;,  will  8,  1943  and  had  sailed  on  one  of 
^  rto  the  SIU  and  to  the  many 
i  ­friends  I've  made  among  Seafar­ aboard  a  British  ship  in  Loch  find  all  hands  veiy  cooperative.  the  first  convoys  to  Russia"^ dur­
i  ers  whose  helpful  hdvice  will  Ewe,  Scotland,  when  the  Gate­ And  any  effort  will  be  worths  ing  World  War  II. 
way  City  arrived  in  port. 
while." 
"The  entire  crew  of  the  Yaka 
help  me  be  a  better  citizen." 
.  The English­born  Seafarer  says  The  SlU­contracted  vessel  was  Scotty  took  another  important  mourned  the  passing  of  Brother 
^he  never  dreamed  that  the  in  need  of  an  AB  and  imder  the  step  last  year.  He  married  an  Stevenson,"  Lonski  sqid.  A  col­
Casket  containing  body  of 
' switch­over  to  the  Gateway  City  wartime  arrangement  between  American  lass  on  Feb.  14—St.  lection  was  made  and  the  pro­
George 
Stevenson  is  taken 
England 
and 
the 
United 
States, 
Valentine's 
Day. 
So 
his 
first 
an­
ceeds 
forwarded 
to 
the 
late 
Sea­
would  prove  to  be  a  stepping 
aboard 
Twin 
Falls  Victory  in 
Scotty 
signed 
on 
the 
Gateway 
niversary 
will 
be 
cause 
for 
a 
farer's 
wife, 
Cecilia, 
who 
resides 
•  stone  to  American  citizenship. 
Panama  for  last  voyage  to^; 
in  New  York  City. 
In  the  summer  of  1942  he  was  City  to  fill  the  vacancy.  After  a  double  celebration. 
Mrs.  Stevenson  expressed  her  New  York.  Photo  by  Chief^'; / 
appreciation  to  the  Yaka  v:i'ew  Electrician  Merwyn  Watson. 
and  also  to  the  men  of  the  Twin 
Falls  Victoiy  for  their  condolen­ No. 25245  and  was  in  good  standf:­
ces. 
ing  at  the  time  of  his  death.  The 
Brother  Stevenson  held  Book  Union  paid  for  burial  expenses^ 
(The  author  of  the  follow­ such  time  as  those  machines  well  as  to  SIU  passenger  .ships 
ing  article  is  a  Stewardess  were  needed  in  the  SIU  Hall.  and  former  crew  members  of  the 
These  machines  have  done  much  SS  Puerto  Rico  who  wish  to  be 
,pboard  the  SS  Puerto  Rico.) 
to  keep  the  paper  going. 
kept  informed  of  the  ship's  ac 
By  HILDA  REVESZ 
The  Advocate's  policy  has  al­ tivities. 
The  SS  Puerto  Rico  sailed  on  ways  been  to  back  our  imion  Our  sports  page  is  kept  alive 
by  "SALTY  DICK' 
her  maiden  voyage  from  New  100  percent. In  addition, we  have  by  Roy  Grundner.  While  the 
York  on  August 18,  1949.  During  endeavored  to  encourage  our  sMp's  sport  life  is  confined  to 
that first  trip  the  idea  of  pub­ brothers  and  si'^ters  to  hold  open  Softball,  our  Sports  Editor  helps 
lishing a  newspaper for  the crew  discussions  on  ways  and  means  gather  other  material  when  his  ­Donald  Strong  would  like  his  Several  times  I  went  shopping? 
was  conceived  by  George  Boney,  of  keeping  SIU  tops  in  the mar­ assigned  duties  are  over.  The  SIU  friends  to  write  to  him  care  in  New  Orleans  and  twice  I  was ^ 
our  first  editor,  and  Kenneth  itime  unions.  In  order  to  keep  board  of  directors  consists  of  of  the  Central  Alberta  Sanator­ taken  for  a  floorwalker.  Now 
Eokholm, our  present editor,  with  the  Advocate  interesting  to  all,  Edward  X.  Mooney,  Nick  Wu­ ium,  C|jgary  Altar,  Canada.  He  afraid  to enter  department stores^ 
the aid  of  a few  other  enthusias­ we  added  a  sport  page,  a  scan­ china  and Reed  Humphries. They  may  be  there  for  a  long  while.  . .  .  Ivan  During  tried  to  joiri 
tic crew  members.  It  was at  that  dal  page  and  also  photographs  also  contribute  articles  every  is­ . . .  The  crew  of  the  SS  Del  the 'Salvation  Army  and  was  told 
time  the Advocate  was  born. —  of  various  crew  members  either  sue. We  have  also accepted  many  Norte  heips to support  the  Beth­ he  had  a  long  wait. He  generally 
literary  contributions  from  var­ lehem  Orphan  Home  by  donat­ ships  out  as  a  Waiter.  . .  In 
The first  issue  consisted  of  at  work or  play. 
ing  a  sum  of  money  eVery  trip.  New  Orleans,  movies  are  reason­
ious^members  of  the  crew. 
two  pages  which  were finally 
PLENTY  OF  WORK 
put  out  after  many  difficulties. 
These  are  the  many  things  Many  of  us  stop  over  at  St.  able.  Quite  a  few  of  the  gang 
The 
duties 
of 
each 
staff 
mem­
can  be  seen  at  the  Strand­Joy; 
We.  had  to  borrow  the  Chief 
ber  are  many  and  varied.  The  that  make  up  the  Advocate.  We  ­Thomas,  V.I.  to  refuel.  The  most  A  suggestion:  All  members  of 
Steward's  typewriter  to  cut  our 
Editor,  Kenneth  Eckholm,  and  will  continue  the  publishing  of  reasonable  place  to  buy  in  that  our  Union  should  stop  at' the 
stencils,  and  obtain  permission 
Associate  Editor  Hilda  Revesz,  our  paper  as  long  as  the  inter­ port  is  the  Bolero.  . .  Adolfo  Halls,  whenever  possible.  This 
from  the  Purser's  office  to  use 
write  many  of  the  articles,  ar­ est  and  enthusiasm  remains.  We  Capote  says  he's  willing  to  take  applies  to  men  working  asea  arid 
their mimeograph  machine. When 
range  the  layout  of  the  paper,  hope  that  will  be for  a  long  time  any  ship  as  long  as  he's  home  ashore. . .  Herman  Troxclair's. 
George  Bortiy  left  us,  after  our 
every  week. 
to  come. 
wife  is.  sick  and  the  bills  fdiv 
second  voyage,  Kenneth  Eck­ gather  material  and  sometimes 
even  help  cut  the  stencils.  The 
medical  expenses  are  mounting. 
holm  inherited  the  office  of  Edi­
tor. Working  under  difficult  con­ Executive  Editor,  Stanley  Haw­
A  certain  Brother  likes  to 
kins,  cuts  stencils  'also  and  ga­
ditions  was  a  strain  for  the  en­
"put 
on"  while  in  New  Orleans. 
thers  material.  It  is  also  one  uf 
tire  staff  imtil  we finally  got 
He  visits  the  most  fashionable 
his  duties  to  oversee  the  distri­
permission  from  the  membership 
hotels  and  restaurants.  One  day 
bution  of  the  paper. 
to buy  a  t3T&gt;ewriter  and  a  mime­
Seafarers  aboard  the  Mathiasen  tanker  SS  The  Cabins  he  came face  to face  with  people 
We  haye  two  Managing  Edi­
ograph  from  the  ship's  fund. 
tors,  James  Golder­ and  James  are ,in  favor  of  an  annual' assessment  to  finance  publica­ he  had  met  a  few  nights  prevr 
Brother  Eckholm  took  his 
iously  and; was  his  face  red­
DuBose.  They  are  in  complete  tion  of  the  LOG., 
•  
^ 
problems  to  Headquarters  offi­
charge  of  the  advertising  and  In  a  resolution  adopted  at  the  ment  among  the  membership  They  were  cruise  passengers  on 
cials.  They  seemed  eager  for  us 
photography.  Our  advertisers  Jan.  21  shipboard  meeting,  the  about  voluntary  contributions  his  .ship  and  he  waited  on  their 
to  continue our  paper  and  offer­
being  paid  only  by  some  of  our  table. 
have  helped  us  to  become  self­
ed  their  help.  This  help  consist­ supporting so  that  we don't  have  crew  proposed  that  the  question  Brothers,  and 
While  on  the  beach  waiting 
of  a  five­dollar  let^  be  submit­
ed  of  lending  us  a  typewriter 
to  draw  on  the  ship's  fund  ior  ted  to  a  referendum  vote.  The  "Whereas:  The,  SEAFARERS  for  a  ship,  Arthur  Kirwin  Jr. 
and  a  mimeograph  machine  till  expen.ses.  They* also  contribute 
resolution  was signed  by 25 crew­ LOG  is  a  both  vital  and  neces­ painted  his  parents'  house  white 
sary  medium  for  keeping  our  with  green  trinunings.  . .  Not 
to  our  editorial  page. 
members.  ' 
There  are  two  directors  ,of  The  text  of  the  resolution  fol­ membership  informed  about  un­ mentioning  any  names,  but  a 
ion  business  and  activities, there­ guy  whose  initials  are  F.U.  al­
publication,  Edward  Glazder  aiid  lows: 
fore 
most  bought  a  Nash  car  with  a 
If  you  don't find  linen  George  John.  They  are  respon­
"Whereas:  The  SEAFARERS  "Be  It  Resolved:  That  we  the  bed  in  it,  until  he  asked  for  a 
when  you  go  aboaid  your  sible  for  running  off  the  paper 
LOG  is  an  annual  drain  on  the  undersigned  crewmembers  of  the  sink  with  running  water.  The 
ehip, soHly  the HaU at  once.  on  the  mimeograph  machine  and. General  Fund,  and 
SS  The , Cabins propose ­ that  an  salesman  said"®  he  couldn't  fill 
A teleanun ixom Le HUVM or  then,  distributing  it  to  th6  crew 
Sia0«pa»  won't  do yon  any.  members. They also ai'e in  charge  "Whereas:  We  are  going  to  annual  five­dollar  asse^ment  for  the  order..  Met  .  Joe  Hilton 
good.  It's  your hed  wad  you  of  our mailing list  which is large.  ballot  on  the  credit  union  and  the  LOG  be  placed .oiv\ the  bal­ again  after •  a  number  of  years 
lot  along  with  the  credit  unions  and  he; wants  to  be  quoted  .­as 
Copies of  the Advocate  are mail­ vacation  questions,, and 
hare  to  lie  in tt&gt; 
ed  to  all  SIU  branch  (rfftces  as  "Whereas: There has been com­  and  vacation  resolutions./ 
being  against  homesteading.  , 
Back  ia  1942  when  he 
transferred  from  a  British 
merchant  ship  to  the  SIU­
contracted  SS Gateway  City 
in Loch  Ewe, Scotland,  Ern­
est  ( S c o 11 y )  Aubusson 
wasn't  giving  much  thought 

SS  Puerto  Rico's  Shipboard  Publication 
Is Product  Of  Hard  Work And Cooperation 

Voice  Of  Oke  Se 
eCL 

Crew  Of  The  Cabins  Favors 
Annual Levy To Sustain Log 

AnENTION! 

�Friday,  Fabruary  10, 1950 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Page SevcA 

Digested Minutes Of  SI0 Ship Meetings 
VFNORE,  Nov.  27—R.  E.  Die* 
and  Welfare:  Crew  asked  to  co­
key,  Chairmart:  H.  B.  Vincenl, 
operate  in  keeping  shoresiders 
Secretary.  Everything  on  order 
out  of  messroom.  Oiic^  minute' of 
WHE lATBST  e0UHf&gt; VOLVMBO^ 
in  the  departments.  Motion  car­
silence  for  Brothera  lost  at  sea. 
ried  recommending  that  Union 
ft ft ft 
'  tmd  company  meet  lo  work  out 
SS  DEL  ORG,  Dec.  4—Chair­
plan  whereby  watches  can  be 
man,  J. P.  Shuler:  Secretary,  G. 
placed  in  the  same  rooms.  Sani­
Gillispie.  Delegates  reported  all 
Aiue WITHIAI A PEW P/AVS. /VOW IS
tary  conditions  on  ships  discuss­
running  .smoothly.  New  Busi­
ed,  also  ways  and  means  of  get­
TUB TtMB TO TAKE. /ACTIO/V ABOAI^
ness:  Motion  by  Gillispie,  car­
vting  along  in  good  Union  man­
ried,  that  crew  boys  not  be  al­
YiPoe. SHIP ANP AUlUOI^lZB BLHiAS
ner.  Under  Good  and  Welfare, 
lowed  inside  midship  house,  with 
A  COPY FOR  YOUR. 
Bhipboard  conditions"  were  das­­
the  exception  of  the  crew  mess­
cussed.  One  minute' of  silence 
man  and  the  Wipers.  Good  and 
• SHIPBOARD LieSARY. 
In  memory  of  departed  Union 
Welfare:  Suggested  by  John 
­THE PRCe FOR 
Brothers. 
gate  give  all  information  on  man  Linn  that  crew  write  Congress­
THIS  VOLQMB ­
I 
%  X  X 
man  Heller  thanking  him  for  his 
SEATRAIN  NEW  JERSEY,  v^ho  jumped  ship  to  Patrolman  praise  of  the SIU  New  York  hall 
WHICH IS LARSEC 
Bee.  19—Robert  Adams,  Chair­ upon  ship's  an*ival  in  New  York.  and  his  backing  of  the  maritime 
THA/V 
­IHE Peev­IOUS 
man;  John  J.  Jellette,  Secretary.  Two •   permitmen  recommended  hiring  hall. Suggestion  made  that 
^gine  Delegate  asked  men  to  for  books.  Good  and  Welfare:  Ship's  Delegate  write  the  Ed­
F/ALP­YEARLY 
.­lessen  noise  near  foc'sles.  Ship's  Ship's  Delegate  reported  that  it  itor  of  the  LOG  to  express 
OsLLECnOHS 
jjeiegate  reported  that  Brother  was  impoi'tant  that  repair  work  crew's  appreciation  of  the  air­
be 
done 
this 
trip. 
Men 
getting 
—  IS 
Lester  had  spent  $30^ for  movies 
mail  Bulletin.  Suggested  by  J. P. 
off 
were 
asked 
to 
leave 
their 
for  crew's  recreation  and  that 
Shuler  that  more  time  be  de­
Chief  Cook  had  spent  $6  for  rooms  clean  and  return  linen  to  voted  to  education. 
^ 
Christmas  decorations  and  sug­ Steward. 
ft ft ft 
ft ft ft 
gested  that  men  chip  in  to  re­
SS 
YAKA, 
Dec.  4—Chairman,  SS  SWEETWATER,  Dec.  24— 
Imbuise  these  two  at  payoff. 
Chairman,  Mgx  Lipkin;  Secre­
Best  wishes  extended  to  Joe  Ry­ John  Thompson;  Secretary,  Fred  tary,  Ted  Dy^n.  Delegates'  re­
lick  who  is  leaving  ship. •  and  Litsch.  Repair  list  made  up  and  ports  accepted.  New  Bu3ine.s.s: 
who  has  been  a  good,  shipmate.  approved.  New  Business:  Motion  Brother  Wilisch  elected  Ship'.s 
Under  Good  and  Welfare  Bill  by  Lonski,  carried,  that  Patrol­ Delegate.  Wilisch  suggested  send­
Gray  read  Christmas  message  man  check  medical  supplies  and  ing  letter ­  to  Hall  with  repair 
shortage  of  medical  instruments. 
written  by  John  Jellette. 
Education:  Thompson  spoke  on  list,  and  request  Patrolman 
4.  4  t 
meet  ship  to  straighten  out  con­
PONCE  DE  LEON.  Nov.  26—  air­mail  Bulletin's  request  that  fusion  in  Stewards  Department. 
William  Bolton,  Chairman:  John  crew  write  Congressman  Heller.  One  minute  of  silence  for  Bro­
,  L 
Menville,  Secretary.  No  beefs,  Crew  was  urged  to  write  the  thers  lost  at  sqa.. 
by Hank
a:#i 
Congressman 
thanking 
him 
for 
except  for  disputed  overtime  for 
ft ft ft 
/ 
Electricians.  Ralph  Grosclose  his  interest  in  the  preservation 
SS 
COUER 
d'ALENE 
VICT­
of 
the 
maritime 
hiring 
hall. Good 
There's  no  doubt  that  in  our  hiring  halls  and  aboard* SIU 
elected  Ship's  Delegate  by  ac­
ORY, 
Nov. 
20—Chairman, 
Sigurd 
and 
Welfare: 
Suggestion 
made 
ships 
throughout  the  world  the  membership  is  happily  realizing 
clamation.  Washing  machine  to 
Anderson; Secretary,  Dave  Buck­ what  the  recently­gained  welfare  fund  means  to  all  hands  .  .  . 
that Day 
Men 
and 
men 
off 
watch 
be  checked  and  repaired  if  nec­
essai­y.  Newly  elected  depart­ refrain  from  taking  coffee  out  ley.  Delegates  reported  «mall  And  here  on  Beaver 'Street  the  SIU  brothers  are  busy  as  beavers. 
ment delegates  are: Dick  Carpen­ of  percolator  till  watch  is  serv­ amount  of  disputed  overtime.  The  average  Seafarer,  who  has  been  in  many  beefs  toNkeep  our 
Discussion  on  Captain  eating  Union  strong,  shows  easily  enough  that  he  has  never  lost  that 
ter  (Deck);  Murry  Wilerson,  ed.  Suggestion  made  to  take  up 
special 
food.  Question  i­aised  as  spirit,  indeed  ... At  random,  we'll  mention  a  few  of  the  fellas 
collection 
for 
widow 
of 
George 
(Steward)  and  Matthew  Nolan, 
to 
where 
he  gets  the  food  and  helping  out  continuously—day  after  day,  including  nights.  There's 
Stevenson, 
who 
passed 
away 
(Engine).  One  minute  of  silence 
whether 
he 
really  has  stomach  the  happily­married  Frank  Bose  with  his  mustache  and  sharp 
aboard 
ship 
on 
December 
3. 
in  memory  of  departed  Union 
trouble  as  claimed.  Better  qual­ humor  .  .  .  "Slim"  Tom  Hale  is  a  versatile  worker—not  half  a 
ft ft ft 
Brothers.  Crew  wished  all  hands 
day,  at  all.  .And  in  his  own  words,  we'll  say  "he'll  aways  have 
a  Merry  Christmas  and  Happy  SS  MICHAEL,  Nov.  11—Chair­ ity­food  asked. 
man, 
J. 
Felton; 
Secretary, 
Law­
it,  too"—with  the  pleasure  of  naming  whatever  it  is ... A  lot  of 
!l&lt;few  Year. 
rence  Richie.  Delegates'  reports 
help  is  coming  from  A1  'Wilk  and  Eddie  Bis.  Incidentally,  Eddie 
accepted.  Motion  carried  that 
has a  mustache,  too.  (Some  day  we'll  hear  of  a  Brother  sailing  into 
Delegates assist department  mem­
New  York  with  a  beard.  'We  haven't  seen  a  bearded  brother  in 
bers  in  making  out  repair  lists. 
a  long  time.  How  about  hearing  from  bearded  brothers  in  other 
One  minute  of  silence  for  de­
ports  or  aboard  the ships?)  . . . Eddie Saul  is contributing  humor­
parted  Brothers. 
ft ft ft 
ous  expx­essions  and  Donald  "Tiny"  Mease  is  a  dynamo  of  work— 
STEEL  WORKEa  Dec.  26—W.  v/hile  he  continues  to  humorously  mention  some  mysterious  ship 
ft ft ft 
ft  t  t 
MORNING  LIGHT,  Nov.  29—  SS BEATRICE, Dec. 11—Chair­ Borreson,  Chairman;  G.  Brown,  called  the SS  Sandpaper. 
Homer  Ringo, Chairman;  Tremer,  man,  P,  Bobbregt:  Secretary.  R.  Secretary.  Brother  Zahelli  elec­
ft ft ft 
Secretary.  Delegates  reported  no  Pennington.  Delegates  reported  ted  Ship's  Delegate.  Discussion 
We  have  dicovered  that  Brother  Alex  Andreshak  is  Bosun 
beefs.  Under  Good  and  Welfare  no  beefs.  New  Business:  Motion  on  two  new  ships  which  the  right  now  aboard  the SS  Steel  Navigator.  Bon  seranging,  Alex 
the  following  were  discussed:  carried  to  keep  doors  in  passage­ Bernstein  company  is  ti­ying  to  . . . We  are  sorry  to  hear  about  Brother  Andy  Havrilla  being 
Washing  machine,,  repair  lists,  way  open  while  at  sea.  Crew  place  in  passenger  service.  Sug­
dxydocked  in  a  veterans  hospital  down  in  Aspinwall,  Pennsyl­
overhauling  of  galley  range,  voted  in favor of  motion.  Wipers  gested  that  collection  be  made  vania.  Speedy  recovery.  Andy  . . . Don  Brown,  the  poet  and 
practice­ of  company  guard  pre­ requested  that  Patrolmen  see  for  athletic  equipment.  Agreed  one  of  the  best.  East  or  West,  says  he'll  be  in  this  New  York 
venting  men  from  going  ashore  about  cleaning  gear  for  sanitary  that  sanitai­y  men  are  to  keep  town  around  summertime  . . . While  Brother  Howard  W. 
library,  slop  locker  and  Igimdry  Moore  is  turning  to  for  some  landlubbing  schooling  down  in 
ur'il  after  ship  has  been  cleared  work. 
clean.  Each  man  is  to  take  good  Pennsylvania  he'll  also  be  anxiously  looking  over  every  issue 
by  agricultural  agent,  accident 
ft ft ft 
in  which  Wiler  fractured  his  SS  ROBIN  MOWBRAY,  Nov.  care  of  washing  machine.  Vote  of  the  LOG  for  important  Union  news  and  the  whereabouts 
wrist. Heai­ty  vote  of  thanks  was  14—Chairman,  J.  Sansel;  Secre­ of  thanks  given  Stewai­ds  De­
of  shipmates . . . Brother  Thomas  Melton,  who  hasn't  raised 
given  by  all  hands  to  Stewards  tary,  3.  O'Connor.  Delegates  re­ partment  for fine  Christmas  din­
any  sort  of  beard  for  a  long  time,  was  in  New  York  recently 
Department  for  the  wonderful  ported  all  smooth.  Good  and  ner.  Suggested  that  crew  thank  after  a  long  absence.  Tom  says  he's  been  shipping  out  of  the 
dinner  and  decorations  set  up  Welfare:  Discussion  on  keeping  Capt^  for  Christmas  tree  and  Gulf  and  on  one  ship  didn't  have  any  real  Southern  cooking 
quarters,  showers,  heads  clean.  gift. All  were  asked  to  cooperate  for  more  than  a  year.  Say,  Tom,  the  only  thing  we  have  up 
for  the  Thanksgiving  dinner. 
Ship's 
Delegate  Sansel  praised  in  turning  oyer  unused  linen  to  here  In  New  York  which  is  real  good.  Southern  style,  is  that 
ft ft ft 
air­mail,' Bulletin. 
Steward, 
SS  BESSEMER  VICTORY, 
record  called  "Hominy  Grits"  which  is  enough  lo  make  a 
Bee.  6—Chairman,  Edward  Cole: 
good  man­ leave  town  real  fast  for  that  good  food. 
ft ft ft 
DEL  SUD,  Dec.  25 —Leonard 
Secretary,  Lester  R.  Waller.  En­
ft ft ft 
Munna.  Chairman;  Edmundo 
gine  and  Stewards  Delegates  re­
A  good  man  indeed,  is  little  "Scotty"  Norris  who  is  always 
Sepulveda,  Secretary.  Anti­Trot­ helping  out  in  the  hall  . . . One  of  the  Brothers  wanted  us  to  say 
ported  no  beef^;  Deck  Delegate 
skyite resolution  passed  at shore­ something  about  Brother  Edison  Brown.  Well,  we  will.  He's  a 
reported  two  hours  disputed 
side  meetings  was  adopted  xui­ swell  guy . . . Brother  W.  J. Plauche  of  Louisiana,  who  retired  his 
overtime.  Motion  by  Scott,  car­
animously  by  ship's  crew.  Dele­ book,  still  keeps  informed  of  what  the  SIU  is  doing  through  the 
ried,  that  complaints  about  left­
ft ft ft 
over  food  be  made  to  the  Stew­ SS  PETROLITE,  Dec.  4—  gates  reported.  Libi­arian  asked  LOG  he  receives.  And  his  family  enjoys  reading  their  copy,  too 
ard  through  the  Delegates.  Mo­ Chairman.  Joseph  Bourgeois:  men  to  return  magazine  and  . . . Bill  Gray,  aboard  the Seatrain  New  Jersey,  informed  us  that 
tion  by  Cain,  carried,  that  at  Secretary,  H.  Rosensteil.  Dele­ books  to  librai­y  before  voyage  more  than  $60.00  was  donated  by  crewmember.&lt;;  and  officers  for 
­ least two delegates and  the Stew­ gates  reported  no  beefs.  Ship's  ends.  Motion  carried  calling  for  the  March  of  Dimes  campaign.  Every  SIU  ship  has  had  literature 
ard  check  the  stores.  Education:  Delegate  reported  that  soap  immediate  shipboard  meetings  sent  to  it  explaining  this  worthy  cause.  We  no  doubt  shall  hear 
Cole  requested  each  member  to  powder  had  been  obtained  and  upon  receipt  of  shoreside  resplu­ of  many  more  SIU  ships  showing  their  kindness  in  this  campaign 
reaU  Bulletin  of  Dec.  2,  especial­ fans  would  be  repaired  as  soon  tions  or  important  Union  litera­ a  long  time.  How  about  hearing  from  bearded  Brothers  in  other 
ly  the section  regarding  the  Wel­ as  parts  were  delivered. 'Motion  ture.  Committee  was  elected  to  to  help  those,  young and  old,  who  are struck  by  infantile  paralysis. 
fare  Fund.  Good  and  Welfare:  by  Pere*  to  select  committee  to  draw  up  a  .set  of  working  rules 
ft ft ft 
Request  made  that  Engineers  study  possible  amendments  to  for  a  future  ship's  fund.  Pat 
Brother  Pat  Jones  of  New  York  says—Keep  the  SIU 
present  tanker  agreement.  Two,  Donahue  stated  that  two  bats  ships  sailing ... Joe  Pendleton  was  in  New  York  recently 
check  the  radiator  valves. 
men 
fx­om  each  department  elect­ were  sold  to  Argentine  ball  ... Brother  "Chink"  White  is  still  soldiering  over  in  Japan 
ft ft ft 
SS  STEEL  EXECUTIVE,  D«e.  ed  to  make  study  and  present  players  after  sale  was  approved  . . . And  Ed  Larkin,  the  Electrician,  is  oil  well" down  in 
6­Xhairman,  D.  bfcKeel;  Secro­ recommendations  at  next  meet­ t&gt;y  ship's  team.  Money  was  turn­
Venezuela,  mentioning  that  his  shipmate  Eddie  Hallinan  sent 
tary,  A.  Brodia.  Delegateg^  re­^  ing.  Ship's  Delegate  to  see  Cap­ ed  over  to  Ship's  Delegate  for  him  a  Christmas  post  card ... The  SEAFARERS  LOG  will 
New  Orleans.  be saUing  free of  cost  to the  homes  of  the foUowing  Brothezsi 
ported  no  beefs.  Gric* ma le mo­ tain  concerning  practice  of  Of­ replacement  in , 
tion,  carried  that  Ship's  Dele­ ficers  painting^^ their  rooms.  Good  Meeting,  adjourned at  3:15  PM. 
&lt;)tto  Hever  of  Missouri  Donald  Faulkner  of  Brooklyn, 

• ­rye 

tc&gt;s­a&gt;vfeRiA(e 

ALL- isstiEs OP i94p-WILLBBASML-

CUT  and  RUN 

m0O

�Pag9 Ei^i 

TBE  SEAFAR^ERS  LO€ 

FiilUai'.  F«ima^ 10.  10SO 

&amp;

Welfare  Plan  Hailed 
New SIU MOestone 

JAPAN  TRIP 

ed  in  the  LOG,  I  am  asking  the 
'^fto  the  Editor: 
i.  I  have  just  read  the  January  Editor  not  to  print  my  name  but 
&lt;13  issue  of  the  LOG  and  saw  my~  book  number  instead.  The 
where  the  SIU  has  oome  to  an  average sailor would  be surprised 
agreement  with  nine  steamship  to  know  in  whose  hands  the 
companies  on  a  welfare  plan  for  LOG  does  fall. 
Book  No.  45010 
seamen.  I  believe  this  is  one  of 
'the  greatest  strides  ever  made 
by  a  maritime  union, 
i  (• ' The  welfare  plan  ranks  with 
• the inaugxiration  of  the  three­
watch  system  and  the section  of 
our  contract  allowing  the  Union 
to reopen  discussion  on the  wage 
question  at  any  time  during  the 
To  the EdiKUr: 
life  of  the contract. 
I'd  like  tp  expose  an  insidious 
SIU  NEEDED 
group 
within  our  membership 
t have  retired  from  the  sea, 
whose 
aim 
is  devoted  to  making 
tut  I  am  still  in  the  maritime 
their 
shipmates 
the  most  un­
^industry.  I  work  for  a  steamship 
washed 
guys 
in 
the 
labor  move­
'line!  If  we  had  a  strong  union 
ment. 
years ago  like  the­ SIU  is  to­
:  Iday,  I'm  sure  many  of  my  This  underground  group  can 
i&amp;iends  who still  go  to  ^a could  best  be  labelled  Uie  "soap 
snatchers."  For  various,  unex­
test  a  lot  easier  now. 
The  fuU  value  of  the  welfare  plained  reasons,  some  shipmates 
plan  Aegotiated  by  the  SIU  wiQ  find  themselves  unable  to  afford 
not  be  realized  for  a  few  years.  soap  when  they  are  on  the 
"But  as it  gradu^y comes  to  co­ beach.  To  overcome  this  situa­
ver  every  seaman  in  the  indus­ tion  they  take  to  hoarding  their 
try—as  it  will  eventually—the  two­bar  weekly  allowance  while 
unorganized  seamen  will  see  they  are  aboard  ship. 
how,  through  a  united front,  sea­
DIRTY  TRICK 
men  can  obtain  what  some  un­
This  in  itself  wouldn't  be  so 
organized  companies  claim  is  bad,  but  it  goes  further.  They 
something they  alone can offer.  remove  the  used  soap  of  others 
The  welfare  plan  should great­ from  the  washroom  so  as not  to 
ly  increase  the  momehtum  of  have  to  break  a  single  wrapper 
the  Seafarers'  organizing  pro­ of  their  own  hoard. 
gram.  I  noted  that  a  few  of  the.  On  one  ship  I  opened  my  last 
signers  of  this  clause  ai­e  cpm­ bar  of  soap  in  the  shower  and 
spanies  newly  organized.  That's  then  left  for  a  few  seconds  to 
^ good sign  of  clear  thinking and  get  my  razor.  When  I  returned 
^responsible  leadership. 
—^you  guessed  it—the  soap  was 
Chief  Male  W.  R.  "Catfish" 
'  I also  noted  that  the  Negotiat­ gone.  Being  unable to secme an­ Kenopke,  who  the  Yaka  crew 
ing  Committee  is  of  the  opinion  other  bar  at  the  time, " I  was 
said  "is  strictly  a  good  imion 
vthaf^  SlU­contracted  companies  forced  to  use  laundry  soap. 
are more than  satisfied  with  Sea­
I  hope some  Brother  comes  up  man.  He  deserves  much  credit 
farers  crews  on  their,vessels. 
with  an  effective  method  of  for  the  swell  trip."  Kenopke 
&gt;• : I'm  in  a  position  to  say  that  dealing  with  these  "soap  snatch­ is a former  member of  the SIU. 
fthe statement  is  entirely, correct.  ers,"  as  the­harsh  odor  of  laim­
By comparison  with other  unions  dry  soap  does  not  strike  a  par­
ALL HANDS HAD 
&lt;in  the  industry,  the  SIU  sailor  ticularly  seductive  chord, in  the 
definitely  tops  them,  all. 
nostrils  of  a seaman's girl  friend.  GOOD  CHRISTMAS 
Since this letter  may  be  print­
Abe  Goldfarb  ON SS DEL MONTE 

SMOOTH  AS  SILK 

Soap Snatching 
Is Dirty Trick, 
Brother Bphhles, 

At  the  Waterman  ship's  payoff  in  Baltimore  recently, 
Lonnie Lonski  said  the voyage was  one of  the  best  he's  made. 
Some of  the  men  who  helped  make it  successful, are shown  in 
photo  above,  taken  in  USS  club  in  Yokohama.  Around  fable, 
left  to  right,  are:  Taylor  (light  jacket).  Fuzzy.  My^s,  Lilsch, 
Legg.  James,  Storey  and  Sjoherg.  Standing,  left  to  right: 
Goldsborough  and  LonskL 

SUP  Man  Says  Trotskyites 
Use Free Speech To Disrupt 

To  the  Editor: 
But  I  have  seen  a  man  get  the 
I  hope  that  you  will  print  this  bum's  rush  because  he  wanted 
letter. It  points out  the  line used  to dis£igree  with  a  man  spouting 
by  the ' Trotskyites  which  some  his  disruptive  ideas. 
members  may  listen  to  and  pass  I  will  say,  however,  that  tHe;"^1?K 
on. 
Trbtskjrites  have  sumetliing  tb^..;i/v, 
As a  retired SUP man,  I would  fear  and  that  is  that  men  of  the'? 
like  to  point  out  how  much  vio­ SIU  wiU  not  fan for  their  unidn­,,f;^ 
lence  the SUP 'has  to  fear  fi'om  busting  ideas,  and  that  the  SIU  V? 
the  SIU  officials,  as .the  Trot­ will  remain  the  best  Union  on 
skyites  screamed  recently. 
the  waterfront,  if  not  in  the 
! 
When  I  was  shipping  out  of  world, 
New  York,  I  often  heard  the  As  for  violence,  I  think  thatvll­!, *!;  I 
Trotsky  line  that  the  Stewards  if  they  take  the  word  of  advice ? '' " 
Department  ought  to  leave  the  offered  in  the  Dec.  30  issue  of 
SIU  and  form  a  separate  imion.  the  LOG,  the  Trotskyites  will 
I  know  that  tw^.  of  the  men  not  have  any  trouble. 
P. A.  Carlson 
who  were  spouting  this  union 
SUP  Book  No.  3964  (Ret.) 
busting  idea  are stiU  sailing,  de­
spite  the  fact  that  one  of  them 
still  advocates  an  MCS  of  the  BULLETIN  CATCHES 
East  Coast, 
To  the  Editor: 
LEARNING  HIS  S­I­V'S 
Many  times  in  the  union  halls  DEL NORTE  MEN 
I  am  enclosing  some  pictures  of  the  Gulf  I  heard  talk  of  a  DOWN  IN  BRAZIL 
of  our Christmas dinner  on board  separate  Gulf  union  and  in  the 
To  the  Editor: 
the SS Del Monte. We had a very  SUP  hall  talk  against  the  SIU, 
nice  Christanas  even  though  we  and in  the SIU halls, talk  against  This  is  to  acknowledge  receipt, 
were  at  sea  and  away  from  our  the SUP.  There  was  also  talk  of  of  the  Bulletins  forwarded  to: 
families  and  friends^ 
keeping  a  port  for  men  from  this ship  this  voyage.  They  have 
been  posted  on  the bulletin Iraard 
AH of  the crew­were coipplete­ that  port. 
and 
are  well  received  by  the* 
ly  satisfied  and  all  agreed  that  These  Trotsky  lines,  aimed  membership,  who  looks  forward; 
they  could  not  have  had  a  ifiner  at  splitting  the SIU  and  causing  to  new  ones  each  trip in  Brazil. 
dinner or day­  We  will  be at ^a  it  damage,  have .been  aired free­
Whoever  thought  of  the  idea 
for  New  Year's,  but  have  been  ly  in  the  halls  for  years  and  I  deserves­a  vote  of  thanks  for 
promised the same kind of  dinner  have  jfet  to  hear  of  any  man  keeping  the  membership  inform­
and  fun  with  hats  and  noise­ meeting  violence  becalise  he  ed  of  what  is  going  on  during, 
makers  by  the  Steward,  Henry  spoke  his 'union­busting.,  views.  their  absence  from  the  States.  . 
(Hunger)  Gerdes.  The  Captain 
I  am  enclosing  the  minutes 
joined  in  to  make  the  coming 
of  the two­regular  meetings  held­
affair  a success. 
on  this  voyage,  although  I  have 
Pro  mid  con  commenis  on  not  seen  any  minutes  published 
As  you  can  sro  by  the  menu 
and  the  pictures,  we  all  had  a  the  suggested  change  in.the  from  these  ships  during  the  last 
sMppIng  rules  to  make ,  it  year  in  the  LOG. 
good  time. 
mandatory  for  a  man  to  ac­
C.  A.  Bradley 
Bob  Creel 
# 
cept his vacation  pay and  get 
Ship's  Delegate 
(Ed.  Note:  Unforlunately^  off,  a  ship  after  one  year 
SS  Del  Norte 
Aboard  continue  to  come  in 
(Ed.  N(de:  Time  does  not  . 
Philip  Sfazimpton,  who  claims  Book  No.  000  as  a  member 
LOG  readmrs  will  be  unable 
from  Brothers  asea  and 
pennit  a  full  check  hack  over 
;  ia good  silting  of  the SIU,  scans  his  LOG  fox  the  latest  dope 
to  see  what  a  good  time  was 
ashore.  If  you  haven't  yet 
&lt;m  the 
Service  beef.  Fouz­month­old  Philip  is  the first 
the 
LOG  issues  of  this  year 
had  aboard  the  Del  Monte  at 
mq^xvMied  youT  views  on  the 
effort  ot "Aussie" and  Rose Shrimpton  and  he  wants  it  known 
but  offhand ..we can  cite  issues  . 
Christinas  dinner.  The  photos 
&lt;|uestion.  ­how . ahoitf  send­
^No.  28,  No.  31  and  No.  32  of 
that he is available for  picket  duty If  he is needed.  His  parents 
were  loo  dark  fow  saffsfactory;  kig  them  to  the  LOG—now.  ­ffie  LOO  in  which  Del  Norte 
^ met  on  an  SIU  sldp,  the  SS  Evangeline,  and  if  that  doesn't 
­t— 
minutes  appear.) 
make  haa  a  Seafarer  Phil  would  like  to  know  what  does.  .  reproduction.)' 

Had Your Say? 

*­ 

*­Ilj 

�FMiniarf  Ifli,  Mlo 

Page  Nine 

BE  SE'AFARERS  LOG 

*Why  All  The  Fuss?'  Asks 
Ppppn^rft Of  Vacation Rule 

Trip Was Good 

Bosun's Wife Lowers Boom 
On  Compulsory  Vacations 

throw  their  earnings  over  h  gin­
mill  bar  and  say  "manana—t(&gt; 
As  the  wife  of  an  SIU  mem­ morrow I'll ihake another ship." 
ber  (Bosun  John  LaFoe)  and  as  They  have  responsibilities, 
a  former  Stewardess  with  six  wives,  babies,  coal  bills,  etc.,  ad 
strike  clearances,  which  means  infinitum.  They  have  probably 
that  I  should  know  what  the  foimd  what  all  humans  have 
score  is,  I  am  thoroughly  in  ac­ sought  since  the  days  of  the 
cord  with  Brother  Tex  Suit's  cave  man — a  home,  a  woman 
analysis  of  the  homesteading  and  security,  and  last  but  not 
situation. 
least,  happiness. 
The  members  of  the  Seafarers  Is  it  any  wonder  that  after 
have,  in  the  not  too  distant  past,  years  of  hitting  the  bricks  and 
fought,  bled  and  died  to  obtain  striving  for  some  semblance  of 
and  maintain  the  working  con­ an  Utopia,  they  are  willing ­  to 
ditions  and  living  standards  they  sweat  it  out  to  achieve  those 
Jack  Dietrich  (left&gt;&lt;  FWT,  now  enjoy.  That  monument  to  ends?  Can't  you  visualize  the 
keeps  a  photographic  record  old  Andy  Furseth  wasn't  erected  monotony  of  hitting  one  port 
of  his  voyages. Here he is  seen  in  his  memory  because  he  knit­ after  another,  day  after  day, 
with  the  Deck  Maintenance  ted  ropeyams.  He  fought  to  ob­ month,  after  month,  just  to come 
aboard  the  MV  Gadsden  dur­ tain  the  conditions  which  we  all  home  to  the  "little  woman"  or 
ing  a  recent  run  from  Haiti­"  enjoy  today.  Don't  forget  that.  to  pay  a  board  bill  for  little 
ONLY  200 
mouths  whom  some  woman  has 
more  to  For^aleza.  Brazil.  Die­
And 
don't 
forget 
that 
the min­
abandoned 
because  she  couldn't 
trich  says  all  hands  agreed 
ority 
of 
200 
members 
Vvho 
stay 
take 
it. 
I 
know 
of  many  such 
that  the  first­rate  trip  on  the 
Gadsden  would  be  hard  to  aboard  a  vessel  longer  than  12  instances. 
months  are  not  the  guys  who 
LOOK  OVER  THE  FENCE 
beat. 
How  about  you  guys  who have 
only  the  thought  of  getting  into 
port,  paying  off  and  looking  for 
that  favorite  bar  maid,  going 
broke  in  a  few  days  without  a 
penny  and  then  holding  down 
the  Hall  for  another  ship—how 
the  Hall  for  certain  ships  or  about  looking  on  the  other  side 
To  the  Editor: 
runs  and  in  some  cases,  even  of  the  fence  for  a  change?  Be­
I  would  like to  voice  my  opin­ certain  companies,  and  conse­
ion  as  being  definitely  against  quently  their  cards  build  up  on  cause  some  day  you  may find 
and  cherish  the  same  things  that 
con^ulsory  vacations. 
the  shipping  list.  That  quite  a  those  few  200  other  guys  have 
First,  upon  interpreting  sec­ few  permitmen  are  able  to  get 
tion  54,  Vacations,  I find  that  ships  will  attest  to  that  fact,  in­ found. 
Unless  you  give  this  question 
the  agreement  gives­  the  privil­ asmuch  as  bookmen  have  prefer­
some 
long­range  thought,  you 
ege  of  staying  on  a  ship  as  long  ence  over  permitmen  in  ship­
may 
destroy 
the  rung  on  the 
To  the  Editor: 
'  as  a  mehiber  wants  to  and  after  ping. 
ladder 
to 
future 
security. 
If  at  any  time  someone  has  tcid  you  this  is  a  small  world;  the first  year  it  credits  the  sea­
Laura 
LaFoe 
Third,  it  would  be  a  reflection 
they  are  suffering  from  dementia  praecox,  non  compos  mentis—or  man  with  two  weeks  of  vacation 
Baltimore, 
Md. 
on  our  boast  that  we  have  jobs 
In  just  plain  words,  NUTS!  This  past  week  brought  to an  end  our  pay  and  any  additional  time  is  equal to bookmen. It  would stand 
round­the­world  trip  aboard  the  SS Steel  Worker,  or  is it  "Work­ also  paid for  with  the equivalent 
to  reason  that  our  job  situation  RETIRED  MEMBER 
house."  For  an  Isthmian  job  it  isn't  bad  even  if  the  Mate  thinks  of  two  weeks  pay.  So  it  is  quite 
apparent that  any referendum on  is  not  too  sound  if  we  have  to  KEEPS  IN  TOUCH 
"Time­off"  is  a  Russian  admiral. 
limit  members  to  certain  periods 
Before  leaving  the  States  we  got  shots  for  everjrthing  from  compulsory  vacations  will  be im­
THROUGH  THE  LOG  ^ 
of  employment. 
constitutional. 
pink  toothbrush  to bleeding  eye­
To 
the  Editor: 
Fourth,  the  economic  reper­
(Ed.  Note:  Rules  pertaining 
balls.  The  shot  for  lockjaw  is 
to  shipping  procedures  are  cussions  would  be  too  great  for  I  wish  to  express my  apprecia­
terrific—a  pennanent  cure  for 
made  by  the  membership  in  a  married  man  with  a  family  tion  for  the  prompt  delivery  of 
halitosis,  which  in  a  small  way 
referendum  vote  and  there  is  or  anyone  with  obligations.  The  the­  LOG  to  my  home  every 
is  better  than  no  breath  at  all. 
nothing in  the constitution  that  privilege of  staying on  a ship  in­ week.  My  family  and  I  have 
The  crew  proved  themselves^  ^  ­
prevents  them  from  doing  so.  definitely  belongs  to  all  book­ been  receiving  the  LOG  for  four 
quite fit  to  the  trip,with  the ex­  •  ^ 
The  agreements  do  not  regu­ men  alike,  so  that  each  man  can  years  or  more,  and  we  are  very * 
ception  "ot  one  poor  guy  who 
late  the  length of  a  man's ser­ stay  aboard, as  long  as  he  lives  interested  in  the  activities  of  the 
went  to  the  hospital ­in  Manila 
vice  aboard  ship,  but  merely  up  to  the  agreement,  untiL  he  Union  on  the  beach  and  at  sea. 
for •  water  on  the  knee^  It  was 
, 
govern  the  wage  and  work­ has finances  to support  him  over  I  retired  early  in  1947,  after 
so  bad  that  when  they  operated 
having  been  an  active  seaman 
~  ing  conditions,  of  which  vaca­ a  period  of  unemployment. 
two  nurses  and  'an  interne 
for 
over  two  years  —  all  as  A 
As 
for 
the 
charge 
of 
the 
men 
tions 
is 
one. 
This 
is 
merely 
a 
dx'owned.  In Hongkong,  the ships' 
member 
of  the  SIU.  I  am  en­
becoming 
company 
men, 
e^ch 
clarification 
of 
the 
Brother's 
vocalist,  John  DePoo,  after  ren­
point.  The  LOG  takes  neither  man  has  a  certain  type  of  work  closing  a  money  order  for five 
dering  "I  Only  Have  Eyes  P'or 
to  do  under  his  rating,  and  our  dollars  to  help  with  your  pui&gt; 
side  in  the  issue.)  ** 
You,"  g(^  run  over  by  a  couple 
Second,  it  is  my  observation  agreement  to  live  by.  If  he  does  lication. 
of  rickshaws.  Now  he's  got  ath­
Keep  up  the  good  work  and 
that  if  a toan  really  wants  to  not  do  so,  I  am  sure  any  Pa­
lete's  foot  in,the  face.  My  only 
keep 
the  LOG  rolling. 
get  a  ship,  he  can  in  all  prob­ trolman  or  Port  Agent  would 
trouble  was  with  the^  tired, 
Cyrus  C.  Brown 
ability  to  do  without­ too  long  see  him  for  an  explanation. 
burning  eyes;.  Even  after  drink­
St. 
PauL  Minn. 
Louis 
Rizzo 
a  wait.  Some  men  wait  around 
ing  a  bottle  of  "Murine  they  still 
burned. 
RED  CAMPBELL 
Believe  me,  there's  nothing 
like  the  "Fungus  Run."  In  all  these  Asiatic  ports  Isthmian  intro­
duces  their  latest  in  garbage  disposal  units—^four  half­starved 
Union  and  the  company,  it  broke,  ideas  are  like  cars  and 
coolies.  Throughout  the  various  jungle  ports.  Chief  Cook  Dave*  To  the. Editor: 
  proves  that  the  man  is  compe­ busses—continually  coming  by. 
Herron  beat out  the rhythm  of  the  jungle on  the galley  kettle with  This is simple, straight «•
and tent  and  that  the  Union  is  living  Let's  look  into  the  future  and  •  [ 
a­ slightly  over­ripe  kielbasi.  Kielbasi,  that's a  marlin  spike  dipped 
plain. . t
up  to  its  agreement,  as  far  as  not  at  the  beaches.  When  this 
in  ^ariic. 
\ 
When 
I 
arrived 
in 
the 
States 
competency  is  concerned.  This  matter  comes  to a  vote,  vote for | 
'  In  Singapore  we  all  went  to  the  Malayan  premiere  of  the 
recentlj^ 
from 
Europe 
I 
picked 
| 
has  been  the  SIU  system  all  the  homesteaders,  instead  of  de­ 
film,  "Christopher  Columbus."'  No  wonder­  old  Chris  had  such  a 
up 
a 
LOG, 
issue 
of 
December 
2, 
priving 
them 
of 
their 
rights to a 
along. 
tough  tiiqe—^three  ships  and  not  one  bookman  aboard.  Two  of  the 
ships  are  at  present  on  the  sugar  run  for  Waterman.  The  Cathay  and  noticed  the  invitation  to  I  for  one  have  never  stayed  a  job  well  done.  Pi­aise  them  and 
Theater  where  the  picture  played  is  one  of  the  most  modem  in  comment  on  vacations  and  a  year  on  any  ship,  even  though  be  thankful  for  having  such 
ci'edit  union.  Both  are  very  in­ it  is  my  privilege.  But,  Brothers,  militant  and  competent  men  in 
the  Far  East—^neon  poetry  in  the men's  room. 
Finally,  after  about  22  tropical  ports  we  found  ourselves  in  teresting,  but  for  this  letter  I'll  bear  in  mind  that  times  are  rap­ om­  ranks.  They  are  helping  the 
the  North  Atlantic  rolling  and  tossing,  tossing  and  rolling—what  confine  my  comments  to  com­ idly  changing  and  the  least  slip  Union.  If  they  were  hurting  the. 
on  om­  pOrt  may  be  the  loss  of  Union financially,  I  might  see 
a  crap  game!  A  terrific  drop  in  the  temperature  necessitated  the  pulsoi­y  vacations. 
heating  of  the  foc'sles.  The  First  (who  comes  from  a  long  line  I have  read  the  pros  and  cons  a  contract.  By  keeping  the  old  some  merit  in  arguments  against  ­i 
of  early  American  Eskimos),  issued  an  extra  box  of  matches.  We  on  the  matter  in  the  LOG  and  reliable  men  on  the  ships—the  them. 
\ 
I  am  strictly  opposed  to" forcing  homesteaders—we  will  have  one  Another  reason  to  back  thecal 
took  turns  giving  each  other  hot  foots.  (Gad,  such  English.)' 
' 
;  However,  it  all  came  to  a  happy  ending  at  Staten  Island.  We  men  off  ships,  resulting  in  the  more  thing  in  oiu­  favor  during  homesteaders  is  that  it  is  quite  | 
' 
likely  some  of  these  men  made 
had  so  much  rubber  aboard  we  bounced  off  the  dock  six  times  loss  of  a  meal  ticket  and  weak­ negotiations. 
it.possible  for  you  and  me  tO;  J 
before  we  got  tied  up.  So  here  I am  back  at  Beaver  Street,  catch­ ening  support  of  their  families. 
LOTS  OF  IDEAS 
sing  up.  on  the  oKTnews.  I  see  the  NMU  a­few  weeks  back­inau­ I  just  can't  see ,it.  It  interferles  The  men  who  are  coming  up  have  our  jobs  today.  In  behalf 
gui'ated  a series  of  Olympic  games. T'd  have given  anything for  the  with  a  man's  livelihood. 
with  these  ideas,  I  can  see  and  of  my  shipmates  I  give  praise  j 
band­aid  concession  at 17th  Street. 
&gt; 
Take  this  into  ­consideration.  undei­stand,  are  on  the  beaches.  to  hdfnesteaders. 
; 
In  closing,  please  don't ,  hold  anything  against­  the  "LOG"  If  &amp;  man  stays  on  a  yessel five  Needless  to  sa.; ,  they  have  had  I'll  write  next  on  the  credit  :| 
** 
, 
during  the  paatCyear  for  the  mad­ravings  of  "Your  Fraternally,"  years  and  lives  up  to  the  con­.  their  chances,  but  wouldn't  take  union. 
Lamar  M.  Loti.  Sx;, 
"Red"  Campbell  tract  to  the  satisfaction  of  the  advantage  of  them.  When  you're 
To  the  Editor: 
months  longer,  he  gets  another 
I  have  been  reading  the  vari­ week's  vacation  and  six  months 
ous  articles  on  compulsory  va­ more  gives  him another  vacation. 
cations  and  would  like  to  state  So  if  a  man  get^  off  at  the  end 
a  few  of  my  own  ideas  on  the  of  the  one  year,  he  loses  a 
week'§  pay  for  the  next  stretch. 
subject. 
In  my  opinion, a  seaman  has  a  I  would  like  to  quote  BroUier 
right  to  hpld  a  job  as  long  as  he  "Salty  Dick"  who  contradi^d 
wants.''He  is  no  dilferent  from  a  himself  in a  recent  letter  on  this 
man  working  ashore.  He  has  a  subject.  He  says,  "Shipping  has 
family  and  responsibUitiea  as  slowed  down  and  the  beach  is 
getting  crowded."  Then  he  goes 
well  as  anyone  else. 
on 
to  say  that  "any  bookman 
Let  us  remember  that  a  sea­
knows 
he  can  ship  out  between 
man,  belongs  to  a  union  and  as 
long  as  he  can  show  that  he  is  tw®  and  four  weeks." 
a  credit  to  the  union  and  stays  I  don't  get  it.  If  "Salty  Dick" 
in  good  standing,  he  is  disposing  knows  so  much  about  the  ship­
of  his  obligation  ^o  the  rest  of  ping  situation  and  if  what  he 
the  membership. When  they  start  says  is  true,  why  all  the  fuss 
telling  a  fellow  how  long  he  can  about  a. few  guys  who  have  the 
work  at  a  certain  place.  Brother,  initiative  to  stick  a  year  or  so 
that  doesn't  smell  so  good. 
on  a  ship  and  whi,  want  to  stay 
employed,  especially  since  their 
IF 
Don't  get  me  wrong.  I  am  in  working  conditions  are  desir­
favor  of  compulsory  vacations  able? 
if  a  fellow  gets  his  job  back  af­ Any  man  who  can  hold  a  job 
without ­being  a  trouble­maker 
ter  the  vacation  is  over. 
Show  me  any  man  in  his  right  or  a  gas­hound  is  a  credit  to  the 
mind  who  will  trade  a  week's  Union  and  the  longer  he  stays 
vacation  for  a  decent 'job.  Let  lis  on  a  ship  and  does  his  work,  the 
look  ahead  a  little.  If  a  man  is  longer  he  is  in  there  pitching 
on  a  ship  one  year  he  gets  one  for  the  good  name  of  the  Union. 
H.  Slitis 
week's  vacation.  If  he  is  on  six 

To  the  Editor: 

v 

Length  Of  Time  On  Ship 
Up  To  Individual:  Rizzo 

The Redhead Is Moaning Low
After Crack At Rungus Run'

Homesteaders  Upheld  As  'Old  Reliables' 

�ram  MMdFdmxm^ 

^Fdaa^t  f^btmxr  10«  l«d 
ats 
*'l 

BOSTON — Chairman,  Stanlc^ 
working  on  a  permanent  basis. 
Otaenzidge, 1863;  Recording  Sec­
Motion  carried  to  accept  Hospi­
Tetarr,  Ben  Lawso^  894. 
tal  Conunittee's  report.  Mating 
Minutes  of  meetings  in  other 
a^oumed  at  7:50  PM,  with  ~ 
Branches  accepted  as  read.  Port 
385 
members  present. 
,  ^ 
REG. 
REG. 
REG. 
TOTAL 
SHIPPED  SHIPPED  SHIPPED  TOTAL 
Agent  discussed  shipping  in  this 
PORT 
DECK 
.XXX 
' 
ENG. 
STWOS. 
ENG. 
STWDS.  SHIPPED 
REG. 
DECK 
port.  Patrolman's  and  Dispatch­
PHILADELPHIA  —  Chairmaiw 
16 
9 
8 
7  A.  S.  CarduUo.  24599;  Recording 
33 
3  ^ 
4 
er's  reports  approved  as  read.  Boston. 
New 
York­
98 
98 
96 
292 
9?. 
80 
81 
253. 
Motion  carried  to  accept  Head­
Secretary,  Ray  Gates,  25128; 
31 
27 
30 
9 
88 
12 
35  Reading  Clerk. D.  C.  Hall.  43372. 
14 
quarters  report  to  the  member­ Philadelphia. 
(No  Figures Rectived) 
64 
66 
71 
201 
ship  and  Secretary­Treasurer's 
Minutes  of  previous  meetings 
Norfolk. 
. 
— 
35 
41 
26 
102 
3  in  aU  Branches read  and  motions 
2 
1 
financial  report  One  minute  of 
(No  Figures  Received) 
(No  Figures  Received) 
sUence  in  memory  of  departed  Savannah. 
carried  to  concur. . Port  Agent 
9 
8 
5 
22 
74  discussed  shipping  in  Philadel­. „ 
27 
26 
21 
Union  Brothers.  Meeting  ad­ Tampa. 
24 
20  «  20 
25 
'  €4 
34 
29 
88  phia.  Motion  carried  to  alloy 
journed  at  7:30  PM,  with  126  Mobile. 
New 
Orleans. 
67 
62 
82 
77 
211 
85 
87 
249 
members 
in 
attendance, 
Ed  Callahan  to  change  from 
ii.?­, 
Galveston  .­. 
36 
31 
17 
84 
29 
20 
34 
83 
Group 
three  to  Group  one.  Mo­
its. 
West  Coast 
29 
30 
24 
83 
21 
16 
14 
51 
tion 
carried 
to  concur  in  Secre­  ' 
GALVESTON  —  Chairman, 
tary­Treasurer's financial 
report, 
Keith 
AIsop, 
7311; 
Recording 
if' 
GRAND  TOTAL 
345 
326 
308 
979 
362 
333 
349 
1,044 
and  Headquarters report  to  the 
Secretary.  Robert  Willbum, 
membership.  Patrolman ­ Dispat­
.37739:  Reading Clerk,  John Byzd, 
Brother  Foster's  funeral.  Mo­ Han  now  being  negotiated.  He  meeting  were  read,  and  motion  cher's  report  accepted  as read. 
34683. 
tions  carried  to  accept  as  read 
Galveston  and  other  Branch  Secretary­Treasurer's  financial  also  spoke  on  the  developments  carried  referring  excuses  to  Dis­ 285  mem^rs  were  in  attendance^ 
minutes  of  previous  meetings  i­eport  .and  Headquarter^  report  in  the  Cities  Service  ,beef.  Bro­ patcher  for  action.  Secretary­ when  meeting  was  adjourned. 
XXX 
read  and  approved.  Secretary­ to  the  membership.  One  minute  ther  Hall's  thorough  i­eport  was  IVeasurer's financial  report  was 
Treasurer's  report  and  Head­ of  silence  in  memory  of  Broth­ weU  accepted  and  applauded  by  read  and  approved.  Reports  of  NEW  YORK  —  Chairman. 
quarters  report  to  the  member­ ers  lost  at  sea.  Meeting  adjourn­ the  membership.  Communica­ following  committees  wer6  con­ Charles  Haymond.  98;  Record­
ship read  and  approved.  Port  ed  at  7:35  PM,  with  316  mem­ tions  from  membei's  seeking  to  curred  in:  Trial  Committee  and  ing  Secretary,  Freddie  Stewart. 
be  excused  from  the  meeting  Headquarters  Reinstatement  4935;  Reading  Clerk.  Robert 
Agent  spoke  on  the  local  shipK  bers  present. 
wei'e 
i­efsred  to  the  Dispatcher.  Committee., Under  Good  and  Matthews. 154. 
^ing  situation,  which  during  the 
Communication 
read  from  New  Welfare,  there  was. discussion  on  Minutes^ of  previous  meetings 
% 
% 
%. 
i&gt;ast  two  weeks  had  shown  im­
Orleans 
Branch 
Agent  of  the  the  local  shipping  situation  and  in  all  Branches  read  and  ap­
NEW  ORLEANS—Chairman, 
provement.  Patrolman­Dispatch­
MFOWW, 
thanking 
Seafarei*s  many  ^ood  points  were  stressed  proved.  Port  Agent  discussed 
er's  report  was  read  and  accept­ Frenchy  Michelet,  21194;  Record­
who 
responded 
as 
blood 
donors  by  the  speakers.  Motion  to  ad­ shipping,  which  is  on  the  quiet 
ed.  One  minute  of  silence  in  ing  Secretary,  Johnny  Johnston, 
to 
call 
from 
one 
of 
the 
MFOWW 
journ  carried  at  8  PM,  with  102  side.  He  cautioned  men  on 
memory  of  departed  Union  53;  Reading  Clerk,  Buck  Steph­
members. 
Headquarters 
report 
to 
members 
present. 
South  African  run  not  to  miss 
Brothers.  Motion  carried  to, ad­ ens,  76. 
the 
membership 
read 
and 
ap­
ship, 
us  long  detention  sen­  ^ 
X 
X.X 
journ  at  7:30  PM. 
Minutes  of  previous  New  Or­ prove^.  Motion  carried  to  con­
tences  are  meted  put  by . the 
SAVANNAH^hsirman. 
Nol­
i  i  i 
leans  meeting  read  and  approv­
MOBILE  —  Chairman,  D.  L.  ed.  Charges  were  read  and  mo­ cur  in  committee  recommenda­ lie  Towns,  7193;  Recording  Sec­ governments  there.  Secretary­
Parker,  160;  Recording  Secre­ tions  carried  advising  accused  tion  that  two  Brothers  be  allow­ retary. J. F.  Goude, 50999;  Read­ Treasurei­'s financial  report  ap­
iary,  James  L.  Carroll.  50409;  that  they  must  stand  trial  in  ed  to  become  re­active.  Brother  ing  Clerk,  E. M.  Bryant,  25806.  iwoved  as  read  and  motion  car­
Reading  Clerk,  Harold  J.  Fis  either  New  York,  Galveston  or  C.  F.  Bankston  took  the  Union  Motion  carried  to  accept  pre­ ried  to  turn  it  over  to  auditing 
Oath  of  Obligation.  Motion  to 
committee  for  review.  In  Head­
Cher,  59. 
New  Orleans  Branches.  Minutes  adjouin  carried  at  8:10  PM,  with  vious  minutes  of  Savannah  quarters  report  to  the  member­
Branch 
meeting. 
Secretary­
Minutes  of  previous  meetings  of  other  Branch  meetings  were  745  members  present. 
Treasurer's financial  report read  ship,  Assistant  Secretary­Trea­
in  aU  Branches  read  and  ap­ accepted  as  read.  Port  Agent 
XXX 
and  accepted.  Motion  carried  to  surer  Matthews outlined  the  pro­
pnoved.  Port  Agent  stated  that  stated  that •  affairs  of  port  are 
gress  being  made  on  the Union's 
shipping  had  b^n  slow  during  in  good  shape,  with  shipping  SAN  FRANCISCO—Chairman.  concur  in  Headquarters  report  to  welfare  plan.  All  details  have 
W. 
McCuistion. 
23138; 
Recording 
the  membership.  Branch  Agent 
the  past  two­week  period.  He  somewhat  slow.  He  said  that 
not  yet  been  worked  out, fie 
added  that  Feb. 15  had  been  set  shipping  might  be  improved  in  Secretary,  Jeff  Morrison.  34213;  discussed  shipping  in  Savannah.  said,  hut  several  more companies 
Readuig 
Clerk. 
P. 
M. 
R^jertson, 
Minutes  of  other  Branch  meet­
as  the  tentative  date  for  the  the  coming  two  weeks  on  the 
ings  read  and  accepted.  Motion  lave  joined  the  list  of  those 
formal  reopening  of  the  Mobile  basis  of  the  number  of  payoffs  30148. 
wlio  have  already  agreed  tP  the 
Hall.  All  major  alterations  have  scheduled  thus  far.  He  added  San  Francisco's  and  other  carried  to  excuse  J. Sellers  fi­om  plan. He  also discussed, the Cities  , 
been  completed,  he  said,  and  that  the  coffee  urn  had  been  Branch  minutes  of  previous  meeting  because  he  had  to  he  Service  beef  to  date.  Directof 
the  next  couple  of  weeks  will  okayed  and  would  be  rigged  up  meetings  accepted  as  read.  Port  in  New  York  on  a  legal  matter.  of  Organization  Williams  ela­
be  devoted  to  the  cleaning  up  shortly.  The  Port  Agent  intro­ Agent  said  that  shipping  had  Brother  R.  W.  Thomas  took  the 
borated  on  details  of  the  Cities 
job.  The  Agent  announced  with  duced  Secretary­Treasurer  Paul  been  dead  slow  for  past'  two  Union  Oath  of  Obligation.  Dona­
Service 
beef  and  his  report  was 
regret  the death  of  Brother  Ray­ Hall,  who  discussed  the  state  of  weeks,  but  that  coming  two­ tion  made  to  the  March  pf  enthusiastic^y  accepted.  Ex­
mond  Foster,  Steward,  in  the  the  Union,  the  Union's  policy  in  week  period  looked  better.  He  Dimes.  Under  Good  and  Wel­ cuses  were  referred  to"* the  Dis­
Mobile  Marine  Hospital.  Motion  respect  to  issuance  of  books, J­he  recommended  that  Brothers  in  fare,  various  subjects  of  import­
patcheci  Charges  were  read  and 
carried  that  a  floral  wreath  be  favorable  job­to­book  ratio  of  port  visit  Seafarers'  in  the  local  ance  to  members  were discussed, 
referr^ 
to  a  Trial  Committee. 
sent  from  Mobile  Branch  to  the  Seafarers,  and  the  Welfare  Marine  Hospital  as  these  visits  including  advisability  of  regis­ Under  Good  and  JiYelfare,  meet­
always  give  the  patients  a  lift.  tering  and  voting  in  city,  county 
Committee  was  elected  to  hear  and  state  elections.  Men  were  ing  was  tdtd  about  AFL  Team­
charges  and  to  handle  communi­ again  reminded  to  patronize  sters  beef,  which  has  the  SlU's 
cations  from  members  seeking  to  Garden  City  cabs  as  they  are.  hacking.  All  hands  were  ask^ 
be  excused  from  meeting.  Broth­ the  ordy  ones  employing  Union  to  Help  out. 
^ 
^ 
j­
er  Robert  C.  Stephens  took  the  drivers.  Discussion  also  took 
Union  Oath  of  Obligation.  Mo­ place  on  starting  blood  hank  in 
tion  carried  to  refer* excuses  to  Savannah  for  SIU  members  and 
Trial  and  Excuse  Committee. Re­ their  families.  Everyone  thought 
ports  of  the  following  committee  this  was  a  good  idea.  Motion 
WILFRED  "RED"  SHEA 
SILAS  LESLIE  ­
Get in  touch  with  your  mother  Call  E.  C.  Savage,  CO  7­2913  were  read  and  accepted:  Head­ carried  to  give  Agent  free  hand 
quarters  Reinstatement  Commit­ in  getting, the  bfoqd  hank  roll­
immediately.  There  is  serious  or  Floral  Park  2­2689. 
tee,  Headquarters  Balloting Com­ ing.  Meeting  adjourned  at  7:55 
illness  home. 
XXX., 
mittee,  Trial  and  Excuse  Com­ PM,  with  108  members  present.  The following  men have  money  . 
%  X  % 
ORVAL  BURK 
mittee.  Under  Good  and  Welfare, 
J,  J,  OTCEEFE 
XXX 
due  them,  as  of  last  Noyemher. 
Get  in  touch  with  C.  M.  or 
Write  to  your  mother,  230  W.  Richard  L.  Solomon  at  2409  there  was  general  discussion ­ on  BALTIMORE—Cheirman,  Wil­ Get  in  touch  with  Smith  8s 
^Parker  Avenue,  Bethlehem,  Pa.  Parkville  Place,  Nashville,  Tenn.  the  prospects of  shipping for  this  liam  Renlz.  26445;  Recording  Johnson,  '60  Beaver  St.,  New, 
port.  The  Agent  statfd  that  it  Secretary.  A1  Stanrijury.  4683;  York  4,  New  York. 
XXX 
It's  very  urgent. 
was  important  that  meni  aboard  Reading  Clerk.  R.  Dickey.  852. 
STONEY  L. WILSON 
SS  EDWARD  G.  JANEWAY  ­
­  '  XXX 
the  intercoastal  ships  touching  Minutes  of  other  Branch  meet­ .^'lick  Bigney,  Niel  M.  Grun­ v 
;  Your  mother  wants  to  hear 
JACK  DALTON 
the  west  coast  ports  do  a  first­
you. 
'Write  to  Clement,  Hospidales,  class  job.  At  7:50  PM, . a  motion  ings  read  and  acceptecl.  Motion  dahl.  Earl  D.  Johnson,  Richai^  ^ 
XXX  "  ­
carried  to  refer  communications  P.  McBride,  Robert  E.'Pritchar^ 
i| 
SAMUEL  B,  CUNNINGHAM  c/o  SIU  Hall,  51  Beaver  Street,  to adjourn  carried,  with  46  book­ from  members  seeking  to  he  ex­ Lloyd  Gk  Schop,  Louis  M.  Vo­. ­  ' 
New  York. 
members  ih  attendance. 
Write  to  your  mother. 
cused  from  meeting  to  Dispatch­ liva,  R.  Fiore,  Thomas  Harris,'' 
XXX 
X  X'X 
XXX 
er.  Communication  read  from  Clyde  A.  Kent,  Harold  G*.  Mc­
FREDERICK  R.  BEHNKE 
JAMES  J.  GORMAN. 
NORFOLK—Chairman.  .J.  S.  Local  74,  ­American  Federation  Donald,  Harold  QUimhy,  Ferdin­
:  i  Get  in  touch  with  your  moth­ Your  gear  is  being  held  White.  56:  Recording  Secretary,  of  Grain  fillers,  thanking  SIU  and  Szohlik,  Jason'Gihhs,  Martin 
er.  Shd  is  worried  about  you.  aboard  SS  Julesberg  by  Purser  jr.  A.  BuUock,  4747;  Reading  for  aid  ih ' Eflresent  beef.  Head­ J.  Hitchcock,  Daniel  D.  Lupton, 
Mrs.  Mary  Gorman,  2147  33rd  until  arrival  in  New  Yorjc  sonie­ Cler^  B.' P.  Bees.  95., 
quarters  report  to  the  member;;  Erling  Melle, Francisco  M. Rej'^es,  *''' 
time  in  February. 
St..  Astoria  5;  L. I.,  N. Y. 
^ 
Minutes  of  previous meetings  ship,  approved  as  read.  Agent  Roy  Thompson. 
XXX 
SS  JOHN  W. CULLEN 
&gt;  j;: 
XXX 
of  Norfolk  nnd  otlier  Branches  reported  that  shipping  is  slow, 
^ 
EMIL  M.  PAPIO 
EDGAR  MARQUARDT 
, 
accepted  as  read.  Motion  carried  and  that  one  beef  on  the  Robin  .  Hubert  J; Andrews,  Bobby  R. j; 
®  Please 
me  at­home,  Se­ Will  those  crewmembers  who  to  concur  in  Headquarters  re­ Line  Is  stUl  pending.  He  said  W.  Guthrie,  Edward  A.  UssCry,  ;  : 
ijpsaicus,  N.  J.  —  Union  6­4322.  witnessed  accident  of  this  Broth­ port  to  the  membership.  Agent  that  A1  Stanshury  had  been  Jam^  R;  »  Bspdley,  David 
: ^ 
C Bob  Z, 
' 
er  aboard  the  SS  BxiU  Run  on  discussed  shipping, the  poor  state  elected  to  the  AFL  Maryland  Mitchell,  John  Zohil,  Eiwin  R. ^ 
December  31,  1949,  get  in  touch  of  which  is  partially  the  result  St^te  and  District  of ^Columbia  Cooper,  William  C.  Sipgletou; 
XXX 
AFTON  J.  B^SH 
with  Paul  C.  Matthcviis,  11  of  the  decline in  coal production.  brar&gt;ch  of  Labor's  .League  for 
SS  JOHN  GALLUP 
C&lt;mfact 
Amo^trong,  .458  Broadway,  New  York  City,  m  Communications  from  members,  Political  Education, "  and  that  Paul  Gonzales,  J.  Mikaljunas,  ;  ' 
iPacific  Stteet,  Brooklyn,  N. Y. v  ordef  to  protect  his  interests. 
wanting  to  be  excused  from  this  committee  will  soon  begin  Otto  J,; Stenmo.  ' 

A&amp;C  Shipping  from  Jan,  18  To  M.  1 

&gt;V' 

• J.' V  •  

•  " •  

'• ­ •  •  ''•cil'i^'It 
 
•  .  i 

�Ttiday&lt;  F«bniari^ ie. 1950 

THE  SEAFARERS  IOC 

/= 

lO($ 

,^a'oe_'^&gt;U£!l 

Cities  Service  Shews  Bad Faith; 
Unfair  Dismissais  Acceierated 

conference  table.  But  it  takes  ance  of  the  advertisement  in  the 
{Continued  from  Page  1) 
New  York  Times,  16  Cities  Ser­
ly  with  the  union  overwhelm­ tw6  to  make  a  bargain. 
ingly  chosen  by  the  seamen  of  "If  the  Marine  Division  would  vice  seamen  were filing  charges 
its  tanker fleet  in  two  National  accept  its  legal  and  moral  obli­ of  imfair  labor  practices  against 
Labor  Relations Bofird  elections."  gations  to  its  employees,  to  its  the  company,  after  they  were 
INDIVIDUAL  DONATIONS 
Majemik,  $2.00;  P.  Rojo,  $2.00:  M. 
The  message  also  pointed  to  stockliolders  and  to  the  public,"  fired  two  days  earlier  off  the 
Earl  A.  Dunlop,  $5.00;  Norman  R.  Kopenhagen,  $2.00;  G.  Street.  $3.00; 
the  Union  statement  said,  "a  Government  Camp  in  Boston; 
Petterson,  $3.00;  A.  Coldsmit;  $15.00;  J.  C.  Huber,  $4.00;  J.  E.  Naylor.  $2.00:  the  fact  that  because  of  the 
strike 
could  be  totally  unneces­ The  men  charged  they  weffe  dis­
V.  A.  MasciteUI,  $5.00;  K.  Sterner.  S.  F.  Brunson,  $4.00;  J.  MichaeL  Marine  Division's obstinance,  the 
sary." 
$1.00;  J.  Scuba,  $2.00;  P.  Heuler,  $2.00;  E.  P.  Naya,  $2.00;  T.  Luciano. 
missed  because  of  vmion  activit­
company  stands to  lose  hundreds 
$2.00;  H.  Thomas.  $5.00;  R.  H.  Wat­ $5.00;  T.  Blower.  $5.00;  G.  F.  Fflbert. 
ies. 
of  thousands  of  stockholders' 
OS'  HESPONSIBILITY 
kins.  $10.00;  J.  1.  Fontendt.  $1.00;  $2.00;  N.  Hughes.  $2.00. 
Nolan  L.  Flowers.  $5.00;  W.  D. ­Fisher, 
dollars  as  a  result  of  more  than  Should  a  strike  develop,  full  On  Feb.  3,  seven  members  of 
SS  SLfZANNE 
$10.00;  R.  F.  Black.  $3.00;  J.  J.  Mc 
J.  Bonefont,  $1.00 
250  unfair  labor  practice  charges  responsibility  for  it  must  be  ac­ the~ Fort  Hoskins crew  were fired 
Guire,  $5.00. 
SS  FRANCIS 
filed  by  its  employees  with  the  cepted  by  the  company,  the  in  Baltimore.  They  also" filed 
S.  Zavadcson,  $1.00;^.  J.  Meyer 
C.  Ramos.  $1.00. 
charges  with  the  NLRB. 
NLRB. 
chak.  $5.00;  R.  W.  Miller.  $5.00;  S. 
message  concluded. 
SS  SEATRAIN  TEXAS 
Even  as  yesterday's  meeting 
Caliaro,  $1.00;  P.  Zappia,  $25,00; 
H.  Nicholos,  $1.00;  E.  C.  Shaffer. 
"The  Seafarers  International  Immediately  after  publication 
• p.  N.  Callo.  $1.00;  Woodward  A.  $1.00. 
between  company and Union  rep­
Union,  as  the  legally  certified  of  the  Union's  statement,  hun­
Tobey.  $5.00;  Wm.  J.  Blakeley,  $1.00; 
SS  FRANCES 
resentatives  was  in  progress,  CS  ­
representative  of  the  company's  dreds  of  inquiries  and  requests 
B.  B.  Butler.  $3.00. 
F.  Townsend,  $1.00. 
officials 
were firing  nine  pro­
SS  EVELYN 
SS  FAIRLAND 
seamen,  has  repeatedly  attempt­ for  further  information  from 
SlU 
crewmen 
of  the Salem  Mar­
J.  Emerlck.  $1.00;  R.  Miller,  $3.00, 
I.  C.  Pongen,  $2.50;  J.  C.  Fernan­ ed  to  meet  with  Cities  Service  company  stockholders  began 
SS  STEEL  ADVOCATE 
itime,  as  the  ship  tied  up  in, 
dez,  $15.00;  J.  Giardina,  $1.00;  A.  P. 
W.  Stark,  $2.00;  E.  Aubusson,  $1.00;  Williams,  $1.00;  J.  R.  Pinoa,  $2.00;  to  work  out  mutually  acceptable  pouring  into  SIU  Headquarters  Stapleton,  Staten, Island. 
and  Branch  offices. 
A.  Strachan, ^$ 1.00;  P.  Garofalo,  $2.00;  Thomas  Foster.  $2.00;  L.  G.  Walberg.  terms,"  the  Union stated. 
' That  the  Union's  appeal  to  the 
R.  Hernandez,  ­­  $2.00;  P.  O'Rourke,  $2.00;  G.  Miller,  Jr..  $2.00;  H.  F. 
The  message  continued: 
It  was  apparent  that  stock­ stockholders,  and  a  similar  mes­  7 
$1.00;  L.  Ryzod,  $1.00;  L.  Dixon.  $1.00;  Hammons,  $1,00;  U.  S.  Veach, * Jr.. 
"The  company,  however,  has  holders  were  also  besieging  saige  sent"  direct  to  members  of  ; 
­P.  Miller,  $2.00;  T.  Snow,  $1.00;  E.  $1.00;  R.  J.  Cavanaugh,  $1.00;  37  S.. 
consistently 
refused  to  bargain  the  company  officers  for  an  ac­ the  Board  of  Directors,  was  re­  •  
Madias,  $1.00;  M.  Grant.  $1.00;  A.  Chayeo,  $2.00. 
in  good  faith.  The  SIU  prefers  counting  of  Cities  Service's  xm­ sponsible  for  yesterday's  meet­  q 
SS  EVISTAR  ­
BQnes,  $1.00;  V.  Mahan,  $1.00;  W. 
M.  Laca.  $2.00;  A.  Rivera.  $2.00;  to  resolve  the  issues  peaceably,  warranted  stand  in  face  of  the 
Panicls,  $1.00;  W.  Budzinski,  $l.pO; 
ing  appears  obvious  in  view  of  ^ 
A.  Leiner,  $3.00;  T,  Johnson,  $1.00;  R.  A.  Perez,  $2.00;  W.  Gale.  $2.00;  J.  to  negotiate  a  collective  bar­ Union's  strong  case. 
Whalen. 
$1.00; 
R. 
Pitzer, 
$1.00; 
G, 
the  company's  stand ­ offishness if 
Jleale,  $1.00; .  T.  Duncan.  $5.00;  M. 
gaining  agreement  across  the  Coincident  with  the  appear­ up  to  that  point. 
Rourke.  $1.00;  W.  Thorton,  $1,00, 
CunTniaii,  $1.00;  D.  Tuinlln,  $4.00. 
if 
SS  CHICKASAW 
In  registered  letters  sent  to^^ 
•   J.f)  B.  Zagorda,  $1.00;  R.  B.  Eader, 
the 
company  on  January  4  and  f 
$1.00;  E.  Plnkowiki,  $1.00;  J.  E.  Utz, 
on  January  20,  the  SJU  request­  J 
| 
$1.00;  F.  B.  Youngblood,  $2.00;  V.  P. 
Williams,  $2.00;  A.  Leonard,  $1.00; 
ed  meetings with the  CS officials.. 
G.  F.  Turner.  $1.00;  J.  Kumor,  $1.00; 
This  is  another  of  a  series  of  articles  on  the  "Soviet  System  "The  subject­matter  of Akhma­ Both  appeals  were  ignored. 
'i.  W.  Magarvy.  $f.00;  C.  Szymanski. 
of 
Mind 
Ck&gt;ntroL"  by  one  of  America's  outstanding  educators.  tova  is  individualistic  to  the 
AT  LAST  MINUTE 
$1.00;  G.  Krupick.  $1.00;  J.  Fekete, 
core.  Her  poetry  is  poverty­ A  third  Union  appeal  was  for­
Others 
will 
appear  in  subsequent  issues. 
• $l.00j. R.  M.  Matson,  $2.00;  P.  Cold. 
^1.00. 
stricken—the  poetry  of  a  frantic i  warded  to  the  company 
_  on  Jan. 
By  GEORGE  S.  COUNTS 
SS  HELEN 
little 
lady, 
rushing 
back 
and; 3o7 asking 
for 
a" ronfereiice 
on 
J.  Wright,  $1.00;  A.  Saavedra,  $1.00; 
forth 
between 
the 
boudoir 
and'Feb. 
6 
at 
11 
AM. 
This 
request 
been 
critized 
unmercifully 
in 
the 
The  "ideological  resolutions" 
J.  PeGrazia,  $1.00;  J.  C.  Jones,  $1.00; 
R.  W.  Campbell,  $1.00;  W.  Kovamees,  of  the  Central  Committee  of  the  resolution — Mikhail  Zoshchenko  the  chapel.  Basic  with  her  are, 
also  ignored,  until  a  half­
$liOb;  J.  Walkiewicz,  $2.00. 
amorous­erotic 
motifs, 
interlaced 
hour 
before  the  hour  set  by  the 
and 
Anna 
Akhmatova. 
He 
char­
Party  of  Lenin  and  Stalin  on  the 
, 
SS  COLABEE 
with  motifs  of  sadness,  anguish,  Union. 
acterized 
Zoshchenko 
as 
follows: 
literary 
arts, 
music, 
science, 
and 
L.  Nelson,  $1.00;  A.  J.  Lord.  $1.00; 
death,  mysticism  and  doom  .  . .  At  that  time  a  company  rep­
S.  Dakota,  $1.00:  L.  Seay.  $1.00;  J.  C.  the  press  condemned  everthing 
"Zoshchenko, 
like 
the 
Philis­
Carr,  $1.00;  A.  C.  Castelo.  $1.00. 
"bourgeois"  or  Western  and  tine  and  vulgarian  ^at  he  is,  Not  quite  a  nun  and  not  quite  a  resentative  notified  the  SIU  by 
SS  STEEL  KING 
fomicatrix,  but  rather  a  forni­ telephone  that  Marine  Division 
A.  Puracher,  $2.00;  D,  C.  Robinson.  glorified  everything  Russian  or  chose  as  his  permanent  theme  catrix  and  a  nun  in  whom  for­
officials  would  attend  a  meeting; 
$1.00;  M.  P.  Davis,  $2.00;  Y.  R.  T&gt;11­ Soviet  without  restraint.  They  digging  into  the  basest  and  pet­
nication  is  mingled  with  prayer."  later  get  for  yesterday. 
berg,  $2.00;  C.  Tannehill,  $3.00;  O.  also  attacked  individueds  with 
tiest  sides  of  life  . . ^  Only  the 
^cLran,  $3.00. 
At  the  outset  of  the  session,  it 
utter  savagery. 
SAVAGE  ATTACK 
dregs  of  literature  could  produce 
SS  EMELIA 
was 
crystal  clear  that  the  com&lt;* 
The 
character 
of 
this 
assault 
E.  Martinez,  $1.00;  Louis  Aviles, 
such  'works'  ... In  this  tale  The  American  reader  should 
$1.00;  Louis  Torres,  $1.00;  T.  "V.  on  individuals  is  revealed  in  a  Zoshchenko  turned  his  vulgar  know  that  the  voice  of  Zhdanov  pany  was  talking—but  not  bar­
Brown,  $1.00;  R.  Kiminsky,  $1.00;  speech  by  Andrei  Zhdanov,  after 
and  mean  little soul  inside  out...  was  not  the  voice  of  a  publish­ gaining  in  good  faith.  Marine 
E.  Belkofsky,  $25.00;  J.  R.  Cleater, 
Division  officials  stated  point­
Stalin  the  most  powerful  mem­
$1.00;  C.  Rivera,  $1.00;  Robert  Meeks, 
"He, spat  on  public  opinion ... er, of  a  rich  patron,  of  a literary  blank  that  they  would  not  dis­
ber 
of 
the 
Politburo 
at 
the 
time, 
• $1.00;  C.  Horvath.  $1.00;  J.  J.  Swy­
critic,  or  even  of  the  head  of  a 
on  August  21,  1946.  Representing  The  thoroughly  putrid  and  cor­ Congressional  Committee  who  cuss  any  contract  which  would 
Eert.  $1.00;  A.  A.  Mitchke,  $1.00. 
rupt 
socio­political 
and 
literary 
SS  STEEL  ROVER 
cover  the  nine  ships  voted  in. 
the  absolute  power  of  the  Soviet 
•   W.  Hayes,  ­  $2.00;  H.  R.  Hanssen, 
physiognomy  of  Zoshchenko  was  might  be  haled  into  court  on  a  the  second  NLRB  election  and 
state, 
he 
interpreted 
the 
resolu­
$5.00;  Chow  Ching  Miao.  $5.00;  C. 
not  formed  in  the  most  recent  charge  of  defrauding  his  gov­ for  which  the  SIU  had  been  cer­
Adams.  $3.00;  P.  Huss.  $3.00;  R.  tion  of  'the  Central  Committee 
ernment.  All  who  heard  his 
Parville.  $2.00;  W.  G.  Heater,  $3,00;  on  literature  at  the  First  All­ period  . .  .  Let  him  reform.  But 
speech 
knew  that  the  court  of  tified  on  Dec.  2  last. 
H.  Taylor.  $2.00;  F.  Logan,  $2.00;  Union  Congress  of  Soviet  Writ­ he  does  not  want  to  reform.  Let 
The  CS  spokesmen  admitted 
R.  Munsell,  $2.00;  R.  J.  Rondbcrg. 
him  get  out  of  Soviet  literature.  last  resort  had  spoken.  As  for  they  had  no  further  legal  re­  . 
_ 
^ 
ers 
and 
passed final 
judgment 
on 
$2,005  S.  Santorio.  $2.00;  C.  J.  Palm 
In  Soviet  literature  there  can  be  Z o s h c h enko  and  Akhmatova, 

Its Follow  The  Line  —  Or  Eke,  In  Russia 

course  to  upset  the  certification 
no "blace  for  putrid,  empty,  vul­ they  knew  that  they  would  nev­ award,,  but  they refused  to  ac­
gar,  and  ideologically  indifferent  er  "rise  again,"  unless  they  cept  it  nevertheless. 
grovelled  before  the  Party,  re­
works. 
RUMOR  DISPELLED 
nounced  their  past  and  demon­
CARICATURE  CHARGED 
strated  by  deed  a  genuine  state  Shortly  after  the  meeting  got , 
"He  depicts .Soviet  people  as  of  contrition.  No^fcOne  dared  to  underway,  the  SIU representa­
ASST.  SECRETARY­TREASURERS  loafers  and  monsters,  as  stupid I come  to  their  defense  at  meet­ tives  told  the  Marine  Division 
SIU,  A&amp;6  District 
Robert  Matthews 
Lloyd  Gardner 
and  crude  people  . . . Zoshchen­ ings,  in  the  press,  or  over  the  officials  that  in  order  to  dispel 
Joseph  Volpian 
BALTIMORE 
14  Nortii  C«y  St. 
ko  habitually  mocks  at  Soviet  radio.  They  were  forsaken  by  rumors  spread  by  the  company, 
William  Rentz,  Agent 
Mulberry  4540 
life, 
Soviet  institutions,  Soviet  former  friends  and  acquaint­ the  Union  wanted  it  clearly  un­
.BOSTON..., 
273  State  St. 
SUP. 
Ben  Lawson,  Agent  Richmond  2­0140 
people ... In  his  Adventures of  ances.  They  had  become  "en­ derstood  that  it  was  not  asking 
Dispatcher 
Richmond  2­0141  HONOLULU 
..16  Merchant  St  a  Monkey  he  gives  a  deliberate­ emies  of  the  peojfie."  There  are  Cities  Service  to  sign  any  s^ree­
• GALVESTON 
30854—23rd  S*­
, 
Phone  5­8777 
countless  Zoshchenkos  and  Akh­ ment  that  wasn't  in  conformity 
Keith  AIsop,  Agent 
Phone  2­8448  PORTLAND.."  Ill  W.  Bumside  St.  ly  deformed  and  vulgar  carica­
ture  of  the  life  of  the  Soviet  matovas  in  the  Soviet  Union  to­ with  the  law. 
LAKE  CHAR^,  La.... 1418  Ryan  St. 
Beacon  4336 
As  the  conference  drew  to  a 
day. 
JL.  S.  Johnston,  Agent 
RICHMOND,  CaHf, 
,257  5th  St.  people  in  order  to  insert  into 
MOBILE 
1  South  Lawrence  St. 
close, 
the  SIU  representatives 
.  Phone  2599  the  mouth  of  the  monkey  the 
Cal  Tanner,  Agent 
Phono  2­1754  SAN  FRANCISCO 
declared  their  willingness  to 
59  Clay  St.  vile,  poisonous,  anti­Soviet  max­
NEW  ORLEANS 
523  Bienville  St. 
Douglas  2­8363  im  that  it  is  better  to  live  in  a 
meet  with  the  company  at  any 
E. Sheppard, Agent  Magnolia  6112­6113 
SEATTLE 
....\..86  Seneca  St 
time, 
preferably  the  next  day,  to 
NEW  YORK 
...Bl  Beaver  St. 
Main  0290  zoo"  than  at  liberty,  and  that  it 
Joe  Algina,  Agent 
HAnover  2­2784  WILMINGTON.. 
continue 
their  efforts  toward  ob­^ 
is 
easier 
to 
breathe 
in 
a 
cage 
440  Avalon  Blvd. 
Don't depend  on guesses or 
NORFOLK... 
127­129  Bank  St. 
taining  a  contract. 
Terminal  4­3131  than  among  Soviet  people  .  .  . 
Ben  Reee,  Agent 
Phone  4­1083 
rumors.  Before  going  ashore, 
The  company  people  said  they 
How can  the  people  of  Leningrad 
PHILADELPHIA, 
337  Market  St. 
S.  C^rdullo,  Agent 
Market  7­1635 
tolerate  on  the  pages  of  their  take  a  look  at  the  sailing  were  too  busy"  with  other  com­
Canadian District 
SAN  FRANCISCO 
85  Third  St. 
board  so  youTl  know  when  mitments  to  meet  before  Feb. 
journals  such filth  and  obscen­
Jeff  Morrieon,  Agent  Douglas  2­B475  MONTREAL... .....404  Le  Moyne  St 
your  ship  is  scheduled  to  16.  The  SIU  men  said  they, toi), 
' 
UNiversUy  2427  ity? 
SAN  JUAN,  PR 
282  Ponce  de  Leon 
FORT  WILUAM. .118'/4  Syndicate  Aveu 
"With  cynical  frankness  he  "leave  port. If  the time  is  not  had  other  business,  but  that  in  : 
Sal  Colls,  Agent 
Ontario 
Phone 
3­3221 
SAVANNAH... 
2  Abercorn  St. 
continues  to  remain  a  preacher  posted,  ask  the  Delegates  to  view  of  the  importance  of  • t  he 
128 H  HoHit'  St 
current  situation  they  would  put 
E.  Bryanti  Agent 
Phone  3­1728  HALIFAX 
find  out  the  correct  depar­ everything  else  aside  in  the  in­  •  
Phone  3­8911  of  ideological'  indiffei­ence  and 
SEATTLE .A 
2700  Ist  Ave. 
103  Durham  St  vulgarity,  an  unprincipled  and 
ture  time  from  the  Mate. 
Wm.  McKay,  Agent 
Seneca  4570  PORT  COLBORNE 
terest  of resolving 
the  issue 
Phone  5591  unscrupulous  literary  hooligan." 
TAMPA 
1809­1811  N.  Franjflin  St. 
­In  any  event,  don't  leave  threugh  collective  bargaining 
111 A  Jarvis  St 
Ray  White,  Agent 
Phone  2­1323  TORONTO 
Zhdanov  pays  a  "tribute"  of  the  ship  until  you  know  procedure. 
Elgin  5710 
WILMINGTON, CAlif.,  227 V4  Avalon Blvd. 
602  Boughton  St  same  order  to  Akhmatova: 
when  you're  due  back 
E.  B.  Tilley,  Agent  Terminal  4­2874  VICTORIA,  B.C 
The  Union  also  demanded  that 
Empire  4531 
HEADQUARTERS. .51 Beaver St.;  N.Y.C. 
^'Akhmatova  is  a  repi'esenta­ aboard.  YouH  save  yourself  the  company  designate  an  auth­
VANCOUVER 
565 
Huston 
St 
SECRETARY­TREASURER 
and  your  shipmates  a  lot  of  orized  spokesman  to  meet  md 
Pacific' 7024  tive  of  this  ideologyless  reaction­
Paul  Hall 
HEADQUARTERS...­­...BIS  McGUI  St.  ary  swamp  .  . .  She  preaches  trouble by  checking with 4he  bargain  with  the  Union  and  who 
DIRECTOR  OF  ORGANKATION 
Montreal 
Piateau  576  the  theory  of  'art  for  art's sake;' 
proper  souzcesk 
Lindsay  WUiiaBis 
would  be  accessible  for  discus­;; 
of  'beauty  fcr  beauty's  sake.' 
sion  at  all  times. 
$5.oo"*  B.  KuMkow 

$1l.00;  A.  two  popular  writers  who  had 

Directory  Of  SIU  Halls 

Check Sailing Time 

�Twelve:, 

i'Ji­­' 

TBE  SEAFARERS  laC 

io. 

FMdai^ 

TO  THE  STOCKHOLDERS  OF  CITIES  SERWOE  OIL  COMPAIIY: 

•• 

X.'­

"Si 

­­f 

Cities Service Oil Company  faces a  paralyzing  and  costly  strike  which will affect  all of  its operationSy  because its Marine Division  refuses 
to  recognize' and  bargain  collectively  with  the  union  overwhelmingly  chosen  by  the  seamen  of  its  tofiker  fleet  in  two  National  Labor 
Relations  Board  collective  bargainipg elections. 
.  i 
In -addition. Cities Service Oil Company stands to lose hundreds of thousands of your dollars as a result of more than 230 unfair labor '
practice charges filed by its employees with the National Labor Relations Board.
'
'
"

%

WHAT  ARE  THE  FACTS  IN  THE  CASE? 

fe'­' 

h  I  Three  years  ago  the  Seafarers  International 
jltJnion, AFL, filed a  petition for an election  among 
ihe seamen of  the Cities Service tanker fleet. The 
v company fought  the union, spending thousands of 
your  dollars  in  legal  fees,  in  the  organizing  and 
^supporting  of  a  company­dominated  "union," and 
Jin costly staUing  maneuvers. Despite this, the sea­
,:­men  chose  the  Seafarers  International  Union  to 
^represent  them in  two  NLRB elections, by major­
'||ties of  83  percent  in  the  first  and  89  percent  in 
^the  second. 
iy-

As a  result of  these elections,  the SlU'was offi­

%ii 

cially certified  by  the NLRB to represent  the un­ dominated  organizations  which  were  declared  il­
licensed personnel of  the company's tanker  fleet.  legal  and  ordered  dissolved  by  the  NLRB  and 
Cities Service's Marine  Division  has  used every  court  orders,  ^ 
device  to  evade  its  legal  obligation  to  enter  into 
Aboard  its  ships.  Cities  Service  has  employed 
collective  bargaining  negotiations  with  the  SIU.  a  spy. system  to ferret  out for  dismissal  the  pro­
It even refused to  cooperate with  the Government  union  men  in its fleet. On  one ship  alone, for  ex­
in  the conduct  of  the elections, 
^  ample — the SS  Government  Camjji,  on  July* 22, 
The  Marine  Division  has  sponsored  and  sup­ 1949, at Linden, New Jersey — 28 men of  a 32­man 
ported  a  company  "union"  in  order  to  stall  the  crew  were  fired  for  tmion  activities.  We  believe 
legal  machinery  which  would  bring  the  seamen  each one of  these dismissals  constitutes an  unfair 
representation  of  their  own  choosing.  This  com­ labor practice, for which damages can be collected. 
pany  "union,"  Cities  Service  Tankermen's  Asso­ Thus far, more than  250  of  these cases  have been 
ciation,  was  patterned  after  two  other  company­ filed  against  the company. 
j 

1 
ft,K: 
• 

yl 

WHAT  DO  THESE  MASS  FIRINGS  MEAN  TO  YOU? 

' 

When  these  unfair  labor  practice  charges  are 
?proved. Cities  Service  will  have  to­—  in  addition 
to  reinstating  these  men  to  their  former  jobs — 
PAY  EACH  AND  EVERY  MAN  WAGES  AND 
tSUBSISTENCE  FOR  EVERY  UNEMPLOYED 
'^DAY FROM THE TIME HE WAS FIRED TO THE 
DAY  HE  RESUMES HIS JOB, 

supported  by  affidavits  on  file  with  the  NLRB,  unfair labor practice charges will  be filed  against 
and will be  proved. Since some of  these cases will  the  company — and  proved. 
have  run for  as long  as  three  years  before  being 
Nor  will  company  losses — your  losses — And 
finally  adjudicated,  the  total  amount  involved 
there, 
jj 
may  well  run  into  hundreds of  thousands  of  dol­* 
Should  the  union  be  forced  to strike  the  com­
lars — of  your  money. 
pany  because  of  the  Marine  Division's  policy, all 
And  that  is  not  all.  The  longer  the  Marine  segments  of  the  Cities  Service  enipire ^iU  btt 
%r  All  of  these  cases  are  well  documented  and  Division persists in its anti­union firings, the more  seriously  affected, 
^ 

WHO  WILL  LOSE  IF  A  STRIKE  IS  CALLED? 
You, the stockholders  of  Cities Service,  will  b® 
the  only  losers.  It  will  mean  money  out  of  your 
pocket, all  because of  the Marine  Division's anti­
quated  labor  policy — a  policy  that  is completely 
at variance  with  the established  pattern  of  other 
divisions of  Cities Service,  which enjoy  amicable 
contractual relations  with  bona fide  trade unions. 

has  repeatedly  attempted  to  meet  with  Cities 
Service  to  work  out  mutually  acceptable  terms. 
The  company,  however,  has  consistently  refused 
to bargain in good faith. The SIU prefers to resolve 
the issues peaceably,  to negotiate a collective  bar­
gaining  agreement  across  the  conference  table. 
But it takes two  to make a bargain. 

ing passenger ships, freight ships  and oil tankers^ 
and  is  recognized  in  the  maritime  industry  as  a 
reputable and  responsible  organization. 
t 

If  the  Marine  Division  would  accept  its' leg^ 
and moral obligations to its employees, to its stock­
holders and to the public, a strike would be totally 
unnecessary. If a strike is called against the Marine 
The Sea:fe'rers International Union, as the legally 
The Seafarers International Union has contracts  Division,  the  Cities  Service  Oil  Com|&gt;any  must 
idertified  representative of  the company's  seamen,  with  52  American  steamship  companies,  operat­ accept  full responsibility. 

If you would like a copy of the complete, documented story of the SIU's case
against Cities Service—from its inception in October, 1946, to tlx present date—write
to any of these four of the major branches of the Seafarers International Union.

276  STATE  STREET  /  337  MARKET  STREET 
BOSTON  9,  MASS, 
PHILADELPHIA,  PA, 
81  BEAVER  STREET 
NEW  YORK  4,  N,Y, 

1419  RYAN  STREET 
L'AKE  CHARLES,  LA, 

SEAFARERS  INTERNATIONAL  UNION  OF  NORTH  AMERICA,  AFL 
• Tiiumc UB  lUF  DisnticT 

­  /;  '  laJsllS 

l/^](5rhis  ad  api/eared  originally  in  the  New  York "Times" on February 2, and  the New  York  ^raW/Tribune"  on 1^br^ 

fyB\

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="7">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42905">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1950-1959</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44875">
                  <text>Volumes XII-XXI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44876">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44877">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10191">
                <text>February 10, 1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10240">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10292">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10344">
                <text>Vol. XII, No. 3</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10370">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10396">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10424">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
SIU PUTS HEAT ON CITIES SERVICE BUT COMPANY STALL CONTINUES&#13;
AFL PLEDGES AID TO BUILD WORLD LABOR SOLIDARITY&#13;
LATEST VICTIMS OF CITIES SERVICE'S UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICES&#13;
PANAMANIAN SHIPS FOUND FAR BELOWN STANDARDS&#13;
SLAVE LABOR EXPONENTS&#13;
DOMESTIC SHIPPING SERVICES IN BAD SLUMP&#13;
TUG STRIKE ENDS; PICK-UP LOOMS FOR BALTIMORE&#13;
MOBILE INVITES ALL SEAFARERS TO HALL OPENING&#13;
NEW YORK NO EXCEPTION IN SHIPPING SLUMP&#13;
BOSTON SHIPPING IS ON DULL SIDE&#13;
SEATTLE REPORTS FAIR SHIPPING&#13;
SEAFARERS COVER WORLD'S WATERFRONTS&#13;
1942 TRANSFER TO GATEWAY CITY OPENED WAY TO US CITIZENSHIP FOR BRITISH SEAFARER&#13;
GEORGE STEVENSON, SIU MAN SINCE '43 DIES ABOARD YAKA&#13;
SS PUERTO RICO'S SHIPBOARD PUBLICATION IS PRODUCT OF HARD WORK AND COOPERATION&#13;
CREW OF THE CABINS FAVORS ANNUAL LEVY TO SUSTAIN LOG&#13;
IT'S FOLLOW THE LINE - OR ELSE, IN RUSSIA&#13;
YOUR INVESTMENT MAY BE IN JEOPARDY!</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10425">
                <text>2/10/1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13075">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="64">
        <name>1950</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="979" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="2329">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/9e6a342503cffc1d9c0f2fe6f8113568.pdf</src>
        <authentication>3a502ece9c6878b497a5e702e193ac28</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47457">
                    <text>••  • i&gt;'^i­*^ki"­T'­­'' 
­:"'  ;&gt;;&gt;y&lt;tv­'P®'Rv?;.­^^^^ 

y'&gt;t?'f®­jT:!»3Ts?­­ &gt;  ­

Presses 

Contract 

BULLETIN—^As  the  LOG  went  to  press,  the 
SIU. Negotiating  Committee  was  still  exerting 
every  effort  to  hammer  out  a  contract  with  the 
Marine Division of  the­Cities Service Oil Company. 
High  on  the  list  of  Union  demands,  was  tile 
insistence that any  contract  arrived  at  must  cover 

personnel  on  all  16  ships  in 
• 
the  company's  tanker  fleet., 
^Meanwhile, the  Union Ne­
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf  District, Seafarers International Union of  NA  gotiating  Committee  was  Don't  shoot  the  postmao! 
It's  not  his  fault  that  the 
LOG  is  late  this  week. Con­' 
NEW  YORK,  N.  Y„  FRIDAY.  FEBRUARY  24.  1950 
No.  4  taking  note  of  the  rapidly­
VOL.  XII 
growi:ig  demand  by  Cities  ditions  beyond  our  control 
forced  us  to  delay  publica­ ­
Service  tankermen  for  an 
tion  for  a  few  days,  but  the 
all­out  strike  against  the  next  issue  will  be  out  on 
time, barring a general strike 
Representative  Schuyler  Otis  Bland,  chairman  of  the  House  Corhmittee  on  the  company's  facilities  on  all  in 
the  printing  industry. 
Merchant  Marine,  and  often  termed  "the  father  of  America's  modern  merchant  ma- coasts,  unless  concrete  evi­
rine,"  died  February  16  in Washington. He  was 77, 
dence  is  immediately  forth­
Judge  Bland  had  represented  Virgiriia's  first  district  continuously  since  1918.  coming  that  Cities  Service 
A staunch supporter  of  a strong  Amirican  merchant  marin^  Bland  was  instru­ will sign  a  decent  contract. 
mental  in  having  passed  the Merchant  Mar  ne  Act  of  1936,  which  paved  the  way  for  Headquarters  issued  a 
the  rebuilding  of  America's  shipping  industry. 
memorandum instructing  all 
Maritime  labor  and  management  always found  Judge Bland sympathetic to the 
problems  and  needs  of  the  maritime  industry,  one  such  incident  being  the  recently  Cities Service tankermen and 
won  battle  to insure  the  carrying  of  at  least  50  percent  of  European  Aid  cargoes  in  members  of  the  SlU  in  all 
ports  to  stand  prepared  in  The  second  hearing  on  prob­
American  bottoms. 
Bland's  interest  in  the  merchant  marine  was  not  solely  legislative,  for  he  took  the  event  that  the  dispute  lems  facing  the  maritime  indus­
try  has  been  scheduled  for  early 
a  personal  and  active  interest  in  seeing  to  it  that  the  {y;lministrative  branches  of  the­ cannot  be resolved  across the  next 
month  by  the  Senate  Sub­
government  carried  out  to  the  letter  the  will  of  his  committee and  Congress.  It  was  bargaining  table. 
committee  on  Merchant  Marine 
primarily  at  his  insistence  that  the  "watchdog committee"  was set  up to see to it that  The  Union  made  it  clear,  and  Maritime  Matters. 
the  50  percent  cargo  rule  was  not  violated. 
however,  that  it  would  con­ Senator  Warren  G.  Magnuson, 
^  America's  maritime  indtistry 
of  a  true  friend.  Every  ship  tinue to press  for  a  peaceful  who is parking  the Senate drive 
settlement  and  that  respon­ to expand  the  US njerchant flee^ 
afloat  in  the  country's  new  merchant  marine is  a  monument  to his  memory. 
heads  the  subcommittee.  The 
Expected  successor  to  Bland  as  the Merchant Marine Committee's head is Rep­ sibility  for  any  strike  action  hearing  is  expected  to last  about 
resentative Edward J. Hart, of  New Jersey,  who represents the 14th  New Jersey district,  would  rest  with  the  com­ two  weeks. 
pany. 
including  the  Port  of  New  York  cities  of  Hoboken  and  Jersey City. 
Among  the  matters  that  are 
under  consideration  by  the  Sen­
ate  group  are a long­range build­
ing  program,  the  transfer  of 
American flag­ships  to  foreign 
registry,  the  Economic  Coopera­
as its  application  to the  maritime  tion  Administration  and  the  90 
WASHINGTON—In  a  decision  The  high  court  did  not  dis­ through  remedial  legislation. 
loaded  with  grave  potentialities  cuss  the  merits  of  the  contro­ Senator  James  Murray,  (Dem.,  industry  was  concerned,  at  least.  percent  shcU­e  for  US  ships 
versy  over  the  hiring  halls.  It  Montana),  announced  that  the  Questioned  on  the  possibility  of  cargoes  shipped  imder  the  act, 
for  the  shipping  industry^  the 
merely  refused  to  review  the de­ Senate  Labor  subcommittee,  allowing  seamen's  \inions to  con­ and  competition  for  commercial 
Supreme  Court, has  ruled  that  cision,  declaring  the  union  hir­ which  he  heads,  would  shortly  tinue  their  present  hiring  meth­ vessels  from  Army  and  Navy 
the  hii'ing  hall,  as  operated  by  ing  halls  illegal  imder  the  T­H  begin  hearings  on  a  bill  offered  od^  Taft  said: 
ships. 
the  CIO  National  Maritime  Un­ Act,  handed  down  by  the Fed­ by  Senator  Warren  Magnuson  "I  don't  see  how  we  can  do  In  connection  with  the  cour 
ion  on  the  Great  Lakes,  violates  eral  Circuit  Court  of  Appeals  (Dem.,  Wash.), to  legalize  hiring  it  for  the  maritime  unions  im­ struction  phase  of  the  hearings, 
the  closed  shop  ban  of  the  Taft­ in  New  York.  Thus,  the  lower  halls  and  allow  their  continued  less  we  do  it  for  all."  / 
the  Senate  subcommittee  is  con­
operation  as  in  the  past. 
court  verdict  stands. 
Hartley  Act. " 
In  fact,  that  attitude  appeared  sidering  a  biU  to  give  Federal 
The  NMU  has  filed  a  petition  A  similar  biU  has  been  offered  to  set  up  a, stumbling  block  to  support  to  construction  and  op­
for  a  rehearing  of  its  case  by  in  the  House  by  Rep.  John  Le­ quick  action  on  the  Magnuson­ eration  of  this  coimtry's  mer­
sinski  (Dem.,  Mich.). 
the  Supreme  Court. 
Lesinski  bill.  Those  favoring  the  chant  marine. 
The  enthe  maritime  industry  Senator  Murray  said  that  the  present  hiring  haU  method  of  A  companion  bill  had  been  in­
viewed  the  decision  with  con­ hiring  hall  system  "has  worked  employment  are  afraid  to  take  troduced  to  the  House  of  Rep­
sidei­able 
alarm,  since  the  end  satisfactorily  and  it  seems  to  me  any  action  that ­  would  be  un­ resentatives  by  the late Schuyler 
The  1950  scholarships  for 
of 
union­operated 
hiring  halls  it  ought  to  be  continued." 
popular  with  other  sections  of  Otis  Bland,  who  had  headed  the 
Anierican  trade  unionists  to 
would 
mean 
a 
return 
to 
crimps, 
Senator 
Taft, 
however, 
who 
management, 
especially  since  lower  chamber's  Committee  on 
•   ' study  at  Ruskin  College,  Oxford, 
shanghaiing 
and 
all 
the other 
vi­
has 
considerable 
influence 
in 
this 
is 
an 
election 
year. 
Merchant  Marine  and  Fisheries. 
England,'  have  been  opened  and 
cious 
practices 
that 
were 
wiped 
Senate 
Labor 
Committee 
deci­
Nevertheless, 
all 
maritime 
un­ Senator  Magnuson has express­  . 
applications  are  now  being  ac­
'  cepted  at  the  scholarship  com­ out  by  the rotary system  of  ship­ sionsj  indicated  he  would  block  ions—^AFL,  CIO  and  independ­ ed  the  opinion  that  any  mer­
a  move  to  exempt  the  marithne  ent—are  urging  immediate  pas­ chant  marine  expansion  pro­
mittee's  offices  in  New  York.  ping  for  seamen. 
On  the management  side, there  unions'  hiring  halls  from  the  sage  of  the  Magnuson­Lesinski  gram  would  fail  unless  there ; 
Offered  annually by the  Trans­ was  fear  for  the  continued  effi­ closed  shop  ban  imposed  by  his 
biU,  as  the  only  sound  way  out  was  assurance  that  at  least  5® 
atlantic ,  Foundation  are five  cient  operation  of  ­"'essels  whi(A 
law. 
of 
the  confusion  and  chaos  that  percent  of  this  coimtry's  foreign 
scholarships  to  active  trade  un­ the  union  hiring  halls  have 
But 
Taft 
indicated 
that 
the 
would 
inevitably  result  if  the  trade  moved  in  American  bot­' 
ion  members  in  this  country,  brought  about. 
T­H  ban  was  a  mistake  insofar  hiring  haUs  are  smashed. 
toms. 
each  winner  receiving  tuition,  Spokesmen  for  a  section  of 
room  and  board  at  Oxford,  plus  maritime  management  were  in 
approximately  $210  for  personal  Washington  last  week,  discuss­
expenses. 
ing  the  problem  ­with  Govern­
The  offer  is  open  to  members  ment  labor  experts. 
of  the  AFL,  CIO  and  Indepen­
They  expressed  the  view^  held  Seafai­ers  who  are  veterans  of  branch  of  the  military,  and  v/ho  Applications  may  be  obtahieA 
dent  unions,  with  the  committee  generally  by  ship  operators,  that  World  Wax  II,  and  who  entered  served  more  than  60  days  be­ at  all  major  veterans  organiza­
particularly  interested  in  per­ the  present  njethod  of  hiring  the  armed  forces  as  residents  tween  Dec.  7,  1941  and  Sept.  2,  tions,  aU  Pennsylvania  National 
sons  between  20  and  35. 
through  the­  union  halls  is  less  of  Pennsylvania,  are  eligible  for  1945,  can  receive  compensation.  Guard  armories  and  the  ofiiee 
state  bonus  payments.  Applica­ Payments  wiU  be  figured ' as  of  the  County  Director  of  Vet­
Application  forms  and  fiuiber  expensive  and  more  orderly. 
information are available through  Meanwhile,  responsible  mem­ tions  should  be  filed  immedi­ follows: 
erans  Affairs,  located  in  4he 
th6  Editor,­ SEAFARERS  LOG,  bers  of  Congress,  conscious  of  ately,  as  the  deadline  is  July  1,  $10  for  every  month  and  frac­ coimty  court  hou3^^s. 
tion  thereof  for  service  in  the 
51  Heaver  Street,  New  York.'AlI  the  acute  problem  facing  the  1950. 
The  state  emphasized  that  ap­
^ 
applications  must  be  in  the  maritime  industry  as  a  result  Honorably  discharged  vets,  US. 
plicants 
must file  no  later tiian 
who 
lived 
in 
Pennsylvania 
at 
$15  for  every  month  and  Ac­
hands of ttie  scholarship commit­ of  th^  Supreme  Court  ruling^ 
the 
time 
of 
entry 
into 
any 
tion 
thereof 
for 
overseas 
Mrrvice. 
July  1,  16S0. 
began  steps  to  resolve  the  issue 
;:by 
;L 

paiiiiiisiiil 

Hold  It,  Brotberl 

Congressman  Bland  Dies  In  Washington 

Senate  Greup 
Sets  Hearing 
On  Maritime 

Sea Unions Urge Adoption Of Hiring Haii Bill 

fiuskin Scholarship 
Applications  Openod 

PennsYivania  Veterans To Get State Benas 

�Page Two 

T  H  E  SEAFARERS  tO G 

friday, Febxuaty  24,  !SSO 

SEAFARERS  LOG 
% 

j't 

r  • ' 

Published  Every  Other Week  by Jhe 

SEAFARERS  INTERNATIONAL  UNION 
OF NORTH AMERICA 
Atlantic and 
.  Affiliated  with  Ihe  American  Fedefatkm­of .Labor. . 
'  At 51  Beaver Street,  New  York 4,  N. Y. 
HAnoyer  2­2784 
f  ReentCTed  as second  class  matter­ August^ 2.  1940,­  al • t^^e 
Office  in  New  York,  N.Y.,  under  the  Act  of  August'  24,  19l2. 
267^ 

Union  Hiring  Halls 
It  must  be  admitted  that  ascertain  element  among 
1 management  found  the  Taft­Hartley  Law,  and especially 
^its provision  banning  the closed  shop, exactly  to its liking. 
^It gave them a hammer  toliold over, the Leads of  organized 
labor,  because  the  prohibition  of  the  closed  shop  is  a 
threat  to the security  built  up  by  unionized  workers  after 
years of struggle. 
^ 
« 
Whatever  the  feelings  of  industry  are  in  regard  to 
this vicious  piece of  legislation, you  can  bet  that  the ship­
owners  are  almost  as  vehemently  opposed  to it  as  are  the 
niaritime  unions.  And  they  have  recorded  their  opposition 
to the  ban on  the Hiring  Hall on  many occasions. 
Using  good,  sound  business  sense,  based  on  a  desire 
to  continue  operations  with  a  maximum  of  efficiency 
and  a  minimum of  confusion,  the shipowners  have  seen— 
in  concrete  form—the  benefits  of  the  Hiring' Hall,  not 
only  to  the  seamen,  but  to  the  industry  as  a  whole. 
Prior  to  the  advent  of  the  Union  Hiring  Hall  in 
maritime, conditions  were chaotic,  to put  it  mildly. Crews 
i^ere  obtained  through ffair  means  or  foul—and  mostly 
foul. The parasitic  group  known  as crimps  did  a flourish­
ing  business  shanghaiing  their  victims  aboard  ships  for  a 
j  fee,  or  by  maneuvering  helpless  seamen  into  debt  for 
board  or  lodging  until  they  could  force  them  to  take 
I any shipboard  job,  under any  conditions,  to wipe  out  their 
|v obligations. 
fv  •   Thanks  to  the  Union  Hiring  Halls,  crimping  and 
shanghaiing  are  things  of  the  ugly  past.  Seamen  now  are 
able  to obtain  employment  in  a  fair,  democratic  way  by 
virtue  of  the  rotary  hiring  system  used  in  Union  Halls. 
They are assured  of  proper and  respectful  treatment—and 
consequently,  they  are  better,  more  efficient  workers 
because  of  it.' 
Because  of  the  successful  operation  of  the  Union 
Hiring  Halls,  ships  leave  on  time,  arrive  on  time  and  are 
manned  by qualified seamen  who respect  their  contractual 
obligations.  This  has  naturally  resulted  in. an  efficiency 
These are the  Union Bibthexs currently  in the  marine hoq^Hals. 
impossible of  attainment under  the pre­Union  Hiring Hall 
as 
reported 
by  the  Port  Agents. Them  Brothers find  tlihe  hanging 
methods. The operators know it. Even Senator Taft  knows 
heavily 
on 
their 
ir.  He  showed  the  weakness  in  his  armor  the  other  day,  writing  them.  hands.  Uo  what  you  can  to  cheer  them  up  by 
at  an  open  hearing  before  a  Senate  Labor  subcommittee 
ISLAND  HOSPITAL 
J.  DAVIS 
on  the  Magnuson  Bill  to  exempt  maritime  unions  from  . STATEN 
CIRNACO  ESOLAN 
S.  C.  MILLARD 
the  closed  shop  ban,  when  he  observed:  "I don't  see  how  J.  H.  DANIEL,  JR. 
J. SHE A 
we  can  do  it  for  the  maritime  unions  unless  we  can  do  LUIS  DIOUDONNE 
B.  D.  ELBERT 
ir for aU." 
C,  P.  THOMPSON 
N.  BATHOIR 
J.  MARTINEZ 
Th6 closed shop  ban—on any  union—^is  a  mistake. In  THEODORE  ROZUM 
C.  TERRY 
connection  with  its  application  to  the  maritime  unions,  JAMES  HILLIER 
R.  GRALICKI 
W.  D.  WARMAdK 
a?  least,  Senator  Taft  prefers  to  remain  stubborn  about  JOHN  SANTANIELLO 
S.  BUZALEWSKI 
admitting it,  and  thus is  inviting  a  return  to  the old  days  V.  E.  JOHNSON 
J.  A.  KRUSEZYNSKI 
of  chaos  and  confusion. 
H.  J.  OUT 
C,  F. SCHERKOUS 
F. KORVATIN 
The  maritime  trnions  cannot  allow  this  xo  happen.  J.  A.  PILUTIS 
K. 
JENSEN 
P. 
E.  DARROUGH 
If  Taft and  his  backers have  no obligation to the  vast  ma­
J.  W.  MC CASLIN 
P.  FRANKMONS 
jority  of  working  men  and  women  of  this  country,  their  B.  B.  FULLER 
ft 
unions  do—and  they  mean  to  discharge  that  obligation.  MOSES  MORRIS 
NflW  ORLEANS  HOSPITAL 
Regardless of  any differences  they may  have on  any issues,  HENRY  WATSON 
A.  DEFERMO 
JAMES 
PANTOJA 
G. 
NOLES 
the  maritime  unions  are  absolutely  united  in  their  stand 
B. 
F. 
LAW 
E. 
J. NAVARRE 
, 
on the Hiring Hall. 
A.  BJORNSSON 
J.  D7ENNIS 
They  know  full  well  that,  besides  leaving  the  way 
F.  LANDRY 
%  i  t 
­open  for  the  return  of  crimps  afid  their  ilk,  the  Hiring 
BALTIMORE  HOSPITAL 
H.  F.  LAGAN 
Hall  ban  could  lead  to  a  breakdown  of  working  condi­ E.  K.  BR'YAN 
L.  LANG 
,  L.  WILLIS 
tions  and  wage  levels — representing  years  of  sweat  and  J.  P.  STANFORD 
C.  CHESNA 
struggle.  Smashing  of  the  Hiring  Hall  could,  in  essence,  J.  O.  MORRISON 
W.  ASHFORD 
A.  PAREK 
" 
mean  the  smashing  of  maritime  unions  and  everything  J,  H.  TURNER 
C.  P.  BENWAY 
V 
they  have  accomplished  both  in  behalf  of  their  member­ A.  L.  MASTERS 
M.  A.  DODGE 
ships aind  for  the stability of  the industry. 
G.  A.  CARROLL 
C.  EZELL 
P.  ROBERTS 
V 
The  Lesinski­MagniiSon  Bill,  which  would  legalize  M.  DUSENITCH 
I. 
WILLOUGHBY 
A.. 
MAUFFRAt 
, 
Hiring  Halls  and  return  them  to  their  pi^­Taft­Hartley 
T.  MORIARITY 
N.  1.  WEST 
status, intelligently jfecogmzes  this danger. Congress  should  J.  G.  HARRIS  ' 
,.P;"­L/­RAY 
7t  quickly  to pz• ' . it. 
B.  THOMPSON 
J. J.  GERDA 
.  ..c 

Men Hew In The  Maine Hespiteie 

Staten Island  Hospital 
You  can  contact  your  Hds­
pital  delegate  at  the  Stateh 
Island Hdspital  at the follow­
ing  timesi 
Tusiiday  1:38  to  3:30  p.m. 
(on  5th  and  Offa floors.) 
Thursday —  1:30  to 3:30  pan. 
(on  3rd  and  4th floors.) 
Saturday  —  1:30  to 3:30  p.m. 
(on  1st  and  2nd floors.) 
C.  R.  BRACE 
C.  F,  PRICE 
O.  HOWELL 
P.  GAVILLO 
C,  LYONS 
T.  E.  T.EE 
H.  D.­  MC KAY 
L.  TlCildLE 
G.  B.  GILLISPIE 
W.  W.  LAMB 
W.  HAYES 
W.  HAZELGROVE 
C.  NEUMAXER 
' 
W.  WALKER 
^ 
­
^  X 
SAN  FRANCISCO  HOSPITAL 
S.  SWOR 
W.  SILVERTHORNE 
A.  CAUDRA 
J.  KEENAN 
G.  W.  GHALE 
J.  JELLETTE 
t 
4 
SAVANNAH  HOd£&gt;ltAL 
RAY  COLE 
4  4  4 
MOBILE  HOSPITAL  '. I  ­
H.  HENDERSON 
t. LITTLE 
.  • ' 
P.  BURROUGHS 
A.  B.  LYNN 
I  . 
TiJa  BURKE 
'444 
BOSTON  HOSPITAL  r 
H  v 
FRANK  AL.ASAVICK 
W.  BEZANSON 
..jn 
V,.  .:V 
• v;;V, 
F.  PAGAN 
R.  WAGNER, 

^ I 
­.• 'i 

�,.... ,= 

frKtoy. J^i^teafuy ,2#­  1850 

&lt;fffEJ§MAJ 4 EiEJES  I Q  G 

P9g0 Tbtee 
­­—tSij 

trucking  competition,  plus  the j 
high  costs ""of  handling  cargo ^ 
Several  hundred  jobs  seem 
which  face  all  postwar  steam­
assured  for  seamen  on  the  West 
ship  operations,  that  H.  F.  Alex­
Coast,  with  the  recent  awarding 
ander  developed  his  idea  for 
of  bids  to  the  Sun  Shipbuildmg 
Trailerships. 
|md  Drydock  Company  at  Chest­
ENDORSED  BY  UNIONS 
er,  Pa.,  for  the  construction  of 
He  has  obtained  the  whole­
two  Trailerships,  imusual  vessels 
hearted  endorsement  of  both 
that  will  &lt;;arry  highway  trucks 
longshore  and  teamsters  unions, 
and  passengers  between  I^g 
and  has  seen  his  project  finally 
Beach  and  San  Francisco. 
win  official  approval  after  three 
"Proposed  for  several  years  by 
years  of  "backing  and  filling" ^ 
H.  P.  Alexander,  well  known 
the  old  salts  would  say,  before 
West  Coast  shipping raan,  'Trail­
the  cautious  Maritime  Commis­
. crships  have  received  the  finan­
sion. 
cial  backing  of  the  US  Maritime 
These  two  ships,  he  hopes, 
^  Commission  to  the  extent  of 
will 
be  the  forerimhers 
some  $110,000,000. 
of  more  extensive  Trailer^p 
operations  to  come  on  the  Par 
They  will  operate  on  an  over­
cific,  Gulf  and  Atlantic  coasts; | 
mght  service  between  Long 
reviving  the  prewar  coastal  pas­
B.each  and  the  Golden  Gate,  one 
,ship  leaving  the  southern  ter­
An  azchitect's drawing  of  ono  of  two  faUBrsbips  on  which  construction' is  soon  to  begin.  senger  trade  and  giving  employ­] 
ment  to  hxmdreds  of  seamen  in 
minus  as  another  departs  from  The  vessels  axe  563  feet  long,  have  a  9P­.£pot  beam,  and  will  have accommodations  for  382  pass­
the  north. 
engers  and  176  trailer  trucks.  The  TraUerships  will  operate  between  San  Francisco  and  Long"  the  process. 
Beach.  Calif. 
5^he  Board  of  Harbor  Commis­
(Editor's  note:  This  is  the 
It  is  hoped  that  the  innovation  of  the  Trail srships  in  the  coastal  trade  will  open  up  new 
sioners :Of  Long  Beach  are  budd­
second 
and  concluding  article 
areas  of  employment  for  seamen. The ships  will  each  carry  19  officers  and  117  unlicensed  crew­
jj^g  a  .$3,000,000  terminal  to  ac­
on  the  subject  of  coastal  ship­
members.  and  also  will, have  qparters  for  60  of  the trailers' drivers.  According to  present  plans, 
comodate  the  first  two  Trailer­
ping  by  John  Bunker,  foriner 
ships,  when  they  start  operating  the ships  will  have  25­knot  speeds. 
some  time  in  1950  or  1951. 
member  of  the  SIU.  who  is 
This 
truck 
competition 
grew 
coastwi^ 
and 
intercpastal 
lines 
men," 
three 
Oilers, 
three 
Elec­
now 
ship  news  reporter  fox 
FAMILIAR  NAMES 
' 
tricians,  three  Firemen,  three  were  having  a  hard  time  fi­ by  leaps  and  bounds  dui­ing  the  the  Christian  Science  Monitor. 
To  West  Coast  sailors  these  Watertenders,  three  Quarter­ nancially  and,  if  the  war  had  depression,  striking  hardest  at 
two  ships  will  have  old,  familiar  masters,  nine  ABs  and  several  not  put  them  out  of  business be­ those  sections  of  the coast  which,  Bunker  is  currently  at  werk 
^  names,  for  they!ll  be  called  the  other  un^ecified  deckhands  in  cause  of  requisition  of  their  supported  the  most  seaboard  on  a  series  of  articles  which 
H.  F.  Alexander  and  the  Ruth 
will  highlight  the  wartime 
addition  to  a  Stewards  Depart­ ships  by  the  government,  it  is  traffic. 
Alexander,  after  ships  well 
very Jikoly  that  they  would  have  It  was ­the  princip^  reason  for  role  of  SIU ­ contracted  ships 
ment  of  69. 
known  in  the  Pacific  for  many 
These  will  probably  be  the  folded  up  under  postwar  eco­ abandonment  of  the  famous  Fall  and  their  crews.  Upon  com­
years  before  the  war. 
ncsnic  stress. 
Elver,  New  London,  Providence  , pletion  of  the  project,  the 
The  "Ruth"  was  one  of  the  only  ships  .afloat  especially  fit­: 
and 
Bridgeport  Lines  in* New 
•   first  American  ships  .tp  be  at­ ted  to  carry  trAi&lt;ds,diriVK»rT­i60  M  One  of  the  major  proWems  of 
SEAFARERS  LOG  will  pub­
England. 
the  coastal  lines  was  competition 
tacked  in  World  War  JI  while  them. 
lish 
it  in  serial  form.  Because 
The  idea  behind  Trailerships  from  motor  carriers,  and  thous­'  It  was .the  reason  why  Mer­
the  "H.F.,"  a  very  fast, 
beamed  passenger  liner,  carried  is  to  circumvent  the  high  cost  ands  of  tons  of  package  freight  chants  and  Miners,  Clyde  Mal­ of  the  historical  nature  of  the 
thousands  of  Qf's  to  wartinae  of  freight  handling  which  has  whiclv  once  moved  by  seaboard  lory,  Eastern  and  other  steam­ Seafarers'  part  in  the  war. 
battlefionts  in  her  role  as .an  kayoed  the  coastwise  steamship  liners  were  diverted  to  highway  ship  companies  did  not  build  Bunker's  articles  should  be  of 
lines  durmg  recent. years,  mak­ trucks,  which,  besides  offering  new  vessels  to  replace  ships  vital  interest  to  all  Union 
Army  transport. 
These  Trailer#ip6  are  ,563  ing  resumption  of  many  domes­ lc^,er  rates.,  .cojdd  give  shippers  which  were  becoming  obsolete  in  members  and  others  connected 
footers  with  a  90  foot  beam—  tic lines  impossibje efler the war­ the  extra  advardage  of  door­to­ the 1930s. 
It  was  to  get  around  this  with  the  maritime  industry.) 
sis^eaMe  .abips  in  .leyery  reapcct.;  Even  during  tlie  193Qs,  the  (Jnor 
They  are  intended  to  cany  136 
officers  and  crew. 
Income  will  be  derived  partly 
passengers  and  partly  from 
icarrying  .trucks,  for  they  have 
accomodations  for  383  passen­
By  HOLT  ROSS 
gers  and  176  trucks  of  the  type 
­comrnorily  referred  to  as  .high" 
way ~  "trailers,"  which  will 
I^rd  God  of  Sosts, O,  make  us  strong, 
Lor#  ie$  me ^fiye :i» 
way 
­  jstbwed  along  the  main  deck  and 
Help  us  speed  our  cause  along­
To  do  9ome  worthy  act  each  day. 
ah  upper  deck. 
I  seek  no  favors,  power  or  wealth 
This  deck,  incidentayy,  might 
O,  give  me strength  to  lead  the fight, 
But  just  contentment  and  good  health. 
even  inject  a  new  word  ipto 
To  help  the  poor  each  wrong  to  right, 
marine  terminology,  should  the 
And  to  each  worker  everywhere, 
Let  me dive in  where  the stream  is  swift 
designeis  decide  to  call  it  the 
I  would  award  his  equal  share. 
^trailer  deck,"  as  they  most  ap­
And  give  some  feilowman  a  lift. 
propiately  could. 
I  trust  no  one  yrjJll  ever  frpwh 
V­i 
To  those in  darkness,  show  the  hght. 
PROVIDE  NEW  SERVIQE 
Ap4  say  I  let  a  real  friend  down. 
jGive  strength  to  those  too  weak  to fight. 
Thei*e  have  been  no  ateam­
O  Lord,  we  will  obey  Thy  laws 
jGojifer  on  me,  O  ­l^ord, ;the  gift  . 
phip  passenger  lines  romnirig 
And  would  be  soldiers  for  Thy  cause. 
^o  giye  the  poor.n  little  lift, 
j^ng  the  West  {Coast  for  .the 
j99St  ten  yaars.  The  Pacific  Coast 
:he^  them  when  they're  down  and  out 
We  that  are  strong  would  help  the  weak, 
,  steamship  Company,  which  will 
,ea,nnot find  Iheir  way  about. 
The  pure in  hpart  and  workers  meek. 
operate  these  Trailerships,  hopes 
to  sell  tickets  at  $11  for  a  one­
O  help  me,  God, ­to  hold  the  torch 
W4ht  and  poverty 
'  •  
y?ay  passage  or  $19,80  for  the 
For Ghristian  Wurker? QA. the  march. 
to  blight  society. 
,  , 
ypimd  trip. 
&gt;^1  this  load  of  Vant  and  sorrow 
This  reasonable  rate  is  sure 
"Hiose  who  are  blessed  should  appreciate 
V'? 
I  would  lighten  f.or  t^wnwrow. 
fp  attract  plenty  of  tracje  ^m 
Hiy  timely  aid  and  reciprocate 
• ? 
folks  wanting  a  pleasant  sea 
By  daily  doing  some  good  deed 
Of  worldly  goods  some. Iwiyen't­stny 
trip  of  short  duration,  a?  Well 
To  help someone  right  now in  need. 
'  as from  travelers  between  north­
tjp  tliis  land 
syeallh  and,plpnty. 
em  and  southern  California. 
.6 
n)py  wprXer?  everywhere 
Lord,  help  us  in  this  crucial  hour; 
Tentative  scheduling  caJls  for 
Unite .and fight  tp  get  thpir  share. 
Give 
us  strength  and  more  will­power. 
the .ships  to  leave  Long  Beach 
jat  6  pm  and  arrive at  Sajn  Fran­
May  we  never  oeasp  to fight. 
;Ojur ifolks.haye surely  laced starvation. 
cisco  the  next  morning  at  nipe, 
For  fhis  cause  so  just  and  right. 
3h.ey  have  suifered  esspioitation, 
8  fast  run  made  possible  by 
­i; • : 
But  they  always  turned  to  You; 
. 
powerful  turbines  and  twin 
We know  the fight  is all  up­hill, 
'screw  drives  that  will  send  these 
They  remained  steadfast  and  true. 
But  we  wiil  charge  ahead  until 
coastal  liners  along  at  25  knots. 
Each  worker  comes  into  his  own 
Tho  i^vro  ships  will  each  cariy 
^They  had  hope  and  inspiration 
And  has  the  strength  to  carry  on. 
19  officers  and  117  urilicensed 
An^  j^ways  prpyed Ipr  tfoe^^ 
j)erspnnel..  The  designs  provide 
Now,  Then  hast  heard  their  prayers 
Lord,  when  my  work  on  earth  is  done 
for  liberal  space in  all  the guart­
And 
Victory 
wifl 
soon 
be 
theirs. 
• '  V. 
accorno^ting  officers  and 
And. Labor's  yictpry  has  baen  won. 
% 
May 
those 
w.ho 
knew 
me at 
the 
end 
We are 
thankMil 
for .all 
fayors, 
.T 
­ 
r/'i". , ­. 
Among  the  unlicensed  med  are 
Say, "He  was  truly  Labor's  Friend!" 
And  wiil share tiiera with our  neighhOTS.­v 
six  "1 ;OokoiUs,"  six  "Statiop­.' 
B7  JOHN  BUNKER 

The  Laborer's  Prayer 

m 
o" V  r 

Ml 

•  •  

�Fiiae Fmur 

T  B E  S  E  A  F  A itE R  S  L O G 

IMsbile  Expects 
ietter  Days 

. 

"AMONG THE  BEST  MADE  SO  FART 

• '  ntiday^  i^*hw 

T 

in  Savannah 

NEW  YORK  STATE  SCHOOt  OF  INDU8TRIAU  AND  LABOR  RELATIONS 
CPRNELL  UNIVERSITY 
ITHACA,  NEW YORK 

By  CAL  TANNER 

By  E.  BRYANT 

EDMUND EZRA  DAY. CHANCBIXOM 

MOBILE—Shipping  in  the  port 
CORNKt.18 WILLXM  DK  KIEWIET, AcnNS  PfmiDKNT 
of  Mobile  from  February 
M. P. CATHERWOOD,  DEAN 
%:•   through  the  15th,  reached  an all 
time  low,. with  approximately 
thirty­seven  bookmen  and  no 
v:;?; 
Dscember  7,  1949 
permits  shipped  for  the  two­
week  period.  We  had  four  pay 
offs  and  four  sign­ons,  plus  four 
, 
_  S"'­•  
.  ...  . 
• 
ships  in­transit  for  the  period. 
Paying  off  and  signing  on were 
Corsair,  Alcoa;  and  the  Wild 
Mr«  Albert A*  Bsmsteiji 
Ranger,  Lafayette,  and  Antinous, 
International Representative  ­ 
• 
Waterman.  All  four  were  in gooc 
Seafarers International Union 
shape,  hoth  paying  off  and  sign­
of  North  America 
ing  on. 
51 Beaver  Street 
In­transit  for  the  period  were 
the  Chickasaw,  Ames  Victory, 
Hew  York  4,  Mew  lork 
Steel  Admiral,  Greeley  Victory. 
AH  ships  were  contacted  and 
Dear  Mr#  ^mstein:  . 
* 
' 
­
necessary  replacements  furnish­
ed. 
Thank you for sending a!tohg the tw films for our school to preview; 
In  the  Mobile  Marine  Hospital  '^I was much impressed with them*  I feel* that your efforts are among the best 
are  the  following  Brothers:  H. 
made so far by the labor unions* 
Henderson,  T.  Little,  P.  Bur­
roughs,  A.B.  ,Lynn  and  Tim 
The film THIS IS THE SIU tms particularly interesting for showing how 
Burke. 
the "hiring hall" 
works*  Many of our'students do not h^ve the opportunity 
Word  has  been  received  from 
to know how these things function* 
It iias also good ^om the standpoint 
the  Marine  Hospital  that  Broth­
"­V 
of conveying the ideal of your union* 
er  Louis  Howard  died  Friday, 
February  17,  after  a  long  Ulness. 
THE BATTLE OF WALL STREET also is useful in that it gives some idea of 
The  Seafarers  extend  their  sym­
lAat is involved in staging a modem successful strike. 
pathy  to  the  family  of  Louis 
r/  Howard.  , 
Waterman  SS  Company  is 
Both these films are particularly useful to us because liiey serve as 
l­I  changing  the  Victory  ships  on  first­hand information for our students of experiences that few of them 
the  coastwise  nm,  and  replacing 
have been able to acquire by actual presence* 
m 
them  with  company­owned  C­2s. 
While  this  will  mean  a  few 
I hope some day we can make these films a part of our library of 
more  jobs  for  the  port  of  Mo­
films, but until then yon will be hearing from me for their loan* 
' 
'  " 
bile,  it  will  mean  a  loss  of  about 
a  hundred  jobs  to  the  Union,  as 
Thank you for your trouble* 
these  Victorys  will  be  placed  in 
the  laldup fleet  here. 
Sincerelyj 
Well,  we  had  a  few  towboat 
relief  jobs here  in the  last  couple 
of  weeks  and  they  were  what 
J*  J*  Jehriiig 
kept  the  boys  in  cigarette  money 
Asst* 
Prof,  of  Industrial and 
for  the  last  two  weeks.  We  ship­
labor Relations 
ped  approximately  twenty­eight 
relief  jobs  to  tugs  during  the 
two­week  period. 
The  two  SIU films  continue  to get  unstinted  praise  from  unions  and  schools.  Lack  of  space 
Shipping  will  be  a  little  better  forced  the  LOG  to  keep  this^ cut  on  the  Shelf  for  more  than  two months.  It  is reproduced  now 
during  the  coming  two  weeks,  to  remind  interested  organizations  that  they  can buy  a  print  for  $40 for  their  permanent  library. 
with ­  about  nine  coastwise  anc 
Recognized  unions  and  labor  schools  can  borrow  a  copy  for  a  showing  at  no  cost  to­them. 
four offshore  ships  due  to hit  the 
port 

SAVANNAH 
Shipping  bas 
been  slow  in  this  port,  but  is 
expected  to  pick  up .  somewhat 
the  next  two  weeks—but  this  is 
by  no  means  a  signal  for  a  gold 
rush  to  Savannah.  We  have 
enough  men  around  here  to  take 
care  of  our  needs, 
TThere  were  no  payoffs  in  thfe 
last  period,  but  we  had  the  fol­
lo^ving  ships  in­transit:  Jean; 
Bull;  Steel  Recorder,  Isthmian; 
Southport,  South  Atlantic;  wd 
the  Chickasaw  and  Topa  Topa, 
Waterman.  There  was  nary  a 
beef  on  any  of  these  scows. 
The  men  on  the  beach  are  a 
little  sort  of  cabbage,  and  spend 
their  time  on  fishing  trips,  ­which 
cut  down  on  their  expenses  and 
provide  good  times  for  all.  ­
We  have  had  good  fishing ^ 
weather  down  here,  and  any  of 
the  boys  who­are  fat  from  a ^ 
cent  payoff  are  cordially  invited 
to  come  down  with  their  fish­
ing  tackle. 
Brother  Jim  McDonald  just 
blew  in  after  paying  off  the 
Southwind  .  in  Galveston,  and 
bought  five  bucks  worth  of  cof­
fee  and  sweetin'  for  the  men  in 
the Hall. 
There  is  only  one  man  in  the 
hospital  here,  Ray  Cole,  and kis 
condition,  1  am  glad  to  say;. is 
reported  as  good. 
Just  one  more  word,  and  that 
to  performers—^think  twice 
about  coming  to "Savannahi  The 
membership  here  is  sudden 
death  to  them. 

li.T,... 

Slight impFOvemeiii 
In  Frisco Shipping 
By  JEFF  MORRISON 

SAN  FRANCISCO —Shipping 
has. improved  over  the  past  two 
weeks,  but  it  is  still  nothing  to 
brag about.  The SS  Young Amer­
ica  gave  us  our  only  payofA 
later  signing  on  for  the  Far 
East. There  were  no  beefs oh 
ship,  and  the  crew  was  doing 
By  JOE  ALGINA 
Ship  Inter  Lines;  St.  Augustine  the  membership  will  be  in­ a  bang­up  job,  a  real  credit  to 
the  SIU. 
Victory,  Isthmian;  Warrior,  Wa­ formed. 
NEW  YORK  —  Shipping  has 
terman;  Robin  Wentley,  and  the  A  word  of  advice  to  men  In  addition,  we  had  the  fol­
been  very  slow  duHng  the  past 
By  BEN  LAWSON 
Seatrain  and  Bull  Line  ships.  aboard  ships.  We  have  been  in­ lowing  ships  in­transit:  Topa 
two  weeks,  a  condition  that  ap­
Topa,  Hastings  and  Yaka,  Wat­
BOSTON  —  The  only  things  pears  to  be  general  in  all  ports.  All  of  die  payoffs  and  sign­
ens 
came 
off 
in 
good 
shape, 
the 
erman; Kenyon 
Victory and  Steel 
J  moving  around  here  are  the  Although  a. number  of  ships 
vessels 
being 
clean 
and 
ship­
Navigator, 
Isthmian, 
and  the 
,  thermometer,  which  is  going  came  into  this  port,  they  did 
shape. 
Calmar. 
down  but  fast,  and  the  winds,  not  take  large  niunbers  of  re­
Fouy  of  the  Robin  Line  ships 
On  the"  beach  with  us  there 
which  are  strong  enough  to  ram  placements. 
are  P.  Wilma,  T.  Malone  and 
your  words  right  back  down  The  ships  pajring  off  in  the  are  being  chartered  and  will 
Harvey  Hill,  all  of  whom  came 
yoirr  throat. 
two­week  period  just  ended  operate  from  West  Coast  ports. 
Senator  Taft,  as  would  be  ex­
in  with  the  Mankato  Victory 
Up  xmtil  recently  we  were  were  the following: 
and  paid  off,  and  C.  Cothraan 
having  pretty  fair  weather,  but  Beatrice,  Kathryn,  Puerto Rico,  pected,  stated_this  week  that  he 
and  Joimny  BurkCi 
• winter sxire  'cut  loose  the  last  Elizabeth,  Evelyn  and  Suzanne,  is  against  anything  that  would 
couple  of  days.  We've  got  a  foot  Bull;  Bessemer  Victory,  Chicka­ permit  a  closed  ^op,  even  iii 
The  following  Brothers  are  in 
of  snow  on  the  streets  and  are  saw,  Warrior,  an'd  Hurricane,  maritime.  Teift;  of  course,  knows 
the  Marine  Hospital,  and  ­would 
right  in  the  ^ddle  of  a  regular  Waterman;  Seatrains  New  York  nothing  about  what  the  Union 
appreciate  hearing  from  their 
blizzard  of  rain,  hail  and  snow.  and  New  Jersey;  Santa  Clara  Hiring  Halls  Iwve  done  to  stabi­
friends  and  shipmates:  S.  S­wor, 
It's  so  bad  outside  that  the  Victory,  Isthmian; Collins, Trans­ lize  conditions  in  the  maritime 
A.  Caudra  J,.  Keenan,  J.  Jellett^ 
&gt;  Brothers  will  have  to  take  to  fuel;  J.  Hanson,  White  Range,  industry—and  he cares  even less.  formed  by  some  members  after  W.  Silverthome,  and  G.  W. 
dog  sleds  to  make  the  meeting  and  Alexandra,  Carras. 
PROTECT  GAINS 
they  have  come  into  port  that  Ghale. 
^tonight. ­
Signing  on  were  the  Taddei,  Our  Union  is  interested  in  there  are  logs  against  them  that 
­  But  if  you  think  the  weather 
seeing tiiat  the  hard­won  gains  are • not true  or  accurate. 
is  bad,  dipping  is  worse.  We 
of  the seamen  are  preserved,  and  Therefore,  we  advise  all  hands 
had  one  payoff,  the  W.  E.  Down 
that  the  present  stability  in  the  that  if  a  log  is  placed  against 
fiig  of  the  State  Fuel  Corpora­
maritime  industry  resulting  from  them  aboard  ship,  they  should 
Since  Bull  Lines  is  mo 
tion,  which  came  in  dean  with 
Pro  and  con  commenla  on  establishment  of  the  Hiring  Hall  not  sign  it  if  they  believe .it  to  longer  mailing  cut  Inoooae 
.no  beefs. 
Ihe  suggested  change  in  the  rema^ unchanged.  Senator  Taft  be  inaccurate.'•  
Tax  Withholding  Statements, 
li^­. 
In­transit  visitors  were  the  shipping  rules  to  make  R  has  no  such  interest.  In  fact,  Once  you  have  signed  your  all  men  who  were  on  Bull 
Robin  Sherwood;  John  B.  Wa­ mandatory  for  a  wiRn  to­ac­
he  is  determined  to  break  down  name  to  a. log,  you  have  prac­
Lines  ships  in  194g'cae  u^­
'  terman.  Canton  Victory,  Besse­ cept his vacation pay  and get  union  conditions  wherever  he  tically  admitted  that  the  infor­
ed  to  call  at  or  write  to 
mer  Victory,  Waterman,  and  the  off  a  ship  after  one  year  can.' 
mation  contained  therein  has  the  company  offices for  their 
.Steel  Vendor,  Isthmian. 
aboard  continue  to  come  in 
So far,  there  has  been no defi­ your  approval.  You  cannot  ex­
statements.  Failure  to  fUb 
^  ^ere  were  some  overtime  brom  Brothers  aeen  and  nite  word  from  Washington  on  p^  to  deny  it  after  the  ship  tax  returns  befdre  Mazdi 
it''
on  the  John  B.  Waterman,  ashore.  If  you  haves*?i  yet  the  status  of  Bernstein's  applica­ comes  Into  port. 
15  will  result  in fines  and 
' Vvfaidh  were  straightened  out  expressed  your  views on  the  tion for  d  subsidy  to pemHt  ope­
In  ether  words,  you  can't  penalties.  Bull  Lines  are  ki­
aboard rfiip,  and  mi  the  Robin  .quesnon,  how  about  send­ ration  of  two  passenger  ships to  change  your  story.  So don't  sign,  fcated ^ 105  Broad  Siieet; 
Hherwood,  which  will  be  carried  ing  them to  the  LOG—now.  European  ports.  As  soon  as  if  you  don't  agree  with  the  in­
New.  York  City,... 
I to the  port  of  payoff. 
something  is  announ&lt;'ed  on  th.i8,ifonnation.  in  t­he  log^ng. 

Htercury, Shipping 
Nosedive  in  Bustnn 

New  York  Shipping  Situation  (inrhangod 

Bull Lines Crews 

Had Your Say? 

. , 

^It , 0 
J,!p J 

1 

�Friday. Fabruaxy  24, 1950. 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Page Five 

'An  SlU Credit  Union  Just Cannot Miss' 
By  JOHN  COLE 
» 

About 150  years ago,  groups of  workers banded 
together  for  the  purpose 
giving  mutual  aid 
and  assistance  to  brothers  who  fell  into  debt,  or 
to families  who  were  made  destitute by  the loss 
of  their  breadwinner. 
These, fraternal  groups  formulated  principles 
which  were  later  Incorporated  by,  present  day 
credit  unions. 
Actually,  however,  their  real  claim  to  fame 
Jay  in  the  fact  that  they  were  tjj.e first  trade 
unions  in  America,  but­it  was  not  till  later  that 
they  pressed  programs  that  called  for  improve­
ment  in  their  living  standards. 
We,  today, seem  to  Mhve  reversed  that  process 
by  going  after  conditions  first,  and  following^ 
with  stabilizing  services  later.  The  organization 
saw  fit  to  blueprint  the  needs  of  us  Seafarers, 
and  then  proceeded  to . pick  them  off  like  sitting 
ducks—^with  stout  backing,  of  course,  from  the 
membership. 
ECONOMIC  SECURITY 

One  of  the questions  presently  being  pondered 
by  Seafarers  is  the  advisability  of  setting  up  a 
credit  union  by  and  for  SIU  members.  In  a  re­
cent  issue,  the  LOG  published  an  article  con­
taining  basic  information  on  credit  unions—the 
way  they are set  up. how  they operate  and what 
they  intend  to  accomplish.  Since  publication  of 
the  credit  union  article  there  has  been  a  flurry 
of  pro  and  con  comment. 
Among  those  favoring  the credit  unipn  idea  is 
Seafarer  John  Cole.  On  this  page.  Brother  Cole 
tells  why  he  wants  a  credit  union  in  the  SIU. 
Because  he  has  done  so­ clearly  and  comprehen­
sively.  the  LOG  feels  that  all  members  should 
read  Cole's  article  carefully  and  thoughtfully.  It 
provides  the  understanding  of  credit  unions  that 
is  necessary  before  anypne  not  familiar  with 
their  nrnkeup  and  operation  can  decide  whether 
he is for. or  ageinst, a credit  union for  Seafarers. 
Meanwhile,  the  membership  is  urged  to  con­
tinue  its  shipboard  and  shoreside  discussion  of 
the subject. Members  having  opinions  they  wish 
to present  to  their  Union  Brothers are  requested 
to forward  them  to  the LOG  for  public^ion. 

NO  GAMBLE 

Members'  saving  may  not  be  gambled  with."'^ | 
The  purchase  of  federal  bonds  and  savings, 
loans  to  other  credit  unions,  and  loans  to  mem­
bers  are  permitted.  Dividends  on  earnings  may 
not exceed 6  percent  a  year. Losses  on  bad  loans 
amounted  to  one­fifth  of  1 percent  last  year. i 
The  lending  service  can  stop  many  demor­v :,| 
alizing  worries,  but  funds  may  be  tapped  oijiyj] 
for  useful,  worthwhile  purposes. 
;  i 
The  credit  committee  screens  all  applicants '] 
for  loans  and  arranges  schedules  for  repayment.; 
Most  frequent  loans  last  year  were  made­for 
When  fhat  is  done,  th^  call  a  membership  automobile  mortgages, for  consolidation  of  debts, 
meeting;  elect  a  board  of  directors  (five  for  and  for  paying  current  Ijiving  expenses. 
headquarters  anti one .fMr  every  other  port  that 
Unsecured .loans  may  be  made  up  to  limits 
might  be  workable),  a  supervisory  pojmmittee  of 
set 
by  the  directors.  Adequate  security  is  re­
three,  and  a  credit  committee  of  three;  draw  up 
bylaws  in  conformity  with  federal  and  state  quired  for  loans  in  excess  of  a  member's  share­
requirements;  and  petition  the  Bureau  erf  Fed­ holdings.  A  loan  may  be  secured  by  a  cosigner. 
Eighty  percent  pf  the  total  income  of  credit 
eral  Credit  Unions  for  a  charter. 
unions came  from the 1 percent  interest a  month 
When  the ch^ter  is finally  certified,  the  Sea­ charged  members en  their  loans. 
&lt; 
farers  International  Credit  Union  of  North  Am­
At  the  January  meeting  every  year  dirCctois, 
erica  is  in  business. 
supervisory  and  credit  emnmittees  are  elected. 
COOPERATIVE  EFFORT 
The  directors,  iu  turn,  elect  their  own  officers. 
The  treasurer  is  the  man  on  whom  responsi­
The  purpose  of  a  credit  union  is  npt  to  be 
directly:  competitive  with  banks,  yet  it  inevit­ bility  is fastened.  He  manages  all  affairs, ­keeps 
ably, must  cross some  lines  into spheres of  their,  all  books,  prepares  all  r^Dforts.  Ho  alone  among 
the officers  may  be  paid  a  salary.. 
activity. 
The  clerk  keeps  minutes  of  meetings  of  the 
It  is­a cooperative  effort , with  two­fold  object­
ives:  the  long­run,­which  :is  to  encourage  sav­ board  and  the niembership.  This office  is usualiy 
ing; and  the short­run, to­finance personal  credit  .  combined  with  the treasurer's. 
The  president  presides  at  meetings  and  |^e­
needs. 
sents 
the  annual  report  to  the  members.  In  his 
It  is  a  banking  sefvice  nm  for  the  member­
' 
ship by  the membership. It shields, the individual  absence  the  vice­president  takes  over. 

Wages,  hours,  working  conditions,  manning 
I  "  scales, safety  rules,  sanitary  standards,  vacations 
(homesteaders  notwithstanding),  and  health  and 
welfare  benefits  were  just  some  of  the  prizes 
bagged. 
Through  all i;hese  gains  economic  security  has 
been  made  available  to  us.  What  we how  need 
.  is some sy'^ematic  device  to help  us  preserve  a 
substantial  part  of  income,  while  we  are  still 
enjoying  the.high  tide of  prosperity. 
..  A  credit  union  could  be  that  means  of  main­
taining adequately  our hard­wpn  economic secur­
'  ity. 
Apart  from  the  few  who  dp  bave  savings  ac­
counts,  what  do  we  know  about  the  monetary 
habits of  om members? 
liet's  break  them  down  to the  two  categories 
of  carefree sandlot  baseball  days,  and  call  them 
married  and  the single. 
Although  these  two  examples  may  seem  to 
oversimplify  the  problem,  fhe  end  result  will 
still  be  the  same  in  most  every  case. 
Comes  a  big  payoff  and/papa  lays  the  bundle 
. oh  the  table  when  he  gpts  home.  Mama,  mis­
..jpfilculating  her  needs,  shops  around  for  those 
,  several  items  that  she  has  wantejJ  for  a  long 
time. 
When  money  begins  to  run  low; ­  she  stops 
the  extra­budgetary  spending,  sudd^y  realiz­.  from  contact  with  coldly  impersonal  commercial 
­  ing  that  she will have  all  to do  to meet  remain,­ banks,  as  well  as  from  ever­lurking  usurious 
ing  living  expenses  until  next  pay  day  with  loan­sharksi 
' what  is  left. 
"it  preserves  democratic  processes  at  the  mem­
bership • l  evel­r­a  rare  thing  in  free  enterprise 
GOODBYE.  BANK  ACCOUNT 
venture^by  giving  members  the  power  to  se­
'  Again, her long dreamed­of  bank  account  must  lect or  remove directors; by  permitting  them  the 
'  be  postponed  to  some  other  faraway  day. 
right  to  decide  how  profits shall  be  shared;  and 
i 
' 
. 
Then  there  is  the  correspondingly  large  pay­ by  allowing  equal  votes  to  largest  and  smallest 
off  for  the  man  without  family  r^ponsibility.  shareholders  alike. 
It  helps  njembers  to  help  themselves  to  a 
The  first  place  he  heads  for,  when  he  hits 
port,  is  the  favorite  hangout.  There  he  leaves  a  greater  degree  of financial  stability. 
big  chunk  of  cabbage  with  the  "proprietor"  for 
Undoubtedly,  we  could  get  Union  officials  to 
safe­keeping.  On  the  way  out  he  meets  an  old  place  SIU  facilities  at  the  disposal  of  a  credit 
shipmate  who is  up against  it  and  lets  him  haye  union. Anfij until such  time as  the baby  banking 
a  himdred. 
structure is  strong  enough  to carry  its own  paid 
• To 
  tell,  the  wholes story  of  his  stay  in  port  employees.  Patrolmen  mi^t  pick  up  deposits 
would  be a  monotonous  repetition  of  round  after  for  savings  accoimts  with­dues  when  ships  hit 
round of  generous improvidence.  Needless  to say,  ports. 
. 
* 
he  is flat  broke  when  he  catches  his  next  ship. 
SPECIAL  AGENTS 
How  can  we  check  this  treadmill  course  of 
Commercial  banks  have  already  adopted  this 
Brothers  who  toil  laboriously  from  pay  day  to 
pay  day,  with  no  appreciable  change  in  their  technique  by  assigning  special  collection  agents 
financial  status?  Merely  by  employing  that  al­ to  the  waterfront. 
With  persons  handling  funds  placed  under 
ways­reliable  tangible,  group  action,  and  at  the 
heavy  bond,  plus  strict  goveriuneat  supervision, 
yery  small  cost  of  two  bits  a  member. 
.  Seafarers  can  decide  affirmatively  in  a  refer­ our  money  has  strong safeguards. 
Althopgh  a  share is  valued  at five  dollars, any 
endum  vote  that  they  want  a  credit  union. 
V. 

multiple  part  of  that  sum  may  be  deporited, 
even as low  as  a  quarter  a  month. 
A  wife  may  share  an  account  jointly  with.  her. 
husband,  but  may  enjoy  none  of  the  preroga­
tives  reserved  for  members  only. 
Just  as  there  is  no  compulsion  on  the  pari ^of 
anybody  to  join  the  credit  union,  so  there is  ho 
right  on  the  part  of  abstainers  to  exercising 
the  privileges  or  reaping  the  benefits  of  mem­
bership.  It  has  been  stated  that  a  group  savings 
plan  is  not  practicable  among  sailors.  Attention 
needs  to  be  called^to  the  sound  condition  of  pur 
Union's  treasury  to  explode  that  fallacy.  6niy 
in  an  organization  as  solidly  based  as  ours  can 
the  dream  of  today become  fhe  reality  of  to­
morrow. 

SUPERVISORY  COMMITTEE 
The  supervisory  committee  serves  as  auditors 
and  ferrets.  If  any  director  makes  a  false move, 
they  suspend  him  and  turn  his  case  over  to  the 
membership  for  disposition  at  a  special  meeting. 
Credit  unions  have  had  a  century  of  experi­
ence  in  Europe  and  Asia.  Although  their  birth 
in  this  country  only  came  in  1909,  the.y  have 
grown  with  amazing  rapidity. 
Aiherica  now  has  over  9000  credit,  unibrjs  ij 
(state  and  federal .combined)  and  4,000,000  mem­
bers  with  an  accumulated  total* of  $700  million. 
When  it  is  realized  tjiat  53  percent  of  that 
sum  goes  into  circulation  to  stimulate  business, 
it  is  no  wonder  that  credit  unions  are  encour­
aged  by  federal, state,  and  municipal  authorities,  ­j 
Let's start  a grassroots educational program  by 
collaring  every  member,  shipboard  and  shore­
side, for the  purpose  of  hastening  the setting  up 
of  credit  union  machinery. 
We  want  to  be  ready  to  give  hard  times  a 
nose­thumbing,  the  next  time  the  econoinic 
graphs  start  their  downward  spiral. 
Go  to  work  on  your  friends  and,  if  there are 
any  pessimists  among  them,  tell  them  to  go  to 
a  neutral corner  until we put  this thing  in work­
ing  order  an&lt;bthen  they  can  join. 
/  '  t H 
An  SIU  credit  union  just  can't  miss. 

�J­

Cyclone Rips Into Robin Kettering; 
Ship, Cargo Take Severe Battering 

UNION  FOR  A UNION  MAN 

Damages  sustained  by  the  SS  Robin  Kettering  when  she  was  struck  by  an  80 
mile­an­hour  cyclone  12  £ours  out  of  Lourenco  Marques,  at  the  entrance  of  Mo­
zambique  Channel,­are  being  repaired  in  Mombasa, crewmember John Tilley inform­
ed  the  LOG  this  week. 
Despite  the  storm's  violence, 
which  caused  heavy  damage  to 
the  ship's  cargo,  crewmiembers 
escaped  severe  injury. 
The  cyclone  raged  for  24 
kotirs  before  spending  itself  and 
permitting  the  Kettering  to  head 
for  Mombasa. 
As  the  twister  tore  into  the 
Robin  Line  vessel,  ­a five­ton 
­steel  derrick  was  ripped  from 
its  mooring  and  snapped  in  two 
Joe  Kotalik  and  Odette  Pjlkerton  bec^e  man  and  wife 
like a  matchstick.  The wind  car­
lii^ ried  it  down  onto  ^ welldeck 
in  Holy  Rosary  Churcdi  in  Ashley.  Pa. 
vrith  such  force  that  it  took  a 
whole  length  of  railing  with  it. 
Heavy  seas  accompanied  the 
cyclon^  rendering  the  Kettering 
almost  unmanageable.  Then  the 
cargo  began  to  shift  Caterpillar 
More  than  2,000  persons  flocked  to  the  town  of 
tractors  consigned  to  Mombasa 
After  the  slonm  Kettering  crewmen  turned  to  softball.  Ashley,  near  Wilkes  Barre,  Pa.,  on  Feb, ­4  to  witness  the 
broke  loose  in  the  hold.  Most  of 
them  were  damaged  and  one  troimcing  the  Moipbasa  club  23  to  12.  Left  to  right,  rear: 
marriage  of  Seafarer  Joseph  Kotalik,  recently  a  crew­
if,
was  crushed  to  pieces,  after  its  J.  Tilley,  J.  Yorin,  L.  Laronde,  E. Hogge,  1st  Asst.  George and 
F.  Pasquale; ­kneeling:  Bob  Sizemore,  R.  Williams,  T.  Parrett;  member  aboard  the  SS* Hall  for  300  guests.  The  bridal 
ehgine  crashed  through  hatch­
boards  into  the  lower  hold. 
front:  S.  Cooper,  T.  Guiliano,  R.  Suarez. 
Puerto  Rico,  to Miss  Odette  party  had  dinner  at  Brother  Ko­
Of  two  automobiles  in  the 
talik's  home  af  42  Charles  St.,, 
P i 1 k e r t o n  of  Nashville,  Ashley. 
eOigo,  one  was  telescopOd  al­ fasten  them  into  position.  The  the  seas  tossed  the  ship  around 
• 
Tenn. 
.  •  
most  , beyond ' recognition  as  it  cargo  kept  shifting  all  the  time,  like  a  toy  boat. 
'  The  wedding  was  televised 
Was  squeezed  between  tractors  even  though  it  was  shored  up  "It  was  terrific,"  he  stated.  The  Holy  Rosary  Church ,  was  over  an  eastern  network,  and. 
on  &lt;Mie  side  and  oil  drums  on  with  six­by­sixes  until  the  hold  "First  we  were  pitching,  then  filled  to  capacity,  hours  before  many  Seafarers  in  New  York 
the  other.  Many  of  the'fuel  con­ looked  like  a  forest." 
we  were  rolling,  then  our  teeth  the  wedding,  with  people  ar­ reported  that  they  had  witness­
riving  as  early  as  7:30  AM.  Ah  ed  it. 
tainers  burst,  spilling  oil  all over  A  deck  cargo  of  sulphuric  acid  started  to  fall  out." 
'the  decks,  bulkheads  and  the  also  broke  loose  and  the  potent  Crewmembers  aboard  the  Ket­ estimated  300  persons,  imable  to  The  couple  is  honeymooning , 
overhead. 
chemical  ate  at  the  decks.  Mom­ tering  were  of  the  opinion  that  gain  entrance  to  the  church,  in  Miami  and  Key  West.  From 
One  of  the  Seafarers  aboard  basa's  Port  Fire  Brigade  im­ two  other  ships  were  in  the  stood  outside  on  the  steps  and  there  they  will  go  to  New  Or­
the  Kettering  reported: 
mediately  began  removing  the  area  of  the  cyclone,  but  were  sidewalk.  A  detail  of  state  po­ leans,  where  Joe  intends  to  en­
1  "We  were  down  there  in  the  acid  as  soon  as  the  ship  tied  up  too  far  away  to  be  identified.  It  lice  was  on  hand  to  handle  the  ter  business. 
hold  like  cowboys,  snagging  there. 
is  belived  that  one  was  British  crowd. 
\  APPEARED  ON  STAGEr 
HIGH  MASS  CEREMONY 
those  tractors  and  trying  to  One  of  the  ship's  officers  said  and  the  other  Dutch. 
Mrs.  Kotalik  has  appeared •  in 
Brother  Kotalik,  32,  is 4 feet,  6 
numerous  vaudeville  and  musi­
inches  tall,  while  his  bride  mea­
iy • •  
cal  shows  and  during  the  war 
sures  just  under  foiur  feet.  traveled  extensively  in  ,  this 
Twelve  midget friends  of  the 
country as an entertainer  in var ­
couple  attended  the  ceremony, 
ious  camp  shows.  She  was  with 
If  shipmates of  Del  Norte crewmember Thurston Lewis are concerned  about  his  which  was  celebrated  in  a  sol­ the 
traveling  company'  of  the 
I  ^muttering  and  mumbling  these  past  few  days,  they  needn't  be  worried.  He  should  emn  nuptial  high  mass. 
Ziegfeld  Follies  several  years 
After  the  wedding,  a  break­
to  normal  in  due  time.  trip  was  the Second  Mate  on  the  mates  who  were  slightly  con­
ago  and  had  appeared  on  Broad­
fast  was  served  for  the  bridal 
way  in  Gus  Edwards'  "Show­
Brother  Lewis'  unusual  con­ second  trip.  Those  who  called  fused. 
party , at  the  home  of  Joe's  sis­ Window." 
duct  is  merely  a  hangover  from  him  'First'  on  the first  had  to 
"Joe  (the  Grinder)  Zimmer"  ter,  Mrs.  Michael  Onderko,  in 
a  brotherly  chore  performed  for  get  used  to  calling  him  'Second'  Move  over,  wiU  you.  Brother  Ashley.  A  reception  was  held  Previous  to  his  job  as  hell­. 
boy  on  the  Puerto  Rico,  Brother 
shipmate  Joe  (the  Grinder)  Zim­ on  the  second.  The  Second  who  Lewis. 
later  at  Holy  Rgsary  Church 
Kotalik  sailed  but  of  the  Gulf 
mer,  who  had  been  trying  to  was Second  on  the first  trip  w;as 
on  the  Dei  Norte  in  the  ^me 
figure  out  who  was  which  Mate  First  on  the  second.  The  Third 
SIU  IS  SAILOR'S  HOPE 
capacity.  Joe  also  had  been  in 
on  what  voyage,  or  something.  who  was  Third  on  the first  and 
show  business  for ^ time. 
Joe  bum^  the  midnight  oil  Second  on  the  second,  was  First 
Both  of  the  newlyweds  are  of 
^d came  up  with  a  clarification  on  the  third. 
parents  of  average  height.  Joe's 
that  he" wanted  to  send  to  the 
three  brothers  and  one  sister  are 
LOG.  He  asked  Lewis  to  type  it  "Now  the  First  on  the first 
went 
Second 
on 
the 
second, 
and 
also 
of  average  height.  TJie 
tip for  him.  As an  explanation of 
Second 
on 
the 
third, 
and 
the 
bride 
comes 
of  a  family  of  eight 
the  Del  Norte  dilemma,  Joe's 
girls  and  two  boys,  all  normal 
masterpieceputs  •  Abbott  and  Second  who  was  Second  on  the 
in  height.  Some  of  her  brothers 
CosteUo's  Baseball  routine  of  first  went  Third  on  the  third. 
are  over  six  feet  tall. 
"Who's  on first?"  to  complete  "So  the  First  on  the first  was 
Joe  joined  the  SIU  in  1947 
really  a  First  because  he  was 
^ame. 
and 
hojds  Book  No.  51233.  His 
First 
on 
the 
third, 
and 
the 
Sec­
Here's  Joe's  letter:" 
brother  Thomas,  who~  is  5  feet 
ond 
on 
the first 
was 
a 
First 
be­
"Dear  Brothers: 
11  inches  tall,  has  also  sailed  on 
"You  will  remember  the  job  cause  he  was a  First  on  the  sec­
SIU 
ships.. 
I recently  had  on  the  Del  Norte  ond,  and  also  Second  on  the 
running  out 'of  New  Orleans.  I  third. 
made  three,  seventeen­day  trips  "The  Third  on  the  third,  who 
was first  the  First  on  the first, 
on  this  ship. 
was a 
First  because he  was^ First 
"Everything  went  well,  as usu­
If  you  don't  find  linen 
al  on  SIU  ships.  However,  there  on  the first,  even  though  he  was 
when 
you  go  aboard  your 
M iwas  a  slight  misunderstanding  Second  on  the  second.  However, 
ship,  notifv  Ihe  Hal!  ai  once,  •  
lig lconcermng  the  question  as  to  the  Ilrst  who  was  First  on  the 
The  lilfle  fellow  is  SIX?  (pr^uaced  Si­you),  a  yearling 
.A  telegram from  LeHavreor 
t who  was  which  mat®.  This  was  first  was  the  real  First,  because  purchased  by  Seafarer  Aussie  Shrimpion  in  England  last  year. 
Singapore  won't  do  you  any^ 
brought  about  by  frequent  he  was  the first  First—^e? 
Aussie  will  race SIU  in the  States ewly in  ISSl.^IU  is shown 
good,  IFs  your  bed  and  you*  ;  ' 
"Hoping  this  will  simplify  with  his  mom.  Sailor's  Hope,  when  he  was  3  yttw 
changing  of  mates,  to  wit; 
Tbe 
have  to  Me  fa  it. 
"The  First  Mate  on  the first  matters  for  those ­  of  my  ship­
coming  ehiitw.p  is' now  ia  Cansda. 

Seafarer  Kotalik's  Wedding 
Brings  Out  2,000  Spectators 

That Wasn't My Mate—That WasMy First 

ATTENTION! 

. 

... ... 

�Fri^y, F*bruKry  24; 1850 

Digested Minutes Of  SlU Ship  Meetings 
WARRIOB.  Nov.  27—R.  Owen. 
COE  VICTORY.  Dec.  6—Gil­
Chairman;  K.  Hatgimisips,  Sec­
bert  Isnor.  Chairman:  Curt  Bor­
retary. Ship's  and  Stewards  Del­
man.  Secretary.  Delegates  made 
egates  to  notify  headquarters  re­
their  reports.  Jack  Johns  elected 
garding  Messman  who  missed 
Ship's  Delegate  by  acclamation. 
ship  in  New  York  after  borrow­
Brother  Scully  asked  member­
ing  money  from  various  mem­
ship  if  he  could  move  into ship's 
bers.  Ship's  Delegate  to  see  if 
hospital;  no  one  objected.  Ship's 
oil  in  wash  wa,ter  can  be  elim­
Delegate  to  get  in  touch  with 
inated.  Medicine  chest  to  be 
Captain  about  getting ship's  milk 
double­checked  for  next  voy­
supply,  increased.  Chief  Steward 
age  to­  avoid  shortage  prevailing 
to  issue  two  pieces  of  face  soap 
during  current  trip.  Suggested 
per  man  each  week.­Night  lunch 
that  clock  be  obtained  for  rec­
not  to  be  issued  until  around 
reation  room.  One  minute  of 
8  PM. 
silence  in  memory  of  departed 
i 
t: 
DEL  ALBA,  Dec.  11—Joseph  KYSKA.  Dec. 
Union  Brothers. 
23—C.'  Collins. 
Engles.  Chairman;  Leonard  Gol­ Chairman;  F.  Donovan.  Secre­
%  X 
embiewskL  Secretary.  Dqpgles  tary.  Election  of  new  delegates 
STEEL  FABRICATOR. Dec. 11  Craddock  elected  Ship's  Dele­
A^MOPe^, TAK^A IOOK
—Miller. Chairman;  Bossert. Sec­ gate.  Others  chosen  were  Ben}a­ Daniel  Alvino  was  designated 
retary.  No  beefs,  delegates  re­ min  Jarralt. Deck; Harry Thomp­ Ship's  Delegate  and  Abner  Ad­
AT THE SAfUM^ BOARD ^ YOO
ported.  Motion­  carried  that  Pa­ son.  Engine,  and  William  Roc­ ams  was  elected  Engine  Depart­­
KA/OW A/MgA/ YOC^R. BHlP IS ^EDUUD
teohnan  see  Old  Man  about  hell,  Stewards.  Motion  carried:  ment  Delegate.  First  Assistant 
Engineer 
was 
called 
to 
meeting 
drdws  in  view  of  circular  letter  That  no  one  outside  of  Stewards 
TO LBA\/B PORT. IP
TIME iS AlCT
from  company  limiting  Skipper  Department  be  allowed  to handle  and  asked  if  anything  could  be 
f^STEO^A^klThtEDBLB^ATBSlOPiMD 
to a  draw  of  $100  per  man.  Dis­ food  in  South  American. ports;  done  about  improving  hot  water 
in 
showers. 
He 
replied 
that 
he 
cussion on  the need  for  adequate  that  crewmembers  be  banned 
OCT ll­iE CORRECT T&gt;EPA13rnJ^ TIME 
supplies  and  a  wider  variety  of  from  entering  messhall  in shorts.  woiild  install  a  new  thermostat 
FROM THE MATE­,  VOAiT LEAVE THE 
food.  Vote  of  thanks  to  Alfred  Suggested  that  character  who  and  if  that  did  not  remedy  the 
Thomas  for  keeping  good  supply  comes  aboard  in  Santos,  Buenos  trouble  he  would  refer  the  mat­
SWI? UASTIL YOU MOW WHEAJ  YOU ARf 
of  ice  on  hand  during  our  stay  Aires  and  Montevideo  to  wash  ter to  the company in  New  York. 
IBAOci ABOARD 1 
In  hot  climate. Stewards Depart­ clothes  and  do  odd  jobs  be  pro­ It  was  decided  at  the  meeting 
that 
the 
Deck 
Engineer 
would 
ment  thanked  for  excellent  hibited  from  boarding  ship. 
be  in  charge  of  regulating  the 
Thanksgiving  dinner.  Suggested 
4 
t 
t 
temperature. Suggested 
that  crew 
that  men  getting  off  ship  turn 
TRINITY. Dec 
14—E. 
A. Luke­
cooperate 
with 
the'Messman 
by 
their  keys  over  to  department 
v/ski.  Chairman:  Pete  Biascik.  exercising  a  little  patience  at 
heads. 
Secretory.,  Engine  department  meal  time  and  not  rushing  him. 
men  thanked  Deck  Gang  for 
building  book  ^ase  for  use  by 
alj  hands.  J.  B.  Bamett,  Ship's 
Delegate  Tesigned  to  allow  an­
AH  hands  are  feeling  bitter  about  this  ridiculous  idea  of 
other  man  to  have  experience, 
^  t,  % 
destroying 
the  hiring  haU  because  the  Taft­Hartley  Act,  a  "shot­
^ 
ALCOA  ROAMER.  Dec.  11—  with  O.  W.  Rhoades  being  elect­
gun" 
piece 
of  strictly  union­busting  legislation,'  claims  it's  illegal 
DEL 
VALLE. 
Dec. 
11—Kend­
Wesley  Palmer.  Chairman;  Eu­ ed  to  succeed  him.  All  beefs 
ricks,  Chairman;  Ryan,  Secre­ after so  many  years in  beneficial  operation.  And  even  the Supreme 
squared 
away 
from 
last 
trip, 
gene  Smith.  Secretary.  Motion 
Court  made  a  "ski  jump"  opinion  on  it,  saying  the  hiring  hall 
carried  instructing  Ship's  Dele­ thanks  to Patrolman  PurceU  Who!No  beefs  pending,  it  was  should  not  be  recognized.  And  many  a  seafaring  Brother  is 
{reported  by  the  delegates.  Bart­
did 
a 
fine 
job. 
Ship's 
Delegate 
gate  to  get  in  touch  with  Union 
scratching  his  head  after  reading  recently  that  President  Truman 
Hall  for  disposal  of  penalty  ov­ informed  crew  that  Chief  Mate  lett  was  elected  Ship's  Delegate. 
He 
was 
instructed 
to 
write 
to 
would  not  allow  any  more  American  ships  to  be  transferred  to 
. crtime  for  no  shore  leave  in  had  requested  all  hands  not  to 
Panamanian 
or  other flags.  For  many  years  thousands  of  jobs  for 
Headquarters 
to 
determine 
opin­
Paramaribo.  Engine  Delegate  re­ smoke  in  restricted  areas.  Broth­
American 
seamen 
were  destroyed  berause  the  government  allowed 
ion 
of 
membership 
in 
regard 
to 
ported a minor  overtime dispute;  er  CMeara  donated  $3.15  to 
ships 
to 
be 
transferred 
or  sold  to  other  nations.  Now  comes  the 
matter 
of 
credit 
union 
and 
com­
there  were  no  other  beefs.  Sug­ ship's  fund,  bringing  total  to  $8. 
terrific 
news 
that 
all 
this, would 
be  stopped  . . . Brother  Larry 
pulsory 
vacations. 
Under 
Good 
hands  to 
ge^ed  that  galley  boy  make  ice  Chairman  asked 
Moore, 
who 
has 
been 
beached 
many 
months  in  New  York,  has 
and 
'Welfare, 
credit 
unions 
were 
tea.  Stewards  Department  giMsen  return  books  to  proper  places. 
discussed  fully­ pro  and  con  and  threatened  to  ship . . . Les Ames,  just  sailed  into  town  aboard  an 
vote^ of  thanks  for  its  efficient 
the  crew  was  unanimously  in  Isthmian  scow  and  no  doubt  is  stowing  aboard  for  more  voyaging 
service.  Ship's  Delegate  to  head 
favor  pf  setting  one  up  for  the  ... To SIU  Brothers  in  all  ports  and  to  their  families  back  home 
committee  which  will  investigate 
SIU, membership.  Vacations  were  we  recommend  them  to  listen  to  an  excellent  news  commentator, 
ship's  library. 
also  discussed  thoroughly,  with  Frank  Edwards,  sponsored  by  the  AFL.  He's  on  every  night  at 
^ 
the majority  of  the crew  opposed  10  p.m.  over  radio  station  WOR  here  in  New  York.  You'll  hear 
DEL  SOL.  Dec. 18—Frank  Mc­
to  making  vacations  compulsory.  labor  news,  the  AFL  way. 
Quillan,  Chairman;  J. R.  Brown. 
ft ft ft 
ft ft ft 
Secretary.  Ship's  Delegate  asked 
ft ft ft 
BEATRICE,  Dec.  31—P.  Lob­
According  to  a  letter." Brother  Giles L.  Quiim  is aboard  the 
that  collection for  fimei'al  wi'eath  KATHRYN.  Dec.  3—W.  Blan­ bregt.  Chairman;  R.  Penningion,  SS  Monarch  of  the  Seas  and  New  Orleans  was  the  last  port 
for  Baker's  deceased  mother  be  ion.  Chairman;  Richard  Cianfag­ Secretary.  All  Delegates  gave  she  hit  . . . Jim  Helms  says  that  the  roof  repairing  business 
left  to  department  delegates.  liaro.  Secretary.  Delegates  re­ their  reports—^no  beefs.  Motion  is  in  a  slowdown  right  now  . . . Louis  Ramirez  is  in  New 
Disputed  overtime  reported  in  ports  were  concurred  in.  Motion  carried  to  continue  cold  suppers  York  with  his  mustache  right  now . . . Another  guy  with  a •  
each  of  the departments  and  will  carried  to  have  Ship's  Delegate  in  island  on  holidays.  Brother  mustache.,  Sid  Rothman.  grabbed,  a  ship  recently  . . . Fred 
be  turned  overrto  Patrolman  up­ contact  Captain  or  Patrolman  Lobbregt  read  and  discussed  un­
Kloiber  and John  Nelson  are two  of  the Brothers  doing a swell 
on  arrival  in  New  Orleans.  Mo­ about  making  it  standard  prac­ ion  bulletin  on  Trotskyites. Crew 
job  helping  day  after  day . . . Another  Brother  ^ways  helping 
tion  carried  to  see  Patrolman  tice  for  schedule  of  destinations  voted  to  go  on  record  against  is  Victor Litardi.  who sure  has  been  burning  up  the  typewriter 
about  changing  wooden  lockers  and  date  of  arrival  to  be  posted  communist  organizations  and  for  many  weeks . . . Bill  Daniels  from  Illinois  is in  New  York 
to  metal  ones  before  ship  leaves  at  gangway  so  that  crew  may  anyone  connected  with  them.  right  now  . . . Keith  Forster.  the  always­smiling  pipe­smoktog 
port  on  next  voyage.  Suggested  arrange  for  mail.  Under  Good  Under  Good *and  Welfare,  it  was  Brother,  sailed  in  this  week  with  a  big  hullo as  usual . . . We 
that  ship's  library  be  exchanged  and  Welfare,  all  sorts  of  ship­ suggested  that  clock  be  moved  have  been  informed  that  a  Brother  nicknamed  "Citizen  Joe" ­
on  arrival.  Selico.  BR,  volun­ board  matters  were  discussed,  to  more  convenient  position.  has  been  threatening  to  ship—on  a  foreign  run . . . We  don't 
teered  to  take  care  of  the  mat­ including  deficient  windchutes,  Steward  was  asked  to. have  bet­ ' remember  mentioning  before  thai  several  Brothers  have  been 
ter. 
brolten  water  fountain.  Patrol­ ter  night  lunches  available, 
happy  guys  since,  they  received  their'  citizenship  papers— 
mafn  to  be  asked  whose  depart­
which  makes quite a  difference in  grabbing a scowOVe  remem­
ft ft ft 
ment  is  to  paint  crew's  passage­
CUBORE.  'Jan.  1  —  W.  W.  ber  Carl  Lawson.  the  Bosun,  and  Clement  Hospedales  ... 
way. 
Fields,  Chairman;  W.  A.  House.  So far  it  hasn't  happened  where  an SIU  ship  has  hit  the "hot" 
Chinese  waters,  where  the  bonus  is  big  and  the' danger  is 
Secretory.  Deck  Delegate  re­
ft ft ft 
ALCOA  CORSAIR,  Dec.  18—  ported  a  small  overtime  beef  in  bigger.  The  first  SIU  ship  to  hit  the "chop  suey"  run  will  no 
doubt  be  in  the  news and  in  the  LOG.  too. 
W.  Higgs.  Chairman:  E.  J.  Rob­ his  department;  other  depart­
erts. Secretory.  Delegates  reports  ment  had  no  beefs.  Vote  of 
ft ft ft 
The  SEAFARERS  LOG  will  be  sailing  free  of  cost  to  the 
accepted.  Ship's  Delegate  an­ thanks,  given  Stewards  Depart­
ft ft  t 
AZALEA  CITY.  Dec.  4—Roih­ nounced  that  Shipping  'Commis­ ment  for  the  excellent  Christ­ homes  of  the foUoAving  Brothers:  Chester  Wilson  of  West  Virginia, 
mas.  Chairman;  N.  De  Santis,"  loners  promised  to  pay  off  ship  mas dinner.  Jack  Denby.  who  is  Allen Friend of  New  York, H.  Galphin of  Florida, Harold  McMahon 
Becrelary.  Ship's  Delegate  re­ in  Mobile on  Deo.  26  so  men  can  leaving  ship,  resigned  as  Ship's  of  Georgia,  Martin  Biggins  of  Massachusetts,  A.  F.  Burns^of 
ported  that  beef  on  hot  water  have  more  time  at  home.''  Mo­ Delegate.  Deck  Engineer  was  el­ Maryland,  David  Dial  of  Texas,  Martin'Mackel  of  Ohio,  Bill  Gross 
had  been  presented  to  First  As­ tions  carried:  That  Ship's  Dele­ ected  to  take  over  the  job.  Let­ of  Louisiana,  William  Blakely  of  Massachusetts  . .  . Brother  ­Tim 
sistant,  who  promised  to  take  gate  see  Punser  about  draw;  that  ter  written  to  Congi­essman  Hel­ Barrett,  who  sailed  in  from  a  trip  recently,  is  proud  of  the  fact 
immediate  action.  He  added  that  Steward  order  new  pillows  and  ler  of  NY,  thanking  him  for  that  his  father  has  been  an  AFL  member  for  over  50  years  . . 
Captain  ­ agreed  to  have  Deck  mattresses.  Discussion  on  pur­ complimentary  remarks  about  FLASH  NEWS—Bosun  Alex  Andreshak  was  happily  married  to a 
Engineer  keep  key  for  fan  room  chasing  movies;  delegate  to  SIU,  was  read  to  the  crew.  Beef  gal  from  Galveston,  Texas,  and  they  received  a  wedding  dinner 
so  he  culd  regulate  temperature.  check  into  this.  Several  Brothers  brought  up  about  condition  of  in  their  honor  at  the  famous  "Mecca"  in  Baltimore  . . . Brother 
Under  Good  and  Welfare,  it  was  spoke  on  subject  of  writing  let­ laundry  room.  Ways  of  keeping  A.  Mosher  told  us  about  the  time  they  bought  a  little  Scotch  as 
suggested  that  bottle  be  filled  ter to  Congressman thanking  him  clean  were  discussed.  Members  they  lay  anchored  out  in  the .port  of  Hamburg.  Buying  Scotch 
with  fresh  water  and  shown  to  for  interest  he  has  shown  in  were  advised  that  imclean  per­ seems  to  be  okay  in  this  port  as  it  is  classified  as  a  "free  port" 
Patrolman  and  sanitation  auth­ SIU.  Ship's  Delegate  authorized  sons have  no place  on SIU  ships,  for  a  ship  anchored  out.  It  must  have  been  a  nice  Christmas, 
orities  So  bolster  crew's  claim  to  WKltc  • he letter  in  beh­alf  of  and  that  no  one  .ehould  leave  Brother  Mosher,  with  that  "wee"  bit  o'  Scotch  for  celebration 
cf  Christmas  overseas. 
laundry  dirty. 
crew. 
that  tanks  need  cleaning. 

• m 

�Page Eight 

Fridaxr  February  24/  1950 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

TBE  MEMBERSHIP  SPEAKS 
The  Steel  Rover  Boys  In  Siam, 
Or Hoiv To Learn The  Hard Way 

THEY  SAY  SHE'S  A  JEWEL 

religion  he  founded.  We  saw  When  we  got  back  to . the  old 
the  sitting  Buddha,  too,  but  the  Malee  Bar  we  found  that  the 
Ci',,.  We  would  like  to  tuU  you  temple  of  the  standing  Buddha  launch  service  was  not  being 
what  happened  to  a  few  of  us  was  closed. 
kept  as  advertised  on  the  card 
r,i Steel  Rover  boys  in  Thailand, 
The  religion  of  the  people  of  the  bar.  We  waited  around 
fi,  once  called  V  Slam,  so  anyone 
here  really  is  a  philosophy  of  a  while  and  then  began  to  get 
J­,making  the Far  Eastern run may 
living  with  quite  a  lot  of  ideal­ information  about  other  means 
f r  profit  by our  experience. 
ism,  good  will  and  good  fellow­ of  transportation  out  to  the ship. 
1 
We  dropped  the  hook  in  the  ship  actually  taught  and  prac­
There  was  a  big  launch  on  a 
1? 
Gulf  of  Siam  oh  Dwember  2.  ticed.  Their  Sutta,  or  Bible,  con­ pier  right  across from  the  Malea' 
Nearest  town  was  Kohsichang,  tains  quite  a  number  of  truths 
bar  which  wanted  25  dollars  to 
on  an  island  half  hour's  run  and  paths  ­of  virtue  by  which  take  us  out.  Another  smaller 
from  the  ship.  Nearest  town  on  the  individual  can  regulate  his  raotor  boat  nearby  wanted  17.20. 
the mainland  was  Sriracha,  one  life. 
We  took  a  native fishing  boat 
hour's  run  by  launch  from  the 
We  saw  a  bundh  of  cobras  and  for  6  dollars. 
other  poisonous  snakes  at  the 
WAR  STORY 
To  get  to  Bangkok  you  have  Savapha ­ Institute.  Anyone  who 
I  S:  to  go  to  Sriracha  by  launch  and  goes  there  on  Thursday  can  see  It  was  p  beautiful  trip.  The 
3'  /•  then  take  a  four  hour  drive  the  keeper  get  down  in  the  pit  two  native fishermen  told  us  the 
by  auto  or  bus.  In  Bangkok  you  and  milk  the  snakes  of  their  whole  story  of  the war  by  losing 
get  ail  the  sights,  the  sitting,  venom which  is used for an  anti­ gestures  and  grunts  and  noises 
Everything is ri^l up  to snuff  on  the tanker SS  Julbsberg/­
standing  and  lying  Buddhas,  snake­bite  senun. 
like  an  airplane,.  We  thought  at  according  to  ciewmembers/  who  ought  to  know.  Thfy  say. 
temples,  theaterg,  night  clubs. 
first  that  they  were  dumb­look­
Capf. J. A. Engelbracht  is a "real  good  Joe,"  the  food  put  out 
For  a  quiet time  with  girls,  The  capital  is  modeled  on  the  ing  gees,  but  when  they succeed­
by the able Cooks is swell—in short,  nio  beefs at  all. No  wonder, 
drinks, fishing  and  swimming  capital  in  Washington  and  has  ed  in  telling  us  ip  their  sign  these  guys  look  pleased.  They  are  Red  Lachappe,  Vlilkins,' 
a  mile­long  approach  lined  with 
!  '  ^ 
nearest  place  is  Kohsichatig. 
Frank  Travis, Pete  Street,  Vincent  Myers,  Gene  Bacon,  George 
trees.  The  gpvemment  buildings  and  grunt  language  that  Com­
Thumer and Joe Penner. Pumpman Ray  Arnold  took  the|pholo^ 
1^ '' .  There  was fierce  competition  are first  class  for  such  a  small  munism  was  the same  as Japan­
I  '^­' among four  launches  owned  by  country  and  all  of  recent  con­ ese  fascism,  we  thought  that 
'"y'l bars,  three  launches  from  Koh­ struction.  At  night  we  went  to  they  were  pretty  smart fisher­
"' sichang  and  one  launch  from  the  Silpakom  Theater  for  50  folk. 
Sriracha,  to  get  customers.  The  cents  and  saw  a  two  hour  show  On  the  way  baCk  to  the  ship, 
^tertainers from  the  bars  were  with  bekutiful  native  dancing.  which  took  us  two  hours,  we  To  the  Editor: 
, 
decided  at  the  present  moment 
|;  '^Ipn  the  launches. 
to  homestead? 
The  story  of  the  drama  v/e saw  ­were  passed  by  the  launch  of  *  I 
by  the  last  few  issues 
was  taken from  the  old  histwy  the  Malee Bar.  The  owner  want­ .of  th^  liX3G  that  the  proposed.,  li^en  a  Mate  or  First  Assist­
^  t! 
"DUMB  LIKE  FOK 
ed  to  pick  ­US  up  and  Routed 
Tbe  three launcl^ fr(»ii  Koh­ uf  the Siamese  people  with Ipye,  to  us  that  the ^ip was not  sail­ ­vacation  clau^  has  caused  quite  ant  starts  calling' you  jby  your 
court  in­
n  few  members  to  voice  their  first  n^e  and  you  know  what' 
I  ­r­fiichai^  wore free  of  i^sffge but  .conflicf^  battles 
ing  until  next  day,  Mon^y.  We 
tri^e. •
 
.  size  shoes  he  wears  (just  an 
,  " nnly  went  up  to  50  ym?ds from 
were  so  ^re  at fom  and  were  opinions. 
ample).  Brother,  it's  time  to 
Thcaa 
we 
went 
down 
to 
the 
I  "­Uhore  wiiere  you  had  to  hire  a­
rajojdng  the  trip  so  much  that  r  want  to  go  on  record  as.  make  a  change.  Sov iet's  put  the 
market 
i:egion and 
saw 
a strange. 
.stating  .that  a  year  on  a  diip' 
I 
campan­ to  take  you  the  rest 
we  ignored  him. 
xjuestion  to  a  90­day  ref^renduim 
I '  the  w^.  The. laimdi fr&lt;»a  end  performance  in  an  tfid  tbeater.  We  were  very  lyeE­impressed" Is, Jttsag  en^gh.  A­  man  should 
vote  up  and  down  thje  co^ 
The 
gee 
who 
owns 
the 
place 
tjhep !take 
yac^ion. 
It's ­get­
I  f  Jto  Sriracha. was  owned  by  the 
by 
the 
people 
6f 
Siam. 
They 
are 
and find 
out  what  the  rp^ber­
tender  age; 
ting  so  that  it  is  almost  impos­, 
';4&gt;w»» of  the  Malee  Bm*.  It  was  buys  girls  of  a 
clever, 
healthier 
and, 
aside 
ship 
thinks 
about  the  compiil­  . 
sible  to  ship  on  certain  vessels,., 
I' " free  of  charge ^i^ up  to  the  from  their  parents  for  100  to, 
from 
the rickshaw 
drivers, 
le^s 
sory 
vacation 
issue. 
' 
namelj''  the  Robin  Line. 
i  beach  of  the  Malee  Bar.  Ihe  300  dollars  depending  on  looks. 
mercenary 
than 
other 
Asiatics. 
Paul  Arthofejr 
Also,  it  seems  that  the  turn­
. :;3  ?. uwner  jwas­  a  gee  dumb  like  a  He  gets  th^ young  and  keeps 
them  in  slavery.  They  dance  P.S.:  We  cannot  stress  the  over  in  the  key  rating  jobs  such 
phqniness  of  the  Malee  bar  as  Bosun,  Carpenter,  Deck  En­
r 
. He told  us  he had  a  car  wait­ a  strip  tease  which  is  definitely 
too  strong  and  urgently  sug­ gineer and  Chief  Steward is  very 
not 
pxoperifor 
girls of 
that age. 
il;'  ­C'  ing fbr lis  to take  us to Bangkok 
^ 
and  back  for  25  smackCTOos.  If  This  slave  trader  seems  to  be  gest  that  all  seamen  put  the  slow.  Members  take  these  jobs 
owner in  their 99 year dub. 
and  then  marry  the  ships. 
%  we  waxded  to  wait  untd  mom­ in  "favor  with  the  governing 
I 
Ernest  L.  Zaugg 
YEAR  IS  ENOUGH 
® 
ing,  he  could  send  us  up  in  one  clique  and  is  locally­known  as 
I 
realize 
that 
a 
guy 
likes 
to 
Fxed 
Schoenborn 
^  of  "his"  busses  for  $1.50.  We  a  racketeer.  We  were  told  that 
stay  on  a  good  ship  but  a  year 
Tom  Hawkins 
took  him  at  his  word.  When  we  any  girls  Who  escaped  from  him 
is  enough.  What  would  happen­
Bob 
RainTille 
were 
"rubbed 
out" by 
his hench­
got  to  the  bar,  there  was,  of 
To  the  Editor: 
if  just  half  of  the  membership 
Albert 
Susanann 
men. 
How 
true tii's 
is, 
we 
do 
course,  no  auto  waiting  there 
The  present  situation,  ip whi&lt;jh 
for  u^  We  were  mad.  The  trick  not  know,  but  it  sounded  pretty 
awful. 
The 
girls 
exposed 
them­
the 
Cities  Service  Oil  C!impapy 
was  of  course  to  get  us  to  his 
COMING  INTO  BALTIMORE 
is  trying  to  evade  its  obligation, 
bar  and  women  and  then  bleed  selves  with  such  a  serious  face 
to  sign  an  agreement  wjith  t^e 
us  white  and,  if  we  still  had  that  it  seemed  as  though  they 
Union,  brings  to  my  m^nd  tj)e 
enough  money  left  in  the  morn­ were  doing  something  they  had 
experience  I  had  with  the  corp­
: •  ing  to • g  o  to  Bangkok,  we  coidd  to  do  rather  than  wanted  to, ' 
pany  in  the  early  days  of  tjie 
LUNCH  AT  TROC 
organizing  drive.  ' 
.  . 
We  suppose  some  fellows  The  best  place  to  eat  is  the 
I  was  sailing ­  aboard  Cities 
would  have  made  the  best  of  Trocadero,  the  best  hotel ^  in 
Service . ships  back  before  the 
a bad  bargain  and  remained, but  town.  An  excellent  lunch  is  75 
first  NLRB  election.  I  rerpember 
y  this  p^icuku* group  was  all  for  cents.  Breakfast  with  lo?tds  of 
when  we  were  on  the  jvay ' to 
"  the  sitting,  standing"  and  lying  fruit  is  35  cents.  The  bar  is 
Aruba  to  pick  up  a load  of  crude 
Buddhas  and  temples  of  Bang­ comfortable  and  reasonable. 
oil  for  England.  On  the  way  , 
fc  ^  kok,  so  we  went  around  town  Rooms  were  $3.50  so  we  stayed' 
down  I started  to  talk  upion  to 
looking  for  transportation. 
in  the  Bungalow  Hotel,  which 
the  crew  and,  Brotlier,;  every 
No  luck.  Finally  the  Malee  was only  1 dollar  but  very  clean 
tiine  the  word  was  mentioned 
p  bar  made  a deal  with  the agent's  and  screens  on  the  windows. 
they  turned  green—they  were 
|l : r  driver  to  take  us  up  to  Bang­ Showers  were  hand­scooped,  air­
so" 
afraid  of  being  caught  even 
kok  for  20  dollars.  We  were  warmed  water from  a  huge  jug 
thinking 
about  it." 
I' \  plpnty  sorei  as  this  was  more  at  least  four  feet  high  and  big 
The 
Chief 
Mate  found' out  I 
than  the  suni  originally  men­ around. 
was  pro­union  and  from  then  qn 
,  tioned,  and  some  of  us  swore  In  Bangkok  we  were  taken 
out  and  I  mean  out—I  j^ot  the 
we  would  give  this  gee  of  the  around  all  day  by  Thong  Yoo 
dirty  end  of  the"  stick,  i^t  wps 
/;• M
  alee  Bar  a  bit  of  bad  publi­ at  the  Trocadero  Hotel,  car 
what  I  expected  so  I  managed 
number  103i7,  for  7.50  dollars. 
to  stand  up  under  it  okay. 
(•   Well,  Bangkok  was  worth  it.  This  is  a  good  deal  for  Bang­
"Whep  we .got  to  Linderl,  N.J.,  ­
^|,„;::,;The  inost  impressive  sight  was  kok.  The  same  man  took  us  the 
I  &gt;vas  fired,  of  course, 
onjy 
tv­  the sleeping  Buddha.  He was  75  long  trip  bapk  to  Sriracha  for 
A  bright  day  and  the  cameranum'g  request  brought  these  because  I  thought  Cities  Service 
yards  long,  covered  with  gold  $17.50. 
folur  members  ot  the  SS  Ireneslar's  Black  Gang  together  for  seamen  deserved  the  yifht  lo 
. /  ieaf  and  his  feet  were  irilaid  The  agent  at  the  Borneo  com­
ig.^5  ^  with  mother  of  pearl.  His  re­ pany  was  very  polite  and  gave  some  chatter  and  a  photo^  Left  to  right:  ChazR«  Hurk,  FWTj  a  contract  which  they  so .badly 
. 
;! 
^ 
'Si;  f  cJinfng  position  and  calm  fea­ us good  iiifpmiation  about seeing'  Joseph  Kidd,  Utility;  Bjome  Jensen,  Oiler,  and  Mike  Carlin,  needed. 
"Vi^per. 
Bob  Breityirui^ 
tures  expressed  the  spirit  of  the  the  town. 
­i 

the  Editor: 

Urges  Ballot  On  Vacatioiis 

Breitw^ Recalls: 
CS  Attti­Umofiism 
Rough From Start 

�Fridar.  Februaxy  U. 1950 

Hellmuth Holds 
Vacation Rule 
Would Aid Morale 

T H  E  S  B  A F  A  R  ER S  LOG 

DOWN  ON  TBE  DELTA  LINE 

To  the  Editor: 

Page  Nine 

Vacation  Plan  Won't  Solve 
Shipping Problem, He Says 
To  the  Editor: 
Whenever  jobs  become  scarbe 
—as 
they  are  now—well­inten­
I  wish  to  compliment  Brothers 
tioned 
people  from  everywhere 
Joseph  Buckley,  Joseph  Blake 
put 
forth 
ideas  which  they  feel 
and  Frank. Bose for  their rational 
will 
serve 
as  antidotes  to  imem­
and  praiseworthy  arguments 
ployment, 
or,  as  in  our  case, 
against  compulsory  vacations.  I 
tough 
shipping. 
agree  with  them  that  if  there 
Compulsory  vacations  is  one 
exists job  insecurity  among  book­
of 
these.  Its  backers/  however, 
members  it  will not  be  decreased 
fail to understand 
economic  prin­
by  compulsory  vacations. 
ciples,  or  at  least  to  recogime 
I  say  that  if  such  a  nile  were  them.  The  notion  that  compul­
to  go  in  effect  it  would  not  sory  vacations  will  create  more 
lessen  insecurity  ampng  mari­ jobs  is  mathematically  absurd. 
time  men.  Owing  to  the  dimin­
Whatever ­merit  there  may  be' 
ishing  of  sea­borne  trade,  a  in  an  increased  turnover  at  the 
large  number  of  seamen  are  initiation  of  such  a  rule  would 
thrown  out  of  work  regularly.  be  insignificant  when  compared 
Economic  insecurity  and  fear  of 
losing  his  job  has  haunted  the 
AMy  WEK3H  I 
wage­earning  seaman  since  the 
iLoOkS  •  
AT IT-r.
time  he first  boarded  a  ship. 
Fortunately,  his  union  has  done 
a  lot;  a  tremendous  lo*^,  to mini­
mize  this  fear. 

I  soinetimes  wonder  if  those 
Brothers,  who  are  against  com­
pulsory  vacations  have  ever 
• topped  to ­  consider  the  other 
Bide  of  the  story  and  the  more 
serious  aspects  of  the  situation. 
What  about  the men  v/ho  get 
off  at  payoff,  mai­ried  or  single, 
because  their  homes are  far  from 
the  port  they  payoff  in  and  they 
wish to go home  for a visit  more 
than  once  every five  years^ 
When  these  men  get  ready 
to  ship  again,  they  don't  feel 
much  like  waiting  a  couple  of 
months for  a  job  (possibly  broke) 
just  because  their  Brother  Union 
members  are  too  selfish  to  give 
From  lli^  MV  Del  Campo.  Mississippi  vessel  on  the  South 
them  a  break.  And  when  they  American run,  come these  photoby Seafarer  William Cameron. 
do  have  to  wait  around  broke,  Above,  front  row,  left  to  right:  J.  Kellogg,  M.  Machel.  E. 
they  become  discouraged.  It  Weems;  rear.  Bosun  J.  Voxel  and  T.  Dennis. 
we^ens their  morale—and  often 
breaks  it. 
CREWMAN HAS HEAP 
Our  organization  is  like  any 
OF  PRAISE  FOR 
other  in  one  respect:  It's  power 
lies  in  its  unity,  and  weakness  THE  SS  WAR  HAWK 
In  any  individuals  within  its  To  the  Editor: 
ranks  necessarily  means  a  weak­
I  would  like  to  drop  a  few 
ness  in  the  whole  body. 
lines 
to  the  LOG  about  the  good 
Since  our  Union  was  organ­
ship 
SS 
War  Hawk,  Waterman. 
ized  in  1938,  it  has  been  ever 
We 
crewed 
up  in  Mobile  The 
growing  and  changing,  accord­
ship 
was 
one 
of  many  that  lay 
ing  to  the  needs  of  its  member­
in 
port 
for 
about five 
weeks,  be­
ahip.  '^e  have  taken  in  many 
fore 
the 
army 
chartered 
her  to 
new  members,  organized  large 
haul 
grain 
to 
Germany. 
shipping  companies,  levied  as­
sessments,  and  we've  fought  for,  We  arrived  in  Nordenham,  and 
earned,  and  gotten,  higher  wages  boy  it  sure  is  a  nice  little  town. 
I  think  a  lot  of  SIU  men  have 
and  better  living  conditions. 
Our  organization  has  never  been  there  many  times.  It  used 
been  static.  We've  created  the  to  take  quite  a  while  to  dis­
finest  and  most  powerful  Unioni  charge  there  but  we  sure  got  a 
the  world  has  ever  known.  And  surprise  when  we  were  ready 
we're  proud  of  our  Union.  Let's  to  leave  in  two  days flat. 
Tasty  chow  abowd  the  Campo Is prepared  by  these  mem­
not break  it down,  but let's  make  On  our  way  from  Germany  to  bers  of  the  Stewards  Department.  Left  to  right:  J.  Johnson, 
changes  where  changes  are  nec­ the  states,  we  really  cleaned  the  Assistant  Cook;  E.  Odem,  Chief  Cook;  T.  Fields,  Night  Cook 
essary.  Let's  change  with  the  ship  up  and  when  she  arrives  &amp;  Baker  and  W.  Cameron,  Second  Cook. 
changing  world!  If  there  isn't  in  Philly  I  am  sme  they  will 
Brother  Cameron,  who's  getting  to  be  quite  a  cameraman. 
enough  work  fdr  all,  then  let's !give  us  a  compliment  for  bring­
Uses 
his  iV* x 3'/4  speed graphic  for  these  shots. 
ing  in  a  ship  like  this.  There 
divide  what  work­there  is. 
I  can't  see  where.it  will  hurt  has  not  been  a  single  beef  the 
any  one  of  us  to  take  a­vacation  whole,  trip.  The  officers  are  a 
after  a  year  on  the  same  ship.  swell  bunch,  headed  by  Captain 
Don't  be  selfish.  Think  of  how  Elmer  Thompson.  He  has  done 
proudly  we  can  stand  up  and  everjrthing  he  could  to make  this 
tell  everyone  that  shipping's  a  pleasant  voyage. 
the  LOG  wants—^the &gt;  Brothers' 
good  out  of  our  halls,  and  that  Anyone  who  is  looking  for  a  To  the  Editor: 
personal  viewpoints  on  tlus 
good 
ship 
should 
take 
the 
SS 
we  don't  have  to  worry  about 
I  am  not  much  at  writing,  but  question.  Let's  have  more  of 
War  Hawk. 
a  job. 
I  have  been  listening  to  and  them.) 
Albert  E.  Hellmuth 
Edmtmd  Erikson  reading  a  lot  abouc  this  idea  of 
compulsory  vacations. 
Shining Eyes 
I  have  yet  to  hear  an  argu­
ment  that  would  seem  to  give 
a  good  solid  reason  why  a  man 
should  have  to  get  off  a  ship. 
The  way  I  see  it,  if  a  man 
EQUAL DIVISION OF OVERTIME 
knows  he  caii  stay  only  so  long 
PUZZLES  ARIZPA  CREWMEN 
on  a  ship,  then  there  will  be 
more 
men  taking  advantage  of 
To  the  EditOR 
the  full  time  allowed.  In  that 
Would  you  please  clarify  this  point  concerning  the  division  case,  I  can't  see  where  it  would 
of  overtime.  The  problem  is this: 
create  more  of  a  turnover. 
As  you  know,  the  day  men  do  not  work  on  Sundays  or  holi­
I  certainly  agree  with  Frank 
days  at  sea,  yet  the  three  watches  must  perform  their  regular  Bose  in his  letter  of  Dec.  30  that 
duties,  for  which,  of  course,  they  are  paid  overtime. 
if  a  man  is  going, to  be  a  com­
Should  this  Stinday  and  holiday  overtime  be  counted  when  pany  stiff,  staying  aboard  one 
overtime  is  computed  for  the  purpose  of  equal  division  between  ship  will  not  be  the  cause  of  it. 
the  watchstanders  and  the  day  men?  This  question  has  caused  And  if  he  is a  good  Union  man, 
quite  a  bit  of  dissension. 
nothing  will  change  him. 
M.  J.  Martin 
I  personally  believe  that  if  the 
SS  Arizpa 
vacation  clause  is  put  through 
ANSWER­rActually  each  ­man  receives  overtime  pay  fOr  it  will  do  more  toward  hurting 
the  overtime  work  he  has  performed  individually.  There  is  no  our organizing of  non­union ships 
pooling  of  overtime.  The  purpose  of  the  eq[ual  division  of  than  anything  else. 
overtime  clause  is  to  allow  those  men  who  stand  low  in over­
It  would  give  John  Shipowner 
time  work,  a  chance  to  bring  their  overtime  wages  as  near  a  chance  to  stress  the  fact  that 
This  cute  little  lady  already 
as  possible  to the level  of  the  higher  men.. 
we are  not sincere about  promis­ shows  signs  of  being  endowed 
This  is  done  by  giving  overtime  jobs  to  the  low  men  ing  job  security  and  that  per­
until  the  amount  Of  overtime  work  has  been  distributed  fairly  sonnel  could  stay  aboard  his  with  plenty  of  charm.  Only 
six  months  bid  when  this 
equally.  It  would  bo  impossible  to  divide  all  overtime  exactly  ships  as long  as  they  cared  to. 
eqiial.  You  can  only  attempt  to  divide  the  work  as  equally  as 
This  is  of  course  just  my  own  photo  'was  taken,  she  has  just 
possible.  The  contract  says  "All  overtime  shall  be  divided  as  personal  viewpoint, 
passed  the  Id­month  mark. 
equally  as  possible  among  She  members  of  the  deck  crew" 
Her  name  is  Luz  Maria  and 
William  E.  Candler 
Here,  overtime  refeks  to  overtime  work  and  not  the  pay,  as 
Baltimore,  Md. 
her proud  pop is 'Babe" Miller 
some  have  thought. 
(Ed.  Note:  That's  just  what  —and  nO  wonder  he's  proud. 

Limiting  Stay  Aboard  Ship 
Seen Harmful To The  Union 

THE  BEEF  BOX 

to  the  ultimate  result:  more 
members  woiild  stay  on  their 
respective  ships  longer  than  us­
uaL  and  the  majority  of  those 
who  ordinarily  do  not  make 
more  than  one  or  two  trips, 
would  stick  to  their  jobs  like 
glue,  sweating  out  their  vaca­
tion  pay. 
The four­watch  system,  so  well 
argued  for  by  Brother  Joseph 
Buckley,  is  the  only  real  per­
manent  solution  against  job" 
scarcity.  Though  it  will  be  sir* 
gued  against  as  being  too  cvun­
Wsome,  costly,  and  difficult  te 
win,  it  would  provide  the  cusht­
ion  this  industry  needs  in  the 
days  ahead. 
Thousands  of­permitm en 
would,  under  the foiur­watch  sys­
tem,  be  spared  the  terror  of  un­
employment  and  the  demoraliz­
ing  effects  of  prolonged  failure 
to find  woi­k.  The  four­watch 
system  would  provide  the  high 
turnover  sought  on  the  ships  to­, 
day. 
Although  the  four­watch  sys­
tem  is  just  a  dream  today,  at 
least  we  can  dream  and  plan 
and  hope  for  the  best  in  the 
future. 
Bertil  Svensson 

Share The Johs, 
Urges Supporter 
Of One­Year Rule 
To  the  Editmr: 
In  answer  to  your  recent  edi­
torials  I  am  sending  you  my 
opinion  on  vacations. 
It  seems  to  me  (Book  34733) 
that  a  Brother  who  has  spent  a 
year  on  one  ship  should  give 
another  man  a  chance  to  earn 
a  living.  You  may  say  that  the 
man  has  a  family  to  support,  so 
why  take  his  job  away. 
I  will  combat  this  by  having 
you  look  at  the  records  of  any 
and  all  bookmen  in  this  Union. 
You  will find  that  nearly  all  o# 
us have  a family  and  kids.  Evai 
if  we  didn't  have  any  family, 
or  kids,  it  should  always  be 
agreed  that  we should  always  be 
Brother  members  a  chance  to 
earn  himself  a  living. 
I  would  like  to  put  to  the 
LOG  the  suggestion  that  any 
man  with  a  year  on  a  ship  get 
off  for  vacation. 
John  B.  Causey 

�'C?,r­v,.­':­v  • '.. 

JPagp Ten 

THE  SEAFARERS  L0G 

Crawl  Or  Be  Pui|;eil 
Is  Russian  Dictate 
B7  GEORGE  S.  COUNTS 
This  is  the  last  of  a  series  of  articles  on  the  "Soviet  System 
S­  ./  Oif  .Mind  ControL"  by  one  of  America's  outstanding  educators. 

fxju^, &gt;efanuzy  2/L. ^0 

tii&amp;wiiig  the  current  scale  for  aH  ratings  ou  §jKJ­| 
t^tractc? iws au4 
pay  rat$is lu­gyiously in effect, ate printed  below in response  t&lt; 
the 
requests  received  neceiitly 
iUnion  members. 
DECK  DEPARTM^T 

W#0a  E#©cliy» 

Wage  Effectiva 
December  15,  1948 

Wage  Effective; 
June 15.  1949 

The  "letter  to  Stalin"  has  be­ scientists  and  practical  workers  Bosun 
$288.94 
$296.44 
come  a  basic  Soviet  institution.  in  the  nural  economy  feel  the  Carpenter 
258.5,4 
266.94 
Whenever  any  group  is  under  manifold  concern  of  the  Coni­
attack  by  the  Party,  or  even  in  munist Party  and  the Soviet state 
237.84 
245.34 
fear  of  attack,  it  invariably  ad­ for  agricultural science  and  Your, 
226.01 
233.51 
dresses  a  communication  to  Sta­ constant  personal  sharing  in  its 
; 222.51 
226.01  ­
lin  couched  in  unrestrained  further  development  and flower­
233.51 
words  of  adoration,  giving  him  ing. 
Ordbwy Scaroan 
^ 
.  1^9.97 
193.47 
200.97 
assurances  of  complete  loyalty  "To  You,  the  great  creator 
and  devotion,  thanking  him  for  of  Communism,  patriotic  science 
ENGINE  DEPARTMENT 
his  fatherly  care  and  promising  is  indebted.  By  Your  brilliant 
works  You  enrich  and  exalt  it  Chief  iElectrician.... ^ 
to  correct  aU  errors. 
.v' 
;$3b0.93 
$364.43 
$371.93 
The  "ideological  resolutioi^"  before  the  entire  world.  You  2nd  Electxician. 
,.... 
....;. 
3;21.22 
324.72 
332.22 
evoked  a flood  of  such  letters.  guard  it  from  the  perils  of  es­
;...  284.62. 
The  professors  of  all  the  high­ trangement  from  the  needs  of  Unbcensed  Jr.  Engineer  Pay........... 
288.12 
29J.62 
er  educational  institutions  of  the  people.  You  assist  il;  in  .Unlicensed  Jr.  Eugineer  ^SFatcb . .. .......255.04 
258.54 
266.94 
Moscow  begin  their  letter,  un­ achieving  victory  over  reaction­
292.90 
303.9,0 
296.40 
animoiusly  ' approved,  with  this  ary  teachings  hostile  to  the  Plumber­Machinist 
people. 
You 
watch 
over 
the 
salutation: 
Deck  Engineer 
255.04 
2664)4 
2^5.54 
"We  . . .  send  You,  our  dear  continuous  growth  of  scientists. 
Engine  Utibty.....; 
2J5.04 
258.54 
266.04 
"Long live forwacd­lookiig 
leader  and  teacher,  our flaming 
Evaporator 
237.29 
churinist  science! 
jjreetin^" 
240.79 
248.29  ' 
"Glory  to  the  great  Btdbh.  Oiler 
They  conclude  as  follows: 
222.51 
226.01 
233,51 
"We  are  inflnitely  grateful  to  leader  of  the  people  and  cory­? 
243.51 
247.01 
254.51 
­ ^^e  .Soviet  Government,  to  the  phaeu.s*  of  forward­looking  OiJer^Piesel 
great  Bolshevik  Party,  and  to  science!" 
Watertender 
222.51 
226.01 
233.51 
You  personally.  Comrade  Stalin,  Soviet  biologists  in fhe  august 
226.01 
Fireman­^atertender 
222.51 
233.51 
for  exceptional  concern  for  the  Academy  of  Sciisnce, after  tha?^­
Fireman 
T;........" 
210.68 
higher  school  and  science. 
ing  Stalin  "for  the complete 
214.18 
221.68 
"Long  live  the  great  Soviet  tory  of  the  revolutionary,  dia­' 
v........  219.55 
223.05 
230.55 
people! 
lectical­materialistic  M i c h u r i n 
"Long live  the  Party  of  Lenin  teachings  oyer  the  reactipniaiy 
and  Stalin,  the  organizer  and  idealistic  tendency  in  bwlq^' 
334,85 
:  342.3,5; 
iWkm 9^y 9m  carried) 
331.35 
inspirer  of  our  victories! 
and  after  promising  '^tp  conduct 
"Long live om*  wise leader  and  an  active  struggle  against  .ser­ Rjefrigeratifl^ .Engineer 
i . 
teacher,  the  greatest  scholar  of  vility  toward  bourgeois  scifipce 
three ate carried) 
,  • 
our  epoch­Joseph Vissarionovich  unworthy  of  a  Soviet  sci^tl^/'. 
334.85 
331.35 
342.35 
conclude  their  letter  with 
Stalin!" 
293.49 
304.49 
296.99 
STALIN'S  INTEREST 
words: 
­  A  ecmference  erf  eminent  musi­ "Long live  advauc^ 
282.0:1 
271.01 
274.51 
.....  . 
cians  addresses  a  letter  to  "the  ist  science! 
great leader of  the Soviet  people,  "May  pur  leader,  teacher,  aijd 
STEWARDS D^ARTMENT 
. . 
Gomrade  Stalin,"  which  includes  friend  of  scientists live ..ap,d grps­
these  words: 
per  many  years  as  the  cojy­; 
$278.25 
$281.75 
$289.25 
IWe  experience  a  feeling  of  phaeus  of  advanced  sdenceJ"  . 
266.04 
"258.54  •  
255.04 
tremendous gratitude  to the Cen­
MONARCHY  SURPASSED 
'i. 
266.04 
255.04 
258.54  ' 
­tral  Committee  of  the  Party" and  The  student  of  Russian  ,his­
to You  personally,  dear  Comrade  tory  will  see  in  this  entire  sys­
242,38 
231.38 
234.88 
Stalin,  for  the  stern  but  pro­ tem  of  mind  control  the perpetu­
230.55 
219.55 
223.05 
founcdy  just  appraisal  of  the  ation  and  perfection  .pf  au  ai).­ A^istant C 
­present  condition  of  Soviet  musi­ cient  cultural  pattern. 
200.97 
193.47 
189.97 
cal  art,  and  for  the  attention  Upder  the  cloak  of  .Marxist; 
200.97 
189.97 
193.47 
­ • •  •^    ^ 
•­
   
• ' 
which  You  and  the Central  Com­ verbiage  stands  the  hoary figure^  fJtditymaQ 
Note:  The SIU  is in  the  process of  workittg  out  details  &lt;rf  a  wdfare  plan,  already  signed­ by 
mittee  of  our  Party  have  mani­ of  Russian  absolutism. 
fested  toward  the  cause  of  the  The  following  words  from  the  a  considerable  number  of  contracted  operators.  Under  the  agreement,  the  operators  contribute^  to 
development  of  Soviet  music and  great  Dostoievsky,  ardent  Sla­ a  welfare  fund  25  cents a  day  for  eatdi  man  employed.  Paymepts  into  the  fund  are  retroactive  to 
toward  us,  Soviet  musicians. 
vophil  and  defender  of  the mon­
^^TiOng  'live  the Leninist­Stalin­ archy,  express  with  astonishing  Ja^ucuy  1,  1950. 
ist  people, the  people industrious,  flddity  the  spirit  of  So*­;ot  rule 
fhe  people  victorious,  conquer­ today:­
ing  a  truly  socialist  r.rt,  the  "And  the  fact  that  in  Russia 
most  advanced  in  the  wo.ild! 
all  fundamentals  gre  difTerent 
*Tjong  live the  Leninist­Stalin­ from  anythji^  in  Surppp  may 
ASST.  SECRETARY­TREASURERS 
SIU,  A&amp;G  District 
Robert  Matthews 
Lloyd  ­Gardner 
ist Central  Committee of  the AU­ be  demoiistrated  by  the  fplipw­
Joseph  Volpian 
ing  example. 
BALTIMORE 
14  North  Oay  St. 
^nion  Cpmmunist  Pafty! 
William  Rentz,  Agent 
.­^ulbwij  4040' 
"Long  live  our  leader  and  "Civil  liberty  may  .be  p^b­, 
BOSTON 
.276  State  St. 
li^jfwiier, father of  die people,  the  lished  in  Russia  on  ap  ini^gral  The following mep  have mpngy  Ben 
SUP 
Lawson,  Agent  Richmond  2­0140 
great  STALIN!" 
scale;  more  complete  than  any­ due  them,  as  of  last  November, 
Dispatcher 
Richmond  2­0141  HONOLULU.. 
16  Merchant  SE 
The  Academy  of  Agricultural  where  in  the  world,  whether ;ia  (let  in  tpucb  with  Smith  &amp;  CALVE^TPN. 
308&gt;/»—aOrd  SL 
Phone  8­8777 
kelth 
Aisop, 
Agent 
Phone 
2­8446 
. Sdence,  after  being  instruct^  Europe  or  even  in  North  Ameri­ Johnson,  60  Reaver  "St.,  New 
FORTLAl!iP 
Ill  W.  Burnsido  SE 
LAKE  CHARLES,  La.... 1410  Ryan  St. 
.  Beacon  4330 
by  the  Central  Committee  re­ ca,  and  precisely  on  the  .same  York  4,  New  Yprk. 
Jj.  S.  Johnston,  Agent 
JUCHMQNp,  CaUL 
.;?57  Sflt  S*­
garding  the  correct  position  in  adamant  fpun^iion. 
jyig^^E.^,,... .­t  S^yth  jt^yrrepce  St, 
^ 
Phone  .2890 
I 
SS JAI&gt;^S M. GIUJS 
genetics,  sends  the  following  "It  will  be  based  not  ippb  a 
Cai  Tanner,  A0.^t 
Phone  H­17M  SAN  FRANCISCO.... 
59  Clay"  SE, 
S23  Bienville  SL 
note  of  gratitude: 
written  sheet  of  paper,  but  uppn  James  Beaners,  Antonio  De  NEW  ORLEANS. 
' 
Douglas  2­8363 
E. Sheppard, Agent  Magnolia  6112­6113 
Costa, 
Paul 
N. 
Froom, 
Stylianos 
SEATTLE 
86  Seneca.  SE 
'^very  day  and  hour  the  the  children's  .afltection  ,crf  tjhe 
NEW'YORK... 
81  Beaver  St. 
Main  p20O 
Mondanos, 
Cecil 
Thomas, 
D. 
p^ple  for  the Gmf  as  theu:  fa^ 
^oy  Angina,  Ageyt 
HAnover  2­^784  WILMINGTON. 
440  Avalop  Blvd. 
127­129  Bank  St. 
ther, aince  children  may fee »j)er­ Woods,  George  T.  Brannan,  Jqse  NORFOLK...; 
Terminal  4­3131 
Agept 
Phone  jl­1083 
mitted  many  a  thing  which  is  M.  Dominquez,  John  W,  Hags,  Ben 
PHILADELPHIA 
,.337  Market  St. 
inconeeiyable  in  the  caae gf  .con­ Henry  J.  Rote,  Rpbect  H.  Wat­ S. 
CarduUo,  Agent 
Market  7­1635 
Canadian  District 
Re^rs notifying the SEA­
tractual  nations;  they  mag  be  kins,  Thomas  J.  Dgwes,  AJbprt  SAN  FRANCISCO 
,. ..85  Third  St. 
FARERS LOG  of  a change  in  entrusted  with  much  that  has  E.  Editors,  Chiles  Av  Lpuje,  J^f. Morrison,  Agent  Douglas  2­5475  MONTREAL...... . .404  Le  Moyne  SE 
UNiversity  2427 
mailing  address  are  re­
Ponce  de  Loon 
nowhere  been .encountered;  since  Stanley  Rugyski,  Ravid  L.  Wil­ .SAN  JUAN.  PR.... 
FORT  WUXJAM. . llSVi  Syndicate  Ava. 
Sal  Colls,  Airenf 
quested  to  include  their  old  children  will  not  betray  their  liams. 
Phone  3­3221 
Ontario 
SAVANNAH 
2  Ahercom  St, 
.addzess  along  with  the  new.  father,  and  being  children,  they 
128&gt;/i  HoriU  St. 
E.  Bryant,  Agent 
Phone  3.1728  HAUFAX 
SS 
JOHN 
DiJiCaCINSON 
In  addition  to  «riaii3Ttg  easier  will  lovingly  accegt  from  him 
Phone  3­8011 
2700  let  Ave. 
William  F.  Bakley,  Louis  p.  SEATTLE........ 
the  »witeh­.over  it  wRl 
Reneoa  4870  PORT  COLBORNE .... .103  Durham  SE 
any  cprreelipn  of  their  errors.'"  Gkioch,  Manuel  Di  Barros,  Pieijro  Wm.  McKay,  Agent 
Phone  8501 
1800­1811  N.  FrankUii  St. 
guarantee  uninterrupted 
If  the  word  "Stalin"  be  iutb­ Paulin,  Emilio  Di  Pietro,  Charles  JM/IFA 
....lllA  Jarvls  St. 
Ray  Wjiite,  Agent 
.Phone  a­1323  TORONTO, 
mailing  service. 
for  the  word  "Czar,"  F. Scherhans. 
Elgin  5710 
WUMlNGTONTCaUf.,  227 H  Avalon Blvd. 
4/ .  All  noHficatioos  of  change  stHuted 
this  statement  would  apply  as 
E  E  TUley,  Agent  Terminal  4^2874  VICTORIA.  B.C.  .  .. .602  Bonghton  SE 
Empire  4831 
of  address  should  be  ad­
­UEAIKEPARTRRS . .81 Beaver St.,  N.YA;. 
SS  THOMAS  J. LYONS 
truly  tp 'the  Russia  of  194^  'as 
.. ..868.  Unzsiltos  SE 
SECRETARVTREASyP­EP. 
VANGOyVER 
dressed  to  the  Editor.­  SEA­
it  did  to  the  Russia  of  1851,  the  Alexander  Apoline, George. W= 
.ftciflp  7824 
Panl  Hall 
FARERS  LOG,  51  Besver  year  in  ,which  it  was  yriltti^  Lpwry,  Pouglas  W.  Clifton, 
HEADQUARTERS. ......812  McpUI  SE 
DIRECTOR  OF  ORGANIZATION 
Iteoet. Hew  Yosk  L  N. Y. 
Plateau  670 
Mimtreal 
ILJndsey  WUUama 
BUeran  G.  SieiTa»  Herbert  .R, 
'Leader  of  an  operatic  clioidis  HVitcWns,  William  P.  Vaughn. 

•   m­H 

Du'ei^ry  Of  BIU  Halls 

ipg Sfibscribert 

if. 

�Friday,  February 24, 1350 

SAVANNAH —Chairman,  Jeff 
dlHetfe,  37060;  Recording  Secre­
liry, L.  E. Hodges,  255;  Reading 
(fierk,  E.  M.  Bryant,  25806.  . 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Page  ElereA 

a  Hall  sufficient  to  accommo­
' date all members  at future meet­
ings,  Under  Good  and  Wdfare, 
there  was  discussion  on  Nie 
Teamsters' 
organizing. .drive  in  *
REG. 
REG. 
REG. 
TOTAL ffltlPPED 
SHIPPED  SHIPPED  TOTAL 
^  Secretary­Treasurer's financial 
PORT 
DECK  .  ENG.  ,  STWDS. 
REG. 
DECK 
EWa 
STWDS.  SHIPPED  New  York, in­which  the support 
report  and  Headquarters  report 
of  all  SIU  men  on  the  beach 
td  the  membership  read  and  ap­ BostoiL 
....... 
(No  Figures  Received) 
(No  Figures  Received) 
was  recommended;  on  the strike 
pfcoved.  Agent  reported  that  New  York. 
^  87 
60 
96 
243 
31 
29 
38 
98  of  the  Mine  Workers  Union  aaad 
^ee in­transit  ships  had  called  Philadelphia. 
(No  Figures  Received) 
' (No  Figures  Received) 
the  credit  union  idea  and ttie 
ahce  the  last  meeting,  each  of  Baltimore. 
94 
78 
64 
2^6 
91, 
69 
61 
221  possibilities  fcHP  one  being set vrp 
tiiein  taking  replacements  from  Norfolk. 
27 
48 
36 
111 
3 
2 
— 
5  within  the  SIU. 
flfa  Hall.  He  added  that  he  had  Savannah 
,3 
5 
11 
19 
4 
3 
3 
10 
X  %  % 
yteited  the  local  Marine  Hospi­ Tampa 
7 
9 
9 
25 
20 
19 
13 
52 
tal  to  discuss  the  setting  up  of  Mobile.:.... 
G A L V E S 
T O N—'Chairman, 
25 
18 
16 
59 
14 
12 
11 
37 
ff blood  bank  for  local  members  New Orleans....,..,...^......... 
57 
41 
75 
s  173 
66 
42 
76 
184  Keith  Alsopt,  7311;  Recording 
aftd  their  families,  as  was  sug­ Galveston.........v........... 
.49 
33  _  14 
'98 
27 
23 
19 
69  Secreiaiy,  R.  Wilbum,  37739: 
^ted  under  Good  and  Welfare  West  Coast. 
29 
18 
19 
66 
.  39 
49 
38 
126 
Reading  Clerk,  J. Byrd,  34683. 
ait  last meeting. Hospital  authori­
GRAND 
TOTAL 
378 
^ 310 
340 
1,028 
295 
248 
259 
802 
ties  said  they  had  no  facilities 
Minutes  of  previous  meetings 
fet such  a  plan  and  referred  the 
in  Galveston  and  other  Branches 
i^nt  to  the  local  Red  Cross  crew had  donated a  picture made  source  into  this  beef  to  bring  Headquarters  report.  Headquar­ read and  concurred in. Secretri^­
chapter.  Minutes of  other Branch  of  butterfly  wings to the Branch.  the  company  tmder  contract.  ters report pointed  out  that ship­ Treasurers financial  report  and 
nSsfeetings  approved  as  read.  Mo­ Director  of  Organization  Lihdsey  Meeting  adjourned  at  7:55  PM,  ping  had  slowed  down  some  in  Headquarters report  to the mem­
tion  carried  to  excuse  Brother  Williams  discussed  the  Union's  with  38  members  present. 
New,  York.  The  report  also  bership  approved  as  read.  Agent 
llObert  Woodward,  whose'  car  organizing  drive  to  date,  and 
brought  the  membersliip  up  to  discussed  shipping  in  this  area. 
%  t,  % 
broken  down  en  route  to  thoroughly  covered  the  Cities  BALTIMORE—Chairman,  Wil­ date  on  the  Cities  Service,  beef.  Mason  HaU,  Boyd  Breeden  and 
ifail.  Motion  carried  to  com­ Service  beef.  He said  that  strike  liam  Renlz,  26445;  Recording  Communications  from  members  Charles  McUowell  took  the  'Un­
itfend  Brother  Smith  for  accept­ preparations  will,  continue  until  Secretary,  G.  A.  Masterson,  seeking  to  be  excused  from  to­ ion  Oath  of  Obligation.  One 
ing  job  under  the  circumstances  a  contract  has  been  signed  on  20297;  Reeding  Clerk.  A1  Sians­ night's  meeting  referred  to  the  minate  of  silence  in  memory  Of 
aryi  give  him  his  original  ship­ the  company's  16' ships.  Motion  bury,  4683. 
Dispatcher.  Motion  (by  Y,  L.  departed  Union  Brothers.  Motion 
ping  card.  Despite  personal  diffi­ carried  to  give  a  vote  of  thanks 
Steibig)  carried  to  try  to  secm'e  carried  to  adjourn  at  7:30 .PM. 
culties  he  remained  aboard  ship  to  Del  Norte  crew  ^or  their  Motion  carried  to  suspend 
rather  than  leave  it  sail  short­ splendid  cooperation.  Excuses  regular  order  6f  business  and 
handed.  Membership  suggested  were  referred  to  the  Dispatcher.  go  into  obligations  and  charges. 
• ­".M 
that  Agent  get  data  on  pro­ E.  F.  Lyttle,  L.  A.  Beaudry  and  B.  A.  Granberg  and  N.  Straton 
laj)or  candidates  for  coming  el­ R.  L.  McDavitt  Were  obligated.  took  the  Union  Oath  of  Obliga­
ection  and  post  same.  It  was  Under  Good  and  Welfare  there  tion.  The  following  men  were 
pointed  out  that  registering  and  was  much  discussion  on  the  elected  to  serve as af  Trial  Com­
vqting  is  a  must  because  of  the  Cities  Service  beef,  cooperation  mittee:  J.  Gill,  J.  Turner,  P.  J. 
need  to  oppose  anti­labor  legis­ in  regard  to  the  serving  of  cof­ Ryan,  W.  Harrell  and  C.  O. 
DAVID  HERON 
WILLIAM  MATSOUKAS 
lation.  Cities  Service  situation  fee  in  the  Hall  and  the need  for  Saunders.  Minutes  of  other 
Mr.  and  Mrs. Wm.  Riebenstein, 
ANTONIO  GONZALES 
was  discussed.  There  were  85  keeping  the  Hall  clean*  Meeting  Branch  meetings  read  and  ap­
members  present  when  meeting  adjourned  at  8:15  PM,  with  520  proved.  Secretary­Treasurer's fi­ 933  Linwood  Avenue,  Canton,  Contact  Joseph  P.  Marcelle, 
nancial  report  and  Headquarters  Ohio,  are  anxious  for  you  to  Collector  of  Internal  Revenue, 
adjourned. 
members  present. 
report  to  the  membership  ac­ write  them. 
Treasury  Department,  Internal 
t. 
4.  4.  i 
cepted 
as 
read. 
Motion 
carried 
Revenue 
Service,  210  UvingstOil 
MOBILE —Chairfhan,  J.  Par­
4. 
. 
4 
NORFOLK—Chairman,  J.  S. 
Street,  Brooklyn  2,  New  York. 
ker,  160; ­ Recording  Secretary  White,  56;  Recording  Secretary.  to  refer  written  excuses  to  the 
CHARLES  WINFREY.  JR. 
J. Caifroll,  50409;  Reading  Clerk,  James  A.  Wyim,  30783;  Reading  Dispatcher.  Agent  reported  that  Write  to  your  father,  818 
4  4  4 
shipping 
had 
been 
slow 
and 
is 
H.  J.  Fischer,  59. 
JOHN 
MCNAMARA 
South 
Chestnut 
Street, 
Bristow, 
Clerk,  Ben  Rees,  95. 
expected  to  continue  that  way  Oklahoma. 
Get  in  touch  with  Mrs.  C.  J. 
Previous  meetings'  minutes  Minutes  of  meetings  in  other  for  a  while.  Motion  carried  to 
Price,  4636  N.  Lincoln  Avenue, 
4  4.  4 
read  and  apiwoved.  Port  Agent  Branch  ports  read  and  ai,proved.  accept  Hospital  Committee's  re­
Chicago,  niinois. 
WALLACE 
L. 
ASHFORD 
re^rted  on  the  prospects  for  F'ort  Agent  discussed  the  state  port.  Motion  (by  J. F.  L­ee)  car­
4  4  4 
shipping  in  the  next  couple  of  of  shipping  here,  stating  that  ried  to  make  up  shipping  list  Your  father,  George  W.  Ash­
VICTOR 
ARTDRO 
VALENCIA 
ford, 
asks 
that 
you 
write. 
wdeks,  saying  there  would  be  there  was  no  change  and  that  and  post  near  Dispatcher's 
Rafaela 
Martinez 
Valencia, 
424 
4 
4 
4 
abdut  three  off­shoijg  ships  and  immediate  prospects  were  not  counter.  Meeting  adjourned  at 
Francisco 
Street, 
San 
Francisco, 
HEBEF 
R. 
GUYMAN 
niiie  coastwise  and  in­transit  bright.  Communications  from  8:10  PM,  with  392  members 
Contact  Mrs.  Shirley  Wessel,  California,  wants  you  to  get  id 
vei^sels  arriving  during  the  two­ Brothers  seeking  to  be  excused  present. 
Supervisor, 
Missing  Seamen  Bu­ touch  with  her. 
wdek  period.  He  also  elaborated  from  meeting  were  referred  to 
t  4  4 
4  4  4, 
on  the  Secfetary­'Treasurer's  re­ the  Dispatcher.  Changes  were  PHILADELPHIA  —  Chairman,  reau,  Seamen's  Church  Institute, 
port  on  Cities  Service,  and  urg­ read  and  approved  aiid  motion  D.  Hall,  43272;  Recording  Secre­ 25  South  Street,  New  York  4,  CREW  SS  ABR.  ROSENBERG 
(May, 194e^anuazy, 1947) 
ed  everyone  to  be  ready* in  the  carried  to  refer  them  to  a  Trial  tary,  Branconi,  100848:  Reading  New  York. 
WiU 
former  shipmates  of  Lu­
I  event  they  were needed. He  con­ Committee  to  be  elected  under  Clerk,  G.  H.  Seeberger,  6932. 
4  4  4 
cien 
R. 
EUe  On  that  voyage 
cliMed  his feport  by  stating  that  New  Business.  Elected  were  T. 
RALPH  J. PENNINGTON 
in 
touch 
with  him  on  a  matter 
W^erman  would  start  bringing  Hill,  Luther  Thome,  Earl  Con­
Minutes  of  previous  meetings  Get in  touch  with Harold Gutt­
of 
great 
importance.  Write  to 
their  ships  down  to  Mobile  for  gelton,  W.  LaChance,  and  N.  C.  in  all  Branches, read  and  acc^t­ man;  66  Beaver  Street,  New 
SS 
Alcoa 
^valier,  c/o  Alcoa 
annual  inspections  around  the  Wroton. Secrefary­'Dreasuper's re­ ed. Agent  discussed  the status  of  York  4,  N.  Y. 
SS 
Con^any, 
1  Canal  Street 
last  of  Marchy  thus  causing  a  port  read  and  approved,  as  well  local  shipping  and  mentioned 
4  4  4 
New 
Orleans, 
Louisiana. 
bigger  turnover in  this port.  Sec­ as  Headquarters  report  to  the  the  prospects  for  the  coming  STELIANOS  T.  MONDANOS 
4  4  4 
retary­Treasurer's financial 
re­ meinbership.  Meeting  adjourned  two  weeks.  Secretary­T^­easurer's  The  photostats  of  your  dis­
FREDERICK  JOHNSON 
port  and  Headquarters  report  to  at  7:50  i^,  with  111  members  financiai  report  and  Headquar­ charges  from  Isthmian  vessels 
"Dear  Fred,  please  write  to 
the  membership  read  and  ap­ present. 
ters  repqrf  to  the  membership  are  being  held  in  the  LOG  of­
Mom, 
P.O.  Box  308,  Station  A, 
proved.  Meeting  adjourned  at 
accepted  as  read.  Motion  carried  fice.  Call  or  write  for  them. 
Boston, 
Massachusetts." 
7:55  PM,  with  450  members  SAN  FRANCISCO—Chairman,  to  allow  Brother  George  Noble 
4  4  4 
4  4  4 
present. 
Jeff  Morrison,  34213;  Recording  pay  up  his  dues  in  arrears  and 
DICK  BOLES 
WILLIAM 
PAYNE  HAYMEN 
1) 
t­  S.  t­
Secretary,  P.  M.  Robertson,  register  for  shijiping.  Communi­
"Let  me  know  where  I  can  Contact  James  J.  Gourles^  Ml 
ilEW  ORLEANS  —  Chairman,  30148;  Reading  Clerk,  S.  White,  cations  from  members  seeking  write  to  you:  C.  P.  Jones,  513  Court  House,  Paterson,  New 
to  be  excused  from  meeting  East  9  Street,  Greenville,  North 
Frenchy  Michelet,  21184;  Record­ 38302. 
Jersey. 
were  referred  to  the  Dispatcher.  Carolina." 
ing'Secretary,  Johnny  Johnston, 
Motions  carried  to  accept  other  Charges  against  a  Brother  for 
53;  Reading  Clerk,  Buck  Steph­
EDWARD*^  VAN^  NIEROP 
4  4 
Branch  minutes  as  read.  Agent  conduct  unbecoming  a  Union 
ens,  76. 
(VANNIEROP) 
reported  that  shipping  had  im­ memi)et  were  referred  to  an  el­ ROLAND  BRUCE  CORNELL 
Get in 
touch  with  Fred J. Zee­
Get 
in 
touch 
with 
William 
L. 
proved 
a 
bit 
during 
the past 
two 
.  Minutes  of  the  Branch  meet­
ected  Trial  Committee.  One  min­
handelaar, 
95­11  —  87  Street, 
Standard, 
38 
Park 
Row, 
New 
weeks, 
but 
that 
it 
is 
still 
far 
ings  read  and  approved.  Secre­
ute  of  silence  in  memory  of  de­
Ozone Park 16, 
Long Island,  New 
York 
7, 
N. 
Y. 
from 
being 
what 
he. 
would 
like 
tary­Treasurer's financial  report 
parted  Union  Brothers.  Meeting 
York,  concerning  an  inheritance 
and  Headquarteris  report  to  the  it  to  be.  The  prospects  for  the  adjourned  at  7:30  PM. 
4  4  4 
from  relatives  in  the  Nether­
JOSEPH  D. DODGE 
membership  accepted  as  read.  coming two weeks look better,  he 
lands. 
Get 
in 
touch 
with 
your 
bro­
Port  Agent  disOuss^  the  affairs  said,,  with" several  ships  sched­
NEW  YORK —Chairman,  S. 
SS  CAROLYN 
of  the Branch,  which  are in  good  uled  to  make  this  a  port  of  call.  Simmons,  219;  Recording  Secre­ ther,  Harris,  concerning  income 
C.  P.  (Slim)  Thompson  aska 
shape.  He  said  that  ten  ships  Trial  and  Excuse Committee  was  tary,  Freddie  Stewart,  4935:  tak. 
that  Cherokee,  the  Oiler,  and 
4  4  4 
had  paid  off  since  lasj:  meeting,  elected.  Motion  carried  to  elect  Reading  Clerk,  Robert  Matthews, 
Tommy, 
the '  Fireman^  contact 
FRANK 
MAZZA 
but  there  were  few  calls  for  re­ the  following:  S.  Ghale,  R.  154. 
him 
by 
mail 
or  in  person  at  the 
Mfs. 
Andreshak, 
of 
Galveston, 
Stephens, 
F. 
McGarry, 
J. 
Coth­
placements.  There  were  seven 
Staten 
Island 
Marine  Hospital^, 
Texas, 
would 
like 
to 
hear 
from 
Motions 
carried 
to 
accept 
min­
rah 
and 
J. Simmon. 
Motion 
car­
sign­ons  ahd  about  20  ih­transit 
concerning 
the 
accident  of  Jan­­
you. 
utes 
of 
previous 
meetings 
in 
all 
ried 
to 
accept 
Headiquarters 
Re­
ships  in  port.  Ten  payoffs  are 
uary 
28, 
in 
Ciudad 
Trujillo. 
Branches 
as 
read. 
Secretary­
instatement 
Committee's 
report. 
4 
4 
4 
scheduled  for  the  coming  two 
Treasurer's financial: 
report 
ac­
EDWARD 
J. 
ZEBROWSKI 
Under 
Good 
and 
Welfare, 
there 
4 
4 
4 
w^ks.  Grain  ships,  he  said,  are 
RUruS  L.  O'NEAL 
again  beginning  to  come  into  was  discussion  on  the.  Cities  cepted  and  concurred  in.  Port  A  registered  letter  is  being 
this  port. He  announced  that  the  Service  beef,  and  the  memb^­ Agent  was  absent  due to  illness,  held  for  you  at  office  of  Calmar  Get  in  touch  with  your  wife, 
coffee  um  is  working  in  the  ship  indicated  it  was  in  favor  and  it  was  recommended  that  SS  Company,  25  Broadway,  New  1403  West  41  Street,  Norfolk  8, 
Virginia. 
Hall,  and  that  the  Del  Norte  of  the  Union  throwing  every  re­ his  report  be  incorporated  with  York  City. 

A 

Shipping  Fnm  Feb.  2 To  Feb.  IS 

�Of  late  there  seems  to  have  been  renewed  activity on  the  pfart  of  photography­
minded  Seafarers.  Photos being  received  from  SlU­contracted  vessels  on  the  high: seas! 
tell  of  the  camera  adventures  of  Union  members  in  the  four  corners of  the  earth.  All 
of  the  lensmen  are  interested  in  sharing  their  "shots"  with  Brothers,  through  the  ' 
medium  of  the  LOG. 
* 
On  this  page  are  some  selections  from  the  latest  batch  received.  The  LOG  asks 
——­ 

K 

AboBrd  the SS Steel  Naviga­
tor,  erewmembers  call  Bosun 
jAndreshak  (left)  "Popeye  the 
Second."' Duke  Fisher  and  Red 
Ransome  submitted  this  photo 
taken  in  Bombay,  India,  to 
show  why.  With  the  Brother 
Andreshak,  er  —  Popeye,  is 
"Shorty,"  a  shoe  shine  boy 
who  conducts  his  business  on 
the  Bombay  docks.  Oh  yes, 
Andreshak  is  only  mugging  to 
oblige  the  ceuneraman. 

WJ.  VUW^JL.  yxMv 

, 
­ 

^ 

| 

iiauuivvVLA..  XXa  Ulilixy  il5  pOSSlDle  t 

This. group. shot  would  indicate  that  most  of  the  lads  aboard  the  Jeff  Davis,  Waterman, 
travel  around  together  when  they  hit  a  formgn  port.  The  scene  is  a  seamen's  club  in. Yoko­
hama,  Japan,  where  the  fellows  took  advantage  of  the  opporkinity  to  wet  their  whistles  and 
relax  a  bit. 

They  have  him  by  Mie  tail  now,  but  tlm 
350­pouttd  shark  didn't  give  up  mthout  a 
• i^gg­o. Just  ask  Frank  Pasquale,  who nabbed 
vkirn  w^h  a  meat  hook,  a  piece  of­beef  and 
a  heaving  line. 

, 
/ 

..  / 

Red  Fisher  has  thawed  Old  a  bit eince he fo6k^^ 
from  the  poop  deck  pf  t^ SS  Colid)^  up  in  Bale  Comeau, 
Canada,  recently," .:'....'; 
" v'­.  '' 

Guys  who  have  sailed  with 
Walter  Newberg  say  he  tatef 
with  the  best  as  a  Steward* 
Here  he  is  with  a  pet  durlas|F 
a  recent  voyage  aboard  a 
Bull  Lines  ship.  Brother  New* 
berg  is  temporarily  engage^ 
in  shoreside  food­dispensingv 
He's  now  in  charge  of  the 
restaurant  in  the  grog  shop^^ 
located  on  street  level  of  the 
New  York  Hall  at  51  Beaver 
Street. 

Siuall  but  90^ eating,  are  these  lOxpound 
flounders caught  1^  Frank  Gardner  When  he 
was  Steward  on  the  Loyola  Victory.  Frank 
pulled  in 46  others  like  those  he's  holdings  He 
:fried­them  as  snacks  ior..s3iipmaieii. .. 

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="7">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42905">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1950-1959</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44875">
                  <text>Volumes XII-XXI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44876">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44877">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10193">
                <text>February 24, 1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10241">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10293">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10345">
                <text>Vol. XII, No. 4</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10371">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10397">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10426">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
SEAFARERS COMMITTEE PRESSES CITIES SERVICE FOR CONTRACT&#13;
CONGRESSMAN BLAND DIES IN WASHINGTON&#13;
SENATE GROUP SETS HEARING ON MARITIME&#13;
SEA UNIONS URGE ADOPTION OF HIRING HALL BILL&#13;
PENNSYLVANIA VETERANS TO GET STATE BONUS&#13;
UNION HIRING HALLS&#13;
TRAILERSHIPS MAY REVIVE COASTAL SHIPPING&#13;
MOBILE EXPECTS BETTER DAYS&#13;
FISHING TIME IN SAVANNAH&#13;
NEW YORK SHIPPING SITUATION UNCHANGED&#13;
SLIGHT IMPROVEMENT IN FRISCO SHIPPING&#13;
AN SIU CREDIT UNION JUST CANNOT MISS&#13;
CYCLONE RIPS INTO ROBIN KETTERING; SHIP, CARGO TAKE SEVERE BATTERING&#13;
SEAFARER KOTALIK'S WEDDING BRINGS OUT 2,000 SPECTATORS&#13;
THAT WASN'T MY MATE - THAT WAS MY FIRST&#13;
CRAWL OR BE PURGED IS RUSSIAN DICTATE&#13;
MINUTES OF A&amp;G BRANCH MEETINGS IN BRIEF&#13;
PHOTOS OF, BY, AND FOR SEAFARERS</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10427">
                <text>2/24/1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13076">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="64">
        <name>1950</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="980" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="2330">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/d41a3e27dca5178298c146954076e2be.pdf</src>
        <authentication>2a31a2e634a16185ef9a4ff73a470237</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47458">
                    <text>SEBVICE  SIGNS  UP 
AVERTING  STRIKE 
BY 
SIU 
Company  Recognizes 
9 

SIU  As  Sole  Agent; 
Scale Up, $13 ­ 36.50 
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf  District, Seafarers International Union of  NA 
VOL.  XII 

NEW  YORK,  N.  Y.,  FRIDAY.  MARCH  10,  1950 

Old­Line  Vet 

No.  5 

NEW  YORK,  MAR. 10—CITIES  SERVICE.' 
TOO,  IS SIU! 
In  one  of  the  most  significant  collective  bat­
* gaining  victories  in mod­
ern maritime history, the 
SIU  Atlantic  and  Gnlf 

CtmSSBmCE, 
Groups Hit At 

Sick  Seamen 

IS sn// 

• rH 

District  brought  CS's  Ma­
rine  Division's  16­ship tank­
er  fleet  under  Union  con­
tract  late  tonight. 
As  the  news  of  the  stun­
ning  success  raced  up  and 

In  keeping  with  their  policy 
down  the  US  waterfront,  Cities 
of  blocking  the  welfare  of  the 
Service  seamen  were  jubilant 
American  merchant  seamen,  the 
over  terms of  the contract,  which 
old­line  veterans  organizations 
gives  them  across­the­board 
are,  waging  an  underhanded 
wage  increases  ranging  front $13 
fight  against  use  of  New  York's 
to  $36.50  per  month,  and  the 
Manhattan  Beach  Hospital  for 
standard  Union  rate  of  overtime 
tuberjular  seamen. 
pay. 
With  the  completion  of  the 
Under  terms  ^of  an  interim 
l.OOO­bed  Fort  Hamilton  hospi­
pact,  the company  agreed  to rec­
tal  the  Veterans  Administration 
ognize  the  SIU  as  sole  collective 
has:'  returned  the  Manliattan 
bargaining  agent  for  all  Iff 
Beach  institution  to  the  United 
shii&gt;s  in  the fleet,  ending  one of 
States  Public  Health  Service, 
the  longest  and  most  bitter  anti­
which  has  title  to  it,  and  which 
union  campaigns  on  record. 
wants; to  use  the  facilities  for 
HIRING  GUARANTEE 
the  260  tuberciUar  patients  now 
The 
pact  also  gives  Union 
at  Neponsit  Beach  Hospital. 
members  guaranteed  hiring 
PHONY  EXCUSE 
riglits  and  establishes  a  solid 
American  Legion  and  Veterans 
giievance  procedure  for  job  pro­
of  Foreign  Wars  posts  in  the 
tection.  Article  2,  covering  em­
Manhattan  Beach  area  are  op­
ployment  procedure,  says; 
PQsing  the  move  on  the  stupid 
"The  Company  will  not  dis­
grounds  that  tuberculosis  hos­
criminate  in  hiring  unlicensed 
pital  would­jeopardize  the  health 
personnel,  or  in  their  tenure  of 
of  the. community. 
employment,  between  Union  and 
Manliattan  Beach  chapters  of 
non­Union  men.  The  Company 
the  American  Veterans  Commit­
will  notify  the  Union  in  ports 
tee,  a  World  War 11  group,  how­
where  men  are  required  as  far 
ever,  have  publicly  announced 
in  advance 
possible  when  any 
. their  suppoi­t  of  th^  move  to 
unlicensed  men  are  to  be  em­, 
transfer  the  Neponsit  patients  to 
ployed,  so  that  the  Union  may 
the  i­eclaimed  .USPHS  hospital, 
send  men  ha\'ing  the  qualifica­
and •   have  branded  the  Legion 
tions  for  the  jobs  to  be  filled,..* 
and  VFW stands  as  being  against 
",,, If  the  Union  considers the  . 
the  public  interest. 
, 
company's  rejection  of  any  ap­
In  response  to  the  pressure 
plicant  for  a  vacancy  to  have 
groups,  a  hearing  was  conducted 
been  discriminatory  because  of:" 
by  .Gpngressman  Emmanuel  Cel­
Union  membership,  or  without 
lar  in  the  Surgeon  General's  of­
(Continued on Page 3)
fice ' in  Washington  on  Feb.'  8. 
Outstanding  authorities' • o
  n  tu­
bei­culosis,  including  representa­
tives  from  the  USPHS,  the  Am­
erican  Tubercular  Association 
and  the  health  departments  of  Determined  to fight  for  the  The  conference  is  especially 
'hiring  halls  to  their  pre­Taft­ tary­ti­easurer  of  the  Atlantic 
the  City  and  State of  New  Yprk,  preservation  of  the  democratic  significant  in  light  of  the  Su­
Hartley  status. 
and  Gulf  District;  Morris  Weis­
testified  that  use  of  the  Manhat­ hiring  hall  procedure,  represen­ preme  Court's  refusal  last  month 
A  subcommittee  of  the  Senate  berger,  vice­president  of  the 
tan  Beach  hospital  for  tubercu­ tatives  of  eight  seafaring 'unions,  to  review  a  lower  court  ruling 
Labor  Committee  is  already  con­
lar  patients^^ould  positively  not  including  the  Seafarers  Interna­ • that the  hiring  hall,  as  operated  ducting  preliminary  studies  of  SIU  and  New  York  Agent  for 
create  a  health  hazard  for  the  tional  Union,  will  meet  in  Wash­ by  the  National  Mai'itime  Union  the  hiring  halls  as  operated  by  the  SUP;  Capt.  Charles  May, 
president  of  the  Masters,  Mates 
,  surrounding  community. 
ington  on  March  20  to  discuss  on  the  Great  Lakes,  is  a  viola­ the  seagoing  unions,  and  public  and  Pilots, 
the  possibility  for  joint  action.  tion  of  the  Taft­Hartley  Law,  hearings  will  be  held  in JYash­
IGNORE  FACTS 
CIO—Joseph  Curran,  president 
De.spite  the  overwhelming  tes­ Whatever  differences  may have  The  high  court  is  now  consider­ ington  next  month.  S^ator  of  the^NMU;  William  Steinberg, 
timony  of  the  medical  experts,  existed  between  ^h'ese  organiza­ ing  the  NMU's  request  for  a  i*e­ James  Murray  of  Montana,  com­ president  of  the  American  Radio  •  . 
* 
mittee ­  chairman,  will  be  in  Association;  Herbert  Dagget, 
the opponents  of  the  use of  Man­ tions  in  the  past  will  be  forgot­ hearing  of  the  case. 
charge 
of  the  hearings,  at  which  president  of  the  Marine  Engin­
hattan  Beach  for  tubercular  sea­ ten  "in  their'  detei­mination  to  Legislation  to  amend  the  T­H 
the 
SIU 
will  be  represented. 
maintain 
the 
union 
hiring 
hall 
men  have  continued  their  ex­
Law,  to  exempt  maritime  unions 
eers  Beneficial  Association, 
• 
pensive  pressure  campaign  and  rotary  shipping,  which  are  from  the  hiring  hall  ban,,  has  Scheduled  to  be  present  at  the 
the  only  safeguards  seamen  have  been  introduced  in  Congress.  Washington  conference  are  the  Independent—^Vincent  Malone, 
against  the  transfer. 
president  of  the Marine  Firemen, 
Observers,  v/ho  have  studied  against  the  crimp  joints,  job­ Identical  bills  have  been  offei­ed,  following: 
•  
the  situation  closely,  see  the  selling,  and  the  intolerable  ship­ in  the  House  by  Representative  AFL—^Harry  Lundeberg,  presi­ Oilers,  Watertenders  and  Wipers,'* 
"health"  argument  advanced  by  board  conditions  of  the  past. 
John  Lesinski  and  in  the  Sen­ dent  of  the  SIU  and  secretary­
The  CIO  Marine  Cooks  and 
The  meeting  will  represent  ate  by  Senator  Warren  G.  Mag­ treasurer  of  the Sailors  Union  of  Stewards  Union  was  not  invited" 
the  vets  organizations  as  a flim­
100,000  seamen  in  AFL,  GIO  and  nuson.  The  Magnuson­Lesinski  the  Pacific;  Paul  Hall, first  vice­ because  of  its  domination  by 
sy  frorii, 
Independent  Unions. 
amendments  would  return  the  president  of  the  SIU,  and  secre­ communists. 
(Continued  on  Page  tl) 

Seamen's Unions To Discuss Hiring Mali Defense 

w 

I

/ii'  •  

�Fags  Two 

THE  SBAFARERS 

SEAFARERS  EOG 
Published  Every  Other  'Week.  btf. the 

SEAFARERS  INTERNATIONAL  UNION 
OF  NORTH  AMERICA 
Atlantic and  Gulf  District 
AfEilialed  with  the  American  Federation 
Labor  ^ 
At  yi  Beaver  Street,  New  York  4,  N. Y. 
HAnover  2­2784 
Reentered  as  second  class  matter  August  2,  1949,  at  the  Post 
Office  in  New  York,  N.Y.,  under  the  Act  of  August  24,  1912. 
267 

We've  Just  Begun 
*,  The  long  night  is  over  for  the  Cities  Sefvice  tanker­1' 
men.' 
After  years  of  organization,  collective  bargaing  elec­
tions,  and  stalled  negotiations  between  the  company  and 
the  Seafarers  International  Union,  Cities  Service  has  at 
last  bowed  to  the  inevitable,  and  signed  an  SIU  contract 
that  will  give  their  seamen  Union  wages.  Union  ship­
board  conditions,  and  Union  job  security. 
The  story  beginning  om page  one  will  give  you  the 
major  parts  of  the  contract—some  of  the  rninor  details 
^iil  have  to  be  worked  out—an,d  the  wage increases  won 
more  than  justify  the  time  and  sacrifices  involved. 
Tlianks  to  the  SIU  Organizers,  the  rank­and­file 
shipboard  organizers  who  gave  up so  much  to ship  under 
sub­«tandard  conditions,  and  the  Cities  ,Service  seamen 
who  jeopardized  their  jobs  because  they,  too,  wanted  to 
work  under  SIU  conditions,  the  tanker field  on  the  East 
and  Gulf  Coasts  which  has  consistently  defied  unioiaza­
tion,  is  now  cracked  wide  open. 

1 
fei.; 

But  the Cities  Service  victory is  not  the  end.  We  are 
just  beginning  to go  forward,  to  bring  SIU  contract?  to j 
every  unorganized  fleet.  We  cannot  now  announce  our 
next  campaign,  but  we  strongly  urge  all  interested  Sea­'  " 
farers to see  the Organizers in the closest  port. Remember, 
there  can  be  no  complete  security  until  all  unorganized 
fleets 
are  under  the SIU  banner. 
ll: 

f: 

JOSEPH  SPAULDING 
JOSEPH  SILLAK 
LUIS  TORRES 
FRED  ZESIGER* 
MELVIN  COLLINS 
ft  t 
; 
Moscow  has  pulled  the  strings  and  its  puppets  in 
STATEN 
ISLAND 
HOSPITAL 
France  are  performing. 
JAMES  HILLER 
The  stunt  is  aimed  at  clumping  the first  of  the  arms 
C. 
P.  THOMPSON  ' 
.' ? 
aid  cargoes  now  enroute  to  France  from  this  country. 
THEODORE 
ROZUM 
* 
j­i­* 
France  is  one  of  the  eight  nations  that  has  signed  the 
T.  GAMBLISH 
' 
North  Atlantic  Treaty  to  defend  democracy  against  pos­
B.  F.  LOWE 
R.  GR^LICKI 
sible  aggression.  Soviet  Russia,  where  democracy  is  a 
foreign  word,  is  bitter  about  the  whole  thing. 
' 
Broths ci»xentty in ihe  mar^e hwpitals,  J.  H. 'DANIEL,  Jr. 
° 
,  1  •  
•   ^ 
r  1 
I 
reportad  by  the  Port  Agents. These  Brothers  find  time  hanging  A.  BJORNSSON 
Although  the  overwhelming  majority  of  the  French  heavily  on  their 
P©  what  yoti  can  to  cheer  them  up  by  K.  JENSEN 
»people  wholeheartedly support  the  North  Atlantic Treaty,  writing  them. 
H,  WHISMANT 
P.  ERAZE 
Russia  is  intent  on  sabotaging  the  pact.  It  has  ordered  BALTIMORE  MARINE  HOSP.  J.  THOMASON 
JOHN  SANTANIELLO 
its  communist  stooges  in  France  to  see  that  the  cargoes  J.  J.  TOBIN 
C.  LYONS 
V.  JOHNSON 
5  • '• &gt;.'  are consigned  to the  deep six  when  they  hit  port. 
M.  GUY 
ED.  F.  LAMB 
H. 
J.  OUT 
i 
A.  StRACHEN 
Despite  the  fact  that  the  commies  wield  influence  M.  J.  LUCAS  ­
J. 
W. 
MCCASLIN 
H.  MCKAY 
among the  French  dockers,  it  appears  certain  that  the  rest  .  W.  G.  WHITMER..­
•
 
­ 
­444. 
%  ­'VP 
L.  TICKLE 
A.  CARROLL  , 
SAVANNAH 
HOSPITAL 
of  that  freedom­loving  nation  will  not  tolerate  Russia's  G. 
W.  ADAMS  ^ 
D.  HAUGHT 
R.  JAMISON 
interference  with  plans  for  defense  of  their  democracy.  V.  L.  LAVANWAY 
J.  FLOYD 
­s 
W.  WALKER 
RAY  COLE 
Yv 
For  the  democratic  trade  unions  in  France  share  wifh  C.  E.  WOOTEN 
. 
C.  NEUMAIER 
4  4  4 
:•   ­""p. 
" 
• 
organized  labor  in  the  US  the  conviction  that  the  North  J.  A.  SHEA 
G. 
GILLISFIE 
S. 
M. 
MILLWARD 
BOSTON 
MARINE 
HOSPITAL 
Atlantic  Treaty  stands  as  the  greatest  single  barrier  to 
L.  KNICKERBACKER 
DRZEWICKI 
ROBERT  COLLINS  ' 
Soviet  Russia's  design  to  forcefully  enslave  what  remains  T. 
W.  LAMB 
D.  C.  BREASHEARS 
W.  BEZANSON 
W.  HAYES 
of  free  Europe. 
j 
t 
4 
JERRY 
O'BYRNE 
: ;f: 
W.  HAZELGROVE 
The  glorious  record  of  the  French  workers  against  NEW  ORLEANS  HOSPITAL 
FRANK  ALASAViqjI  :  " 
W;  MEEHAM 
brutality, dictatorship  and  terror during  the  Nazi occupa­ R.  LANGFORD 
­
F.  FAGAN  •   •   •  
­c­
.  t  4,  t 
­
tion  indicates  that  they  have  no  stomach  for  tyranny,  J.  LYONS­ 
4  4  4 
•  .­vS, 
NEPONSZT 
HOSPITAL 
G.  NOLES 
SAN  FRANCISCO  HOSPITAL 
t­egardiess  of  its label. 
* 
WILLIAM  PADGETT 
W.  HANT­USCH  .  k 
S.  SWOR  •  
V 
. 
Unless  it  exists  in  a  democratic  atmosphere,  a  trade  jr.  DENNIS 
MATTHEV;  BRUNO 
W. 
SILVERTHORNE 
tinion  cannot  be  an  instrument  for  the  advancement  of  F.  LANDRY 
JOSE  DE  JESUS 
A.  CAUDRA 
J. M.  LANCASTER 
the  v/orkers'  welfare.  In  fact,  that  is  exactly  what  the  H.  LAGAN. 
J. 
KEENAN 
R  E.  LUFLIN 
'  •  
communists  are  demonstrating  in  France,  as  elsewhere.  L.  LANG 
G. 
W.  GHALE 
ESTEBAN  P.  LOPEZ 
WILLIS 
j' 
Commie­controlled  unions  are  merely  political  arms  of  L. 
J. 
JELLETTE 
G.­DJIAN 
: 
PEDRO G. ORTIZ  ' 
­
the  party,  and  wherever  the  party  assumes  political  con­ D.  RUSSO 
" 
44  4 
R. REDDEST 
MOBILE 
HOSPITAL 
trol,  tire  free  trade  unions  pass  out  of  the  picture. 
e.  EZELL 
R. A. RATCLIFP 
i 
H.  HENDERSON 
R. A. BLAKE 
• 
The French  know  this as  well as  anyone.  That's  why  P.  ROBERTS 
T. 
LITTLE 
A. 
MAUFFRAY 
L; BALLESTERO 
it's  more  likely  that  they'll  dump  the  eoimnie  saboteurs,  J.  CERDA 
JOHN T.  EDWARSS. 
'  •   F,  BURROUGHS 
ather  than  the  arms  which  will  help  them  preserve  their  O.  HOWELL 
• E. FERRER  ­' 
A.  B.  LYNN 
lemocracy. 
• G. NEWMAN 
I. H,  FRENOH 
r 
TIM  BURKE  •   &gt;.  ­V. 

Sabotage  In  France 

Men Now h The Marine Hospitals 

L". 

HMf'­

�lit:: 

Friday, Maxell la 1950 

'Wa­E  S  E  A F A R E  R  S  L O G 

Page three 

Men Win  SiU Wage  Scale 
' ' (Continued from Page 1)
Jitet  cause,  it riiall  be  derilt  with­
iuidbt  the  grievance  procedtire," 
The  overtime  rate  of  pay  for 
Cities  Service  seamen  is  set  as 
follows:  $1.15  per  hour  for  those 
Bsaking  $235.75  or  less  per 
month,  and  $1.45  per  hour  fw 
^se making  morff  than  $235.75 
a  month. 
The  pact  provides  for* a  40­
hour  work­week  in  port,  and 
that  all  work  performed  in  port 
on  Saturdays,  Sundays  and  nine 
national  holidays  shall  be  paid 
for  at  the overtime  rate. 
The  standard  Union  practice 
Of  designating  onfe  man  in  each 
department  as  a  Delegate is  also 
set  forth  in  the agreement,  with 
S  Ship's  Delegate  to  r^resent 
18»e  unlicensed • p  ersonnel  in  re­
Jgtions with  the vessels' Skippers. 

ingly  in favor  of  union  represai­
tation over  company  paternalism. 
"Ihe SIU wUi now  make plani 
to  ext«ad  its  organizing  drive 
This  is  the  wage  scale  now  in  effect  aboard  all  Cities  Service  ships,  in  the  tanker field,  so  that  aU 
unorganized  tankermen  may  sail 
c&lt;mtrasted  with  the old  CS  scale. 
under  Union  conditions  and  for 
DIFFER­ Union  wages." 
NEW 
OLD 

Jki¥  And OU Cities Service  IVcrjre  Scales 

RATING 
SIU SCALE  CS SCALE  ENCE 
KEEPING  READY 
Deck Maintenance.1251.00 
$214.50
$36.50 
Commenting  on  the  depart­
214.50
18.50 
AB 
233.00 
mental  working  rules  to  be  ne­
gotiated  beginning  next  week. 
214.50
13.00 
OS  Maintenance.. 
.  . 
227.50 
Hall  said  that  "while  the SIU  is 
184.00
19.50 
OS..... 
.  203.50 
confident  that  the  remainder  of 
.Pumpman  .  .V  .  ;v..313.00 
33.00 
280.00
the  contract  will  be  worked  out 
33.00  ^  amicably  within  the  stipulatedi 
280.00
Machinist.  .* 
.  . 
313.00 
30­day  period,  the  Union  is  nev­
214.50
Oiler 
233.00 
18.50 
ertheless 
keeping  its  strike  ma­
214.50
233.00 
18.50 
chinery 
in 
a  state  of  prepared­
214.50
Wiper 
,  227.50 
13.00 
ness." 
242.50
32.00 
Chief  Cook. 
^ 
..." ; i^ 
274.50 
The  SIU  contract  soimded  the 
214.50
30.50 
2nd Cook &amp; Baker ... 
245.00 
death  bell  for  the  Cities  Service 
179.00
24.50 
Galleyman 
. 
. 
203.50 
Tanker  Men's  Association 
179.00
18.50 
Messman 
107.50 
(CTMA),  the  " company­spawned 
WORKING  RULES 
179.00
18.50 
Utility 
197.50 
and  dominated  puppet  union, 
Union  representatives  will 
The overtime  rate  for  those  making  $235.75  or  less  shall  be  $1.15  per  which  CS  had  employed  to  con­
meet  with  company  officials  im­
mediately  to  thrash  out  a  set  hour,  and  the  overfime  rate for  those  making  more  than  $235.75  shall  be  fuse  and  harass  its  unlicensed 
personnel. 
Ci  working  rules  for  each  de­ $1.45  per  hour. 
IWrtment.  As  soon  as  full  agree­
Significant  of  the  company's 
ment  has  been  reached  on  these  for  representation  by  the  SIU.  and  their  multitudinous  devices  Hall  summed  up  developments,  inability  to  disguise  the  purpose 
rules, ­  they  will  be  incorporated 
for  nipping  unionizatitm  in  the  stating: 
of  CTMA,  is  the  fact  that  in  its 
kito  the  iHterim  contract,  which  The  CS  tankei­men  registered  bud  are  impregnable;  is  nothing  "The  signing  of  this  agree­
their 
overwhelming 
preference 
year 
and  a  half  of  existence  the 
will  run  luitil  Feb.  15,  1951; 
ment,  and  the  events leading  up 
for  SIU  as  bargaining  agent  in  mwe  than  a  myth. 
company  union  never  had  more 
At  the  Union's  insistence,  the  two  National  Labor  Relations  After  the  Cities  Service  com­ to  it,  definitely  prove  that  the 
contract  provides  that  the  ques­ Board  elections,  which  resulted  pany  had  agreed  to  the SIU  con­ unorganized  tankermen  in  the  than  a  handfql  of  bona­fide 
rion  of  wages  may  be  reopened  in  two  certifications  giving  the  tract,  Secretary­Treasurer  Paul  marine  indusby  are  overwhelm­1 members. 
«t  any  time  after  the  pact,Jias  Union  jurisdiction  over  the  gn­
been  irj operation  for six  months.  tire  fleet. 
The  Marine  Division's  agree­ The  company's  stand  against 
ment  to  an  SIU  conti­act  averted  union  recognition  dates  back 
A  full­scale  strike,  which  would  more  than  a  depade,  having  suc­
bave  crippled  Cities  Service  fa­ cessfully  resisted'attempts  of  the 
cilities  on  all  coasts.  The  SIU's  National  Maritime  Union,  in  the 
Strike  machineiy  had  been  pre­ late  1930s,  to  secure  a  contract 
pared  to  go  into  motion  on  a  after  it  had  wen  a  collective 
24­hDur  basis at  a  second's notice,  bargaining  election  in  the  CS 
'  Despije  the  effective  apparatus  fleet. 
fbat  it  had  standing  by,  the  SHJ 
NMU  HALTED 
Negotiating  Committee  exerted 
«fv®iy  effort  to  bring  the  dis­ The  company's  tactics,  coupled 
pute  to  a  peaceful  conclusion.  with  internal  strife  in  the  l^U 
' Until a  week  before  the  agree­ at  that  time,  stymied ­the  NMU's 
ment  was  reached,  tiie  prospects  efforts  for  a  contract^  and  the 
of  an  amicable  solution­  ap­ CIO  organization's  strength  in 
peared  bleak,  with  Marine  Di­ Cities  Service  evaporated  shortly 
,vision  officials  j­efusing  to  rec­ thereafter. 
bgnize  the  Union's  principal  At SIU  Headquarters this 
rights  as  the  certified  collective  morning,  the  Union  Negotiating 
bargaining  agent  for  its  unli­ Committee  announced  that copies 
of  the  interim  agreement  would 
censed  pei­sonnel. 
be  distributed in  all  ports­with­
EXPERT  CALLED 
in  a  few  hnurs. 
With  the  bargaining  confer­ The  committee  advised  all 
ences  on  the  verge  of  collapse,  Cities  Service  men  to  visit  the 
hnd  a  sti'ike  looming  large,  the  nearest  SIU  Hall  for  complete 
Cities  Service  company  called  information. 
C.  R.  Johnson,  its  industrial  re­
lations  expert,  into  the  picture  Union  representatives  will  be­
gin  boai*ding  Cities  Service  tank­
fo  days  ago. 
ers  in  all  US  ports  this  week, 
Progress  was almost  immediate  for  the  first  time  in  the  com­
and,  except  for  hiring  procedure,  pany's  history. 
foe area  of  disagreement  was 
UNION  WANTED 
narrowed  down  quickly.  ­Both 
parties • c  oncentrated  on  this  The  SIU's  success  in  organiz­
phase  of  the  dispute  and  after  ing,  for  the first  time,  an  Eart 
eeverar  meetings,  the  interim  Coast  major  tanker  cranpany  de­
was  agreed  to  late  tqnight. 
monstrated  two  things: 
The  agreement  ends  more  than  One,  that" the  unlicensed  per­
Niree  yeai­s  of  a  bitter  oi"ganizing  sonnel,  at  least,  aboard  the  old 
drive  in  the  Cities  Service  fleet,  line anti­union  tanker  cornpanies' 
complicated  by  a  maze  of  the  ships" are  as  anxious  for  legiti­
,  most  ruthless  anti­union  tactics  mate  trade  union  representation 
experienced  in  modem  labor­ as are  unorganized seamen  every­
management  relations.  Intimida­ where. 
­ 
" 
tion,  mass  firings,  espionage  and 
Given  half  a  chance,  and  solid 
persistent  refusal  by  the  com­
pany  to  accept  ­the  mandate  of  indications  of  strong  union  sup­
its  unlicensed  personnel  marked  port  in  their  desire for  impreved 
wages  and  working  conations, 
the  campaign. 
This  was  the first  of  the  series  of  memorable  cartoons  which  so  eU 
the  unorganJged  tankermen  ­will 
fectively 
exposed  the  CTMA  for  the  cwnpany­controlled  "union"  that  it 
MEN  HELD  FAST 
fight  through  to  the  eial. 
was. Of  course, the SIU  was helped  considerably by  the leadership of  CTMA^ 
Throughout  the  most  viciOus  "two,  the heretofore undisputed 
which 
consistently  spouted  management's  propaganda  (as­all  company  un­
periods  of  the  company's  anti­ belief  that  the  major  ­tanker 
­  tlhiohism,  the  Cities  Service  sea­ cbihpahies,  with  their  dbmihated  ions  havB to,  OF  course). So,  goodbye  to  the Old  Bag.  We're  glad  to see her 
ihen  stood  fast  in  theit  desire  and  cbntroiled  cranpany  unions,  go—hut  she was  SO  pathetic! 
•  

I 

t,.... 

I,I, 

.... 

�ife­' 

^• '­m 
THE  S  EAF  A  RER S  idc 

Pag«  Four 

Two­Week Spurt 
I, 
­li  Eases Beachload 
On  West  Coast 

iy. March  10,1950 

Not  Bragging ! 
Says  Savannah 
­ But  Who  Is? 

# 
f 

By  JEFF  MORMSON 

By  E.  M.  BRYANT 

: 

SAN  FRANCISCO —Shipping 
for  the  past  two  weeks  has  been 
fair  out  here,­ However,  we  still 
have  quite  a  few  men  waiting 
to  ship  out.  This  backlog  is  the 
result  of  the  slxunp  we  went 
into  a  few  weeks  previously. 
Vessels  in port  during  the  past 
two  weeks  were  the  SS  Topa 
Topa,  Fairisle,  Madaket,  Jeff 
Davis,  Waterman;  Steel  Naviga­
tor,  Isthmian;  Robin  Hood,  Seas 
Shipping. 
The  Sand  Craft,^  which  had 
been  expected  to  crew  up  some­
time  in  the  past  couple  of 
weeks, still  is not  ready.  As soon 
as  information  is  available,  de­
tails  wiU  be  posted  in  the  Hall 
here  and  forwarded  to  the  LOG. 

SAVANNAH—The  SS  South­
port,  South  Atlantic,  paid  off 
and  signed  on  and  thi­ce  ships 
called  in­transit  dilring  the  past 
two­week  peflod,  but  shipping 
was  slow  nevertheless.. 
Tt)e  in­transit  callers  v/ere  the 
SS  Jean,  Bull,  SS  Lafayette, 
Waterman  and  the  SS  Horace, 
Bulk  Carriers.  There  were  a 
few  minor  beefs,  but  all  were 
squared  away  a^ter  a  conference 
with  all  department  heads. 
• When the  SS  Cape  Race  was 
turned  over  r^ently  to  a  com­
pany  not  imder  contract  to  the 
SIU,  the  crew donated  the  wash­
ing  machine  to  the  Savannah 
Branch.  Inasmuch  as  the  SS 
Jeail  crew  was  in  need  of  such 
a  machine,  it  was  placed  aboard 
that  vessel  for  the  crew's  use. 
ON  THE  BEACH 
Among  the  Seafarers  on  the 
Savannah  beach  at  present  are 
the  following:  M.  P.  Linsky, 
Nollie  Towns,  J.  Laseter,  D. 
Brannan,  W.  C.  Sanders  and  A. 
J.  Bullard. 
Two  of  our  members  are  in 
the  local  Marine  Hospital.  They 
are  J.  Floyd  and  Ray  Cole. 
Everything  is  running  ' very 
smoothly  in  this  port,  and  our 
only  gripe  is  that  shipping 
should  be  better.  In  that  respect, 
however,,  we  don't  seem  to  be 
any  worse  off  than  any  US  port 
at  the  moment. 
The  weather  is  pretty  cool  for 
this  time  of  the  year,  in  case 
anyone  is  interested.  Municipal 
and  state  elections  are  coming 
up  this  year  and  all  men  are 
being  urged  to  register  and  vote, 
so  that  we  can  bring  out a  good 
vote  for  the  pro­labor  candid­
ates. 
That's about  all  for  now.  More 
in  the  next  issue. 

PROSPECTS  BLEAK 

The  coming  two  weeks  don't 
look  too  good.  Scheduled  to  call 
at  this  port  are  the  Fairland, 
Topa  Topa,  Steel  Vendor,  Jeff 
I, 
1,.­.­ ­. 
Davis,  Marquette  Victory  and 
Br ­y . 
the 
Marymar. 
IH­­' 
'  In  view  of  a  possible  sti­ike 
against  the  Cities  Service  tank­
ers,  we  have  talked  with  the 
Central  Labor  bodies  in  this 
area,  and  they  have  assured  us 
toat  all  possible  assistance  would 
be  given the  SIU  in case  the  pin 
were  to  be  pulled. 
During  the  past  couple  of 
weeks,  we  learned  of  a  few 
cases  wherein  men  had  filed  for 
unemployment  after  their  ships 
had  been laid  up,  yet  the  Water­
man  company  contested  the 
On  Ma]|ch  12  seamen  throughout  the  nation  will  pay  th^  recpecls  to  the  memory  of 
claims.  The  company  apparently 
Andrew 
Furuseth,  a  name  that  has  become  symbolic  of  freedom  for  the  men  who  go  to  sea. 
didn't  even  know  the  ships  had 
Bom 
in  1854,  Furuseth  dedicated  his ­life  to  freeing  seamen  from  serfdom,  a  dream  which 
been  laid  up  and,  as  a  result  of 
he 
saw 
realized 
with  the  ei^tment  of  the  Seamen's  Act  in  1915.  IBs  contributions  to  the 
their  not  checking  up,  the  men 
emancipation 
of 
seamen 
earned  him  the  title ot  "Abraham  Lincoln  of  the  Sea." 
involved  are  experiencing  un­
Furuseth 
died 
in 
Washington, 
D.C«  where  he  battled  unceasingly  for  the  men  he  loved, 
necessary  delays  in  getting  their 
on 
Jan. 
28, 
1948. 
The 
simple 
man, 
who 
had fled  from  a  British­bark  in  California  in  1881,  re­
rightful  compensation. 
ceived  homage  in  death  never  before,  or  since,  accorded  to  a  labor  leader  in .America. 
We  are  following  up  these 
The  body  of  Andrew  Furuseth  lay  in  state  in the rotunda of  ihe Department  of  Labor build­
ca^s  in  the  hopes  that  there  ing  in  the  nation's  capitol,  and  seamen  were  joined  by  senators,  congressmen,  labor  leaders, 
will  be  no repetition.  Things  are  lawyers  and  justices  of  the  Supreme  Court  in  paying  their  respects  to  a  great  man. 
tough enough­these  days  without 
On  March  21,  Furuseth's  last  wish  was  carried  out  by  men  whom  he  understood  so  ~weU, 
having our coffee and  dough held  Aboard  the  SS  Schoharie,  his  ashes  were  taken  out  to  sea,  "as  far  from  land  as  possible."  The 
By  BEN  LAWSON 
up, ^especially  if  it  is  because  of  engines  were  stopped,  the  Captain 'read  a  simple  service  and  the  ashes  of  JWidrew  Furwfoth 
carelessness on  the part  of  people  were  scattered.  Andy  may  rest  secure  in  the  knowledge that  the seafaring  unions  ere continu­
BOSTON—This  port  was  kept 
who  should  know  better. 
ing  his  good fight  for* the  welfare  of  organized  seamen. 
fairly  active  during  the  past  two 
weeks  servicing  contracted  in­
transit  ships,  but  the  calls  for 
Late Seafarer' 
replacements  were  few. 
The SS  W.  E.  Downing,  State 
Fuel,  paid  off  and  signed  on.  In 
By  JOE  ALGINA 
headed  for  New  Orleans  and  formation  from  the  office  of  the 
addition,  the  following ships  call­
NEW  YORK —Three  vessels  a  grain  cargo,  Seatrain  Havana  SEAFARERS  LOG  or  by  apply­
ed 
at  Boston:  Steel  Traveller," 
and  the  Bull  Lines  ships. 
ing  direct  to  the  Ruskin  Colleg:e 
that  came  out  of  lay­up  gave  A,  number  of  members  in  the 
Steel 
Admiral,  Steel  Apprentice, 
Labor  Scholarships,  2  West  45 
Kenyon 
Victory  and  Allegheny 
shipping  a  much­needed  lift  in  Port  of  New  York  have  already  Street,  New  York  City. 
Victory, 
all  Isthmian;  i^laclc 
this  port  during  the  past  couple  made  application  for  considera­
NOW'S 
THE  TIME 
Eagle, 
Kyska 
and Greely  Victory, 
«* 
of  weeks.  This  development  en­ tion for  one of  the Ruskin  Schol­
Waterman, 
and 
the  Algonquiji 
Now 
that 
the 
Labor 
Govern­
abled  the  port  to  write  off  the  arships,  which  offer  a  year  of  ment  has  bpen  retui­ned  to  pow­
Victory, 
St. 
Lawrence 
Naviga­
study  in  England  to  trade  union 
tVo­week  shipping  period  as  members.  A  couple  of  years  ago  er  in  England,­even  if  only  by  a 
tion.' 
OT  BEEFS  ' 
fair. 
an  SIU  man  was  among  the  slight  majority,  perhaps  it  will 
There 
were 
a  few  overtime 
be 
able 
to 
do 
something 
to 
im­
lucky 
ones 
chosen 
by 
the 
com­
The  ships  reactivated  were 
beefs 
on 
the 
Steel 
Admiral,  but 
the  SS  John  Hanson,  White  mittee .and  we're hoping  that  the  prove  the  shipboard  conditions 
they 
will 
be 
carried 
to  the  port 
Range;  SS  Steel  Mariner,  Isth­ Seafarers  might  be  so  honored  of  their  merchant  seamen.  De­
of 
payoff 
for 
final 
disposition. 
spite 
the 
fact 
that 
British 
pas 
mian,  and  the  SS  Stag,  Mar­ once  again. 
Brother  R.  Lbe  is  right  on  the 
Trade. 
Members  interested  in  this  senger  ships  rank  with  the 
top 
of  the  list  of  those  Seafar­? 
swankiest 
shiiJs 
afloat, 
conditions 
scholarship  can  get  further  in­
, 
PAYOFFS 
ers  in  Boston  who' are  Faring 
for  their  seamen  are  far  from 
to  ship  out.  Right  on  his  heels 
.satisfactory. 
Paying  off  were  the  Steel  Ad­
is  Brother  Frank  McGuire. 
A  recent  incident  aboard  one 
miral,  Steel  AdvOTate,  Isthmian; 
Hia^ many  friends  were 
Five  of  our  lads  are  in  the 
of  our  ships  makes  a  word  of 
Ratings,  Yaka,  Waterman;  Bea­
trice,  Angelina,  Elizabeth,  Puerto 
All  men  who' have  sailed  advice  in  order.  If  any  SlU  man  shocked  at  the  news  of  the  Boston  Marine  Hospital,  and  I'd 
Rico,  BuR;  Black  Eagle,  Coral  Cities  Service  Oil  Company  has  a  legitimate  beef  involving  recent  death  of  Warren  Calla­ like  to  suggest  that  thdr  ship­
working  conditions,  wages  and  han.  who  died  January  21  in  mates  and  friends  drop  them  a 
Sea;  Julesberg,  Mathiasen;  Car­
ships  and  have  unfair  labor  the  like,  he  can  expect  the  Un­ New  York  of  cancer.  Brother  line  or  pay  them  a  visit,  when­
ruth,  Trans­fuel;  Seatrain  Ha­
charges filed  at  the  National  ion  to  back  him  100  percent.  But  Callahan,  who  was  27  years  ever  possible.  The  hospitalized 
vana,  and  the  Alamar,  Calmar. 
Labor  Relations  Board  if  he  gets  in  a  personal  beef  old.  joined  the  SIU  in  ApriL  :6rothers  are  Robert  Collins,  W.  . 
Signing  on,  in  addition  to  the 
ashore,  for  which  no  one  but  1343.  He  sailed  as  Bosun,  and  Bezanson,  Jerry  O'Byme,  Frank 
three  ships  that  caine  out  of  the.  against  Cities  Service,  con­
himself 
is  responsible,  he  can­ was  active  as~ shiplx^d  and  Alasavieh  and  F.  Fagan. 
lay­up fleet,  were  the  Robin  tact  file  Organizers  in  New  hot  expect  the  Union  to  go  out  shoreeide  Organiser  during  the 
Brother  Collins  entered  the 
Sherwood,  Julesberg,  which  is  York  either  by  mail  or  in  on  .the  limb  for  him.  In  fact,^  Isthmian  cunpaign.  He  is  sur­ local  Marine  Hospital  as  a  trans­
scheduled  to relieve  the Petrolite  person. 
nothing  could  be  accomplished  vived  by*  his  widow  and  two  fer  from  the  hospital  in  New 
on a  shuttle  run;  Camjth,  which 
Haven,  Conn. 
children. 
if  it  did. 

In­Transits Bring 
Few Jobs To Boston 

Vessels Out Of Boneyard Cheer New York 

Fired  By  CS? 

�vw'gy^j 
y 

^ 

' 

'^TT^ 

J 

T  H^E  S  E  A  P  A  R  E  R  S  LOG 

Page Fire 

Just In  Case 

.f, 

­.'i 
While  members  of  the  SIU's  Negotiating  Committa  l 
labored  at  the  bargaining  table  to  bring  the  Cities  Service 
Oil  Company's  Marine  Division  under  contract,  scores  of 
Seafarers  were  at' work  perfecting  the  Union'­s  strike 
apparatus—just  in  case. 
Although  the  Union  was  exerting  every  effort  to  ; 
settle  the  dispute  peacefully,  the  possibility  was  ever 
present  that  the conferences  might  collapse.  If, and" when^ 
they  did,  the Seafarers  was  not  to be  caught  off  base  and, 
at a  moment's notice, the streamlined SIU strike  machinery 
could  be  thrown  into  motion  wherever  company  facilities 
were  in.  operation. 
On  this  page  are  some  of  the  ipany  volunteers  who  " 
enthusiastically  pitched  into  the  strike  preparations,  and 
some  of  the  projects  on  which  they  have  been  working. 

Keeping  all  Atlantic  and  Gulf  District  poris  up  to  date  on  the status  of  the  Cities  Service 
beef  and  coordinating  strike  preparations  involves  a  mass  of  detail.  Here,  several  volunteers 
attend  to  the  tedious  but  highly  essential  job  of  communications. 

Cities  Service  plants  throughout  the  country  were  broken  down  into  geographical  areas. 
with  picket  details  ready  for  assignment  in  each  on  a  24­hour  basis.  Area  boards  like  the  one 
shown  above  contain  reoorts  of  activities  in  each  area. 

was .  incorporated  in  the •  area 
charts drawn  up  by  Seafarers  concerned  with  this  phase of  the 
strike'prepctratlons.  Hera's  a  section  of  Carteret.  N.  J. 
J.Sft'i'vl 

Among  the many  volunteers  who gave unstintingly  of  their 
time  and  energy  to  make  the  strike  preparations  airtight  was 
Vic  Litardi.  shown  here  with  the  typewriter  he  worked 
long  and  hard. 
• ' 

­  All  areas  that  would  be  involved  in  the  event  of  a  Cities  Service  beef  were  carefully  ;|| 
plotted  on  large  maps.  All  hands  responsible  for  the smooth  functioning  of  the  machinery  were  »  "^^^1 
briefed  until  they  were  fully  acguainled  with  their  respectivo. areaSv 
'' '''' 

�Page Six 

T HE SEAFARERS L O G

Friday,  March  10. 1950 

SHIPS' MINUTES AMD MEWS 
Mowbray  Softballers 
Take  4  Of  5 Contests 
Having  bagged four  of  the five  contests  played  on 
the last  trip to South  Africa,  the Robin  Mowbray softball 
squad  is  thirsting  for  bigger  game. 

HE. NEVER  FORGETS  THE­SIU 

Raymond Foster, 
Member Of SIU 
Since 1938, Dead  ­
Seafarer  Raymond  Foster, 
a  member  of  the SIU's  At­
lantic  and  Gulf  District 
since  its  inception "in  1938, 
died  qf  a  heart  ailment  on 
Jan.  30  in  the  Mobile  Ma­
rine  Hospital,  the  LOG 
learned  |:his  week. 

According  to  Mel  Smith,  the'* 
Mowbray  team  is  particularly 
anxious  to  lock  horns  with  the 
Robin ^ood softballers,  who  re­' 
.centiy  laid  claim  to  the  champ­
ionship  of  the  Robin  fleet. 
Burial  took  place  on  Feb.  3, 
"I  believe  we  can  give  them 
She's  not  a  stuck­in­the­
in  Magnolia  Cemetery,  Mobile. 
a  nm  for'  their  money,"  says 
mud  anymore. 
Smith  in  a  letter 
to  the  LOG 
Brother  Foster,  who  was  born 
f
Six  days  after  running 
'4his  week..  If  they  ever  hit 
on  March  1,  1909,  in  Thomas­
port  with  the  Mowbray,  they  aground  at  the  entrance  to 
ville,  Ala.,  was  admitted  to  the 
are  challenged  to  a  friendly  New  York  harbor,  the  SS 
Marine  Hospital  on  Nov.  7  last. 
Alamar,  Calmar  Liberty,  was  re­
game  or  two." 
•  
He  is  survived  by  his  wife, 
To  prove  the  Mowbray  men  floated  on  Washington's  birthday 
Vcderax^  Seafarer  Fred  D.  Benson' 
Mrs. 
Mabel  Foster  of  550  South 
and  towed  to  an  anchorage  off 
are  ready  for  the  "champs,"  Stapleton,  Staten  Island. 
Bayou 
Street, ' Mobile. 
You  can't  keep  a  good  Union  man  at  the  old  building  at  2 
Smith  cited  the  impressive  rec­
The  Alamar  Was  pulled  out  of  man  away  from  the  hiring  hall,  Stone  Street  in  1942. 
Brother  Foster  joined  the^^U 
ord  of  the  last  trip.  Against  the  the  mud  at  10:07  AM,  just­ one  even  if  he  does  happen  to  be  A  veteran  of  the  Spanish­ in  Mobile  on  Nov.  21,  1938.  He 
American  war,  Benson  is  on  a  had  a  Steward's  rating  and  hejld 
team  representing  General  Mot­ hour  before  high  tide.  Shortly  a  retired  member. 
ors  in  Port  Elizabeth,  the  Mow­ after  she  was  being  towed  to  Brother  Fred  D.  Benson  has  30­day  leave  from. the  Veterans 
Book  No.  15. 
brays  eked  out  a  9  to  6  victory.  Port  Newark  by  Moran  tugs.  been  paying  periodiq,  ^isits  to.  Hospital  at  Bath,  N.Y.  As  a 
Heavy­gear  salvage  equipment  the  SIU  HaU  in  New  York  ever  Seafarer  he  saw  two  years  of  Headquarters  was  advised  of 
"ONE  RUN  VICTORY 
and  a  deisel­electric  tug,  the  since  he  quit  going  to  sea  in  World  War  II  abdard  SIU  ships  Foster's  death  by  the  A&amp;G  Dis­
Next  they  crossed  bats  with  Curb,  succeeded  in  refloating  the  1944.  He  stopped  in  the  other 
when the gomg  was the  toughej.  ^^et  Port  Agent  In  MobUe.  The 
the  Robin  Sherwood  Seafarers  stubborn  Liberty  after  six  pre­  day  to  say  "hello'^  to  the  old­ Benson started sailing  on wmd­' 
in  Lourenco  Marques.  One  run  vious  daily  attempts  had  failed.­  timers,  who  know  him  as  one  jammers,  making  his  first  trip 
Seafarer  was  in  good  stand­
provided  the  victory  margin  for 
of 
the 
first 
to 
join 
up 
when 
the 
in 
a 
four­masted 
barque 
from 
"ig 
at 
the  time  of  his  passing 
SHALLOW 
the Mowbray softballers,  the final 
A&amp;G 
District 
was 
organized 
New 
York 
to 
Calcutta. 
He's 
a 
and 
the 
Union  forwarded  the 
Alamar  ran  aground  in 
score  reading:  Mowbray—14,  The 
I
 
bnriar benefits 
to  his  widow. 
in ,1928.  Fred  was  Door­  deck  man,  of  course. 
20  feet  of  water  at  the  top  of 
Sherwood—13. 
Romer  Shoal,  between  Gedney 
In  a  three­game  series  with  and  Ambrose  Channels,  about 
the  team  of  the SS  African  Sun,  three  miles  off  Sandy  Hook 
I  the  Mowbrays  won  the first,  Light.  She  was  inbound  from 
14  to  7.  They  were  on  the  short  the  West  Coast  with  10,000  tons 
By  "SALTY  DICK' 
;  end  of  the  scoring  in  the  second  of  lumber. 
contest,  5  to  4,  but  came  back  On  the  fourth  day  of  refloat­
to  win  the  rubber  game,  9  to  8.  ing  attempts,  the deck  cargo  was  Henrick  Hansen,  better  known  should  be  referred  to  as  Phila­ leans. . ,  And  George  Nuss  is 
Smith  asked  the  LOG  to  "pass  urUoadedlo''hghters'"and'by  the'®® 
scrapple,  cause  that's  happy  being  in  the  Black  Gang. 
the  word  to  any  ships  that  may  next  day  468  tons  of  lumber  had  P"rc^sed  a  fish  hatchery  in  where  he's  from. . .  The  foreign  Wonder  why  William  Scott  is 
be  headed  down  Africa  way  to  been  transferred.  Another  400  Florida.  He  expects  to  make  it  seamen  are  always  asking  for  aliyays  smiling  these  days?  He 
be  on  the  lookout  for  us  as  soft­ tons on  deck  were  removed  from  his  livelihood.  . .  Miles  Stems  the  SEAFARERSLOG.  Two  expects  to  be  a  father  soon;  . . 
asked  Carl  Johnson  doesn't  seem  to  ^ 
ball  opponents. 
the  ship  the  next  day.  The  rest  spends  a  lot  of  his  time  at  the  English  sailors recently 
track. He 
claims he is ,way 
ahead 
mfe 
for 
the 
paper, 
which 
I 
gave  have  a  care  in  the  world.  . . 
"The  big  trouble,"  he  wrote,  of  the  lumber,  all  in  the  holds, 
of 
the 
game. 
them. 
Thfey 
seem .to 
be 
hitngi­y 
"seems  to  be finding  teams  that  was  transferred  to  lighters  when 
The  Creel  brothei­s,^  Bob  and 
have  a  schedule  permitting  a  the  Alamar  arrived  in  Port  A1  Brindley  is  being  called  for  maritime  news. 
Sloppy,  are  on  the. South  Ameri­
get­\o­gether  on  the  ball field."  Newark. 
"Kansas  City  meat,"  when  he  Did  yoii  know  that  New  Zea­ can  run,  aboard  different  ves­
/ 
&gt;  ! 
land  has  comp\ilsory  vacations  sels.  Bob's on  the  Del  Monte and^ 
for  seamen?  . . .  This  happened  James  Paul  (Sloppy's  name)  is 
^EMBERS  OF  SIU  STEWARDS  DEPARTMENT ON CRUISE  SHIP  on  the  Alcoa  Clipper  recently:  on  the  Del  Norte. 
A  passenger  ordered  a  kippered 
Clarence  (Red)  Hancock  can 
herring  and  figs.  The  waiter  always  be  seen  at  a  reserved 
brought­  the  fish—^smothered  in  table  at  the  Justin  Hotel  in 
figs.  A  slight  error. 
Buenos  Aires.  The  trip  is  47 
Bill ^Hanold  wrote  a  fine  days  and  he  receives  47  let­
piece  on  the  old  Hog,  the  Al­
ters  every  voyage.  The  hotel, 
coa  Banner. 1  made  that  last  by  the  way.  is  one  of  the  best 
• trip on  the  Banner  with  Rill,  On  the run. . . V. C.  often  goeis 
end  I  share  his  sentiments. . .  to  RosaHo  by  train  to  B.A. 
Cleveland  Vincent  lost  about'  to see a  beautiful senorita.  This 
15  pounds  working  in  the  gad­ trip  he  was  disappointed  cause 
ley.  Then  he  went  ashore  and  she  had  gone  to  Mendoza  for  •  
picked  it  cdl  up  again: . .  a  vacation.  I  predict  this  bird 
Mickey  Dunn  is  doing  a  swell  will  soon  be  in  a  gilded  cage 
job  as  Chief  Baker  on  the  Del  (yeah,  marriage). 
• 
Norte.,  'The  crew  especially 
There's  a  bUl  before^  the  Ar­
likes  his  French  bread. 
gentine  Congress  that  soon  may 
Note  to  camera  fiends:  Buy  be  law.  It  will  mean  a. better 
your  film  packs  and  bulbs  in  break  for  seamen. . .  I  also  un­
the States.  I tried  to get  material  derstand  that  all  the  dives  along ; 
in  all  South  American  ports,  Alem  Street,  such  as  the  Avalon, 
without  success.  And  don't  take  Odeon  and  Roayl  must  close  and 
a  camera  ashore,  unless  you  seek  new  heavens.  The  ceamen, 
have  a  permit. 
American  aVid  'other|,  will  gain 
'  Charles  Bradley^  once  owned  much  by  this  move. 
,WilUam  J.  McKay,  Stewards  Delegate  aboard  the  Alcoa  Clipper  says  that first­rate  jon  a  tui'key  farm,  but  all  the  birds  The  New  Orleans  HaR  is  ;,to  f 
„  „  performance  enables  the  Union  to  negotiate  better  contracts.  Here  are  some  of  his  shipmates  died  on  him.­  Now  he's  going  to  receive  a  big  picture from  a  cere­
try  it ,with chickens. '.  . Domingo  tain  crew  that  will fee  the  talk  , 
li  who  share  that  beli^  Froht  row,  le£t  to  right;  Chief  Steward  M.  T.  CMtello  and  Secoxid  Stew­
Molina  is  stiU  working,  on  the  of  the  waterfront.  Watch  for 
ard Fred  Diekow. Hear  row: Tom  Carmody, James  Nelson,  Kenny  Miller,  William  McKay,  Chine  coffee  run,  but  lio'a  iilways  picture^  in  a  later  issue  of  the 
Bosa,  Jack  MeCranie  and  £.  L.  Chesser,  all  Waiters. 
glad  to  get  back  to  NgW  Or­ Loo.  f  . 
­v;.­..;:­

'Stuc^In Mud' 
Gets  Going 
After  6  Days 

'Voice  Of  The  Sea' 

i 1 
^ :  il 
'I 

�• :W^"™" 

WrSM 
' • ":'l'?^A/fi^''l"'' 

Friday.  March  10, 1950 

THE SEAFARERS

LOG

Page Seven 

Digested Minutes  Of SlU Ship  Meetings 
SEATRAIN  NEW  ORLEANS. 
argued  at  mealtime,  but  brought 
Dec.  18—Matr Fields.' Chairman; 
up  at  meetings  or  to  department 
Z m  m • •  
Ji*, 
• 
Frehchy  Michelet. Secretary. Del­
delegate. 
egates  reported  that  there  were 
4  4  4 
^
no  beefs  in  any  of, the  depart­
BESSEMER  . VICTORY.  Jan. 
ments.  Motion  (by  Fredericks) 
14 '—  A.  J.  Baker,  Chairman: 
carried  that  ship's  fund  be  set 
Frank  Strelilz.  Secretary.  Ship's 
'• 'i 
up  and  that  each  man  pledge 
Delegate  reported  that  minor 
two  dollars  to  get  it  started. 
beefs  had  been  settled  satisfac­
Motion  (by  McKay)  carried  that 
torily  to  all  concerned.  Depart­
$50,  of  the  fund  be  donated  to 
ment  delegates  stated  that  ­there 
Christmas  dinner  being  put  on 
were  no  beefs  to  report.  Motion 
for  men  in  New  Orleans.  Under 
by  Roland  Lanoue  carried  that 
•• '­8 
r 
Good  aiid  Welfare there  was con­
all  beefs  be  put  down  in  writ­
I 
siderable  discussion  about  addi­
ing  so  that  complainant  cannot 
tional  repairs,  etc.  Ship's  Dele­
go  back  on  his  beef.  After  con­
gate  explained  that  steps  had  galley  cr^w  for fine  preparation  siderable  discussion  under  sub­
been  taken  to  square  these  of  food  in  view  of  the  lack  of  ject  of  education,  on  various  ar­
^ings  away  to  satisfaction  of  variety  of  stores.  Suggested  that  ticles  and  letters  appearing  in 
Ship's  Delegate  notify  First  As­ LOG,  it  was  recommended  that 
all  concerned. 
sistant  Engineer  to  discontinue  members  digest  contents  of  pa­
^^ITIES SERVICE IS /VOW RRMLY WlT^//V 
4.  4,  4, 
SEATRAIN  NEW  YORK.  Jan.  doing  Wiper's  routine  duties. 
per  thoroughly  so  that  they  will 
­THE  SlU POLP,  BUT VVE  CAMblOT  RESTO/sl 
4  4  4 
1—S.  E.  Harm.  Chairman;  J.  J. 
be  well  infomied  in  cas,e  of  fur­
OUR  LAURELS — NOT AS LON©  AS 71­1 ERE 
­M alone.  Secretary.  Elections  ALCOA  FENNANT."  Jan.  2—  ther  discussions  or  voting  on 
• ^1 
IS  AN  UAlQRSANirfeO  COMPAtNY IN THE. 
were  held,  with  Brother  Buckner  C.  Dix.  Chairman;  R.  F.  Black.  them.  Men  also  advised  to  keep 
INPUSTRY. ^ 
chosen  as  Ship's  Delegate  and  Secretary.  Delegates  reported.  up  to  date  on  Cities  Service  de­
dSF VOUARE INTERESTED IN 
Brother  Gardner  as  Deck  DOICT  Steward  suggested... that  radio­ velopments.  Motion  (by  John 
gram 
'be 
sent 
to 
Headquarters, 
HELPJN(^ 
THE 
SlU EXPAND, AND  BRING 
gate.  Motion  carried  xmanimous­
Hunt,  seconded  by  John  Duffy) 
ly  that  crew  go  on  record  as  confirming  crew's  approval  of  carried  unanimously  to  go  on 
THE  STABILIZING  SlU CO/VDITIONS TO 
­I 
heartily  endorsing  action  of  stand  toward  Trotskyites.  Gen­ record  in  support  of  Headquar­
•  .:.1l 
/MARITIME —  SEE THE ORGANIZERS  /N 
eral 
discussion 
on 
amount 
of 
membership  to  halt  infiltration 
ters  action  agaiiist  Trotskyites  to 
THE A/EAREST SlU PORT. 
of  communists  —  Stalinist  or  time  a  man  should  be  allowed  register  confidence  in  officials  so 
^otskyite  —  into  our  ranks.  to  sail  continuously.  General,  viciously  attacked  in  newspaper 
Ship's  Delegate  instructed  to  opinion  is  that  one  year  on  one  of  the  Trotsky  group. 
take  up  matter  of  rusty  water  ship  should  be  enough.  Sug­
in  tanks  with  Chief  Engineer.  gested  that  resolution  be  written 
Chief  Steward  asked  to  tee  what  up  pertaining  to  this  matter 
he  could  do  about  getting  some  and sent.to Headquarters. "Mac," 
..new  mattresses  and  to  report  the  Oiler,  designated  to  serve  as 
ship's  treasurer  to  collect  dona­
results  to  next  meeting. 
4  4  4 
tions  at  payoff  for  washing  ma­
DEL 
MONTE. 
Jan.  8 —Creel. 
chine  and  spbrting  good.s  to  be 
There's  strike  action  on  Beaver  Street  and  many  Seafarers 
Chairman; 
Gerdes, 
Secretary. 
used  by  crew. 
are 
remembering" those  rough  days  on  strike  with  the  UFE  Wall 
Brother  Buckley  elected  Ship's 
4,  4  4 
Street 
employees  and  picketing  through  rain  and  cold  weather 
DORIAN  PRINCE.  Jan.  1  —  Delegate  by  acclamation.  Dele­ with  the  telephone  girls  on  strike.  Now  SIU  brothers  are  happily 
gates reported. 
Motion 
(by 
Buck­
Joseph  Ranieri.  Chairman;  E. 
encouraging  the  militant  Beaver  Street  picketline  of  girls  and 
Mor^,'  Secretary.  Ship's  dele­ ley. seconded  by  Miller)  that  re­
guys  on  strike  against  a  high  class  restaurant  determined  to  bust 
solution 
be 
drawn 
up 
concurring 
gate  to  see  Captain  about  in­
»  4. 
their contract  and  union,  the AFL  Hotel and  Restaurant  Employees, 
in 
anti­Trotskyite 
resolution. 
STEEL  RJ^NGER.  Dec.  26  —  noculation  cards  which  will  be  Discussion  on  ga'shounds  by  liocal 16.  You  should  hear  the girls  talk  about  the  hiring  of  scabs, 
D.  K.  Nunn,  Chairman;  V.  De  given  to  crewmembers  when  Brother  E. DeBautte.  Ot'aer  mat­ and  the  restaurant  boss  worrying  about  all  the  early­morning 
LaCnu.  Secretary.  A  few  hours  they  leave  vessel.  Delegates  re­ ters  discussed:  wearing  of  cloth­ pastries  and  pies  going  to  waste.  However,  Labor  marches  on  . . . 
disputed  overtime  in  Deck  and  ports  accepted.  Suggested  that  ing  in  pantry,  and  keeping  Franklin  Smith,  in  town  right  now,  told  us  about  a  swell  place 
Engine  Department  but  all  okay  library  for  crew  be  acquired.  E. 
down  in  Houston,  Texas.  Next  week  we'll  mention  the  place  . . . 
foc'sles  clean. 
in  Stewards.  Crewmen  were  ad­ Morris  suggested  that  any  man 
Frank  Nagy,  who  was  in  New  York  recently—is  probably  out  on 
4 
4 
4 
vised  to keep  their  foc'sles  clean.  having  a  beef  should  air  it  at  LILICA,  Jan."  1—^Lester  Lap­ a  trip  right  now  ,  .  .  David  Dial  is  another  visitor  to  New  York 
Crew favors  rule making  it ­man­ the  regular  meetings  and  not  in  ham. Chairman;  Raymond  Perry.  after  a  long  absence,  it  seems.  Any  story  for  the  LOG,  Dave? 
datory  that  men  entitled  to  va­ the  alleyways  where  topside  can  Secretary.  Delegates  reported 
^ 
• 
4 
4 
4 
^ 
cation  with  ppy  after  one  year  get  wind  of  theni.  One  rninute  that  all  was  okay  except  for  a 
Albert 
Lavoie 
sailed 
into 
New 
York 
this 
week. 
He's 
still  , 
aboard  ship,  accept  the  pay  and  of  silence  in  memory  of  depart­ couple  of  minor  beefs.  Crew  fa­
aboard 
the SS 
Yaka 
and 
a 
good 
SIU 
ship 
she 
is. 
indeed 
... 
ed 
Brothei­s. 
get  off.  Discussion  about  the 
vors  compulsory  vacations.  Re­
Brother  Jimmy  Ott  is  one  of  the  swell  Brothen;*^heIping  out 
claims  for  compensation  by  men 
pair  list  to  be  drawn  up  and  for  some  time . . . If  we  remember  correctly  we  saw  Brother 
who  are  working  aboard  in  re­
handed  to  Ship's  Delegate.  Men  Frank  Boyne.  wrestler  and  poet,  visiting  New  York  recently 
lief  capacities. 
cautioned  to  be  sober  at  payoff.  ... Brother  Ivan  Ryswyk  is  aboard  the  Mankato  yictory 
it  b  4  ­
Matter  of  new  springs  and  mat­
right  now  . . . Flash  News:  Brot)ier  Edward  Hansen,  the  old­
JULESBERG.  Jan.  l~Ray  Ar­
tresses  were  di^ussed. One  min­
timer. 
just  sailed  into  New  York  after  a  three  month  Robin 
nold.  Chairman;  C.  B.  Skipper. 
ute  of  silence  in  memory  of  de­
Lpe 
voyage. 
Brother  Hansen  says  his  shipmate.  Brother 
Secretary.  Deck. Department  re­
parted  Union  Brothers. 
Nielsen 
shipped 
out  on  some  Waterman  scow . . . There's  lots 
ported  12  hoirrs  disputed  over­
of 
Brothers here in 
New  York  right  now  who have  been aboard 
4 
4 
4 
time;  no  beefs  in  the  other  de­
4  4  4 
SEATRAIN  NEW  JERSEY.  the  SS  Puerto  Rico.  There's  Luigi  lovino.  John  Butler  (who's 
partments.  Much  discussion  on  JOHN  HANSON.  Jan.  1—Ed  Ian.  16—^Tom  Clark.  Chairman; 
in the This  Is The SIU  film). Nick  Pappas. Benny  Papademitros, 
proposed  enforced  vacation  rule;  win  Westphal,  Chairman;  R.  P.  Phil  O'Connor.  Secretary.  Dis­
Billy  Roach.  A.  Gido  and  Eddie  Macklin. 
letters  in  LOG  giving  pro  and  Hannigah,  Secretary.  Otto  Pe­ puted  overtime  in  Deck  Depart­
4 
4 
4 
con  were  discussed.  Motion  (by  dersen  elected  Ship's  Delegate  ment, to  be  taken  up  with  Pa­
The SEAFARERS  LOG  will be  sailing free  of  cost  to the  homes 
J. Penner. seconded  by J. Judge)  by  acclamation.  Motion  carried  trolman.  No  beefs • i  n  other  de­
carried  that  after  a  man  has  that  crew  go  on  record  asking  partments.  Windchutes  for  hos­ of  the  following  Brothers:  N.  A.  Brewer  of  Mississippi,  Curt  Bof­
been  aboard  ship  for  one  year  Secretary­Treasurer  to  prepare  pital  and  paint  for  all  decks  man  of  Maryland,  Bill  Gross  of  Louisiana,  Martin  Mackel  of  Ohio, 
he  should  take  his  vacation  pay,  ballot  on  question  of  compulsory  have  been  ordered.  Ship's  Dele­ Thurston  Lewis  of  ArTcansas,  Martin  Biggins  of  Massachusetts,  E. 
gel  off  and  re­register.  Vote  was  vacations.  Suggested  that  recrea­ gate  reported.  Pledges  for  March  C.  Piatt  of  Georgia,  James  Bethea  of  Florida,  Joe  Lewallen  of 
21  for  motion,  2  again.st.  Airmail  tion  room  be  used  for  amuse­ of  Dimes to date total $45.60.  Col­ North  Carolina,  E.  W.  Copeland  of  Louisiana,  Peter  Anchundia 
editions  of  LOG  received  in  ment  and  messroom  to  be  left  lection  for  movies  showm .aboard  of  New  York,  Arthur  Graf  of  New  Jersey,  Albert  Packert  of  New 
Canal  Zone  and  read  by  all  to  watch­standers.  Requested  vessel  for  crew's  entertaihment  York,  George  Vourlounus  of  Massachusetts,  Alton  Mackin  of 
Georgia,  Daren  Redmond  of  Michigan,  Charles  Jones  of  Massa­
hands.  $12  is  on  hand  in  ship's  that  Messman  be  given  a  break  will  be  taken  up  at  payoff. 
chusetts, 
Vincent  O'Reilly  of  New  York,  Thpmas  Marcellus  of 
fund. 
during  meal  hour,  especially 
Pennsylvania. 
when  he  is  serving  watch­stand­
4 
4 
4 
ers.  ' 
Brother  Elmer  Witzke  was  in  New  York  again . . . "Red" 
4  4  4 
Shea  is  fresh  in  town  and  it  seems  he's  trying  to  sell  a  new 
STEEL  MAKER.  Jan.  8—M. 
car  or  buy  one.  WelL  all  we  can  say,  "Red.".­  is  "he  one  or 
F. Laresen. Chairman; T.  Concep­
4  4  4 
cion.  Secretary.  Ship's  Delegate  ANN  MARIE.  Jan.  12—W.  D.  buy  one"—Anyway,  we're  only  kidding  and  only  talking  about 
ALCOA'POINTER.  Jan.  j|  —  said  that  better  sanitary  job  Canty.  Chairman;  Vincent  trie  car . . . The  Calmar  ship.  SS  Alamar.  was  slightly  in  the 
newspapers  recently  . . . The  SS  Black  Eagle  was  in  port 
Sullivan,  Chairman;  George  Zld­ must  be done.  Disputed  overtime  O'Reilly. Secretary.  No  beefs,  ex­
ik.  Secretary.  Ship's  Delegate  reported  in­  Deck  and  Engine  cept  for  some  overtime  beefs  in  recently  and  Pete  Gvozdlch.  delegate  aboard  her.  is  doing  a 
reported  complaints  against  Departments;  none  in  Stewards.  Deck  Department.  Crewmembers  good  job . . . Bill Gray  informs  us  that  John  Jellelle. the  Stew­
Steward;  motion  carried  that  Motion  carried  unanimously  in  requested  not  to  cook  anything  ard  vrtth  a  mustache  that  is  practically  like  the  old­fashioned 
matter  be  brought  up  to  Pa­ favor  of  Headquarters  anti­Trot­ on  bare  hot'  plate,  but  to  use  handle­bar  type,  is  in  the  Frisco  Marine  hospital.  Swift  recov­
trolman  at  port  of  arrival.  De­ skyite  resolution.  Departm.ent  frying  pan  provided  for  that  ery.  John... Aboard  the SIU  ships  there  lure  many  discussions 
going  on in  regards to  the threatened  Hiring  Hall,  the  vacation 
partment  delegates  stated  that  delegates  to .prepare­repair  lists  purpose.  Baker  and  crew  Pan,­
overtime was okay  and  that there  and  turn  them  over  to  Ship's  tryman  were  complimented &lt; for  rule,  the  transfer  of  American  ships  to  foreign­flags,  the  im­
were  no  beefs.  Motion  carried  Delegate  before  vessels  aiTives  being  especially  conscientious  portance of  Headquarters  air  mailed  Overseas  BuUelins  to  SIU 
to  have  Chief  Cook  make  up  in first  US  port.  Glasses  not  to  and  efficient  in  their  duties.  List  ships all over  the world,  the SIU  welfare fimd,  the  creation  of 
emergency  store  list  to  be  turn­ be  dropped  in  sink,  but  to  be'  of  needed  repahs to  be submitted  a  credit  union  for  the  SIU.  etc.  Brothers,  keep  those  ships  on 
ed ' over  to  master  for  port  of  washed  aiid  returned  to  proper  before  beginning  of  next  voy­ ­  the  ball  with  those  shipboard  meetings,  educational  meetings 
and  running, these ships clean  and  the  jobs  In  shipshape  styles 
ariival.  Vote  of  thanks  given  to  place  in  shelf.  Beefs  not  to  be  age. 

�IP 
, •  ­

^ • 

T^ E  E$4E ARERS  LO G 

•   "' 

.'  .. 

­  .  '" 

Fridays  Much  10.  1956 

• 

•. 

... 

• ­.. "•   .^. 

­..=rW 

TBE  MEMB ERSHIP 
Servicing  Mast  Lights  Job 
For  Agile  Monkey:  Reiss 

POP  SCARED  HIS  OWN  GIRLS 

Seafarer's Wife 
Favors fl­Months" ^ 
As Time Limit  i 

I'll  tell  you  why.  It's  because 
To  the  Editor: 
1*0  the  Editor: 
I 
I  joined  the  Kyska  seven  don't  take  any  guff  from  the 
Mates.  They  tried  to  tell  me  my 
am  • writing you  in  the  hop^S 
months  ago  and  had  no  trouble  business  when  they  don't  know 
of  getting  a  smaU  voice  in  the 
until  ten  days before she  put  in­ one  wire  from  another. 
controversy  over  the  proposal  tb 
/to  New  Orleans.  Then  it  hap­
have  rrien  stay no  more  than onb 
My  bosses  are  the  C^ief  and 
year  oh  a  single  ship—taking 
pened.  I  was  working  in  the  1st  Engineers.  I  don't  have  to 
the  due  vacation  pay  and  get­
Cwheelhouse  doing  my  work  as  take" any orders from  topside, and 
ting  off. 
• 's  hip's  Electrician  when  the  Cap­ most  certainly  not  from  any  one 
My  husband,  Theodore  (Book 
else  aboard  the  ship.  That's  one 
;  .  tain  came  up  to  me  in  an  ex­
No. 
51061),  is in  no  way  respon­
way  to  stay  iii  one  piece. 
cited  manner,  and  in a  very  loud 
sible  for  my  opinion,  either. 
With  jobs  scarce  and  many' 
voice  asked  me  who  is supposed  I  recall  an  accident  that  hap­
pened  in  September,  1949.  We 
Bookmembers  waiting  for  ro­
to  put  bulbs  in  the  main  mast  left  port  and  secured  the  gang­
tation  jobs,  not  to  mention  the 
and  the  foremast  running  lights.  way  while  at  sea.  A  man  fell 
permits,  I  think  it  would  be  h­
I  told  him  not  to  get  excited,  overboard,  but  luckily  was  pick­
very  good  idea  tolitnit  the  stay 
ti^. 
but  to  go find  out.  In  my  12  ed  up  by fishermen.  If  he  had 
on  any  one  ship  to  six  tnonths 
fkii-:
?  years  as. an  Electrician  on  Am­ drowned,  whose  fault  would ^  it 
or  one  complete  voyage. 
' ; 
;i«rican  ships  the  work  was  ai­ have  been?  He  was  AB' on  the 
In 
this 
way, 
there 
will 
be 
These  two  cute  females  are'  Dawn  (left).  21/2  years,  and 
rways  done  by  an  AB  or  Mate,  ship  and  held  a  2nd  Mate's  tic­
Donha,% 16 
months,  daughters  of  Seafarer  Blackle  and  Marie  more  vacancies.  Jt  wiU  benefit 
ket. As  compensation  he was giv­
:j I  was  never  asked  to  do  it. 
Colucd. 
The 
smiling  lad  is  the  girls'  uncle,  Mike  Aversano,  everyone.  Some  now,  who  stay 
/  On  some  ships  they  use  a  en  a" 3rd  Mate's  job.  Well  taken  an  SIU  man  himself.  Dawn  and  Donna  shed  big  tears  when  on  these  ships—the  homesteadi^ 
' f­  Bosun's  chair  with  one  man  to  care  of,  the  company  tells  us. 
Poppa.  Colucci  tried  to  pose  with  them,  acted  as  though  they  ers—are  staying  ^n  principally 
LIGHTS  NOW 
' 
"/ help  him.  On  the  Kyska  a  small 
weren't  acquainted  with  him.  That's  what. he  gets  foiy being  because  they  know  they  will 
likely  have  a  two  or  threfe' 
A  AB always  did  it.  He  crept from  The same  trip a  Fireman broke  a  seaman. 
months'  wait  for  the  next  ship, ' 
• ­ the  crosshead  up  the  steel  guy  his  leg.  Befbre  this  happened  I 
If  the  limit  virere  six  months 
/ about  40  feet  and  swung  him­ told  the  Mate  there  should  be 
on  any  one  ship,  there  would.be 
vself  over  to  the  running' light.  a  light on  the deck  aft, but  noth­
a  bigger  turno'ver.  The  men  who 
/ I've  seen  this  trick  done  by fly­ ing  was  done  imtil  the  accident. 
stay  so  long  will  know  shipping 
ing  'monkeys  in  South  Africa.  After,  there  was  a light.  He  will 
is easier  and  that  they  will  have 
,  Once  in  awhile  they  miss,  land­,  be  well  taken  care  of  by  the 
much  less  time  to  wait  for  an­
.• r ling  on  their  feet  on  the  soft  company. 
slump  which  is  now  prevailing  other  berth. 
To  the  Editor: 
/groimd.  Here  a  miss  would  send 
in  San  Francisco.  Some  of  the  So,  I'mi  in  favor  of  six  months 
.a  man  falling  between  winches,  While  a  creWmember  of  the  Our  San  Francisco  hall  isn't  Chinese ports  which, used  to con­
­which  aren't  made  of  rubber.  John  B.  Waterman,  I  was  hos­ very  large,  and  at  times  there  sume  large  amounts  of  Ameri­ .on  any  one  ship  for  any  one 
I  nevCT  worked  for  Bamum  pitalized  by  food  poisoning.  The  is  an  exceptionally  large  num­ can  cargoes  are  now  closed  to  member.  If  the ship  should  stay 
out'  more  than  six  .months, 
/ and  Bailey  on  the flying  trapeze,  company  paid  me  seven  weeks  ber  of  members  gathered  there.  us  by  the  Communists. 
full 
wages 
while 
ur 
the 
hospi­
As 
yet 
no 
one 
has 
had 
to 
stand 
which  is  very  xmlikely,  then  it 
J but  I've  begim  to  think  I  have 
At  times  the  going  really  gets  should  be  the  full  voyage  ,on 
tal. 
The 
Union 
got 
everything 
because 
of 
a 
shortage 
of 
seats. 
i to  join  it  in  order  to  hold  my 
rough  in  Frisco,  as  some  of  us 
due  me  from  the  company.  Well 
job  as  ship's  Electrician. 
I  can  remefhber  when  the  have  learned  the  hard  way.  articles. 
taken  care of,  the  company says. 
(Mrs.)  Maria  Lindberg 
New  York  hall  was  so  crowded  Some  of  the  rough  spots  have 
WELL CARED FOR
Lima,  Peru 
I  know  of  a  case  where  an  that  there  were^no  seats  avail­
been  ironed  out  by  the  exist­
The  Master  also  told  me  if  I  AB  refused  to  go  up  the  mast 
able  in  the  recreation  room  and 
'' or  anybody  else  fell  down  we'd  because  he  couldn't  go that  high.  we  had  to  stand  ­around  and  ence  of  a  stewpot,  the  proceeds  Robin  Sherwood  Men  i 
for  which  are  so  benevolently 
'^be  well  taken  care  of  by  the  The  Master  demoted  him  to 
wait  our  turn  to  rest  our  weary  donated  by  the" more  prpsperous  Like  Overseas  Bulletin 
government,  f'wonder  when  and  Ordinary  and  logged  him  two 
Brothers.  Cigarettes •  and  coffee  To  the  Editor: 
,  / 
; how.  He  said  the  Electrician  is  days'  pay.  The  Commissioner  bones. 
/ supposed  to  pay  the  overtime  to  took  off  the  log.  He  still  sails  Some  of  our  Brothers  seem  are  also  available. 
We,  the  ci­ew  of.  the  SS  Robin 
the  AB |Who  puts  in  the  bulbs.  as  AB. Why  didn't  they  log  the  to  be  disillusioned  about  the  Something  should  be  said  for  Sherwood,  wish  to  express  our 
shipping  situation  in  San  Fran­ our  representatives  in  San  Fran­ thanks  and  appreciation  for  the 
'  Boy,  oh  boy,  what  a  pile  of  Electrician? 
i 
cisco.  This  is  evidently  a  result  cisco,  and  I  "am  certain  that  I  latest  Bulletins,  received  during 
money  I  must  owe  if  it's  retro­
We  have  excellent  cooperation  of  the much­publici.­^ed reputation  voice  the  sentiments  of  many 
active.  (Three  years  for  Water­
our  last  voyage  to  South  Af^ 
in  the  engine  room,  but  none  here  for.  good  shipping,  which  when  I say  that  they  are  among 
'  man  alone.) 
rica.  We  believe  that  this  will 
was  foimded  during  the  period  the  best  to  be  found  in  the SIU.  not  only  bring  our  Union  Head­
I'd  like  to  knpw  what  the  from  the  officers. 
Things  have  now  been squared  immediately  folioydng  its  open­ They  are  conscientious  in  the  quarters  and  members  into 
safety laws  are?  Is anybody  sup­
posed  to  be  compelled  to  go  up  away.  At  the  payoff  the  Patrol­ ing,  when  the  shipowners  here 
pursuit  of  their  duties, and  ob­ closer  contact  with  ships  at  sea, 
on  the  mast  without  an  AB  tic­ man  in  New  Orleans  informed  were  crying  for  men.  Things 
but  it  will  also  let  us  know  of 
ligations  for  the  welfare  of  the  our  Union  activities  at  all  times. 
the  Captain  that  he  was  wrong  have  changed  since  then. 
1­  ket? 
John  C.  Reed  \ 
There are  several  factors  con­ men  on  the  beach. 
;  Why  did  I  get  all  this  trouble  and  squared  him  away.­
Fred 
Miller 
Ship's 
Delegate, 
Carl  Reiss  tributing  to  the  comparative 
iafter  seven  months  on  the  ship? 

Red  Hold  On  China  Affects 
Frisco  Shipping,  He  Says 

Count  Your  Change  In  Mediterranean  Night  Spots,  Brother  Cautions 
your  bill  when  they  see  that  esting  places  like  the Church  of  nine  San  Marco's  Plaza  is  pro­ Our  last  port,  Istanbul,  look's 
To  the  Editor: 
from  the  harbor  like a  city  from 
The SS  Kyska  arrived  in  New  you  are  not  watchful  for  your  San  Marco  and  the  Doges'  Pal­ fuse  with  street­walkers. 
the  Arabian  Nights.  The  city  is 
money. 
ace 
to 
see. 
The 
town 
is 
as 
pic­
WINDY 
CITY 
Orleans  February  17,  completing 
a 
maze  of  hilly, "narrow  streets; 
I 
was 
short 
changed 
a 
few 
turesque 
as 
all 
get 
out 
with 
the 
Our 
next 
pprt 
was 
Trieste 
and 
a  seven  week  trip  from  New 
York,  to  various  ports  in  the  times,  but  collected  what  was  canals  thick  with  boats,  especi­ here  we  encoimtered  the  Boreas,  A  seaman  will  find  most  of  the 
.  Mediterrane^  Sea.  We  made  coming  to  me  when  I  pointed  ally  the  gondolas,  rowed  by  a  strong  wind  from  the  hfotth.  cafes  are  high  priced.  There' are 
Genoa,  in  thirteen  days  from  out  the  discrepancy  in  the  bill.  shabby  dressed  gondoliers,  As  Coming  into  the harbor  the  wind  any  number,  of  hostesses  who 
. New  York,  arriving  right  in  a  Once  I  was  clipped  for  a  dollar  twilight^ clones  the day,  the  cafes  almost ripped  off  No. 3  tarpaulin  speak  English  in  these  places— 
general' strike  declared  for  that  when  I  had  two  glasses  of  wine  come, to  life  and. people  crowd  and  it.  took  five  of  us  to  secure  the  roughest  gutter  English  I 
day.  "The  docks  in  Genoa  were  in  the  Black  Cat  cafe  and  the  into  San  Marco's  Plaza  and  spiU  it  again.  The  wind  sometimes  found  in  the  PicadUly.  The  day 
quiet  enough  and  next  day  the  waitress  brought  me  back  100  into  the  bars  and  restaurants.  reaches  gale  proportions  and  :was  cold  and  snowy ^he  day  we 
• I:...­
..  longshoresmen  returned  to  work.  lira  change  out  of  a  1000  lira  Here,  too,  as  in  Genoa  a  sea­ work  ceases  on  the  wharves  and  left* here.  We.  were  glad  to ' be 
man  must  be  alert  when  order­ lines ^  are  stretched  'along  the  leaving  for  thie  Btates. 
The  weather  in  this  city  was  bill. 
She 
could 
yell 
louder 
and 
ing 
drinks  and  food,  for .1  verily  streets  for  'the  pedestrian  to 
...  balmy,  as  New  York  would  be 
EACH  HIS  OWN 
i 
swear, 
better 
than 
I 
could. 
One 
believe 
that  overcharging  for­ clin^  to.  A GI guard  on  jhe ship 
,  in  paid­spring.  There  are  any 
This,  in 
some  Of  •  
number of  cafes along  the water­ would  think  from  listening  to  eigners  is  a  kind  of  sport  with  told  me  that  a  street  car  was 
the 
outv/ard 
commonplace 
.Ex­
once  blown^ on  its  side  by,  the 
­front  and  uptown  in  which  a  her  vehement  outburst  that  I  some  of  these  people. 
periences, of 
the 
trip, 
but 
eyery 
) seaman  can  epjoy  himself  and  was  trying  to  rob  her.  I  was  One  of  the  best  places  to  eat  force  of  the  'wind. . 
man  finds  in  his voyage  to  other 
prices  are  reai^nable.  A  seanaan  glad  to  get  away,  feeling  a  little  an^  drink ­ is  tl^  Antico . Pignolo  Heading  south  "for,  Piraeus, 
lands 
his  own  singular ' 
expEirr 
would  be  siiiart  however,  if  he  guilty  of  trying  to  take  advau­ night  club,  here  you  must  have' Greece,  wje  met  with  the sirocco,  iences. 
[0 I 
a  menu  to  order  from  and  the  a  wind  from  Africa  and  it  was 
;  asks  first  the  price  Of  anyt's'ng  tage  of  an, innocent  woman. 
The  most flpely  mused  thinifs 
VENICE 
prices  /are  fairly  reasonable.  gale  weather  till  we  reached  the  are 
^  before  he  buys,' since  I  found 
never  written. 
!";/ 
/ that  the  caterers  have  a  doliber­ Our  next  port  was  romantic  There  is! also  an  orchiespra.  L:  shelter  of  islands  on  the  Greek 
: 
.  ,, 
John  J. /Flynn 
•  ate  carelessness  in  adding  up  Venice.  There  are  .many  inter­ the  evening  hours  of  eight  and  coast,:.! 

�Friday,  March  10,  1950 

T  H  E  S  E  A  P  A  R  E  R  S  LOG 

ALCOA PATRIOT  CREWMEMBERS 

I 

Page  Mine' 

Member's Wife Protests Forced Vacation, 
CaUs  It  Violation  Oi  Individual  Rights 

job.  I  believ^  we  should  take  a  of  employment  to  the  meh  on 
vacation  ­for  our  own  welfare.  the  beaches  who  could  relieve 
I  have read  the items on  com­ I also  believe that seamen  should  the  men  on  vacation.  It  would 
pulsory  vacations  in  the  LOG.  get  vacations  on  the  same  basis  give  one  trip  men  plenty  of 
It  seems  to  me  the .word  "vaca­ that  millions  of  other  workers  work,  and  jobs  to  many  permit 
tion"  is  incorrectly  used.  Sever­ get  theirs.  That  is,  allow  them  men  too. 
al  writers  have  suggested  that  a  to  take  a  vacation  for  one  trip,  I am  not  in favor  of  any  regu­
ruling  be  passed  compelling  men  two  weeks,  or  for  whatever  pe­ lation  compelling  all  book  hold­
to  give  up  their  jobs  at  the  end  riod  of  time  could  be  agreeable,  ers  to  give  up  their  jobs  at  ­the 
of  a  year, for  the purpose  of  giv­ but instead  of  losing his  job,  per­ end  of  any  set  period  of  time. 
ing  their  jobs  to  somebody  else.  mit  him  to  return  to  it  after  1  believe  such  a  ruling  would 
Is  that  a  vacation? 
his  vacation  is  over,  if  he  so  not  be  in  the  best  interests  of 
Do  you  know  of  any  laborers,  desires. 
the  majority.  It  would  violate 
organized  or  unorganized,  who  Let  the  seamen  have  a  little  their  civU  and  personal  rights 
are  coml^Ued  to  give  up  their  "say  so"  or  the  right  to  choose  and  freedoms. 
jobs  in  order  to  get  a  vacation?  the  time  for  a  vacation,  to  meet  The  Union  helps  a  man  get  a 
Is  there  any  Union  that  com­ his  needs.  Instead  of  ruling  that  job.  The  Union  protects  his  job 
pels  its  members  to'  give  up  he  has  to  take  his  vacation  at  from  unfair  labor  practices  of 
their  jobs  at  the­ end  of  any  set  the  end  of  12  months,  let  him  an  employer.  Is  it  right  for  the 
period  of  time  in  order  to  give  take , it  at  the  end  of  12  to  16  Union  to  take  the  man  away 
another 
man  a  job? 
months.  Under  these  conditions,  from  his  job  simply  because  he. 
This  photo,  forwarded  to  the LOG  from  Trinidad  by Ship's 
I  think  we  all  agree  that  we  all  hands  woidd  be  glad  to  take  has  held  it  for  one  year,  or  any 
Delegate  Van  Whitney,  shows, from  left  to  right:  Ernest  Glass­
ford,  BR;  Richard  Fleming,  Galley  Utility:  radio  operator;  are  entitled  to  a  vacation  after  a  vacation.  That  arrangement  period  of  time? 
working  a  year  on  the  same  would  give  many  extra  months 
Van  Whitney,  Oiler,  and  Raymond  Thomas,  Chief  Cook. 
FREE  CHOICE 
Most  workers  are  given  a  cer­
tain  amount  of  freedom  in  de­
ciding  on  the  time  for  their  va­
cations  to  suit  their  needs.  Sea­
men  should  be  entitled  to  the 
out  had  equal  or  more  family  quately  with  a  homesteader  same  rights.  If  they  cannot,  it 
To  the  Editor: 
turning  company  stiff,  without  would  cause  hardships  in  many 
It  has finally  become  apparent  obligations  to  meet  than  the 
pulling  a  man  off  to  take  his  cases.  For  example:  Suppose  a 
man 
taking 
the 
berth. 
Just 
who 
to most  Seafarers that some  defi­
vacation. 
is  to  decide  in  such  cases? 
seaman's  wife  is  expecting  a 
nite  procedure,  regarding  vaca­
To the Editor:
&lt;
baby  in  ApriL  He  wants  to take 
It 
is 
also 
noteworthy 
that 
no 
The 
problem 
of 
homesteading 
tions,  either  forced  or  volimtary, 
I  have  been  a  patient  here  at  is  necesscuy.  However,  before  is  entitled  to  some  thought,  but  one  to  date  has  suggested  that  his  vacation  at  that  time.  Wouldi 
~  Staten  Island  Marine  Hospital  anybody  gives  way  to  his  per­ it  seems  as  if  much  more  em­ once  a  man  ships  he  must  stay  it  be  right  to  compel  him  te 
for'ten  weeks  and "have  had  a  sonal feelings or  renders  a  quick  phasis  is  placed  on  this  now  on  the  same  vessel  until  he  has  take  his  vacation  in  February 
good  chance  to  think  and  talk  verdict  it  would  be  well  to  con­ than  was  formerly.  Actually,  it  earned  a  vacation,  this  in  itself  or  March?  Such  a  ruling  would 
about  the proposed  vacation  rule.  sider  the  significance  and  im­ is  very  doubtful •  if  there  are  points  up  the  point  of  beach  not  only  cause  him  imnecessary 
There are  members here of  other  portance  of  the  following  points  more  men  who Jjiomestead  today  pressure. 
hardships,­but  probably financial 
maritime  unions who  have  work­ and  conditions. 
than  back  in thp old  days  before  The  above­mentioned  points  difficulties too. 
ed  under  such  a  rule  in  their 
the  war.  UsuaUy  there  were  two  should  be  thought  over  by  aU  Consider  the  family  men  with 
organizations  and  all  of  them  First,  it  must  be  realized  that  or  three  on  each  ship  then  even  Seafarers,  for  their  future  se­ children  in  school.  The  chances 
feel  it  has  worked  out  pretty  the shipping  business  is  no  long­ as  there  are  today.  The  number  curity  and  welfare  wiU  depend  are,  he  would  want  his  vacation 
er  the  war­time  inflated  protege 
well  with  them. 
of  men  who  hoJmestead  undoubt­ to  a  great  extent  on  how  they  during  the  summer,  or  other 
One  of  the  first  things  that  of  the  1939­1946  rea.  The  lush  edly  make  up  a  very  smaU  per­ decide  to  handle  the  "vacation  school  holidays  such  as  Christ­
comes  up  in. any  discussion  of  gravy  train  years  of  "jobs  for  centage  of  the  membership.  It  problem." 
mas  or  Easter,  so  that  he  can 
the  rule  is,  "How  about  the  everyone  and  his  mother  in.­ is  also  well  to  remember  that 
Bryan  (Scoily)  Downes  take  his  family  to  the  country, 
married  men."  Well,  there  are  cluded"  are  gone,  and .only  the,  the  member^p  can  deal  ade­
H.  Stuart  CIa»ry 
beaches,  or  back  to  the  old 
single  men  who  have  obliga­ uninformed  and  super­optimistic 
hometown 
to  visit  grandma  and 
tions  too.  Some  of  them  support  woidd  believe  or  hope  that  the 
grandpa. 
parents  and  brothers  and  sis­ millions  of  tons  of  shipping  now 
Compulsory  vacation  regiila­ * 
in  the  James  River  Fleet  and 
ters. 
tions 
would  be  difficult  to  en­
But  if  a  member  knows  that  other  reserve fleets  will  again 
force. Suppose 
a  man is shipping 
^ter  a  year  he  has  to  take  his  become  a  source  of  jobs. 
out  on  a  long  run—four  to  eight 
MORAL  SIDE 
vacation  and  get  off,  then  th^ 
months.  He  has  been  on  the 
is  a  good  possibility  that  he  will  Now  we  come  to  vacations  To  the  Editor: 
and  ill  feeling  so  often  found  on  ship  10  or  11  months.  If  he  is 
save  his  money  to  hold  him  with  the  idea  of  creating  work  ,1  would  like  to  extend  my  some  ships.  Any  hitches  that  not  permittee,  to  sail  he  would 
over  for  a  little while. 
for  more  people or spreading  the  sympathy  to  the  family  of  Os­ come  up  could  be  straightened  be  cheated  out  of  his  "vacation" 
There's  no  doubt  conditions  work  around.  Who  is  to  say  wald  Stone,  who long  served  the  out  by  an  advisory  Qonunittee.  pay.  If  he  sails,  he  "could  not  _ 
are  getting  rough.  Anyone  who  when  a  person's  services  with  a  membership  of  the  Union  and  The  rules  should  make  clear  the  begin  his  vacation  until  he  re­ " 
doubts  it  should  take  a  ride  up  company  shall terminate?  Has an  whose  demeanor  should  serve  difference  between  .the  duties  turned to the  States. That  would" 
the  Hudson  River  to  Tarrytown  individual  the  choice  of  staying  as  an  example  to  all  union  of­ of  the  men  on  the  various  types  allow  him  to  work  14  to  19 
and  take  .a  look  at  the  ships  with  his  job  so  long  as  he  ficials. 
of  ships.' 
months  without  a  vacation. 
in  the  boneyard. 
• '  chooses  or  must  he  give  up  his  Concerning  the  proposed  cred­
LOG  STAMP 
BAD  EFFECTS 
Anyway,  the  tljing"  to  do  on  berth  to  another. 
it  union,  I  am  not  clear  as  to  On  another  point:  It  would  be 
vacations,  now  that  eVery  pos­
Let  us  take  a  look  at  the  whether  this  would  be  compul­ a  good  idea  to  have  LOG  dona­ "What  effect  would  compulsory 
sible  argument  has  been  offered,  moral  side  pf  the  problem  for  sory  for  aU  members  to  join  or  tions  stamped  in  the  books.  All  job­turnover  have  on  the  effi­
is  to  put  the  question  on  a  specr 
minute  or  too.  Has  any  one  woWd  be  for  only  those  who  men  would  tlien  be  covered  and  ciency  of  Union  personnel?  H 
ial  ballot  and  let  the  member­ the  right  to  deprive  another  of  are  interested.  If  it  is  adopted,  wouldn't  feel  cheap  when  turn­ a  man  knows  that  he  is  going 
fhip  decide. 
his" living?  It  would  undoubtedly  it  should  be  optional  for  the  ing  down  a  request  for  a  dona­ to  lose  his  job  in  a  short  tim^ 
Joseph  A.  Pilutis  often  prove  that  the  man  forced  members  to  join  or  not  as  they  tion,  having  made  one  the  trip  regardless  of  how  well  he  has 
before. 
done  his  work,  won't  he  be  in­
see  fit. 
How  about  some  information  clined  to  get  careless,  indifferent 
On  the  much  discussed  enforc­ on: 
or lay  down  on the  job?  Chances 
ed  vacation  plan,  I  don't  be­ 1­  Is  it  possible  to  send  biUs  for  promotion  and  job  security 
lieve  the  riding  would  effect  for  medical  expenses  to  marine  make  most  men  try  to  improve 
enough  men  to  make  it  worth  hospitals?  What  is  taken  care  of  their  efficiency.  If  a  book  holder 
To  the  Editor: 
man  who  gets  off  after  a  sev­ the  expense.  Unless  it  is  ab­ at  marine  hospitals? 
is  a  good  mechanic,  a  good 
eral­month  trip  and  gives  an­ solutely  necessary,  it  seems  to  2­  If  a  man  holds  an  accident  Union  man,  shouldn't  he  have 
The  LOG  said  that  it  was  in­
be  an  infringement  on  the  mem­
terested  in  hearing  what  the  other  fellow  a  chance  to  make  bership's  nghts  and  should  not  and  healtli  policy,  what  does  a  chance  to  get  ahead,  to  keep 
a  buck  should  not  be  victimiz­
the  policy  cover? 
a  job  that  he  has  proven  him­
membership  thought  on  the 
ed  by  his  own  guts  and  confi­ be  put  into  effect  unless  ship­ , In  conclusion,  I  think  Seattle  self  to  be  capable  and  worthy 
question  of  whether  .or  not  to 
ping  becomes  dead  sftw. 
dence  in  the  future. 
Agent  McKay  should  be  com­ of  holding? 
make  it  a  "must"  to  get  off  a 
The  evils  of  homesteading  are  If  there  are  company­minded  mended  for  doing  a  good  job  Our  Union  has  advanced  be­
ship  after a  year's service.  Hence 
muny.  The  longer  a  seaman  is  men  who  break  om'  regidations,  under adverse  conditions in Seat­ cause  our  members  have  ad­
this: 
on  p  ship  the  more  company  he  we  have  the  means  to  pidl  them  tle.  He  has  always  boon  court­ vanced  as  individuals,  We  have 
With  shipping  slowing  down  gets  and  the  less  Union.  The  off  the  ships.  Unless  the  offend­ eous,  helpful  and  obliging. 
better contracts  today because we 
I don't  see  how,  if  a  full  book  homesteader  shrinks  the  active  ers  were  quite  competent  I'm 
George  F.  Johnson  have  better  men,  because  we 
is  to  be  worth  a  damn,  we  can  membei*slaip  down  and  weakens  sure  they  would  not  have  been 
(Ed  Note:  Should  a  credit  have  been  given  a  chance  to 
get  around  not  making  such  a  the  Union  kitty.  And  when  the  kept  aboard  the  ships.  Person­ union  be  set  up,­  participation 
work  arid  improve  our  skills. 
rule.  Aggravating  the  general  chips  are  down  and  its  a  strike  ally,  I  have  never  been  on  a  would  be  optionaL  Your  other 
Let  us  continue  to  strive  to  go 
job  slump  are  tho^e  jittery  cases  seige  many  of  them  will  say:  ship  longer  than  nine  months.  questions  require  more  infor­
forward!  Not  backwards!  Let  us 
or  plain  greedy  guts—^who  are  "The  hell  with  you  chumps^  I've  While  at  it  I  would  like  to  mation  bom  you  and  the 
work  towaids  a  real  "vacation?* 
holing  up  on  the  buckets  ad  in­ got  my  loot,"  and  scram  inland.  put  ih  mj'  two  cents  worth  on  answers  would  be  of  too  great 
Mrs. Mary  R. Masters 
finitum. 
Joseph  Whalen  the  Stewards  Deparment.  There  length  to  cover  ifl  the  LOG. 
It  seems  that  the  guy  who  is  P.S. II we  made  it  a  maximum  is  a  definite  need  for  a  ruling  Stqp  in  and  see  Special  Ser­
(Ed. Note;  The  writer of  the 
taking  tough  sledding  in  his  of  eight  months  I'd  like  it  still  on  the  duties  of  each  man. . This  vjlces  Representative  the  next  above  letter, is  the  wife  ci, 
Stride  should  be  protected.  The  Tietter. 
SIU  member  Stacy  Masters.) 
would  keep  down  the  arguments  time  you're  in  port.) 
To  the  Editor: 

Time  Limit 
Okayed  By 
Hospitalized 

Brothers  Weigh  Moral,  Economic  Issues 
In  Review  Of  Proposed  Vacation  Ruling 

Airs  Views  On  Vacations, 
Urges Steward  Dep't  Rules 

.Whalen  Sees  Homesteaders 
Aggravating  Job  Decline 

�J i .Page Tea 

THE  SEAFARERS  L 0« 

BOSTON—Chairman.  T.  Fleiri­
Sag,  30821;  Recording  ­Secretory, 
B&gt;  Lawson,  894;  Reading  Clerk, 
B.  Leo,  102530. 

Friday.  Maxoh  10,195Q, 

PHILADELPHIA  —  ChairtnaA 
A. S.  Cunfrdlei,  24599;  Recording 
Secretary,  Ri^ ^Oates,  25EH|l; 
Reading  Cleric.  G.  H.  6eri&gt;erg^, 
8932. 
REG.
TOTAL
SHIPPED SHIPPED SHNPPEb TOTAL
REG.
REG.
Motions  carried  to  accept  pro­
REG.
STWDS.
DECK
DECK
ENG.
PO.RT 
ENG.,
STWbS. SHIPPED
Minutes  of  the  Feb.  15  min­
­  wedings  of  other  Branch  meet­
utes 
in  aU  ports  were  read  and 
7
ings  as  read.  Port  Agent  dis­ Boston 
30 
10 
3 
13 
5 
13 
9 
approved. 
Motions  carried  to  ac­
cussed  shipping  in  Boston.  Mo­ New  York. 
235 
86 
73 
58 
72 
77 
59 
186 
cept 
Secretary­Treasiuer'a finan­
. fion  carried  to  concur  in  Secre­ Philadelphia. 
69 
23 
20 
22 
20 
24 
12 
52 
tary­Treasurer's  financial  report  Baltimore. 
55 
202 
36 
65 
48 
30 
82 
114  cial  report  and  Headquarters  re­
and  Headquarters  report  to  the  Norfolk 
—
89  ­
23 
26 
1 
1 
40 
2  port  to  the  membership  as  read. 
membership.  Motion  carried  in­ Savannah 
7 
• 27 
.  5 
8 
12 
4  •   4 
13  Pert  Ageat  spoke  on  the  state 
structing  Port  Agent  to  change  Tampa 
19 
29 
28  .  23  .  21 
19 
67 
71  of  shipping  in  Philadelphia  and 
electric  ciurent  in  Hall  from  DC  New  Orleans 
67 
65 , 
216 
71 
72 :  103 
84 
248  of  the  immediate  prospects.  Ex­
to  AC,  as  recommended  by  the  Mobile 
16 
22 
­29 
67 
13 
21 
19 
53  cuses  from  mmnbers  not  present 
Boston  Edison  Company.  One  Galveston. 
46 
17  •  
34 
18 
98 
22 
13 
52  at  tonight's  meeting  were  re­
minute  of  silence  in  memory.of  West  Coast 
. 40 
97 
23 
39 
26 
90  ferred  to  the  Dispatcher  for  Sp­
28 
31 
pitmriate  action. Motions  carried: 
deparied  Union  members.  Meet­
378 
.425 
394 
1,197 
295 
295 
302^ 
892  lhat  no  job  be  put  on  board 
mg  adjourned  at  7:30  PM,  with  GRAND  TOTAL...n.. 
until  10  minutes  before  calling 
75  members  in  attendance. 
ports  were  concurred  in.  Com­ of  other  Branch  meetings  read  ice  Oil  Company's  Marine  Divi­ time;  to  permit  Brother  G. 
i  % 
munications 
in  regard  to excuses  and  conciured  in.  Port  Agent  sion.  The  Central  Labor  bodies  Stidham  to  change  his  registra­
SAVANNAH —Chairman.  Jeff 
from 
meeting 
were  read  and  act­ said  ­that,  outside  of  shipping,  with  which  Agent  has  be«n  in  tion  from  Deck  to­Stewards  De­
Gillette,  37060;  Recording  Secre­
tary.  L.  E.  Hodges,  255;  Reading  ed  upon.  Motion  carried  to  ac­ affairs  of  i)ort  were  in  good  touch  have  assured  us  of  aH  partment.  There  were  231  mem­
cept  communications  from  Head­ shape,.  Prospects  for  the  coming  possible  assistance.  The  foUow­ bers  present  when  meeting  ad­
.Clerk,  E.  M.  Bryant.  25806. 
t 
quarters  on  Hiring  Hall  with  two  weeks  are  not  loo  bright,  ftig  were  elected  to  serve  as  a  journed  at  7:45. 
Savannah  Branch  minutes  of  recommendation  that  Union  ex­ he  said.  He  asked  the  memb^  Trial  ahd  Excuse  Committee:  S. 
XXX 
previous  meeting  read  arid  ap­ press  thanks  to  Congressman  ship  to  permit  the  SUP  to  work  White,  J.  J.  Burke,  B,  M.  Slade,  GALVESTON — Chairman, 
proved.  Motion  carried  to  accept  DoUinger  for  his  stand  on  the 
of  the  31U  Branch  HaR  in  Kiedermeyer,  Warren  and  J.  Keith  Alsop,  7311;"  Recording 
1­^  Secretary­Treasurer's financial  re­ Hiring  Hall.  Motion  earned  to  out 
New  Orleans,  inasmuch  as  the  SuHivan.  Charges  were  read  and  Secretary,  J.  Hammond,  24404; 
port  and  Headquarters  report  to  adopt  resolution,  signed,  by  40  SUP  has  closed  its  own  Hall  in  referred  to  the  conmuttee.  Mo­ Reading  Clerk,  R. Williams. 
the  membership  as  read.  Branch  members,  lurging  disciplinary  ac­ this  port  Requests  from  men  tion  carried  to  accept  report  of  Minutes  of  Jast  meeting  night 
111 
Agent  mported  that shipping  had  ticm  against  men  missing  ship.  seeking  to  be  excused  from  the  Headquarters  •  Reinstate­ in  all  ports  read  and  approved. 
heen  slow  arid  that  the  few  65  members  in  attendance  when  meeting  were  referred  to  the  ment  Committee.  Meeting  ad­ Motions  carried  to  accept  Secre­
mirior  beefs  aboard  the  vessels  meeting  was  adjourned. 
Dispatcher.  Headquarters  report  journed  at  8  PM,  with  39  mem­ tary­Treasurer's financial  report 
that  made  port  had  been  set­
to  the  membership  accepted  as  bers  in  attendance. 
and  Headquarters  report  to  the 
%  %  X 
tled.  Minutes  of  other  Branches  NEW  ORLEANS  —  Chairman.  read.  The  foUdwing  members 
membership. 
Port  Agent's  report 
X  X  X 
read.  Motion  carried  to  non­con­ Eiarl  Shei^ard,  203;  Recording  took  the  Union  Oath  of  Obliga­
BALTIMORE  —  Chairmam  L.  on  shipping ,Jn  this  area  was  ac­
inir  with  section  of  Philadelphia  Secretary,  Johnny  Johnston,  53;  tion:  R.  J.  Egan,  J.  J.  Cuccia,  Johnson,  108;  Recording  Secre­ cepted,  as  were  Patrolman's  and 
proceedings  recommending  rein­ Reading  Clerk,  Buck  Stephens,  P.  E.  Coorie,  A.  E.  Kennedy  and  tary,  AI  Stanriiury,  4683;  Read­
Statehient  for  a  Brother,  and  in­ 76. 
R.  E.  Hostler.  Motion  carried  ing  Clerk,  B.  Snow,  46140. 
'Structing  the  Port  to  refer  mat­
recommending  action,  to  obtain 
ter  to  Headquarters  Reinstate­
New  Orleans  minutes and  Sec­ additional  chairs  for  the  Hall.  Charges  were  read  and  refer­
i''  ment  Committee,  as  is  the  usual  retary­Treasurer's financial 
re­ Under  Good  and  Welfare  there  red  to  the  following  committee 
procedure.  Minutes  of  other  port  read  and  accepted.  Minutes  was  pro  and  con  disfcussion  on  elected  from  the floor:  J.  Hud­ Dispatcher's  reports.  Motion  car­
compulsory  vacations,  with  the  gin,  G.  Nutting,  C.  White,  C.  ried  recommending  that  Head­
majority  of  the  speakers  against  Sahders,  S.  Fulford.  Minutes  of  quarters  take  steps  to  put  ques­
any such  rule,  which  they  claim­ previous meetings in  all Branches  tion  of  compulsory  vacations  af­
ed  would  not  be  a  solution  »of  were  accepted,  as  read.  Motion  ter  one  year  aboard  one  ship  oh 
the  shipping  problem.  Meeting  earried  to  refer  commimications  a  referendum  ballot.  One  min^; 
adjourned  at  9:10  PM,  vvith  540  • from  men  wanting  to  be  ex­ ute  of  silence  in  memory  of  de^ 
cused  from  meeting  to  the  Dis­ parted  Union  Brothers.  Meeting 
menibers  present. 
patcher.  Port  Agent  spoke  on  adjourned  at  7:20  PM. 
XXX 
shipping  in  this  port  during  the 
XXX 
MOBILE—Chairman,  L.  Neira,  past  two­week  period  and  men­
W.  C.  HALL 
NEW  YORK— Chairman,  Joe 
SS  MICHAEL 
I.;" 
Writ6  or  call  home  at  once:  Will  the  following  crewmem­ Recording  Secretary,  J.  Carroll,  tioned  the  prospects  for  the  Ai^na,  1320;  Recording  Secre­
I?.'  407  Goodsen  Street,  Mineola,  bers,  who  paid  off  iii  Boston  on  50489;  Reading  Clprfc.  H. &gt;  J.  weeks  ahead.  Motion  carried  to  tary.  Freddie  Stewart,  493Ss 
accept  Hospital  Committee's  re­ Reading  Clerk;  C.  Simmons; 21&amp; 
|;|f i;  Texas;  Phone  285­J.  Very  ,iiu­ March  2,  1950,  please  get  in  Fischer,  59. 
1*"  portant. 
touch  with  Blackie  Gardner,  at  Motions  carried  to  accept  min­ port. , One  minute  of  silence  in  Motions  carried  to  accept  min­
X  X  It 
Headquarters  in  New  York  City,  utes  of  previous  meetings  in  all  manory of  departed  Union  mem­ utes  of  Feb.  15  meetings  in  all 
bers.  Under  Good  and  Welfare 
.  ED  SALAZAR 
as  soon  as  possible:  Marcus  Branehes  as  read.  Agent  discuss­
members 
discussed  the  Cities  Branches  as  read,  with  excep­
JOHN  ACCORD 
Evans,  Roy  E.  Tallaksen,  A.  ed  the  present  ^tate  of  shipping 
tion  of  Philadelphia  New  Busi­
Mrs.  Rose  Franz,  whose  son,  Blanchette,  Joseph  Stan wood.  It  in  this  pOTt.  Moiidns' carried  to  Service  beef  and  the  Welfare  ness  dealing  with  reinstatement 
Bbb,  was  killed  in  an  automo­ is  very  important. 
accept  Secretary­Treasurer's fin­ Plan  presently  being  negotiated  of  member.  Motion  carried  in­
bile  accident  on  December  24, 
ancial  report  and  Headquarters  by  the  Union.  There  were  364  structing  Philadelphia  to  rcfeC 
X 
t 
X 
1949, .asks  that  you  get  in­touch 
report  to  the  membership.  Pa­ members  in  attendance  when  master  to  Headquarters  Rein­
SS  CAROLYN 
the meeting  adjourned  at  8 PM. 
with  her  at  Rt.  2,  Box  233, 
statement  Committee  in  accord­
C.  P.  (Slim)  Thompson  asks  trolman  and  Dispatcher  gave 
Gilroy,  California. 
XXX' 
that  Cherokee,  the  Oiler,  and  their  r^xnrts.  Following  period  NORFOLK  —  Chairman,  Ben  ance  with  established  procedure. 
XXX 
• 4­}: 
Tommy,  the  Fireman,  contact  devoted  to  Good  and  Welfare,  Rees,  95;  Recording  Secretary,  Secretary­Treasurer's financial 
A.  K.  POWERS 
there  was  one  minute  of  silence 
report  accepted  as  read  and  mo­
­  "Please  get  in  touch  with  me  him  by  mail  or  in  person  at  the  in  mwnory  Of  departed­  Umon  J.  A.  Bullock,  4747;  Reading  tion  carried  to  refer  it  to  audit­
it once,  at  222  East  Plume  St.,  Staten  Island  Marine  Hospital,  Brothers.  Meeting  adjourned  at  Clerk.  Lloyd  Hewitt,  4169. 
ing  committee.  Motion  carried  tO'" 
i/b G.  Washington  Tavern,  Nor­ concerning  the  accident  on  Jan­ 7:45  PM;  3&amp;0'  members  were 
concur  in  Headquarters  Rein^i 
Minutes 
of 
previous 
meetings 
uary  28,  in  Ciudad  Trujillo. 
folk,  Va.  Ruth." 
present. 
statement 
Committee's  report. 
In 
all 
Branches 
were 
read 
and 
XXX 
XXX 
Communication 
from  member 
approved. 
Motions 
carried 
to 
HENRY 
J. 
FOY 
XXX 
JOHN  E. STEELE 
wishing^ 
to 
appeal 
his  case  was 
concur 
in ^.Secretary­Treasiurer's 
SAN  FRANC2SCO­&lt;.­Chairman, 
Contact  Robert  F.  Reynolds,  Your  father  has  important' pa­
read 
and 
referred 
to 
Trial. Com­
1302  Hobart  Building,  San  Fran­ pers  for  you;  please  write  him.  Jeff  Merrison,  34213;  Recording 
mittee. 
Port 
Agent 
reported 
on  « 
^ 
^ 
^ 
« 
Secretary,  H.  Stivers,  23799; 
cisco,  California. 
shipping 
and 
advised 
members 
ANDY  ANDERSON  ' 
Reeding  CUnb,  D. C.  Jones. 116. 
XXX 
that  if  they  had a  legitimate  beef 
BENET HEDBERG
Get  in  touch  . with  Frank  The  following  were  read  and 
they  would  be  backed  ICQ  per­  * 
ROBERT BRAUN
Scheesley,  at  Marine  Photog­ approved:  San  Francisco  Branch 
cent  by  the  Union,  but  that  if 
' Get  in  touch  at  once  with  raphers,  733  Toulouse  Street,  minutes,  Secretary­Treasurer's fi­ finan'cial  report and  Headquarters  their  beefs  were  phony  they 
James" A.  Cuddihy,  37  Wall  St.,  New  Orleans., 
nancial  report.  Headquarters  re­ report  to  the  membership.  Port  should  not  expect  the  Union  or 
XXX 
lirB  New  York ..5,  N.  Y. 
port 
to  tiiie  membership.  Port  Agent  reported  on  the  present  the  membership  to  go  out  on  a 
1­V^ &gt;.• ' 
EDDIE 
X  X.  X 
Agent  reported  that  shipping  status  of  the  Cities  Service  beef,  limb  for  tbem.  Motion  by  Butts 
WILLIAM  CAPPS 
"Everything okay  at  home,  but  during  the  past  two  weeks  had  pointing  dht  the  possibility  that  carried  recommending that Head­
Joseph  Simmons,  970  Goss  write:  Frank." 
been  fair,  but  not  sufficiently  a  strike  could  be  declared  at  quarters  attempt  to  secure  in­
Avenue,  Louisville,  Kentucky, 
XXX 
good  to  cjlear  the  beach  of  men  any  time.  He  also  discussed ( the  nerspring  mattresses  aboard  all 
asks  you  to  get  in  touch  with 
E.  PANTAS  ' 
who  piled  up during the'previous  shipping  situation  in  Norfolk.  contracted  vessels.  Amendment 
gs;'­  Aim." 
F.  CLARK 
period  Of  poor  shijpping.  The  Motion  carried  to  refer  to  Dis­ carried  to  table  motion  until 
XXX 
Youf  suitcases,  which  were  Sand  Craft,  which  had  been  ex­ patcher  aH  requests  for  excuses  Cities  Service  beef  has  been  set­
SS  MANGORE 
cleared  by  Customs,  have  been  pected  to  crew  up  here,  is 
from  tonight's  meeting.  Under  tled.  Headquarters  report  wa^ 
(Sejrt.  22­  Get*  28,  1949) 
held  at  Manh6tlan  Storage  and  hot  ready  arid  as  soon  aS 
Good  and  Welfare,  several  Bro­ not  given  inasmiich  as Seeretaryr 
&gt;  Spivey„ Youtzey  and  the  Deck  Warehouse  Company,  801  Sev­ ther  information  is  available  it  thers flipped  their  lids  about  the 
Treasurer  and  other  Headquar­
angineer  on  this  voyage  send  enth  Avenue,  New  York  City,  will  be  posted.  Things  do  not  relatively  poor  prospects  of  ters  officials  werq  at  mcetiuB 
li'-.
your  addresses  to  Lawrence  Hit­ since  last  October.  If  not  claim­ look  too  goed  for  the  iiOming  shipping  out  of  this  port  at  with  Cities  Service  representa­
chher,: 183  South  East  Avenue,  ed  before  Odtbber,  1950,  the suit­ two weeks. JUJ  preparations have  presfent.'  Meeting  adjourned  at  tives  and  were  still  in  sessiori 
i  flridgteton.  New  Jersey,  for  your  cases  and  contents  will  be  sold  be^i  made  here  ih  the  event  of 
PM,  urith  89  members' pres­ when  the  meeting  concluded  at 
at  auction. 
a  strike aghihist  the  Cities  SerV­' ent ­­

A&amp;G  Shipping  From  Feb.  16  To  Mmh 1 

u 

• 

• • • Mir 

:'V: 

�T  B ^  S  RA FABMMS,  L O fS 

10,^ 

' 

,  u/A'­ '•  
7%' U  •  •  • *''• ,: 
..lTP'*fi.  ­''ii&amp;&gt;­

• 

. 

' 

r 

Page  jSlfrea 

I, ,'..  .';u.«^.itiiiijri  'II  "  J. 

HELPING  GTHBR  TRADE  UNIONISTS 

Honest, It's A Wonifer 
Any  BHIs  Get  Passed 
Maybe  you've  wondered  why  13.  The  Senate  subcommittee 
it  takes  so  long  for  Congress  to  send.?  the  bill  to  the  full  com­
enact  a  bill  into  law.  Or  what  mittee. 
has  happened  to  a  bill  you  are  14.  The  full  committee  studies 
vitally  interested  in — let's  say  the  measure  and finally  approves 
the  Seamen's  Bill  of  Rights. 
it. 

• pa 

X^\ 

m 

/.• I*" I 

Let's  trace  a  bill  which  is  in­ T5.  Then  the  bill  is  given  a 
troduced  in  the  House  and final­ place  on  the  Senate  calendar. 
ly  makes  it  way  to  the  statute  16.  At  the  proper  time the full • 
books: 
Senate debates  the measures.  The 
1.  A  Congressman  introduces  Senate  may  pass  a  bill  differing 
his  bill,  say,  to  build  a  new  somewhat from  the one approyed 
bridge  over  a  river  in  his  dis­ by  the  House. 
trict. 
17.  Then  the  measure  goes  to 
a 
2.  The  bill  is  referred  to  the  conferen^ie  committee  made  up 
of  Senators  and  Representatives. 
proper  committee. 
18.  The  conference  committee 
3.  A  subcommittee  is  appoint­
agrees 
on  a  measure  which  it 
ed  to  study  the  measure. 
thinks  will  be  accepted  by  both 
4.  Public  hearings  are  held. 
Supporting  other  sections  of  organized  labor  involved  in  legitimate  beefs  is  one  of  the  Persons  for  and  against  the  pro­ Hpuses. 
rules  most  Seafarers  live  by.  Here  some  of  the  boys  are  doing  it  again  in  Philadelphia  where  ject  are  heard. • E
  xpert  testimony*  19.  The  bill  agreed  on  by  the 
AFL  Cooks  imd  Waiters  are  picketing  a  union­bucking  restaurant.  Among  the  pickets  are  SIU  of  the  subcommittee  research  conference  committee  goes  back 
^nembers  John  Gardner,  R.  A.  Finneran,  Pete  Bite.  fi. E.  Spencer.  John  Smith  and  A.  Pieton­
to  the  House  and  Senate. 
staff  is  presented. 
viski.  Merwyn  Watson.  Chief  Electrician,  submitted  the  photo. 
5.  The  subcommittee  reports  20.  The  House  must  vote  on 
the  bill  to  the  full  committee.  the  conference  bill. 
6.  The  full  committee  studies  21.  The  Senate  must  vote  on 
the  measure  and finally  reports  it  also. 
it  to  the  House. 
22.  If  both  House  and  Senate 
7.  The  bill  is  placed  on  the  agree  on  the conference  measure, 
propier  House  calendar  to  await  then  the final  bill  goes  to  the 
President. 
its  turn  for  consideration. 
8.  The  measure  is  debated.  It  23.  The  President  decides 
(Continued from Page 1)
can  be  passed,  rejected  or  sent  whether  he  should  sign  the  bill, 
They  point  to  the  fact  that,  back  to  committee  for  further  thus  making  it  law,  or  veto  it. 
ever  since  the  end  of  the  war,  changes. 
24.  If  the  bill  is  vetoed,  the 
certain  real  estate  interests  have  9.  If  ­the  bill  is  passed  by  the  House  and  Senate  can  enact  it' 
been  .anxious  to  have  the  gov­ House,  it  is  sent  to  the  Senate.  into  law  by  overriding  the  veto 
SS  STEEL  ADVOCATE 
|H.  Gorbett,  $2.00;  J.  Martin,  $2.00; 
ernment 
place  the­  Manhattan  10.  In  the  Senate  the  measure  with  a  two­thirds  majority  in 
T.  John«on,  $2.00;  J.  A.  Prodey,  V.  Weldman,  $2.00;  V.  E.  U.  Dindia, 
$9.|0;  T.  Snow,  $2.00;  M.  S.  Grant,  $4.00:  R.  E.  King,  $4.00;  C.  W.  Beach  properties  on  sale.  If  suc­
is  referred  to  the  proper  com­ both  Houses. 
$2.00:  B.  Smith,  $2.00:  L.  Tabarrini,  Crafford,  $4.00;  J.  P,  Hillman,  $4.00;  cessful  in  this  attempt,  the  pri­
mittee. 
$2.00;  W.  Budzlnski,  $2.00;  C.  Guer­ F.  S.  •  Mitchell,  $5.00;  C.  C.  Hunter,  vate  operatoi­s  could  make  a 
Of  course,  anywhere  along  the 
ring,  $2.00:  E.  Aubusson,  $1.00;  J.  $5.00:  L.  M.  Thome,  $5.00;  Wm. 
11.  A  Senate  subcommittee  is  line  in  the  legislative  procedure 
gold 
mine 
of 
the 
property, 
be­
Meeks,  $5.00';  R.  W.  Daniels,  $2.00:  Murrell,  $5.00;  V.  A.  Reid,  $5.00; 
set  up  to  study  the  measure. 
the  bill  may  be  killed  by  a  vgte 
W.  Stank,  $5.00:  R.  Beale,  $1.00:  A.  M.  W.  Evans,  $5.00;  F.  Jenkins,  $5.00;  cause  of  its  desirable  beachfront 
Bones,  $1.00;  E.  Madias,  $1.00;  F. ;C.  W.  Mariner,  $5.00;  Wm.  M.  Kuhl.  location. 
12.  Once  again  public  hear­ of  a  subcommittee,  a  full  com­
Bona,  $2.00;  J.  McKenzie,  $1.00;,  A.  $5.00;  C.  W.  Christoffersen,  $5.00;  H. 
mittee  or  either  house. 
Meanwhile,  the  City  of  New  ings  are  held. 
Ferrara,  $2.00;  V.  Mahon,  $1.00;  A.  R.  Whismant,  $3.00; .C.  Carlson,  $2.00; 
York, 
which 
owns 
the 
Neponsit 
Strachan,  $1.00;  M.  Kalkis,  $2.00;  V.  S.  Kuhl,  $1.00;  A.  T.  Vaughn,  $2.00. 
SS  ROBIN  HOOD 
Hospital,  is  asking  the  USPHS 
M.  Greenwald,  $1.00;  J.  Boletcheck, 
IN  THE  SPIRIT  OF  BROTHERHOOD 
$2.00;  A.  Leiner,  $2.00;  M.  Coffman, 
Larry  Jones,  $1.00;  Thomas  O.  Man­ to  return  it  as  soon  as  other  fa­
$1,00;  F.  Quinonez,  $1.00;  J.  Toro,  Ion,  $1.00;  L.  Proper.  $2.00;  E..  V. 
cilities  are  found­  The  city  is 
Corral,  $2.00;  H.  R.  Dombrowski,  $3.00; 
$1.00. 
G.  F.  Abundo,  $3.00;  A.  F.  Chysna,  short  more  than  6,000  beds  for 
: 
SS  PENMAR  ' 
$2.00;  J.  Norupberger,  $2.00;  Luigi  its  own­patients. 
H.  A.  Simmon,  $2.00:  J.  Marshall, 
I  lovino,  $3.00;  A.  Kuberski.  $2.00; 
Neponsit  Hospital  authorities 
&gt;1.00;  F.  C.  Clod.  $2.00;  S.  F.  Koenig, 
,  Donald  Mease,  $3.00;  J.  L.  Higgin­
$5.00;  V.  E.  Thompson,  $20.00;  T.  F. 
disclosed 
that  80  percent  of  their 
1  botham,  $2.00;  Pedro  Anlceto,  $2.00; 
Walker,  $2.00;  C.  M.  Webb,  $1.00; 
present 
patients 
are  seameil— 
|K.  T.  Stout,  $2.00;  C.  A.  Gomes,  $1.00; 
C.  F.  Gropevant,  $2.00;  Wm.  Bobaiek, 
Pietro  Amadro,  $1.00;  I.  Galarco,  $3.00;  among  them  membere  of  the 
$2.00;  J.­W.  O'Neill,  $3.00;  F.  Lillard, 
E.  W.  Andoreon,  $5;00;  Peter  King,  SIU—and  that  more  than  one­
$5.00;  J.  Dejesus,  $1.00. 
$2.00;  Fiancis  Teller,  $1.00;  Steve  Kar­
SS  BRET  HART 
lak,  $2.00:  Charles  E.  Rogers.  $3.0&gt;:  third  of  them  are  residents  of 
1 
X  I* 
F.  Carter,  $1.00;  L.  Sawyer,  $3.00:  James  TutwUer, &gt;1.00:  Arthur  E.  Huhh,  the  Ne)v  York  area. 

Old  Vet  Outfits 
Oppose  Hospital 
For Sick Seamen 

'M.  Massey,  $5.00:  J.  Short,  $1.00;  $2.00;  T.  C.  Lyons,  $2.00;  John  A. 
R.  Simmons,  $1.00;  E.  Broaders,  $2.00;  Whittakar,  $1.00. 

v;. ' 

Directoi^ Of  SIU  HaUs 
SIU,  A&amp;G  District 

V 

ASST.  SECRETARY­TREASURERS 
RobeFt  Matthewa  '  Lloyd  Gardner 
Joseph  Volpian 

:  V  :iV­

.  .'­v  " .0*  ;&gt;­  l  "  .  11.  A  ' 

. 

­f.  ^ 

The following  men  have money 
BALTIMORE 
14  North  Gay  St. 
William  Rentz,  Agent 
Mulberry­  4540 
due  them,  as  of  last  November. 
BOSTON 
270  State  St. 
Get  in  touch  with  Smith  &amp; 
Ben  Lawson,  Agent  Richmond  2­0140 
Johnson, 
60  Beaver  St.,  New 
Dispatcher 
Richmond  2­0141 
HONOLULU.,.. 
16  Merchant  St 
York 
4, 
New 
York. 
. 
GALVESTON 
308 Vi—23rd  St. 
Phone  5­8777 
Keith  AIsop,  Agent 
Phone  2­8448 
SS  JOHN  A.  DONALD 
PORTLAND,,..,,Ill  W.  Burnsldo  St 
LAKE  CHARLES,  La  ­• 1410 Ryan  St 
Beacon  4336  •   Walter  G.  Butferton,  Davis  W. 
L.  S,  Johnston,  Agent 
RICHMOND,  Calif. 
.257  Sth  St  Gilbert,  Jack  A.  Helms,  George 
MOBILE 
1  South  Lawrence  St* 
Phone  RS99 
N.  Haeliwai,  Fred  Murphy,  Wil­
Cal  Tanner,  Agent 
Phone  2­1754 
SAN  FRANCISCO.........59  Clay  St 
NEW  ORLEANS 
523  Bienville  St. 
liam 
L.  Pinkman,  Charles  W. 
r 
Douglas  2­8363 
E. Sheppard, Agent  Magnolia  0112­6113 
SEATTLE 
,.86  Seneca  St  Stokely,  Rbt.  G.  Templeton, 
NEW  YORK 
51  Beaver  St. 
Main  0290  Charles  D.  Westman,  Steve  Col­
Joe  Aigina,  Agent  '  HAnover  2­2784 
WILMINGTON., i.... 440  Avalon  Blvd. 
eccki,  (iharles  O.  Giilikin,  Seth 
NORFOLK 
,.127­120­  Bank  St. 
Terminal  4­3131 
Ben  "Rees,  Agent 
Phone  4­1083 
B.  Hinton,  Robert  Layko,  Simon 
PHILADELPHIA 
337  Market  St. 
H.  Nugent,  Chas.  W.  Sanderson, 
S.  Cardullo,  Agent 
Market  7­1635 
John  Straka,  Andrew  R.  Tonon, 
SAfl  FRANCISCO.. 
85  Third  St. 
Jeff  Morrison,  Agent  Douglas  2­5475  MONTREAL...;....404  Le  Moyne  St  Elonza  L.  Zedaker,  Roy  L.  Cuth­
UNiversity  2427  rell,  Harry  Hayaski,  Farris  M. 
SAN  JUAN,  PR......2S2  Ponce  de  Leon 
FORT  WILLIAM  .IISU  Syndicate  Ave. 
Sal  Colls,  Agent  ­
Jones,  Herman  L.  Moore,  Luis 
Ontario 
Phone  3­3221 
SAVANNAH 
,i...,2  Abercorn  St. 
... ,..128&gt;/a  Hollis  St  H.  Olivera,  Arsenni Sooma,  Gun­
E.  Bryant,  Agent 
Phone  3­1728  HALIFAX,, 
Phone  3­8911  nar  K.  Svalland,  Jessie  B.  Vol­
SEATTLE.  .. 
.2700  1st  Ave. 
103  Durham  St.  iva,  Steve  Zouvelos.  , 
Wm.  McKay,  Agent 
Seneca  4570  PORT  COLBORNE 
Phone  8881 
TAMPA.... .1809­1811  N.  Franklin  St. 
SS  PONTUS  H.  ROSS 
Ray  White,  Agent 
Phone  2­1323  TORONTO.,..,... :...111A  JarvJs  St 
^ack 
W.  ATellanes,  Joseph  D. 
Elgin 
8719 
WILMINGTON, Calif.,  22714  Avalon Blvd. 
E.  B.  TiUey,  Aaeht  Terminal  4­2874  VICTORIA.  B,C.  .....602 Boughton  St  Long,.  Berkeley  Peters,  Warren 
Empire  4831  Thorp,  Henry  R.  Gordon,  Mi­
HEADOUARTERS, ,51 Beaver St„  N.Y.C. 
VANCOUVER,......*. .868  Hamilton  St. 
SECRETARY­TREASURER 
chal  Michalik,  David  Pontes, 
' 
Pacific  7644 
'Paul  Hall 
HEADQUARTERS 
812  McGlU  St  Bobby  L.  Wilson,  Thpmas  B. 
DIPRCTOR  OF  ORGANIZATION 
Montreal 
Plateau  870  Hampel,  Alli  Nasroen,  Nicholas 
Lindaey;  VnilUama 

SUP 

Ipftf 

^ 

­5,­ 

•• 

I 

Canadian  District 

Sargent. 

­pi 

The  crew  of  the  SS  Del  Norte  h8&gt;  a  long  record  of  aiding 
those  less  fortunate  than  themselves.  Among  their  favorites 
are  the  children  of  the  Lutheran  Bethelehem  Orphan  Home, 
to  whom  they  contributed  more  than  $500  last  year.  Above  is 
a  plaque  ^ven  the  Home  by  the  Del  Norte  crew.'  Mado  in 
Brazil  of  colored  bulterfly  wings,  it  is  backed  by  tbe  good 
wishes  of  the  Seafarers. 

! 

.  .'P'il 

�Page  Twelve 

TB E

SEAFARERS

LOG

Fzldaf. March  10, 1950 

In  World  War  II 
By  JOHN  BUNKER 

Of  the four lifeboats that  got safely  away from 
the 
ship,  the  first  was  picked  up  by  a  freighter 
This is  the story  of  SIU ships  in  World  War  II 
13  days  later  and  the  last  was  not  found  until 
­r­the  thrilling  saga  of  the  cargo  ships  and  the 
it  had  sailed  700  miles,  its  occupants  subsisting 
men  who  sailed  them  over  the  far­flung  ocean 
on 
a  meager  ration  of  biscuits  and  water. 
bracks  to  write  an  epic  chapter  in  American 
When  the first  survivors from  the  Robin  Moor 
maritime  history. 
/ 
were  landed  and  ne­ws  of  the sinking  stirred  the 
Here  is  the  story  of  the ^torm­swept,  subma­
nation. 
President  Roosevelt  sent  a  spi^ial  mes­
rine­swept,  bomb­pocked  road  to  Russia  over  the 
sage  to  Congress.  The  date  was  June  20,' 1941. 
misty  Arctic—the  epic  of  the  ships  that  sailed 
Said  the  President: 
alone  during  the  first  hectic  months  after  Pearl 
"I  am  under  the  necessity  of  bringing  to  thd 
Harbor,  when  there  were  no  coastal  convoys 
attention rf&gt;f 
the  Congress  the  ruthless  sinking 
and  torpedoed  tankers  became  flaming  pyres 
After  the  eventual  release  of  this  ship  and* 
along  our  eastern  seaboard;  when  the  freight  her  crew,  it  was still  many  months  before  Pearl  . by  a German siibmarihe of  an American  ship, th^  _ 
ships  and  the  tankers  went  out  unprotected  and  Harbor.  Then  came  the 'incident  of  the  SIU­ Robin .Moor,  in  the  South  Atlantic  Ocean  (2^ 
unarmed,  but  never  lacked  for  crews. 
manned  SS Robin  Moor,  bound  for  South  Africa  degrees  and  40  minutes  west,  6  degrees  and  10 
Here,  too,  is  the  log  of  fighting  freighters  from  New  York,  which  was shelled  and  sunk  by  minutes  north)  while  the  vessel  was  on  the  high 
/ 
li  whose  Orelikon  guns  traced  tales  of  high  cour­ a  German  submarine,  eliciting  from  President  seas  en  route  to South  Africa. 
age  in  a  myriad  foreign  skies.  Wherever  the  Roosevelt  an  historic  pronouncement  on  freedom 
"WE  ARE  NOT  YIELDING" 
freights of  war  were needed,  these cargo  carriers  of  the seas. 
". .. . . We  must  take  it  that  notice  has  now* 
sailed  them  through. 
'  ~ 
•   Chief  Officer  Melvin  Mundy  was on  the bridge 
been 
served  upon  us  that  no  American  ship  o# 
i­'  ­SIU  ships  freighted  everything  imaginable  in  of  the Robin  Moor  at four  o'clock  in  the morning 
the  way  of  war  goods  and  the  necessities  of  life  of  May  21,  when  he saw  a  light  blinking  on  the  cargo  on  any  of  the  seven  sea^  can  consider  it­
t. to  our  Allies,  to  our  overseas  garrisons,  to  the  horizon,  signaling  in  international  code  th^  let­ self  immune from  acts of  piracy. Notice is served 
oh  us,  in  effect,  that  the  German  Reich  propose^' 
beachheads  and  the  supply  ports  for  the  fight­ ters  AAA  or "What  ship  are you?" 
so 
to intimidate the United  States  that  we would 
V  ing  fronts. 
I^r.  Mundy  answered:  "American  steamship  be dissuaded  from  carrying out  our  chosen  policy 
Robin  Moor."  Captain  William  W.  Myers»came  pf  helping  Britain  to survive. 
ASSORTED  CARGOES 
on  the  bridge,  and  to  the  Moor's  question  "Who 
". . . . Were  we  to  yield  on  this  we  would  in­
'  Ships  left  the  States  loaded  deep  with  every­ are  you?"  the  answer  was  signaled  back,  "Sub­
thing  from  cigarettes  to  Sherman  tanks;  with  marine."  This  was  followed  by  the  command,  evitably  submit  to  world  domination  at  the 
hands  of  the  present  leaders  of  the  German 
barbed  wire,  guns,  powder,  railroad  cars,  air­ "Don't  use  your  wireless." 
Reich. 
We  are  not  yielding  and  we  do  not  pro­
planes,  dehydrated  eggs,  beans,  grain,  flour^ 
A  boat  was  then  launched  from  the  freighter,­
. 
bombs,  trucks,  clothing,  oil,  gasoline­^and  so  according  to the  U­boat's  orders, and  pulled  over  pose  to  yield." 
There were  other incidents  involving  American 
many other items that  a  complete  manifest  could  to the  submarine, where  the Germans  questioned 
ships 
prior  to  Pearl  Harbor:  the  bombing  of 
never  be made  of  it  all. 
First  Mate  Mundy  about  the  vessel's  destination 
In  addition  to  helping  supply  half  the  world  and  cargo.  The  sub  commander  insisted  that  the  the Steel  Seafarer , in  the Gulf  of  Suez;  the sink­
with  fuel,  food  and  the  tools  of  war,  ships  of  Robin  Moor  carried  contraband,  despite  Mr.  ing  of  the  freighter  Lehigh;  the  mysterious  dis­. 
the  Seafarers  International  Union  brought  back  Mundy's  assertions that  the  cargo  included  noth­ appearance  of  the tanker  Astral, and  the sinking 
to  this,  the  world's  arsenal  of  democracy,  the  ing  more  warlike  than  pleasure  automobiles,  en­ of  the freighter  Sagahodac  only  four  days  befor0 
vital  raw  materials  without  which  a  war  effort  gines,  tin.  plate,  and  general  merchandise  for  the  attack  upon  Honolulu. 
But it  was in January, 1942,  that  the  merchant 
on  such  a  tremendous  scale  would  have  been  South  African  stores. 
impossible. 
Crew  and  passengers  were  given  20  minufes  marine felt  the full  fury  of  the  war  at  sea.  And 
Little  has  been  said  about  this  homeward­ to  dress  and  get  into  the  boats,  after  which  the  then, with  a suddenness  that found  lis totally  un­
bound  traffic from  foreign  lands during  the  war,  sub  put  33  shells  into  the  ship,  sinking  her  in  prepared,  the  U­boats  struck—not  in  foreign 
but  it  was  just  as  important  as  the  bombs,  the  18  minutes  and  without  any  chance  to  dispatch  waters  nor  on  the  convoy  routes  to  Europe,  but 
along  the'shores  of  our  own  Atlantic  coast. 
grain  and  the  cannon  that  were  carried  out  of  an  SOS. 
One  of  the  first  ships  to  feel  this  Nazi  thrust 
Until  weeks  later  nothing  was  known  of  the 
American  ports  in  an  endless  stream  for  five 
freighter's fate, for  the sdfbmarine  departed  with­ in  the  western  Atlantic  was  the  SlU­manned 
war­harried  years. 
City  of  Atlanta. 
Our  freighters  and  those  of  our  Allies  brought  out  reporting  the  incident  and  the 45  crewmem­
r (Continued  Next  Issue) 
to  this  country  manganese,  burlap,  mica,  rubber,  bers  and  passengers  were  left  adrift. 
timber,  bauxite,  iron  ore,  sugar,  jute,  spices  and 
hundreds  of  other  industrial  necessities,  .with­
out  which  we  would  have  found  the  fighting  of 
a war  not  only  most  inconvenient  but downright 
impossible. 
They  also  helped  to  carry  what  normal  com­
merce  there  was  between  the  United  States  and 
Caribbean,  Central  and  South  American  coun­
tries,  which  depended  upon  us for  the  numerous 
I  requirements  of  daily  existence, 
p 
When  the  war  at  sea  was  finally  through  and 
1^  bright  lights  shone  through  the  open  ports  of 
s?  ships  at  "sea,  on  peaceful  missions  once  again, 
p  the  Seafarers  International  Union  had  paid  a 
heavy  price  in  ships  and  men. 
The  merchant  marine  as  a  whole  lost  6,000 
seamen,  dead  or  missing.  A  total  of  1,554  Amer­
ican  flag  ships  were  lost  by  torpedoing,  bomb­
I  ing,  mines  and  the  varied  other  accidents  of 
war.  Of  these,  no  less  than  570  were  lost  in 
g. direct  action  with  the  enemy! 
Our  merchant  marine  had  its  baptism  of  fire 
long  befofe  Pearl  Harbor.  The  SS  City  of  Ray­
yille  struck  a  mine  and  sank  off  Australia  in 
1940,  to  be  followed  by  the  Charles  Pratt,  a 
Standard  Oil'  Company  tanker,  Which  was  tor­
pedoed,  off  West  Africa  in  December  of  the 
same  year. 
Even  before  these actions,  the SS  City  of  Flint 
had  made  the  headlines  and  caused  an  inter 
national  furor,  when  it  was  captured,  while  en 
These  men.  SIU  survivors  of  torpedoed  ships,  are  marching  in  the  "New  York 
J 
i  'route to Norway in October, 1939,  by  the German 
At  War"  Parade  in  June.  ISf?.  Although  the  US  had  been  at  war  only  six  months. 
pocket  battleship Deutschland  on  the charge  that\ 
473  Seafarers  had  already  been  Ibst  at  sea  due  to  enemy  action.  Before  the  w^r  *  J 
it was  carrying  contraband. 
» 
' 
'had  ended,  the  SIU  casualties  had  risen  to''1258. 
• 
Beginning  with  this  Issue,  the  SEAFARERB 
LOG  will  present  a  series  oi  articles  on  the 
role  of  the  SIU  members  in  the  Second  World 
Wa'&lt;  Written  by  John  Bunker,  retired  Seafarer 
now  with  the  "Christian  Science  Monitor,"  this 
thrilling  story  of  outstanding  heroif^ will,  at 
the  conclusion  of  the  series,  be  republished  in 
book  form  for  those  who  wish  to  have  a  per­
manent  record  of  their  Brothers'—and  their  own 
—^sacrifices  and  heroism  in  the  face  of  death. 

r 

.  •

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="7">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42905">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1950-1959</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44875">
                  <text>Volumes XII-XXI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44876">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44877">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10195">
                <text>March 10, 1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10242">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10294">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10346">
                <text>Vol. XII, No. 5</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10372">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10398">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10428">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
CITIES SERVICE SIGNS UP, AVERTING STRIKE BY SIU&#13;
OLD-LINE VET GROUPS HIT AT SICK SEAMEN&#13;
SEAMEN'S UNIONS TO DISCUSS HIRING HALL DEFENSE&#13;
WE'VE JUST BEGUN&#13;
SABOTAGE IN FRANCE&#13;
EMANCIPATOR OF AMERICAN SEAMEN&#13;
TWO-WEEK SPURT EASES BEACHLOAD ON WEST COAST&#13;
NOT BRAGGING SAYS SAVANNAH - BUT WHO IS?&#13;
VESSELS OUT OF BONEYARD CHEER NEW YORK&#13;
IN-TRANSITS BRING FEW JOBS TO BOSTON&#13;
VESSELS OUT OF BONEYARD CHEER NEW YORK&#13;
PREPARING FOR CS STRIKE - JUST IN CASE&#13;
MOWBRAY SOFTBALLERS TAKE 4 OF 5 CONTESTS&#13;
RAYMOND FOSTER, MEMBER OF SIU SINCE 1938, DEAD&#13;
'STUCK IN MUD' GETS GOING AFTER 6 DAYS&#13;
HONEST, IT'S A WONDER ANY BILLS GET PASSED&#13;
THE SEAFARERS IN WORLD WAR II</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10429">
                <text>3/10/1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13077">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="64">
        <name>1950</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="981" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="2426">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/3be4ed7dd780a48d5065cf5c3c8bcb54.pdf</src>
        <authentication>7327553018f4947f2f08a1cd171cfb0f</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="48539">
                    <text>"ir­jwr 
.• • ­kt  v.'.*;  .r&gt;~?V'­v' 

Maritime Uniims Join Forces 
To Save  Union  Hiring  Halls 

St­

WASHINGTON—In  an  unprecedented  mutual 
aid pact, seven seafaring  unions, including the Sea­
farers  International Union, gave notice of  a collec­
tive fight for retention  of  their union hiring halls. 
At  conferences  held  here  on  March  20  and  21, 
representatives  of  the  seven  unions,  AFL,  CIO 
and Independent, made it clear that any past differ­
ences  would  be  swept  aside  in  their  determination 
to  preserve  the  hiring  hall  and«the  rotary  system 
of  shipping, which they described as "the lifeblood"*. 
Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf  District, Seafarers International Union of  NA  of 
their  organizations. 
NEW  YORK,  N.  Y.,  FRIDAY,  MARCH  24.  1950 
The seven seagoing unions, representing 170,000; 
No.  6 
VOL.  XII 
•seamen, 
 
drew  up  a five­point 
program  pledging  aid  to  one 
another  in  the  event  they  are 
threatened  by  litigation  "invok­
ing  the  anti­labor  features  o£ 
the  Taft­Hartley  Act." 
A  joint statement  revealed  that 
the  seven  Unions  would  call 
upon  Congress  to  pass  the  Mag­
nuson­Lesinski  amendment  which 
would  exempt  the  hiring  halla 
Cities  Service,  but  Esso  and  the  about  a  year  and  half  ago,  when  Fsso  stooge  union.  He  pursued  from  the  Taft­Hartley  ban  on 
By  ORGANIZING  STAFF 
other  major  unorganized  tanker  CS  borrowed from  Esso the  num­ the  same  tactics  in  the  CS fleet  the  closed  shop. 
In  the  wake  of  the  announce­ outfits,  pitched  against  the  SIU.  ber  one  man  in  ETMA,  Esso's  that  have  so  far  been  successful 
ment  that  the  Cities Service  Ma­ All  were  vitally  concerned  with  company  union. 
in  Esso.  The  only  difference  was  CRIMPS  WOULD  RETURN 
rine  Division  had  signed  an  SIU  smashing  genuine  unionization 
that  in  CS  he  failed  miserably.  "Loss  of  the  union  hiring 
ETMA  EQUALS  CTMA 
Vi
• ' contract  covering  its  16  ships,  of  their  employees  and  so  they 
This  man  was  David  Furman,  Outside  of  himself  and  a  few  practice,"  the  statement  said, 
there  were  rumblings  of  long­ made  Cities  Service  the  testing  who  began  organizing  the  com­ other  comprany­paid  hacks,  "would  bring  back  crimp  and 
seething  discontent  from  seamen  ground. 
pany  dominated  Cities  Service  CTMA  could  attract  no  mem­ shanghaii  days  and  would  result 
sailing  on  unorganized  tjuikers—  Esso's  role  in  the  Cities  Serv­ Tankermen's Association  (CTMA)  bers. 
in  widespread  chaos  in  the mari­
i ­
particularly  those  of  the  Stand­
time  industry. 
Of 
course, 
men 
aboard 
CS 
ice's  futile  but  hysterical  resist­ immediately­ upon  going  into  the 
ard  Oil  Company  of  New  Jersey.  ance  to  the  Union  chosen  by  CS fleet.  Furman  carried—and  ships  signed  CTMA  pledge  cards  "This  would  aUow  the  Com­
Almost  as  significant  as  the  their  employees  became  clear  still  does—^Book.  No.  1  in  the 
munist  Party,  Trotskyites  and 
(Continued  on  Page  10) 
Union's  victory  in  cracking 
splinter  groups  to  continue  their 
through  the so­called  paternalism 
wrecking  tactics  in  the  maritime 
of  a  niajor  East  Coast  tanker 
industry,"  the  statement  pointed 
company  for  the first  time,  was 
out. 
the  revelation ­that  an  apparent 
The  seven  unions  stressed  the 
majority  of  Standard  Oil seamen, 
The  interim  agreement  signed  by  Cities  Service  Oil  Company  appears  on  pages  fact  that  the  various  communist 
members  of  the  stooge  "union"  9  and  19  of  this  issue,  along  with  explanatory  comments  by  the  Negotiating  Com­
factions  "are  actively  engaged  in 
known  as  Esso  Tankermen's  As­
trying  to  destroy  our  union  hir­
mittee. 
sociation,  want  no  part  of  com­
ing 
practices  in  order  to  further 
Meanwhile,  the  Committee  is  meeting  with  the  company  to  draft  acceptable 
pany  unionism  in  any  shape  or 
their  international  disruption  by 
working  rules  for  the  balance  of  the  contract.  And  a  good  part  of  the  success  of 
form. 
invoking  the  anti­labor  features 
these  negotiations  will  depend  upon  the  way  you, the  Cities Service  tankermen, are  of  the  Taft­Hartley  Act." 
ESSO  MEN 
Taking  a  joint  position  on 
Within  the  space  of  a  few  able  to  organize  yourselves  and  act  as  Union  crews. 
By 
this 
we 
mean: 
do 
your 
jobs, 
and 
do 
them 
well. 
Act 
as 
a 
unit, 
and 
not 
as^ 
other 
problems  of  mutual  con­
days  after,  the  ,  SlU­negotiated 
contract  was  made  known  on  groupings  of  individuals.  Elect  your  Department  and  Ships  Delegates  to  handle  your  cern,  the conferees  adopted  reso­
the  waterfront,  Esso  tankermen  beefs  and  questions  as  to  interpretation  of  the  interim  agreement  and  the  old  CS  lutions  calling  for  an  end  of 
began  sounding  out  SIU  organ­
working  rules.  If  you  have  beefs  among  yourselves,  handle  them  in  your  shipboard  Coast  Guard control  over civilian 
seamen,  and  for  collective  acUon 
izers  on  tJiG  possibility  of  an or­
to  halt  ship  transfers  to  Pana­
ganizing  effort  in  that fleet,  to  or  departmental  meetings—don't  run  to  topside. 
But  the  important  things,  to  repeat:  do  your  job  well,  and  act  as a  unit, so  that  manian,  Honduran  and  liberian 
win  them  genuine collective  bar­
registry. 
the  company  will  learn  that  SIU  unionism  is  not  only  best  for  the  crew  but—sur­
gaining  representation  and  bona­
fide  Union  security. 
prisingly  enough—;­for  the  company,  too.  Remember  that  once  organized  you  were 
TAX  EVADERS 
From  the  number  of  queries  able  to  get  things—wage  increases,  job  security  and  Union  protection  —  that  you 
Charging  that  the  ship  trans­
it  was  clear  that  unorganized 
fers  are  effected  to  "evade  US 
weren't  able  to  get  for  yourselves  as  individuals. 
tankermen  in  the  old­line  anti­
Another  thing,  be  on  the  lookout  for  those  few  Bosuns  and  Stewards — who  taxes  and  safety  laws  and  to 
union  companies  are  anxious  for 
have  been  ruled  supervisory  employees  by  the  NLRB  and  outside  of  this  contract  depress  wages  by  intensifying 
legitimate, trade  union  represen­
unemployment  and  breaking 
'tation. Up  to  now  any expression  —who  are  still  CTMA­minded.  There  are 16  jobs for  each  of  these  ratings,  and  over  down  the  union  standard  of  liv­
of  preferenccj  even  in  off­the­
50  men  in  each  group  desperate  for  jobs,  and  some  of  them  will  try  to  brownnose  ing,"  the  unions  agreed  to  sup­
record  conversations,  for  union 
for  a  chance  at  a  job—not  all  of  them,  but  some  will. So  button  your  lip  when  they  port  the  International  Transport­
protection  was  taboo  among  un­
workers  Federation  in  eliminat­
turn  the  conversation  to  the  Union.  It's  all  right, of  course,  to , tell  them  what  a  dif­
organized  tankermen. 
ing 
"this  union­busting  tactic." 
But. with  the  signing  of  the  ference  it  is. working  under  ^n  SIU  contract,  but  the  internal  affairs  of  the  Union  The'  SIU  is  affiliated  with  the 
Cities Service  company, after  one  are  definitely  not  their  business. 
ITF. 
of  the  most  bitter  and  seemingly 
But^ things  are  shaping  up.  Brothers,  and  before  long  conditions  on  Cities  Ser­
Also  approved  was  a  resolu­
impossible fights,  the  SIU  has  vice  tankers,  like  the  wages  and  job  security  you  already  have  won,  will  soon  be 
tion 
declaring  "hot  war"  on 
exploded  the  myth  that  large 
tops 
in 
the 
industry. 
(Continued 
on  Page  3) 
tanker  companies,  with  . their 
dominated  and  controlled  "un­
ions,"  are  impregnable. 
THIS  IS  IT 
Several  Esso  tankermen  in­
formed  SIU  organizers  that  the  WASHINGTON  —  The Federal  the  Federal  Mediation " Service,  letter  to  the  subcommittee  on  timony  in  favor  of  the  hiring 
halls  has  been  overwhelming, 
victory  over  Cities  Service  was  Government's  top  labor  media­ told  a  Senate  Labor  subcom'mit­ March  21. 
what  tanker  personnel  have  tor  has  warned  that  a  complete  tee  that  outlawing  of  the  present  On  the  same  day,  the  Senate  with  shipowners,  as  well  .as 
practices  would  touch  off  nation­ group,  which  is  studying  the  union  representatives,  urging 
been  waiting  fon 
tie­up  of  all  US  shipping  would  wide  strikes  and  work  stoppages.  hiring  hall  question,  heard  SIU 
their  retention.  Senator  Warren 
They  characterized  the  SIU 
drive  on  Cities  Service  as  the  result  if  the  union  hiring  halls  Ching  said  that  he  and  mem­ President  Harry  Lundeberg  tes­ Magnuson, co­author  of  the Mag­
bers  of  his ^ staff  felt  that  a  re­ tify  in  defense  of  continued  ope­ nuson­Lesinski amendment  which  • ­­i­
contest  on  which  hinged  the  are finally  outlawed. 
hopes  of  unorganized  tankermen  Declaring  that  all  seafaring  turn  to the  pre­union  hiring  hall  ration  of  the  hiring  halls,  which,  would  return  the  hiring  halls 
for  eventual  freedom  from  the  unions,  as  well  as  most  employ­ system  would  have  a  most  dis­ he  said,  were  in  the  best  inter­
to  the  pre­Taft­Hartley  statui, 
domination  by  conipany­controll­ ers  in  the  maritime  industry,  fa­ turbing  effect  on  labor­manage­ ests  of  the  seamen  and  the  in­
also  testified  in  support  of  the 
dustry. 
vored  retention  of  the  hiring  ment  relations  in  the  industry; 
ed  "unions." 
His 
warning 
was 
set 
forth 
in 
a 
Thus 
far 
at 
th&lt;. 
hearings, 
tes­
present  hiring  methods. 
in this fight,­they  saw not  only  halls,  Cyrus  Ching,  Director  of 

Sm Defeat  Of  CS Company  Union 
Raises  Hope  Of  Esse  Tankemen 

Cities Service Men Can Influence Final Pact 

Witnesses Back Union Hiring Haii At Senate Hearings 

�rM'­',  :.  •   VK­::"­. 

I^age  Two 

• • ..••  ; '  ­• ­• • .V'irn 
 

HE  SE  A  F  A  R  E  RS  L O  G 

,'• • &gt;* 
.1­; f' 

SEAFARERS  LOG 
Published  Every  Other  Week  by  the 
SEAFARERS  INTERNATIONAL  UNION 
OF  NORTH  AMERICA 

Atlantic and  Gulf  District 
Afiiliated  with  the  American  Federation  of  Lahor 
At  51  Beaver  Street,  New  York  4,  N. Y. 
HAnover  2­2784 
Reentered  as  second  class  matter  August  2,  1949,  at  the  Post 
Office  in  New  York,  N.Y.,  under  the  Act  of  August  24,  1912. 
267 

Outmoded—And  Outvoted 
No matter  how  up­to­date  they  try  to dress  up  their 
company­  sponsored  "unions,"  the  old­line,  anti­union* 
tanker  outfits  cannot  conceal  the  mustiness  of  their  trap­
pings. 

•)&gt; 

\ 

A  company  union  is  a  company  union,  no  matter 
how  you  look  at  it,  and  there's  something  about  these 
slickly  conceived  straitjackets  that  smells  of  a  dirty  deal 
for  the  seamen  they're  designed  for. 
What  makes  the  smell  particularly  easy  to  detect  is 
that  the  last  remaining  sponsors  of  the  company  "union" 
ip  the  maritime field  are  the  powerful  and  sprawling  oil 
companies. 
While  their  methods  of  industrial  operations  and 
their  public  relations  policies  are  among  the  most  efficient 
and  streamlined  in  the  world,  they  still  employ  an  out­
moded  paternalism  in  their  labor  relations. 
But  no  matter  how  they strain  to appear  benevolent, 
the  fact  remains  that  they  are  giving  the seamen  who sail 
their  ships  the short  end  of  the stick. 
» 

w 

Oil  companies.  Standard  Oil  of  New  Jersey  among 
them,  have  a  notorious  history  of  exploitation.  In  their 
present­day operations,  however, 'they expend  considerable 
energy and  funds to inform  the public—and  their  workers 
—that  they  arc  good  guys. 

J.  McNULTY 
B.  L.  KRIEG 
W.  WALKER 
C.  NEUMAIER 
W.  MEEHAM 
L.  KNICKERBACKER, 
W.  LAMB 
W.  HAYES 
W.  CARROLL 
RN.  FRENCH 

­ 
The cleverly­turned phrases of  their newspaper, maga­
f  2ine and  radio advertisements always say,  in effect:  "We're 
;;  for  a  better  America."  "Our  know­how  benefits  our 
workers  and  the  public." 

Men Now h The  Mtm HespHoh 

if

tr

BALTIMORE  HOSPITAL 
I.  WILLOUGHBY 
M. 
J,  LUCAS 
These are the  Union Brothers currently  in the marino hospitals, 
W. 
G.  WHITMER 
If  they  had  good  sound  know­how  in . their  relations  as  reported  by  the Port  Agents. These  Brothers  find  time  hanging 
M. 
B. 
BROWN 
with  their  tankermen,  these  companies  would  take  their  heavily  on  th^ hands.  Do  what  yeu  can  to  cheer  them  up  by 
V. 
L. 
STANKIEWICZ 
coinpany  unions,  wrap  them  in  bindings  and  allow  their  writing  them. 
M,  P.  PROCKAK 
employees a free voice in choosing  their own representation.  STATEN ISLAND HOSPITAL  L.  BALLESTERO 
W.  S.  WARMACK 
JOHN  T.  EDWARDS 
J.  DAVIS 
EDWIN 
C. ROBINSON' 
The vast  majority of  the American  maritime industry 
•   E.  FERRER 
E.  F.  LAMB 
THOMAS DALY 
—of  which  these  oil  tanker  outfits  are  a  part,  whether  I. SANTINO 
I.  H.  FRENCH 
D.  HAUGHT 
they  like  it  or  not—has  accepted  the  role  of  the  bona­ N. ROBERTSON 
JOSEPH  SILLAK 
W.  G.  ALSTON 
LUIS  TORRES 
J. A.  SHEA 
fide  trade union in labor­management  relations. They  have  C. E. SANCHEZ 
FRED 
ZESIGER 
G.  BELL 
' 
accepted  it  because  their  employees  chose  them  in  order  V. E. JOHNSON 
PADZIX 
T.  KIISKI 
. 
to  get  decent  wages  and  working  conditions  and,  just  as  JAMES W. BARMES 
JOHN 
i. DRISCOLL 
D. 
C. 
BREASHEARS 
H. J. OUT 
a.  important,  decent  and  equitable  treatment,  without  fear  MEYER CZRERWINSKI 
t  4  » 
•  •   of  intimidation,  blacklisting  and  all  the  other  horrors  K. JENSEN 
NEW  ORLEANS  HOSPITAL.  BOSTON  MARINE  HOSPITAL 
inherent  in  company  unionism. 
ROBERT  COLLINS 
JAMES  HILLIER 
R.  LANGFORD 
JERRY 
O'BYRNE 
C.  P.  (Slim)  THOMPSON 
G.  NOLES 
Oil  companies—like  Standard,  with~jts  stooge  Esso  JOHN  P.  PURVIS 
FRANK 
ALASAVICH 
W.  HANTUSCH 
Tanker  Men's  Association—support  the  company  "union"  J. H.  DANIELS 
F. 
FAGAN 
JR.  CRUZ 
BEN ­GORY 
as  a  means  of  staving  off  what  they  regard  as  the  threat  J. F.  GAMBLICH 
g.  J.  NAVARRE 
PETER  KOGOY 
H. 
WEBBER 
J: DENNIS 
of  genuine  trade  union  representation  for  their  personnel. 
CHARLIE  MCCARTHY 
T. 
E. 
MAYNES 
F.LANDRY 
^  In fact, Esso is so concerned  with this threat  that it  threw  A.  RODRIQUEZ 
F.  VIGEANT 
H.  F.  LAGAN 
the  resources  of  its  ETMA  behind  the  Cities  Service  B.  T.  lOWE 
%  ^  % 
L.  LANG 
.'• \T 
f  Tanker  Men's  Association,  when  the  latter  was  spawned  C.  ESOLAN 
SAN  FRANCISCQ  HOSPITAL 
L.  WILLIS 
" 
„  to  confuse  and  intimidate  CS  seamen  who  wanted  the  A.  GARCIA 
H.  D.  McKAY 
W.  SILVERTHORNE 
B. 
W. 
BIGGS 
G. W. GHALE 
^ 
% 
X 
% 
l­SIU  as  their  agent. 
NEPONSIT  HOSPITAL 
G.  ROUSE 
J.  JELLETTE 
CTMA  didn't  last  long.  "She"  was  old  and  almost  WILLIAM  PADGETT 
C.  EZELL 
^  g  &gt; 
G.  NEWMAN 
SAVANNAH  HOSPITAL 
lifeless even  when she  was  born.  Unorganized  seamen  just  MATTHEW  BRUNO 
O.  HOWELL 
J.  MAXEY 
don't want  anything to  do with selfish,  deceitful company  JOSE  de  JESUS 
E:  J.  SPODASR 
G.  T.  WOLFE 
JON 
LANCASTER 
1^: jpaternalism.  And  Esso employees,  bound  down  by ETMA  R.  E.  LUFLIN 
C.  LYONS 
'  against  their  will, are  already  freely expressing  their  desire  E.  STEBAN  LOPEZ­
A.  L.  RICHAUX 
MOBILE 
L. 
GOLEMBIEWSKl 
TIM 
BURKE 
1throw off  the  bonds of  company  unionism. 
PEDRO  G.  ORTIZ 
A. 
STRACHEN 
p. rpRWOOD 
,G. 
FORWOpD 
R.  REDEST 
;  ­
Company  unionism, 
drilling  for  oil  by  hand,  is  R.  A.  RATCLIFF:;.;i^"l5lS''tr­
D.  TICKLE 
J.  ASHURST  . 
' 
J.  CAEOLAN 
R.  A.  BLAKE  ••  . 
5 outmoded  and  belongs  in  tk§ past. 
To  which  the  seamen  on  their  tankers  would  reply: 
^^Malarkey!" 

m 

^  IIPIPITAL 

�Maz^ 24,  1950 

Page Three 

THE  S  E  AF  ARE  RS  LO G 

=23 

tki  Hbiag  HaUs 
We  realize  that' certain  forces  of  the  National 
Associatioh  of  Manufacturers,  Chamber  of  Com­
merce, shipowners  and  other  enemies  of  organiz­
ed  labor  are  fully  determined  to  destroy  trade 
unionism  in  the maritime  industry  by  utilization 
of  the Taft­Hartley  Act. 
We  know  that  the  Communist  Party,  the  So­
cialist  Workers  Party—known  as  Trotskyites— 
as well as  other splinter  groups, also  are actively 
engaged  in  trying  to  destroy  our  union  hiring 
practices  in  order  to  furthef  {heir  international 
disruption,  by  invoking  the  anti­labor  features 
of  the  Taft­Hartley  Act. 
We  recognize  the  fact  that  the  loss  of  the 
union  hiring  practice  for  any  maritime  union 
Would  set  in  motion  the forces  to  throw  seamen 
back  to  roaming  the  docks  for  jobs,  kickbacks, 
and  bring  back  crimp  and  shanghai  days;  and 
would  also  result  in  widespread  chaos  in  the 
maritime  industry.  This  would  also  allow  the 
Communist  Party,  Trotskyites  and  splinter 
groups  to  continue  their  wrecking  tactics  in  the 
maritime  industry. 
Therefore,  we  the  assembled  representatives 
bf  seamen's  unions in  conference at  the Congres­
sional  Hotel,  Washington,  D.C.,  on  Monday, 
March  20,  1950,  unanimously  agree  upon  the  fol­
lowing  program: 
1.  That  we  notify  all  seamen,  trade  unions. 
Shipowners  and  the  public  that  we  are  united 
bn  this  matter  of  fighting  to  retain  the  hiring 
practice for  seamen's  unions. 
2.  That  we  call  upon  Congress  to  pass  the 
Magnuson­Lesinski  amendment  to  the  Taft­Hart­
ley  Act  now  before  them,  to  make  the  hiring 
Jjfactices  of  seafaring  unions  as  they  existed 
prior  to  June  15,  1947,  not  an  unfair  practice 
under  the Act. 
3.  That  we  unanimously  agree  not  to  use  the 
anti­labor  provisions  of  the  Taft:Hartley  Act 
fegaihst  each  other,  and  each  union  agrees  that 
it  Will  give  no  aid  and  comfort  to  any  group  or 
individuals  of  any  other  union  using  tha  Taft­
Hartley  Act  in  litigation  against  a  union.  Such 
cases  shall­be  regarded  as  internal  matters  of 
the union  involved. 
^ 
4i  That  we  will  aid  each  union  to  the  best  bf 
bur  ability  when  such  matters  arise. 
5.  We  call  upon  all  seamen  of  all  unions,  and 
all  trade  unionists  from  all  industries,  regard­
less  of  affiliation,; to  support  this  program  fot 
the  defense  of  the  hiring  practice  which  is  the 
lifeblood  of  the  maritime  unions. 

Oa  Ship  Trmsfets 

Washington  Conference 

MARINE  FIREMEN.  OILERS.  WATERTEND­
ERS  AND  WIPERS  (IND.)  Vincent  Malone  and 
Ernest  G.  Ramsey. 

As  a  consequence,  American  seamen,  fomlerly 
and  for  many  years  under  the  regulation  and 
control  of  civilian  personnel  of  the  DepartiJient 
of  Commerce,  are  and  will  continue  to  be  sub­
ject  to the extremely  rigid  regulation and  control 
and  wholly  unsuitable—and  often  arbitrary  and 
unrealistic—processes  of  military  establishihent 
in  respect  to  matters  which  should  be  regulated 
by  civilians,  in  accordance  with  principles  and 
procedures  adapted  to  civilian  employees. 
Recognizing  the  serious  position  of  the  Anieri­
can  seamen  as  a  result  of  the  present  policy  of 
supervision  being  exercised  by  the  military  or­
ganization,  the  Coast  Guard,  over  civilian  mer­
chant  seamen,  the  unions  in  this  Conference 
representing  AFL  and  CIO  will  proceed  imifted­
iately  to  bring  to  the attention  of  the Presidents 
of  both  organizations  the  need  for  immediate 
action,  and  suggest  to  them  that  they  seek  an 
immediate  meeting  with  President  Truman  for 
the  purpose  of  obtaining  speedy  ­action  on  this 
important  question. 

AMERICAN  RADIO  ASSOCIATION  (CIO): 
W.  R.  Steinberg  and  Joe  Rubin. 

(h Curopeaa  Aid 

Oa  thiii  page  are  the  dbciaions  arrived  at  by 
the  Seamen's  Conference  held  In  Washington 
March  20  and 21,  The  following  unions  and  their 
r^resentatiVes,  speaking  for  more  than  170,000 
AFL,  Cip  and  Independent  seamen,  were  in 
attendance: 
SEAFARERS  iNTERMAtlONAL  UNION 
(APL):  Harry  Lundeberg,  Paul  Hall,  Morris 
Weisberger  and  Matthew  DUshane. 
NATIONAL  MARITIME  UNION  (CIO):  Joe 
Curran,  Neil  Hanley  and  M.  Hedley  Stone. 
NATIONAL  ORGANIZATION  MASTERS. 
MATES  &amp;  PILOTS  (AFL);  C.  F.  May.  E.  W. 
Higginbotham  and  William  C.  Ash. 
MARINE  ENGINEERS  BENEFICIAL  ASSO­. 
CIATION  (CIO):  H.  L.  Daggett,  Frank  A.  Sayre 
and  R.  Meriwether. 

• 

RADIO  OFFICERS  UNION  (AFL):  Andrew 
In  discussing  the  position  of  the  working  class 
Macfibneld, 
in Western  Europe, with  regards to the econqmic 
reconstruction  of  their  countries  and  the  defense 
of  their  free  democratic  regime,  we  are  aware, 
from  personal  observation  of  the  fact,  that  the 
Communist  Party  and  Communist  trade  union 
We,  as  representatives  of  the  seamen's  unions,  stooges  under  the  orders  of  the  Cominform  have 
have  thoroughly  discussed  and  given  serious  tried,  and  are  trying,  to  disrupt  these  countries 
consideration  to  the  plight  of  the  American  sea­ by  creating  chaos  and  by  using  violence,  in 
men,  who,  although  civilian  employees,  are  in  order  that  the  Marshall  Aid  Plan  and  the  Atlan­^. 
the unique  position  of  being  under  the regulation  tic Pact  may  not  have  their  full  effect. 
and  control  of  a  military  establishment  of  the 
We  seamen's  representatives,  therefore,  pledge 
United  States  Government,  the  United  States  ourselves  completely  in  support  of  the  Marshall 
Coast  Guard. 
Aid  countries,  and  of  those  subscribing  to  the 
The  administration  of  numerous  provisions  of  Atlantic  Pact,  for  we  are. convinced  that  only 
Federal  law  affecting  the  rights  and  obligations  through  these  instruments  will  democratic  West­
of  American  seamen,  by  the  United  States  ship­ ern  Europe  be  reconstructed  and  be  placed  in 
ping  Commissioner  and  the  Bureau  of  Marine  a  position  to  maintain  democracy,  freedom  and 
Inspection  and  Navigation,  traditionally  and  for  liberty  as  we  here  in  our  country  understand 
over fifty  years  until  1942,  has  been  a  function  and  enjoy  its  benefits. 
of  the  United  States  Department  of  Commerce, 
We  further  shall  endeavor  to  give  every  pos­
effectuated  by  civilian  personnel. 
sible  assistance  to  the  European  Free  Trade  Un­
Early  in  1942,  as  a  temporary  war  measure,  ion  Movement  in  its  struggle  against  communis­
these  offices  were,  by  Executive  Order  of  the  tic  dictatorship,  and  to  carry  the  goods  to  their 
President  of  the  United  States,  transferred  from  countries  under  the  Marshall  Aid  Plan  and  the 
the  United  States  Department  of  Commerce  to  Atlantic  Pact. 
the  Commandant  of  the  United  States  Coast 
Further, we  shall call  upon  the  American  Fed­
Guard,  then  under  the  direction  and  supervision  eration  of  Labor  and  the  Congress  of  Industrial 
bf  the  Secretary  bf  the  Navy. 
Organizations,  and  through  these  channels  upon 
At  the end  of  the  year  1945,  the  United  States  the  International  Federation  of  Free  Trade  ^n­
Coast  Guard  was  returned  to  the  Department  of  ions,  with  fhe  view  to  holding  in  the  United 
the Treasury, but  the office  of  the  United  States  States,  at  the  earliest  possible  and  most  conven­
Shipping  Commissioner  and  the  Bureau  of  Ma­ ient  time,  a  conference  of  all  American  Trans­
rine  Inspection  and  Navigation  were  not  separ­ port  Workers  Trade  Unions,  in conjunction  with 
ated  from  the  United  States  Coast  Guard  nor  the  International  Transportworkers  Federation, 
returned  to  civilian  control  under  the  United  in  order  to  formulate  the  necessary  measures  to 
States Department  of  Commerce, but, on  the con­ be  taken  to  counteract  the  disruptive  and  sub­
trary,  were  by  Executive  Order  embraced  per­ versive  activities  of  the  communists  in  Eurbpe 
manently  within  the  United  States  Coast  Guard.  and  elsewhere  in  the  transport  industry. 

On  US  Coas t  Guard 

This  Conference  has  noted  with  great  alarm 
the  continuous  tfahsfef  of  American  ships  to 
Panamanian, Liberian  ahd  Honduran flags,  while 
retaining  American  ownership. 
We  have  made  it  clear  to  Government  bodies 
and  the  Congress  that  this  serious  condition  has 
resulted  from  the  desire  of  shipowners  to  evade 
tax  and  safety  laws  of  the  United  States,  and 
^ depress  wages  of  American  seamen  through 
intensifying unemployment  among American sea­
men  hoping,  thereby,  to  destroy  American, sea­  ­
ihen's unions by  depressing the standard of  liVihg 
(CoHtiHued  ft&amp;M  Page  1) 
gained  by  them  through  their  unions. 
European  communists  trying  to 
It  is  the considered  opinion  of  this  Conference  block  jhe flow  of  Marshall  Plan 
that  the  only  solution  to  this serioUs  question  is  goods  and  Atlantic  Pact  arms  to 
that  ail  American  seamen's  unions,  together  the  Western  democracies. 
The  union  representatives  blasted 
with  the  labor  movement  generally,  must  take 
the 
communists  and  their  "stooges" 
Collective  action  to  put  an  end  to  this  condition 
overseas, 
who,  they  said,  were 
as  quickly  as  possible. 
"using  violence"  to crush  the demo­
Further,  this  Conference  recognizes  the  splen­ cratic  nations  of  Europe. 
did  work  done  in  this  question  on  a  worldwide  ,  They  supported  an  appeal  from 
basis by  the International Transportworkers  Fed­ Qmer  Becu,  Belgian  secretary­gen­
eration  and  hails  the meeting  to  be  held  i::2  Am­ eral  of  the  ITF,  for  a  program  of 
Bterdam  in  April, and  We  will cooperate in  &amp;very  action  by  American  workers  to 
combat  the  propaganda  being 
•   way  to  have  the  ITF  Gonfetence  sueeessfuiiy  spread  by  communist­dominated 
develop  a  program  to  eliminate  this  uriion­bust­ European  traiisport  unions. 
Ing  tactic M  world  maritime  circler 
•   Becu  reported  that  the  commie­

Maritime  Unions  Act  To  Save  Hiring  Halls 
led  unions  in  Europe  were  spread­
ing  the  lie  that  American  seamen 
were  opposed  to  the  Marshall  Plan 
and  the  Atlantic  Defense  Treaty. 
Representatives  of  the  AFL  and 
GIO  unions  participating  in  the 
conference  said  they  would  call 
upon  the  presidents  of  their  re­
spective  organizations  to  set  up  a 
conference  of  all  American  trans­
port  workers'  unions  to  back  tlieir 
anti­communist  drive. 
Meanwhile,  they  pledged  support 
to  the  European  trade  unions  "in 
their  struggle  against  communist 
dictatorship,"  and  stated  theil*  in­
tention  of  continuing  to carry  Mar­
shall  Plan  cargoes  and  arms  aid 
to  tlieir  countries. 

] 

4i\ 

Represented  at  the  conference 
were  the  Seafai­ers  International 
Union,  Radio  Officers  Union,  ^nd 
the  Masters,  Mates  and  Pilots,  all 
AFL;  National  Maritime  Unjon, 
American  Radio  Association,  and 
Marine  Engineers  Beneficial  Affso­  | 
elation,  all'CIO,  and  the  Maijine  : 
Firemen's  Union,  Independent. 
Not  present  at  the  sessions  were 
the  Marine  Cooks  and  Stewardls^ 
Union  and  Harry  Bridges'  Inter aa­^ 
tional'  Longshoremen's  and  Wore­ ­;^ 
housemen's  Union,  both  CIO. These 
two  were  not'invited  because  tliey 
follow  the  line  laid  down  by  the 
communists. 

�Pa0« Four 

Slow  Shipping 
Baltimore 
I®­­

^ March  24. 1950 

THE  S  E  AF  ARE R  S  LO G 

Good  Shippiiig 
For  Savaimah 

SIU Legal  Advisors In Cities Service Negotiations 
I­  , 

By  WM.  (Curly)  RENTZ 

By  E.  M.  BRYANT 

BALTIMORE  —  There's  been 
SAVANNAH  —  Shipping, has 
no  change  from  the  slow  ship­
been  pretty  good  for  this  port 
ping  that  has  gripped  this  port 
during  the  past  two­week  period, 
for  the  past  month  or  so.  But 
we're  mighty  happy  to  report. 
we're  still  hoping  for  an  im­
The  SS  Southland  payed  off 
provement. 
and  signed  on,  and  the  SS  Steel 
A  number  of  ships  paid  off 
Director,  Isthmian;  and  the  SS 
here  in  the  past  two  weeks,  but 
Carrabula,  Cuba  Distilling,  came 
I#  the rub  lies  in  the fact that  most 
in  as  in­transits. 
of  them  went  elsewhere  to sign­
There  was a  beef  involving  the 
s'  on.  Among  them  were  some  Ore 
Chief  Mate  on  the Steel  Director 
,  ships,  Bull  Lines  scows,  and 
but  since  she  came in  after five 
isthmian  vessels.  Ihere  were 
o'clock  and  sailed  at  7  AM, 
I  "also  a  few  ships  in­transit. 
there  wasn't  much  we  could  do 
I 
Biggest  ­beef  of  the  week  con­
about  it.  "When  we  got  down  to 
. cemed  a  crewmember  of  the 
the  ship  at  8  PM,  most  of  the 
Allegheny* Victory.  The  crew  of 
gang 
was  ashore.  The  ship  is 
C. 
PAUL 
BARKER 
BENJAMIN  STERLING 
MARVIN  SCHWARTZ 
the  ship  beefed  that  this  man 
going  to  Galveston  to  payoff. 
had  fouled  up  repeatedly 
In  the  successful  fight  to  bring  the  Cities  Service  Oil  Company's  Marine  Division  under 
Curt  Starke,  the  Seafarer  who 
throughout  the  trip,  but  when  Union  contract,  the  SIU  was  aided  by  the  able  legal  counsel  of  C.  Paul  Barker.  Benjamin 
once 
worked  for  the Bamum  and 
payoff  time  rolled  around  they  Sterling  and  Marvin  Schwartz.  Their  role  throughout  the  negotiations  was  qf  invaluable  aid  in 
Bailey circus, is 
on  the SS South­
aU  took  off  and  nobody  was  bringing  the  difficult  and  protracted  struggle  to  peaceful settlement. 
^ 
land 
and 
he 
wishes  to  say 
around  to  press  charges. 
Barker  is  associated  with  the  firm  of  Hirsch,  Greene  and  Barker,  specialists  in  labor  law, 
"h6llo"  to  all  his  old  shipmates. 
with  offices  in  New. Orleans  and  Baton  Rouge,  La. 
PROTECT  YOUR  JOB 
There  has  been  some  question 
Benjamin  Sterling  and  Marvin  Schwartz  are  with  the  New  York  firm  of  Benjamin  B. 
We  all  have  a  big  stake  in 
as  to  whether  or  not  a  motion 
Sterling, 
proctors­in­admiralty. 
om:  Union,  and  we  cannot  allow 
can  be  introduced  at  a  regular 
foul­ups  to  jeopardize  the  gen­
meeting  to  change  the  shipping 
eral  welfare  of  the  membership. 
rules  or  amend  the  constitution, 
Unless  we  are  willing  to  accept 
and  we'd  like  the  LOG  to  pub­
­  the  responsibility  of  maintain­
lish  the  answer  for  the  informa­
ing  discipline  aboard  the  ships, 
By  JOE  ALGINA 
as  much  conscious  of  the  need  It's  a  pretty  small  guy  that  tion  of  all  the Brothers. 
there is  not  much  use in  beefing. 
for  doing  a  good  job  as the  em­ wiU  try  to  blame  it  on  his 
(Ed.  Note:  Changes  in  ship­
NEW  YORK—Shipping  slowed 
workers,  and  then  cry  that  he  ing  rules  tmd  amendments  to 
:  All  other  beefs  were  of  a  rou­ down  to  a  walk  in  this  port  last  ployers—if  not  more  so. 
tine  nature,  and  were  settled  week,  but  every  port  in  the  US  If  a  company ^has  a  himk  of  couldn't  say  anything  to  them.  the  constitution  can  only  be 
If  aboard  the sl^s  before  the  pay­ seems  to  be  having  the  same  punk "merchandise,  let  it  stand  It's  the  kind  of  whispering  cam­ effected  by  Union­wide  refer­
on  its  own  feet  and  accept  the  paign  that  should  be  nailed  endum.  as  required  by  the 
offs. 
trouble. 
responsibility. 
down,  right  away. 
constitution.  The  procedure  is 
Otherwise  everything  is  going  Bull  Line  ships  on  continuous 
^ 
smoothly  in  this  port. 
for  a  resolution  to  be  intro­
articles  that  paid  off  were  the 
duced, 
stating  the  proposed 
Now  that  Cities  Service  has  Inez,  Puerto  Rico,  Evelyn,  Su­
change or  amendment  and  rec­
signed  the  Cities  Service  agree­ zanne  and  Kathryn.  Other  pay­
ommending  that  it  be  placed 
ment,  let  us  not  forget  what  a  offs  were  the  Ponce  de  Leon, 
By  CAL  TANNER 
on  a  referendum  ballot.  If  the 
difficult  fight  it  was  to  win  this  Chickasaw,  Alawai,  Waterman; 
MOBILE—Shipping  in  Mobile  Seafarers  in  this  port  extended  membership votes  favorably on 
beef.  The  men  that  sailed  these  Robin  Doncaster;  Algonquin  Vic­
ships,  and  stuck  it  out  in  face  tory,  St.  Lawrence  Navigation;  for  the  past  couple  of  weeks  has  their  deepest  sympathies  to  the  the  resolution  after  action  at 
of  hardtiming  by  the  company,  Bull  Run,  Mathiasen;  Chrysstar,  been  slow.  We  had  eight  payoffs  families  of  fbur  Union  men  who  the  regular  meetings  in  all 
ports,  the  question  can  then 
fe­ deserve  loads  of  praise.  We  can  Triton;  Seatrain  New  York;  and'  eight  sign­ons,  in  addition  died  here  in  the  past  week. 
thank  these  men  for  doing  a  Harry  T.,  Palmer,  and  the  to  three  ships  in­transit,  during  Services  were  held  in  the  be  submitted  ­to  a  referendum 
swell  job  for  the  cause  of  good  Queens  Victory,  Isthmian,  which  the  two­week  period  just  ended.  Cathedral  of  the  Immaculate  vote  up  and  down  the  coast.) 
trade  unionism  and  for  the  ben­ has  been  returned  to  the  Mari­ The  payoffs  were  the  Cavalier,  Conception  for  Brothers  Clement 
efit  of  the  imorganized  seamen.  time  Commission. 
Clipper,  Partner,  Pegasus,  Alcoa;  Mayers  and  George  D.  Arnim, 
Sign­ons  were  the  Robin  "Tux­ Monarch  of  the  Sea,  Antinous,  who  drowned  when  their fishing 
ford,  Angelina,  Ponce  de  Leon'  Mobilian  and  Fairhope,  Water­ boat  overturned  in  the  Mobile 
and  the  Collins,  Dry  Transporta­ man.  These* ships  all  signed  on  Bay.  The  families  of  these  men 
in  Trinidad  were  unable  to  pay 
tion,  wliieh  came  out  of  la;&gt;rup  again. 
By  STEVE  CARDULLO 
for 
retujrii ­ef  the  bodies,  so  Sea­
last  week. 
In­transit  were  the  Del  San­
Most  of  the  ships  coming  into  tos,  Greeley  Victory  and­  the  farers  in  this  port  donated  funds  PHILADELPHIA  —  A  strong 
By  BEN  LAWSON 
for  the  burial,' along  with  a  lo­ shot  in  the  arm  to  the  slow 
New  York are  in good  shape and  Chickasaw. 
BOSTON—^This  was  a  fair  there  are  few  beefs  of  any  con­
shipping  in  the  port  was  the  ar­
cal  mortician. 
All  payoffs  and  sign­ons  were 
week  for  us,  with  four  tankers  sequence. 
rival  of  the  Lake  George,  which 
FLOWERS  SENT 
smooth,  with  only  a  few  minor 
and  a freighter  honoring  us  with 
paid  off  after a  seven­month­trip. 
beefs,  all  of  which. were  settled  Flowers  were  contributed  by  She  took  a  full  crew  and  helped 
BERNSTEIN  ASKS  BIDS 
payoffs.  Three  of  the  tankers 
signed  on  here.  In  addition,  we  The  Bernstein  Shipping  Com­ to  the  satisfaction  of  all  con­ the  Alcoa  and  Waterman  Steam­ somewhat  to cut the  hecvy  back­
had  six  freighters  in­transit. 
pany­has  received  an  okay  from  cerned.  The  in­transit  jobs  were  ship  Companies,  Mobile florists  log  of  men  on  the  beach  here. 
the 
Maritime  Commission  to  so­ contacted  and  aU  necessary­  re­ and  the  hostesses  of  the  Catho­ However,  we  still  have  a  couple 
The  tankers  were  the  Alex­
' andra,  Michael  and  Trinity,  Car­ licit  bids  from  shipyards  on  re­ placements  were  shipped  from  lic  Maritime  Club.  Burial  plots  of  himdred  men  waiting  around 
the  HaU. 
were  offered  by  the  Catholic  for  jobs.  One  vessel •   doesn't 
ras;  the  W.  E.  Downing,  Mathia­ conversion  of  two  former  army 
Cemetery. 
make  a  shipping  boom. 
sen;  the  Ann  Marie,  BuU,  was  transports,  which  the  company  In  the  Marine  Hospital  this 
would  like  to  place  in  the  Eu­ week  are  the following  Brothers:  Lee  Yarborough  was  killed  in  The  joy  at  the  news  that  the 
the  freight  ship  payoff. 
The  in­transit  ships  were  the  ropean  passenger  trade  under  Tim  Burke,  G.  Forwood,  J. Ash­ an  autornobile  accident  and  Bro­ SIU  had  signed  the  Cities  Ser­
ther  R.  Nicholas  pas^d  away  in  vice  Oil  Company  contract  is 
Greeley  Victory,  Mobilian  and  subsidy.  Invitations  for  bidding  urst  arid  L.  Wilkerson.­
Mobile  last  week. 
will 
probably 
go 
out 
this 
week. 
In 
addition 
to 
the 
regular 
jobs 
still  being  felt  around  this  port. 
Canton  Victory,  Waterman;  the 
we 
shipped 
about 
35 
men 
to 
Some  men  coming  in  haven't 
I 
Crewmembers 
of 
the 
following 
Probably 
every 
one 
of 
us 
has 
Mr.  Robin  Doncaster,  Robin;  the 
Queens  Victory,  Isthmian,  and  run  into  an  outfit  that  uses  that  relief  jobs  over  the  past  two  ships  donated  to  the  funeral  ex­ heard  the  news,  and  it's  a  big 
the  Yorkmar,  Calmar.  All  ships  old  gag  about  "it's  on  account  weeks,  and  short  as  some  might  penses:  Alcoa  Clipper,  Alcoa  fat  smile  that  spreads  across 
were  handled  swiftly,  with  no  of  the  unions,"  whenever  they  be  these  are always  a  good  thing  Pegasus,  Azalea  City,  Noonday  their  faces  when  we  tell  them 
that  Cities  Service,  too,  is  SIU. 
and  Morning  Light. 
beefs  hanging fire  when  they  have  to  cover  up  some  of  their  to  have^ available. 
own 
faults 
and 
inefficiency. 
left  port. 
We've  heard  quite  a  few  in­
WANNA  YACHT? 
stances  of  this  type  in  the  past 
With  Spring  beginning  to  be  couple  of  weeks,  and it  might  be 
felt  around  here,  Alex  Olson,  a  good  idea  for  union  men  and 
By  RAY  WHITE 
bunch  lined  up .against  him,  in­ around here  must  believe in  him. 
who  has  hibernated  here  during  their  fam|lies  to  show  how 
cluding  the  National  Association  He's  having  his  toughest  cam­
the  winter,  is  beginning  to  think  phony  this  stuff  is. 
TAMPA—^We're  continuing  to  of  Manufacturers,  the  chambers  paign  of  his  career,  however. 
of  putting  his  yacht  into  service  For  example,  we  know  of  a  enjoy  a  good  turnover  of  men  of  commerce,  the  .medical  ,so­
One  of  the fivp  men  in  the 
and  touring  the  ^ters  here­ guy  who  purchased  something  on  the  ships  hitting  this  port, 
cieties  and  the  big  money  boys.  race  is  J.  Tom  Watson,  the 
iv  abouts  for  the  summer.  Alec  is  from  a  Store  here  a  short  while  though  shipping  in  general  has 
There's  going  to  be  an  awful  lot  father  of  the  Watson  Law,,Flo­
W  Waiting  for  his  old  pal  and  back  and,  when  he  retinned  it  slowed  down  somewhat  from  the 
of  heat  generated  before  this  rida's  little  Taft­Hartley  Law. 
#  watchmate,  Don  Hodge,  to  hose  because  it  was  faulty  merchan­ tempo  held  for  the  past  two 
battle  ends. 
He  isn't  given  much  of  a  chance, 
into  this  port  and  sign  articles  dise,  the salesman said: "This  job  months.  If  shipping  doesn't  lag 
WINNING  FORM 
as 
everyone looks  upon  him  as  a 
fii  for  a  summer's  cruise. 
was  turned  out  by  union  guys,  any  further, this port  won't  com&gt;  Senator  Pepper,  being  the  crackpot. 
The  mother  of  Bobby  Clark,  and  you  know  how  it  is.  You  plain  too  loudly. 
friend  of  labor,  makes  no  bones  Winning  Cities  Service  will 
who  was  badly  injured  in  a  fall  can't  say  anything  to  them." 
The  political  picture  here  is  about  his  position.  He's  all­out  probably  help  this­state  a  bit, 
on  the  Trinitj',  has  asked  us  to 
much,  malarkey  and  becoming  clearer  now,  with  a  for  repeal  of  the  Taft­Hartley  though  not  this  port.  A  lot  of 
ii­ pass  along  her . thanks ­  to  the  it's That's, so 
more  of  a  downright  lie  to­ great  deal  of  interest  being  Law  and  all  infringements  on  Cities  Service  ships  hit  Jackson­
Trinity  crew  for  their  donation.  day  than  it  ever  was.  Union  shown  by  the  voting j)ublic. 
labor  groups.  Pepper  has.  held  ville.  But  wherever  they  touch, 
She reports  that  the  money  came  workers  take v  pride  in  their  Senator  Pepper,  labor's  friend  his  Senate .seat  for  14  years  on  the important  thing is  that  we've 
In  handy. 
, work, ­a::*!  i' •   Jnions  are  just  in  Florida,  la  facing  a  tough  this  piatiom,  so  the  people)won,  and  they  are  ali burs  now. 

New York Shipping Foiiows Nationai Trend 

Death  Su­ikes  Few  h Mobik 

Tankers Are Big Help 
To Boston Seafarers 

One Ship Is Ho Boom, 
Sairs  Philadelphia 

Politics Holds Center Of Stage In Tampa 

MniMi. 

�u 

THE  3 E  At AnMlis  LOG 

Page  Filre 

The  Seafarers  In 
By  JOHN  BUNKER 
Chapter  Two 

There  was  a  chill  breeze  and  a  long,  glassy 
swell  on  the  sea,  as  the  SlU­manned  Seatrain 
Two  of  the  three survivors 
Texas  came  upr  the  Carolina  coast  at  full  speed  of  tho  City  of  Atlanta^Rob­
in  the  morning  of  January  19,  1942. 
ert  S. FennelL  Jr., Oiler, and 
Captain  Albert  Dalzell  was  on  the  bridge  and  Second  Mate  George  Tavelle 
every  officer  and  unlicensed  man  aboard  was on  —congratulato  each  other  on 
the  alert,  for  Sparks  had  been  receiving  mes­ their escape, as  they recuper­
sages  of  ships  being  attacked  by  submarines. 
ate  in  St. Mary's  Hospital  in. 
During  the  night  there  had  been flashes  of  Hoboken,  N.J.  The  City  of 
gunfire  on  the "horizon  and,  though  they  sup­ Atlanta  was  torpedoed  and 
posed  it  was  practice fire  by  the  Navy  or  Coast  sunk on. January 19.  1942,  off 
Guard,  they  were  taking  no  chances.  The  ship  the  Carolinas,  taking  with 
was  holding  as  close  to  the  shore  as  safe  navi­ her  39  lives. 
gation  would  permit. 
The  officer  of  the  watch  had  just  taken  a 
bearing  on  Wimble  Shoals  buoy,  when  a  call 
came* from  the lookout  that  there  was  ^C­reckage 
"on  the  water  ahead. 
were  alive  When  the  Seatrain  Texas  hove  by. 
No  more  reports  came  through,  for  soon  after 
Captain  Dalzell  got  his  glasses  and  swept  the  The  others  lay  astride  their  bits  of  wreckage, 
sea  in  the  direction  toward  which  the  lookout  but  had  died  spmetime  during  the  morning  the  radio  man  had  tapped  out  this  message  on  ­il 
his  key  the  Venore sank  and  Sparks,  true to the 
had  pointed. There  were small  black  specks  bob­ hours. 
'  traditions  of  his  calling,  stayed  at  his  post  too 
bing on  the long  swells  and,  as he focused  more 
Living  to  tell the story  of  the City  of  Atlanta,  long  to  escape. 
clearly  on  the  area,  he  saw  a  man's  hand  wave 
one of  the most costly  sinkings along  the Atlantic 
Several  lifeboats  were  launched  by  the  Yen­  i 
from  one  of  the  bits  of  flotsam. 
coast, 
were 
Oiler 
Robert 
Fennell, 
Jr., 
Seaman 
ore's 
crew  and  the  survivors  were  picked  up | 
it  waved  again,  weakly.  All  he  could  see  was 
Earl 
Dowdy; and 
Second 
Mate 
George 
Tavelle. 
38  hours  later. 
the hand, for  the man's head  and  shoulders were 
Sinking  declined  along  the  Atlantic  seaboard 
Captain 
Albert 
Dalzell 
and 
Chief 
Engineer 
'too  close  to  the  water. 
Turning  to  the  Mate,  the  Skipper  ordered  a  Tom  Kenney  of  the JSeatrain  Texas  heard  their  after  coastal  convoys  were  inaugurated  in  May 
boat  prepared  for  lowering.  The  engine  room  story  without  wanting  to  believe  it  could  be  of  1942,  but  the  U­boats  prowled  these  waters 
off  and  on  right  up  till the end  of  the  war. 
. . ­
tele^ph  jingled  as  speed  was  decreased,  and  ,  true. 
in  fact,  the  collier  Black  Point  was  torpedoed 
the  freighter  ran  swiftly  up  on  the  scattered 
TRAGIC  COINCIDENCE 
just  a  few  miles  from  the  big  naval  base  at 
wreckage  noW  becoming  more  visible. 
Newport, 
R. I.,  on  the fifth  of  May,  1945,  the. 
For 
the Chief 
it 
was a 
hard 
story 
to hear. 
His 
They  could  see  pieces  of  boards  and  shattered 
odds  and  ends  of  ship's fittings  strewn  for  a  father.was Chief  Engineer of  the City  of  Atlanta.  last  American  ship  to  be  lost  in  the  war. 
Many  more  SIU  vessels  were  to  be  numbered 
Both  dc^t.  Dalzell  and  Chief  Kehney  had 
mile here and  there across  the undulating  water, 
among 
the 154  Allied  ships  sunk  along  the  coast  " 
but  careful scrutiny  through  the glasses  revealed  started  their  seafaring  careers  on  the  City  of 
only five  bodies  amid  the  debris.  One  man  was  Atlanta  many  years before,  when she Was a  well  and  in  the  northwest  Atlantic  between  January 
known  coastwise  passenger  liner.  Capt.  Dalzell's  and  June  of  1942. 
holding  onto  the frame  of  a  wheelhouse  door. 
Among  them  were  the  Robin  Hood, .  Alcoa 
As  the  Seatrain  Texas  came  to  a  stop,  the  father  had  commanded  her  for  many  years  be­
Guide, 
Oakmar,  Marore,  Major  Wheeler  and 
lifeboat  was  put  quickly  over  the  side  in  the  fore  Capt.  Leemon  UrqUehart  took  over. 
"U­boat  lane"  they  called  Atlantic  coastal  Pipestone  County.  The  Major  Wheeler—of  the 
well­coordinated  movements  of  a  veteran  crew 
and  was  soon  pulling  through  the  watersoaked  waters  now.  Nazi  submarines  ambled  down  the  Bull  Line—completely  disappeared,  never  to  be 
seaboard  on  sinking sprees  that  cost  hundreds of  heard  from  again,  while  the  Robin  Line  Pipe­
wreckage. 
. The  boat's  crew  worked  fast, for  Captain  Dal­ lives, and  sent scores of  ships to the  bottom  with  stone  County,  a  well­liked  freighter  among  men 
who  sailed  SIU  ships,  was  sunk  en  route  from 
zell  couldn't  endanger  his  vessel  and  her  crew  a  huge loss  in  precious cargoes. 
Trinidad 
to  Boston,  about  200  miles  due  west  of 
There  was  no  naval  defense  worthy  of  the 
a minute longer  than  was necessary. For  all they 
knew,  a  submarine  was  watching  every  move­ name,  and  it  was  to  be five  months  yet  before  Bermuda.  Two  of  her  boats  spent  16  days  at  sea 
the first  convoy  was organized  for  the  protection  before  being  picked  up. 
ment  they  made. 
The  men  stopped  at  one  wave­washed  col­ of  shipping  along  the  seaboard,  in  the  Gulf  and 
CHILORE  GETS  IT 
lection  of  flotsam,  lifted  an  inert  body  aboard  the  Caribbean. Merchant  ships,  in  the  meantime, 
U­boats  continued,  their  attacks  ^despite  the 
and  then  went  to  another,  where  a  grimy  sea­ sailed  unescorted  and,  in  most  cases,  unarmed— 
use 
of  convoys,­and  the  SlU­manned  Chilore  of 
man  half  lifted  himself  out ­of  the  water,  trying  with  the U­boats so  bold  they  shelled  their  prey 
the  Ore  Shipping  Company  was  hit  while  in  b 
even  within  sight  of  the  Delaware  Capes. 
to  grip  the  gunwales  of  the  boat. 
heavily 
protected  convoy  under  escort  of  sur­
As  the  rate  of  sinkings  increased,  no  seaman 
STRONG  HANDS  HELP 
could  be sure  that  his  ship  would  reach  its  des­ face  ships,  planes  and  blimps. 
Known  as convoy  KS 520,  this fleet  of  19  mer­
Strong  hands  bore  him  to  safety,  while  those  tination.  Legion  were those  that  didn't, but  they 
chantmen  left  Lynnhaven  Roads  in  the  Chesa­
on  the  Seatrain's  bridge  used  megaphones  to  ­kept  sailing, nonetheless, and  none of  them  idled 
peake  on  July  14,  1942.  When  it  was  off  Cape 
direct  the  crew  to  where  a  third  and  a  fourth  in  port  for  lack  of  crews.  In  some  cases  there 
Hatteras 
the  next  day  it  ran  into  a flock  of 
body  could  be. seen  half­alive,  half­dead  in  the  were  even  more  men  willing  to  "ship  out"  at  torpedoes. 
SIU Halls than  there were  ships for  them  to sail. 
winter  sea. 
No  one  even  saw  a  tin fish  until  the  Chilore  } 
At  the old  New  York  Hall of  the SIU,  at num­
In  a  matter  of  minutes  the  boatmen  had  done 
got  smacked,  to  be followed  a  minute or  so later 
their  work,  and  were  back  at  the  vessel's  side  ber  two !§tone  Street,, across from  famous  Bowl­
by  the tanker  Mowinckel. The BiuefieldSj a  sniall 
to  be  hoisted  aboard  with  their  human  cargo.  ing  Green,  men  reported  for  the  hourly  "calls"  Nicaraguan  freighter  carrying  explosives,  was 
At first  the  survivors  were  too  weak  to  talk  as though  there was  no  war  within  ten  thousand  blown  up  while  the  escort  ran  around  dropping 
but,  when  they  had  been  warmed  with  hot  cof­ miles.  They  manned"  the  ships  and  kept  the  depth  charges  and  the  escorting  bombers  spat­  j 
fee and  wrapped  in  blankets,  they  revealed  that  cargoes  moving.. 
On  January  25th,  torpedoes struck  again,  sink­ te^ed  the  water  with  bombs  and  machine  gun 
their ship  had  been  the  City  of  Atlanta. 
fire. 
They  told  how  the  one­time  passenger  vessel  ing  the  550  foot  Venore  off  Cape  Hatteras  with 
It  was  the  freighter  Unicoi,  however,  which 
had  been  torpedoed  without  warning  early  that  a Toss  of  18  men.  She,  too,  was  a  well  known  got  credit  for  sinking  the  doughty  sub,  along 
morning—^how  she  had  gone  down  so  fast  that  SIU  ship. 
with  an  Army  patrol  bomber. 
The  end  of  this  vessel  is  dramatically  told  in 
there  had  hardly  been  time  to  jump  over^the 
"  The  Chilore  and  Mowinckel  dropped  out  of  ) 
side  . . . how  the  burning  hulk  had  rolled  over  the  terse,  urgent  calls  for  help  sent  out  by  her  the  ­convoy  and  headed  for  the  nearby  shore 
to  starboard  onto  the  only  lifeboat  that  cleared  radio  operator. 
At  12;47  a.m.  he flashed  this  SOS:  "Two  under  their  own  power,  but  both  of  them  ran  |j 
the  ship,  crushing  its  unfortunate  men  beneath 
crashes so  far. Will  keep  informed.  Think  swim­ into  a  minefield  and  suffered  more  explosions.  I 
' the sea. 
. 
The  big  Chilore  capsized  and  sank  while  being  J 
For  a . while  after  the  sinking,  they recounted,  ming  soon." 
towed  toward  Baltimore  several  days  later. 
^ ' 
This  call  came  two  minutes  later: "Torpedoed 
some  Of  the  crew  had  floated  around  on  bits  of 
wreckage  while  they  joked  and  sang  in 
at­ twice.  Ship  still  afloat  but  listing  badly.  Captain 
requests  assistance  immediately."  He  then  gave 
Azioiher • e  pisode  of  the  role  of  SIU  crews  in 
| 
tempt  to  keep  their  spirits  up. 
World  War  II  will  appear  in  the  next  issue  of 
Then,  one  by  one,­ all  but five  of  them  had  the ship's  position  a  number  of  times. 
The 
third 
and­last 
message 
was 
heard 
at 
1:22 
the  SEAFARERS  LOG. 
sunk  beneath  the  cold,  dark  waters.  And  of  the 
.  vBve  who Were  still afloat  at dayoreak,  only  three  a.m.;  "Cannot  stay  afloat .much  longer." 

�IP  •  Pag» Si* 
1_ 

T  H  E  SEAFARER S  L O  G 

Friday,  March  24,  1950 
\ 

= 

MINUTES AND NEWS 
Isthmian Crew Rescues 
Survivor  Of  Sunken 
Greek Ship In Red Sea 

PROUD HOLDERS OF UNBEATEN  SOFTBALL  RECORD 

Heads­up  thinking  and  efficient  seamanship  by 
group  of  Steel  Fabricator  Seafarers  saved  the  life, of  an 
Arab seaman, whose  vessel sank  in  the Red  Sea  on  Feb. 11 
with  the loss  of  four  lives. 
The  rescued  seaman,  Ahmed 
ben  Adree,  was a  member  of  the 
crew  of  the  SS  Kid,  a  Greek 
ship  which  went  to  the  bottom 
shortly  after  high  winds  caused 
it  to  founder.  Tankers  in  the 
vicinity  picked'up  the  other  sur­
vivors. 
A report  from  the Steel  Fabri­
Members  of  the  Marina  Sluggers  pose  for  photographer  V. Swanson, Chief  Cook,  after  they 
cator,  forwarded  from  Calcutta, 
beat  the  team  representing  the  SS  Beatrice  in'Mayaguez.  Kneeling­  (left  to  right):­Dickerson, 
&amp;  said  the  Isthmian  ship  was  pro­
OS;  Downey,  MM;  Wafkins.  Oiler;  Wagner,  OS;  Olive,  AB.  Standing:  Port  Steward,  Doyle, 
ceeding  smoothly  in  the  Red 
Bosun;  Anderson,  3rd  Cook;  McCatey,  MM;  Carrera,  Ch.  Mate;  Capt. Callas  (holding  bat);  Shot­
Sea  at  10  AM,  when  SIU  crew­
well,. 3rd  Mate,  and  Gireaux,  AB. 
* 
members  spotted  pieces  of  cargo 
floating  in  the  water. 
"MAN  OVERBOARD" 
fl. 
"Several  of  us  were  looking 
at  the floating  cargo,"  the  re­
port  ^id,  "when  we  heard  the 
Chief  Cook  shout  'Man  over­
Lifeboat  returns  to  the  Steel 
In  a  Softball  contest  hdfalded  as  the  "Battle  of  the  Bull  Line  Titans,"  the  SS 
board.' 
Fabricator 
with 
the 
rescued 
Marina 
Sluggers  notched  another  victory^ in  their  unblemished  record,  downing  the 
"The  Chief  Cook  was  on  his 
toes.  He  grabbed  a  life  ring  and  crewman. 
SS  Beatrice  Bums  14  to 11,  under  a  blazing sun  on a  Mayaguez,  P.R., sandlot. 
• 
threw it  to  the fellow  in the  wa­
The  all­Seafarers  games  was*  ! 
! 
: 
^ 
ter.  He  threw  perfectly  and  the  Aboard  the  Steel  Fabricator 
Ting  landed  directly  in  front  of  during  the  rescue  was  Wilson 
Sweeney,  economic  officer  of  the  up  in  the  island" port,  according 
the  victim." 
Steei  Fabricator  crewmen  im­ US  Consulate  General  in  Cal­ ;o  Bosun  Doyle  of  the  Marina., 
mediately  sent  word  to  the  cutta.  Mr.  Sweeney  said  he  was  Doyle,  whose ­  report  ­of  the 
bridge  and  the  Captain  ordered  proud  of  the  SIU  crew,  and  game  was  packed  with  all  the 
You  can't  judge  a  book  by  its  cover,  nor  a  customs 
the  verael  to  circle  ben  Adree  hailed  their  action  in  the follow­ skillful  bombast  and  elegance  of 
while  the  life  boat  was  being  ing  lettei­  addressed  to  Union  Barnum  and  Bailey  press  ag­ inspector  by  his  clothes,  Flugo  Echevarria,  2nd  Cook 
Headquarters: 
laimched. 
on  the  SS  Lilica,  Dolphin  Steamship  Corp.,  learned  to  his 
.sorrow—.$85 
worth—^recently  inf­
"When  we  got  him  aboard,"  "The  efficiency  and  seaman­
only  carrying  out  a  crew  reso­
Bone,  North  Africa. 
the  report  continued,  "we  gave  ship displayed  by the officers and 
lution 
to  keep  all  unauthorized 
The  expensive  experience 
him  hot  food,  put  him  to' bed  crew  of  the  SS  Steel  Fabricator, 
persons 
from  the  messhall. 
which  befell  Hugo has  since  been 
for  the  rest  of  the  trip.  Then  while  rescuing  a  survivor  of 
The 
man 
had  not  identified 
roundly  criticized  by  the  entire 
some  of  the  fellows  went  to  the  the  Greek  ship  SS  Kid,  which 
himself 
and, 
not  being  a  mind 
Lilica  crew  as  a  racket  to  en­
Steward  who  nms  the  slopchest  foundered  and  sank  on  Febru­
reader, 
had figured 
him  for  a­
trap  seamen  performing  their 
and  told  him to  give the  rescued  ary 11  in the Red  Sea,  makes me 
local 
sharpie 
helping 
himself  to 
duty. 
man  some  new  clothes,  which  feel  proud  of  our  American  Mer­
a 
free 
meal. 
Customs 
inspectors, 
the  crew  would  pay  for,  and  chant  Marine  and  the . members 
The  sad  situation  came  about  Hugo  pointed  out,  always  wore 
cigarettes  and  candy." 
of  the  SIU'crew." 
while  Hugo,  busy  in  the  galley,  uniforms  and  identified  them­
noticed  a  seedy­looking  charac­ selves  before  nosing  around. 
ter  sampling  the  choice  bits  of 
PAY  OR  ELSE  » 
fare  being  readied  for  the  crew's 
ent's  advance  notice,  said  that  lunch.  Hugo,  in  his  best  French,  But  it  was  a  losing  proposi­
after  the  game  "both  the  vic­ told  the  guy  to  take  a  powder  tion  fpr  Hugo.  He  had  his  choice 
torious  Marina  Sluggers  and  the  and  stay  out  of" the  mtssroom.  of  riding  a  bunk  in  jail  Or 
defeated  gladiators  of  the  Bfea­ The  intruder  took  the  hint  and  coughing  up  30,000  francs.  He 
/ 
trice  proceeded  to  the  Seafood  scrammed.  But  he  didn't  scram  paid  the  fine. 
When 
the 
crew 
heard 
the 
de­ . 
far. 
. 
' 
Bar,  where  a  cold  one  was  en­
tails,,  of  the  quickie  trial,  con­
INDIGNANT 
joyed  by  one  and  alL 
viction  and fine,  a  special  meet­
"Be  it  also  written . that  we  The  guy  hightailed  it  up  to  ing  was  called  and  a  resolution 
are  proud  of  our  achievements  the  Skipper  and  demanded  that  drafted,  condemning  the  actions 
on  the diamond,"  Doyle declared.  Hugo  be  thrown  in  the  hoose  of  the  customs  and  accused  the 
While  he  was  at  it,  the  Mar­ gow.  Producing  his  credentials,  Bone  government  boys  of  vic­
ina's  Bosun  issued  a­  challenge  he  lamented  that  he,  a  customs  timizing  American  seamen—who 
to  all  "Bull  Lines  and  Water­ inspector  in,  the  service  of  the  were  merely  protecting  ship's 
man  crews on  the Rum  arid  Coke  French  government,  need  not  be  ­property. 
run  to  be our  guest  at a  game  of  subjected  to  such  abuse.  His  The crew  also  pointed  out  that 
pride  had  been  severely  dented,  during  the  ship's  15­day  stay  in 
Softball. 
and 
could  only*  be­  salved  it  Bizerte,  a  near­by  French  port, 
"May  the  best  team  emerge 
Brother 
Echevm­ria  were  in­ they  had  no  trouble  with  the 
victorious,"  Doyle  said,  but  he 
stalled 
in 
the  local  cooler.  But,  customs  men,  who  wore  uni­
quickly  followed  that  up  with 
of 
course, . 
a  small fine  would  forms  and  identified  themselves 
the advice  that "five  will get  you 
serve 
just 
as 
well. 
when  coming  aboard. 
ten  that  we  will  win." 
The 
Skipper 
looked  the  guy's  The  crew  concluded  its  state­* 
The  unbeaten  Marina  Sluggers 
might  be  interested to  know  that  papers  over,  and  called  for  Hugo  ment  with  the  warning  that 
' 
' 
i 
the  crew  of  the  SS  Puerto  Rico  to  'come  topside  to  explain  his  other  crews  hitting  this  North 
Wearinfj^'the  sweai  shirt  and. dungarees  presented  to  him  are  also  hunting  for  competition  actions. 
African  port  would  be  wise  to 
by  Steel  Fabricator  crewmen  shortly  after  they  hauled  him  on  the  ball field.  P.  San  Miguel  The  guy  being  a  customs  man  look  twice  before  chasing  a 
out  of  the  Red.  Sea.  SS  Kid  crewmember  Ahmed  ben  Adree  is booking  the PR's  games. 
was  news  to  him,  Hugo  explain­ shaggy­looking  character  away 
pcses  with  his  rescuers  on  the  deck  of  the  Isthmian  ship  in 
Brother  Doyle,  meet  Brother  ed  to  the Skipper.  When  he  saw  from  the  stew  pot.  It  might­  be 
Ckdcutta.  Nick  Brancala  is  on  hie  right  and  Ring  Miller  on  San  Miguel—aiid  mai"  the  beat  the  guy  dipping  into  the. crew's  another  guy.  with  a  price  tt« ; 
the left. 
­
food  and chased,  him  put  he  was  on his  pride.. 
team  emerge  victorious! 

Marina Sluggers Belt Beatrice Bums, 14­11 
In  'Battle  Of  The  Bull  Lines  Titans' 
.''S'cra/n  Bub'  Costs  Seafarer 
$85;  Bub'  Was  Customs  Man 

ik­­ ­  ­M! 

�Fridajr* 
» 

16S0 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Page Seven 

Digesteid  Minutes Of  SlU Ship  Meetings 
KYSKA,  Jaiu  8 —C.  Collixu, 
carried  that  men  on  sanitary 
Chairman; J. J. Flynn, Secretary. 
work  be  required  to  do  job  in 
Some  disputed  ovrtime  in  Deck 
conformance  with  Union  rules 
and  Engine  Departments;  none 
and  failure  to  do  so  shall  make 
in  Stewards.  Motion  by  J. 
them liable to fine. Resolution de­
Abrams  to  keep  Mates  and  En­
claring  Socialist  Workers  (Trot­
gineers  out  of  messroom.  Some 
skyite)  Party  as  dual  and  hostile 
felt,  such  a  rule  would  create 
to. Union  read  and  adopted  un­
ill  feeling,  others  that  it  was 
animously.  Suggested  that  radio 
okay  for  Mate  on  gangway  to 
be  placed  in  chart  room  where 
come for  coffee,  Abrams  said  one 
it  may  be  used  by  crew.  Special 
of  the  officers  carried  tales  to 
vote  of  thanks  given *to  Stewards 
saloon.  Vote  was  12  to  10  ask­
Department  for  fine  chow  put 
ing  this  particular  officer  to 
out  by  them. 
keep  out. 
ft ft ft 
SEATRAIN  TEXAS,  Jan.  22— 
» 
» 
PETHOLITE,  Jan. 7—V.  Perer.  egate  explained  the  rules  re­ Frank  Prezalu,  Chairman;  John 
Chairman;  H. M.  Rosenstiel, Sec­ garding  transportation.  Discus­ Messick,  Secretary.  No  beefs  in 
retary.  Ship's  Delegate  spoke  to  sion  on  painting  of  alleyways  Deck  Department,  one  in  Engine 
Captain and  repopted  understand­ and  it  was­  agreed  that  spot  and  40  hours  disputed  overtime 
ing  that  officers  will  not  do  any  sougeeing  would  take  dare  of  in  Stewards.  Motion  carried  call­
more  painting  in  their  quarters.  the  vessel's  needs.  Under  Good  ing  for  painting  in  all  foc'sles. 
yfZB  SnuLVOiNG­ BUSIMESS AT THE SAMm 
Crew^s  decks  have  been  painted  and  Welfare  crew  indicated  ap­ Under 'education  there  was  dis­
OIS&gt;  enAATD ,  aRXSEfZ THE 194.9 "EoUAfO 
and  port  hole  dogs  freed.  No  proval  of  a  one  year  rule  gov­ cussion  and  clarification  on  two 
StOLUME.  OF THE  SEATAJdBQS  ICX3­
beefs  in  any  of  the  departments,  erning  'stays  aboard  one  ship,  major  issues  now  before  Union 
YoUfZSElF OR. YOUR 
LIBRARY. 
after 
which 
vacation 
with 
pay 
delegates  Teported.  Motion  (by 
membership:  compulsory  vaca­
ONE VEAR.CF 
SlU 
HiSTDRy FOR ONOi 
should 
be 
taken. 
Deck 
Delegate 
J.  Bourgeois,  seconded  by  Jesse 
tions  and  credit  unions.  Arrange­
Sturm),  to  see  Captain  about  reminded  men  that  there is  a  no  ments  made  to  call  Seamen's 
^ROM 
51 BE&lt;\VER STREET 
painting crew's  mess  and  recrea­ smoking  rule  on  deck  for  the  Church  Institute  for  new  library 
MBVSl 
YORK­ 
4­, Af.y.. 
PAY POSrAQE. 
safety 
of 
the 
crew 
and 
ship, 
books.  One  minute  of  silence  in 
tiph^  roomi  Steward  reported  on 
ft ft ft 
memory  of  departed  Brothers, 
status  of  ship's  welfare  fund. 
Discussion  on  leaks  in  cargo  BALTORE,  Jan. 8—Edmond  L. 
ft ft ft 
lines.  Crewmen  urged  to  make  Eriksen.  Chairman;  M.  Bunker,  WARRIOR,  Jan.  8  —  Ray 
sure  tanks  ai'e  gas  free  before  Secretary. Delegates reports  were  Queen,  Chairman;  Gordon  Bilbo, 
they  enter  them.  Earl  Gonyea  accepted.  Eriksen  moved  that  Secretary.  Three  hours  disputed 
suggested  crew  thank  Stewards  two  men  who  had  missed  ship  overtime'  in  Deck  Department, 
Department  for  excellent  holiday  be  referred  to  Baltimore  Hall.  no  beefs  in  the  others.  Ted 
Suggested  that  coffee  urn  be  Hodges  to  carry  on  as  Ship's 
dinners. 
kept  clean  at  all  times.  Wiper  Delegate  until  oncoming  crew 
ft 
4. 
and 
Ordinary  to  continue  mak­ elects  new man. Patrolman  to  be 
CORAL  SEA,  Feb.  28 —Joe 
ing 
coffee. 
Copies  of  repair  list  notified  of  need  for  repairs,  as 
iBarron,  Chairman;  A1 De  Forest, 
The  most  serious  topic  of  discussion  among  the  SIU  mem­
to 
be sent 
to 
company  offices  in  they  are unseaworthy  at  present. 
Secretary.  Ship's  Delegate  ex­
bership 
ashore  and  aboard  ships  throughout  the  world  continues 
Motion  carried  to  have  clock  in­ to  be  the  Hiring  Hall.  Throughout  the  nation  in  the  homes  of 
plained  that  library  hadn't  been  Baltimore  and  New  York. 
stalled  in  recreation  room.  Mo­ parents,  wives  and  relatives  (who  read  the  LOG  thoroughly) 
changed  because  of  limited  time 
tion  carried  to  givb  Seton  La­ there  is  also  an  intense  and  disturbed  feeling  about  this  Taft­
in  each  port.\ He  asked  that  pri­
Locheur,  who  is  paying  off,  a  Hartley  and  Supreme  Court  "monkey  business"  of  destroying  the 
vately  purchased  books  be  put 
vote  of  thanks  for  his  services  maritime  Hiring  Hall  .  .  .  There's  good  AFL  news  on  Beaver 
in  library  after  owner  has  read 
as  Ship's  Delegate.  Delegates  to  Street,  for  the  girls  and  guys  of  Local  16,  Hotel  and  Restaurant 
them.  Blackie  Connors  thanked 
draw  up  letter  about  good  con­ Employees.  They  won  their  strike  against  the  high  class  restau­* 
Deck  men  for  cleaning  up  laim­
dition  aboard  the  Warrior  and  rant  across from  our  Union  Hall . . . Canasta  is  not  a  new "Souse" 
dry.  He  said  he  and  Deck  Dele­
send it  to the SEAFARERS LOG.  American  dance  but  an  exciting  card  game  and  we'll  bet  some 
gate  Briandies  will  try  to  ex­
change  library  in  Genoa.  No 
ft ft ft 
SlU  ship  has  already  preferred  canasta  instead  of  hearts,  poker, 
ROBIN  KETTERING,  Jan.  15  blackjack,  pinochle,  bridge  or  cribbage  .  .  .  Cities  Service  Com­
beefs  reported  by  department 
—Elbert  Hogge,  Chairman;  John  pany  is  SIU,  too—and  it  sure  provides  the  best  tanker  runs,  ac­
delegates.  Motion  carried  to  lock 
ft ft ft 
TUIey,  Secretary.  Harry  WUl­ cording  to  many  SIU  tanker  sailors. 
laundry  room  while  in  port.  Un­
der  Education,  Ship's  Delegate  ALCOA  PLANTER,  Jan.  13—  oughby  elected  Ship's  Delegate. 
ft ft ft 
Connors  said  that  this  was  first  Percy  Boyer,  Chairman;  Hugh  No  beefs  pending  in  Deck  and 
Gallagher, 
Secretary. 
Delegates 
One 
of 
the 
Brothers 
was  wishing  Harry  Banner,  "Big"  ' 
Stewards  departments,  with 
time  gangway  watches  have 
reported 
no 
beefs. 
Suggested 
by 
John 
Carey, 
the 
Bosun, 
Duke 
Wade,  the  Cook;  Pete  King  emd 
everything  okay  in  Engine  de­
been  allowed  and  urged  every­
Sentis 
that 
that 
system 
be 
work­
Pete 
Bush 
were 
all 
in 
New 
York. 
For  "pete's  sake,"  sounds 
partment  with  exception  of  a 
one  to  do  a  good  job  and  be 
ed 
out 
between 
department 
to 
like 
jin 
oldtimer's 
reunion 
which 
is 
something  which  hardly  •  
few  hours  disputed,  overtime. 
sure  he  has  relief  before  leav­
keep 
laundry 
room 
clean. 
Nord 
ever 
happens . . . Looking 
good 
with 
a  cigar  and  a  smile  for 
Motion  carried  calling  for  sched­
ing.  Brandies  stressed  fact  that 
all. Brother 
Ray 
Queen 
just sailed 
in 
after 
many  months  away 
strdm urged 
crewmembers.to live 
ule  agreeable  to  all  hands  on 
no  stores  are  to  be  sold  or 
from 
this 
hamburger 
burg of 
a 
town . 
. . Brother 
E.  Anderson, 
up 
to 
Agreements 
reached 
at 
cleaning  of  laundry  room.  After 
traded.  Joe  Barron  cautioned 
shipboard 
meetings. Steward 
told 
oldtimer 
and 
Electrician, 
has 
been 
helping 
out 
for 
some  time. 
discussion ' it  was  agreed  that 
men  about  Greek  and  Turkish 
Brother 
Anderson, 
a 
prolific 
reader, 
says 
he's 
just 
finished 
members 
that 
if 
they 
had 
any 
departments  would  rotate  on 
regulations  on  cigarettes  and 
reading 
a 
fine 
book, 
the 
biography 
of 
Sigmund 
Romberg. 
special 
dishes 
which 
they 
have 
weekly 
basis 
in 
attending 
to 
this 
money.  Under  Good  and  Welfare 
it  was  agreed  by  all  that  each  not  been  getting  to  report  it  to  job.  Motion  carried  to  approach  Music,  music,  music  . . .  Another  Brother  who  had  been 
member  be  personally  respon­ him.  Boyer  asked  all  hands  to  all department  heads on  questibn  helping  out  for  more  than  a  month  and  a  half  burning  up  a 
typewriter  and  whatever  other  work  there  was  to  do,  is  now 
sible  for  the  cleanliness  of  the  cooperate  in  keeping  down  noise  of  painting  foc'sle  decks.  Sug­
in 
passageways 
during 
the 
day­
happily  out  at  sea.  His  name  is  Nick  De  Semtis  and  a  true 
gested  that  men  show  considera­
laundry  before  he  leaves  it. 
SIU 
man  he  is. 
time. 
tion  of  others  at  all  times  while 
ft ft ft 
ft ft ft 
aboard  ship. 
TRINITY,  Jan.  16  —  C.  L. 
Eddie  Saul,van  artist  with  the  quips  (the  only  brush  he  owns, 
Brown,  Chairman;  Pete  Piascik, 
however,  decorates  his face)  is  studying  pipes—the  shipboard  lines 
Secretary.  Ship's  Delegate  .re­
in  the.  engineroqm  which  are  always  leaking.  Good  luck,  Eddie, 
ported  that  some  of  the  needed 
ft ft ft 
towards  non­leaking  refrigeration  engineering ... Norman  Maffie, 
DEL  NORTE,  Feb.  19—Thurs­ repairs  had  been  taken  care  of. 
the  talented  artist,  grabbed  a  scow  about  a  month  ago  . .  . John 
ton  Lewis,  Chairm.'sn;  C.  A.  Department  delegates reported 
Wunderlich,  a  talented  writer  with  many  articles  logged  in  the 
Bradley,  Secretary.  Ship's  Dele­ that  there  were  no  beers  pend­
LOG,  has  had  everything  good  happen  to  him  since  he  quit  the 
ft ft ft 
gate  reminded  Brothers  they  ing,  Discussion  on  pay  differen­
LAFAYETTE,  Jan.  15—C.  Au­ landlubbing  shipchandling  business.  He  turned  4;o  getting  married 
must Tie  aboard  one  ho'u­  before  tial  between  Second  Cook  and  bert.  Chairman;  R.  Eden,  Secre­ (five  months  ago)  and  has  just  left  Galveston,  Texas,  aboard  the 
sailing  time  and  urged  them  to  Night  Cook  and  Baker.  Suggest­ tary.  Ship's  Delegate  reported  SS  War  Hawk  boimd  for  the  Far  East.  May  the  mystic  mysteries 
settle  all  minor  beefs  with  their  ed  that  noise  in  passageways  be  everything ship­shape.  Few  hours  of  the  Far  East  guide  weU,  John.  Congratulations  and  happiness 
departmental  delegates.  Depart­ cut  down  at  night. 
disputed  overtime  in  Deck  De­ on  the.sea  of  matrimony. 
ment delegates also  reported. Mo­
partment,  but  all  okay  in  others. 
ft ft ft 
ft ft ft 
tion  (by  Lewis)  carried •  recom­
MARYMAR,  Jan.  15 —James  Motion  by  Quint,  seconded  by 
It's  sure  good  lo  hear  thai  the  Winona  Bar  on  Sledman  . 
mending­ that  ship's  newspaper  Rose,  Chairman;  Robert  Mott.  Tamlin,  to  have  new  chairs  put  Street  in  Houston,  Texas,  is  a  good  place  towards  SIU  guys.  . 
be  published.  Ship's  treasurer  Secretary.  Delegates  reports  ac­ in  messroom  and  to  have  them  They're  now  on  the list  to  receive  LOGS,  too . . . From  Mobile  : 
reported  that $18.44  wiis  on  hand  cepted.  Anti­Trbtskyite  resolu­ fastened  to  deck.  Motion  (by  we  have  received  a  letter  from  Brother  Joseph  A.  Ryan  who 
in  ship's  fund.  Crew  had  do­ tion  was  read  and  adopted  un­ Marsh,  seconded  by  Keel)  car­
has  written  the  following  excellent  poem: 
nated  $78  to  March  of  Dimes.  animously.  Delegates'^to  visit  all  ried  to  see  if  some  place  can­
A  SEAMAN'S  DREAM 
Motion  by  King  carried  to  re­ foc'sles  in  their' departments  and  not  be  designated  for  placing 
Forgotten  people  we  are,  one  and  all 
strict  use  of  ship's  funds  to  make  list  of  needed  repairs  in  books  and  magazines.  Marsh 
purposes  originally  agreed  upon.  three  copies,., to  be  given  to  de­ and  other  members  of  Stewards 
out­casts  to  everyone,  small  and  tall 
Ballard  C.  Browning  elected  partment  head,  Patrolman  and  Department  were  thanked  for 
We  deliver  the  goods,  day  after  day 
Athletic  Director.  Discussion  on  one  to  be  retained  by  delegate.  their fine  efforts.  Marsh  dischss­
that  they  will  survive,  in  the  distance  away 
Our  risks  unheard  of,  our  hazards  untold 
lifeboat  drills  and  the  duties  of 
ed  dangers  of  Trotskyites  to 
ft ft ft 
that  the  real  unfortunate,  may  see  a  new  world 
each  man  during  the  exercise, 
PONCE,  Jan.  21—Robert  Ri­ unionism.  Crew  went  on  record 
Will  we  never  be  recognized,  by  smart  or  un­schooled 
vera,  Chairman;  James  Waller.  n  favor  of  expulsion  of  these 
ft ft ft 
will  our  tasks  and  attempts,  be  always  over­ruled 
STRATHMORE,  Jan.  15  —  Secretary.  Department  delegates  enemies  bf  the  Union.  One  min­
Itn awakening  now,  with  a  smile  and  a  gleam 
Frank  Walaska,  Chairman;  G.  Reported  no  beefs.  Robert  Rivera  ute  of  silence  in  memory  of  de­
Butonkoff,  Secraiwy.  Ship's  Del­ elected  Ship's  Delegate.  Motion  parted  Union... Brothers. 
There's  only  one  answer—it's  just  a  Seaman's Dream! 
. 

:.K,r  ...v­, 

�THE  StAF ARE RS  LOG  ' 

ki»sii a«,  iSItt 

THE  MEMBERSHIP  SPEAKS 
Use Of  Training Ships 
Blasted By Wunderlich 
various  Maritime  Training  Sta­
tions  here  in  the  US.  In  my 
This  is  intended  as  an  answer  opinion,  the  only  practical  solu­
to  John  Bunker's  article  on  the  tion  to  the  problem  of  training 
use  of  sailing  ships  as  training  merchant  seamen  is  to  let  them 
vessels,  which  appeared  in  the  learn  right  on  board  ship  under 
actual  conditions  with  the  men 
LOG  of  Jan.  13;  1950. 
^ First  of  all,  I  wish  to  extend  who  know  the  score,  whether 
liiy  sincere  compliments  to  John  they  go  as  Wiper,  Messman,  OS 
Bunker  for  his  contributions  to  or  galley  boy. 
the.'advancement  of  information  Let  them  leam  the  way  of 
concerning  the merchant  marine.  seamanship  on  the  ships  oh 
We  are,  indeed,  in need  of  more  which  they  are  to  serve  in  the 
articles  informing  the  public  of  future.  Then  we  can rest  assured 
the need  for  a  large  and  modem  they  will  develop  into  not  only 
American  merchant fleet, 
in  competent  seamen,  but  also  good 
peacetime,  as  well  as in  national  shipmates  and  true  union  bro­
;  .emerg^cies. 
thers  in  tiii  great  tradition  of 
Though  I  differ  'with  Bunker  seafarers  throughout  the  marl­* 
in  regard  to  the  use  of  sailing  time  world. 
ships  as  training  vessels,  no  dis­
J^ui T,  Wi^delich,  Jr. 
respect  for  his  opinion  is  meant. 
SS  War  Hawk 
.  Although  disagreeing  with  him 
in  this  instance,  I  still  agr6§' 
'^th  his  general  purpose. 

SEVEN  OF  DEL  NORTECS  COMPLEMENT 

Log'A'Rhythms 
My  Lord's  Prayer 
By  MARY  LOU  FARLEY 

;r To  the  Editor: 

1 

Our Father,  who are in heaven. 
You  know  I'm  not  too  bad, ^ 
But  there  comes  at  certain 
feeling 
That  always  leaves  me  sad* 
1  shouldn't  say  this.  Father, 
But  somehow  I  know  it's 
true. 
That  when  my  life  has  just 
begun, 
YouTl  take  me  up  to  you. 
I'm  not  afraid  of  dying 
And  going ^up  above* 
But  Lord,  you  know  just  how 
I  feel. 
Bemuse  I'm  now  in  love. 
Dick  Marlines  submilted fibis, phdtd  Ut  a  sample  of  typical 
Sealare»  aboard  the  SlU  pisseiiger  ^p.  Standing,  left  fe 
ri^. Brothers  Russelb  Nunesi  Fafnandta,  Poplar  and  Suares. 
Kneeling  are  E.  Reyes,  whoie  Oartoehi  oeeasiiMially  appear 
in  the  LOG,  and  Goe. 

I  love  this  boy,  deair  Fatheri 
So. please,  don't  let  us  part. 
It isn't  just  puppy love, 
IPs  really  from  Rie  heart. 
He's  different  from  the  pthef 
boys, 

•  

He's  kind  beyond cottipare. 
That's  why,  my  Godr  1  don't 
want  to start 
To  climb  those golden  stairs* 
If  you  don't  want  the  sun  to 
shine. 
Or  the moon on  lovers'  lane* 
You  very  easily  turn  tlMm  off,. 
And  maybe  let  it  rain. 
So if  when  I  am older. 
You decide my day ha* coma, 
Give me  a  little warning, 
Before  my  hatfle's  done. 
So,  God  of  mine,  please  ha 
fair. 
Don't let  this prayer go by. 
Read  and  think  it  over. 
Oh  God,  I  don't  want  to die. 

RAISED  IN  SEAPORT 
I  had  my first  encounter* with 
the  sea  and  its  men  in.  Norway. 
li^H­
Although  I  was  bom  in  Brook­
IW"  lyn,  I  was  raised  in a  small  sea­ To  The  Editor: 
All  right,  but  does  the  publica­ I  The  resolution  jiist  gives  the 
port  on  the  southern  coast  of  I  was  very  much  amazed  in  tion  of  the  LOG­ continually  di­ bare  statement  that  the  LOG  is 
Norway.  Arendal  is  the  name  reading  the  LOG  of  February  lO'  minish  the  money  in  the  Gen­ a  drain  on  a  fund  for  which  we 
and  it is  in  the  county  (Fyike)  the  resolution  adopted  by  25  eral  Fund  without  the  money  assess  oui^elves  ten  dollars  and 
of  West  Agder.  Like  the  United  members  of  the  crew  on  the  SS  being  replaced  and  in  fact  the  which  is  expressly  for,  opera­
States,  Norway  has  sectional  di­ The  Cabins,  proposing  a five­dol­ fund  growing  by  the  yearly  as­ tional  uses  of  the  Union.  We  can 
visions  as  South,  North,  Middle  lar  assessment *  to finance'  the  sessment  of  ten  dollars  for  each  say  that  the  maintainance  of 
seaman? 
SlU  Hails,  the  wages  of  officials, 
West,  etc.  The  part  where  I  was  publication  of  the  LOG. 
There  is  a  drain  to  be  sure  the  buying  of  equipment  neces­
brought  up  is  called  the  Sor­
landet,  or  Southland,  which  was  The  only  two  reasons  that  the  but  so  is  a  wife  at  home  with  sary  for  the  Union" and  the  in­
the  name  of  the  training  vessel  resolution  gives  to  support  the  children  while  the  husband  is  on  numerable  pamphlets  arid  leaf­
on  which  the  youngsters  in  that  idea  of  a five­dollar  assessment  a  ship  earning  money  to  support  lets  printed  by  the  Union  is  also 
part  of  Norway  got  their  pre­ are  that  the  LOG  is  an  annual  them.  And  is  he  not  compensat­ a  drain  on  the  General  Fund­
drain  on  the  General  Fund  and  ed  by  a  home  to ..go  to  when  he  What  bothers  me  is  that  the 
liminary training  as seamen. 
that  the  voluntary  contributions  can  get . off  a  ship  and  the* love  Brothers  that  drew  Up  this  reso­
We  also  had  the  training  ship 
are  being  paid  by  only  some  of  of  his  family? 
lution  assume  conditions  to  be 
Christian  Radich  in  the  Eastem  the  Brothers. 
Is  not  the  pleasure  of  smoking  so  on  which  they  haven't  offered 
part  of  Norway,  and  the  Stats­
Let  us  examine  these  reasons  a  drain  on  a  man's  total  wages  the  slightest  facts  to  back  up 
rad  Lemkulh,  which  is  the  prop­
and 
see  if  they  are  xeaJ  enough  for  a  year,  but  is  he  not  com­ their  argument  for  another  as­
erty  of  the  western  part  of  Nor­
for 
the  SIU  membership  to  pensated for  it  by  the  enjoyment  sessment. 
way. 
assess  themselves five  dollars  an­ he  derives  from  smoking?  Even 
My  objection  to  their  use  is 
FACTS  LACKING 
nually.  Is  the  LOG  a  drain  on  serious  thinking  is  a  drain  of 
not only  the fact that  these ships 
the  General  Fund?  By  that  to  energy  from  one's  mind  and  I'm  J  believe  it  desii­able  that  be­'  To  the  Editor:' 
are  obsolete  and  of  no  value  in 
say,  as  the  resolution  implies,  afrciid  there  has  been  ,  little  fore  this  resolution  ever  gets  to  Congratulations  to  the  SIU  on 
a  marine  education.  The  family 
money  is  taken  from  the  Gen­ thinking  going  into  the  making  a  referendum  vote  Headquarters  the  Cities  Service  victory—­the 
of  a  cadet  on  those  ships  has  to 
could  tell  us  just  how  much  the  signing  by  the  Company  of  an 
contribute  to  the  expenses  of  eral  Fund  to  maintain  the  LOG.  of  this  resolution. 
voluntary  contributions  made  to  SIU. contract  and  its  immediate 
training  the  men.  Consequently 
the 
LOG  defray  the  cost  of  pub­ monetary  gains—not  to  speak  of 
LOVELY  GIRLS  DEPARTMENT 
the  average  youngster  you  will 
lishing  it.  Let  us  get  some  facts  modern  working  rules  and  con­
find  on  them  is  not  the  kind  of 
before  we  assume  something  to  ditions  to  follow. 
if 
ia  boy  who  has  an  honest  desire 
be  true.  I've  never  read  any  The  men  who  sailed  these 
^o  make  a career  of  the  sea. 
burst  of  passion  injhe  LOG  be­ ships  and  stuck  to  their  guns  in 
Quite the  opposite. These  train­
fore  on  the  subject  of  the  LOG  the  face  of  all  opposition, are,  to 
ing ships haye become the  dump­
being  a  ruinous  drain  on  the  be  honored.  They  have  given 
ing  grounds  for  the  wild  young­
General  Fund,  and  I  want  more  Unionism  a  tremendous  boost. 
sters  from,  well­to­do  families. 
to  go  on  than  this  fuzzy  written  This  should  convince  the  luke^ 
They  are  onboafd  tmwillingly 
resolution. 
warm  fence  sitters inside  or  out­
and  have  but  one  ambition—to 
Of  the  other  reason  that  we  side  Union  ranks  that  genuine 
get  back  ashore  as  soon  as  the 
must  have  an  assessment  be­ Unionism  pays  off  in  concrete 
head  of  their  families  believe 
cause  voluntary  contributions  to  results  an4  that  Unionism  a  le  it'; I 
they  have  reformed. 
the  LOG  are  made  by  only  some  SIU  type  is  in  the  forefront  of  iSi;i 
Due  to  that  fact;  most  of  the 
of  the  Brothers.  I  believe  that  the fight  for  freedom  and  pork 
men  coming  aboard  a  merchant 
those  who  gladly  contribute  to  chops  in  the  maritime  industry.' 
vessel  from  a  schoolship  are 
the  LOG  do  so  because  they  en­ The  power  of  unity  and  pur­
treated  with  contempt,  which 
joy  its  features;  those  who  con­ pose,  of  correct  leadership  poli­
most  of  them  do  their  utmost 
tribute,  but  do  so  because  a  cies  and  membership  backing­
to  live  up  to. 
Patrolman  is  asking  him  directly  plus  determination,  i.e.,  plain 
for 
a  donation  for  the  LOG, 
damned  stubborness,  is  there  for 
ANTI­UNION  TRAINING 
In  closing  I  &lt;fo  not  believe  it  all  the  world  to  see. 
Second,  but  not  the  least  im­
is  the  custom  with  unions  to  Once  more  —  congratulations. 
portant,  is  'the  fact  that  the 
have  their  members  pay  a  speci­ No  longer  need  a  seaman  haunt 
yoimgsters,  while  in  training  are 
Looking  cute  as  all  get  out  in  her  new  Outfit,  the  gal  on  fic money  for  reading  the  union's  the  company  office  and  be  sub=­
taught  to  believe  in  their  su­
the  left  is redheaded  Marilyn  Willianut,  four  months,  daughter  paper. A  Brother  paying  his  dues  ject  to  a  secret  blacklist  in  thfe 
periority  over  the  ordinary  sea­
of  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Walter  Williams  of  Brooklyn.  The  daring  and  assessments  pays  for  the.  hands  of  men  who  control  hiS 
farer,  and  are  alsc  solidly  indoc­
damsel  on  the  right  who  appears  to  be  right  la  style  with  right  of  reading  his  union's' lit­ life and  those  O'f  his  loved  ones, 
trinated  in  anti­unionism  in  all  an  off­the'^shoulder  gown.  Is  Carol  Mpordsikaria, whose  parents  erature  without  another  .assess­
God  Bless  the  Siy,  Yours  has 
of  its  various  forms. 
ere  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Bill  Mpontsikaris  of  New  Bedford*  Mass.  ment  superimposed  on  this. 
been  a  magnificent fight. 
^ 
m­'­ I  have  also  spent  time  in  the  Both  fathers  are  Seafarers,  of  course. 
: 
: 
John  J.  Flynii; 
,Wittderittg 

Lacks Convinciiig Argument, Seafarer Says 

m 

CS Pact Hailed 
As Boost To 
Cause Of Unionism 

111 

I•

 

�Friday,  Muck1^1,  I960 

THE  SEAFARERS  t OG 

Page  Nine 

Cities Service Interim Contract Anaiyzed 
DATE  OF  AGREEMENT 
MARCH  10,  1950 

sea  falling  on  Sunday,  the  following  Monday  shall 
be  deemed , a holiday'and  no  double  overtime  shall  be 
. paid  on  holidays  falling  on  Sunday.  •  
COMMENT:  Holidays  that  fell  on  Simdays  (as 
they  did  last  Christmas  and  New  Year's)  were 
lost  to  Cities  Service  crewmen.  From  now  on  men 
on  CS  tankers  will  be  fully  protected  in  this 
matter. 

they  got  it. Under  this Article, five  different  rating* 
will  make  30  cents  more  an  hour  for  overtime. 

Article  7.  Ship's  Delegate.  One  (1)  man  in  each 
,  Interim  Agreement  made  this  ioth  day  of  March 
department  on  each  vessel  shall  be  recognized  as 
1950,  by  and  between  CITIES  SERVICE  OIL  COM­
delegate  for  his  department.  Such  delegates  are  privil­
PANY  OF  PENNSYLVANIA,  MARINE  DIVISION, 
eged  to  present  to  their  superior  officers, ^on  behalf 
(hereinafter called  the Company)  and  the  SEAFARERS 
of  the  members  in  their  department,  facts  and  opin­
INTERNATIONAL  UNION  OF  NORTH  AMERICA} 
ions  concerning  any  working  conditions  si)ecified  in 
ATLANTIC  AND  GULF  DISTRICT,  (hereinafter 
called  the  Union)  affiliated  with  the  AMERICAN 
(b)  The  work  week  in port  shall  be  forty  (40)  hours  this  Agreement  wherein  adjustment  is  thought  proper 
FEDERATION  OF  LABOR. 
per  week.  It  is  understood  for  the  purpose  of  this  There  may  also  be  a  ship's  delegate  who  shall  be 
privileged  to  present  to  the  Master,  on  behalf  of  the 
Article  1.  Recognition.  The  Company  recognizes  paragraph  all  work  performed  in  port  on  Saturdays,  unlicensed  personnel,  facts  and  opinions  concerning 
the  Union  as  the  exclusive  collective  bargaining  rep­ Sundays  and  recognized  holidays  shall  be  paid  for  any  working  conditions  in  this  Agreement  wherein 
resentative  for  the  unlicensed  personnel  (excluding  at  the  overtime  rate. 
COMMENT:  Under  the  old  conditions,  CS  men  adjustment  is  thought  proper. 
Stewards,  Pursers,  Boatswains)  employed  aboard  the 
COMMENT:  For  the first  time.  Cities  Service  tan­
worked  44  hours  a  week  in  port,  and  got  no  over­
vessels  of  the  Company  or  vessels  bareboat  chartered 
kermen 
will  have  around­the­clock  Union  represen­
time  for  work  done  up  to Saturday  noon. 
to  the  Company  where  the  Company  furnishes  the 
tation. 
Unlike 
the  appointed  stoogy  CTMA  "dele­
crew. 
(c)  At  sea  the  hours  of  work  shall  be  forty­eight 
gates," the  men the crew  elects as  Department  Dele­
COMMENT:  For  the  first  time.  Cities  Service  sea­ (48)  hours  per  week  for  men  standing  watches.  It  is 
gates  and  Ship  Delegate  will  do  the  best  they  can 
men  have  a  bona  fide  trade  union  to  represent  imderstood  that  for  the  purpose  of  this  paragraph 
to  see  that  the  agreement  is  lived  up  to.  If  they 
them  in  their  negoRations  with  the  company  on  Sundays  at  sea  .shall  be  considered  the  overtime  day, 
cannot,  they  will  turn the facts  over  to the  boarding 
wages,  conditions  and  working  rules,  and  to  handle  that  is  to  say,  all  work  performed  on  Sunday  at  sea 
Patrolmen,, who  will  carry  on^  The  shipboard  Dele­
their  grievances. 
shall  be  paid  for  at  the  overtime  rate. 
gates  are, the  first  line—and  the  backbone—of  the 
(d)  Engine  and  Deck  Day  Men  at  Sea.  The  work 
Union's  defenses,  so  be  sure  to  choose  men  who 
Article  2.  Employment.  The  Company  will  not  dis­
week 
for  the  unlicensed  Deck  and  Engine  personnel 
know  the  contract  and,  preferably,  men  who  have 
criminate  in  hiring  unlicensed  personnel,  or  in  their 
had  previous  experience  in  this  matter. 
tenure  in  employment,  between  Union  men  and  Non­ who  do  not  stand  watches  shaU  be  forty­four  (44) 
Union  men.  The  Company  will  notify  the  Union  in  hours per  week  (8 a.m.  to 5  p.m.  week­days and  8  a.m. 
Article  8.  Grievance  Procedure.  For  the  adjustment 
Ports  where  men  are  required  as  far  in  advance  as  to  12  noon  Saturdays). 
of 
grievances  arising  under  this  agreement  which  can­
(e)  Eight  (8)  Hour  Day.  Except  for  emergencies,  no 
possible  when  any  unlicensed  men  are  to  be  employed 
not 
satisfactorily  be  adjusted  aboard  the  vessel,  there 
SO  that  the  Union may  send  men having  the  qualifica­ member  of  the  imlicensed  personnel  will  be  required  shall  be  established a  port  committee  in  the  Home  port 
tioqs  for  the  jobs  to  be  filled.  As  between  applicants  to  work  more  than  eight  (8)  hours  in 'any  one  day  (New  York)  consisting  of  a  representative  or  repre­
having  comparable  qualifications,  the  Company  will  without  the  payment  of  overtime. 
sentatives  of  the  Unipn  and  of  the  Company's  shore 
COMMENT:  For  the first  time  there  is  a  definite,  operating  staff.  This  port  Committee  shall  be  ready 
give  preference  to  those  applicants  for  jobs  who  have 
fleet­wide  rule  as  to  hours  of  work.  Before  this  to  meet  on  24  hours'  notice  to  either  party  any  day, 
seniority  with  the  Company  as  hereinafter  defined. 
agreen^ent,  this  was  generally  left  up  to  the  indi­ Monday  through  Friday,  between  9:00  A.M.  and  5:00 
If  the  Union  considers  the  Company's  rejection  of  any 
vidual  Masters  or  Department  heads,  with  little—  P.M.,  holidays  excluded,  and  shall  endeavor  to  arrive 
applicant  for  a  vacancy  tO'  have  been  discriminatory 
if  any—overtime  for  work  in  excess  of  8  hours.  at  a  prompt  and  fair  adjustment  of  each  grievance. 
.because  of  Union  membership,  or  without  just  cause, 
Even  when  overtime  was  promised,  it  was  seldom  In  the  decision  or  settlement  of  all  matters  sub­
it  shall  be  dealt  with  imder  the  grievance  procedure 
paid.  This  practice  has  been  halted  for  good. 
and  the  Union  agrees  that  such  rejection  or  resort  to 
mitted  to  the  port  Committee,  the  Union  and  the 
the  grievance  procedure  shall  not  cause  any  vessel 
(f)  Stewards  Department.  The  Stewards  Department  Company,  irrespective  of  the  number  of  their  repre­
to  be  delayed. 
shaU  be  required  to  work  eight  (8)  hoiurs  per  day  in  sentatives,  shall  each  have  one  vote. 
Unlicensed  personnel  when  applying  for  employment  a  spread  of  twelve  (12)  hours.  For  the  purpose  of 
In  the  event  the  port  Committee  is  imable  to  ad­
shall  submit  to  such  physical  examination  as  may  be 
this  section,  any  work  performed  at  sea  on  Sundays  just  said  grievance  within  48  hours,  either  the  Union 
prescribed  by  the  Company  and  shall  submit  from  or  holidays  and  in  port  on  Saturdays,  Sundays  and  or  the  Company  may,  within  30  days  thereafter,  sub­
•  time  to  time  thereafter  to  such  physical  examination  holidays  shall  be  paid  for  at  the  overtime  rate  of  mit  the  same  to  arbitration  as  hereinafter  provided^ 
as  may  be  required  by  the  Company.  FaUme  to  pass  pay.  The  schedule  of  working  horns  for  the  Stewards  If  such  question  shall  not  be  so  submitted  to  arbitra­
any such  physical  examination sh41l  be  sufficient cause 
Department  personnel  to  be  worked  out  during  bar­ tion  within such  30  days,  it shall  be  considered  closed­
to  prevent  employment  or  to "^ause  termination  of 
In  the  event  arbitration  be  desired  by  either  party, 
gaining  sessions  on  balance  of  this  contract. 
employment;  provided,  that  if  Jhe  Union feels  that  the 
COMMENT:  Stewards Department  men would work  it  shall  notify  the  other  party  in  writing  as  herein 
Company  doctor  has  .unfairly  discriminated  against  or 
whenever,  wherever  and  as  long  as  the  Steward's  above  provided,  stating  the  question  to  be  submitted 
unjustly  rejected  a  member  of  the  unlicensed  person­
to "arbitration.  Within  15  days  after  receipt  by  such 
pleasure  demanded,  with  little or  no overtime. 
nel,  it  shall  be  dealt  with  as  a  grievance;  and,  pro­
other  party  of  such  notice  in  writing,  the  Company 
vided  further,  that  the  Union  will  not  interfere  with 
(g)  The  following  days  shaR  be  recognized  as  and  the  Union  shall  jointly  ­submit  such  grievance 
or  delay  any  vessel  because  of  such  grievance. 
holidays: 
to  arbitration  in  New  York  under  the  volimtary  rules 
Nothing  contained  in  this  agreement  shall  be  con­
New  Year's  Day 
Independence  Day 
of  the  American  Aribitration  Association.  Insofar  as 
strued  to  prevent, the discharge  of  any  member  of  the 
Lincoln's  Birthday 
Labor  Day 
applicable  to  the  particular  grievance  submitted  to 
unlicensed  personnel,  who,  in  the  opinion  of  the 
Washington's  Birthday 
Armistice  Day 
arbitration,  the  arbitrator  shall  have  authority  to  in­_ 
Company  is not  satisfactory;  provided,  however,  that  if 
Memorial  Day 
Thanksgiving  Day 
terpret  and  apply  the  provisions  of  this  agreement, 
the  Union  feels  that  any  such  discharge  is  discrimina­
Christmas  Day 
but  he  shall  not ­have  authority  to  alter  or  amend  this 
tory  or  without  just  cause,  it  shall  be  dealt  with  as 
agreement 
in  any  respect  whatsoever;  the  arbitrator 
COMMENT:  If  there  ever  was  a  company fleet­
a  grievance;  and,  provided  further,  that  the  Union 
shall 
have 
the  authority  to  order  reimbursement  fOT 
wide  policy  on  holidays,  it  was  never  followed. 
will  not  interfere  with  or  delay  any  vessel  because 
any 
loss 
of 
wages  or  any  other  benefit  to  which  he 
The N^ter  would recognise  or  ignore  holidays,  de­^ 
of  such  discharge. 
might 
be 
entitled 
under  this  agreement  to  the  encb­
pmding  on  his  mood.  Many  a  Cities  Service  sea­ &lt; 
Nothing  in  this  Article  is  to  be  construed  to  mean 
man  has  worked  Fourth  of  July  or  Christmas  at  ployee  concerned  in  the  grievance  so  submitted  to 
that  the  Union  will, Jn any  manner,  interfere  with the 
the  regular  rate.  Now  the  men  are  assured  of  nine  arbitration  hereunder.  The  determination  of  the  griev­
Company  in  its  free  selection,  transfer  or  retaining  of 
recognised  holidays,  the  same  as  the  men  on  other  ance  by  the  arbitrator  shall  be final  and  binding  upon 
employees  with  seniority  as  hereinafter  defined. 
the  Company,  the  Union,  or  any  employee  concerned 
SlU­contracted  ships. 
COMMENT:  This  clause  delinitely  puis  an  end  lo 
therein.  The  costs  of  any  such  arbitration  shall  be 
Article  5.  Wage  Scales. 
discrimination in  hiring.  Men sent  down to  the  com­
shared  equally  by  the  Company  and  the  Union. 
pany  from  the  Hall  have to be  accepted or  rejected 
Deck  Department:  •  
COMMENT:  This Article  guarantees that  grievances 
on  the  basis  of  experience  and .ability.  Whenever 
Able  Seaman 
.....$233.00 
which  cannot  be  settled  aboard  ship  will  not  die 
the  Union  feels  that  a  man  has  been  rejected  or'  Deck  Maintenance—^AB 
251,00 
an  unnatural  death.  A  decision  must  be  reached on 
fired  arbitrarily,  it  can  invoke  the  grievance  pro­
Ordinary  Seaman 
203.50 
all  beefs,  whether  through  the  Port  Committee  or 
cedure  (Article  8  of  this  agreement)  under  which 
Deck  Maintenance—OS 
227.50 
arbitration.  So  Cities  Service  men  now  know  that 
he may  be awarded  "reimbursement  for  any  loss  of 
if 
they  have  a  good  beef,  they  will  get  satisfac­
Engine  Department: 
wages  and  benefits." 
tion; 
and  that,  since  there  are  definite  time  limits 
Pumpman 
­ 
$313.00 
set, 
the 
beef  cannot  be  strangled  by  red  tape  and 
Article  3."  Passes.  The  Company  shall  furnish  ap­
313.00 
Machinist 
inaction. 
propriate  passes  to  autliorized  representatives  of  the 
Oiler 
.V 
233.00 
Union  to  board  the  vessels  of  the  Company  for  the 
F.W.T.  ....  ............u..........M................................. 233.00 
Article  9.  Term  of  Agreement.  This  agreement  shaU 
purpose  of  conducting  legitimate  business  with  mem­
Wiper 
......H......H..................M......H............... 227.50 
take  effect  as  of  the  date  hereinabove first  set  forth 
bers  of  the  Union  in  the  unlicensed  crew's  messrobm 
and  shall  remain  in  effect  until  February  l5th,  1951, 
Stewards  Depa^ment: 
or  recreational  facilities.  Any  pass  shall  be  revocable 
and  from  year  to  year  thereafter  unless  either  party 
Chief  Cook 
$274.50 
by the  Company  at  any time  for  cause.  Not more  than 
shall  give  written  notice  of  its  election  toi  amend  co­
2nd  Cook  and  Baker 
245.00 
;two  passholders  shall  be  allowed  aboard  al^y  vessel 
;­i1 
terminate  this  agreement  to  the  other  party  at  least  ­'i^J 
Galley Man 
203.50 
of  the  Company  at  the  same  time.  The  Union'guaran­
60  days  before  the  expiration  date  of  this  agreement 
Messman 
197.50 
tees  that  its  authorized  representatives  to  whom  such 
or 
the  expiration  of  any  such  annual  extension  there­
COMMENT:  All  CS  tankerihen  under  this  contract 
passes  are  issued  will  not  interfere  with  or  retard 
of. 
Within  ten  (10)  days  after  the  giving  of  any  such 
.  have  won  increases  ranging  from  $13  to  $36.50, 
the  work  of  the  vessel.* 
notice 
of  election  to  amend,  the  party  giving  such 
something  they  could  not  do  while  they  were  un­
COMMENT:  Whenever  ' a  Cities  Service  tanker 
notice 
shall 
submit  its  proposed  changes  in  writing 
oi^ganised. 
* docks  in or near  an  SIU  port,  it  will  be  visited  by 
to  the  other  party. 
SIU representatives,  who will  handTe  whatever beefs 
Article  6.  Overtime  Rate.  Overtime  rate  for  un­
Either  the  Company  or  the  Union  may  request  that 
the crew  may have  and clarify  misinterpretations  of  licensed  men  covered  by  this  Agreement  whose  base  negotiations  be  opened  for  designated  changes  in  the 
the  working  rules. 
salary  is  imder  $235.73  per  month  shall  be  $1.15  per  wage  scales  set  forth  herein  on  or  at  any  time  after 
hour,  and  for  those  whose  base  salary  is  $235.73  per  this  agreement  has' been  in  effect  for"  six  moulhs  by 
'  Article  4. Hours  of  Work.  Work  in Port  and at  Sea. 
month  and  over  shaU  be  $1.45  per  hour. 
giving  at  least  30  days'  prior  written  notice  to  the 
(a)  Overtime  shall  be  paid  for  all  work  performed 
. 
by  unlicensed  personnel  in  port  or  at  sea  on  any  of 
COMMENT:  Formerly,  the  tmlicensed  personnel  other party  of  the desire of  the party giving such notice 
the  nine  (D)  holidays  specified  in  this  Agreement; 
(except  Stewards,  who  do  not  come  under  this  to  negotiate  a  change  in  such  wage  scale.  No  su(d&gt; 
provided,  however,  that  in  the  case  of  holidays  at 
contract)  gof  $1.15  per  hour  for  overtime—when 
(Continued  on  Page  10) 

�THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Friday.  March  24. 

Service Interim Contract Analyzed 
(Contftmed from  Page 9) 
request  shall  be  deemed  cause  for  tenUinatibn.  of  this 
agreement  or  of  any  provision  thereof.  If  the  parties 
shEill  fail  to  agree  upon  the  requested  change  in  the 
wage scale,  the provisions  of  this agreement  shall  con­
tinue  in  effect  throughout  the  balance  of  the  terms 
of  this agreement,  and  such  failure  to  agree  shall  not 
constitute  a  grievance  under  the  provisions  of  this 
agreement,  nor  shall  it  be  referred  to  arbitration  or 
mediation. 
COMMENT:  This  provides  the  machinery  for  fb­
opening the  contract  for  wage increases  and changes 
in  Working  niles. 
Article 10.  Seniority. 
1.—Present  employees  as  used  herein  shall  mean 
iaU  men  in  the  Unit  presently  serving  in  the fleet 
including  those  now  on  vacation,  sick  leave or  author­
ized  leave. 
±—^Employment  in  the fleet  shall  not  be  broken 
because  of  vacation,  sick  leave  or  authorized  leave. 
The  Union  shall  be  promptly  notified  when  any  such 
authorized  leave has  been  granted. 
3.—^AU  present  employees  may  remain  in  employ­
ment  unless  they  quit  or  are  discharged  for  cause.  ' 
4—If  any  such  present  employee  quits  and  later 
applies  for  reinstatement  he  shall  have  preference  if 
he  has  24  iponths  sea  service  in  the fleet,  between 
March  10th,  1947  and  March  10th,  1950. 
COMMENT:  Cities  Service  seamen  bh  authorized 
leave are  guaranteed  that  their  jobs are  waiting  for 
them  when  they  come  back.  No  waiting  or  boot­

licking,  the  jobs  are  thuirs  when  they  want  them.­
WhUe  the  negotiations  for  a  full  agreement  are  in 
Eveh  those men  who imposed  the SlU  are  protected  progress,  all  the  Company's  working  rules  and  other 
in  their  job  by  this  fair  and  liberal  BIU  contract,  c'Snditions  of  employment,  not  expressly  provided  for 
giving  them*a  chemce  to see  how deinociratic  union­ herein,  shall  continue  in  full  force  and  effect. 
ism  really  works for  all seamen. 
COMMENT:  Even  now,  the  Union  and  the  com­
pany  are  meeting  to  work  out  a  new  set  of  work­
Article 11.  Membership  in  the  Uzuon.  The  Union 
ing 
rtiles  for  the  Cities  Service  tankers  by  April 
agrees  to  extend  membership  to  present  employees, 
8, 
1950. 
Until  that  time,  the  old  company  working 
as  defined  in  sub­division  1  of  Article  10,  covered  by 
rules still  maintain. If  full  agreement  is  not  reached 
this  Agreement  on  the  same  terms  and  conditions  as 
by that  date—unless  the  time  Is  extended  by  both 
are  available  to  all  other  applicants  for  membership. 
parties—^the  Union  is  released  from  its  no  strike 
COMMENT:  Every  man  now  in  the­ employ  of 
pledge,  which  is  covered  by  Article  13,  below. 
Cities  Service  can  join  and  have  all  the  privileges 
of  membership  in  the  SIU.  If  they  choose,  they 
Article 13.  No Strike  or  Lockout.  While  this  interim 
can sail  on  any  one  of  the  SlU­Contraieted  ships,  to  agreement  or  any  extension  thereof,  is  in  effect,  the 
all  parts  of  the  world,  under  the  finest  conditions  Company  agrees  that  there  will  be  no  lockout;  the 
and  highest  wages  in  maritime. 
Union  agrees  that  neither  it  nor  any  of  its  members 
shall  engage  in,  or  in  any  way  encourage  or  sanction 
Article  12.  Compleliohs  of  Full  Contract,  immedi­ any strike or  any  other  group action  which shall inter­
ately  upon  the signing  of  this  Interim  Agreement,  the 
rupt  or  interffere  with  the  Company's  operations.^ 
Company  and  the  Union  will  meet  to  bargain  with 
respect  to  working  rules  and  other  conditions  of 
CITIES  SERVICE  OIL  COMPANY  OF  PENNA. 
employment.  When  a fuU  Agreement  has been" reached 
BY:  (s) ^  Chas.  R.  Johnson 
with  respect  to  such  working  rules  and  other  condi­
Labor  Relations  Director 
tions  of  employment,  such  Agreement  shall  be  incor­
SEAFARERS  INTERNATIONAL  UNION, 
porated  with  and  made  part  of  this  Interim  Agree­
A.&amp;G.  DISTRICT  (A.F.ofL.) 
ment. 
Failure  to  reach  a  full  agreement  on  working  rules 
BY:  (s)  John  Arabasz 
and  other  conditions  of  employment  by  April  8th, 
BY:­^S)  Lindsey  j.  Williams 
' 
f 
1950,  shall  free  the  Union  or  the  Company  frottl  ad­
^BY:  (S)  George  Ruf 
herence  to  Item  No.  13  of  this  Interim  Agteement, 
BY:  (s)  Paul  Hall 
J  k ^ 
unless  it  is  mutually  agreed  to  furthfer  extend  the 
BY:  (s)  Robert  A.  Matthews 
1  V  ­
date  for  agreement. 
BY:  (s)  Lioyd  Gardner 
. 

£sso Nien Look To  SIU  To  Mork  Tinis^ To  Stooge  Vnion' 
ice  battle  by  the  striking  paral­ tuted  elaborate  and  costly  sys­ "The  writer,  on  one  occasion,  nor  any  of  the  "executives"  of 
(Continued  from  Page  1) 
lel 
between  CTMA  and  ETMA.  tems  of  service  bonuses,  and  personally  asked  the  ETMA  Pa­ the  Esso  Tankermen's  Associa­
and  the  SIU  sympathizers  were 
• 'if,­ i 
Both  used  the syrupy  paternal­ other  concessions  and  seemingly  trolman,  Sam  Royal,  for  a  clari­ tion  has  the  ability  or  the  in­
tl'i  jao  exception.  This  was  a  must 
fication  of  this  particular  clause.  genuity  to  conceive  anything  so 
if  they  hoped  to  remain  in  the  ism  that  is  concocted  to  cover  liberal  policies. 
Wr
"Ih 
some 
insthhees 
they 
even 
I 
told  him  it  had  been  the  prac­ neat. 
fleet.  But  as  events  have  proved,  Up  the  rank  plot  to  chisel  sea­
surpass 
conditions 
on 
Unioh­
tice 
to. call  us  out  during  our  "However, I do know that  only 
the CTMA  membership lists  were  men out  of  decent  conditions and 
Cohtracted 
Vessels; 
They 
have 
meal 
hours,  and  asked  him  if  those  having  membership  in  the 
ho indication  of  its strength,  just  a  free  voice  in  the  settling  of 
clever high­paid 
lawyers 
to draw 
there 
was 
any  penalty  provision.  Esso  Tankermen's  Association 
as'the Esso  Tankermen's Associa­ their problems  with management. 
Up 
union 
contracts 
and 
working 
"He  replied  that  no  penalty  were  eligible  to  vote.  And  I  do 
tion  membership  lists  are  no  in­
But  let  Ernest  Bossert,  who 
dication  of  sentiment  among  the  was employed  as a  tankerman  by  rules  closely  Simulating  our  could  be  claimed  and  nothing  know  also  that  this  Esso  Tank­
Union  contracts; 
could  be  done  about  it., 
ermen's  Association  represents 
men  in  the  Esso fleet  today. 
Esso  for  many  years,  tell  it: 
Esso's  active  role  in  helping  "This  company  imion  (CTMA)  "The  Word  'simulating'  above  "I take  this  one  clause to illus^"  only  a  very  small  minority  Of 
' tlities  Service fight  the  genuine  was  organized  along  the  same  is  used  advisedly  because,  while  trate  the  difference  between  the  \he  men  sailing  Esso  ships." 
union  preferences  of  its  seamen  lines  as  the  Esso  Tankermen's  these  contracts  appear  on  the  Union  contract  and  these  phony  • What  Ernest  Bossert  had  to 
has  been  substantiated  in  innu­ Association,  which  is  the  stooge  surface  as  equal, to  Union  con­ Contracts.  The  Union  contract  say  about  ETMA  and  compafly 
merable  other  instances. 
union  of  Standard  Oil  of  New  tracts,  a  Close  study  of  them  has  the  above  clause  also,  but  paternalism  are  the  sentiments 
will  reveal  glaring  evasions  and  there  are  penalty  provisions  expressed  by  the  Esso  tanke'r­
­  When  Cities  Service  was  fran­ Jersey. 
inconsistehcies. 
in  a final  analy­ which  give  it  strength. 
tically  trying  to  keep  men  with 
men  who  have  been  contacting 
NO  SUBSTITUTE 
sis 
they 
have 
nothing 
at  aU,  ex­
tinion  sympathies  off  its  ships, 
SIU 
orgamzers  these  past  couple 
"If  'We  arb  interrupted  in  our 
Esso stepped  into  the breach  and  "Don't  be  fooled  by  any  of  cept  what  is  to  the  advantage  to  meals,  we  get  one  hour  over­ of  Weeks.  The  men  are  hep, to 
screened  CS  job  applicants  in  these  company  outfits that  might  the  company. 
time,  and  ohe  additional  hour  the  fact­that  the  company  prfe­
its  State  Street  offices  in  New  be  formed  principally  to  keep  "!ln illustrate  just  one  Of  mahy  overtime  as a penalty  for  the in­ tends  to  giVe  them  something 
York  City.  But  Esso  was  no  the  Unions  out,  Uhd  are  hot  for  meaningless  clauses/in  their  Con­ terruption.  'Without  this  penalty  with  the  right  hand  and  then 
more  successful  than  was  Cities  the  seamen's  benefit.  They  can  tract,  which  simiilates  union  provision,  the  Clause  itself  is  takes it  away  with  the left. 
iService  and  pro­SlU men  slipped  never  take  the  i»lace  of  a  mili­ Ctmtracts,  there  is  this  clause:  meaningless. 
READY  FOR  SIU 
through  their  careful  anti­union  tant  Union  such  as  the  8lU,"  'There  Shall  m  one  fuil  un­
•
''About 
two 
years 
ago 
their 
But  for  the first  time,  Esso 
Bcrem  just  as  they  did  up  on  Bossert  warned  Cities  Service  broken  hour  for  meals  for  each 
shrewd  company  lawyers  drew  tankermen,  inspired  by  the  vic­
.  Fine  Street,  for  it  is  virtually  seamen  wjien  CTMA  Was  form­ man,' 
"But,  and  here  is  the  joker,  up  an  entirely  neW  contract,  tory  of  their  fellow  tankermen 
inrpossible  to  obtain  competent  ed. 
"In 
fact," 
said 
BoSsert, 
"ofte 
there 
is  absolutely  no  provision  which  is  a  miaSterpiecfe  in  the  in  the  Cities  Service fleet,  aye 
seamen  today  without  taking 
of 
their 
main 
objectives 
is 
a 
for 
a 
penalty  in  the  event  this  company  interests. 
inclined  to  shake  off  the  yoke 
men  of  definite  pro­Union  senti­
blacklist,system 
against 
militant 
'full 
tmbroken 
hour' 
for 
­each 
'T 
Say 
company 
lawyers 
drew 
of 
company­sponsored  unionism. 
ment. 
men  who  might  have  the  coiu:­ man  for  each  meal  is  not  al­ up  this  contract,  beCaUse  I  am  The SrU organizing  staff  stands 
AFRAID  OF  SIU 
age  to. speak  out  and  demand  lowed. 
certain  that  neither  Sain  Royal  ready  to  help  them  obtain  the 
In  fronting  for  CS,  Esso  was  anything  for  the  employees  — 
free  voice  they  seek,  along  with 
naturally figuring 
that  if  it  something  Which  the  company 
FIRST  fO SHIP FROM  SIU  TO CS  ~  freedom  from  blacklists,  intimi­
fought  the  SIU  in  the  Cities  looks  upon  with  great  disfavor; 
dation  and  company  domination 
Service fleet  it  Would  stave  off 
'Having  been  an  employee  of 
over  every  aspect  of  shipboard 
the  immediate  possibility  of  the  Standard  Oil  of  New  Jersejr  for 
life. 
SIU  going  into  Esso  ships. 
yeare,  I  feel  that  I  can  speak 
Other  Essb  tankermCn  who are 
As  men  in  the  Esso fleet  have  with  authority  about  this  com­
interested  ih  the  brand  of  legi­
pointed  out,  this  is  sufficient  pany  and  their  stooge,  Esso 
timate  trade  unidn  representa­
evidence  of  the  fact  that  the  Tankermen's  Association. 
tion  that  is  responsible  for  the 
company  is  merely  using  ETMA  "To  begin  with,  all  patrolmen 
high  standard  of  wages  arid 
to  crush  the  inevitable  prefer­ ^d  executives  ­of  the  Esso 
working  conditions  ih  the  Arn­
ences of  its  unlicensed  persohhel.  Tankermen's  Association  are  on 
erican  merchant  marine—^the  un­
if  there  were  no  ties  between  the  company  payroll  and  they 
organized  tahker  ships  included 
Standard  OH  of  N§w  Jersey  and  are,  with  few  exceptions,  the 
—should  feel  free  to  call  updn 
ETMA,  the  conlpany  would  have  same executives year in and  year 
the  SIU  orgamzing  staff  at  arty 
remained  aloof,  it  Would  have  out.  They  have  been  so  since 
time  for  infomiation. 
shown no Interest  ih  the  outcome  its  inception. 
All  queries  will' be  kept  in 
of  the Slti  drive  on  Cities  Serv­
"Standard  Oil of  New Jersey  is 
strict  confidence.  ESso  men  wish­
ice,  one  way  or  the  other. 
prbbahly  one  of  the  largest  and 
ing  infPtmation  to  be  mailed  to 
t•  
Rut  Esso  was fighting  its  own  most  efficiently  organized  cor­
them  should  give  their  private 
diiti­imion  battle  as  well.  A  vic­ porations  in  the  world.  They 
mailing  address.  A  pledge  card 
tory  in  Cities  Service  for  the  khow  the  power  of  organization. 
appears  on­the  back  page of  this 
€aus6  Of  legitimate  trade  union­ They  also  know  the  power  of  an 
issue. 
ism  might  well  be  a  forecast  efficiently  organized  and militant 
In  view  of  the  recent  devel­' 
of  things  to  come  in  its  own  union  such  as  the  SIU. 
opments  in  the  tanker field,  it 
fleet 
and  the other  Uiiargaiilz­
"They  fear  it  and  will  go  to 
appeats  that  much  may  be 
ed fleets  ih  the  tanker field. 
great  lengths  in  preventing  or­
ibb 
ti§it)  hdams  as 
shflfws~SIU  OiganizlBk  wfitteh  by  uhorgahi2ied  tahker­
The  hand  of  Esso  was  further  ganization  of  their  workers  by  Kaiih  Teip*  tMppiug  tard  maJHttg  him  tB* flzst  nmit to  ba  men  en  the  drtve  for  eeohoftilc 
^vealed  during  the  Cities  Sea v­ sueh  a  Union.  They  have  insti­
freedtaa. 
­ 
v 
' 
to  a  Ciflto 
thi|n  tha flatam  Mirlliina. 
li": 

yfe? 

�24/1860 

T  HE  SB M:  F  A  RE R S  LOG 

paa9 pleroii 

Minutes Of A&amp;G Brench Meetings In Brief 
BOSTON—Chairman,  T.  Flem­
two  from  each  department,  tp 
ing,  30821;  Recording  Secretary, 
make  recommendations  to  Head­
9*  Lawson.  894;  Reading  Clerk, 
quarters  as  to  procedure  to  be 
9,  Murphy,  39427. 
used  on  excuses.  Meeting  ad­
Minutes  of  previous  meetings 
journed  with  50  members  presr  "^'fl 
REG. 
REG. 
REG. 
TOTAL 
SHIPPED  SHIPPED  SHIPPED  TOTAL 
ip  all  Branches  read  and  ap­
PORT 
DECK 
ENG. 
STWDS. 
REG. 
, 
DECK 
ENG. 
STWDS.  SHIPPED  ent. 
proved,  with  exception  of  mo­
4  4  4 
; 
26 
11 
15 
52 
14 
19 
15 
48 
tion  to  non­concur  with  Phila­ Boston 
NEW  YORK—Chairman,  Lloyd 
New 
York 
101 
98 
89 
288 
73 
61 
60 
194  Gardner,  3697;  Recording  Secre? 
delphia's  and  Galveston's  New 
37 
34 
41 
112 
18 
27 
29 
•   74  lary,  Freddie  Stewart,  4935; 
Business.  Agent  reported  on. the  Philadelphia..... 
73 
48 
55 
176 
50 
45 
57 
152  Reading  Clerk,  Charlie  Hay­
^tuation  in  regard  to  shipping.  Baltimore 
Norfolk... 
32 
42 
27 . 
101 
•
 
1 
2 
3  mond,  98. 
Patrolman­Dispatcher  also  re­
Savannah. 
......... 
8 
7 
6 
21 
7 
1 
4 
12 
ported  on  activities  for  the  pre­
Minutes  of  meetings  in  all 
16 
14 
14 
44 
15 
12 
11 
38  Branches read  and accepted,  with 
vious  two  weeks.  Nev. ly­signed  Tampa 
New 
Orleans 
27 
26 
29 
82 
'  21 
20 
17 
58  exception  of  motion  to  non­con­
interim  agreement  between  SIU 
Mobile..... 
41 
54 
76 
171 
38 
54 
64 
156 
and  Cities  Service  Oil  Company 
cur  with  Philadelphia  New  Busi­
Galveston 
.' 
57 
40 
22 
119 
5 
4 
14 
23  ness  recommending  that  jobs  be 
was  read  and  a  motion  carried 
17 
29 
18 
64 
11 
22 
12 
45  posted  ten  minutes  before  the 
to  concur  in  it;  One  nonute  of  West  Coast 
silence  in  memory  of  departed  GRAND  TOTAL 
435 
403 
392 
1,230 
253 
267 
283 
803  hourly  call.  In  discussion,  speakr 
Union  Brothers.  Motion  carried 
ers  pointed  out  that  as  soon  as 
t§  adjourn  meeting  at  C  PM, 
job  comes  in,  it should  be  posted 
with  75  members  in  attendance  er's financial  report  were­  read  and  Excuse  Committee  was  el­ of  thanks to  organizing staff.  Mo­ as  per  shipping  rules.  Motion 
and approved. Other  Branch  min  ected  from  the  floor.  Headquar­ tion  carried  4o  concur  in  Savan­
4.  "S.  i 
carried  to  refer  Savannah  reso­
PHILADELPHIA  —  Chairman,  utes  also  read  and  approved,  ters  Reinstatement  Committee's  nah  resolution  concerning  miss­ lution  on  p&gt;enalties  for  missing 
A&gt;  S.  CarduUo,  24599;  Recording  Port  Agent  spoke  briefiy  on ship­ report  and.Trial  Committee's  re­ ing of  ship and  catching it  in  the  ship  back  to  that  Branch  for 
Spcretary,  A^  M.  Brancont  ping  in  this  port.  Charges  were,  port  were  read  and  concurred  in.  next  port.  Complaint  against  clarification.  Port  Agent  stated 
1|0848;  Reading  Clerk,  Don  Hall,  read  and  Trial  Committee's  find­ Motion  carried  to  give  rising  member  of  Chickasaw  crew  was  thet  shipping  had  managed  to 
ing.  were  accepted.  Motion  car­ vote  of  thanks  to  Headquarters  referred  to  a  Trial  Committee. 
48272. 
ried  to  accept  resolution  offered  for  job  well  done  in  getting  Committee  later  reported  back  hold  its  own  during  the  past 
Minutes  of  last  meetings  in  by  Savannah  Branch,  recom­ Cities  Service  to  agree  to 'con­
two­week  period.  In  Headquarr  ^ 
that  man  is  to  be  subject  to  a 
ajl  ports  were  read  and  approv­ mending  penalities  for  missing 
ters 
report,  Secretary­Treasurer 
tract.  Motion  carried  to  adjourn 
Motion  carried  to  accept  Ag­ ship.  One  minute  of  silence  in  at  8  PM,  with  39  members  pres­ fine  for  conduct  harmful  to  his  gave  a  picture  of  the  develop^ 
Union  Brothers;  motion  carried 
ent's  report,  which  outlined  memory  of  departed  Union  Bro­ ent. 
ments  leading  to  the  signing  of 
to 
concur  in  committee's  report. 
shipping  prospects  for  the  com­ thers.  Meeting  adjourned  at 
the  Cities  Service  agreement.  He 
Secretary­Treasurer's financial 
4  4  4 
ing  two  weeks.  Motion  carried  7:30  PM. 
NEW  ORLEANS^—  Chairman.  report  read  and  approved.  Under  pointed  out  how  the  SIU's  repur. 
tp  make  a  collection  for  Brother 
Frenchy  Michelel, ^1184;  Record­ Good  and  Welfare  several  speak­ tation  for  helping  other  unions 
4  4  4 
D.  Rose,  Book  No.  3139,  whose  NORFOLK—Chairman, 
J.  S.  ing  Secretary,  Johnny  Johnston,  ers  explained  hardships  men  rid­ had  been  of  tremendous  advan­r 
home  was  destroyed  by fire  re­ White,. 56;  Recording  Secretary.  53;  Reading  Clerk,  Buck  Ste­
tage  in  obtaining  all­out  sup­
ing  Cities  Service  had^  experi­
cently.  Secretary­Treasurer's  fin­ J.  A.  Bullock,  4747;  Reading  phens,  76. 
port  from  AFL  refinery  and  al­
enced  and  all  hands  felt  that 
ancial  report  was  read  and  ap­ Clerk,  James  Webb,  46306. 
New  Orleans'  previous  meet­ volunteer  organizers  deserved  lied  workers  in  the  South  and 
proved.  Communications  from  Minutes  of  previous  meeting  ing  minutes  read  and  approved. 
from  CIO  oil  workers  in  the 
the  highest  praise  for  their  ef­
men  seeking  to  be  excused  from  in  Norfolk  and  other  Branches  Motion  carried  to  accept  charges  forts. 
East  and  West.  He  said  these 
people  were  standing  by  up  to 
the  meeting  were  referred  to  read  and  approved,  except  for  as  read  and  refer  them  to  a 
4  4  4 
the  Dispatcher.  Charges  prefer­ motion  to  non­concur  with  Sa­ Trial  Committee,  which  was  el­
the  moment  the  contract  was 
MOBILE­r­Chairman,  L.  Neira.  signed  and  were  ready  to  re­
red  against  a  crewmember  of  vannah  resolution_.regarding  pen­ ected  from  the  floor.  New  Or­
26393;  Recording  Secretary, 
the  Steel  Scientist  accused  of  alties  all  around  in  cases  of  men  leans financial  report  and  Sec­ James  L.  Carroll,  14;  Reading  spect  SIU  picket  lines,  if  a 
strike  was  called.  The  pro­ •  
drunkenness  and  failure  to  do  missing  ship.  Secretary­Treasur­ retary­Treasurer's financial 
re­ Clerk,  H.  J.  Fischer,  59. 
his­ job  aboard  ship  were  read,  er's  financial  report  read  and  port  read  and  approved.  Trial 
posed  rule  on  compulsory  vaca­r 
Motions  carried  to  concur 
along  with  Trigl  Committee's  approved.  Agent  pointed  out  Conunittee's findings  read  and 
tions  has  been  roimdly  discussed 
with  minutes  of  previous  Branch 
ruling  that  he  be  placed  on  sus­ that  interim  agreement  signed  concurred  in.  Minutes  of  other  meetings  in  all  ports.  Agent  re­ m the  LOG for many months  and 
pension  for  one  year.  Meeting  Mar.  10  with  Cities  Service  Oil  Branch  meetings  read  and  ac­ ported  on  the  possibilities  for  t  is  expected  that  the  question 
adjourned  at  8:10  PM. 
Company  was  most  significant  cepted.  Agent  reported  that  shipping  for  the  coming  two  will  be  put  to  a  Union­wide 
4  »  » 
victory  won  by  any  maritime  shipping  had  fallen  off  and  that  weeks.  He  announced  the  death  referendum  to  allow  the  mem­t 
BALTIMORE—Chairman,  WU­ union.  He  read  the  story  of  the  it  is  not  expected  to  ^ick  up  of  four  SIU  men  during  the  aership  to  decide  which  way  it 
wants  to  go  on  this  matter,  he 
l^m  Renlz,  26445;  Recording  Cities  Service  agreement  from  for  the  next  two  weeks.  Since 
past  week:  Lee  Yarborough,  Cle­
concluded.  Charges  were  read 
si^etary,  G.  A.  Maslerson,  the  SEAFARERS  LOG  of  Mar.  the  last  meeting  there  were  six 
ment  Mayer,  George  Arnim  and 
28297;  Reading  Clerk,  A1  Slans­ 10  and  said  he  had  mapped  out  payoffs,  seven  sign­ons  and  Ruben  Nicholas.  Volimteprs  to  and  referred  to  a  trial  commit­
biiiry,  4683. 
a  plan  whereby  some  CS  ships  about  25  ships  in­transit  in  this  serve  as  pallbearers  for  Arnim's  tee.  Motion  carried  to  allow 
Motion  carried  to  suspend  might  be  induced  to  payoff  in  port.  He  also  discussed  the  sign­ and  Mayer's  funerals  were  re­ ! 3rother  extension  of  shipping' 
regular  order  of  business  and  Norfolk,  as a  means  of  providing  ing  of  the  Cities  Service  agree­ quested.  He  called  membership's  card  because  of  his  mother's 
go  into  obligations  and  charges.  job  opportunities  for  the  compe­ ment  and  recommended  that  per­ attention  to  fact  that  De  Luxe  serious illness. Meeting  adjourned 
Charges  and  Trial  Committee's  tent  men  in  this  port.  Commiyii­ mit  members  who  had  stood  by  cabs  are  non­union  and  that  at  8  PM. 
findings  in  case  of  member  cation  read  from  Brother  D.  in  Lake  Charles  be  given  con­ Teamsters  asked  support  by  hav­
aboard  the  Allegheny  Victory  Rose,  whose  home  burned  down  sideration  for  their  efforts.  Di­ ing  members  refuse  to  ride 
were read and approved.  Minutes  leaving  him,  his  wife  and­  eight  rector  of  Organization  Lindsey  them.  Motion  carried  to  give 
o(  meetings  in  other  Branches  children  destitute.  Motion  car­ Williams  outlined  the  CS  beef  vote  of  confidence  to  Director  of 
Wfere  read  and  concurred  in.  Mo­ ried  recommending  that  anyone  and discussed  the  principal  points  .Organization,  Negotiating  Com­
tion  carried  to  refer  all  com­ desiring  to  chip  in  to  help  this  in  the  contract.  Motion  carried  mittee  and  Strike  Committee 
munications from  men seeking  to  Brother  out  see  the  Disf&gt;atcher.  to  give  Brother  Williams  a  vote  for  a  very  capable  job  all  had 
• ^be excused  from  meeting  to  the  Requests  for  excuses  from  meet­ of  thanks  and  confidence  for  his  done  in  getting  Cities  Service 
Dispatcher.  Communication  from  ing  were  referred  to  the  Dis­ work  in  bringing  CS  imder  the  to  agree  to  contract.  Meeting  ad­
EILERT  E.  (Eric)  NATVIG 
Headquarters  announcing signing  patcher.  Motion  carried  that  we  SIU  banner.  Motion  carried  to  journed  at  7:55  PM,  with  400  "Fred  died  last  September. 
o| an  agreement  with  the  Cities  non­concur  with  resolution  from  accept  conununication  from  Paul  members  present. 
Jean  is  in  need  of  money:  John 
Service  Oil  Company  was  read  Savannah  concerning  shipping  Hall,  Secretary­Treasurer,  an­
Robertson." 
4  4  4 
and  approved.  Resolution  from  rule  on  missing  ship.  Meeting  nouncing  signing  of  CS  agree­
SAVANNAH ^Chairman.  Jeff 
4  4  4 
Sgvannah  Branch  was  tabled  adjourned  at  7:50  PM  with  101  ment.  Collection,, of  $105  was  Gillette,  37060;  Recording  Secre­
DONALD  TOWNSEND 
u^til  matter  was  fully  discussed  members  present. 
taken  up for Brother  D. W. Rose,  tary,  L.  E. Hodges.  255;  Reading  Your  sister,  Mrs.  Glenn Skeels, 
by  membership  through  mediuin 
whose  home  burned  down,  leav­ Clerk,  J.  B.  Sellers,  36401. 
4  4  4 
5027  Long  Branch  Avenue,  San 
o|  the  S5AFARERS  LOG.  Port  SAN  FRANCISCO—Chairman.  ing  his  eight  children,  his  wife  Savannah  Branch  minutes  and  Diego  7,  California,  is  trying  to 
Agent  said  that  shipping  had  Jeff  Morrison,  34213;  Recording  and  himself  without  quarters.  Secretary ­ Treasurer's financial 
locate  you. 
been  slow  and  prospects  are  not  Secretary,  D.  C.  Jones,  116;  Thomas  Atkins  and  Adolph  Sad­ report  read  and  approved.  Min­
4  4  4 
bright  for  the  immediate  days  Reading  Clerk,  S.  C.  White,  enwater  took  the  Union  Oath  of  utes  of  other  Branch  meetings 
WOODROW  W.  MOORE 
ahead.  He  thanked  all  hands  for  38302. 
Obligation.  Motion  (by  Nagel)  read  and  concurred  in,  with  ex­
Write  to  your  niece.  Miss 
standing  by  until  midnight  on  San  Francisco  minutes  of  pre­ carried  that  no  more  cards  be  ception  of  motions  to  non­con­ Lillian  Moore,  Box  692,  South 
Friday,  Mar.  10  imtil  word  of  vious  mating  and  Secretary­ extended  over  90  days  unless  cur  with  Philadelphia  New  Busi­ Hill,  Virginia. 
the Cities  Service settlement  had  Treasurer's financial  report  read  thoroughly  investigated  by  a  ness  that  jobs  be  posted  ten 
4  4  4 
been  received.  Motion  carried  to  and  approved.  With  exception  of  committee.  Meeting  adjourned  at  minutes  before  calling  time;  and 
LOUIS S. WTTTEN 
accept  Hospital  Committee's  re­ motion  to  non­concur  with  Phil­ 8:45  PM,  with  545  members  recommendation  that  a  Brother  Write  to  your  wife  at  once. 
port.  Under  Good  and  Welfare  adelphia  New  Business,  minutes  present. 
be  allowed  to  change  his  regis­ She  reports an  emergency: Route 
there  was  much  discussion  in  of  all  Branch  meetings  were  ap­
tration,  inasmuch  as  there  is  a  1,  c/o  H.  D.  Duke,  Dalton, 
4  4  4 
reference  to  the  Cities  Service  proved  after  they  had  been  TAMP,A  —  Chairman,  Ray  regular  procedure  for  making  Georgia. 
agreement  just  signed.  Meeting  read.  Port  Agent  said  that  shipr  Wiiite,  57;  Recording  Secretary,  such  a  cKange.  Telegram  from 
4  4  4 
adjourned  at  8:10  PM,  with  360  ping  had  been  dead  slow,  with  J.^. Jones,  2898;  Reading  Clerk,  Secretary­Treasurer  Hall  an^ 
GEORGE  A.  BUBKE 
members  present. 
the  in­transits  calling  for  very  A.  3.  Baker,  32313. 
nouncing  signing  of  interim  Your  motl^  asks  that  you 
4  4  4 
few  replacements.  Prospects  for  Minutes  of  all  Branch  meet­ agreement  with  Cities  Service  write  her  at  Box  95,  Mass, 
GALVEST^ — C h a i r man,  the next  two  weeks appear  much  ings"'read  and  approved.  Port  was  read  and  motion  carried  to  Michigan. 
Keith  Alsw,  7311;  Recording  brighter,  he  said,  as quite  a  few  Agent  discussed  shipping.  Com­ accept.  Motion  can­ied  to  go  on 
4  4  4 
Secretary,  R.  Wilbum,  37739;  ships  are  scheduled  to  arrive.  munication  read  from  Secretary­ record  to  elect five­man  conun.it­
Reading  Clerk, 3. Doggett.  50892.  Seattle  may  do  well  if  several  Treasurer  announcing  signing  of  tee  to  hear  charges  and  act  on  Your  mother  is  vesy  iU.  Ypur 
Minutes  of  previous  Galveston  developments  result  in  new  pay­ Cities  Service  agreement.  Mo­ excuses  for  lateness.  Motion  car­ father  asks  that  you  write  at 
meeting  and  Secretary­Treasur­ offs  coming  into  that  port.  Trial  tion  carried  to  awept  with  vpte  ried  tp  elect  six­dnen  cpnunittee, 

A&amp;G Shipping From Manh  I To Marth  IS 

I 

cAfiRoyu  i,  iiou#m8 

�Page  Tw^ve 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

FxidaF,  March  24,  1950 

11115  15 WHATfME Ori^5ffSl^T/|AlKaeA1&amp;y 
HA&gt;^  JUST 
T^ROoeH  AH SlU MeSOymo ODHlKAer 
IL'­. 

i^rt­

W' 

1/ 
••• 
K • 

I 

1 

The right to choose from any of uhe thousands of jobs on SIU 
freight ships« passenger ships, tankers, and towboats. 

VLOS,,. 
IHE  PB3Tl!;CTI0N  OF  £HE  SEAFARERS  INTERKAIIOUAL  ONION 
!•  No  overtime* 

WffATP0&gt;0li 

f  &lt; 

|!  £ 
lit! 

• '   
­

^€So TAAJKSRM^ : 
SIU fi«5 
iVtRoosH 
ccvv«MMy­
UNtOti AlME M TUe TAtiKeR FlEitD . 

SKSA' THIS pi.EPse CAeo AATD 
• teUP yoOftSBLy/BS Ger  QBC.­

Uftriy, THF iVoRKmilS­ CCVVDmoAfS, 
/wo vAlio/J PfiarearioM ­JHAT&amp;^ 
T/Wl&lt;eRA1AAJ W/AWTS ...  •.•  

' vVi' • '  ­ 

. 

to foreign registry?) 
^ 
3.  No  representation  to ^eak  fbr 
your  beefs. 
4. 1 fleet  shot  throi:igh  and  throiigh 
with  company  and  ETMA  spies. 
5.  A  "union"  idiich  is company­domin­
ated and. run  by  non­seamen,  idio 
have neither  insist nor  interest 
in your  problems as active  tank­
ermen* 
6. Favoritism and discrimination in 
„ hiring • — 
and firing* 

f 

OROANIZKO IMS 
SV THS SAiLOflS UNION 
OP THK PACIFIC 

' r W/r • &lt; ' I 

If?­:­

This pledge card will be held strictly 
confidential by the SIU, until the time 
comes to take positive action.  Meanwhile, if you want to hear from us, 
toclose your private mailing address, 
and we will write to you in a plain 
envelope, to protect you from the 
company  spies.. 

'i  I 

'Affiliated with  American Pederaion of  Labor 

PLEDGE  CARD 
1,  hereby  designate,  appoint  and  authorize  the  SEAFARERS'  INTERNATIONAL 
UNION OF NORTH  AMERICA to represent me in any and all negotiations relative 
CO collective bargaining with my present or any future employer. 
This authorization shall  continue in full  force and effea  until I have revoked  same  \ 
by written revocation delivered to die Secretary­Treasurer of said Union. 
S. S. 
..Date.. 
Company... 
'Signature, 
Rating.... 

»a*i

4m 
I 
' 

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="7">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42905">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1950-1959</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44875">
                  <text>Volumes XII-XXI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44876">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44877">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10197">
                <text>March 24, 1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10243">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10295">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10347">
                <text>Vol. XII, No. 6</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10373">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10399">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10430">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
MARITIME UNIONS JOIN FORCES TO SAVE UNION HIRING HALLS&#13;
SIU DEFEAT OF CS COMPANY UNION RAISES HOPE OF ESSO TANKERMEN&#13;
CITIES SERVICE MEN CAN INFLUENCE FINAL PACT&#13;
WITNESSES BACK UNION HIRING HALL AT SENATE HEARINGS&#13;
OUTMODED - AND OUTVOTED&#13;
SLOW SHIPPING GRIPS BALTIMORE&#13;
GOOD SHIPPING FOR SAVANNAH&#13;
NEW YORK SHIPPING FOLLOWS NATIONAL TREND&#13;
DEATH STRIKES FOUR IN MOBILE&#13;
TANKERS ARE BIG HELP TO BOSTON SEAFARERS&#13;
ONE SHIP IS NO BOOM, SAYS PHILADELPHIA&#13;
POLITICS HOLDS CENTER OF STAGE IN TAMPA&#13;
THE SEAFARERS IN WORLD WAR II&#13;
ISTHMIAN CREW RESCUES SURVIVOR OF SUNKEN GREEK SHIP IN RED SEA&#13;
MARINA SLUGGERS BELT BEATRICE BUMS 14-11 IN 'BATTLE OF THE BULL LINES TITANS'&#13;
CITIES SERVICE INTERIM CONTRACT ANALYZED</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10431">
                <text>3/24/1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13078">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="64">
        <name>1950</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="982" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="2427">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/a280dfc26af9ea684d07b4dfbec736ea.pdf</src>
        <authentication>39b2679eff17af8e8d13d403529fa8c6</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="48540">
                    <text>y 

SRSt'­ • .  .i; :  •   • •­    ­  , •   • .'•  

• : • •*., •
  •.­4.a 
 

X'U­­

,' ­

•  ­^1 

Official Organ, Atlantic &amp; Gulf  Oisirid, Seafarers International Union of  NA 
VOL.  XII 

NEW  YORK,  N.  Y„  FRIDAY.  APRIL  7. 1950 

AfL  RaJimen 
Say  No' To  CIO 
Chi  Morgor  BU 

No.  7 

SIU  CREWS  AID  PARALYSIS  VICTIMS 

The  membership  of  the  AFL 
Radio  Officers  Union  has  re­
jected  a  proposal  for  combining 
forces  with  the  CIO  American 
Radio  Association  . as  one  big 
union. 
'  ^  ­
Of'317 members  who  voted  on 
the  question "in  a  referendum 
ballot  sent  to  all  ROU  men,  229 
opposed  the  merger  and  88  fa­
vored  it. 
'  Ballot  forms  on  a  variety  of 
questions  were  distributed  to  the 
ROU's  1,275  members  and  369 
valid  answers  were  received  and 
tallied. 
79  memljers favored  taking  the 
CIO  union  into  the  AFL  in  a 
body;  4  said  "no"  to  this.  44 
thought  it  okay  to  allow  CIO 
men  to  come  into  the­ROU  as 
individuals. 
However,  none  of  the  AFL 
men  wanted  to  enter  the  CIO 
.union  as  individuals. 
Like  the  SIU,  the  ROU  is  a 
member  of  the  AFL  Maritime 
Trades  Department.  It  was  one 
of  the  seven  seagoing  imions 
which  agreed  on  a  mutual  aid 
pact  in  defense  of  the  Hiring 
Hall. 

On OS Contract, 
Welfare  Plan 
The  SIU's  Negotiating  Committee  was  kept 
hopping  this week, alternating from meetings  with 
Cities  Service  officials  on  working  rules  for  thei 
company's 16 ships to sessions with other contracted 
operators  on  details  of  the  Welfare  Plan. 
Progress in the Cities Service negotiations was 
reported  by  the  Union  committee.  The  company; 
and  Union  representatives  began  tackling  the  job 
of  setting up departmental  working rules  last weds 
as a follow­up to the interim contract signed several 
weeks ago. 
As soon as agreement  has  beeiL reached on the 

working  rules  for  the  three  de­&lt;­7 
partmehts, it  will be  incorporated 
into  the interim  pact,  which  will 
then  become  operative  as  a  full 
contract. 
A  meeting  was  held  early  this 
week  and  another  is  scheduled 
for  today.  Committee  members 
said  that  the  talks  were  con­
The  Arnold  Bernstein  Line's 
ducted  in  "a  friendly  atmo­
hopes  for  operating  two  passen­
sphere." 
Predictions  by  Union  negotia­ ger  ships  to  Europe  were  in­
tors  are  that  full  agreement  creased  when  the Maritime  Com­
would  be  reached  shortly,  bar­ mission  on  March  24  asked  ship­
ring  imforeseen  developments.  yards  to  bid  on  the  conversion 
of  two  former  army  transports. 
PROGRESS  ON  WELFARE 
Joe  Algina,  SIU  New  York  Port  Agent,  presents  a  check 
The  Bernstein  Line  has  ap­
The  meetings  with  other  con­ plied  for  the  purchase  of  the 
for  $3,207.  represetiting  donations  made  by  crewmembers 
aboard  Union­contracted  ships,  to  I.  Robert  Weinberg,  labor  tracted  operators  to  draft  details  SS  General  William  Weigel  and 
of  the employer­financed,  jointly­ the  SS  General  John  H.  Pope, 
director  of  National  Foundation  for  Infantile  Paralysis. 
administered 
welfare  plan  were  both  of  the  P­2  type,  troop­
In  accepting  the  contribution,  which  more  than  triples 
also 
productive, 
the  Union  com­ carrying  class,  under  the  Mer­
the Seafarers'  domition  to  last  year's campaign.  Weinberg  said: 
mittee 
reported. 
chant  Ship  Sales  Act  of  1946. 
"The  membership  of  the  Seafarers  International  Union  can  be 
At  the  conclusion  of  yester­
proud  of  having  raised  $2,284.67  more  than  last  year  for  the 
In  addition  to  a  construction­
fight  against  this  dread  disease.  We.  too.  are  proud  that  we  day's  meeting,  only  three  ope­ differential  subsidy  for  the ships'  • "• ".6.1 
have  such  staunch  and  loyal  friends  and  hope  our  service  to  rators  had  not  yet  signed  the  conversion,  the  company  is seek­
Welfare  Plan  agreement,  which 
organized  labor  wiU  merit  continuance  of  this  support." 
calls  for  employer  contributions  ing  an  operating  subsidy  for  use 
of  25  cents  a  payroll­day  for  in  Trade  Route  8,  from  New­
each  crewmember  aboard  their  York  to  Antjverp  and  Rotterdam, 
ships.  Payments  to  the  fund  are  The  Commission  issued  the in­
vitations  to  bid  with  the  under­
retroactive  to  last  January  1. 
standing 
that  no  award  wiU  be  :..^J 
Among  the  details  the  ship­
Preliminary  steps  in,  the  poll­ as  provided  in  the  SIU  Consti­ put  the  question  to  the  entire 
made 
until 
and  unless  the  Coin­
owners  and  Union  representa­
ing  of  the  membership  on  the  tution. 
membership  in  a  secret  ballot.  tives  are  concerned  with  in  the  mission  has  made  all  of  the 
hotly­debated  question  of  com­
In  view  of  the  highly  contro­
No  date  will  be  set  for  com­ current  meetings  are  the  types  necessary findings  on  the  com^ 
pulsory  vacations  will  be  taken  versial  nature  of  the  proposal,  mencement  of  the  referendum 
and  amounts  of  benefits  to  be  pany's  applications. 
in, all  SIU  Branches  at  the  next  Headquarters  recommended  that  until  the  membership  has  acted  paid  Seafarers  out  of  the  fund,  At  present,  the  two  ships  ate 
regular  membership  meetings  on  the­membership  be  given  a  rea­ on  the­ final  wording  of  the  bal­ eligibility  requirements  and  in  layup  at  the  Suisan  Bay  Re­* 
April  12. 
sonable  time  to  discuss  the  issue  lot. 
serve  Fleet.  The  bids  on  their^. 
method  of  administration. 
;  In  accord  with  a  Headquarters  fully  in  the  SEAFARERS  LOG 
conversion  are  to  be  opened  oa 
.recommendation  adopted  unani­ and  at  shipboard  and  member­
May  10. 
UNION  DELEGATES  ON  CS  SHIPS 
mously  at  the  March  29  regular  ship  meetings. 
membership  meeting  in  the  Port  At  that  time.  Headquarters 
of  New  York,  each  Branch  will  pointed  out  that  the  effect  of 
• e  lect  a  committee  to  draft  a  such  a  proposal  would  be  far­
­resolution,  based  on  membership  reaching  and  that  every  mem­
sentiment,  suggesting  the  word­ ber, therefore, should  have ample 
AFL  officials  on  local,  state 
,ing  'of  the  questioh  on  which  opportunity  to  understand  the 
and  national  levels  have  en­
.  Seafarers  will  vote  in  a  Uhion­ issues  involved. 
dorsed  the  1950  Cancer  Crusade 
'wide  60­day  referendum. 
The  Headquarters  recommen­
of  the  New  York  City  Cancer 
FINAL  RESOLUTION 
dation  was  concurred  in  and  the 
Committee,  which  seeks  $1,33^1,­
;  Upon  completion  of  this  task,  proposal  was  tabled  to  permit 
919  during  April  as  part  of  the 
the  port  committees  will  submit  full  discussion. 
American  Cancer  Society's fifth 
their  .proposals  to  Headquarters,  For  the  past  several  months, 
annual  nationwide  appeal  for 
where  an  elected  committee  will  the  debate  has  been  hot  and 
cancer  research,  education  and 
decide  on  the  wording  of  the  re­ heavy.  Each  issue  of  the  SEA­
service  funds. 
­solution  in  its final  form.  The  FARERS  LOG  contained  numer­
President  William  Green  of 
­final  resolution  also  will  be  sub­ ous  letters  from  Seafarers  and 
the  AFL,  in  endorsing  the  na­
ject  to  the  approval W the'meni­ members  of  the­.families,  either 
tional  campaign;  said,  'Tn  the. 
.bership. 
; 
^ 
•   "•  favoring  or  rejecting  the  propo­
extension  of  support  to  the" 
"  The  issue over  compulsory  va­ sal for  compulsory  Vacations.  Al­
American  Cancer  Society,  which" 
" cations  developed  as  the  result  though  no  tally  was  taken,  opin­
is  leading  in  an  effort  to find 
; of . several  resolutions  offered  by  ion  seems  to  have  been  about 
a  remedy  for  this  dread  disease 
.members  at  regular  meetings  equally  divided. 
and  the  extension  of  help  to 
lasf  winter,  urging  a  change  in 
those  who  suffer  from  it,  work­  , 
FULL  DISCUSSION 
the  shipping  rules  to  require  a 
ers  everywhere  should  join  with 
man  who  has sqjled  continuously  The  Headquarters  recommen­
all  other  classes  of  people  in  the 
• aboiird one  ship  for  one  year  to  dation  for  steps  towarid final 
campaign  against  cancer." 
. accept  the .Vacation  pay  prescrib­ balloting  was  madq  in  view  of 
Urging  labor's  cooperation,  , 
Th^e  two  meii  share  the  distihdtioh  of  being  the .&amp;st'  President  Green  said,  "I,  there­
­ed  in­the" Unu3|i  contract  and  get  the  fact  that  the  question  has 
off  the  ship:, 
.  been  roundly  discussed  for  a  Union  delegates  to  be  elected  on  the  Cities  Service  tanker  fore,  call  upon  labor  every­
^nsiderable  period  of  time  and  SS  Abiqua  at  a  shipboard  meeting  in  Bayonne.  N.  J„  March  where to  unite with  other  classes 
' When  the 
that'the 
membership ­ is,  there­
23.  Merwin  DriscoU  (left).  Oiler,  who  has  been  abo^d  the  of  people  and  to  join  with  them 
troduced,  Headqufirlers  Jolhtbd 
fore, 'fully.­acquainted 
with 
the 
Abique 
for  a  year,  took  over  the  Ship's  Delegate  job.  Sam  in  the  fund  raising  campaign 
'out  that  issues  involving  changes 
Reed*  FWT.  was  designated  by  his  shipmates  to  serve  as  for  the  purpose  of  carrying  on 
• i  n ­  the  shipping  niles  can  only  issues  involved^ 
Engine  Delegate.  He  has  seven  months  on  the  Abiqua  and  an  imcompromising fight  against 
^ be  resolved  through  the  medium  The  next  logical  step,  ­Head­
of  a  Union­wide  secret  ballot,  quarters  explained,  would  be  to­ two  months  on  the  taxdcer  'VIHnter  HiU. 
the  dread  disease  of  cancer." 

MC  Asks  Bids 
On  Resonvorting 
Bemstoin  Shgis 

Branches To Get Vacations Issue 

AFL  Gives its Okay 
To  Cancer Campaign 

�&amp;• . 

ftig« Two 

p.'­  *5=5========== 

WflESEAFARERS  LOG 

Friday.  April  7,  1950 

=F

.,MA iJi.ll 
=R= 

=5= 

SEAFARERS  LOG 

The  Mmt  Pr^ious CargQ 

Published  Bpery Other  Week  jby  the 
SEAFARERS  lOTERNATIONAL  UNION 
OF  NORTH  AMERICA 

AHantic and 
11^ 

•A
  ffiliated  with  the  American  Federation  of  Labor 
At  n Beaver  Street,  New  York 4,  N. Y. 
HAnover  2­2784 
Reentered  as  second  class  matter  August  2,  1949,  at the  Post 
­Office  in  New  York,  N.Y.,  under  the  Act  of  August  24,  1912. 
267 

A  Job  To  Do 
The communists  are  going  to find  the  going  hot  and 
heavy  in, the  months  to come.  Free  labor  is  on  the  march 
­and  plans  are  now  being  laid  to  carry  the fight  to  all 
nations  of  the  world, ^including  those  behind  the  Iron 
Curtain. 
The  newly­organized  International  Confederation  of 
Free  Trade  Unions  has  mapped  a  campaign  for  the  next 
three  years,  which  has  among  its  objectives  assurance  of 
delivery  of  American  arms  aid  to  western  European 
democracies. 
The  Confederation  also  plans  to  carry  the  message 
of  free  democratic  labor  to  the  non­communist  peoples 
of  Czechoslovakia,  Poland,  Roumania,  Esthonia,  Latvia 
and  Lithuania. 
Head  of  the  Confederation  is  J. H. Oldenbroek,  who 
is  the  former  secretary  of  the  International  Transport­
­workers  Federation,  with  which  the  SIU  is  affiliated. 
Oldenbroek  says  the  people  behind  the  Iron  Curtain  are 
not  commies,  "They're  just^under  an  iron  heel." 
The commies  are  going  to squawk  a­plenty. Especial­
ly since  the  Confederation  is  no  dinky  outfit.  Set  up  by 
free  trade  unions  to  combat  the  communist­controlled 
­World  Federation  of  Trade  Unions,  the  new  Confedera­
tion  speaks  for  more  than  50,000,000  workers in  53  na­
tions, including  the AFL  and CIO in  the  United  States. 
On  the  basis  of  previous  performance,  our  guess  is 
that  the  communist  propaganda  hacks  will  scream  that 
the  whole  thing is  an  "imperialist  plot" hatched  and  paid 
­for  by  the  United  States  and  carried  out  by  stooges  in 
die European  democracies. 
But  commie  hysterics  are  not  going  to  change  the  The final  chapter  in  the long  campaign  to 
fact  that  this is  going  to be  a  labor show,  conceived,  pro­ bring  the  Cities  Service  Marine  Division 
duced  and  carried  out  by  working  men  and  women  who  under  a  full  SIU  contract  is  now  being 
.:Still  live  in  a  free  atmosphere. 
written.  Shortly  after  the  pigning  of  the 
Not  only  are  they  going  to  make  sure  that  the  interim  agreement  several  weeks  ago,  hindr 
European  democracies get  the arms  aid  and  Marshall  Plan  ing  the  company  to  the  standard  Union 
­cargoes  that  will  keep  them  from  being  crushed  by  the  wage  scale,  establishing  the  hiring  proced­
­Soviet  heels,  they  are  going  to  actively combat  the  com­ ude  and  the  other  major  gains,  committees 
munist  malarkey that  the world  outside  the Iron Curtain,  representing  the SIU  and  Cities Service  sat 
specially  the  UiS,  is  he|l  for  workers. 
down  to  work  out  a  set  of  working  rules. 
.Seafajrers h«ive  piade  jt  very clear  that  they are  proud  Several  meetings  have  already  been  held 
that  they  are  once  again  among  the  ones  who  will  be  and,  although  many  of  the  departmental 
jCarrying the  goods to the important  fronts. Besides  getting  rules  remain  to  be  written  out,  the  end  of 
­the  physical  materials  necessary  for  the  democracies'  of­ this contract  campaign  is dehnitely dn sight. 
fensive  to  the other  side,  SIU  members  are  in  a first­rate 
When agreement  has  been  jreached  on  the 
jipQt  to  perform  another  invaluable  service  to  the  cause  working  rules,  they  will  be  incorporated 
^ freedom  everywhere. 
into the interim  agreement, which  then  will 
On  hitting  the  ports  of  the  European  democracies,  beeome  the  final  and  full  contract. 
'particularly  those  where  communists  control  the  unions  Every SIU  member  and  every  Cities  Ser­
x)f  waterfront  workers,  as  in  France  and  Italy, each  Sea­ vice man  who stuck so  hard  by  his demands 
ifarejr  can  take  ashore  his  own  quota  of  facts  about  life  for  Union  representation  in  the  company's 
,jn  a  democracy. 
tanker fleet  rates glowing  commendation for 
They  can  tell  these  befuddled,  misguided  people  of  their  part  in  the  big  victory.  They  have 
IP"­ 4he  conditions  and  wages  enjoyed  herej  because  their  made  possible a  victory  that ultimate^ will 
unions are free  to fight  for their  economic*betterment  and  benefit  more  than  those  irnmediately  in­
iflV"  are  not  strapped  down  by  political,  self­seeking  hacks. 
volved. 
They can  tell  them  that  there are  no firing  squads or  salt  But  in  the flush  of  .vi^ojry,  let  us  not 
amines ­for  dissenters. 
forget  the others  whose  offers  of  support  in 
Seafarers  can  give  them  the score  about  democracy.  our fight  for  the  Cities  Serviqe  eontr^et 
proved  so  valuable—­the  AFL  refinery  workr 
ers,  machinists  and  allied  workers  in  the 
South  and  the CIO  oil  workers  on  the  East 
Due to space limitations, the LOG was forced  to omit  Coast,  just  to  mention  a  few, 
the  mwal  reports  from  the  Branch  Agents.  Although  the  All  of  these  people  stood  by right  upjto 
pranch  minutes digest  highlights  the  major  shipping  de­ the  very  l^st  minute,  ready to  give  alHoiit 
ijreiopments in eaeh port, it lacks  the flavor  of  the individr  support  the  momeht  it  was  needed.  Their 
4ial  port  reports.  Barring  similar  circumstances,  the  spirit  of  cooperation  ­is  the  kind  of  stuff 
"Around  tlie ports'*, fcaturs  will  sppenr  in  the  nest  issue. ^ that  has  been  so  tmportant  in  improving 

We're  Sorry 

' 

the  security  of  the  working  men  and  wo­
men  of  this  country. 
It  should  be  mentioned  here  that  an  ap­
praisal  of  the  Cities  Service  campaign 
points  up  the  soundness  of  several  Union 
policies. Because  these policies had  been  put 
into  effect  earlier,  the  beef  was  consider­
ably  easier  to  push  to  a  successful  conclu­
sion  than  it  would  have  been  otherwise. 
One  of  th^e  was  the  policy  of  limiting 
the  number  of  jnembership  books, to  ap­
proximately  the  number  of  contracted  jobs. 
As  a  result  of  this  policy,  our  member^ip 
was  never  overloaded.  Not  only  is  this  ^ 
great  protection  to  our  menabershipj  but  as­
sured  Cities  Service  men  they  would  have 
ample  opportunity  to  ship  on  other  vessels 
if  they  so  desired. 
One  of  the  most  impprt^t  factors in  tfia 
successful  drive  on  CS  w^e  the  economy 
measures  instituted  a  few  years  ago.  Be­
cause  of  this,  we  had  the  funds  necessary 
in  any  large scale  organizing  campaign. 
Above  all,  the  big  thing  is  that  the  SILT 
has been  able to gp fprwrnrd  wfien  the uaayi­
time  industry is shrinking  and  other  unions 
are  wrestling  with  tough  internal  problems, 
resulting  from  an  unfortunate  lack  of  fore­
aight. 
The  SiU  has  npt  only  held  i,ts  own,  it  js 
moving  ahead.  We  maintain  that  continual 
growth  is essential  to  the  health  of  any  or­
ganization, and  we mean  to keep  our  Uplon 
in  a  sound,  healthy  state, 
Thafs  why  \we 
the full  CS "epBtract  is  wrapped  up.  We'y© 
got  to  keep  going ahead.  And  what's  mor^, 
we  will ! 
• 

�Fciday. 

7, 1«50 

THE  SEAT  ARE RS 

Pass Three 
S4S 

' !rhe  American  Federation  of  Labor  as a  whole 
and  the' American  seamen,  as  part  of  the  Amer­
ican  Federation  of  Labor,  have, a vital  stake and 
interest  in  the  maintenance  of  a  first­class. Mer­
chant  Marine  flying  the  American  flag.  This, 
we  believe,  is  the  established  policy  passed  by 
Congress  and  enacted  into  law  under  the  Mer­
chant  Marine  Act  Of  1936. 
I  However,  the  present  status  of  the  American 
Merchant  Marine  leada  one  to  believe  there  is 
no established  policy  and there is no one  bureau, 
including  the  Maritime  Commissiofi,  which  is 
protecting  the  advancement,  welfare  and  the 
maintenance  of  an  American  Merchant  Marine. 
In  view  of  the  fact  that  the  Senate  has  approp­
riated  money  and  invested  in  your  Committee 
powers  to hold  hearings,  to  investigate  problems 
and  to  recommend  certain  action  for  the  benefit 
of  the  American  Merchant  Marine,  we  would 
like  at  this  time  to  express  our  opinion  and  to 
make  recommendations  on  certain  subjects  now 
before  your  Committee. 
The  action  of  the  Senate  itself  to  appropriate 
money  ;for  your  Committee  proves  there  is 
something  radically  wrong  with  the  American 
Merchant  Marine  today.  Not  so  long  ago,  during 
the  War  and  after,  our  country  had  the  largest 
Merchant  Marine  in  the  world  with  all  types 
of  ships  fitted  for  any  trade  and  any  route—in 
fact,  the  American  Merchant  Marine  was  so 
capable  that  it  carried  a  major  part  of  supplies, 
troops,  etc.  to  the  various  military  fronts  of  the 
world.  Today,  however,  this  situation  has  mater­
ially  changed.  The  American  Merchant  Marine 

is rapidly  dwindling  and  it  is  safe  to  say  there 
are  less  ships  sailing  the  American  flag  than 
there  were  prior  to  the  War. 
We  see,  on  the  other  hand,  that  all  types  of 
nations  have  developed  merchant  marines  over 
and  above the needs of  certain countries and  this 
critical  situation  has  been  accomplished  in  part 
through  the aid  of  various bureaus in the United 
States  such  as  the  Maritime  Commission,  the 
State  Department,  etc.  We  are  referring  now, 
for  instance,  to  the  Panmnanian  registry,  the 
Honduran  registry  and  the  Liberimi  registry 
Which  today  are  operating  ships  and  tonnage 
never  dreamed  of  prior  to the  War. 
However,  our  organization  has  already  sub­
mitted  a  statement  to  your  Committee  dealing 
with  the  transfer  of  the  American  Merchant 
Marine  to  foreign  flags,  so  we  will  not  go  into 
tiiat  matter  at  this  time,  but  there  are  other 
phases  of  the  American  Merchant  Marine  now 
before  your  Committee  on  which  we  would  like 
to express  our  opinion  and  make  certain  recom­
men^lations. 

I—Navy  Operated Tankers 
In  the  past  two  years,  the  United  States  Navy 
has  operated  approximately  57  tankers  (55  T­2's 
and  2  T­l's),  These  tankers  have  been  operated 
op  a  world­wide  basis  for  the  Navy  by  four 
American  shipping  compames^two  West  Coast 
companies  and  two  East  Coasl;  companies.  These 
xpmpanigs  have colle^ive bargaining  agreements 
with'  Ajnerican  seamen's  unions.  Consequently, 
one  can  regard  the  operation  of  Navy  tankers 

On  this  and  the  following  page  is  the  state­
ment  of  the  Seafarers  International  Unlom 
through Its International  Presldenf, Harry Lunde­
berg, on  the various  maritime  problems  now  be­
ing considered  by  the Senate  Sub­Committee  on 
Merchant  Marine  and  Maritime  Affairs. 
as' a  civilian  operation  due  to  the  fact  the  of­
ficers  and the  men  manning  those  tankers do  so 
through  their  various  unions  under  collective 
bargaining  agreements.  This  operation,  to  our 
knowledge—and  we  have  had  no  complaints— 
has  been  running  smoothly  without .any  strikes 
or  delays  and  has  benefitted  the  Navy,  the  tax­
payers,  the  operators  and  the  American'seamen. 
From  time  to  time,  certain  pressure  has  been 
put  on  the  Maritime  Commission,  which  in  turn 
has  put  pressure  on  the  Navy  Department,  to 
cease  operating  these  particular  tankers,  giving 
as  a  reason  that  many  tankers  are  laid  up  for 
lack  of  cargo  and  that  the  Navy  should  turn 
around  and  charter  these  laid­up  tankers.  This 
pressure  has  come  in  most  cases  from  certain 
tanker  companies  on  the  Atlantic  Coast. 
We  want  to  bring  to  the  attention  of  your 
Committee  that these same  companies when  they 
were  asked  three  years  ago  to  carry  Navy  cargo 
absolu :e  ly  refused  to do so. They  had  no  tonnage 
because  they  were  then  reaping  the  harvest  of 
the  high  charter  market  on  a  world­wide  scale. 
They  said,  in  effect,  "To  hell  with  the  Navy; 
we  are  going  out  to  make  all  the  dough  we 
can."  They,bought  their  ships  under  the  Ships 
Sales  Act,  planked  down  so  much  and  went  to 
work  and  made  plenty  of  money.  Now  some  of 
their  ships  are  tied  up,  but  should  the  charter 
market  in  the tanker  field  go  up,  they  definitely 
would  not  look  to  the  Navy  for  business;  they 
would  go  where  ihey  could  make  the  most 
money,  and  it  would  put  the  Navy  in  the  posi­
tion  of  having  to  compete  on  the charter  market 
and  your  Committee  may  be  sure  that  it  would 
cost  the  Navy  plenty  of  money  to  charter  these 
vessels. These  particular  tanker companies would 
juggle  the  charter  market  in  such  a  way  as  to 
put  the  Navy  in  the  position  of  having  to  pay 
them  exorbitant  prices  for  hauling  its  oil.  Fur­
thermore,  these  particular  tanker  companies  do 
not have enough  qualified  tankers  by  any stretch 
of  the imagination capable of  handling the Navy's 
transportation  of  gasoline  and  oil  on  a  world­
wide  basis.  Furthermore,  for  the  information  of 
your  Committee,  some  of  these  same  companies 

are  radically  reaching  the  point  that  they  must 
be  replaced.  Most  of  the  tankers  now  operated 
by  the  Navy  (T­2's)  were  operated  during  the 
War  at  the  maximum  service  and  the  effective­
ness  of  tankers, 111^  other  ships,  only  lasts  over 
a  certain  span  of  years.  We \xmderstand  that 
there  are  private  companies  which  are  willing 
to undertake  the  building  of  modern  T­5  tankers 
capable  of  a  speed  of  18  to  20  knots,  in  addition 
to  a  large  reanying  capacity  than  the  present 
tankers.  We  understand  this  tjrpe  of  vessel  has 
the approval  of  the l^avy  Department. 
The stumbling  block  now  in  getting  this  tank­
ship  building  program  under  way  is  the  fact 
that  the  Navy  is  not  allowed  to  charter  for  a 
longer  term  than  one  year.  Consequently,  these 
companies  which  are  willing  to  invest  capital, 
needless  to  say,  cannot  start  building  these  ves­
sels  until  such, time as  they  can  make a  contract 
enabling  them  to  charter  out  their  vessels  for 
a  longer  period  of  years.  We  believe  that  your 
Committee  should  endeavor  to  amend  the  law 
to  permit  the  Navy  to  charter  the  types  of  ves­
sels  mentioned  above from  these  companies,  that 
are  willing  to  build  these  vessels,  for  a  substan­
tially  long  period.  This  would  insure  the  Navy 
a  coming  supply  of  new  fast  tankers,  winch 
would  help  the  National  Defense  program;  it 
would  save  the  American  taxpayers  money  in 
the  long  run;  it  would  help  the  shipbuilding 
industry  and  insure  more  employment  and  keep 
more  qualified  and  skilled  craftsmen  in  the 
American  yards; it  would  help the American sea­
men  who man the vessels. 

II—Military  Cargo  Transportation 

We  realize  that  at  the  present  time  under  the 
Military  Sea  Transportation  Service,  quite  a 
large  number of  dry  cargo,  reefer  ships  and  pas­
senger  vessels  are  being  operated—in  fact  it  is 
true that  this service  operated  by  the  Army  and 
Navy  today  is  the  largest  shipping  service  in 
the  United  States. 
'  ' 
We  believe  that  some  of  this  service  could  be 
handled  in  the  same  manner  as  tankers  have 
been  operated  by  the  Navy:  namely,  this  service 
could  be handled  for  the  Military  Transportation 
Service  through  private  shipping  companies 
which  would  be  paid  on  a  cost­plus  basis  as  an 
agency  fee for  operating  their  ships. That  would 
insure  the  Military  Service  as  receiving  the 
proper  service  without  having  to  pay  enormous 
chart  hires;  it  would  insure  these  private  oper­
ators  who  would  be  capable  of  operating  these 
ships for the  Navy  and Army  a fair fee for  doing 
this  work  for  the  Navy,  and  it  would  give  civil­ , 
ian  seamen  more  work. 
We wish  to  point  out  to the Committee  a prob­
lem  that  has  been  overlooked  by  everybody—, 
we  don't  know  for  what  reason—including  the 
Military Sea  Transportation  Service:  namely, the 
problem  of  national  security.  Today  our  coun^ 
is  on  the  verge  of  war  and  is  conducting  a  cold 
war  with  the  Soviet  Government.  Newspapers 
are  daily  devoting  space  to  the  danger  and  pos­
sibilities 
of  war.  Certain  security  regulations' 
have  part  of  their  vessels  operating  under  the 
Panamanian flag,  and  we, can see  no  reason  why  have  been  established,  or  attempts  are  being 
your  Committee  should  tolerate,  or  encourage  made  to  have  them  established,  in  various  Gov­
or  help  chiselers  of  this  type.  We  are  satisfied  ernment  bureaus  in  an  endeavor  to  insure  the 
that  the tankers operated  by  the  Navy  are  being  loyality  of  persons  who  work  for  the  United 
operated  for  the  best  benefit  of  everyone  con­ States  Government. 
cerned,  including  the  taxpayers—we  have  no 
However,  nothing  has  been  done  to  establish 
complaint  about  that  whatsoever—and  we  do  whether  the  loyality  of  the  men  who­ man  the­
not  think  the  United  States  Government  should  ships  for  the  Military  Sea  Transportation  Ser­
pay  any  attention  to  the  cries  of  a  few  specula­ , vice  is  up  to  standard.  As  a  matter  of  fact,  w© 
know  that  there  are  communists  and  subversive 
tors. 
« 
It  is  understood,  of  bourse,  that  on  a  long­ elements  sailing  in  the  Army  Transport  Service 
range  program  the Navy  will need  modern  tank­ ships,  in  American­flag  ships,  which  are  prac­
ers. It is essential for  the defense  of  this country  tically  owned  and  operated  by  the  Uniffed  States 
that  jpartLculaj?  tanfeers  be . of  the ­nvost  modem  Government.  We  know  that  the  United  Stat^ ­
and  fastest  type  avwlable.  It  is  also  understood  Coast  Guard  knows  these  things  but  is  doing 
that the tankers at  the  present  time in  operation 

�Page Four 

THE  SEAFAREitS  tOG 

Friday.  April  7. 

SlU Policy On 
connection.  As  a  matter  of  fact,  it  has  proved  have mofe  than  made up for  the high  prices  they 
through  its  various  actions  that  it  is  unqualified  . might  think  they  have paid for  these vessels. 
and  incapable  of  carrying  out  the  duties  as  out­
Conditions  have  rfow  changed.  Shipping  is 
lined  in  the  Merchant  Marine  Act  of  1936. 
tough;  the  charter  market  is  tough;  competition 
There  are  certain  matters  that  your  Commit­ with foreign­flag ships is  tough.  Now  is the  time 
tee  should  look  into  and  rectify;  for  instance,  to  change  the  policy  on  the Ships  Sales  Act. 
1  ~ 
the  discriminatory  rates  allowed  the  railroads 
on  the  Coast  by  the  Interstate  Commerce  Com­
IV—Ships  Charters 
mission.  In  other  words,  the  I.C.C.  allows  rates 
We  recommend  to  your  Committee,  and  we 
on  the  Coast  between  the coastwise  states which  doubt  that  legislation  will  be  adopted  in  the 
are  very  loW,  and  as  a  result  it  is impossible  in  very  near  future  to relieve  the situation  dealing 
many  instances  for  steamship  operators  to  com­ with  the  American  Merchant  Marine,  that  the 
.  1 
pete  with  the  railroads,  which  in  the  overall  charter  provision  of  the  Ships  Sales  Act  be  ex­
picture  are  losing  money  on  the  rates  approved 
tended  for  another  year,  or  until  such  time  as 
by  the  I.C.Cr;  but  in  non­competitive  trades they 
. a  definite  program  has  been  established  for  th6 
are  allowed  rates  which  make  up. for  what  they  American  Merchant Marine. 
may  lose  on  the  coast  in  competitive  trades;  in 
If  this  is  not  done,  we  are  afraid  that  m^y 
other  words,  the  I.C.C.  is  discriminating  against 
ships 
which  are  noW  chartered  will  be  laid  up 
ments  that  during  an  emergency  might  sabotage  shipping  in  favor  of  the  railroads.  As  a  matter 
these  ships. The  same  condition  should  certainly ,  of  fact, it is a  common  belief  and  opinion  among  and  no  ships  will  be  taking  their  place,  particu­
apply  to the Military Sea  Transportation Service.  people  in  the  know  that  the  I.C.C.  is  controlled  larly in  the intercoastal  run, which  doesn't make 
sense.  It  will  mean  more  unemployment  among 
These,  we  believe,  are  important  phases  of  by  the  railroads. 
American  seamen  and  less  ships  under  the 
There  are  other  things  which  come  into  the  American flag;  also  more  unemployment  benefits 
the American Merchant Marine which  your  Com­
picture, such  as  the high  tolls through" the Canal 
mittee  must  consider. 
to  be  paid  out  by  the  Various  States  to  the  sea­
Zone.  Also,  on  the  coastwise  run  all  the  ships 
men.  These  Government  ships  will  be  put  up 
Ill—Intercoastal and Coastwise Shipping  that  were fitted  for  that  particular  service  prior 
to  the  war  have  now  disappeared  because  most 
Prior  to  the  War,  the  percentage  of  American  of  them  have  been  sunk  or  junked  as  a  result 
ships  in  the  domestic  service,  such  as  coastwise  of  the  Wdr.  Consequently,  there  are  no  ships 
shipping  and  intercoastal  shipping,  was  approx­ fitted  for  these  runs  and  the  Maritime  Commis­
imately  75  percent  of  the  whole  American  ton­ sion  has  hot  seen  fit  to  develop  plans  encourag­
nage.  The  bulk  and  backbone  of  the  American  ing  the  building  of  ships  for  the  coastwise  run, 
Merchant  Marine  was  the  coastwise  and  inter­ particularly  types  of  ships  which  would  fit  the 
coastal ships.  Offshore shipping  imder  the Amer­ rim  economically  and  also  ships  that  could  be 
ican  flag  was  composed  of  a  few  liners  and  a  used  in  a  national  emergency.  On  this  subject, 
few  lines  carrying  their  own  products,  such  as  your  Committee  certainly  should  come  in  with 
the  Isthmian  Steamship  Company. 
certain  strong  recommendations  and  a  policy  the  creeks  in  the  laid­up fleet  to  rust  away  and 
When  the Second  World  War  became a  reality,  rehabilitating  the  coastwise  run. 
at  a later  date  possibly  be sold for  junk, so  that 
all coastwise and  intercoastal ships,  with  the ex­
In  the  intercoastal nm  certain  types  of  ships  is  why  we  suggest  that jrour  Committee  recom­
ception  of  a  few  coal  carriers  on  the  East  Coast,  were  specifically  designed  for  the"  intercoastal  mend  to  Congress,  that "it  extend  the  charter 
were taken over  by  an Executive  Order  of  Pres­ run;  namely,  the  C­4's.  However, evidently  these  provision  for, ario^ar  year. 
ident  Roosevelt.  These  ships  were  diverted  into  ships  cannot  be  sold  because  the  price  is  too 
services  on  behalf  of  this  country's  war  needs  high,  so  the  shipowners  say.  If  the  intercoastal 
~ 
V—Subsidies 
and  they  were  handy  and  ready  when  this coim­ run  could  be  reestablished,  we  take  the  position 
We  further  recommend  to  the Committee  that 
try  needed  them. 
that  if  the  price  set  by  the  Ships  Sales  Act  is 
American 
ships  that  are* willing  to  go  into  a 
Today,  now  that  the War  is over,  we find  that  too  big  for  companies  to  buy  ships,  then  some  competitive  trade,  evep  if  there  is  already  one 
the  intercoastal  and  coastwise  services,  insofar  adjustment  should  be  made  on  the  prices.  We  American company operating in the  trade, shoUld 
feel  that  a  bunch  of  ships  tied  up  in  various 
creeks, rivers and  bays in the United States Ijdng  be  allowed  subsidies. 
The  present  subsidy  set  up  under  rules  estab­
year  in  and  year  out  idle  and  decaying  is  only 
lished 
by  the  Maritime  Commission  practically 
an  expense  and  burden  to  the  United  States 
Government,  and  if  there  was  assurance  that  amounts  to  a  monopoly,  and  in  the  long  run 
these  ships  could  be  put  in  the  run  under  the  costs  the  United  States  taxpayers  money.  If 
American flag, they should  be taken  out  of  these  other  companies. could  be  granted  subsidies  in 
bays  and' rivers,  where  they  are  now  laid  up,'  these  various  routes, it  would  in  the final  analyr 
and  sold  even if  the price  has to  be cut,  because  sis establish  keen  competition  and  after  a  period 
in  the  final  analysis  they  will  be  sold  for  junk  of  time  would  eliminate  the  dead­heads  out  of 
anyway. We do  not  want  the United  States Gov­ the  industry  who  are  now  traveling  strictly  on 
ernment  to  refund  the  purchase  price  which  the  United  States Government  taxpayers' money 
as  shipping  is  concerned,  are  practically  dead.  the  shipowners  paid  under  the  Ships  Sales  Act.  in  the  form  of  subsidies. 
: 
' There  is  less  than  one­third  of  the  amount  of  We  know  many  of  the  operators  are  going  to 
Furthermore,  it  is  a  well  known  fact  thai; 
American  shipping  in  the  intercoastal  nm  than 
practically  every  nation  in  the  world  is  sub­
there  was  prior  to  the  War.  In  1939,  just  prior 
sidizing  its  ships  running  in  foreign  competitive 
to  the  war,  in  the  coastwise  run  on  the  Pacific 
trades  in  one  form  or  another.  Why  the  United 
Coast, in  Which  run ships  plied  between  Califor­
States  should  be  §6  backward  in  granting  sub­
nia,  Oregon,  Washington  and  Vancouver,  there 
sidies  to  shipping  companies  is  hard  to  under­
were  74  ships  operating  in  and  out  of  various 
stand  when  it  is  subsidizing  everything  from 
coastwise  ports  on/ the  Pacific  Coast  strictly  in 
potatoes  to  railroads  through  grants  of  land, 
the  coastwise  run.  Today  there  are  less  than  10 
which  is  practically  a steal. 
ships  operating  in  the  coastwise  run. 
These  are  only  a ­few  things  that  we  would 
Now  we  feel  that  the  Committee  should  cer­
like  to  have  inserted  in  the  record.  No  doubt 
tainly  take  into  serious  consideration  the  study  scream  and  be  opposed  to  such  action,  claiming  you  have  thousands  of  pages  of  testimony  on 
and  possibility  of  rebuilding  the  coastwise  and  that  it  will  be  discriminatory  tO  reduce  the  these  various  subjects, so  we feel  that  you  could 
intercoastal  runs,  not  only  for  economic  reasons  price  on  these  vessels  after  they  had  brought  well find  a  place  for  pur  comments  and  possibly 
but  certainly  from  the  national  defense  stand­ them  at  a  higher  price  at  an  earlier  date.  How­ read  them. 
point.  There  are  many  reasons  advanced  why  ever,  your  Committee  should­'^not  pay  any  at­r 
Respectfully  submitted, 
these  runs  have  not  been  built  back  up  again  tention ,to  this  because  the  people  who  bought 
to  their  normal  strength.  We  believe  that  it  is,  ships  under  the  Ships  Sales  Act,  when  it  was 
* 
Harry  Luhdeberg,  President 
and should  be, the  duty of  the Maritime Commis­ first  passed  by  Congress,  have  made  plenty  of 
SEAFARERS INTERNATIONAL 
.aion  to  n^e it  their., first  order  of  business  to  money  because  when  the  Ships  Sales  Act  first 
r  ­  'UNION  OF  NORTH  AMERICA^ 
see that shipping  in the  coastwise and  intercoast­ was  established  and  ships  were sold,  the tharter  , 
t  ^ 
and  Secretary­Treasurer, 
­V 
al  trades  is  brought  back  to  normal,  but,  need­ market  was  lucrative  and  the  shipowners  were 
SAILORS UNION OF THE  ;  i;  t 
less  to  say,  the  Mmtime  Commission,  a  weak­ making  money  right  and  left  in  all  kinds  of 
PACIFIC  (Au^teu  With  the  ^ 
kneed  body  at  best,  has  done  nothing  in  this  trades—particularly,  in  foreign  trades—so  they 
American­^leratiOn  of  Labor^ 
V 

(Cmfhmed  from  Page  3) 
nothing  about  it.  We  believe  that  any  operator 
who  desires  to  operate  and  handle  cargo  and 
ships for  the United  States  Army  and  Navy  cer­
tainly  should  guarantee  that  these  vessels  will 
be  manned  by  loyal  Americans  and  not  by  ele­. 

�FtmY. 

7,  19Sa 

TaE  S  M  AF  A R E K  S  LOC 

Xitaens  Only' Tag  Oh Jobs 
Irks  Baltimore Seafarers 
The  letter  below,  signed by  three  Brctkers  in  the  F'ort 
of  Baltimore,  was  received  by  Headquarters  ffiis  week.  Fol­
lowing  this  cmnmunication  is  Headquarters'  explanation. 

Page  Kvtf 

•   Headquarters  has  recelyed  a letter from  three alien members  of  the 
Union  in  the  Port  of  Baltiiiiore,  requiting  a  statement  of  SIU  policy 
"with  regard  to  jobs  for  its  alien  members." These men, W. A. Ebanks, 
Pedro J. Villofanay  and  Lambert  O.  Gafoon  are  gravely  concerned  over 
their status in face of  growing difficulties /aced  by  alien  seamen  as  a 
result  of  retrenchment  in  the  maritime  ind^ustry. 
Published with their letter of  inquiry  on  this  page  is  a  statement 
from  Headquarters,  appraising  the alien seamen situation and reaffirm^ 
ing  the  SlU's  firm ^licy  in  behalf  of  alien  members,, adopted  long 
fore the  presmtt  difficulties arose. 
The  problem  of  the aHen  seamen  today  is an  outgrowth  of  increas­
ing  govemmeittal  restrictions,  including  a  toughening  up  by  Immigra­
tion  authorities.  The  shipowners  have  found  these  restrictions  costly 
and,  ccmsequently^ are  anxious  to  avoid  hiring aliens. 
Despite  the  shipowners'  position,  the  SltF  has  continued  to  press 
for  full  protection  for  its  alien  members,  and  will  continue  to  do  so. 
The  Union  will  keep on  sending  its meml^rs to jobs through the rotary, 
shipping  system.  As  pointed  out  on  this  page,  the  Union  is  not  inter­
ested  in  a  man's  national  background;  it  is  only  interested in  whether 
or not he is a member in good  standing, and  eligible for  the  job. 
In  view of  the  importance of  the alien  problem,  it  is  extremely  ad­
visable  that  aU  members—citizens  as  well as aliens—read  the contents 
of  this  page carefully,  so  tha't  all  hands  will  have  a  full  and  clear  un­
derstanding of  what  is involved. 

• '^!l 
This  is  a  considered  protest  do feel  that, as loyat  Union  mem­
on  the  part  of  loyal  SIU  book­ bers,  we  are  entitled­ to  our  fair 
members  and  permitholders,  who  .chance  at  the  jobs  that  come 
are  aliens,  of  a  condition  exist­ into  the  Hall  from  ships  whose 
ing  et  this  liail,  and  a  request  , alien quotas  are  not  full. 
that  it  be  investigated. 
'  in  view  of  these  facts,  we  re­
For  the  past  several  months,  spectfully  request  that  you  in­
every  job  in  the  Hall  has  been  form us  of  the official  SIU  policy 
posted  for  "citizens  only."  This,  with  regard  to  jobs for  its  alien 
of  course,  means  that  alien  SIU  members;  and,  if  this discrimina­
seamen  do  not  have  their  fair  tion  over  and  above  the Federal 
chance,  based  on  registration  regulations  and  our  Union  con­
date  for  jobs  coming  into  the  tracts  With  the  operators  is 
Hall,  aboard  ships  whose  alien  against  our  Union  Constitution, 
By­Laws  and  principles,  as  we 
quotas  are  not  full.  ' 
In  our  opinion,  this  policy  is  firmly  believe it  to  be,  we  would 
imdemocratic  and  discriminatory,  appreciate your  investigating and 
a  violation  of  the  Gohstitution  correcting  this  Situation  in  the 
and  By­Laws  of  our  Union, 
Baltimore  Hall. 
Many  of  us  are  sincerely  try­
ing  to  secure  our  citizenship  in 
this country  under  the  provisions 
of  the  Merchant  Seamen's  Act— 
a*  course  of  action  constantly 
urged  upon  its  alien  members  The  laws  of  our  country  have  groups  showed  any  interest  in  the  ship  and  must  take  the com­ the  SIU  is  to  mamtain  a  strong 
by  the  SIU. 
pany's  word,  aithou^  he  will  bond  of  brotherhood,  to  inain­? 
made  specific  restrictions  as  to  helping  alien  seamen. ­
attempt &lt;to^ 
leem  if  any  of  the  tain  and  imiarove  the  working^ 
the 
number 
of 
alien 
seamen 
al­
­The  SIU's  handkng  of  the 
LACK  F6W  MONTHS 
lowed within  crews  of  Ajherican­ problem  was,  and  is,  as effective  men  lea^h^  the  ship  afe  aliens.  and  living"  conditions  on  thO" 
Although  Miany  of  Us  heed 
If  there'  is  a  Strong  doubt  in  sMps.  If  a  man  is  a  native  of­
only  a  few  months'  more  time  flag  ships.  The  Merchant  Marine  and  as  forward  looking  as  is  the Dispatcher's  mir  V  the  Union  a­  foreign  country,  it  is  not  im­­
Act 
of 
1936 
almost 
completely 
possible 
under 
the 
conditiofis 
oh  United  States  ship's  articles 
makes  every  attempt  to  check  portant.  "What  is  important  is" 
excluded  alien  seamen  from  which  exist  in  this ­industry. 
ih  order  to  secure  our  papers, 
service  on  American  ships,  but  On  the  other  side  of  the  SIU's  the  ship  and  leam  the  true  sit­ that"  he  be  a  good  union  man. 
we' find  it  impossible  to  secure 
uation. 
a  job  here  because  of  this  "citi­ during  "World  War  II  the  law  policy  is  the  positron  taken  by  Many  times  the Dispatcher  has  "The SiU  has  protected  its  alien 
was 
waived 
and 
aliens 
were 
membership  in  keeping  the  jobs­
the shipowners,  who are far from&gt; 
zen  only"  policy. 
forced  the  company  to  take 
'We  are  also  disturbed  by  the  allowed  aboard  American  ship's  anxious  to  see  aliens  serve  on  aliens,  when  it  was  found  that  available  at  a  high  level;  the 
KU  has  aided  aliens  toward  se­
their  ships.  With  them  it's  a 
knowledge  that  the  privilege  of  up  to fifty,  percent.' 
the  quota  was  not filled.  How­ curing  visas  and  citizenship  pa­
It 
was 
not 
too 
long 
following 
doUars­and­eents 
proposition 
— 
sailing  United  States  ships,  and 
ever,  the  SIU  is  not  in  a  posi­ pers;  the  SIU  has  checked  the 
so  securing  our  citizenship  here,  the  War  that  the  alien  quota  aliens  can  cost  them  money. 
tron to maintain a cheek 
on every 
may  be  repealed  by  Congress  was  reduced,  and  the  Union  saw  The  Ifttmigration  authorities  ship  but,  almost  without  excep­ sh^s  and  made  the  companies 
that  the alien  membership  would  have"  several  times  demanded 
take  men  when  it  was  found, 
•  during  its next  session. 
tiori,  the  ships  sail  with  a  full  the  ships'  cpiotas­  were  not  full;­
find 
itself 
in 
an 
untenable 
posi­
M^y  of  us setved  in the  iher­
that  coftipanies  post  $1,000'bond  quota  of  alieris  aboard. 
the  SIU  has  campaigned  in­
. chant  marine  during  the  war;  tion  unless  specific  safeguaflis  in  behalf  of  each  alien  crew­
The  aliens  contribute  to  the 
we  have  actively  supported  the  were  made.  "The  SIU  at  that  member,  and  there  have  been  lack  of  job  vacancies  oh  fhe  Washington  for  extension  of 
Union  in  all  its  objectives  and  time  established  the  policy  that  occasions  where  the  bond  was  ships  by  staying  aboard  indefi­ alien  waivers,  and  re­virion  of 
the seatime  requirement  for  citi­
participated  in  all  strikes  since  is  its  guidepost  today. 
forfeited.  ­
nitely.  Today  it  is  r.'ire  for  an  zenship;  and  on  many  occasions 
joining;  we  are  paid  up  mem­
POLICY  AIDED  ALIENS 
In  addition,  should  an  alien  alien  once  he  is  on  a  ship  to 
bers  as  of  the  termination  of 
get 
into  trouble  ashore  and  be  leave.  The  record  shows  that  the  SIU  has  interceded  in  the" 
Admission 
to 
the 
Union 
was 
our  last  voyage. 
picked  up  by  the  police,  he must  aliens  are  staying  aboard  in  behalf  of  an  alien  facing  depor­: 
closely 
regulated 
to 
prevent 
an 
Those  of  us  who  do  not  hold 
be  kept  aboard  ship  under  guard  larger  i&gt;ercentages  than  the  ci­ tation.  This  the  SIU  has  done' 
overloading 
of 
the 
Union 
in 
re­
and  will  continue  to  do  as long; 
the  oldest  cards  in  the  Hall  for 
(at  company  expense). 
tizen  merhbers.  If  the  alien  sea­ as  there  is an  alien  in  the ranks ' •  
lation 
to 
the 
number 
of 
jdlas 
our  respective  jobs  have  mostly 
available  under  contract.  This  If  he  is  returned  to  Ellis  Is­ men  would  get  off,  they  would  Of  the  SIU. 
had  to  re­register — and  while 
protected  citizen  and  non­citizen  land  for  deportation,  he  must  help  the  other  aliens  by  provid­
Alien  members  who  believe; 
we  wait  for  the  ship  we  can  be 
be  accompanied  by  a  guard  (at  ing at  least  a  moderate  job  turn­
alike. 
they 
have  a  grievance  over  the ­  i 
assigned  to,  our  families  are 
The  SIU  strongly  encouraged  company  expense)  and  be  given  over. 
filling 
of  jobs  should'take  their  , 
going  hungry. 
room  and  board  (at  company  Alien  members  who  question 
Also,  many of  us are  on  parole  its alien  members  to secure  visas,  expense)  on  Ellis  Island  until  fhe  Union's  policy  on  its  non­ problems  to  the  Dispatcher  im­ •  
from  warrants  issued  in  depor­ which  would  allow  them  to  ship  his  case  is  disposed  of. 
citizens  fail  to  consider  the  mediately  for  investigation.  The 
tation  proceedings—shaving  to re­ aboard  coastwise  ships  and  free  Companies  have  also  found  Union's  record  in  their  behalf  dispute  should  be  ironed  out  in . 
port  once  a  week  to  the  Immi­ them  from  the  29­day  rule. 
themselves  involved "in  minor  in­ which  is,  beyond  a  doubt,  the  the  port  where  it  occurs,  when \ 
• gration Service  and  also  having  Aliens  who  had  sufficient  sea­ ternational  incidents,  such  as  the  best  on  America's  waterfront.  it  occurs. 
had  to  give  into  their  possession  time  were  aided  in  obtaining  time  an  alien  seaman  was  to 
The  Union  has  full  provisions 
BEST  JOB  CHANCES 
our  Seaman's  Certificates  or  their  citizenship.  The  SIU  also  be  deported  and  the  country  of 
for  the  membership  to  present­'; 
took  a  stern  stand  toward  those 
passports. 
his  birth  refused  to  take  him.  The  alien  members  of  the  their  grievances.  If  the  matter, 
aliens  who  had  sufficient  sea­
CAN'T  WOBK  ASHORE 
N6body  wanted  him,  yet  he  SIU  have  the  largest  percentage  is  not  settled  satisfactorily,  the 
time,  but  hadn't  taken  the neces­ couldn't stay  in  this country.  The  of  jobs  available  to  them  in  the  men  involved  may  present  their  ; 
Until  we  get  a  ship,  we  have  sary  steps  toward  citizenship. 
ease  cost  the  company  consider­ industry;  the  percentage  of  SIU  problem  to  the  Branch  member­
no  way  to  secure  the  funds 
TJhus  the  SlU  policy  was  one  able  h­ioney,  and  made  them  alien  members  obtaining  citizen­ ship  in  a  regular  bi­weekly 
with  which  to fight  these  depor­
ship is  the  highest  in  the  indus­
tation  proceedings,  for  we  are  of  continually  working  toward  Acutely  sensitive  about  hiring ad­ try,  and  the  chances  of  an  alien  meeting. 
citizenship  for  the  alien  mem­ ditional  aliens. 
The SIU wants  to see its policy 
not  allowed  to  work  ashore. 
Obtaining  sufficient  time  for  ci­ adhered  to.  There  is  no  reason  ; 
bers 
to 
give 
thdm 
the 
shipping 
The 
attitude 
of 
the 
companies 
We  do  not  feel  that  the  com­
privileges  enjoyed  by  citizens,  is,  of  course,  not  bur  worry.  If  tizenship^  are  greatest  within  for  ^y  member  or  official  to 
panies  are  behind  this  alien  re­
and at  the  same  time  reduce  the  a  job  can  be legally filled  by  an  this  Union. 
act  contrary  to  the  policy,  s&amp; 
striction,  for  ships  aboard  which 
number  of  aliens  competing  for  blien  member,  the  Union  ­will  Anyone'  questioning  this  need  the  purpose  of  the  Unioi^ first 
we  have  sailed  have  crewed  up 
send  him  to  the  job;  the  eom­ only  look  at  what  is  happening  and  last,  is  to  send  its  members 
out  of  this  Hall;  andf,  as  in  the  jobs  available  to  them. 
The 
Union 
also 
worked 
to 
aid 
i&gt;any  cannot  reject  him  for  this  in  other  uniohg  today.  There,  to  Jobs  through  the  rotary  ship­
some  cases  one  or  more  aliens 
hundreds,  thousiands  of  alien  ping  system,  with  regard  to only 
its 
alien 
members 
in 
another 
reason. 
got  off,  the  alien  quota  for  such 
se»nen are on 
the  beach waiting  a  man's  time  ashore  and  quali­
direction. 
Representatives 
of 
the 
The  true  difficulty  for  aliens 
a  vessel  could  ncg;  have  been 
for 
ships; 
Their 
chances  of  ob­ fications  to  perform  his  job. 
SIU 
worked 
diligently 
in 
Wash­
thus  lies  mostly  in  the  practices 
full—^yet  these  jobs  too  were  all 
taining 
sufficient 
seatime fer  ci­
ington 
for 
extension 
of 
fhe 
crew 
of 
the 
shipowners., But, 
strange 
The  SlU  is  an  International 
posted  as  "citizen  only." 
tizenship are miserably 
small. 
waiver 
on 
aliens, 
and 
pressed 
as it 
seems, the aliens 
themselves 
Union,  both  in  operation  and 
We  would  like  to  know  if  this 
is  the  official  policy  of  the  SIU;  the  government  for  amendments  Contribute  to'  the  acuteness  of  In  our  Unicm,  no  ^en  has  membership.  Any  restricti&lt;ms  on' 
beeii  deported  for  exceeding  his  the  activities  of  its  ali«i  in«Eii­
for  if  it  is,  we  should  be  so  in­ to  the  law  which  would  allow  the  situation. 
men 
with 
three' 
years' 
seatime 
time 
ashore.  Th6  men  who have  bers  are  those  imposed  by  the 
The 
shipowners, 
when' callirtg 
formed,  in order  to try  to secure 
to 
become 
citizens. 
been deported—and 
they are  but  gbverrimCTit  alone.  The  mert  of 
in 
jobg 
to 
the 
Dispatcher, 
often 
a  berth  aboard  ships  of  foreign 
a 
handful—were 
sent 
from  the  the SIU  are bound  together  in a 
state 
that. the 
jobs 
are 
to 
be 
The 
fact 
that 
the 
waiver 
is 
registration  before  we  are  de­
country 
for 
being 
undesirable 
as  group  which  is  not  ccoicemed 
filled 
by 
citizens 
only 
when 
still 
in 
effect five 
years 
after 
the 
ported. 
~  We'are  glad  to  share fhe  ups  war  caii  properly  be  credited  to  berths  are  available  to  alierts.  citizens,  having  run  afbul  of  the  with,  national  origlu  Ox  xiuiiouai 
bdimdarie^  but  only  in  a  great­
and  downs  of  shipping  with  all  the  SIti  and  other  maritime  la­ The  Dispatcher  iS  not  in  a  posi­ law  in sohie manner. 
ouf" Brother  nieittb'ers,  but  We  bor  qrganizafidfig.  No  othel*  tion  to  know  the  situation  on  The  sentim^t  of  the  men  in  er Brotherhood  of  the Sea; 

Led  Fight  For  Alien  Memhers 

�PBoe Six 

1 

THESE A  P  R  E R S  L a G 

SHIPS' MINUTES AMD MEWS' 
7" 7/ 
A 

lAlcoa Roamers Smother 
Pegasus Nine, 31 To 5 

Fleet­Footed 

' 

SIU Crew  Saves  Nine 
In  Dramatic  Rescue 
: 
A  thrilling  sea  rescue  emhodying  all  the  suspense  of 
a  dime  thriRer  was  reported  to  the  LOG  this  week  by 
Jerry  Palmer,  Ship's  Delegate  of  the  Waterman  vessel 

The  heavy­hitting  baseball  squad  of  the  SS  Alcoa 
Roamer  continued  to  ride  roughshod  over  all  opposition, 
knocking  over  the  Alcoa  Pegasus  nine,  31  to  5,  at  the 
Trinidad  Naval Base  held  on  March 4. 

iStonewall  Jackson.  The­Jackson, 
he  reported,  while  enroute  to" deeply  moved  by  the  aid  given­
Korea,  arrived  in  the  hick  o  them,  and  the next  day  returned 
Fresh  from  two successive  vie 
time  to snatch  from  disaster  nine  to  the  ship  to  present  Captain 
The 
Alcoa 
Roamer's 
amazing 
. tones  over  Paramaribo  Pirates, 
men  on  a sinki^, storm­battered  William  Harvey  with  a  Korean 
smoking  pipe as a  token  of  their' 
hitting 
power 
has filled 
Manager 
sailing  craft. '  * 
the  Roamer  boys  belted  the  of­
Mclnis  with  reckless  pride. 
The  Stonewall  Jackson  was  gratitude. 
ferings  of  Pegasus  pitchers  Wold  Shortly  after  his  boys  had  drub­
plowing  the  waters  off  Korea  on  The  Jackson at  the  time  of  the ' 
and  Cosby  for  a .total  of  20  hits  bed  the  PegMus  outfit,  Mae  an­
liSarch  11,  Phlmer  reported, when  accident  was  enroute  to  Korea 
imtil. the one­sided  fray  was call­ nounced  that  arrangements  were 
crewmembers sighted  the sinking  with  an  EGA  cargo  of  fertilizer 
ed  off  at  the  end  of  the  sixth  afoot  to  schedule  games  with 
ship with its crewmembers strid­ from  New  Orleans. 
the 
New 
Orleans 
Pelicans 
and 
ing  on  deck  in  waist­deep  water  With  the  rescue  behind  them, 
inning. 
the Mobile  Bears of  the Southern 
waving  frantically  for  help.  The  the  cr^w  turned  to  matters 
LdPSIDED  WINS 
Association. 
Jackson  responded  immediately  which  could  eventually  spell 
In  games  played  at  Paramari­
He's  even  trying  to  contact 
Clarence  (Flash)  Owens,  and  swimg  around  in  a  tight  trouble  to  them  as  members  of 
bo,  Dutch  Guiana,  on  Feb.  25  Manager  Leo  Durocher  for  a  whose defensive  play  and base­ circle.  Drawing  up  next  to  the  the  SIU:  the  threatened  loss  of 
and  26,  the  Roamers  routed  the  game  with  the  New  York  Giants  running  are ;  among  the  rea­ boat,  the  crew  members  were  the  hiring  hall.  Enroute  to  Hon­
Pirates  by  scores  of  23  to  2  and  before  they  return  north  for  the  sons  for  the  impressive  string  quickly  pulled  up  over  the  side,  olulu  the  crew  gathered  in  a 
25  to  8. 
opening  of  the  1950  big  league  of  wins racked  up by  the Alcoa  the  last  man  clutching  a­  line  special  meeting  and  adopted  a 
ust  as  the  boat  made  her final  resolution  calling  upon  the  SIU 
Roamers'  baseball  team. 
Sparkplugs  of  the  Reamer's  season. 
to  carry  the. hiring  haR  message 
plunge  to  the  bottom. 
offensive  against  the  Pegasus 
to seamen, other 
unions. Congress 
The  hair­raising  escape  mo­
team  were  Big  Joe  Neveraskus, 
and 
the 
public, 
calling 
for  their 
mentarily  stunned  the  seamen, 
who  had  a  perfect  day  at  bat 
support to  keep  hiring  halls  as 
who 
were 
bus;tled 
into 
the 
ship's 
with four  hits including a  power­
biospital  and  bedded  down.  After  they  are  now  operated. 
ful  home  run  into  the  deep  left 
a  hot  meal  the  men  recovered  The  crew  also  called  upon  the 
field  bleachers in the third frame, 
completely 
and  were  given  cig­ branches  of  the  SIU  to  bring 
A  raging  blaze  which  levelled  the  home  of  Seafarer 
and  Webb,  Who  got  on  safely 
to  the  attention  of  the  member^ 
arettes 
and 
clothing. 
four  times out  of  six  trips  to  the  Daniel  Rose in Harkers Island,  North Carolina,  on  March 
ship  the  inunediacy ­of  the  hir­
FUNDS 
RAISED 
* 
plate. 
4  has  left  his  wife  and  eight  children  homeless,  the  LOG  The  Jackson  men,  sensing  that  ing  hall  issue  and  the  import­, 
Mclnis  of  the  victors  also  hit  learned  this  week. 
the  men  were  disturbed  by  the  ance  of  mobilizing  to  follow  the  •  
« 
a  round  tripper,  a  mighty  smash  The fire,  caused  by  a  short­
Rose  reported  in  a  letter  to  OSS  of  their  ship  and  personal  SIU's policy,  unhampered  by  dis­  ; 
which  cleared  the  left  center  circuit  in  the  wiring,  was  fan­ SIU  headquarters that  his family  belongings,  took  up  a  collection  sension. 
field  wall  in  the  fourth. 
ned  by a  strong  wind  and  quick­ is  having  difficulty  in finding  a  which  was  presented  to  the  men  Sparking  the  crew  as  dele­
,  For  the  Roamers,  Mclnis  shar­ ly  spread  through  the  large  place  to  live  in  Harkers  Island  when  they  were  put  ashore  in  gates,  in  addition  to  Jerry  Pal­­
ed  the  pitching  assignment  with  frame  dwelling.  In less  than half  as  there  are  no  homes  for  rent.  Fusan  later  in  the  day. 
mer,  are: Bob  High, Deck;  Frank 
Whithers. They  held  the  Pegasus  an  hoiu*  the house  was  a  charred  In  the  meantime  his  family  is  Palmer  stated  in  his  report  3.  Williams,  Engine;  A.  M.  Will­
:  squad  to seven  hits. 
ruin.  Only  a  few  possessions  staying  with  his  wife's  mother.  that  the  Korean  seamen  were  iamson,  Stewards.' 
were  saved. 
PEGASUS  STARS 
;  Wold,  Cosby  and  Simms,  on  Brother  Rose  was  at  sea  at 
the  moiind  for  Pegasus,  were  the  time  of  the  accident,  but 
xmable  to  silence  the  booming  eft  his ship  in  Panama  and flew  ' The  otherwise  smooth  voyage  about  two  days  out  of  Honolulu 
bats  of  the  Roamers,  although  back  to  rejoin  his  family. 
of  the  SS  Meredith  "Victory,  when  he  failed  to  show  up  for 
they  were  hampered  by  spotty  The  News­Times  of  Beaufort,  which  paid  off  in  New  York  on  his  watch  at  8  PM.  The  Oiler 
fielding  by  their  teammates,  a  neighboring  town,  initiated  a  March  21,  was^  marred  by  the  reported  the  fact  to  the  Chief 
who  made  a  total  of  six  costly  drive  to  aid  the  Rose  family  in  disappearance  of  a  crewmember  Engineer  and  when  a  search  of 
fumbles.  The  Roamers  defensive  getting  resettled.. The  newspaper  at  s6a  on  Feb.  24,  the  LOG  East's  quarters  proved  unavail­
play ,  was  niaired  by  a  single  :s  soliciting  food,  clothing,  furni­ leai*ned  this  week. 
ing,  the  Skipper  ordered  the 
ture  and  cash  and  asks  that  all 
error. 
vessel  turned  around. 
According 
to 
Seafarer 
Frank 
donations  be  sent  to  the  News­
The Roamers  effective defenses 
Gustav, 
Wiper 
aboard 
the 
Isth­
The  area  was  combed  for  sev­
Times,  Beaufort,  North  Carolina. 
were sparked by  Clarence (Flash) 
In  addition  to  the  aid  given  mian  ship,  the  missing  man  was  eral  hours.  Gustave  said  the 
Owens,  who  alternated  in  right 
by  the  News­Times,  the  Sea­ Chester  East,  a  F'WT.  East  yras  seas  were  "fairly  rough,"  and 
field  with  Dyer. Owens  cut  down  farers  in  the  port  of  New  Or­
member  of  the  SUP  who  that  "a  good  swimmer  couldn't 
several  long  drives  deep  in  right 
eans  responded  to  Brother  signed  on  the  ship  on  the  West  have  lasted,  more  than  10  min­
field  territory.  He  was  equally  Rose's  predicament  by  taking  up  Coast. 
utes  in  the  water." 
fleet­footed  on  the  base  paths, 
a  collection,  as did  Norfolk  men.  East's  absence  was  noticed  The  Meredith  trip  which  be­
• stealing bags  almost  at  will. 
gan  in  New  York  on  Nov.  15, 
included  calls at  Haifa, Tel  Aviv, 
Penang  and Singapore. 
"It  was  a  good  trip,"  Cjustav 
reported.  "There  were  no  per­
Joe  Nunan  (left)  and  Frank 
formers,  so  we  had  no  trouble.  Giislav,  Wipers,  who  were 
A first­rate  crew  makes  any  trip  aboard  the  Meredith  Victory 
a  pleasure." 
• 
on  a  recent  trip. 

Fire  Razes  Member !^  Home; 
Wife,  8  Children  Destitute 

Meredith Victory . Crewmember Lost At Sea 

SS  Hurricane  Hits  Shoal 
In  Fog  Off  Fire  Island,  NY 

"J, 

Members  of: the  Alcoa  Roamer  baseball  squad,  which  has  been  snowing. under  flmix  oppo­
sition  by  top­heavy  Scores, .pose  after  their. lalMt  victory.  Front  row: (left  to  Hgbt):  Evans, 
Wright,  Earlsy,  Mcfni?, 
rows  Rissyski,  Webb^.. 
vl­eonard»  OwfflBS,  Dyer • • and­Morris/^ 
7^7 

NEW  YORK, ABril  6—The SlU­manned  Waterman 
freighter  Hurricane  was  caught  on  a  sand  bar  off  Fire 
Island  last  night  as  she  was  creeping  toward  New  York 
Harbor  in  heavy  fog. 
Attempts  to  get tow 
lines  The  Hurricane  was  inbound, 
aboard  were  stymied  by  high  from  Hamburg,  Bremen,  Rotter­  . 
winds  and  heavy  seas, ,,  but  the. dam  and  Leith,  with  .genenaj 
vessel  was  reported  in, no  im­ cargo,  13  passengers  and  a  crew ^ 
;  '  \ 
medlate^dqnger  of  Cracking  up.  gf::­46. •  • 
, . Tw­p tugs  were standing  by. the  Water  has  been  pumped ­hxtqir : 
crippled  ship  uiitil  the  weather­ the  Hurricane^s  . douWe­bottom/: 
abates .suflicteutiy. .for  leiioatlng  itanks  to  prevent­ her  rplUng.r.iatj^ 
efforts  to be  resumed.. 
tito seas and pounding on  the bar. x: 

�rsriday,  April  7.  I95a 

^5' .­s­'  • • , 

", ­ !*'•  
­'? »•  •  

T  H  er  S  E  AF  ARERS  L O  G 

Page Seven 

Digested Minutes Of  Sill Ship  Meetings 
ALCOA  CORSAIR,  Jan.  15— 
hand  iron  ­and  games.  Marjan 
W.  Higgs,  Chainnan;  J.  Rc^ris, 
Reinke  elected  Deck  Delegate. 
Secretary.  All  delegates  reports 
Under  Education,  it  was  resolved 
Were  accepted.  Motion^  carried 
that, any  man  on  this  ship  who 
to  rent  six  moving  pictures  for 
holds  his  book  oyer  permitman's 
Use  on  each  trip  and  money  to 
head  shall  be  referred  to  Head­
be  raised  by  popular  subscrip­r 
quarters  for  action.  All  agreed 
tion.  Noisy  heating  system  to  be 
to  cooperate  in  keeping  rec  hall 
reported  to  the  Union  Hall.  Mo­
clean  at  all  times,  and  to  do 
tion 'carried  to  instruct  Ship's 
utmost  to  be  good  Union  Bro­
Delegate  to  visit  Brothers  in 
thers  throughout  voyage.  Ship's 
Marine  Hospital  and  to  present 
Delegate  Swayne  reported  that 
them  with  gifts  from  'creW.  No­
wjth  one  exception  all  officers 
tice  of  dues  and  assessments  due 
were  cooperating  fully  with 
ME P«ELIMIN&gt;AR.Y plSCUSS­
fdven  all  hands.  One  minute  of 
crew. 
(OA»  PERIOD OAl  COM" 
Mence  in' memory  of;  deceased  made to* aid  former  crewmember 
PWLSOQY 
VACATtO^S HAS 
4  44 
Union'  members.  Meeting  ad­ and  Union  Brother  who  has  to  SUZANNE,  Jan,  29—T.  Osla­
BNUBO , AT ITS NEXT 
^(^ned  at  3:10  PM,  with  71  return  to  Genoa.  Water  hose  to  zeski.  Chairman;  L.  Kane,  Sec­
BRANCH MEETINtS EACH  . 
toembers  present. 
be  run  out  on  deck  for  use  of  retary. No  beefs to  report.  Motion 
•P
  ORT  WILL ELECTA COM' 
stevedores  in  foreign  ports,  as  carried  unanimously  that  all 
AMTTEE  TO DRAW UP A 
t  t  4 
.  PETROLITE.  Jan.  22 —Lester  means  of  keeping  unauthorized  Communists  and  Trotskyites  be 
RESOLUTION IN LINE WITH 
Clark.  Chairman;  H.  M.  Rosen­ persons  out  of  the  passageways.  brought  up  on  charges  and  ex­
THE ON/feRALL  VIEWPOIISITOT^ 
,  ptiel.  Secretary.  Ship'^  Delegate 
4  4  4 
pelled  from  Union.  Brother  E. 
PORT MBMBBRSHiP , THESE  WILL BE 
J.  Bourgeois  saw  Captain  about  MICHAEL,  Jan.  29  —  John  Corum  was  elected  Ship's  Dele­
SOILED  POWA/  BY  A  HSADC^UA'RI&amp;ZS 
painting  crew's  messroom  and  Ni^ler.  Chairman;  Ronald  gate;  department  delegates  were 
COAAMITTEB  FOR. SUBMISSION TO A  "REF — 
has  another  meeting  Tscheduled.  Thompson.  Secretary.  Delegates  reelected.  Discussion  on  SIU  bul­
^RENPUM  V/OTE  UP AND DOWN THE COAST. 
Delegates  reported  nb  beefs ­in  reported.  Motion  carried  that  letin  regarding  Trotskjrites  and 
IF YOU HAVE ANY OPINION ON THIS MATTER 
their departments.  Motion carried  each crewmember  clean up mess­ Communists.  Suggested that  each 
PUT  YOUR PROpOeAL ON PAP£R AND SUB­
to  call  attention  of  Secretary­ hall  after  using  it;  amended  to  crewmember  take­  active  inter­
MIT  IT  TO THE  PORT COAAMITTBB  FOR 
Treasurer  to  fact  that  American  read  that  last  man  on  standby  est  in  shipboard  meetings  and 
• . •A 
% I 
COAISlDEl?ATlOAsl. 
consul  at  Marseilles  permits  hir­ clean up for­the  oncoming  watch.  that  chairman  and  secretary's 
ing  of  aliens  when  ! there  are  New  cfewmembers  were  inform­ jobs  be  rotated.  Ship's  Delegate 
Aihericans  on  the  beach.  Dis­ ed  that  library  contains  SIU  lit­ to  contact  AMMLA  for  new  li­
cussion  on  launch  service  at  erature.  A  beef  raised  over  the  brary. 
Tripoli  where  shore  leave  Was  amount  of  ice  cream  and  fruit 
4  4  4 
permitted,  but  no  launch  was  given  out.  Steward  asked  men  WAR  HAWK. 
Feb.  2—E.  Wal­
ayailable.  Suggested  that  library  to  be  careful  of  the linen.  Ship's  ker.  Chairman;  H.  Starling.  Sec­
bfe  exchanged  with  that  of  an­ Delegate  is  to  get  in  touch  with  retary.  Ship's  Delegate  reported 
p|her  American  ship  in  Port  American  Merchant  Marine  Li­ everything  .  running  smoothly. 
£|eBouc.  One  minute  of  silence  brary  Association  for  a  new  li­ Department  delegates reported  as 
in  memory  of  departed  Union  brary.  Crew  informed  that  lum­ follows:  one  hour  disputed  over­
Brothers. 
ber  was  being  obtained  to  build  time  in  the  Deck  Gang,  few 
As far  as most  jobs  are  concerned  shipping  here  in  New  York 
benches  outside  on  deck. 
lours  in  Black  Gang  and  none  is  lukewarm—steady  but  slow  on  the  bell.  Of  course,  what's 
4  4  4 
in  Stewards  other  than  for  de­ always  hot  are  those  tanker  jobs  and  many  a  man  beached  for 
SANTA  CLARA  VICTORY,  ayed  sailing  in  Venice.  Motion 
some  time has  shot  out  of  port  practically  broke  but  plenty  happy. 
Feb.  2—R.  Peck,  Chairman:  E.  carried •  unanimously  to  oust  all 
Speaking  of  jobs—and  the  system  of  security  for  those  jobs  in 
McCambridge.  Secretary.  Ship's  commies  and  Trotskyites  from 
these  days  of  extreme  maritime  unemployment—reminds  the  SIU 
CUBORE.  Jan.  22 —W.  M.  Delegate  discussed  ways  of  Union.  Suggested  that  Ship's 
membership 
that  the  battle  of  the  Hiring  Hall  is  still  going  on—  ':4| 
Fields.  Chairman;  W.  A.  House,  leaving  a  clean  ship  at  payoff  Delegate  see  Patrolman  regard­
and 
this 
is a 
serious  responsibility  of  every  SIU  Brother.  Not  only 
Secretary.  Delegates  reported  time  "for  benefit  of  oncoming  ing  launch  service  in  Genoa. 
are 
the 
Brothers 
protecting  the  SIU  at  all  times  but  they  are 
that  there  were  no  beefs  in  any  crewmen.  Department  delegates  Discussed. March  of  Dimes  drive, 
continuing 
the 
good 
old  SIU  spirit  of  helping  out  other  unions  in 
of  the  departments.  Motion  car­ reported  all  okay,  except  for  with  members  in  favor  of  do­
their 
legitimate 
beefs—beefs 
created  by  that  monstrosity  of  a  law 
ried  for  ­delegates  to  prepare  some  disputed  overtime  in  deck  nating  to  cause. 
called  the  Taft­Hartley  Act  .  .  .  Next  month  in  the  May  issue  of 
list  of  replacements  to  be  given  and  stewards  gangs.  Under  Edu­
"Liberty"  magazine  is  a  story  about  Samuel  Gompers,  the  great­
to  Patrolman—this  is  to  make­ cation,  Ship's  Delegate  read  his­
AFL  leader.  It  should  help  all  oldtimers  and  young  timers  in 
sure  that ship  calls. Hall for men.  tory  of  SIU  and  the  Internation­
fully 
understanding  the  general  history  of  this  leader  and  the 
Members  asked  to  remove  dirty  al.  Under  Good  and  Welfare 
growth and battles  of  the AFL. 
gloves  whenever  using  hand  rail  crewmembers  said  they  felt  that 
4 
4 
4 
because  of  thp  clean  paint.  Agent  or Patrolman  should speak 
Eddie 
Nooney 
is 
in 
New 
York 
right 
now  keeping  himself 
Chairman  Fields  explained  the  to  officers  about  the  letter's 
busy  playing  shuffleboazd  every  now  and  then  .  .  .  Walter 
purpose  of  holding  shipboard  threats  to  yank  books  and fire 
Reidy,  the  Steward,  is now  aboard  the SS  Black  Eagle making 
4  4  4 
meetings  and  of  the  need  for  men. 
a  steady  European  run  . .  .  Walter  Gardner  is  now  a  matri­
JOHN­HANSON, 
Feb. 5 
— 
Ed­
Union  rules  and  regulations. 
monial  man—so  here's  wishing  him  mucho  happiness  and 
ELLY,  Jan.  8—Arthur  Kaval.  win  Westphal,  Chairman;  R;  P. 
4  4  4. 
congratulations  .  .  .  Plenty  of  Seafarers  and  their  families 
Hannigan, 
Secretary. 
Ship's 
Del­
SOUTHSTAR,  Jan.  6—James  Chairman;  Walter  Husson.  Secre­
throughout  the boroughs  of  New  York  listened anxiously  to  the 
egate 
said 
that 
he 
would 
check 
Stewart,  Chairman;  Louis  Mey­ tary.  Ship's  Delegate  announced 
SIU 
broadcast  on  the  importance  of  saving  our  Hiring  Hall 
upon 
arrival in 
New 
York 
to 
get 
ers.  Secretary.  All  Delegates  re­ that  Master  was  under  medical 
over  radio  station  WEVD  ,  . . John  Chaker  is  a  proud  daddy. 
overtime 
disputes 
straightened 
ported  everjrthing  okay.  Report­ care  and  recommended  that  he 
It's  a  boy.  8  pounds,  13  ounces,  born  on  the  good  day  of 
ed  that  \yashing  ...lachine  had  not  be  disturbed  during  his  ill­ out.  Deck  Delegate  reported  150  March  31—^just  beating  out  April  Fool's  day. 
hours 
disputed; 
Engine, 
150, 
and 
been  repaired.. Notice  to  be  post­ ness.  Engine  Delegate  reported 
4 
4 
4 
ed  in  laundry  room  explaining  that  $38.50. is  in  ship's  fund.  Mo­ Stewards,  64.  Motion  carried  to 
One 
of 
the 
best 
Brothers 
we 
have 
talked  with  is  Bill  Rowe, 
have 
ship 
fumigated 
before 
next 
proper  way  in  which  to  use  tion carried  to  thank  Ship's  Dele­
happily 
voyaging 
on 
the 
Steel 
Mariner 
now 
on  the  Far  East  run.  . 
washing  machine;  anyone  with  gate  and  Engine  Delegate"  for  trip.  Crew  backs  Steward  in  his 
His 
brother, 
Harry 
Rowe, 
is 
also 
happily 
tripping 
on  the  same 
attempts 
to 
have 
his 
requisition 
doubta  is  to  ask.  Suggestion  efforts  in  purchasing  magazines. 
Oiled.  Three  copies  to  be  made  run  aboard  the  SS  Steel  Admiral.  (Brothers,  it's  easy  to  see  that 
so  that  one  can  be  given­to  Del­ these  runs  are  the  best  in  the  SIU  after  the  tough  organizing  of­
egate  and  one  to  Patrolman.  Isthmian and  bringing  those  ships  into  the SIU fleet.)  Getting  back 
Need  for  clarification  of  working  to  Bill,  we'd  like  to  mention  the  swell  way  Bill  ran  around  New 
rules  discussed.  Delegate  to  see  York  and finally  getting  that  DC  washing  macljine  for  the  ship 
Patrolman  to  inform  him  about  cut  of  dough  chipped  in  by  the  crew  to  keep  everything  happy 
Seafarer  Blackie  Coiro  is  now  cal  instrument,  dance,  or  just  conditions  on  this  trip,  also  to  and  shipshape  aboard  ship.  It's  sure  a  lot  of  things—the  big  and 
working  for  the  Patio  Cafe  in  ad  lib  with  the  gags,  you're  eli­ see  about  getting  the  First  As­ small—which  makes  every  SIU  ship  a  good  ship  and  a  clean 
Brooklyn  where,  he  assures  us,  gible  to  take  part. 
ship  .  .  .  Educational  meetings  here  in  New  York,  as  in  other 
sistant  straightened  out. 
all  SIU  members  will  get  a  Brother  Coiro,  who  sails  as  a 
ports,  is  for  the  full  benefit  of  the  membership. 
4  4  4 
Cook,  says. that  Harry  and  Nat,  NATHANIEL  B.  PALMER. 
square  deal. 
4 
4 
4 
Blackie  says  the  Patio's  wel­ owners  of  the  Patio,  are  a  Feb.  S—  i&gt;aul  Whitlow,  Chair­
The  SEAFARERS  LOG  will  be  sailing  free  of  cosl  to  the 
come  mat.  is  always  out  for  couple  of  "good  Joes  who  will  man;  V.  Szymanski,  Secretary.  ­  homes  of  the  following  Brothers:  Ralph  Dunsmoor  of  Massa­'' 
SIU  men  and he  asked  all  hands  always  give,  seamen  a  decent  Carmel  G.  Imnan  elected  Ship's  chusetts.  Peter  Naujalis  of  New  York.  Martin  Sierra  of  New 
on  the  beach  in  New  York  to  deal." 
Delegate.  No  beefs  in  any  of  the  York.  Andrew Buscarello  of  New  York.  Nick Swokia  of  Connec­
The  Patio  has  a  ball  team,  departments.  Suggested  by  chair  ticut.  Stanley  Brown  of  New  York,  Ralph  Groseclose  of  Vir­
pay  the  place  a  visit. 
Prices  are  among  the  most  too,  and  Blackie  suggests  that  that  one  topic  be  designated  for  ginia  .  .  .  Brother  Fred  Paul  is  in  New  York  right  now  ... 
reasonable  in  town,  there  is  con­ SIU  crews  that  have  teams  and  discussion  under  Education  at  Andy  Havrilla  shipped  out  last  week  .  .  .  Here  is a flash  item 
tinuous  entertainment  and  the  Want  to  play  should  get­ in touch  each  meeting,  beginning  with  —about  one  of  the  Brothers  here  in  New  York' who  is  in  the 
atmosphere  is  definitely  friendly.  with  him.  The  Patios  can  ar­ next  session.  Each  department  to  current  movie  in  New  York  called "Cargo , to Capetown,"  with 
Brother  Coiro  says  that  the  go­ range to  get a  park for all g^es.  take  turns  at  cleaning  recreation  Broderick  Crawford.  Brother  John  Harvey,  who  has  been help­
ings­on  diiring  Amateur  Night,  The  Patio  Cafe  is  located  at  roont;  schedule  to  be  posted  on  ing  out  for  many  we^cs,­especially  in  helping  another  union 
which  takes  place  every  Sim­ 630  Flatbush  Ave.,  Brooklyn.  Kiard.  All  hands  reminded  that  on  strike,  told, us  how  he acted  as  a  Messman  aboard  a  Pana­
Blackie  says  the  best  way  to  f  they  have  a  beef  they  Should  manian  tanker  which  was  chartered  for  Hie  movie  out  on  the 
day,  are  a  lot  of  extra  fun. 
The  Patio  gives  winners  of  get  there  from.  Manhattan  is  by  speak  with  department  delegates  West  Coast.  Imagine  a  Seafarer  actiag  for  the  movies  as  a 
amateur  contests  cash  prizes  BMT  subway;  Take .the Brighton  ikst"  aild  not  go  direct  to  de­ '  merchant  ­seaman,­  giving  the" mRlioas­ of  landlubbers  through­
and  the  event  is  open'  to­  all  Line  train  and get  off  at  either  partment  head.  Noise  to  be  kept  out  the natiett  the impressikn  that  merdiant  seamen  live a life 
Prospect  Park  ­or  Parkside  Ave.  at  a  ininimtim  so  watchstanders  of  easy  wtwk  and  grand  i"4v«itiij &gt; 
"cnntera:  H  ybu"  can  sing,• strum: 
 
ihsy  g«.  We 
wondM N  this  BMvie .is  that  dOidoijMT V 
guitar 
other 'musi­ stations.  • 
ban  get  some­ deep. 

son's 
m imli 

' 
i| 

Brother  Assures  SIU  Men 
Of  Good  Deal  At The  Patio 

�FAtacf.  April  7, 

THE  SEAFARERS  LHG 

MEMSEBSmP  SFEOaS r­
Honduran  Sea  Union  Called  Rig 
For Covering  Runaway Operators 

TAKING  CARE OF  THE  HORSEY  SET 

Cosencia's  outfit.  The  only  com­ Bosun gets  about $140  per month. 
pany  exempt from  this  racket  Such  a  "union"  is  an  insult 
Most  of  you  will  recall  that  is  the  Standard  Fruit  Company,  to  the  intelligence  of  any  right­
11  l^i  year  there  was  supposed  to  which  has  a  contract  with  the  thinking  person.  It  is  part  of 
have  beeii  a  world­wide  boycott  NMU. 
the  racket  that  is responsible  for 
of  ships  under  Panamanian  and 
so  many  thousands  of  American 
A 
seaman 
must find 
his 
own 
Hdnduran  flags  as  a  protest 
seamen  being  on  the  beach  to­
agiinst  their use  to  escape  high­ employment  at  the  company  of­ day,  and  if  it  isn't  stopped  more 
fices 
or 
at 
the 
agents 
of 
the 
er  wages  and  safety  standards 
many  companies  sailing  Hon­ thousands  of  us  will  be  on  the 
bf  . other  maritime  nations. 
duran  flag  ships.  I  understand  beach  but  fast  and  permanently. 
I  do  not  know  all  the  facts  as  that  if  a  man  is  sent  to  a  ship  Every  time  an  Amaican  ship 
|tb  why  the  boycott  was  not  put  by  the  so­called  union,  headed  comes  into  port and lays  up,  you 
Wp  effect,  but  when  I  was  in  by  Cosencia,  he must  pay $25 for  can  almost  be  siure  some  ship 
Honduras,  recently,  accompany­ the  job. 
flying  the  flag  of  Panama  or 
ing  my  wife,  who  is  a  lawyer 
Honduras 
is  taking  its place  and 
and  a  native  of  Honduras,  on  a  The  top  wages  of  an  able­ being  operated  by  the  same 
tour bf  that  nation's major  cities,  bodied  seaman  are  $150  per  morried  interests  which  paid  you 
month  and  80  cents  an  hour  for 
m':  I  was  informed  that  it  had  been  overtime.  However,  there  is  no  off  and  put  you  on  the  beach. 
put  off  because  the  seamen  of 
Let  us  hope  that  a  thorough 
'J. 
these,  countries  had  ,  organized  overtime  at  sea,  Sundays  and  investigation  will  be  made  by 
ttemselves  irdo  a  "Union."  CHie  holidays  are  not  overtime.  A  our  affiliated  maritime  unions 
bbycoU  was  posiponed  upon  re­
and  the  proper  action  taken  to 
quest  of  fhd  Panamanian  Gov 
effect  a  boycott  to  stop  such 
AAfoiig  iho  passengeA  aboard  the  BS  Del  Sud on  a  recent 
eriuneol,  which  asked  for rime 
practice^  before  we  all find  our­
voyage  were  the  two  sleek  nags riiown  above,  with  their 
li.'  fo  enbCt  le^shdion  that  would 
selves  beached  until,  the  next  attendants,  neither' of  whom  was  identiiied.  Material  accom­
bring  its  vmges  and  shipboard 
war  caUs us  out  again to further  paiiying  the  photo  didn't  say,  but  it  is  beHeWed  the  aquines 
oi^BdltiOBS rioser  to  the  stand­
enrich  the  sh^wner. 
we A  of  racing  stock  and  were  either  coniing  from  or  enroute 
^ds  in  ject  throughout  the 
Leonard  MitcheU,  SUP 
to  Argentina. 
y^prid.. ^d,} 
To  fhe  Editor: 
I set  out  to  learn  everything  I 
could  about  the  "union"  and  My  good  friend  Bill  Chafnpliri 
found  it  was  very  easy  to  learn  writes  about  "Why  Bosuns  Get 
aH  about  it  as  there  is  very  Gray."  Although  my  hair  is  Still 
little  to  it.  It  is  simply  the  old  black,  afi  AB  can also  turn  gray. 
:^'c»imp''  racket  with  a  new  :'11  cite  one  quick  way  and  I'm 
Sure  I  win  be  backed  up  by  ITO  the  Editor: 
Jvrinkle.  . 
pfeseht  maritime  schools^  even  inissiOil  schools  at  Sheepsheadf 
many  Brothers. 
' 
ANTI­U«nON  DEAL 
I  have  just  finished • r  eading  ori a partial  plan,  to  finance  two  Bay  in  New  York  and  irt  Ala­:" 
The  Bosun  wiU  call  a  special 
*  "^en  the  United  iVuit  Com­ EDeck  Department  meeting  be­ he  article  by  John  Bunker  in  training  Ships  When  the  cOst  Of  meda,  Galif.,  has  classes  operi' 
ply' went  into  Honduras  years  fore  the  ship  sails  and  teU  the  he  Jan.  13  issue  of  the  SEA­ operating  thesS  fWO  ships,  iii­ in  practical  seamartship.  Also;­' 
ggo  it  ii my  uirferstanding  that  gang  to  take  orders  from  him  FARERS  LOG,  entitled  "Use  of  cludihg  wages  for  the  trainees  the  Sailors  Urti^  of  the  Pacifie' 
gi ' deal  was  made  with  the  gov­ and  him  alone.  He  will  run  Sailing  Ships  As  Training  Ves­ and  the  regular  crew,  would  be  operates  a  similar  sehool  irt  Sani' 
FfartciSoo  for  the  benefit  of  its' 
sels."  Giving  all  due  respect  to  tremendous. 
ei­^ent  whereby  the  company  things as he  sees ^it. 
hew mernbers 
artHl  afRliates. 
• 
Furthermore,  let  us  assume 
he  writer,  I  should  like  to  com­
would  furnish  emplojmient  to 
First 
day 
at 
sea 
our 
old 
pal, 
. 
I 
says Let's 
don't 
Worry 
about' 
that  the  two  training  ships  were 
ment  on his  article. 
the  people  of  Hondimas.  In  re­
J;um  the govbmment  was  to pro^  Mr.  Mate,  shows  his  ugly  head  I  think  the  idea,  although  it  in  operation.  That  would  mean  training  n6W  men  who  waht  tO  , 
tect .  the  company  against  labor  on  deck  and  gives  sailors  a  job  makes  interesting  reading,  is  that  after  six  months'. training,  go  to  sea,  lefs  concentrate  ori' 
organizations  by  making  them  other than the  one  he  is  working  about  20  years  too  late  and. ra­ 800  men  a  year  wOuld  enter  the  keeping  and  acquiring  jobs  for 
on.  The  sailor  politely  informs  Iher  impractical  todaV.  As  field  in  competition  for  berths  the  experienced  nrjen  w6  have' 
illegal. 
lim  that  he  is  taking  orders 
available  today. 
That  law  has  been  rigidly  en­ from  the  Bosun  and  continues  Bunker  says,  marlinspike  sea­ on  ships. 
Don  D,  Brown,  SUP 
Does 
Mr. 
Bunker 
realize 
that 
forced  by  the  Honduran  goverri­ his  work.  The  Mate  nms  for  the  manship  in  the  old  sense,  is  nOt 
SS  MisriOii  Dolores  ' 
the 
United 
States 
has 
art 
over­
so 
important 
today 
as 
it 
was 
10­
,ment,  which  is  in  fact  a  police  ; Bosun,  and  with  a  blank  look 
^tate.  .The  army  controls  every­ on  his  face  the  Bosun  acts  as  if  or  20  years  ago,  even  though  it  supply  of  experiertced  seamen 
jthing  and  the police  are  regular  le  doesn't  know  why  the  AB  must  always  be  part  of  a  sea­ (not  including  aliens)  to  last  for 
another 20  years,  without  putting 
p^y  men.  So  you  can  see  that  wouldn't  do  the  little  job  the  man's  basic  knowledge. 
• li 
another  800  rnen  a  year  into  the 
GONE  FOREVER 
any  labor  union  is  impossible.  Mate  asked  him  to. 
picture. 
Some  time  ago  the  stevedores  I  guess  you  know  who  is  left  There  is  no  use  kidding  our­
liil 
SUPPLY  GREATER 
.walked  off  the  job  in  the  port  ligh  and  dry,  holding  the  well­ selves.  The  old  schooners  are 
gone 
forever. 
They ­have 
no 
use 
Where,  may  I  ask,  are  the 
*of  Tela  in  protest  against  their  known  bag  for  the  rest  of  the 
in  modeni  shipping.  We  may  as  jobs for  these men  to come  from? 
ibw  wages  and  working  condi­ trip. 
' 
well  accept  it  and  forget  them  Every  Union  hall  in  the  coun­ To  the  Edilor: 
"tions.  They  get  35  cents  and 
ho'orS,  with  winch  drivers  re­ And  by  the  way,  let's  get  this  as  far  as  using  them  in  training  try  today  has  more  men  than  We,  the  undersigned,  would 
• ceiving 50  cents  an  hour.  The  homesteading  question  to  a  vote,  or  shipping  is  concerned.  They  there  are  jobs.  We  certainly  dO  like  to  voice  our  opinion  on. the. 
United  Firuit  Company  brought  Brothers.  A  year  on  a  ship  is  Ore  Obsolete  fOr  either  purpose.  not  need  any  more  manpower.  length  of  time  a  crewmember 
Another  thing:  The  govern­
If  we  must  have  training  should  be  allowed  on  a  ship. 
In  a  trainload  of* its  plantation  enough  for  any  man. 
Kirivan 
Bilson 
menlf 
isn't 
likely 
to 
drop 'its 
schools, 
the  US  Maritime  Com­^  After  much  thought  on  the 
slaves  to  load  the  ships  under 
subjeict  we  think  that  6rte  year 
military  guard.  Hie general  then 
is  sufficient.  In  that  tinie  any 
gave orders fbf  the regular steve­
mart  should  have  a  fair  amount  •  
dPres  to  return  to  work  within 
put  aside.  He  is  eligible  for  a '•  
24  hours,  or  else  they  would  be 
two 
weeks  vacation  which  most  ' 
founded  up,  and  possibly  wiped 
•
of our 
companies  give.  He is  also 
but.  Needless  to say,  they  all re­
eligible 
for  unemploymbrtt  com­^ 
tiumed  to  work.  All  this  hap­
by 
Thurston 
J. 
Lewis 
pensation, 
if  such  a­  tuling  is 
pened  only  a  few  months  ago. 
passed 
by 
the  meiribership. 
r; 
UNION? 
We  think  that  if  such  a  rul­
They  say  that  I  must  take  a  vacation 
But  ­what  is  there  to  do  in  Topeka, 
.  The  so­called  Honduran  Sea­
ing  is  passed  it  will  create  a 
(I'm  offered  four  weeks  with  pay). 
Or  Tulsa  or  Denver,  say. 
J  large  number  of  jobs immediate­ ­
.  men's  Union  is  owned  and  con­
For  a Bosun  c&lt; Deck  Storekeeper, 
trolled  by  one  man,  a  certain  But  I  don't  know  the  inside  of  the  Nat»m, 
ly  and  froirt  thert  on  a  more ' 
Who don't savvy  the landlubber's  way? 
V  Srabf  Cbsencie^  ^o­ is  on  the  And  I've  long  forgot  how  to  play. 
gradual  tUfnOver  than  we'noW 
payroll  of '  the  United  Friiit  Since first  she  came  out  of  the  yard, 
have. 
" 
How tong  would  t  be  On  the  beach. 
Company,  He also owns the  larg­
We would  like to  hear,  through  •  
I've  sailed  the  SS  DEL  NORTE. 
How  iibng  cbuld  I  keep up my  we^ht 
at  and  miost rapensive  hotel  in  And  you find  things  a  little  bit  hard. 
Ihe  LOG,  the  Opinion  of  more 
When  the  galley^s  out  Of  my  reach. 
&lt;Pui»io  Cortez,  caHed riie  Cos^­
of  the  BrothMS  ort  this  subject' 
When  you're  getting  a  bit  bald  at  ferity. 
And  I'm  off  in  a  dry­land  state? 
eia  Hotel. 
so  that  it  can  be  brought  "to  a 
(Now  wherever  the  ladles  are 
"One  year  and  get  ol6"  they  say, 
The dues of  this so^ralled  tm­
feferendufrt  ballot  in  the  nea?' 
Fm  itill  good  for  a  bit  of  a  sortie­^ 
"But 
off  you  danrii  Wei'  must." 
H:  foa  sre  $1.80  a riibnth. 
future.  ' 
: 
Sfaatt  I  trad*  jih*  dleoiii salt  spray 
man  sailing  aE  Hbhdin­an  sftilf  At  ilur  Madam's or  the  Florida  Baif 
Signed  by  is  Membets  &gt; 
For dii^ despicable  dust? 
must  belong  and  pay  dues  td  TlMugh 1  AM  a bit  bald  at  forty.) 
of  PhSidrifthih 
k 

To  the  Editoe: 

ABs Can Turn 
Gray, Too, 
BUson Claints 

Gov't  Misses Boat  In Training New  Men 
With  Jobs Scarce  For Old  Handst  Brown 

il' 
i' 

Vacation Rule 
Would AidJob 
Turnover, Say 15 

Log'A'Rhythms 

THAT  VACATION  ISSUE 

I; 

�" 

Vacation­Takers 
Should Get Break, 
Brother Contends 

T 'iE  S  E  A FA EE  R S  tb G 

OH, THAT  GOLDEN  CITY! 

Page  Niae 

Proposed Rule On Vacations 
Held Detrimental To Union 

Thus,  for  each  month  that  a 
man  stays  on  a  ship  over  one 
I  am  against  compvilsory  va­ year,  he actually  receives a  wage 
Vacations  should  be  taken  by 
cations  because  I  sincerely  be­ increase  of  one­sixth  of  week's 
the  men  entitled  to  them,  other­
lieve  that  such  a  rule,  particu­ pay,  or a  sum ranging  from  nine 
wise  there  is  no  use  in  having 
larly  at  this  time,  would  be  to  ten  dollars  a  month.  What 
vacations. 
^'  . 
detrimental  to  best  interests  of  normal  person  will  quit  a  job 
It  may  be  possible  to  work 
our  organization. 
on  being  credited  with  a  sub­
out  the  vacation  by  replacing  a 
We  are  now  facing  a  long  and  stantial  wage  increase? 
man  for  one  trip  after  he  has 
tough  legal  battle  (possibly  to 
been aboard  a single  ship for one 
be  followed  by  strike  action)  to  The  so­called  homesteaders are 
year.  If  a  man  should  be  requir­
protect  and  maintain  our  Hiring  seldonFto  be found  on ships  that 
ed  to  get  off  the  ship 'after  one 
Halls,  which  have  proven  to  be  make  long  trips  to  foreign  pprts. 
year,  perhaps  he  could  IJG  com­
the  most  efficient  method  of  as­ The  few  in  that  category  are 
grinding  it  out  on the  less pcqpu­
pensated  in  some  way  after  his 
signing  crews  to  ships. 
lar 
coastwise  rims, • a  nd  they  do 
vacation  is  over.  Either  of  these 
We  must  be  careful  not  to 
so 
largely  because  they  have 
ways  could  accomplish  this: 
make  any  move  that  would 
friends 
and  relatives  in  the 
1.  Give  the  man' a  top  priority 
alienate  those  who  are  on  our 
ports 
their 
ships  visit  regularly. 
shipping  card, 
side  at  present.  We  need  all  the 
Despite 
various 
clsiims  to  the 
2.  Allow  the  man  to  be  paid 
aid  we  can  muster. 
contrary, 
such 
men 
are  usually 
out  of  the  welfare  fund  from 
BEST 
METHOD 
in 
closer 
touch 
with 
Unioii  af­
the  time  his  vacation  is  over 
fairs 
than 
their 
more 
fortunate 
until  he  ships  out  again. 
Because,  under  our  Hiring 
Things  are  mighty  fine 
Brothers 
who 
are 
off 
on  long 
In  this  way  a  man  can  take 
Hall  system,  we  are  able  to 
trips 
or 
completing 
such 
trips 
his  vacation  and  will  not  lose  aboard the SS  Golden City,  say 
make  prompt  assignments  of 
with 
the 
resultant 
heavy 
pay­
anything  by  doing  so.  And  all  the  lads  aboard  the  Waterman 
competent  and  reliable  men,  the 
offs. 
members,  both  single  and  mar­ freighter..  Even  "Sougee 
shipowners  will  aid  us  to  main­
Brown's  Boys,"  as­  the  photo 
ried,  will  benefit. 
Bill  Gray.  Ship's  Del.  , 
tain  our  Hiring  Halls,  not  be­
You  can  hardly  expect  men  above  is  labelled,  keep  going 
Sealrain 
New  Jersey 
cause  they  love  us,  but  for  the 
to  take  vacations  for  two  or  with  smiles.  "Sougee"  Brown 
very  good  reason  that  they  have 
three  weeks  if  it  will  cost  them  is  the' Chief  Mate  and  is  so 
found 
that  it  is  the  most  effici­
two  and  a  half  months  of  pay  named  because  he "always  has 
ent 
and 
economical  hiring  sys­
waiting  for  a  ship  after  it  is  his  boys  working  with  a  sou­
tem 
ever 
in  use. 
gee  bucket." 
all  over. 
The  paying  off  and  signing  on 
In  photo  right  is  Seafarer 
On  the  welfare  fund,  I'd  like 
of  even  a  few  men  entails  a 
to  suggest  that  sick  benefits  be  Bill  Barth.  the  Golden  City's 
great  deal  of  paper  work  by  the 
$50  weekly  for  thre  months.  Night  Cook  and  Baker,  who, 
clerical  staffs  of  the  Union  and 
And  if  a  pension  is  ever  worked  when  he's  not  pounding  out 
the  companies,  a  constant  and  To  the  Editor: 
out  that  it  go  to  all  men  with  pastries  for  his  shipmates, 
expensive  overhead  that  becomes  In regard  to the  length  of  time' 
20  years  in  the  industry,  re­ doubles  as  the  official  ship's 
a  heavy financial 
burden  in  a  man  should  stay  on  one  ship*, 
gardless  of  age.  Men  on  retire­ photographer.  Bill  handles  his 
those  cases  when  ships  have  a  we,  the  imdersigned  members, 
ment  should  be  allowed  to  work  photos  from  start  to  finish, 
large  and  frequent  turnover  in  thought  we  might  voice  our 
processing  the  films  and  prints 
ashore,  if  they  wish, 
personnel,­
opinions. 
right  aboard  the  vessel. 
Andrew  H.  LavezoU 
Everyone knows  that the beach 
DOING  THEIR  JOB 
is  getting  tougher  every  day 
Those  men  that  stay  on  ships  and  that  in  order  to  bring  about 
for  a  fairly  long  period,  some­ a faster  turnover something, must" 
times  a  year  or  more,  are  simply  be  done.  It  is inevitable  that  the 
doing  a  job  in  good  Union  style.  only  conclusion  is  to  limit  a 
They  provide  a  solid  foundation  man's  stay  aboard  ship.  Nine out 
on  which  our  Negotiating  Com­ of  ten  men  going  to  sea  have 
To  the  Editor: 
thinking  only  of  themselves.  worked  in  the  past  and,  thinks  mittee  can  build  for  the  future,  some  sort  of  responsibility­  and 
Just finished  reading  the  LOG  What  are  they  willing  to  do  to  John  Shipowner,  it  can  work  while  maintaining  the  great  in  order  for  them  to  meet  their 
gains  already'won. 
obligations  there  must  be  a  bet­
and  I  see  that  the  homesteaders  get  those  four  watches?  Would  again. 
ere  up  to  their  old  tricks,  I  they  be  willing  to  give  up  their  The  homesteader  says  he  is  a  Upon  completion  of  one  year  ter  turnover  of  jobs. 
Therefore,  the  only  possible 
fchougilt  we  were  rid  of  them  Sunday  at  sea  overtime  and  take  good  Union  man,  but  he  wants  of  service  on  a  ship,  a  crew­
a  cut  in  pay  to  make  that  pos­ to  marry  a  ship  and  hog  it  all  member  is  entitled to  seven days  solution  is  that  after  a  year 
years  ago. 
They  never  did  anything  to  sible?  We  all  know  the  answer  and  let  his  Union  Brother  get  pay,  which  he  wiU  receive  when  aboaid  one  SIU  ship,  we  thizdc 
he finally  leaves  the  ship.  If­he  that  a  man  should  be  reqiared 
make  conditions  except  run  and  to  that, 
by  as  best  he  can.  Don't  let  him  stays  on for  more  than one  year, 
to  take  his  vacation  pay  along 
'tell  the  Chief  as  soon  as  any­
tell  you  he  can't  afford  to  get  some  companies,  Seatrain  being 
NO  DREAMER 
with  his wages  and  pile  off. 
one talked  about  unionism.  They 
off—that  he  has  a  family.  The  one,  compute  his  vacation  time 
We  feel  that  under such  a sys­
were  the' hardest  men  to  or­
The  shipowner  is  no  dreamer;  average  seaman  is  making  more 
and 
pay 
on 
a 
monthly 
basis. 
tem, 
any  man  with  an  eye  to 
ganize,  but  now  that  others have  he  keeps  an  eye  on  the  profit  than  the  average  man  working 
the  future  should  be  able to 
gotten  the  conditions  for  them,  sheet  at  all  times.  That  is  busi­ a^ore,  which  he  sho.uld,  so  that 
they  say  the  Union  can't  survive  ness  with  him.  He  love.?  the  he  can  come  asliore  and  have  a  Floyd's Parents Ask Help  have  acquired  enough  money  in 
wages  and  vacation  pay  to­meet 
Without  them, 
company  stiff  because  he  knows  time  of  his  own, 
his  obligations  ashore, 
&gt;  They  scream  for  the  four  he  can  use  him  to  tear,  down 
watches.  As  usual  they  are  the  Union  'and  conditions.  It  I  have  gone  to  sea  for  about 
WILL  MOVE  QUICKLY 
25  years  and  have  belonged  to 
And, 
in  the  meantime,  his 
the  SIU  ever  since  it  came  into 
name, 
after 
registering,  will  be 
GETTING  SET  FOR THE CONTRACT 
existence  and  have  seen  the 
moving 
steadily 
up  on  the  ro­
homesteader  operate  in  the  past, 
tary  shipping  list  in  a  mudk 
FUTURE  AT  STAKE 
shorter  time  than  it  would  be 
•  
ordinarily, 
It  doesn't  matter  greatly  to 
Anj  member  who  has  spent 
men  of  my  age,  but  you  young 
any 
time  on  the  beach  witiiin: 
fellows  have  a  lot  of  years 
the 
last 
three  months  will  cer­
ahead  of  you  and  if  you  don't 
tainly  agree  to  the  above  and 
tend  to  business  you  will  go 
following  statements:  That  ship­
back  to  times such  as  there  were 
ping  has been falling off  steadily, 
before  the  Union. 
due  to  the  fact  that  men  take 
I  have  seen  them  and  know 
jobs  and  take  root  like  a  50­  ^ 
what  they  were  like.  I  would 
year­old  oak  tree. 
rather  starve  than  go. back  to 
This  plan  wiU  also  eliminate 
those  days  (when  I  practically 
the  possibility  of  a  union  mem­
starved  anyway). 
A  recent  photo  of  John  Pit­ ber  from  becoming  a  company 
Even  though  you  go  to  work 
stiff  and also  give them a  chance 
ashore,  remember  there  is  no  man  Floyd,  who  was  reported  to see  what  is going  on at  shore­
better  job  insurance  than  a  re­ lost  from  the  SS Gateway  City  side  meetings,  which  we  feel  is 
tired  Union  book  and  it  costs  last  April  1,  between  Seattle  very  essential. 
you  nothing.  Tough  shipping  and  Tacoma.  His  parents  are 
Why  not  come  to some  sort  of 
isn't  because  of  a  shortage  of  anxious  for  any  information or  understanding  and  have  tlio 
ships  or  a  matter  of  top  many  recent  pictures  of  Brother  question  put  on  a"  referendum 
members,  but  just  a  matter  of  Floyd and  have appealed to his.  ballot  up  and  down  the  .coast, 
too* many  Hbmesteaders,  Remem­ former  shipmates  and  friends 
Seafarer  Bill  Zarkas,  now  holding  down  an  AB's­job  on  ber  tiial  when  you  vote  on  that  to  get  in  touch  with  them.  so  we  can  see  what " the  mem­
the  SS  Puerto  Rico,  announces  he  will  soon  leave  the  ranks  compulsory  vacation  clause. 
Anyone  who  can  be  of  help  bership  agrees  to, 
of  bachelordoni.  Bill  says  the  wed^g  bells  may  ring  out 
James  Linden 
should  write  to  Floyd's  father, 
C.  G.  Cosilow 
spring  for  him  and  his  fiance.  Angle  Catalano,  tvifh  whom 
Bernard  Toney  ' •  
J.  A.  Floyd  RFD  2,  Box  163, 
he  ia  pictured  here.  — 
D.  C.  Croft 
Fairmount.  N.  C. 
Book  No.  ID 
To  the  Editor: 

To  fhe  Editor: 

One­Year Limit 
Seen As Spur 
To Job Chances 

,rl 

Oldtimer  Says  Homesteading  Threatens 
Return To Pre­Union Shipboard Conditions 

.  ,  V:. 

• . 

• • • •  •  

'V 

;   • 

�ri'fti'W: :v,:­' 

Page Tea 

Fziday; ApsU  7. 1950 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

The  Seafarers  In 
m­­
s'i' • ­• • •  

­Ife' 

By  JOHN  BUNKER 

Caribbean  Carnival 
(Part  One) 

'  Just  as  the  Atlantic  seaboard  in  1942  was 
called  "U­Boat  Lane,"  so  could  the  Caribbean 
\  and  the  Gulf  have  been  called  "U­Boat  Lake"— 
for  the  German  undersea  raiders  roamed  these 
waters  at  will,  becoming  so  bold  in  their  himt 
for  prey  that  they  sank  ships  in  the  very  mouth 
of  the  Mississippi,  in  the  narrow  passage  be­
tween  Key  West  and  Havana,  and  at  the  en­
trance  to  the  Texas  oil  ports. 
The  height  of  bold  audacity  was  reached  on 
thi evening  of  July  2,  1942,  when  a  sub  entered 
the  harbor­  of  Puerto  Limon,  Costa  Rica,  and 
sank  the  SS  San  Pablo. 
During  the first  two months  of  war, six  Amer­
ican  ships  were  torpedoed  and  sunk  in  the  Car­
ibbean  and  the  Gulf.  Six  more  were  sent  to  the 
bottom  in  April;  and  in  May  the  Germans  had 
a  month­long  field  day,  sinking  no  less  than 
five  ships  on  the  4th,  two  on  the  6th,  and  three 
on  the  12th. 
The  total bag for  the  month  of  May  in. Ameri­
can  vessels  alone  across  the  Gulf  and  the  Carib­
bean  was  31 Ships.  By  the  end  of  June,  1942,  a 
total  of  167  Allied  freighters  and  tankers  had 
'  been  sent  to  the  bottom  in  these  warm,  south­
ern  waters! 
A  surprisingly  large  number  of  these  U­boat 
victims  were  cargo  carriers  manned  by  SIU  sea­
men  and  it  would  seem,  from,  a  study  of  the 
war  records,  that  the  Germans  had  a  special 
bMng  for  Waterman,  Bull,  and  Alcoa  ships.  An 
entire  fleet  of  them  was  lost  in  1942.  Limited 
space  permits  describing  only  a  few  of  the 
marly  dramatic  incidents  involving  SIU  ships 
during  this  phase  of  the  war.  A  book  would 
be  needed  to  tell  about  them  all. 
For  the  undersea  raiders it  was a  Roman  holi­
day—simpler  than  knocking  off  clay  pigeons  at 
a  shotgun  shoot. 
So it  was  with  the  Elizabeth  and  Clare  of  the 
Bull  Line,  as  they  plodded  along  the  southwest 
~coast  of  C!uba  on  the  night  of  May  20,  1942.  A 
bright  moon  lit  up  the  sea  and  silhouetted  the 
two ships as  they  headed  south  with  their  holds 
of  general  cargo  for  the  Islands. 
On  the  Clare's  bridge,  the  Skipper  watched 
a  li^t  that  had  been  reported  a  minute  or  so 
before  by  one  of  the  lookouts.  He  couldn't  tell 
whether  it  might  be  a  small  Island  freighter  or 
a  fishing  boat,  for  it  was  moving  across  their 
bow  and  lay  some  distance  off. 
LOST  IN  THE  DARK 
A  rain  squall  blanketed  the  moon  just  as  tHb 
rSkipper  was  trying  to  identify  the  unknown 
craft,  which  seemed  to  be  pursuing  an  erratic 
course. 
­  Up forward in the hot fo'castle. Fireman  Ernest 
Torres  was  stretched  out  in  his  bunk,, clad  only 
in  a  pair  of  shorts.  It  |vas  stickily  hot  and  he 
was  trying  to  read.  He  had  almost  decided  to 
take  his  mattress  on  deck  and  stretch  out  on 
number ene  hatch, rain  or  no  rain. 
Just  then  a  bright  searchlight  blossomed  out 
on the vessel ahead,  playing  over  the Clare from 
bow  to  stern  with  a  blinding  intensity.  Almost 
immediately  a  torpedo  smashed  into  the  hull  at 
number  one  hold;  just  where  Fireman  Torres 
waff  about  to stow  his mattress  for  a cool snooze. 
made  one  hell  of  a  noise,"  says  Torres. 
"The  explosimx  threw  me  out  of  my  bunk  and 
onto  the  deck.  The  old  Clare  shivered  like  a 
,^ummy dancer. 
:  "AS 
lig&amp;ts  went  out  and  I ran  like  hell  to 
my lifii^^ station. I had  the  book  in  my  hand 
the  time,, bid^  I never  even  thought  of  going 
back  for  my.  clothe  or .  my  papers.  The  spray 
from the es^losion gave me a  shower  bath  when 
t 
down  the  deck." 

...a 

I 
4  , 
Tdjem  Mwly  br 
llw  twoUve  Ssafarers  in  the  above  picture  were  only  a  few  of  the 
many 
men  who HaA  Uieir  sbipe  shot  i^om  under  them 
some  as  many  as  three  times, 
although  the Waw  was a  little  more  then  a  year  old. 
Seated,  hrem  left  to  rightr  are;  Anthony  McMunn,  Oiler;  Andrew  Layazoli,  OS;  Charles 
Allem  AS;  IHieleman  Mit&amp;ys,  Fkeman;  Carville  Councilman,  WatertendOr. 
I^andbig are;  It C,  RtCfeetls,  Steward;  Harry  Clock,  Oiler;  J.  L.  Michaelas,  Fireman;  E. 
Aguiweife  Wrmttteadee;  Gus  Alnv  Carpenter;  Robert  B.  Graham,  OS;  Reginald  Goodin.  Cook. 
So  violent  had  been  the  blast  that  water  cas­ Cuba  bound  for  Mobile  with  aluminum  ore. 
caded  down  the  vents  into  the  fjreroom.. 
when,  on  June  7,  a  torpedo  exploded  in  her 
starboard 
side  and  she  went  to  the  bottom  iri 
There  was  no  psmic  on  the  ship and  the  Cap­
tain  visited  all  the crew's quarters  to  make  sure  just.1%  minutes! Not  many ships  beat her  record 
that  no  men  were  trapped  in  their  rooms,  after  for  sinking. 
which  he  gave  the order  to abandon  ship.  Both 
Water  and  debris  shot  up  the  funnel  as  the 
boats  lowered  awsty  sssd  the  men  pulled  as  hard  boilers  exploded  and  First  Mate  John  Hume, 
as  they  could  for  the  shore. 
one  of  the  last  to  leave  the  plummeting  ore  car­
rier,  walked  off  the  deck  in  water  over  his 
ELIZABETH  GETS  IT 
•
They  hadn't  taken  many  strokes, before  the  shoulders after  releasing  the  forward  life  rafts. 
The  sub  that  torpedoed  them  surfaced  nearby 
Elizabeth, still following along behind  and caught 
proverbially,  "between  the  devil  mad  the  deep',"  and  watched  the  troubles  the  men  had  witfi 
received  a  torpedo  amidships,  accompanied  by  their  leaky  lifeboats,  but  the  Germans  did  not 
a  bi;ight  flash  that  momentarily  lit  up  the  vessel  interfere  in  any  way  and  the  27  survivors  were 
picked  up  the  next  day  by  a  Navy  patrol  vessel. 
and  then  was  gone. 
A  close  competitor  to  the Suwied  for  the  title 
From  the  boats  the  crew  of  the  Clare  could 
see  little  lights  blinking  on  the  Elizabeth  as  of  "the  fastest  sinking  ship"  was  the  Alcoa  Pih 
her  men  ran  out  of  the  deck­  house  doors  and  grim,  which  was  torpedoed  without  warning 
pushed  a^e  bliaekout  baffles  on  their  way  to  early  in  the  morning  of  May  28  while  en  route 
from  Port  of  Spain,  Trinidad,  to  Mobile  with, 
the boats. 
Several  of  the  men  laughed  at  the  sight,  for  9,500  tons  of  heavy  bauxite  aboard.  She  sank 
it  seemed  amusing  in  a  way  to  see  other  guys  by  the  stern  in  a  little  over  90  seconds,  with 
get  it,  tooi  "I bet  they don't  save  any  silk  stock­ heavy  loss  of  life. 
NO  TIME  FOR  SOS 
ings  for  the  girls in  Puerto  Rico,"  soineone  said. 
This  blacked­qut,  SlU­crewed  freighter  had 
"It  ain't funny," said  an  Oiler. "If  they  got  hit 
in  the engine  room  there's some  good  guys gom'  three  lookouts  on  watch,  and  was  2ig­zagging 
when  the  unseen  U­boat  sent  a  torpedo  into  her 
down on  her."  " 
That  was  a  sobering  thought  and  they  pulled  engine room  on the starboard  side  just  below  thd 
for  the  shore.  It  took  about 15  minutes  for  the  water  line.  Needless  to  say,  there  was  no  time, 
and no time  to fire any  guns 
Clare  to  sink  and  they  watdied  her  settle,  sil­ to send  out an 
even if 
the 
had bee«i armed?. 
houtted  against  the tropic sky.  No men  werff  lost 
on  the  Cllare.' 
The  Alcoa  MJ^rim  ptoged  so  quickly  no 
Not  so  fortunate  were  other  SIU  ships  that  boafe  ebttld^  be  launched^  but  nhre sinwivors  gat 
are  now  rusting  many  fathoms  under  the  sur^  aboard  two  lh!e  rafta 
drifted'  elear  and 
face in  the  hghtless deeps  of  the  Caribbean  and  were  picked  up a  we^fe  later  by  the SS Thomas 
the  Gulf. 
V 
Neiifton 
Of  the  hundreds  of  men  lost  on  SIU  ships  in 
As  was  usuai&gt;  hi  sihfcin^  cA  un»ied  ships 
World: War  II  a  large  percentage  made  the  sup­ staisning  alone,,  the 
snrfacedv  came  up  to, 
reme  sacrifice  in  these  waters  that  locdfffd  so  tha  survivors,  and?  questioned'  tSem  about  the 
calm  and  peaceful,  yet  comprised  one  of  the  ship and  cargo;  The  U­boat  was a  big  one,  had 
most  hazardous  sectors  of  the war. 
a  three inch  gun on  her  forward deck, and  bore 
It was oil  and bauxite,  the two prime essential^  the insignia of  a ram's head on her conning tower. 
of  modern  war,  lhat  lured "the  U­boats  to  the" Afior  questioning  the  Pilgpim's men,  She  steam­
Caribbean  in  the  first  place.  The  tapkers­  and  ed cajmly  away  on  the surface locfltihg  for  more 
the  bauxite  shipi were  their  number­one  taf­ _  victims.  •  
gets,  but  they  also sank­ anything  else  that &lt;SEHne 
Tru% it can  be «aid that  the Caribbean in  1942 
along.  In  the  first  six  months  of  19^,  the subff 
was a  "U^oat 
shelled ot torpedoed anything  that  steamed  theiir 
way,  without  fear  or  favor. 
Another  apleodtr  Ike  role  of  SIU  crews  la 
One  of  several  banxite­liaden  ships  ta  get 
sliced'  with  a  tin fiishr hv  these  waters  was  the  Wbrld  war  IF wlir apliM«r  la  the aext  issue of 
little  SS  Sawied  under  command  ofi  Gapt^n 
Bernard  David.  She  wSa  off  the  south  coast  of 
..I'Sv 

: v:J 

�Prtday,  Apifll f, 1950 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Page  EBevm 

Brief 

TAMPA  —  ciiainuBn.  R.  H. 
in  this  port  in  the  period  jusfr^ 
,R[all.  20060:  Recojrding  Secretary, 
ended;  he  said.  Director  of  OivSi 
W.  W.  Hall,  ^256:  Reading 
ganization  Lindsey  Williams  re­
Clerk,  Ray  WhitV,  57. 
ported  that  the  Marine  Allied 
Minutes  of  previous  meetings 
REG. 
REG. 
REG, 
TOTAL 
SHIPPED  SHIPPED  SHIPPED  TOTAL  Workers  were  striking^  the  Bisso 
. in  all  Branches  read  and  ap­
PORT 
DECK 
ENG. 
STWpS. 
REG. 
DECK 
ENG. 
STWDS.  SHIPPED  Tug  Co.,  in  New  Orleans.  He 
proved. Branch  Agent stated  that 
said  that  the  MAW  needed  pick­
25 
17 
71 
29 
3 
8 
3 
14  ets  to  permit  24­hour  picketing  ­  /i 
shipping" had  slumped  this  past  Boston 
....... 
128 
99 
128 
355 
69 
66 
64 
199  and  asked  for  volimteers.  Mo­
two  weeks,  after  about  four  New  York. 
Philadelphia 
18 
23 
24 
65 
31 
25 
29 
85  tion  carried  to  concur  in  Wil&gt;  3 
months  of  very  good  shipping. 
93 
79 
81 
253 
93 
92 
68 
253  liams'  report. 
Men  from  outpprts  arrived  to  Baltimore 
— 
— 
32 
39 
37 
108 
1 
1 
find  that  the  bottom  had  just  N'orfoik............................ 
4  4  4 
15 
9 
5  , 
29 
4 
2 
1 
7 
about"  fallen  out.  There  ,are  no  Savannah 
GALVESTON  —  Chairman.  S. 
27 
31 
25 
83 
1 
1 
6 
8 
' signs  of  any  imniediate  improve­ Tampa..,., 
72 
52 
95 
219 
71 
59 
94 
224  Garcia,  20233;  Recording  Secre­
ment,  he  added.  The  samp  num­ New  Orleans 
34 
31 
32 
97 
59 
38 
45 
142  tary,  Keith  AIsop,  7311;  Reading 
ber  of "ships  are  touching  port,  Mobile 
58 
33 
34 
7 
125 
6 
3 
16  Clerk,  C.  Cooper,  100201. 
he  said,  but  m»st  men  are  stay­ Galveston 
26 
34 
27 
87 
25 
38 
22 
85 
Minutes  of  all  Branch  meet­
ing  aboard  for  another  trip.  West  Coast...".;.. 
ings approved  as read. Secretary­
JSecretary­Treasurer's 
financial  GRAND  TOTAL. 
447 
1,492 
528 
517 
364 
335 
335 
1,034  Treasurer's  financial  report  and 
report  and  Headquarters  report 
Headquarters  report  to  the  mem­
­ito  the  membership  approved  as 
.read.  Under  Good  and  Welfare,  Port  Agent  stated  that  shipping  silence  in  memory  of  departed  port  to  the  membership  read  and  bership  were  read  and  concurred 
the  following  Were  discussed:  for  the  past  two  weeks  hac  Union  Brothers.  Motion  carried  concurred  in.  Port  Agent  said  in.  Agent  reported  on  the  local 
the  slow  shipping,  the  Union's  been  good,  with  more  men  ship­ to  adjourn  at  7:40  PM,  with  110  that  affairs  of  port  were  in  good  shipping  picture.  Motion  earned 
shape  but  that  shipping  had  fall­ to  refer  all  excuses  to  the  Dis­
signing  of  Cities  Service  to  an  ping  than  wore  registered  dur­ members  present. 
en  off.  With  the  settling  of  the  patcher.  Patrolman­Dispatcher's 
• i  nterim  contract  and  the  possi­ ing  the  period.  It  was  explained 
4  4  4 
bility  of  openirtg  a  Hall  in  that  the  spurt  in  shipping  hac  SAVANNAH  —  Chairman,  N.  Cities  Service  beef,  things  were  report  read  and  approved.  One 
Jacksonville.  After  one  minute  been  aided  by  fact  that  Patrol­ Towns,  7193;  Recording  Secre­ expected  to  pick  up,  he  said.  minute  of  silence  in  piemory  of 
of  silence  in  menibry  of  departed  man  had  hit  all  ships  in­transit  tary,  J.  B.  Sellers,  36401;  Read­ There  were  six  payoffs,  seven  departed  members.  Meeting  ad­
Union  Brothers,  the  meeting  was  and  found  shortages  of  one  or  ing  Clerk,  E.  M.  Bryant,  25806.  sign­ons  and  30  ships  in­transit  journed. 
­ adjourned.  There  Were  107  mem­ two  men  on  each.  He  attributec  Savannah  Branch  minutes  of 
this  condition  to  the  failure  on  last  meeting  read  and  approved. 
bers  present. 
part 
of  delegates  to  call  the  Secretary­Treasurer's 
t.  4.  4 
financial 
NORFOLK  —  Chairman,  Ben  Hall  and  report  shortages  of  report  accepted  as  read.  Branch 
Rees.  95;  Recorciing  Secretary,  manpower  on  their  ships.  He  Agent  said  that  shipping  was 
J.  A.  Bullock,  4747;  Reading  said  the  Lake  George,  a  US  still  on  the  slow  bell  in  this 
Petroleum  tanker  had  paid  off  port.  He  said  there  was  a  pos­
Clerk,  Vernon  Porter,  505. 
Minutes  of  Branch  meetings  here  after  a  seven­month  trip.  sibility  that  things  might  pick 
in  other  ports  accepted  as  read.  It  was  in  good  shape  and  not  up  a  bit  in  the  near  future  as 
A.  K.  POWERS 
ELLIS  H.  BRONDELSSO 
Headquarters  report  to  the  mem­ one  man  had  paid  off  on  the  South  Atlantic  is  trying  to  reg­
"Please 
get 
in 
touch 
with 
me 
Notify 
Unemployment  Insur­  . : 
other 
side. 
Motion 
carried 
to 
bership  approved  as  read.  Agent 
ulate  its  cargo  so  that  their  four 
at 
once, 
concerning 
Jo 
Jo: 
ance, 
i65 
Joralemon  Street, |. 
elect 
a 
five­man 
committee 
to 
"discussed  conditions  in  the  mari­
ships  can. go  out  from  here  on 
time  industry  from  the  local  iron  out  port  si lipping  rules;  the  European  run.  Minutes  of  Ruth  Powers,  222  East  Plume  Brooklyn,  of  yoUr  present  ad­  i 
standpoint.  Motions  carried  to  motion  amended  to  have  sam.e  meetings  in  other  ports  read  and  Street,  c/o  George  Washington  dress. 
Tavern,  Norfolk,  Virginia." 
concur  in  Headquarters  Rein­ committee  act  as  trial  committee.  accepted. 
4  4  4 
statement Committee's report  and  Motions  carried  to  accept  Sec­
FRANK  L.  SMITH 
4 
4 
4 
­to  non­concur  With  Savarmah  retary­Treasurer's  financial  re­ NEW  YORK  —  Chairman,  SS  WINTimOP  L.  MARVIN 
Your  wife,  Evangeline,  30  S 
(April,  1948) 
•E
  xcuse  Committee's  report  of  port  and  Headquarters  report  to  Frenchy  Michelet,  21184;  Record­
River  Street,  Cambridge,  Massa­  ^ 
Will  Francisco  F.  Freone 
March  16.  Charges  were  read  the  membership. 
ing  Secretary,  Freddie  Stewcurl,  George  W.  Stone  and^ George  La  chusetts,  Says  it  is  very  lurgent  , 
4&gt;  ^  4 
and  following  meii  were  elected 
that  you  • write her. 
BALTIMORE—Chairman,  Wil­ 4935;  Reading  Clerk,  Eddie  France  get  in  touch  with  Robert 
from  floor  to  servp  as trial  com­
4  4  4 
I 
Mooney,  46671. 
F.  Reynolds,  1302  Hobart  Build­
.piittee:  C.  Moser,  J.  Glovier,  R.  liam  Renlz,  26445;  Redbrding 
ANTHONY 
CASINO 
| 
Minutes 
of 
all 
previous 
Branch 
ing,  San  Francisco,  California. 
Brinson,  R.  Morfisette,  N.  E.  Secretary,  G.  A.  Masterson, 
| 
meetings  read  and  accepted.  In  It  concerns  the  case  of  John  E.  Write  your  mother  of  your­ 
Wroton  and  J.  Hqdges.  Commit­ 20297;  Reading  Clerk,  4683. 
whereabouts; 
she 
is 
worried: 
4 
j 
connection 
with 
Savannah 
mo­
Steele,  who  was  injured  aboard 
tee  later  reported  back  and  mo­ Baltimore  minutes  and  those 
Frederick 
Street, 
Raritan, 
New 
tion  carried  to  concur  in  find­ of  other  Branches  of  previous  tion  in  New  Business,  a  motion  the  vessel. 
Jersey. 
4  4  4 
ings.  OnO  minute  of  silence  in  meetings  were  read  and  approv­ carried  reaffirming  Union's  po­
4  4  4 
RED  SHEA 
memory  ,of  departed  JXnion  Rro­, ed.  Motions  carried  to  accept  sition  ­that  excuses  for  absence 
from 
meetings 
be 
handled 
by 
E»HL 
PAPIS 
Please 
get 
in 
touch 
with 
j&amp;ers.  Motion  carried  to  adjourn  Baltimore's  and  Secy^tajry­Jmas­
Get 
in 
touch 
w#h 
Miss  Mary 
ea(^ 
Branch. 
Port 
Agent 
discus­
Whitey 
I&gt;ahl, 
.438' 
Washington 
urer's 
financial 
reports. 
Mofipns 
^t  8:3,0  PM,,  with­­108  members 
R. 
Cav£lIo, 
230 
Boyd 
Ave., 
sed 
shippir^, 
which 
is 
about 
Ave., 
Biooidyp, 
N. 
Y. 
carried 
to 
accept 
fimt 
motion 
present. 
sey  City,  New  Jersey. 
lolding  its  own  in  this  port. 
under 
Savannah 
New 
Business 
4 
4 
4 
^  »  4 
ONICE  TANNER 
4  4  4 
.MOBILE—Chairipan,  L.  Neira,  and  to  non­concur  with  second  Secretary­Treasurer's  fiimncial 
Your  discharges  off  the  SS 
FRANK  PETER  KELLY 
26993;  Recording  Secretary.,  J. D.  motion.  Excuses  were  referred  report  read  and  accepted.  Head­
Hunter,  47364;  Reading,  Clerk  to  the  Dispatcher.  There  were  quarters  report  to  the  member­ Julesburg  are  being  held  for  Get  in  touch  with  your daugh­
ter,  Mrs.  Edna  Elizabeth  LQ$­
no  charges  to  be  read.  Port  ship  discussed  the  recent  Wash­ you  in  the LOG  office. 
. ji,  J.  Fischer,  59. 
better,  315  Wheeler  Ave., 
4  4  4 
Mobile  Branch  minutes  and  Agent  spoke  on  the  shipping  ington  conference  at  which  seven 
AFTpN  J.  BUSH 
Francisco,  Calif. 
Jtrew Business  of  other ports  from  activity  of  the  port  during  the  maritime  unions,  including  the 
vll 
4  4  4 
jirevious  .meetings  accepted  9s  two­week  period  just  ended.  SIU,  agreed  to  a  mutual  aid  pact  "Please  get  in  touch  with 
FRED  FAGAN 
^ 
read.  Port  Agent  discussed  the  Motion  carried  to­  accept  Dis­ to defend  the Union  Hiring Halls,  Evelyn  Armstrong,  458  Pacific 
prospects for  shipping  during  the  patchers  report  on  number  of  t  was  brought  out  that  the  Street,  Brooklyn  17,  New  York:  Please  write  tc Leo  Watts, c/a 
SS  Puerto  Rico,  Bull  Lines,  115 
,jnext  two  weeks,  naming  the  ves­ men  registered  and  shipped;  also  SIU's  position  is  sound  because  Eddie." 
4  4  4 
Broad  St.,  New  York  City. 
sels .scheduled  to  arrive  here.  Hospital  Committee's  report.  Mo­ of  the  Negotiating  Conunittee's 
SS  FRANCES 
"Re  also  discussecjl  the  Hiring  tion  by  J.  Dembrowski  carried  foresight  at  the  time  the  con­
4  4  4 
tracts 
were 
written, 
but 
that 
the 
(June,  1949) 
instructing 
Agent 
to 
send 
a 
Rail  issue  and  announced  the 
ARTHUR 
S.  RERiHOLDT 
Joint  program  drawn  up  by  wreath  from  Union  to  funeral  NMU  was  threatened  with  a  Mariano  Gonzalez,  Harry  (ret  in  touch  with  your  son, 
seven  maritime  upions,  includ­ of  Abraham  Davis,  who  passed  ban  on  its  hall  and  that  the  Singleton,  J.  Munis  and  Steven  John,  at  843  N.  Luzerne  St., 
ing  the  SIU,  to  fight  for  reten­ away  at  the  Baltimore  Marine  defeiise  of  the  hiring  halls  was  ,C:!arx  are  asked  to  get  in  touch  Baltimore  5,  Md.,  as  soon  as 
tion  of  ,the  present hiring  meth­ Hospital  on  March  19.  One  min­ imperative  in  the  interests  of  with Samuel Segal, 11  Broadway,  possible. 
ods.  He  added  th^.t  the  first  ute  of  silence  in­ memory  of  de­ the security  of  all seamen.  Head­ New  York  4,  N.  Y.,  concerning 
.4  4  4 
Cities  Service  ship  since  signing  ceased  members  of  the  Union.  quarters  report  Mso. announced  the  death  of  Chief  Electrician  SILAS  W.  LESLIE  (Lesley) 
^ 
of  the  interim  cor tract  had  hit  Meeting  was  adjourned  at  8:15  that  Union  representatives  were  Ehner  F.  Rose. 
Please  contact  E.  C.  Savage, 
meeting 
with 
Cities 
S^vice 
Ma­
PM, 
with 
370 
members 
'in 
atten­
4 
4 
4 
this  port  and  Ihat  arrangements 
Floral 
Pk.  2­2689  or  C.  Lawson, 
rine 
Division 
officials 
to 
work 
OKLAHOMA  ED 
jyere  being  completed  to  obtain  dance. 
WHitehaU 
3­4134. 
out 
the 
working 
rules 
to 
become 
Sorry,  Brother,  we  cannot  ac­
passes  for  .local  o:^ficials  to  en­
4  4  4 
part 
of 
the 
full 
contract. 
Meet­
4  4  4 
cept  messages  in  cqde:  Editor. 
,,able  them  to  board  CS  ships.  BOSTON—Chairman,  T.  Flem­
ings 
with 
the 
operators 
for 
re­
CURTIS 
RIDGE 
4  4  4 
Plans  are  being  discussed,  he  ing,  30821;  Recor&lt;Rng  Secretary, 
sumption 
of 
Welfare 
Plan 
ne­
Get 
in 
touch 
with  Williara 
H.  C.  (Henry)  KING 
said,  to  improve  |^obile's  posi­ B.  Lawson,  894;  Reading  Clerk, 
gptiations 
are 
scheduled 
for 
next 
Huff, 
RFD 
No. 
1,  Leesburg, 
Contact  Eloise  Neal,  4424 
tion  in  the  shipping  industry.  B.  Murphy,  39427. 
Qhio. 
Wednesday, 
the 
report 
conclud­
Greenwood 
Road, 
Shreveport, 
There  is  a  possibipty  of  a  grgin  Boston  and  other  Branch  min­
ed.  Meeting  was  adjourned  at  Louisiana;  Phone  2­6924. 
4  4  4 
nlevatpr  being  bujl^t  here,  ajong  utes  rqad  ^^nd  accepted.  Port 
8 
PM. 
DAHHY 
ALVIHQ 
4  4  4 
_5yith  ore  ^o.cks  apd  a  molasses  Agent  discussed  the  local  ship­
4 
4 
4 
GEORGE 
VICERY 
Contact 
"Reggie" 
by  phoijye. 
refine.ry,  .all  of.  W­hmh  jvould  ping. situation.  Secretary­Treas­
NEW 
ORLEANS 
— 
Chairmao, 
Mr. 
gnd 
Mrs. 
S. 
Baker, 
1; 
Call 
GR, 
7.­1466. 
Leave 
message 
,  boost  the  port,  h®  concluded.  urer's  financial  report  read  and 
Lindsey 
WiUiams, 
21550: 
Record­
Barnes 
Street, 
Waverley 
79, 
for 
contacting 
you 
in 
New 
Yerk. 
approved.  Motion  carried  to  non­
pi 
ing 
Secretary, 
Herman 
Troxclair, 
Mass., 
ask 
you 
to 
'write 
to them.' 
4 
4 
4 
PHILADELPHIA;—  Chairman,  concur  with  section  on  proposed 
4  4  4 
LORAN  J.  HARRIS 
A.  S.  Carduito,  24599;  Recording  vacation  rule  and  to  concur  in  4743; Reading Clerk, Buck Steph­
ens, 
76. 
JOSE 
SOARES 
Mrs.  E.  W.  Hobson  of  Miotei­
Sfictet^y, 
Ber^fria.  7142;  balance  of  Hea.dquarters  report 
gffii  asks  that  you  get touch 
Reading .Cleric,  Don  RaR, ^.3372.  to  the  membership.  Patrojman­'  All  minutes  of  previous  meet­'  Contact  your  friends,  Mr. 
Minutes  of  preyjous  meetings  D,^patcher's  repo.rts  were  ac­'  ings  in. all  Bran(4es  were  read^  Mrs.  Henry  W.  Crouse,  Severn;'  with  her  at  onee,  on  a  itisAbett 
of  great  imi^tanc® to you. 
in  all  ports  approved  as  read' opspted  as ffiven.  One  minute  of' and  approved.  Headquartws  re­ Maryland. 

A&amp;G Shipping From Mmh 15 To Manh 29 

�'wa­­

T  H  E  S  E  A F  A  R t Jt ^  L O  G 

Seeing  Leads  Ta 

Friday,  April  7, 1950 

­V5''.  :.&gt;&gt;&gt;  t • • • ' 

Mombasa  Officials 
Order VaecinatioDS 
Against Smallpox  . ^ 
­i,. 

• ^ • ­:­~r i. . 

:^ ..VUi^on Hiriiig Hails in die Maritime 
V  ­r 
Indnstry 
:?IXTE]NSION  OP REMARKS 
.  . 

,. 

• 

­OF 

HON. AUGUSTINE B.  KELLEY 
OF  PENNSTLVANIA 

iKv: 

m 

Sd 

Sfd"' 

l " /h«e o?S?fe'?"the  hiring  balls,  a, 
n^ntalnad  by  the seafaring  nnlons,  Ih  piracy '"1 SSetS'toe^'I'f '^raS 
action.  As a result of  these'observations  known as crimps sunk seamen deep into 
I am unqualifiedly in favor of giving them  debt,  then  forced  them  to  take  jobs 
legal status—for  the simple  reason  that  aboard  vessels  under any kind of  condi­
they  have accomplished  much in  behalf  tlons as a means of  releasing them from 
of  the American  seamen and  the Amer­ financial  .tedebtedness. 
ican  shipowner,  with  consequent  ad­
A man vdip v7ent after a job on his own 
vantage to our  Nation. 
was subject^ to discourtesies and abuses, 

irr THE  HOUSE  OF  REFHESENTATIVES 
Thursday, March 9,1950 
Mr.  KET.liEY  of  Pennsylvania.  Mr.  visited  the headquarters  of  the Atlantic  his  chance  for  employment.  Seamen 
Speaker,  already  there are signs  of  the  and Gulf  district of  the Seafarers Inter­ were  stripped  of  evbry  vestige  of  dig­
undermining  effect  of  the Taft­Hartley  national Union,  A. P. of  L., for  the pur­ nity.  ­Understandably,  the  merchant 
pose of  establishing in my mind  how the  nwine could not  be expected  to operate 
law on  American  industry.  Tlie  recent  hiring hall 
principle was applied. 
efficiently in the midst  of  such  medieval 
action  of  the  United  States  Supreme 
In 
the seafarers' hiring halls 
the sea­
treatment  of  the  men  handling  their 
I  Court, sustaining a lower court ruling of  men obtain employment through what is  vessels. 
the maritime union hiring hall as illegal  called  the rotary system  of shipping.  A 
Merchant seamen like those in the SIU 
under the Taft­Hartley Act, brings closer 
to realization the disruptive Influence of  man who comes in for a  job is registered  are determined to keep the present dem­
ttiis  ill­conceived  piece of  legislation. 
i"?h?nScJ 
Of Job ScwSh%tTh: 
is then plsic^ at the bottom of  the ship­
In  the maritime  Industry,  more  than  ping list, add ­as  jobs are called  out they  they  maintain,  is  only  possible  through 
­
1 apywhere else  the Taft­Hartley  ban  on  are offered  to the men  at the  top of  the  the mernum  of.­thqir  union.­  . 
1  thb closed  shop  poses  a  problem  that  list. 
_  ­Hut  the olincher  iif  the argument for 
* 
must  be  reckoned  with  immediately. 
immediate  action  to  return  the 
The  men  at  the  top  of  the  list  may  Sg h^ 
the  union 
union 
Otherwise  a  virtual  break­down  of  the  accept the jobs  or reject  them—without  fS? ls^4 
f industry's  ever­increasing  efficiency  of  affecting their  prior claim when  another  themselveJ ifavp 
operations  looms  large.  For  the  Taft­ job  is  called.  In  this  way  the  list  ro­  connSnJJff^  shijwwners 
^ 
^  Hartley  closed­shop  ban  not  only  tates. 
In  other  words,  jobs  are  dis­
Strikes  at  the  heart  of  the  seafaring  tributed  on  a flrst­come=fii­5t­served 
f 
^^Patehing 
L unions,  but it is an immediate  threat to  basis.  No other consideration enters the 
halls  has 
• the stability  of  the  industry  of  which  picture.  The only qualification is the re­ 
^ 
. 
[they are a part. 
quired  competence  for  the  job,  and  all  tha ­shinnnmt P^®sent  hlring­hall  system 
f  Management, as well  as labor,  stands  eligible  applicants  have  certificates  of 
their ships will 
Ito lose if the outlawing of  the hiring hall  endorsement issued by  the United States  "  •   ®­  ­  ®  leave  on  time.  Thev  know 
rls not  rescinded. 
Coast  Guard. 
^^® 
Of  re­
Undoubtedly  that  was not  the  inten­
The  rotary  system  is  democratic  in 
seamen  who  are 
' tion of  the proponents of  the Taft­Hart­ principle, and at the seafarers hail I wit­ 
ftfjuf  ® 
®ver­increasing  re­
ley  Act.  Nevertheless  that  is  exactly  nessed  it as  democratic in  practice. 
. 
What the closed­shop ban is on the verge 
This,  then, is  the method  of  employ­ 
the light of  conditions in the marl­
of  accomplishing  in  the  maritime  in­ ment  which  the  SIU  and  other  mari­  S,® JP^^H^try  today,  the  Taft­Hartley 
dustry at  least. 
time unions are defending in  their fight 
^ 
^ mistake.  It should be rec­
Any  objective  study  of  the  maritime  against the Taft­Hartley ban.  And they  ifPi'® 
apd do noth­
I  unions' hirir ij halls will demonstrate the  are  morally  justified  in  doing  so. 
o® the damage it could  reek 
value  to all concerned  of  the continued 
Anyone even slightly familiar With the  «  7 simply be  compounding the error, 
use  of  this  method  of  employment.  sordid  hiring  practices  in  the  maritime 
objective  approach  indicates 
These  hiring halls  are at  the  very  core  Industry prior to the advent of the union 
® 
legislation  is  essential  to 
I  of  the industry's operations.  Arbitrarily  hiring hall  will  readily admit  the  justi­ 
the Inji^tice of  the Taft­Hartley 
to  knock  them  out  would  inevitably  fication  for  the  unions' stand. 
'o®  Wjring. hall  to  the American 
[upset  the  entire  pattern  of  operations' 
Ih^iw preumcn hiring hall days ships 

Seafarers  aboard  Robin  Lin%­
ships calling  at  Mombasa,  Kenya  ^ 
Colony,  must  carry  their  small­^, 
pox  vaccination  certificates  with 
them,  the  Union  was  informed 
this  week. 
Concerned  over  the  incidence 
of  smallpox  cases  in  recent 
weeks,  Mombasa  health  authori­
ties  have  ruled  that  all  passeii*. 
ge'rs  and  crewmembers  enter­
ing  the  port  will  be  required  to 
produce  evidence  of  having  been 
recently  vaccinated  against. the 
disease. 
^ 
According  to  the  information 
passed  to  the  SIU  by  the  Robin 
Line  office  in  New  York,  the 
certificates  "may  be  of  the^  in­
I  terhational  or  national  "  type, 
signed' by a  qualified  doctor.''­ ­ • 
y' ' .' ­ . 

QUARANTINE 
These  certificates  must  show 
the  date  of  the  reaction  of  the 
vaccination.  Crews  and  passen­
gers  not  having  certificates  will 
be  quarantined  "until  such  time 
as  they  have  been  properly  vac­
cinated  at  Mombasa,"  port  health' 
authorities  warned". 
The  Union  ­said  it  is  also  ad­
visable  for  all  crewmembers  on 
European  ru"hs  to  carry  theit! 
certificates  of  smallpox  vhccina­. 
tion  with  them.  An  outbreak  of 
the  disease  in  Scotland  reported­
ly  has  been  traced  to  an  in­
fected  seaman  who  entered  thd 
country  on  a  ship from  India. 
In  view  of  this  development. 
Headquarters  feels  that  health 
authorities  in  European  porta 
might  take  precautionary  mea­
sures,  such  gs  those  taken  in 
Mombasa. 
­
'• 1 

Among  the  Congressional  supporters  of  the  move  to  give  the  Hiring  Halls  legal  status  is  Representative 
Augustine  Kelley  of  Pennsylvania.  He  is  a  vigorous  opponent  of  the  T­H  law  and  favors  its outright  repeal. 
Rep.  Kelley  recently  inserted  his  views  on  this  important  question  in  the  "Congressional  Record."  a  repro­
duction  of  which  appears  above.  His stand  is based  on  his  personal  observation  of  the Hiring Hall  procedure during 
a  recent  visit  to  SIU  Headquarters  in  New  York. 

1: 

'  •  

have­­^ot'|f^^ 
oh  thiig^'^­'^ 

"Europe^ 
.but  as 
­reminded,  "An 
duht:e,'^£;^ 
is  worth  a 
pSi^cl'Ibf  hure.'' 
1 

•  Most  Veterans  Not  Taking  Adyantago  Of  GliBonofits 

I  Of 

|| 

approximately  16,000,000  Here  are  some  of  the  benefits  An  exception  has  been  made  health,  so  long  as  he  applies  for  new  National  Service  Life  In« 
World  War  II  veterans  only  2,­ vets  are  entitled  to  under  the  for  veterans  who  enlisted  or  re­ new  insurance  or  for  reinstate­ surance  or  reinstatement  of  lap«« 
sed  NSLl. ' 
". 
V^00,000  haye"  ever filed  a  claim  law: 
enlisted  under  the  Armed  Forces  ­ment "before January  1,  1950. 
Veterans of 
all wars­ana peace­
The 
disability 
must 
have 
been 
_  £ov  disability  compensation  with 
Voluntary 
Recruitment 
Act. They 
GI  BILL  EDUCATION 
• the Veterans  Administration.  Of  World  War  11  veterans  dis­ haye  ten  years  from  the  end  of  incurred  in  service  between  Oct­ time  service—compensation  fof 
tlus  total  only  about  48  percent  charged  before  July  25,  1947,  their  enlistment  period  covered  ober  8,  1940  and  September  2,  service  connected  disabilities. 
Veterans  of  World  War  H 
have  ever  taken  advantage  of  must  start  their  GI  Bill  Educa­ by  the  law  in  which  to  apply.  1945. 
A  veteran  who  applies  for  the  World  War  I  and  Spanish­Am­
the  GI  Bill  of  Rights,  which  in  tion  or  training  before  July  25, 
52­20  CLUB 
'«iost  ca.ses  must  be  completed  1051.  Veterans  discharged  after  The  GI  Bill  Readjustment  Al­ NSLl  total  disability  income  erican  War  —  pension  for  non­
by  July  25,  1956. 
July  25,  1947,  must  begin  their  lowance  Program  has  ended  for  provision  also  is  required  to  fur­ service  connected  disability. 
Veterans  of  War  or  Peacetime 
Why  is  it  that  the  World  War  courses  within  four  years  after  most  World  War  II  veterans.  nish  evidence  of  good  health. 
E  veteran  is  lax  in filing  for  discharge.  In  both  cases,  the  Those  discharged  after  July  25,  In  this  case,  too,  a  disability  Service  who  served  subsequent 
benefits  that  he  is  not  only  en­ training  must  be  completed  by  1947,  however,  may  apply  for  incurred  in  service  between  Oct­ to  April  21,  189$  and  who  ai^ 
titled  to  by  law  but  which  also  July  25,  1956. 
the  unemployment  and  self­em­ ober  8,  1940,  and  September  2',  suffering  from  certain  service 
Goyerrv 
would  enhance  his financial 
in  de­ .connected ­disabilities 
An  exception  has  been  made  ployment  allowances  at  any  time  1945—but  tess, theWji 
•  standing,  his  physical  well­be­ for  veterans  who  enlisted  or  re­ within  two  years'  after  the  dis­ gree­^will  be 9iisr^ti"ded  in  de­ ment  grants  for  specially  designp : 
dng,  and  give  him  a  higher  edu­ enlisted  under  the  Armed  Forces  cbarge  but  no  payments  'will  be  tei­ming  good^hOalth^  so  long  as  ed  housing. 
he  applies for'  thir total disability  BENEFITS  FOR  SURVIVORS 
cation  that  would  make  him  a  Recruitment  Act  (Public  Law  made  after  July  25,  1952. 
more stable  citizen? 
190)  between October  6, 1945  and  The  deadlines  do  not  apply  to  income  provisifirt­before  January  Survivors  of  deceased  veterans 
of  all  Wars  and  of  certain  de­
How  many _yeterans  are  there  October  6,  1946. 
. 
veterans  who  enlisted  or .  re­ 1,1950.  •   ' 
ceafed  veterans of peacetime fer­. 
' Who  know  that,  shotdd  he  sus­ They  have  four  years  from  the  enlisted  imder  the  Armed  Forces 
CARS  FOR­Eg^BLED 
•   tain, a  physical, .toabi^ty  after  end  of  their  Public  Law  190  en­ Voluntas  Recruitment  Act. They  World  War"Tlr ye.tefe1is {who,  in  vice  must file  Claims  for  bufial 
&gt;  his  disfcharge  frqiii  'tfe  Armed  listment  or  reenlistment  period  h'ave  up  to  two  years  from  their  service  lost,  or  Id^f'the^  use  of,"' allowance  within  two  years  aftet 
Forces,  and  rneetmg  certain  re­ in  which  to  begin  their  GI  Bill  date  of  discharge  to  claim  Re­ one  or  both  legs  and/or  about  permanent  burial  or  cremation, 
quirements,  be­ Cw'ould  then  be  training,  and  nine  yeaz's  from  adjustment  Allowances,  provided  the  ankle,  may  be  entitled  to  re­ Survivors'of  all  veterans  whd 
entitled  to  a­  nbn­service  con­ that  date  to  complete  it. 
they  apply  within five  years from  ceive  an  automobile  or  other  died  because  of  service  connect­
nected  pensiqn­j'pf  from  $60  to 
the  termination  from  the  Public  conveyance  at  government  ex­ ed  causes,  may  apply  for  com­
PUBLIC  LAW  16 
$72  per  mon^j^^as  long  as  the 
Law. 190  enlistment  or  reenlist­ pense.  They  have  until  June  30,  pensation  at  any  time  after  th® 
disability 
inter­ Disabled  veterans  of  World  ment. 
1950. to  apply. 
veteran's  death. 
War  11  may  begin  Public  Law 
Survivors  of  veterans  of  World 
OTHER  BENEFITS 
feres with bfe' fe.^loyability full  16 
GI  INSURANCE 
education  or  training  at  any 
•o
  r  even. partyti^?^­.; 5^..., ^ 
A  veteran ,  &lt;5£  World  War  II  There  are 'no  deadlinei'  for  the  War  II,  World  War  I  and  Span­
time ,  after  their  discharge,  but  who  applies  for  new  insurance,  VA­administ"ered  benefits  for vet­! ish­American  War  who  died, be­
'  How  many 
4rr ti^ to 
complete  their  courses  or  to  reinstate  a  lapsed  policy,  erans  listed  below.  They  may  be' cause  of  causes  not  attributable 
are  there  who 
by^Ju^ 
1956. ­
to  service  may  apply,  fpr  pen­
:^titied  to  a  widow's  peh&amp;o^frpf 
generally  must  fuiT­iish ­VA  with  applied  for  at  any  time: 
GI  LOANS 
feom  $42  to $72  per  month,  even 
satisfactory  evidence  of  his  good  Veterans  of  all  wars  and  ser­ sions  at  any  time  after  the  Vet­
vice  connected  peacetime  veter­ erans  death. 
' feough  the  veteran  died  of  ' a  World  War,  11  veterans  may  health. 
(­disability  that  in no  way  related  apply  for  loans  guaranteed  or  A  service  incurred  disability­ ans  —  medical,  hospital  and  (The  above  information  "wai 
compiled  by  the  American  V^t* ; 
with  his  military  service,  upon  insured  Ainder  the  GI  Bill  rintil  less  than  total  in  degree­^will  be  domiciliary  care, 
July  26,  1937. 
^ 
disregarded  iri  deiernfifl? ­  g  good  Veterans  of  World  War  11—  etans Commiiiee.) 
Bieeting  certain requirements? 

if 

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="7">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42905">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1950-1959</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44875">
                  <text>Volumes XII-XXI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44876">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44877">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10199">
                <text>April 7, 1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10244">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10296">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10348">
                <text>Vol. XII, No. 7</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10374">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10400">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10432">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
SIU PROGRESSES ON CS CONTRACT, WELFARE PLAN&#13;
AFL RADIOMEN SAY NO TO CIO ON MERGER BID&#13;
MC ASKS BIDS ON RECONVERTING BERNSTEIN SHIPS&#13;
BRANCHES TO GET VACATIONS ISSUE&#13;
AFL GIVES ITS OKAY TO CANCER CAMPAIGN&#13;
A JOB TO DO&#13;
WE'RE SORRY&#13;
SIU POLICY ON CURRENT MARITIME PROBLEMS&#13;
SIU CLARIFIES POLICY ON 'ALIEN PROBLEM'&#13;
UNION ALWAYS LED FIGHT FOR ALIEN MEMBERS&#13;
ALCOA ROAMERS SMOTHER PEGASUS NINE, 31 TO 5&#13;
SIU CREW SAVES NINE IN DRAMATIC RESCUE&#13;
FIRE RAZES MEMBER'S HOME; WIFE, 8 CHILDREN DESTITUTE&#13;
MEREDITH VICTORY CREWMEMBER LOST AT SEA&#13;
SS HURRICANE HITS SHOAL IN FOG OFF FIRE ISLAND, NY&#13;
BROTHER ASSURES SIU MEN OF GOOD DEAL AT THE PATIO&#13;
THE SEAFARERS IN WORLD WAR II&#13;
SEEING LEADS TO BELIEVING&#13;
MOMBASA OFFICIALS ORDER VACCINATIONS AGAINST SMALLPOX&#13;
MOST VETERANS NOT TAKING ADVANTAGE OF GI BENEFITS&#13;
</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10433">
                <text>4/7/1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13079">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="64">
        <name>1950</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
  <item itemId="983" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="2333">
        <src>http://seafarerslog.org/archives/files/original/4afc2f6a9af4f7b8bd1c6bfa1c55dd78.pdf</src>
        <authentication>bc5a576342529af457eaadf7a6932fff</authentication>
        <elementSetContainer>
          <elementSet elementSetId="7">
            <name>PDF Text</name>
            <description/>
            <elementContainer>
              <element elementId="86">
                <name>Text</name>
                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="47461">
                    <text>Coast­To­Coast  Tie­Up 
Of Shipping To Answer 
Union­Busting Attempt 
NEW  YORK,  April  20—Unless  East and  Gulf 
Official'Orgm, Atlantic &amp; Gulf  District, Seafarers International Union of  NA  Coast  operators  alter  their  union­bunting  stand in 
contract  talks  with  the  AFL  Masters,  Mates  and 
No.  8 
NEW  YORK.  N.  Y..  FRIDAY,  APRIL  21.  1950 
VOL.  XII 
Pilots,  a  full­scale  shipping  tie­up,  backed  to  the 
hilt by  the powerful AFL Maritime Trades  Depart­
ment,  will go into effect  within  48  hours. 
The strike deadline  was  set for midnight,  Sat­
urday," April 
22,  when  it  became  obvious  that  the 
The  powerful  International. Transport workers  Federation,  representing  more 
than 80  shoreside and  marine transport'unions  throughout  the  world,  poised  itself  this  operators  were  using  a  couple  of  minor  issues  as 
we^ek  for a  knockout  blow, against runaway shipowners operating  under the Panamanian  a  cover­up  for  their  intent  to  smash  the  licensed 
flag.  At  a  conference in Amsterdam,  the  Netherlands, on April 18, the Seafarers Section  officers' union. 
The  present  agreement  expired  on  Sept.  30, 
of  the ITF. voted  unanimously  for  a  world­wide boycott of  ships under  the Panamanian 
but 
it has 
been  extended four  times at  the request 
registry.  The  Seafarers  International  Union is  one of  the American affiliates of  the ITF. 
1^^  the mediators. 
Originally  the  ITF  had  order­t  The  report  made^ to  the  Am­

ITF  Panamanian  Boycott  Noar 

ed  a  Panamanian  ship  boycott  sterdam  conference  revealed  how 
on  Nov.  25,  1948,  but  postponed  the'shipping  interests  had  blank­
it  after  the  government  of  Pan­ ly  refused  ta enter into  any  such 
ama  proipised  to  toughen  its  negotiations,"  it  said.  "The  Sea­
The Senate  Labor subcommittee  has concluded  pub­
shipping  regulations.  Since  then,  farers'  representatives  from  va­
lic  hearings  on  the  seafaring  unions' hiring  halls and  is 
,  however,  nothing  has  been­ done  rious  countries,  in  very  strong 
reviewing  the  testimony  preparatory  to  reporting  back 
to  back  up  tlae  promise. 
statements,  '  showed  they  were  to  the  full  copimittee.  The  committee  will  then  deter­
The  ITF  annoimced  that  the  not  prepared  to  tolerate  further 
help  of  longshoremen  and  per­ delay. 
inine  what  action  is  to  be  taken  in  regard  to  the  Mag­
haps  other  unions  would  be 
nuson­Lesinski 
amendment,  which  would  legalize  the 
sought  in  the  effort  to  keep  men  "The  Seafarers  feel  that  the  hiring  halls. 
from  signing  on  the  ships  and  struggle  should,  as  far  as  pos­
Meanwhile,  in  the  House  of  Representatives,  Con­
to  immobilize  cargoes  in  port.  sible,  be  waged  through  their 
ownr  organizations,  but  they  will  gressman  Hugh  B.  Mitchell  has  introduced  another  bill 
UNSCRUPULOUS  PRACTICES  seek  the  support  of  dockers  and, 
7807—^to  amend  the  Taft­Hartley  law  by  making 
The  boycott,  the  communique  if  necessary,  of  other  trades  in­
said,  is  intended  to  stop  "the  un­ directly  connected  with"  the  hiring  practices  prevailing  in  the  maritime  industry 
scrupulous  practices  of  shipown­ transport  industry  in  dealing  prior to  June  15,  1947  exempt from  the closed  shop  ban. 
ers  who  have  switched  to  the  with  certain .types  of  ships." 
Mitchell's  bill^  which  has  been  referred  to  the 
Panamanian  and  similar  flags  The  United  States  delegate  at  House  Committee  on  Education  and  Labor,  recommends 
and  to  enforce  adeiquate  living  the  conference  was  John  Hawk, 
addition of  the following subsection  to the T^H  Act: 
and  working  conditions  in  these  Secretary­Treasurer  of  the  Sea­
"Nothing  in  this  Act  shall  be  deemed  to  make  an 
ships." 
farers  International  Union. 
unfair 
labor  practice  the  performance  of  an  obligation 
Panama  technically  has  one  of 
Other nations 
represented 
were 
the  largest  merchant  fleets  in  the 
of  a  collective­bargaining  agreement  between  an  em­
world  although  it  is  a  pation  of  Belgium,  Britain,  Denmark,  ployer  and  a  labor  organization  ... incorporating  in 
only  746,000  persons.  This  comes  France,  Finland, Germany,  Israel,  whole  or  in  part  any  hiring  or  employment  practices 
from  registration  of  foreign  ves­ Italy, •   the  Netherlands  Norway 
prevailing  in the  maritime  industry  prior  to  June  1947." 
sels  in  Panama.  Union  spokes­ and  Sweden. 
men  charge  the  owners'  object  is 
to  escape  the  labor  and  safety 
HAPPY IS THE WORD FOR SIU-REPRESENTED CS MEN
regulations  of  the  home  govern­
^"m"ents, 
' ...  Many  of  the  800  or  so  ships 
r flying  Panama's flag  are  owned 
V  by  United  States  companies.  A 
•  spokesman, for­Panamanian  sail­
"^qrS'  Charged  last  year  that,  of 
50,900  men  employed  on  the 
'"^1­':—  only  130  were  natives  of 

New  Hiring Hall Bill 

I  'Phriama. 
i 

1  ABSENTEE  OWNERS 
Another  striking  fact  is  that 
.  the  vast  majority  of  Panamanian 
•   ships  never  even  touch  the coun­
try.  As  a  result  pf  this  peculiar 
­setup,  there  would  be  no  oppor­
tunity  for  Panamanian  officials 
^  to  make  inspections  of  the  ships 
evpn  if  regulations  were  tough­
!  ened.  With  most,  if  not  all,  of 
the  owners  living  outside  of  the 
country  it  is  impossible  to  bring 
pi­essdre.  oh.  those  who  du  not 
'  live!  lip. to  the flimsy  regulations 
hhW  iri  existence, 
i  "The  'Seafarers'  boycott  was 
­  voted "at  an  Oslo  conference.  It 
waa  postponed  several  times  at 
'  Panama's  request.  These  Pana­
manian  approaches held  out 
prospects  for­ a  settlement  by  col­
lective  bargaining,  the  communi­
que  said. 

Pleased  With  SIU  on­the­spot, representation and  contract giving  them  top wages,  these crew­
members  of. Cities  Service  SB  Salem  Maritime,  register  their  satisfaction  ioi  the  cameraman  in 
Wilmington,  Calif.  Standing,  left  to  right,  are  C.  Krupinski,  Utility,  F.  Goniales,  2nd  Cook: 
W.  P.  Preston,  OS;  C.  Frank,  AB;  E.  B.  Tilley,  SIU  Port  Agent;  J.  Peragallo,  MM;  J.  Adams,^ 
Oiler«"pnd  T.  ©'Brie?*.  Chief  Cook, 
swe  A.  Ortw  and  C.  Ceropreso, 

• ' V;.  . . 

The  decision  to  call  out  the 
AFL  dock  workers,  teamsters, 
tugboatmen  and  all  other  sea­
going  and  waterfront  labor 
already  has  been  approved 
by  the  seven  member  xmions  of 
the Maritime  Trades Department. 
The  MTD  unions  are  the  In­
temational  Longshoremen's  As­
sociation,  Local  333  of  the  ILA's 
United  Marine  Division,  Sea­
farers  Ihtemational  Union,  At­
lantic  Se  Gulf  District  Sailors 
Union  of  the  Pacific  and  Radio 
Officers  Union.  Full  support  has 
also  been  promised  by  the  Na­
tional  Maritime  Union,  CIO. 
PREPARATIONS 
The  MTD  has  been  meeting 
continually  in an  effort  to aid  in 
resolving  the  dispute.  At  the 
same  time,  the  powerful  AFL 
waterfront  group  has  been  mak­
ing  preparations  in  all  East  and 
Gulf  Coast  ports  for  an  effective 
strike  in  case  no  settlement  has 
been  reached  by  the  deadline. 
The  minor  issues  involved  are 
those  of  seniority  and  the  hiring 
of  all  deck  officers  below  the 
rank  of  Chief  Mate  through  the 
MM&amp;P  halls. 
These  demands  were  accepted 
{Continued  on  Back  Page) 
•  

II,  ­ 
... 

­

Privately­Owned Fleet 
Shows Slight  Decline 
The privately­owned  US ocean­
going  merchant fleet  (vessels  of 
1,000  gross  tons  and  over)  de­
clined  by  two  vessels  and  15,000 
deadweight  tons  during  March, 
according  to  the  National  Fede­
ration  of  American  Shipping. 
The  Federation  report  showed 
the  privately­owned fleet  com­
posed  of  732  dry  cargo and  com­
bination  vessels  of  7,356,000  dwt. 
and  463  tankers  of  6,810,000  dwt. 
During  the  month  of  March 
one  tanker  was  added  to  the 
fleet  from  new  construction,  and 
one  coastal  dry  cargo  vessel  was 
purchased from  the US Maritime 
Commission.  Three  tankers  were 
removed.  from ^  docmrnentation, 
two  of  which  were  sold  for 
scrap  and  one  dry  cargo  vessel 
originally  built  foreign  was  sold 
ab.road. 
f 

�|||:!':;i/­: Page Two 

THB SI? A FA RE RSL 0^

^MmrVA^l  U. IB60 

iHl}'

Sm^RERS  LOG 

MM^A:

­  •^  '

Published  Every  Other  Week  by  the 
SEAFARERS  INTERNATIONAL  UNION 
OF  NORTH  AMERICA 
Atlantic and Gulf  District 

Vil

\ 

1%.:­

mM

* 

Affiliated  with  the  American  Fedefation  of  Labor 
At  51  Beaver  Street,  New  York  4,  N. Yi^  ; 
HAnover  2­2784 
* 

Reentered  as  second  class  matter  August  2,  1949, 'at  the  Post 
Office  in  New  York, "N.Y.,  under  the Act  of  August  24,  1912. 
267 

'  Shipowners  Attack 
\ 

V 

. 

• 

The  stalemate  between  the  AFL  Masters,  Mates  and 
Tilots  and  the East  and  Gulf  Coast  steamship  operators, 
^hich is  just  two days  away from erupting  into a  nation­
­wide  tieup  of  US  shipping  as  the  LOG  goes  to  press,  is 
more  than  just  a  contract  dispute. 
Despite  several  extensions  by  the  union  of  the  con­
tract  that  expired  last  fall,  and  the vigorous  efforts of  the 
'.  Federal Mediation and  Conciliation Service,  the  parties are 
no closer  to agreement  than  the day  they started  out. 
On  the  surface,  the  principal  issues  are  the  MM&amp;P 
demands for  recognition  of  seniority, md  the  hiring of  all 
.deck  officers  below  the  rank  of  Chief  Mate  through  the 
' .union  halls. 
Out  on  the  West  Coast,  where  the  MM&amp;P  has  a 
tightly­knit  organization,  the  operators  granted  these 
same  demands  in  a. contract  negotiated  last  October.  The 
agreement  has  operated  satisfactorily  for  both  sides,  and 
certainly  has  not  been  a  hardship  on  the  operators  there* 
The  East  and  Gulf  Coast, operators  have  refused  to 
budge  an  ihch,  however.  In  nixing  the  union's  demands, 
they 
have  said  such  an  agreement  "would  usurp  mana^ge­
|5j'r,' 
TJ^ 7­, . •  
te/'  ment's  prerogative  to  hire  its  representatives,"  and  that 
the operators couldn't  be  expected  to accept  the language 
uf  contracts "negotiated  elsewhere." 
All  of  which  is  just  a  lot  of  high­sounding  malarkey 
that  is­neither fish  nor  fowl  as  far  as  the  issues  are  con­
cerned. 
^S­' ­ • 
Every  experienced  maritime  observer  is  convinced 
•  that  the operators are  getting set  to try  to bust  the union. 
There is no other conclusion  that can  be drawn  from  their 
^stubborn  attitude  inasmuch  as  some  of  these  same  opera­
tors,  who  have  interests  on  the  West  Coast  (Moore­
McCormack  is  one)  have  accepted  there  what  they  are  It  would  be  the  rare  man  without  an  ulcer  men,  the  radio  operators,  ahd  the.  tugboatmen. 
rejecting on  the  East  Coast. 
these  days,  if  the  news  were  really  as  black  as  In  addition,  the  CIO  National  Maritime  Union 
As  a  result,  the  East  and  Gulf  Coast  shipowners  are  the  headlines.  Take  this  issue  of  the  LOG,  for  has  promised  to  respect  the  picketlines,  if  the 
example, and  you  read that the  East Coast  opera­ operators decide  to go  ahead  with  their Operation 
precipitating  a  paralysis  of  US  shipping. 
tors  are  trying  to  bust  the  AFL  Masters,  Mates  Openshop.' And  that's  a  pretty  sOlid  line­up,  asj 
The  powerful  AFL  Maritime  Trades  Department,  and 
Pilots.  Then,  further  down  the  page,  there  the  operators  found  out  many  times  before. 
composed of  the Seafarers  International  Union,  the Sailors  is  an item  that  the International  Transportwork­
GOOD  PRECEDENT 
Union  of  the  Pacific,  Radio  Officers  Union,  the  Interna­ ers federation,  with  which  we  are  affiliated,  is 
Although  the  MTD  wasn't  officially  in  exist­
tional  Longshoremen's  Association,  ILA  Tugboatmen,  has  finally  going  ahead  with  its  world­wide  boycott 
ence 
then,  remember  what  the  imited  strength 
of 
Panamanian flag 
ships. 
moved  into  action  and  announced  full  support  of  the 
of 
the 
AFL  maritime  unions  was  able  to  do  in 
affiliated  MM&amp;P.  In addition,  the CIO  National Maritime  Then,  of  course, there are  the small  things like  the 1946  General Strike?  §ure, it's no  fun  hitting 
the  month­by­month  shrinking  of  the  US  mer­
Union  has  promised  to  respect  all  picketlines. 
chant .^marine  and,  along  with  it,  the  decline  of  the  bricks,  but  there  is  no  reason, why  we 
If  the  Saturday  midnight  strike  deadline  set  by  the  shipping  and  jobs.  And,  if  you  really  want  to  shouldn't  come  out  the  winner  in  this  one,  and 
AFL  deck  officers  rolls  around  without  an  agreement  be­ be  a  worry  wart,  there's the fact  that the ­Head­ make maritime  unionism  just that  much stronger. 
On  this  Panamanian  boycott  deal,  practically 
quarters  building  in  New  York  is  about  to  be 
ing  reached,  US shipping  will  be  locked  up  tight.  ^ 
il%: 
every 
maritime  union  outside  of  the iron  curtain 
sold from imder 
us, and we 
have 
to get ourselves 
.None  of  the  unions  concerned  with  this  beef  wants 
win  be  a  participant,  and  those  shipowners  who 
a 
new 
Hall. There 
are 
other 
things 
too—enough 
to see  a  strike  develop.  In  fact  they  are  demonstrating  a 
to  give  ulcers  to  yotu:  ulcers,  but  we  won't  go~^  jumped  to  Panamanian  registry  to  avoid  tax^» 
deeper concern for the welfare of  the US merchant marine  into  them  now,  and  save  them for  a  rainy  day.  safety  standards  and  the  prevailing  wage  scales 
than  the  operators.  But  the  AFL  waterfront  unions  are 
wUl  soon find  themselves  behind  the financial 
ONE  AT  A  TIME 
eight­ball. 
not  going  to stand  by  while  38  steamship  operators  go  to 
But,  as we hinted  before, things aren't  as  black 
If  carried  to a  successful  conclusion—and  there 
work  at  smashing  one  of  its  members. 
as  the  printer's ink  makes  them  out  to'be. Let's  •   is  no  real  reason  wiiy  it  shouldn't he—a  lot  of 
The  busting  of  the  MM&amp;P  apparently .has  been  a  take  these  items  one* by  one  and  examine  them 
these  ships  wiU  swing  back  .to  the  American 
long­time desire of  the shipowners  who have  been encour­ so­ that we can  pro­rate our  worrying. 
flag, taking  care  of  some  of  the  other  problems 
aged  and  aided  by  the government's policy  of  flooding  the  First  of  all,  there's  the  MM&amp;P  beef  There  is  mentioned  above.  Those  that  go  to  other  foreign 
no  question  but  that  the  operators  are  ­making  flags  will 'at  least hot  offer  the  ciff­throat  com­
industry  with  officers. 
their first 
real try at breaking  maritime unionism.  petition  to  American,  shipping  and  jobs  that 
Despite  the  acute  unemployment  plaguing  the indus­
If 
they 
are successful  here,  they  will move  on  these  unorganized,  uninspected,  coolie­wage  ships 
tryr the  US  Maritime Schools  and  state  merchant  marine 
to 
some 
other  union  and  try  to  knock  us  now  present. 
academies have been turning out more and more candidates 
off  one  by  one.  But  the  joker  here—'for  them, 
As for  the  Headquarters  building,  that  may  be 
for  jobs  as  ship's officers. 
that  is—^is  that  they  aren't  going  to  take  on  the  a  blessing  in  disguise,  if  contemplated, plans*go 
.Perhaps  with  the  expiration  of  the  MM&amp;P  contract  MM&amp;P  all  alone.  The  AFL  Maritime  Trades  De­ through.  There's 'no  point  in  going  into  details 
the  shipowners figured  this  was  the  ripe'moment  to step  partment  has  seen  through  this  maneuver  and,  now,  but  the new Hall  will  be  tops,  and  provide 
instead  of fighting  just  oiie sm^l  outfit, the East  the  membership pwith  many vservices  that  are 
in and  smash  the union. 
Coast 
operators  will find  the  entire  strength  of  impossible in  the  present  cramped  quarters.  De 
If  the  shipowners  have.no  such  intention,  they  can 
the  MTD  lined  up  solidly  behind  the  mates—  tails  will  be  given  when  we  definitely  have  the 
prove  it  by'knuckling  down  v/ith  the  Goverimient  con­ which  puts  an .^entirely  different'color  to  this  building, because  many  of  the things  planned  de­
ciliators and  the MM&amp;P and resolving the dispute. 
horse. 
pend  on  the site  of  the  building.  But,  one  thing 
Otherwise,  the  responsibility  for  the  consequences  is  Standing  solidly  behind  the  MM&amp;P,  shoulder^ is  sure,  liobody  wUl  be  disappointed. 
to shoiUder,  are  the SHI,  the SUP,  the longshore­
Feelbetter? 
• tHeirs.  •  

mx 

�.
•   : fMdCi;:'Myia n&gt; 'IWllj::;.::; 5:Sip!­^ 

,  5_.jE. ^;^|? 

IJ E RS  LOG 

' 

. .,- mmim^
Page Tiue»  ;;V.E| 

A  Way  Of  Life 

• • • ­Tit 

-M

The  year  was. 186&amp;.  America's  seamen  were  miserable for  the seaman, hoping  he  would  quit,  their  hands  were  black,  kept  without  sleep  and 
still finding  most  of  their  jobs  aboard  sailing  thus saving  the shipowner  the man's  wages.  Of­ set  to  the  hardest  and  most  impossible  tasks. 
ships—steam­driven  vessels  having  yet  to  make  ten  the  skipper  owned  his  own  ship. 
"One . . . escaped  from  his  torture  two  days 
their  clean  sweep  oi  the  seas.  President  Andrew 
The seaman could also be arrested by  the ship's  after  the  vessel  left  Sandy  Hook  by  going  over­
Johnson  was  being  impeached  by Congress. And,  master  without  a  warrant;  could  be imprisoned  board.  A  second  one  . . . followed  his  example 
in  San  Francisco's  Turnverein  Hall,  a  band  of  for  desertion;  could  be docked  one  day's  pay  for  soon  afterward; a  third, a  boy  of  about 17, found 
hardy sailing  ship seamen  formed  the first  mari­ each  hour  of  tardiness,  and  could  be fined  $10  in  the  sea  a  refuge  on  the  morning  of  July  4th 
time  union  in  America,  the  Seamen's  Society  of  a  day  for  harboring  a  deserter. 
—the  anniversary  of  the  great  declaration  of 
the  Pacific  Coast. 
It was  not  until  the  turn  of  the  century  that  freedom  and  equality." 
"^e  Society's  life  was  short,  but  in  its  exist­ flogging  was  abolished  by  law,  but  not  until 
Establishment of  a hiring  hall thus meant  more 
ence  it  wrote  into  the  record  the first  demand  passage  of  the  Seamen's  Act  in  1915  was  the  than  democratic  hiring, it  also stood  as  the door 
of  American seamen for  the most cherished of  all  law  actually  enforced.  Under  the  wording  of  to  improved  shipboard  conditions,  freedom Jrom 
sea  laws, seamen  were "reckoned  neither  among  disease  and  oppressive  maritime  laws. 
union possessions:  the union hiring halL 
' 
Following  the  Society,  other  unions,  associa­"  the  living  nor  among  the  dead." 
EARLY  UNIONISM 
Without  a  hiring  hall,  the  seamen  were  with­
tions  and  brotherhoods  were  formed  and  dis­
The first  strong  wave  of  unionism  in  maritime 
solved,  each  one  having  sought  to  bring  to  the  out  unity  to fight  intolerable  conditions.  Greedy 
sprung 
up  shortly  after  the  Sailors  Union  of 
men  who  sailed  the  ships  the  right  to  equalize  shipowners  stuffed  every  available  bit  of  space, 
the  jobs available  through  a system  of  equal  job  including  the  crew's  fo^sle,  with  cargo,  leaving  the  Pacific  was  founded  in  1885.  Within  a  few 
no  room  for  sleeping  or  mess  facilities.  Crew­ years  the  Marine  Cooks  Union  was  formed  and 
distribution. 
the  Marine  Firemen  had  organized.  In  1893  the 
Some  were  partly  succesful,  others  failed; yet,  members  had  to  throw  the  straw  mattress  they  three  organizations  became  loose  affiliates  in 
wherever  seamai met,  the talk  always  turned  to  cairied  with  them  wherever  they  could find  a  the  International  Seamen's  Union,  AFL. 
the  hiring  hall.  Firing  every  discussion  was  the  bit  of  open  space,  and  ihey  took  their  meals 
where  they  slept. 
In 1891  the Sailors  Union  of  the  Pacific  set  up 
seaman's  deep­seated  hatred  of  the  crimps. 
The  miserable,  ill­v«ntilated  quarters,  jammed  the first  union  shipping  office,  which  bore  a 
THE  CRIMP 
with  the  bodies  of  unwashed  men—water  was  semblance  to  the  hiring  hall  of  today;  but  it 
To  a  seaman  a  crimp  was  the  lowest  form  of  rationed  to  four  quarts  a  day—^made  a  perfect  was  1902  before  the first  formal  working  and 
animal  life.  He  operated, the  shipping  office,  medium  for  disease.  Seamen,  who  because  of  wage  agreement  with  the  shipowners  association 
often  in  conjimction  with  a  boarding  house,  and  their  outdoor  work  should  have  been  one  of  the  was signed. Wages became $35 a month. The ship­
in  his  hands  rested  whether  or  not  a  seaman  healthiest  occupation  groups,  suffered  one  of  the  owners in San Francisco agreed  to maintain  their 
would  get  another  job.  If  he  ran  a  boarding  highest  percentages  of  tuberculosis. 
own  shipping  office  and  use  no  crimps.  In  the 
house, the seaman'knew  he'd  better  take a  room 
The  intolerable  conditions  aboard  ships  also  outports  the  union  was  to  furnish  the  crews.  A 
if  he  wanted^'a  ship.  The  quarters  offered  by  led  to  the  most  inhuman  of  all ,seafairing  prac­ committee  of  owners  and  seamen  was  set  up 
the  crimp  were  crowded  and  vermin­infested,  tices:  shanghaiing. 
to  adjust  grievances. 
the food  and  liquor  poor,  and  the cost  high. 
In the following  years before  World War  I, the 
HELL SHIPS 
The seaman's small  pay was  soon  gone, and  he 
unions  grew  steadily,  with  wage  agreements  re­
Certain vessels  bore reputations  for  having  un­
found  himself  in  debt  to  the  crimp.  When  the 
newed regularly with  wage iDOOsts.  In 1917  wages 
bill  became  high,  the  crimp  put  him  on  a  ship,  usually  brutal  officers  and  extremely  bad  condi­ had  risen  to  $60  a  month,  plus  overtime  and 
having  made  arrangements first  with  the  ship's  tions,  where  the  crews  were  treated  as  animals.  bonuses." 
master  to  have advanced  to him  the money owed  On these ships,  the men  were worked  until  they 
A great  deal of  the advancements  made  during 
by  the  seaman.  It  was  possible,  under  the  law  dropped.  The food  was slop  and  the disease  rate  these  years  must  be  credited  to  job  actions, 
at  the  time,  to  advance  a  seaman's  creditors  up  high.  For  minor  infractions—or  merely  at  the  whereby  a  crew  went  aboard  a  ship  and,  being 
whim  of  a sadistic skipper—men  were  triced  up, 
to four mtmths of  a seaman's  unearned  wages. 
dissatisfied  with  conditions,  waited  vmtil  the ship 
If  the  crimp  didh^  run  a  boarding  house,  he  beaten  and  often  horsewhipped  to  death.  These  was  about  to  sail,  then  threw  their  luggage 
usually had  a  business of  some sort, and  the sea­ ships  were  avoided  by  seamen,  no  matter  how  the  dock  and  pilpd  off.  The  imion,  informed  of 
man  sooii  learned  the  best  patrons  got  jobs  the  much  they  needed  work. 
the  situation,  invariably  was  unable  to find  a 
Because 
replacements 
were 
always 
necessary, 
quickest,  and  cm  the" best  ships.  Seamen  who 
crew  available  imtil  the  shipowner  adjusted  the 
didn't  throw  their  business  to  a  crimp  had  to  and  no  volunteers  were  forthcoming,  the  new  grievance. When the grievance had been adjusted, 
take  their  chances on  the piers,  msdcing  the long  men  could  be  had  only  by  kidnapping,  a  job  the  union  furnished  the  company  a  crew  for 
hikes daily  from  pier  to pier  in  the hope  a  berth  that  fell  to  the  ship's  officers  and  cooperative  the ship. 
was open  and  the captain  the sort  of  a man  who  crimps. 
The  use  of  job  action  was  made  possible  by  ^ 
A  prospective  crewmember  would  be  be­  •  
did  his  own  hiring. 
the  Seamen's  Act  of  1915,  which  abolished  im­,  ; 
But  whether  a  man  patronized  a  crimp  or  friended,  phed  with  liquor  until in  a  stupor,  and  prisonment of  seamen for  jumping ship in  Ameri­  ? 
tramped  the waterfront,  his  chances  of  getting  a  then  dragged  aboard  ship  during  the  night.  If  can  ports,  and  allowed  him  to  collect  all  money 
ship  were  small  if  he  was  known  to  have  ideas  time  was  short,  a  seaman  • would be  set  upon  due.  The  seaman  only  forfeited  his  personal  ; 
about  unions. "Troublemakers"  weren't  wanted.  in  a  dark  street  and  beaten  insensible.  Others  effects  left  aboard.  Passage  of  this  law  is  attri­
But  despite  the  chances  of  being  blacklisted  —guilty  of  some  petty  law  violation—^would  be  buted  to  the  tireless  efforts  of  Andrew  Furuseth, 
with  the  crimps  and  skippers,  men  with  ideas  forced  aboard  by  crimps  with  the  threat  that  Secretary  of  the  Sailors  Union  of  the  Pacific, 
about  unions  continued  to  increase.  Stung  by  they  would  be  turned  over  to the  police.  At  any  who  spent  almost  his  entire  life  in  Washington 
the injustice of  the laws of  the day, swindled  by  rate,  when  daWn  broke  the  ship  would  be  at  lobbying  for  fairer  laws  for  seamen.  Furuseth, 
greedy  crimps  and  abused  by  sadistic  skippers,  sea  and a full crew  Would  be aboard. 
for  his  efforts  to  liberate  seamen  under  the  law, 
Such 
a 
voyage 
was 
that 
of 
the Sunrise, 
which 
the  men  turned  eagerly  to  every  movement  for 
h&amp;s  been  termed  "the  Abraham  Lincoln  of  the 
union  among  seamen  against  their  common  sailed  from  New  York  to  San  Francisco  in  1873.  seas. J}
Unlike  most  such  voyages,  it  ended  in  court 
enemies. 
WORLD  WAR  I 
In 1885,  the Coast  Seamen's  Union  was  formed  with  the  conviction  of  the  captain  and  mate,  a 
The  First  World  War  brought  maritime  union­
and,'three  months  later,  had  marshalled  enough  feat  made  possible  by  the  crusading  work  of 
ism 
to  new  heights,  but  was  followed  by  a 
strength  among  seamen  to  boycott  ships  hiring  the  "San  Francisco  Post."  The  record  has  the 
swift  downfall. 
men from  sources other  than  the  union  hall. The  following  to.  say  of  the  voyage: 
When  the  United  States  entered  the  First 
"As  soon  as  the  Sunrise  got  into  the  stream, 
movement  was  successful  for  awhile,  but  the 
World  War,  ninety­five  percent­  of  the  seamen 
union  was  unable  to  check  on  all  ships  and  the  brutalities  upon  the  crew  commenced,  and 
in 
America  were  members  of  the  unions  and 
did  not  end  until she  took  a  pilot  off  the Golden 
gradually  the boycott  evaporated. 
Gate.  They  were  knocked  down,  kicked,  beaten  wages  had  risen  to  $75  per  month.  Conditions 
OTHER  BENEFITS 
with  ropes' ends,  iron  belaying  pins,  tar  buckets,  were good,  jobs  plentiful and  the cost­plus  opera­
The  desire "^of  the  seamen  for  the  hiring  hall  staves,  or  anything  that  came  handy.  But  the  tions  of  the  shipowners  gave  them  little  reason 
extended  beyond  the  establishment  of  a  system  favorite  punishment  of  the  captain  and  his  mate  to fight  the  union  demands. 
of  job  distribution.  The  seamen  felt  that  once  seems  to  have  been  the  horrible  torture  known 
With the end of the war and the heavy slump
the  hiring  hall  was  set  up,  and  all  seamen  ga­ as  tricing  up,  which  consists  of  ironing  a  man  in shipping which followed, the unions found
thered  together  in  the firm  bond  of  brotherhood  by  the  wrists,  passing  a  rope .around  the  irons,  themselves with their backs to the wall, forced
for  their  jobs,  the  union  would  be  better"  pre­ and  hoisting  him  up  until  his  toes  barely  touch  to fight to maintain standards against the shippared  to  improve  the  conditjoixs  on  the  ships  the  deck. 
owners and a hostile government. Large numand  force  a fight  on  the  maritime  laws,  which 
"They  were  tortured  on  the  Sunrise  in  this  bers of war-trained seamen,. who had not gonir
made  seamen  virtual  slaves. 
way  for  six,  eight  and  ten  hours  for  trivial  of­ through the battles for union conditions, stood
Under  the  law,  seamen  were  bound  to  their  fenses,  or  for  no  offenses  at  all  . . . These men  ready to,man the ships in the event the unions V, 
ships and for a man  to. quit meant  the forfeiture  were  maltreated  in  every  possible "way—beaten  struck against the proposed cut in wages and
of  all of  his  personal  effects  and  any  wages  due  and  kicked  until  they  were  a  mass  of  bruises  increase in working hours. The government was
him.  Under  this  law,  shL^.­  istei's  made  life  and  disc'plored flesh,  hung  up  by  the wrists imtil 
(Continued on Page 4)

�Pag* Four 

TBE  S  E  A F  A  k E  R  S  LOG 

Friday, April 21. 1950^ 

The  Union  Hiring  Hall­A  Way  Of  Life 
(Contitmed  from  Fage  3) 
of  the  national  guard,  the entire  union  member­  ships to issue  the books, the seamen revolted  and 
prepared  to send men to struck ships  through its  ship  of  San  Francisco  in  all  occupations  and  refused to accept  them. Crews on  all coasts made ; 
hiring  hall,  which  had  been  set  up  to  dispatch  trades  went  on  a  general  strike.  The  waterfront  it  clear  that  they  would  not  accept  the  book', 
men  to  government­owned  ships. 
strike ended  shortly  thereafter,  with  the seamen  under  any  conditions.  The  movement  became 
The  International  Seamen's  Union  struck  May  and  the  longshoremen  returning,  to  their  jobs  so  strong  that  the  government  had  to  back 
down. 
1,  1921  and  the  curtain  dropped  on  maritime  with  their ease  before arbitrators. 
Most  important  of  all,  the  1934  strike  had  re­
unionism  for  thirteen  years.  The  shipowners,  at 
The  hiring  hall  continued  to  survive  the  on­
the  urging  of  the  government,  refused  to  back  united  the  seamen  into  S.  force  strong  enough  slaughts  of  its enemies  and  gradually  the  unions 
tcr  press  for  its  demands  through  job  actions  signed  up  the  non­imion  operators,  until  all  but 
down  on  their  demands  for  a  slash. 
and 
the  aggressiveness  of  the  men  the  seamen,  a  handful of  the steamship  companies  were com­
The  government,  in  the  person  of  the­United 
States  Shipping  Board,  also  stipulated  that  the  elected  to fight  the  day­to­^day  battle  from  the  mitted  to  call  the  union  hall  for  their  men.  ' 
unions  would  no  longer  have  the  right  to  have  union  offices  ashore. 
WORLD WAR  II 
By  1935,  job  actions  put  the  hiring  hall  back 
Patrolmen  at  sign­ons  and  payoffs.  As  ships  hit 
^ .  Then war came.  Overnight America's merchant 
United States ports, and  were abandoned by  their  into  operation.  Men  refused  to  ship  except  fieet  doubled,  quadrupled  and  swelled  until  the 
crews,  the  US  Shipping  Board  promptly  dis­ through  the  union  hiring  hall.  If  a  man  came  pre­war fieet  of  1090  ships  had  grown  to  5500. 
patched  scab  crews  through  its  hiring  halls.  To  aboard  a  ship  from  any  other  source,  the  crew  Seamen  were  at  a  premium,  and,  the  imions, 
swing  any  wavering  shipowners  back  into  line,  formed  a  welcoming  committee  for  him.  Ship's  through  their  hiring  halls,  dispatched  thousands 
fljp  chairman  of  the  Shipping  Board  announced  delegates  were set  up, and a  member  from  each  of  men  to crew  the slups. Skilled  men  were  not 
to  the  companies  that,  if  imy  of  them  signed  department  elected  to  represent  the  men  in  dis­ available  in  the  large  numbers  needed.  The 
6n  the  union's  terms,  the  Board  would  take  putes  with  the  company. 
The  shipowners,  seeing  the  futility  of  their  government  turned  thousands  of  hastily  trained 
away  from  them  any  government­owned  ships 
fight,  recognized  the  hiring  hall  as  fact,  and  men from, its training schools.  The Sailors Union 
they  were  operating. 
of  the Pacific  set  up its  own  training  school  and 
The  odds  against  the  union  were  too  much.  gave  up  their  resistence  to*  having  the  hiring  sent  over  500  imion­trained  seamen  to  its  con­
Possessing  a  membership  of  over  100,000  men  hall  clause  written  into  the* contract. 
­
In  this  period  of  resurging  unionism,  the  Na­ tracted  ships.  . 
when  the strike came off,  the membership  rapid­
Men  who  before  the  war  had  been  ABs  and 
dwindled  to  23,000.  At  the  end  of  two  months  tional  Maritime  Union,  CIO,  was  born,  and  Oilers  became  Mates,  Skippers  and  Engineers. 
the  union  capitulated;  the  men  returned  to  the  shortly  after  the  Seafarers  International  Uriibn,  The  tremendous  number  of  men  needed  to  sup­
ships  with  only  a  shell  of  a  imion  remaining  AFL, ^ame  into  existence.  The  big  drive  was  ply  the  ships  strained  to  the limit  the  facilities 
on.  In  maritime  the  trend  was  away irom  craft 
and  no  contract. 
unions  and  toward  the  formation  of  all  men  in  of  the  union  hiring  halls,  yet  the  union  Icnew 
THE  IN­BETWEEN  YEARS 
the  three  departments  into  one  union  of  un­ that  to  let  the  men  be  hired  outside  its  offices 
The  years  following  were  rough  for  seamen.  licensed  men. 
would  mean  a  breakdown  of  its  hard­earned 
security 
of  the  hiring  hall. 
The  crimp  became  king  again.  Conditions  on 
Simultaneously  with  the  establishment  of  the 
the ships worsened, with thousands of  American­ hiring  hall,  conditions  on  the  ships  improved. 
Seamen  who  had  been  torpedoed,  strafed  and 
bom  seamen  leaving  the  seas.  Crews  were  re­ Union  action  brought  about  abolition  of  "blue  shelled  on  the  perilous  Atlantic  nm  to  Mur­
duced  to  the  minimum  set  by  law,  the hours  of  linen"—a  blue  bedsheet  given  the seaman  when  mansk, through  the Suez Canal to Malta,  through 
work  were boosted  to 90  without  the payment  of  he  signed  on,  which  was  supposed  to  serve  as  the  sub­infested  waters  to  England  and  through 
overtime. 
bed  linen  as  long  as  the  trip lasted. 
"U­boat  Lane"  along  the  Atlantic  coast,  came 
The  "workaway"  came  into  being;  a  man 
The  "donkey's  breakfast,"  or  straw  mattress,  back  again  and  again  to  take  out  ships  fresh 
signed  on  the ship for  a  penny­a­month  pay.  He  was  discarded  and  the cojtipanies  forced  to  sup­ from  the shipyards. 
did all the work of  the crew but received nothing.  ply  mattresses.  Crockery  was  supplied  by  the 
Unescorted, sparsely  armed and slow, the Ships 
His  break  came  when  one  of  the  regular  crew­ company,  and  the  men  were, given  ample  room  lumbered  across the  waters to  deliver  the much­
members left  the ship and he assumed  the man's  for  eating  apart  from  their  sleeping  quarters.  needed  lend­lease  cargoes  and,  later,  America's 
job. Another  practice, was for­ college students  to  Gradually,  through  the  initiative  of  individual  armies and  war  materials. By  the end  of  hostili­
sigh  on  as  crewmembers  to  work  their  way  to  crews  in  job  actions  and  through  the  union  m  ties,  6,028  seamen  had  lost  their  lives  in  the 
Europe  for  the  summer,  thus  denying  seamen  negotiations,  the  working  conditions  aboard  the  war,  a  percentage  loss  higher  than  suffered  by 
jobs. 
ships  improved. 
any  of  the  armed  forces.  But  the  job  was  done. 
Miserable  food,  crowded  foc'sles  were  back 
Certain  tasks  outside  the  realm  of  ordinary 
LAY­UPS  AND  SALES 
again.  The  seaman  lugged  his  straw  mattress  work  became  penalty  work,  for  which  overtime 
The  end  of  hostilities saw  a cut  back in mari­
with  him  when  he  signed  on  a  ship,  and  with  was  paid.  Cleaning  tanks,  doing  work  ordinarily 
time 
operations  on  a  scale  imequalled  in  any 
his  personal  belongings  he  carried  eating  uten­ done  by  longshoremen,  and  working  beyond  the 
other 
industry.  iUmost  with  the  signing  of  the 
sils  and  canned  milk  for  coffee.  Conditions  con­ stipulated  number  of  hours  were  among  the 
armistice,  ships  began  making  their  last  run  to 
tinued  to deteriorate, with wage cuts coming  an­ penalty  jobs  spelled  out  in  the  contracts. 
the  "boneyard,"  the  lay­up fleet.  The  govern­
nually  until  1934,  when  the  longshoremen  on 
The  better  living  for  seamen  was  not  without 
the  west  coast  resisted  the  slide  downward  and  opposition,  however.  In  J938,  the  government  ment,  which  had  built  most  of  the  ships  and 
called  a  strike.  The  seamen  hitting  west  coast  announced  that  it  was  going  to  operate  hiring  chartered  them  to  private  operators,  found  the 
ports piled  off  the ships, and  declared  themselves  halls  and  in  several  ports  put  them  into  opera­ shipowners  reluctant  to  stay  in  operation  on  a 
on  strike  for  a  coptract  embodying  a  wage  in­ tion.  The  halls  were  shortlived,  for  the  seamen  large scale. Some  companies, which had operated 
crease  and  re­establishment  of  the  hiring  ball.  met  them  with  job  actions  whenever  a  replace­ as  many  as fifty  ships,  went  out  of  business  en­
tirely,  the  fat,  guaranteed  profits  of  wartime 
ment  supplied  from  the  government  hiring  hall 
THE  1934  STRIKE 
gone. 
Thus  began  the  toughest  and  bloodiest  strike  tried  to  board  a  ship. 
The  full  effect  on  employment  wasn't  felt  fot 
in  maritime  history.  Oh  March  5,  the  strike 
THE  FINK  BOOK 
nearly  four  years,  as  thousands  of  men  who 
began  and,  through  the  ensuing  weeks,  the  em­
Defeated  in  its effort  to smash  the hiring  hall,  entered  the  merchant  marine  during  the  war 
ployers  turned  to  desperate  measures  to  drive  the  anti­union  forces  in  the  government—at  the  returned  to  their  homes, farms  and  schools.  The 
the men  back  to  the  docks ^nd  the  ships. 
urging  of  the  employers—came  up  with  a  neat  government,  concerned  with  the  growing  lay­up 
Thugs were imported to beat up on pickets, the  device  for  keeping  militant  men  off  the  ships:  fleet,  attempted  to  dispose* of  its  ships  by  offer­
city  police  went  to  work  with  their  nightsticks,  the  Copeland  Book,  referred  to  by  seamen  as  ing  them  for  sale  at  a  small  percentage  of  their 
putting  hundreds  of  beaten  strikers  in  jaiL  The  the  Fink  Book. 
original  price. 
new^apers  hollered  "civil  war"  and  called  for 
The  book  was  designed  to  replace  the  usual 
The  American  shipowners  were  slow  to  take 
extreme measures.  Bands of  vigilantes descended  practice  of  giving  a seaman  a separate discharge  up^  the  government  on  its  offer,  but  the  steam­. 
on  the  strikers  wherever  they' found  the  odds  at  the  end  of  the  each  voyage.  Instead,  he  was  ship operators  of  foreign  countries  were  definite­
to  their  favor. 
to  be issued  a  book  in which each  discharge  was  ly  interested.  Ships  were  sold  wholesale  to  ope­
The  tension  rose  until,  on  July  5,  in  the  to  be listed  and, next  to it,  a space for  the skip­  rators in  all the countries  of  the world, 
"Battle  of  Rincon  Hill,"  San  Francisco  police  per's  comments  on  the  man's  ability. 
Hundreds  of  ships  were  sold  to  operators  list­
opened fire  on  a  seamen's  meeting,  killing  two 
Thus,  instead  of  a  seaman  receiving  /separate  ing  Panama  and  Honduras as their  home  offices, 
men  and  wounding  105  others.  The  national  discharges, all of  his  sea  service  would  be  listed  Actually,  the  ships  were  primarily  owned. by 
guard  was  called  out  against  the  strikers,  and  in  the  book  for "a  prospective  employer  to  see. .  American  interests,  but  registered  ih  Panama 
barricades  were  set  up . in  the  streets,  ^e city  Men  who  had  made  short  trips,  left  their  ships  and  crewed  by  Europeans  and  Asiatics.  Their 
of  San  Francisco  took  on  the appearance  df  war­ regularly  and  who  were  given  imsatisfactory  purpose  w^ to  evade the  American  safety  laws, 
time.  The  strikers,  however,  were  not  seeWng  ratings  from  skippers  were  easily  spotted  and  American  shipyard  costs  and  American  crew 
p! battle,  being  content  to  keep 
ships, tied  up  refused  when  applying  for  jobs.  If  the  man  was  wages. 
, 
and  the strike in  effect. 
sent  from  a  hiring  hall,  the  employer  would 
By  January  1,  1950,"the  government  had  di&amp;­
But  the  seamen  had  help,  too.  In  support  of  Ipid  some  pretense  for  refusing  him. 
posed  of  1,006  ships  in its  lay­rup flert.  American 
the  strikers,  and  as  a  protest  ui  the  ogling  out  ;|^ When government  representatives came  aboard 
^Continued  on  Page  5) 
Ife­

.  ^  "  '•  

�Fsidtty.  April 8i; i960 

T  BE  S  E  A F  A  RERS  td 

AU  Three  DeRartments  Share 
In  NeW  York's  Fail'  Shipping 

Sailing Short 

M Slow,  Says  Port  Savannah 

w 
By  E. M. BRYANT 
All  delegates  aboard  SIU 
ships are  urged  to make cer­
SAVANNAH—No  matter  how  Kyska,  SS  Iberville,  and  SS 
By  JOE  ALGINA 
tain  that  every  sh^  is  fully  you  say  it,  shipping  is  still  slow  Azalea  City,  all  Waterman  ships; 
manned  before it leaves port.  ih  this  port. 
SS  Steel  Surveyor  and  SS  Steel 
WEW  YORK^hipping  out  of  Elizabeth,  Puerto  Rico,  Suz­
If  the company  tries to vio­
There 
were 
only 
a 
couple­of 
Chemist,  Isthmian,  and  the  SS 
I the  Port  of  New  York  was  anne,  Caroline,  Frances,  Bull;  late  the  contract  manning 
layoffs 
in 
the 
last 
shipping 
pe­
Jean,  Bull  Lines.  None  of  these 
Ipretty  fair  during  the  past  two  Topo  Topa,  Hurricane,  Choetaw,  scale  by  sailing  short,  the 
iod, 
th^ 
being 
the 
SS 
South­
ships 
had  any  beefs,  either. 
I weeks  for  all  departments.  The  Chickasaw,  Jean  LaFitte,  Water­ ship's  delegate  should  call  port,  South  Atlantic,  and  the SS  Aniong  those  waiting  to  ship 
black  gang  had  a  slight  edge  man;  Steel  Designer,  Steel Work­ the  nearest  Union  Hall  im­ Strathmore,  a  Liberty  tanker  out  of  this  port  at  the  moment 
lover  the  deck  and  stewards  in  er, Steel  Chemist,  Isthmian; Rob­ mediately. 
Which  was  sent  by  the  company  are  Brothers  A.  J.  Bullard,  W. 
in  Kirk,  Robin  Kettering,  Seas 
inumber  of  men  shipped. 
The 
Union 
will 
take­ 
im­
into  dry  dock  to  be  reconverted  Breedlove,  Tommy  Wickham, 
This  does  not  mean,  however,  Shipping;  Southwind,  South  At­ mediate  *kctiott  to  see  that  to  a  dry  cargo  carrier.  The  Mike  Kavanaugh  and  Marvin 
I that  anyone  shotdd  rush  off  in  lantic;  Chrysstar,  Triton;  John  our  agreements  are observed  Strathmore  will  be  in  the  dry­ Swords. 
[the direction  of  NewYpfk. There  Stagg,  Mar­Trade;  Elly,  Sea­ to  the &gt;  letter  as  it  doM  dock  for  about  45  days. 
UNION  SHOP 
I are  approximately  QOOr  men  reg­ Trades;  Black  Eagle,  Orion;  Sea­ whatever  violations  are  re­
The Southport  showed  up  as  a 
Jistered—about,  evenly  divided  in  ttain  New  York  and  the  Sand­ ported. 
We'd 
like 
to  advise  all  Chief 
rpighty  clean  ship,  manned  by 
I the ' three  departments.  That's  craft,  which  came  In  from  the 
Stewards 
that 
when  ordering 
Know  your  contract  and  a  heads­up  crew  of  bookmem­
I about  average  for  the  port,  as  West  Coast. 
supplies 
in 
Savannah, 
they 
report  aU  violations  to  the  bers.' Not  a  single  beef  was  car­
should 
order 
NBC 
bread 
and 
I a rule. 
tried  apoard  this'vessel. 
The  Eastern  Steamship  Lines  Union ­right away. 
Most  of  the  past  period's  pay­ will 
crackers, 
as 
it 
is 
the 
only 
or­
In­transit  we  had  the  SS 
the  Evangeline  into 
joffs  were  smooth,  and  all  beefs  cruise put 
ganized 
bakery 
in 
the 
city. 
^ 
service  beginning­  July  1. 
I were  settled  satisfactorily. ­Ships  The  vessels 
The 
Hall 
here 
has 
been 
paint­
will  make  a  series 
Ipaying  oif  were: 
ed  and  is  looking fine.  We've 
of  ten  weekly  cruises  to  Nassau, 
purchased  a  phonograph­radio 
leaving  every  , Saturday  from 
combination 
from  Brother 
Pier  18,  North  River,  and  will 
By  CAD  TANNER 
Tommy 
Moore, 
who  gave  us  a 
return  to  New,  York  the  next 
MOBILE 
— 
Shipping 
in 
this 
payoffs 
were 
smooth, 
with 
only 
bargain. 
This 
addition  helps, 
Friday  by  way  of  the  Grand 
port  for  the last  couple  of  weeks  a  few  minor  beefs  on  any  of  make  this  HaU  one  of  the finest 
Bahama  Island. 
By  BEN  LAWSON 
in  the  South—and  one  of  the 
has  been  dead  slow,  with  ap­ them. 
The^ Bernstein 
Shipping­ 
Com­
cleanest,  we  proud  to  add. 
In­transit 
for 
the 
period 
were 
BOSTON—Shipping  was  • j ust 
proximately  forty»five  bookmen 
pany. is 
still­ awaiting final 
word 
the  Bull  Rim,  Mathiasen  tanker ;  The Garden  City Cab  Company 
fair/  in  the  Beantowni  although 
a number  of  ships  paid  off  and  on  its.  bid  for  operations  and  and  six  permits  shipped  for  ihe  Chickasaw,  Alcoa  Rimner,  Caha­ sold out, so we  have no organized 
approximately  a  half­dozen  conversion  subsidies  on  two  pas­ two­week  period.  In  addition  to  ba,  SUP tanker,  and the  Lasalle.  union  taxi  service  in  this  city. 
otherb  called  in­transit  during  senger  ships  for  the  European  these,  we  had  approximately  All  in­transit  jobs  were  con­ The  new  owner  keeps  giving  the 
run. 
forty  relief  jobs  on  tugs  and  tacted  and  necessary  replace­ Teamsters  local  the  rvmaround, 
the  past  two  weeks. 
ments  furnishfedi  ­
The­payoff  ships were all  tank­ Meanwhile,  . the  company  is  deep  sea  ships. 
although  he  is  supposed  to  be 
ers:  the  SS .Alexandra,  and  SS  placing a  ship in the trade imder  Ships  paying  off  during  the  Biggest  thing  around  Alabama  an  old  railroad  man.  We  expect 
Trinity, Carras, and  the SS Bepts  Panamanian  registry  (on  a  tem­ last  two  weeks  were  the  Mon­ this last  week  was  the  Alabama  to  hear  something  definite  on 
Fort,,  SS  Fort  Hoskins,  and  SS  porary  basis)  so. that it can  build  arch  of  the  Sea,.  Fairport,  Ala­ State  Federatiori  of  Labor  con­ the  imion's  efforts  to  get  a  con­
wai,  Morning  Light,  Antinous,  vention  in  Montgomery  the,j,first  tract  in  a  short  time. 
Royal  Oak,  Cities  Service.  i All  up  its  bookings. 
of  these  vessels  signed  on  again.  If  there  had  been  swifter  ac­ Wild  Ranger,  all  Watermbn;  the  three days of  the week. As usual  Three  of  our  Brothers  are  in 
With  the  way  the  Cities  Ser­ tion  on  the  Bernstein  applica­ Clipper and  Corsair  of  Alcoa, and  the  SIU  delegates  were  there,  the  local  Marine  Hospital:  J. 
vice  ships  are  hitting^this  area,  tions,  there  would  have  been  no  the  Sanford  B.  Dole,  Mar  Trade.  apd  were  elected  on  all  the  im­ Maxey,  J.  (Chubby)  Morris  and 
Signing  on  were  the  Monarch  portant  committees  for  the  com­ Carl  Smithj­  SUP.  Stop  in  and 
and  witii  the  Yarmouth  and  need  for  the  Panamanian flag 
Evangeline  scheduled  to  begin  operation. This  is  one. of  the' les­ of  the ^  Sea,  Alawai,  Clipper,  ing  year.  The  convention  went  pay  these  Brothers  a  visit  if 
crewing  up  in  about  six  weeks,  'sons  this  nation  should  learn  in  Fairport,  Morning  Light,  Antin­ on  record  to  endorse  candidates  you  have a few moments in  this 
shipping  ought, to  be  pretty good  making  decisions  affecting  its  ous,  Sanford  B.  Dole,  and  the  lyho  were  favorable  to  labor  in  port.  It'll:  go  a  loni:  way  in 
Wild  Ranger.  All  sign­ons  and  the  coming  May  primaries. 
merchant  marine. 
cheering  them  up. 
up, this  way. •  

1 

5

I 

MOA/JIB  Mat  Keeps  RelOng  Ahng 

Tankers Give Hypo 
lib Boston Shipping 

(Continued  from  Page  4) 
j  pperators  ptirchased  693  ships  to  replace  out­of­
date  vessels  and  those  lost  in  the^ war.. Foreign 
operators,  representing  34  nations,  purchased 
l,li3  ships.  Still  in  the  lay­up fleet  are  2,189 
ships, all  but  51 being  war­built  ships.  America's 
[merchant  marine  now  numbers 1,164  ships—only 
74  more  than  before  the  war  —  and  is  still 
dropping. 
MARITIME  TOPAY 
With  the  heavy  shipping  of  wartime  only  a 
memory, seamen  today  find  the  hiring  hall  their 
one  consolation. The number, of  jobs  being fewer 
than  the  men  available,  the  seamen  know  that 
what  jobs  become  available  will  be  offered  thehx 
on  an  equal  basis. 
They^know  the  jobs  that  become  available  will 
be  called, into  the  hall,  where  they  can  wait 
in  leisure,  knowing  that  eventually  their  job 
will  come  up  "on  the  board."  No  trudging  the 
waterfront,  no  putting  up  at  a  crimp  boarding 
house,  no  buying  the  ^oddy  merchandise  of  a 
business  man­crimp.  If  a  job  is  to  be  had,  the 
man  with  the  longest  time  in  waiting  will  get 
the  job.  Waiting'for  his  turn  is  the" only  price 
he  pays. 
But,  just  as  it  h^s  dogged  the  existence  of 
every  seajnan,  the  thfeat  to  the  hiring  h^ re­
mains  ever  over  them.  The  unions  today  are  too 
strong  for  the  employers  to  attempt  to  hire 
their  men  from  crimps  or  off  the  piers.  The 
biggest threat  today comes from the Taft­Hartley 
Law&gt;  which  bans  the  hiring  hall.  In  a  recent 
court  case,  the  Supreme  Court  upheld  the  law 
by  declaring  illegal  the  hiring  halT operated  on 
the Great Lakes  by the National  Maritimh  Union. 
The Supreme Court's decision  is the hiring  hall's 
severest  blow , since  1934; 
To  the  men  of  the  Seafarers  International 
Union,­the hiring hall is  their most  prized  posses­
sion, as: union msn. Shipowners, contracted to  the 
imion  have­  stated­  their  complete  satisfaction 
with  the  operation  of  the  Biting  haH  and  with 
tBe  men  suppli^ by  the  union. 
­t*  » 

1. 
m I 

­ ill 

The Hiring Hail 

Senator  Warren , Magnuson  and  Representative 
John  Lesinski  have  introducedi a  bill  in  congress 
to  exempt  maritime  unions  from  the  Taft­
Hartley  ban.  Despite  a  great  deal  of  support  for 
The  present  contract,  under  the  provision  the  measure  in  both  Houses  of  Congress,  mari­
covering  employment,  reads  in  part:  "To  assure  time  union  leaders  are  not  optimistic  over  its 
­maximum  harmonious  relations  and  in  oj­der  to  enactment  into  law. 
obtain  the  best  qualified  employees  with  the 
The  seamen  feel  that,  outside  a  full  repeal  of 
least  risk  of  a  delay  in  the  scheduled  departmre  the  Taft­Hartley  Law,  their  greatest  hope  for 
of  any  vessel,  the  company  agrees  to  secure  all  retention  of  the  hiring  hall,  and  the  multitude 
unlicensed  personnel  through  the  hiring  hall  of  of  benefits derived  from  it, lies in an  all­out fight 
the  union." 
against  any  attempt  by  shipowners "or  the  gov­
ernment 
to  weaken  in  any  way­or  destroy  the 
HIRING  HALL  SUPPORT 
The  hiring­hall  is  not  without  friends,  how­ hiring  hall  in  its  present  form.  The  seamen  are 
determined  that  in  no  way,  and  by  no  dictate, 
ever. 
will  they  give  up  the  cornerstone  of  maritime 
Recently,  to  acquaint  the  country's  lawmakers  union  independence.  . 
with the  union's  operations, several  congressmen 
America's  maritime  unions  have  always  ope­
toured  the  SI¥'s  facilities  and  later  commented'  rated  independently  of  one  another  in  the  sign­
favorably  in  the  Congressional  Record.  One  Con­ ing  of  contracts,  organizing  companies  and  con­
gressman,  Isidore  Bollinger  (Dem.,  N.Y.),  stated,  ducting  strikes,  with  no  concerted  action  by  all 
"because  of  problems  peculiar  to  the  maritime  unions  other  than  the  usual  respect  of  one  an­
industry,  the  union  hiring  halls  have  injected  other's  picketlines.  But,  now,  the  unions—^AFL, 
stability  into  the  industry  and  have  given  to  CIO  and  Independent—representing  over  170,000 
seafaring  men  a  pfoper  dignity  arid  security  seamen,  are. united  in  their  determination  to 
that  was  impossible  urider  the  previous  hiring  maintain  the strong  right  arm  of  unionism. 
^ 
practices. "The  union  hiring  hall wiped  out  crimp 
History  has  taught  them  that  the  end  of  the 
halls and  shanghaiing  and the maritime  industry  hiring hall means  the end of  a way  of  life. Clean, 
is  better  off  for  it. 
. 
. 
well­ventilated  foc'sles, first  grade  food,  fresh 
"The  Seafarers  point  out  that  the  destruction  Unen  weekly,  a  40­hour  week  at  sea,  and  union 
of  the  union  hiring  hall  would  wipe'out  many  representation  constsmtly  at  their  call,  spell  a 
hard  won  gains  realized  by  organized  seamen  way  of  life  for  America's  seamen  today, equal 
over  the past  ten years,  and. chaos, confusion and;  to  that of  craftsmoa  in shoreside  industries. 
all  the  sordid  conditions  that  are  now  part  of 
The  union  hiring hall has  made it  possible for 
an  inglorious history  would  return. And  |here is  the  seaman  to  become  a  respected  member  of 
sound  basis  for  this  prediction. 
the  community,  to  enjoy  the  h:uits  of  his  labor, 
"The Congress  of  the United  States cap  act  to  to hold  his head  high and  be proud  of  his trade^ 
avert  sttch  a  calamity.  I  believe  all  legislators 
He is determined  that no one  will relegate  him" 
share with me the  desire to  see our  natiop move  again  to the state of  the seaman  a gaaeration  or 
forward,  not  backward. I believe,  therefore,  that  two  ago,  as  it  was  characterized  by  Andrew 
it  is  incumbent  upon  us to  exempt  the maritime  Furuseth: "You can put me in: jail but you cannot 
unions  from  the  dosed  shop  ban.  It  is  in  the  give =  me  narrower  quarters  than  as  a  seaman 
seamen's,  the industry's and  the  nation's^ntere&amp;t  I  have always  had.  You cannot  give  me  coarser 
that  we do so;'* 
food  than I have  always eaten.  You  cannot ihake 
In  agreement  with  Gbngresspian  Dojilinger,  ,me  Ibnelier  than  I have  always  been." 

' V 

^ 

^ 

^ 

TiivNim 

i 

�Page Six. 

• ;• ; z'­'  ,\  ..  /., 
T  H  E  S  E ^ F  A^ R  E  R  S  L O  G 

ficidaY.  jipril  21/19S0 

SBIPS' MIMUTES AMD N^S 
Del  Norte News Sheet 
Makes Shipboard^Debut 

SMOOTH  SAILORS 

Wemick Anxious 
For Chance To  "; ; 
Wrestle In N.Y. 

charting  a  course  dedicated  to  the  best  interests  of 
its  readers  and  the  Union,  the  SS  Del  Norte  Navigator 
made  its  initial  appearance  as  the monthly  j^ublicatioa  of 
ship's  unhcensed  personnel. 

Seafarer  Abe  Wernick  is  hop­  ;| 
ing  to  get  a . wrestler's  license  ; 
in  New  York  so  he  can  show  ; 
the  folks  in  his  home  state  that 
he  can  tangle  with  the  best  in 
the  giunt  'n'  groan  game! 
Abe,  who  has •  been  sailing  •  
since  1940,  joined  the  SIU  in 
1943  in  Baltimore.  He  says  that 
he  started  his  wrestling  career 
at  a' carnival  in, India  back  in  " 
1940  while a crewmember  aboard 
a  ship  calling  there. 
Since  that  time.  Aba  says,  he 
has  wrestled  all  over  the  world. 
As  an  amateur  he  won  32  bouts' 
and  lost five,  he  told  the  LOG. 

Edited  and  printed  at  sea,  the 
Navigator  is being  published "for 
the  dissemination  of  shipboard 
news,,  discussions  of  ideas  and 
actions  within  our  Union  per­
tinent  to  our  welfare,  Snd  for 
instruction  and  entertainment, 
according  to  the  statement  of 
policy  made  by  Thurston  Lewis, 
editor. 
The first  issue  of  the  Naviga­
tor  contains  nine  neatly  mimeo­
These  crewmembers  of  the  SS  Fort  Bridger  believe  in 
graphed  sheets  of  editorial  mat­
traveling  light.  In  case  anyone  doesn't  recogn^e  them  without 
ter,  stories  of  the  crew's  sports 
their  customary  locks,  kneeling  (left  to  right)  are  D.  Desei, 
activities,  cartoons,  news  items, 
Bosun;  Red  Faircloth,  Engine  Utility;  Ollie  Olivera,  AB;  Bing 
poetry and  a  gossip coltunn  deal­
Cotol,  AB.  Standing  are  Jake  Fidew,  AB;  P.  Arthrofer,  DM; 
ing  with  hipboard  personalities. 
Red  Korsak,  OS;  Buzz  Celkos,  MM  and  Chuck  Bogucki.  DM. 
Photo  was  senf  from  Cete,  France. 
The  name  pf  the  paper  was 
"T«x" Melting,  who  won  the 
selected  from  a  number  submit­
ted  by  crewmembers.  The  suc­ cash  award  offered  to  the  Del 
cessful  entry,  the  Navigator,  was  Norte  crewman submitting  the 
offered  by  Gottfried  (Tex)  Met­ most  suitable  name  for  the 
ting, AB  Maintenance aboard  the  shipboard  paper. 
hlississippi passenger  vesseL  Met­
ting  was  awarded  the  ten­dollar  cian  on  the  Del  Norte,  at  th^  Loaded, with  lard  and  live  tig­ miles  a  day  to  Antwerp,  Bel­
prue  set  up  by  the  judges  for  British  Hospital  in  Buenos  Aires  ers,  blackbirds  and  turtles,  the  gium,  arriving  there  on  April  7, 
the  winning  name. 
SS  Southland  was  due  to  arrive  accordifig  to JEriksen. 
on  March  16. 
Europe  this  week  to  begin  The  trip  was  notable  for  its 
Metting  joined  the  SIU  in  Bramble,  who  was  45  years 
discharging 
her  diversified  car­ smoothness,  the  crewmember  re­
1943,  and  according  to  the  Del  old,  was  a  jnember  of  the  SIU 
go. 
ported.  The  big  cats  behaved 
Norte  Navigator  has  been  active  since  1947,  holding  Book  No. 
in  several  organizing  campaigns,  51199.  He is survived  by his  wife,  According  to  crewmember  Ed­ themselves,  thanks  to  the  efforts 
including  Isthmian  and  US  Wa­ two  sons  and  a  daughter  of  mund  Erikseh,  the  voyage  was  of  a  Ringling  Brothers  circus 
^smooth,  despite  the  presence  of  trainer  and  his  assisjtant,  who 
terways.  He  has  served  as  dele­ Norfolk,  Va. 
ABE  WERNICK 
gate  on  many  ships  and  "has  Del  Norte  crewmen  sent  a  the  striped  cats,  who  came  made  the crossing  with  them. As 
) 
' 
• 
aboard  in  Jacksonville.  The  tig­ for  the  lard,  you'd  never  know 
proved himself  to be a good  ship­ large floral  wreath 
to  the  fune­ ers—seven  of  them—destined  for  it  was  aboard,  said  Eriksen. 
A  middlewieght.  Brother  Wer­
njate  at  aU  times."  Before  join­ ral,  and  the  Navigator  said  that 
The  turtles  slept  most  of  the  nick  keeps  in  shape  by  working 
ing the SIU, Metting was a mem­ "all  hands  mourned  the  passing,  the  Hagenbeck  Circus  in  Ham­
ber  of  the  AFL  Brotherhood  of  of  Brother  Gamble,  who  was  a  burg,  made  the trip  on  the  after  way  and  the  blackbirds  didn't  out  aboard  ship. 
Last  December,  Abe  matched 
deck  alongside  of  No.  4  portside  try  to  snip  off  any  noses,  on  ac­
Hallway  Clerks. 
good  shipmate,  well­liked  and  hatch.  In  cages,  of  course. 
count  of  all  hands kept  their dis­ grips  with  Johnson  Smith  in  a 
The  Del  Norte  Navigator's  always  willing  to  cooperate  with 
From  Jacksonville,  the  South­ tances.  These  specimens  were  mat  contest  in  New  Orleans,  he 
s^rts page  features  the  victories  his  shipmates." 
land 
headed  for  Wilmin,gton,  slated  to  replenish  the  Hamburg  recalled.  He  threw  Smith  in  that 
scored  by  the  Crew  baseball  Staff  members  of  the  new 
where 
she  picked  up  the first  zoo,  which  was  pretty  well  one. 
team  over  two  teams  from  the,  shipboard  publication,  in  addi­
cleaned  out  by  the war. 
^gentine.  In  their first  game  tion  to  Editor  Lewis,  are:  Gabe  shipment  of  lard  to  be  sent  from  Best  of  aU,  Eriksen  said,  was  Wemick  is  an  expert  in  jiu­
of  the  season,  the  Del  Norts  de­ Myrick,  associate  editor;  Jimmy  the  port.  A  total  of  1,624,000  the  Southland's  chow,  especially  jitsui,  having  been  trained  in 
feated  a  strong  team  from  San  Darouse,  sports  editor;  E.  Reyes,  pounds were  loaded  on  the South  on  Thm­sdays and  Sundays, when  that  manly  art  by  Japanese  in­
Isidro  at  Buenos  Aires,  25  to 19.  art  editor;  R.  E.  Holland,  direc­ Atlantic  ship  for  ultimate"  con­ the  mess  table  "looks  like  some­ structors.  He  holds  a  certificfite 
The  second  win  was  registered  tor;  C.  A.  (Red)  Hanc'ock,  ad­ sumption 'by  Emopeans  as  part  thing  in  the  Waldorf­Astoria."  testifying  to  his  ability  as  a  rib­
buster. 
over  Gimnasia  y  Esgrima,  4  to  vertising  manager,  ahd  Dick  of  the  Marshall  Plan  aid  pro­
gram. 
3. 
Martinez,  Juan  Gerala,  Tommy  The  Southland  left  for  Emope, 
The  Navigator  also  carried  the  Scoper,  Coolidge  Campbell,  Pat  after  a  call  at  Newport  News,  on 
news  of  the  death  of  Seafarer  Frango  and  Daniel  Kelley,  re­ March  25.  She  averaged  400 
Richard  Bramble,  Third  Electri­  porters. 
j. 

'Load  Of  Lard  Sets  Pattern 
On Southland's Smooth Trip 

r, 

Voice  Of  Oke  Sea 
By  "SALTY  DICK' 

The  wedding  bells  are  ringing  Ipud  here  in  New 
Orleans.  George  Duxworth  heard  the  bells  about  three 
moiy:hs  ago.  Our "friend,  Jack  (3obb,  is  also  married,  and 

The  Del  Norte's  baseball  squad  lines  up  for  a  pre­game  photo  in  Buenos .Aires.  Kneeling 
(left  to right):  B,  Browning,  S.  Candela,  B.  Domiuicis, R,  Boyd, W. Smith.  B. Collins. Standing: 
CampbelL  Rineay,  Rags  Mailho,  J.  NeweU,  D.  Eaton,  J.  AUar^  V. JKeedck,  R  WUti^,  S. 
Eddy.and  Leon. 
/ 

he  and  his  wife  have  adoptedg­
a  child  and  are  residing  in  ^­ speaking  of  "Buck"  Stephens. 
giers,  across  the  river  from  New  In  Brazil,  when  a  native  calls 
Orleans. 
you  pao  duro  (stale "bread)  he 
It  has  been  reported  that  Tex  means  you're  a  cheap  skate ... 
Krohn's  favorite  remark  is  "All  Emmet  Stephens  wants  Joe. Vol­
gashovmds should  go!" . . .  Rarry  pian  and  his  other  friends  to 
Hastings  is  serving ^ as  Ship's  know  he  got  married  last  Dec. 
Delegate  aboard  an  Alcoa  ship  17.  He's still  sailing,  though. 
and  doing  a fine  job  ,  .  .  No  Who  is  the  young" man  work­
mentioning  any  names,  but  a  ing  on  a  Delta  passenger,  ship, 
certain  waiter,  who  hails  from  who is  met every time he  arrives 
up  North  and  now  sails  out  of  at  Poydras  dock  by  a  beautiful 
the  Gulf  wears flashy 
nylon  senorita  in  a  green  buick? 
shorts. 
The  best  sandwich  salesman 
Caspar  Stevens  is  one  of  the  along  the  New  Orleans  docks  is 
better  known  members  of  the  Hugh  Dick,  who  is  now  on  a 
SIU,  but  dam  few  would  recog­ ship  headed,  for:  the  land  of 
nize  him  by  that  name".  I'm  manana.  •  • 
­v:'­'  " 

�^:lil^",­:.­r  ~ •  

f^day. April^l, 19S0 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Dlgesteil Minutes Of  SlU Shiu Meetings || 

Page  Seven 

~ 

FAIHLAND,  Jan.  29  —  Harry 
.  gate  reported  17  hours  overtime 
»!' |/  f  WyP# 
FAIRLAND. 
Galphin.  Chairman;' Grady  Fair 
in  Engine  Department  had  been 
adjusted  and  will  be  paid;  small 
cloth.  Secretary.  Delegates  re­, 
beef  pending  in  Deck,  and  mat­
ported  on  disputed  overtime  am 
book  standings.  No  beefs  were 
ter  of  chairs  needing  reuphol­
IT?BfiOWERS iM THE MARINE 
i^eicorded.  General  discussion  on 
stering  will  be  taken  care  of  in 
^ HOSPITALS  ALL SAY THAT 
New  Orleans.  Bill  Gray  resigned 
two  tripcarders  and  motion  car­
TWE. OA/E  THINS  TWEY  WANT — 
ried  recommending  them  for  Un­
as  Ship's  Delegate  and  thanked 
­BESIDES 
OUT—  IS TO HEAR 
ion  permits  if  shoreside  officials 
all  hands  for  the  cooperation  he 
ERO/M THEIR OLD SHIPMATES . 
had  received  in  the  job.  Election 
Bee fit.  Discussion  on  March  of 
SO VAlHV  A/OT TAKE TIME.  ­Jt? 
of  delegates,  with  following  men 
Dimes  during  which  it  was  an­
im 
DROP THEM A LINE 
/ 
designated:  Bill  Gray,  Ship's 
nounced  that  someone  would  be 
IT'S 
GOOD MEDICINE / 
Delegate;  Morion  Trehan,  Deck; 
present  at  payoff  to  accept  dona­
• •  • • 'til 
Clark,  Engin6; Foniain,  Stewards. 
tions.  Ship's  Delegate  said  he 
would  discuss  water  situation 
2  22 
ALCOA  PLANTER,  Feb.  8— 
with  Patrolman. 
at  Sparrows  Point,  causing  Deck  Percy  Boyer,  Chairman;  H.  Gal­
t.  %  * 
GATEWAY  CITY.  Feb.  12—  Department  to  sail  shorthanded.  lagher,  Secretary.  Ship's  Dele­
6am  Drury,  Chairman;  J,  Riley,  Stewards  Department  was  given  gate  reported  that  beefs  on  slop­
Uecretary.  No beefs in any  of  the  vote  of  thanks  for  well­prepared  chest,  draws  and  promotion  of 
departments.  Motion  carried  that  food  and  excellent  service.  Crew  Wiper  will  be  turned  over  to 
each  man  clean  laundry  wh^  voted  to allow  J. KusmiAki.  who  Patrolman.  Crew  to  get  together 
finished  washing  clothes.  Ship's  was  acting  Bosun,  to  remain  in  and  suggest  sizes  and  quantities 
Delegate  to  see  Captain  about  that  capacity  aboard  this  ship  of  items  needed  for  slopchest  on 
having  ship's  radio  turned  on  at  if  he  so  desires.  Suggested  that  next  trip.  Recommended  that 
certain  intervals  throughout  the  if  time  permits.  Ship's  Delegate  collection  be  taken  up  for  pur­
­day.  Under  Good  and  Welfare  to  see  about  exchanging  library  chase  of  washing  machine. 
the  following  suggestions  were  books,  and  that  heads  of  de­ Thanks  given  to  Stewards  De­
made:  That  more  night  lunch  be  partments  be  asked  about  sou­ partment  for fine  food  and  ex­
cellent  * service  during  entire 
available;  that  table  cloths  be  geeing  crew's  lounge. 
2 
2 
2 
trip; 
special  thanks  to  Baker  for 
kept  clean  as  possible,  and  that 
EDITH,  Feb.  13  —  Woodrow  delicious  bread.  Old  crewmem­
all  esxtra  linen  be  turned  in. 
Reid.  Chairman;  Louis  Riszo,  befs  told  they  should  not  get 
Secretary.  Delegates'  reports  ac­ the  idea  they  run  the  ship  or 
cepted.  Witt  elected  Ship's  Dele­ are  entitled  to  special  favors 
gate.  Old  linen  locker  given  to  all  hands  to  be  treated  exactly 
Deck  gang  by  Steward  for  stow­ aljke. 
ing  heavy  gear  and  luggage  to 
relieve  congestion  in  rooms. 
by  Hank 
Night  Cook  and  Baker  requests 
2  2  2 
ROBIN  MOWBRAY,  Feb.  12  12­4  watch  to  call  him  on  time. 
—John  SamseL  Chairman;  Amos  Crew  asked  to  clean  up  after 
FLASH  NEWS—The  SS  Sandcraft,  the  dredge  from  the  West 
Baum,  Secretary.  No  beefs  themselves  during  the  night. 
Coastj  has  two  oldtimers  aboard.  They  are  Nick  Yacislyn,  the 
aboard  ship.  Motions  carried:  To  Prolonged  discussion  on  March 
New  Yorker,  and  Brother  Bob  Fall  ... So  far  there  have  been no 
permit  two  cadets  to  use  new  of  Dimes  drive  to fight  polio. 
reports  from  any  SIU ships  saying  they  have  spotted  flying  saucers 
2  2  2 
washing  machine  purchased  by  Delegates  to  take  up  collection 
STEEL  CHEMIST,  Feb.  4—E.  over  any  of  the  seven  seas  in  the  world  .  .  .  Two  pf  the  most 
the  crew;  That  money  left  over  and  turn  it  over  to  Ship's  Dele­
important  issues  for  the ftiembership  continues  to  be  the  "battle 
from  purchase  of  'washing  ma­ gate  so  it  will  be  ready  for  the  Anderson,  Chairman;  J.  L.  Ya­ for  the  hiring  hall"  and  the  "vacation  rule"  .  .  .  Shipping  here  in 
kush.  Secretary.  Ship's  Delegate 
chine  be  used  to  buy  baseball  Patrolman  at  the  payoff. 
reported 
that  he  had  spoken  to  New  York  is  picking  up slightly—in  fact,  should  be  getting  better, 
equipment  for  use  by  all  hands. 
2  2  2 
Captain 
about 
imsafe  gangway.  we  believe—and  the  membership  here  is  as  active  as  ever  in 
B6sun  Eaxl  Oppel  gave  a  talk  STEEL  NAVIGATOR,  Feb.  5 
Captain 
said 
matter 
would  have  helping  out  in various.things  which are  important for  the  SIU  .  . . 
on  safety,  emphasizing  the  no­ —^R.  F.  Ransome,  Chairman;  D. 
Richard  Pujos,  who  has  been  helping  out,  just  grabbed  a  tanker. 
smoking  rule  while  explosive  MaxweU,  Secretary.  Delegates  to  be  taken  up  on  return  to  the  Good  tankering,  Richard  ... Abe  Partner  and  Brother  R.  J. 
cargo  is  being  unloaded  and  the  reported  some  disputed  overtime  States.  Crew  went  on  record  un­ Mikutal  have  been  giving  a  hand  with  whatever  there  was  to 
need  for  action  to  prevent  per­ n  Deck  and  Stewards  Depart­ animously  against  communist  do  .  .  .  Brother  Niedomeyer,  the  artist  who  drew  the  picture  of 
sonal  injimies.  Ship's  Delegate  ments.  Motions  carried:  To  have  and  other  splinter  group  dis­ the  SS  Colabee,  just  sailed  into  town. 
Samsel  joined  in  the  discussion.  delegates  check  slopchest  and  rupters  in  the  SIU._ Ship's  Dele­
2 
2 
2 
Considerable  interest  has  been  see  that  lava  soap  is  ordered;  gate  was  told  that  shore  gang 
Steve Piliak, 
the well­dressed guy, is in town 
. . . Red  Shea, 
that  each member  using  washing  will  paint  the  quarters  and  that 
• shown in  these  safety  talks. 
a 
happy 
guy, 
is 
now 
voyaging 
aboard 
the 
tanker, 
SS  Bull 
machine, contribute  twp  dollars  if  anyonss­has  anything  to  say 
2  2  ^2 
Run 
. 
. 
. 
Tony 
Apalino, 
another 
good 
imion 
man, 
says 
the 
ALCOA  PEGASUS,  Feb.  13—  to  ship's  fund  for  iJpkeep.  In  against it,  the matter  would have  best  nms  he  can  think  of  is  grabbing  a  scow  for  the  Mediter­
to 
be 
taken 
up 
upon 
return 
and 
J. T. Spivey,  Chairman; D. Clark,  discussion  on  washing  machine. 
ranean  ports  or,  as  second  choice — the  European  run  ... 
Secretary.  Engine  Delegate  re­ Electrician  volunteered  to  check  a  report  made  to  the  Patrolman. 
Timmy  McCarthy  is  in  town,  smiling  as  ever  .  .  .  We  are 
No 
beefs 
pending. 
ported  that  one  man  had  been  price  of  new  motor,  also  to  see 
wishing  speedy  recovery  to  Brother  N.  A.  Cobb  who  is  going 
2  2  2 
left  in  Barbadoes  as  a  result  of  Chief  Engineer  or  Captain  to 
to 
be  drydocked  for  about  half­a­year  over  in  Holland,  Michi­
illness.  Crew  voted' unanimously  find out  if  discount  could  be  had  ALCOA  CAVALIER,  Feb.  12  gan  .  . . Tony  Zalewski,  who  has  been  sailing  tankers  every 
to  expell  Trotskyites  and  com­ by  ordering  through  shipchand­ • "­Tex  Krohn,  Chairman;  Andy  now  and  then,  is  in  town  with  his  cigar  . . .  Other  Brothers  in 
munists.  Discussion  on  compul­ er.  Rec  room  to  be  used  for  Stephens,  Secretary.  Overtime  town  axe:  Mitchell  Milefski,  Fred  Paul,  Bill  Dunham,  Big 
sbry  vacations.  Members  said  card  playing  and  bull  sessions.  disputes  reported  in  Deck  and  .  Dutch  Bolz  . .  .  Andy  Havrilla  and  Eddie  "1  Save  Coins,  Too" 
Engine Departments.  Motion  car­
they  thought  it  good  idea  to  ro­
ried 
making  ­it  obligatory  for  all  Saul shipped out  on an  Alcoa  scow . . . Next  trip will  be better 
tate  jobs,  especially  on  passen­
hands  to  attend  ship's  meetings,  for  Charles  Dutch  Palmer.  He's  hoping  he  won't  have  hospi­
ger* ships.  Many  members  spoke 
talization  again  and  have  to get  off  the  ship ... A  few  weeks 
vote  was  38  for,  20  against.  Sug­
out  against  credit  unions,  citing 
ago, 
the  West  Coast  Brother,  Rqd  Beers  was  in  town .  . . Pete 
gested  that  action  be  taken  to 
specific  instances  where  other 
Gonzalez, 
the  Cook  without  a  cookbook,  is  off  the  SS  Puerto 
put  another  hand­rail  along  lad­
unions  had  experienced  failme 
Rico 
for 
one 
trip. 
der  leading  from  the  door  near 
of  men  to  meet  notes&gt;  Others 
2 
2 
2 
the galley  to  our  deck. Suggested, 
held  that  credit  vuiions  are  not 
Eddie 
Nooney 
and 
Ray 
Queen 
grabbed 
the  SS  Black  Eagle 
that  Messman  be  compensated 
adaptable  to  seamen's  way  of 
22  2 
on 
the 
Eiuropean 
run. 
Two 
humorous 
guys 
who  will  grab  any 
for 
cleaning 
up 
the 
messhall 
af­
life.  Vote  was  100  per  cent  WARRIOR,  Feb.  12—F.  P.  Jef­
scow, 
any 
run 
. 
. 
. 
Brother 
John 
Nelson 
just 
came  back  from 
ter 
the 
movies. 
Men 
were 
re­
fords.  Chairman;  Gordon  H.  Bil­
against  the  idea. 
Rotterdam 
and 
other 
ports. 
In 
Rotterdam 
he 
saw 
some 
beautifully­
minde'd 
that 
contributions 
for 
bo,  Secretary.  Motion  carried 
2  2  2 
made 
ship 
models 
of 
square­riggers 
which 
were 
not 
priced  too 
ship's 
fund 
should 
be 
turned 
TRINITY,  Feb.  4—J.  B.  Bar­ that  Andy  Gowder  take  full  re­
expensively 
. 
. 
. 
Here 
are 
some 
of 
the 
best 
stewards 
department 
over 
to 
Ship's 
Delegate. 
nelt.  Chairman;  C.  L.  Brown,  sponsibility to  see to  the two­dol­
Brothers  who  are  anchored  in  this  town—Michael  Gottschalk,  De 
2  2  2 
Secretary.  No  beefs  reported  by  lar  donation  from  each  crew­
Forest  Fry,  Robert  Rogerson,  Frank  Wall,  George  Kittchner,. Harry 
member 
to 
the 
March 
of 
Dimes. 
EVELYN, 
Feb. 
5—E. 
R. 
SmUh, 
department  delegates.  Ship's 
Delegate  O.  W.  Rhoads'  resigna­ Each  delegate  to  Collect  from  his  Chairman;  C.  Mitchell,  Secre­ Earl,  and  Peter  Naujalis. 
2 
2 
2 
tion accepted  with vote  of  thanks  respective  department.  Steward  tary.  All  delegates  reported 
The  membership  in  our  halls  and  aboard  ships  throughout 
for  job  well  done.  Delegate  to  to  collect  from  topside.  Receipt  everything  in  good  order.  Mo­
see  Port  Captain  about  changing  to  be  i&gt;osted  on  bulletin  board.  tion  carried  to  discuss  and  draw  the  world  have  realized  that  the  question  of  boycotting  the 
Panamanian  ships—ships  owned  and  operated  profitably  by 
foc'sles  for  Black  Gang  so  they  Delegates  reported  everything  up a  statement  concerning  com­
can  be  called  out  without  dis­ ship­shape.  Each  delegate  to  pulsory  vacations  after  one  American  steamship  companies  —  has  been  endangering  the 
turbing  all  men.  Agreed  that  check  his  department  for  repair  year's  service  on  a  ship.  Motion  number  of  American  ships  operating  and  providing  the  neces­
sary  jobs  and  conditions  for  American  seamen.. The  present 
delegates  collect  funds  for  ex­ list.  Some  action  to  be  taken  in  carried  to  buy  a  washing  ma­
situation  of  great  unemployment  for  American  seamen  is  to 
penditures  for  telephone  calls,  regard  to  Night  Cook  and  Ba­ chine  with  voluntary  contribu­
telegrams  and  so  forth  made  in  ker's  and  Chief  Cook's  room,  tions.  Charles  Bedell  elected  quite  an  extent  due  to  these  Panamanian  ships  operating  in 
competition  with  American  ships  and  American  crews.  This 
since  it  is  too small.  To  be  taken  Ship's  Delegate.  General  opin­
carrying  out  their  duties. 
jp  with  Patrolman  on  arrival  ion  on  ship  is  that  vacations  is  an  excellent  example  of  ­why  every  member  of  the  SIU  is 
anxiously  protecting  the  SIU  against  various  threats  to  our 
BALTORE,^ Feb.^12  —  E.  L.  and  Master  to  be  notified  of  our  should  be  taken  when  due.  Sug­
existence fighting 
the  commies  so  they  can't  disrupt  our 
gested  that  three  delegates  con­
' •  
Eriksen,  Chairman;  J.  Taylor,  action. 
programs—helping 
other 
unions  who  need  aid,  etc.  When  any 
tinue 
to 
check 
iceboxes 
regular­
Secretary.  J.  W.  Busmurski,  el­
2  2  2 
ected  Ship's  Delegate/  Motion  SEATHAIN  NEW  JERSEY —  ly. Suggested  that Steward  check  membqa  protects  his  union,  he  is  protecting  his  job,  his  condi­
f  carried  that  Baltimore  Hall  be  Ray  Perry,  Chairman;  Pbiil  to find  out  about  new  sinks  for  tions,  and  the security  he  has  from  the  hiring  haU,  which  the 
Taft­Hartley  law  is  outlawing. 
if*  notified  of  member  jumping  ship  O'Connor, SsCTetary.  Ship's Dde­ Stewards  Department. 

CUT  and  RUN 

�Page Eis^ 

r HE'  S  EAF  A  RE RS  lt&gt;G 

nm^ 

THE  MEMBERSHIP  i^AKS 
!•  

idea Of  Vacation  Rule 
Viewed As Fair To All 

relieve  them  during  the  vaca­
tions. 
^ 
­  ""S' 
After  reading  all  these  opin­
.  Have  you  ever  seen  the  con­
ions  on  compulsory  vacations,  I  stitution  and  by­laws  of ­ the 
found  none  made  me so  mad  as  SIU?  If  so,  you  must  knOw  the 
that of  Mrs. Mary  Masters, which  second  paragraph  of  the  pre­
appeared  in  the  LOG  of  Mar.  amble,  which  says: 
"Whatever  right  belongs  to 
10,  1950.­
one  member  belongs  to  all mem­
; • I    would  like  to  know  if  her  bers  alike,  as  long  as  they  re­
husband  is  married  to  a ship  or  main  in  good  standing  in  the 
to  her.  I  would  sure  like  to  see  Union." 
my  husband  once  in  awhile. 
Here's  to  winning  the, vote  on 
How  about  you  other  wives? 
compulsory  vacations. 
•   IVfrs.  Masters  asks:  "Suppose 
Mrs. Ellen  Mize 
:  a­seaman's  wife  is  expecting  a 
(Ed.  Note:  Mrs.  Mize  is  the 
baby  in  April.  He  wants  to  take 
his vacation  at  that  time.  Would  wife  of  Seafarer  Cyril  Mize.) 
Sf  ;  it  be  right  to  compel  him  to 
take  his  vacation  in  February 
or  March?" 

WBICH  ONE  HAS  TbE  PONY? 

To' ilw  Edilor: 

Neponsit SIU Men 
15 
OFF  SCHEDULE 
K  I say  suppose  he  does  get  his  Ask Increase In 
i  vacation  in  February  or  March? 
!  What  more  could  you  ask  for?  Hospital Benefit 

Nobody Will Deny  5 
Shipping Pace In  5 
Savannah Is Slow 
To  the  Editor: 

It  doesn't  mattm:  really  because  these  hardridihg  Brothers 
believe  in  the  rotary  system. They're  Dickie  (left)  and  Eddie, 
sons  of  Seafarer  Joe  Brookes  of  Philadelphia.  Their  grand­
father  was  the  late  Eddie  Lynch,  former  SIU  Patrolman  who 
passed  away  recently  in  the  Baltimore  Marine  HospitaL 

Nagels  Becomes  US  Citizen^ 
Suggests  Firm  Alien  Stand 

It's  a  long  time  since  you  got 
a  letter  from  me  and  it's  a 
long  time  since 1 got  a  job.  First  . 
Ill  let  you  know  that  shipping 
in  Savannah  is  miserable.. 
In the last  edition  of  the  LO(?, 
the  Savannah  port  report  men­ &gt; 
tioned  good  shipping  in  Savan­
nah.  The  story  is  misleading  to 
Seafarers. 
I  am  out  of  work  and  hunting 
for  a  job  since  Oct.  5,  1949  and  •  
twice  went  to. the bottom  of  the  r 
shipping  list  here.  Since  Decern­  . 
bar  1948  we  shipped  out  of  the  i 
Hall  one  Steward,  one  Third 
Cook  and  several  messboys  in 
the Stewards  Department. 
Is  that  good  shipping? 
The  port  of  Savannah  is  full  : 
of  ships  —  Norwegian,  English,_^ 
Greek,  tankers,  Lykes  Brothers' 
and  of  every  t3T)e,  except  SIU  • :   
ship^. 
Stay  away  from Savannah. 
­
Olto  PreusslSr 

'  Babies  do  not  always  show  up  To  the  Editor: 
» 
at  the  correct  time.  Maybe  your 
j!  ­'husband  even  gets  his  vacation  On  behalf  of  our  members  in 
(Ed.  Note:  Savaimah  port 
I'  in  April  and  he  wants  to  be  the  hospitals,  I  wish  to  suggest 
paperl,  I would suggest  we  help  reporta  have consistently  men­ ­
5  back  on  the  ship  in  May.  Okasr,  that  an  immediate  increase  in  To  the  Editor: 
them  in  every  way  possible.  But 
be  in  order. 
so  your  baby decides  to wait  un­ benefits  •would 
 
turned the fact, that shipping, in 
I have  been  reading up  on  the 
til  May.  It  has  happened,  you  Three  doUars  a  week  for  so­ alien  situation  in  the  April  T  if  they  don't,  or^if  they  are  way 
^ Jhat port'has been, badi Brother 
know.  Are  you  any  better  off?  called  hospital  expenses  are  in­ .issue  of  the  SEAFARERS  LOG  over five  years  and  have  done 
nothing  more  about  it,  I  suggest  Preuuler is obviously  referring 
5  Compulsory  vacations  don't  sufficient.  A  package  of  cigar­ and  I  would  like  to  say  some­ that  they  be  barred  or  kicked 
to the  report which  staled thatw 
I?  mean  you  have to  stay  on  a ship  ettes  each  day  at  20  cent a  pack,  thing  about  if. 
out. 
a 
few 
stamps and stationery 
and 
shipping improved slightly dur­
1  for  a  year,  you  know.  If  you 
Jack  Nagels 
I  was  an  alien  myself  until 
ing  the  period  it  cevesedi  but. 
h/^ant to see grandpa  or  grandma,  a  daily paper  rxm  into  more than  March  13  of  this  year.  On  that 
5  i  i  have  hubby  get  off  his  ship  and  three  dollars  a  week,  leaving  no  diay  I had the  pleasure  of  chang­
eddied  that  "shipping  is  slow 
margin. 
,  go  see  them. 
neverthriess."  As  for  foreign 
ing  my  citizenship  to  American, 
; 
If  it  is  so  important  to  go  I  imderstand  that  an  increase  thaidc  God. 
ships, 
like  the  Norwegian 
: 
anywhere  at  a  particular  time  is  contemplated  for  about  Sep­
which  pay  $4Q  a  month  for  a 
f  of  the  year,  as  some  seem  to  tember  or  October,  when  the  Before  I  became  a  citizen  of 
this 
country, 
however, 
I 
once 
hospital 
fund 
is 
expected 
to 
be 
Wiper's 
job,­  Savannah  is  no 
15 vfliink,  then  your  vacation  pay 
heard 
another 
alien 
say: 
"Citi­
paid 
from 
the 
Welfare 
Fimd. 
different from  any  of  the other 
^ J  isn't  so  important. 
*
zenship?  To  heck  with  it.  I  got 
ports,  except 
it is smaller 
5  Any  man  who  lays  down  on  In  the  meantime,  however,  I  my  five  years  but  I'll  ride  the 
the  job  just  because  he  know.s  feel  our  present  hospital  fuifd  gravy  train  and  let  them  pay  To  the  Editor: 
and  the  problem  is  therefore 
.ihe  is  getting  off  the  ship  when  can  pay  five  dollars  per  week 
I 
wish 
to 
thank 
my 
Union 
accentiuted. 
This  is  partly the 
the  taxes." 
Khe  reaches, port  isn't  much  of  a  and  still  leave  a  good  balance. 
Brothers 
for 
all 
they 
have 
done 
result  of  the  government's; 
Until the  time  the  Welfare  fimd  That  hurt  bad,  because  at  that 
fUhion  Brother. 
I# 
takes  over  I  am  sure  our  mem­ particular  time  I  was  in  the  for  me  during  my  illness  here  faRuze  to xscognize  the  acute­
| 
­ 
BETTER  CHANCE 
bership  would  be  100  percent  in  midst  of  taking  out  my  papers  in  the  Savannah  Marine  Hospi­ ness  of  the problem  of  the  US 
tal.  If  it  had  not  been  for  my 
With  compulsory  vacations  a  favor  of  this  increase  without  and  if  it  hadn't  been for  the fact  Brothers  and  SIU  Port  Agent  merchant  marine,  epmething  ^ 
that  we  were  on  an  SIU  ship,  Bud Bryant, I might  not  be  alive 
j| maiv  will  stand  a  much  better  red  tape,  delay  or  voting. 
unions  have  no  control  over 
j 5  chance  of  getting,  another  ship  A  resolution  tnging  this  in­ I  think  I  would  have  knocked  today, so  I want  you  all to  know 
or. responsibility for.) 
crease  has  been  adopted  by  SIU  the  guy  in  the  kisser. 
i  when  his  vacation  is  over. 
how  grateful  I  am. 
I  would  like  to  make  a  sug­
Seamen  have known for  many  members  in  this  hospital. 
When  I  am  discharged  from 
gestion  to  general  headquarters  the  hospital I hope to  thank each 
years  that  they  were  paying  off 
WiUiam  A.  Padgett 
at  the  next  port  and  they  didn't 
US  Marina. Hospital  that  somehow  or  other  a  check  one  of  you  personally.  I  also 
be  made  and  that  those  aliens  want you  to know  that, any time 
become  careless  because  of  it. 
Neponsit,  L. I. 
who  have  their  seatime  be 
Mrs.  Masters  suggests that  the 
(Ed. note:  This letter  was al­ Iduntly  askfed  what  their  inten­ any  of  you  nieed  similar  help, 
menibership.  allow  seamen  to  so  signed  by  15  other  book 
ail you  need do  is caU  upon  me.  To  the  Editor: 
' 
tions  are  in  connection  with  ob­
take  their  vacations  and  then 
The  hospital  people  were  People  often  ask  what  part  of 
retui­n  tn  them  after  the  vaca­ members  hospitalized  in  Ne­ taining  their  citizenship. 
amazed  at  the  response  of  the  New  Orleans  Moon  Koims,  thai 
If  they  want  to  take  out  their  Mood  donors  and  everybody  has 
­  tion is over.  Other seamen would  ponui.) 
Bing  Crosby  of  the  SIU,  comes 
been  very  complimentary  about  from. Th6 fact  is that  Moon does 
the  Union  because  of  it. 
not  come from  New  Orleans. 
I.  would  like  very  much  to  He's  just  a  big,  overgrown  coun­
have  this  put  in  the.  LOG  as  I  try  boy. 
dion't  know  how  else  I can  show 
Moon  was  bom  in  a little one­
my  deep  appreciation  for  every­
horse 
to'wn  near  Shrevepprt, La., 
surance,  with  rotary  shipping  as  to  come  home for  the  rare  visits  thing. 
To ibe  Editor: 
Mid 
moved to New 
Orleans, when 
H.  L.  Rogers; 
conducted  in  the  SIU  Hiring  we  now  have?  What  would  be 
he  was  a  pup  (six  years  old). 
Please let one  mother  add  her  Halls,  that  our  menfolk  would  their  chances  of  getting  andther 
He was brought  up on  the' down­
voice  to  the  protest of  the  mem­ be  given  a  fair  chance  for  a  ship,  wit  hthe Hiring  Halls gone? 
town  side  of .. Canal  Street  and 
bers  of  the  SIU  regarding  the  ship  whenever  they  paid  off  a  With  answers  so  varied  and 
for 
the  past  12  years  has  hung 
recent  lower  court  ruling  that  ship  and  came  home  to  their  our  feeling  of  comfort  at  stake, 
his  hat  in  the frish  Channel 
Aend 
in 
the 
minutes 
of 
the  Hiring  Halls  were  a  viola­ families. 
I  think  every  mother  and  wife  your  ship's  meeting  to  the  (uptown  side).  But  Moon  claims 
tion, of  the  Taft­Hartley  Act. 
should 
protest  this  outrage  New  York HalL  Only in  that  that  doesn't  make  him  an  Irish­
END  OF  SECURITY 
I  have  always  regarded  the  With  the  Hiring  Halls  out  of  against  personal  security  and  way can  the  membership act  man. 
' .ifine  spirit  of  fair  play­and  the  .operation  and  the  chance  of  dis^  liberty. 
­ on  your  reconimsndations, 
He's  always  bragging  about 
Mrs. Anne  C. Verner 
ii good  sportsmanship  in  the  ope­ crimination  and  favpritism.  in 
and  then the  minutes can  be  being  a  full­blooded  Cherokee 
Ocean  Springs,  Miss 
ratibii  of  these  halls  as  truly  in  shipping,  we  feel  t|jat  our  se­
printed  in  the  LOG  for  the  liidiaiij  and  tliat  orie  of  liis  aii­
5 the  American  tradition. 
(Ed.  Note:  Mrs.  Verner  is 
jcurity  would  be  gone, 
benefit  of  a!!^  otheir  SIU  cestors  made Sitting  BuU  get  up &gt; 
cknwa.­..  • 
Midrtra/•  
;  We mothers and  wives of  mer­ .  Are  we  going  to  dread  seeing  the  nveihei;  ol Seafairer  Frank 
^ichant  seamen  have  had  the  as­ cur  loved  ones  leave  the  ships  L.  Vemer.)  •  

Eoga^ Grateful 
For Brothers' 
'Life Saving' Aid 

BOYER BREAKS OUT MORE FACTS ON
HISTORY OF 'MOON*

Family Security Hinges On Continued Use 
Of  Hiring  Halls, Says  Seafarer's  Mother 

Send Those Minutes 

�'  ­ 

WW' 

FridSf,  A.i^ 81,  1980 

Page  Nine 

THE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Vacation  Rule  Advocate  Says  Seamen, 
Europe  Run  Nourishes 
Red  Campbell's  Gripes  Shore  Workers  Face  Different  Problems 
any specific  time  of  the  year,  but  make  it  necessary  for  him  to 
rather  he  must  adjust  his  plans  exceed  the  12­month  clause. 
I  have  written  previously  on  to  the  time  of  the  year  his  va­
To Ihe  Editor! 
Secondly,  since  it  seems  defi­
the 
vacation  issue,  but  at  the  cation  falls  due. 
Being  of  found  mind  and  body,  and  having  the  papers  to 
nitely 
agreed  by  everyone  that 
prove  it,  why  do  I  start  a  new  year  under  the  Waterman  baniur?  time  the  controversy  was  yet  in  In  practically  ^y  other  in­ homesteaders  comprise  only  a 
With  a  mild  blare  of  trumpets,  an(i  under  a  shower  of  hominy  the  embryonic  stage.  Since  then  dustry,  employees  are  not  re­ very  small  segment  of  our  mem­
grits  I  took  my  services  to  the  SS  City  of  Alma.  I'm  overpaid  but  the  issue  has  broadened  consid­ quired  to  work  over  the  Christ­ bership,  it  necessarily  follows 
I'm  worth  it.  Waterman  is  the  type  of  company  you  don't  like  or  erably and  as more  members and  mas  holidays  and  they  can  cele­ that  a  compulsory  vacation  rule 
dislike,  you either  hate  it  or .ybu don't  know it. I  don't  know  what  non­members  are  taking  an  in­ brate  at home  with  their families  would  be  in the  best  interests  of 
terest  in  the  proposal  and  new  and  friends,  but  a  seaman  may 
I'd  do  without  them,  but  I'd  rather. 
•  ­  ' 
facts 
presented,  1  would  like  to  be  half  waf  around  the  world  the  majority. 
This  trip  biting  your  naUs  is  absolutely  necessary  to  nourish­
Most  homesteaders  will  home­
ment.  In ^ome  ports  we  have  to  borrow  garbage  from  other  ships  comment  further. 
at  that  time  of  the  year  and  stead  only  on  certain  ships  and 
so people  will  think  we  are  eating.  In  the  future  please  send  your  In  the first  place,  1 notice  that  Christmas  is  just  another  nostal­ runs.  Their  attitude  seems  to  be: 
CARE  packages  to­the  nearest  Waterman  ship.  As  for  the  linen  some  of  the  arguments  especial­ gic day  to him. 
"To  hell  with everyone  else, hoo­
'on  these  ships,  I'm  not  saying  it's  vmdersized,  but  Waterman  is  ly  those  submitted  by  wives  of  As  for  a  man  wishing  to  take  ray  for  me."  Is  that  good  unior?­
the  only  outfit  that  gets  its laundry  done  by  "Di­Dee  Service,  Inc."  somfe  members,  have  a  tendency  a  certain  time  of  the  year  off,  ism?  If  they  get  off  a  ship  after 
&gt;Our  towels  are  so  thin  they  only  have  one  side.  Another  item  4o  classify  the  occupation  of  a  if  the  situation  is  so  desperate  a year  they  will not  be left  with­
John  B  turns  his  back  on  are  the  repair  lists.  I  know  there's  a  /eaman  the  same  as  that  of  he  should  be  willing  to  forfeit  out a  job like a  shoreside worker. 
leaky  pipe  over  my  seat  in  the  messroom. 
shoreside  workers.  Such  is  def­ the  time  he  has accumulated  for 
Everyday  I  eat  the  same  bowl  of  soup  three  times.  My  bunk  initely  not  the  case.  We  must  a  vacation.  In  any  case  a  man  Their  names  will  go  on  the 
light  is  so  low  I  have  to  read  imder  the  pillow.  The  escape  panel  not  ignore  the  fact. that  a  sea^ ­should  always  be  entitled  to  the  shipping  list  and  they  can  catch 
in  our  foc'sle  couldn't  be  kicked  out  by  the  All­American  back­ man's  occupation  differs  from  privilege  of  putting  in  the  time  a  ship  as  well  as  the  next  man. 
fleld.  In  bad  weather  we  run  a  rodeo  back  aft.  We  get  thrown  that  of  any  other  in that  his  va­ needed  to  be  eligible  for  a  vaca­ Their  pay  wiU  be  the  same. 
up  in  the  air  so  much  we're  asking  the  Patrolman  to  collect  us  cation  cannot  be  arranged  for  tion,  even  if  the  circumstances  1 don't  think  the  company  will 
&lt;r&lt; 
shed  any  tears  if  you  leave  and 
flight  pay. 
if  a  man  is  so  much  in  demand 
Before  heading  for  Nothem  Europe  we  made  a  coastwise  run 
by 
a  company  he  can  get  a  li­
through  the  Gulf.  The  favorite  port  seemed  to  be  Galveston.  The 
cense 
and  stand  a  good  chance 
daily  stream  of  crew  members  to  Post  Office  St.  was flmazing. 
of 
sailing 
topside,  where  we 
What's  more  amazing  they're  never  canying  any  mail.  The  choice 
have  a  good  example  of  what 
hangout  is  the  ? ? ?  Club.  It's  an  imderground  affair  catering  to 
homesteading  leads  to. 
moles  and  prairie  dogs.  And  what  a  tough  spot  it  is.  They  close 
on  Sundays  so  they  can  pump  the  blood  out  of  the  cellar.  One  To  the  Editor: 
are  a  1,000  of  our  Libertys;  2,000  The men  who  homestead  make 
Betrayed  by  President  Tru­ others  are  up  the  river,  rotting  it  tough  for  the  members  who 
man,  deceived  by  Maritime  Com­ away.  "While  a  100­odd  tramps  like  to  get  6ff  occasionally  to 
mission,  disliked  by  the  landlub­ are  only  left,  begging  for  car­ visit  their  wives  and  children  or 
bers  in  Senate  and Congress,  dis­ goes  and  crying,  in  vain,  for  friends. 
I  agree  with  the  member  with 
criminated  against  by  our  ex­ subsidies. 
a 
large  family  who  wrote  to  th» 
Meantime, 
one 
of 
the 
mightiest 
porters  and  importers,  prejudiced 
against  by  our  newspaper  edit­ empires  in  the  world,  stretching  LOG  that  if  a  man  cannot  put 
ors—^we,  the  American  seamen,  from  Behring  Straits  to  Berlin  enough  aside  in  a  year  to  last 
a  himdred­thousand  of  us,  who  Bridgehead,  is  busy  building  him  until  he  gets  another  ship^ 
kept  the  ships  sailing  through  ships  and  subs,  and  will  have  in  then  something  is  wrong  in Den­
the  war,  are  on  the  beach  and  1952  a  thousand  schnorkels  on  mark. 
no  longer  wanted  to  man  our  the  job  and  infesting  the  seas.  1  don't  know  of  any  member 
R.  J.  Peterson  of  ofu:  Union  who  is  indispen­
ships.  American  seamen,  used  as 
minor  defect  is  the  poor  ventilation.  One  night  there  was  so  much  a  commodity  in  wartime,  have 
sable.  There  are many  competent 
smoke  they  had  to  groimd  the  balloon  dancer  jfor  three  hours. 
been  displaced  by  foreigners  in  Erazo  Convalescing 
men,  also  with  wives  and  chil­
Our  ports  of  call  in Europe  were  La  Havre,  Dunkerque,  Brem­ peacetime. 
dren  who, 1 am  sure,  will be able 
en,  Rotterdam  and  Antwerp.  Being  a  firm  believer  in  the  North  Twice,  in  two  World  Wars,  In His  Brooklyn  Home  to fill  the  vacancies  when  they 
Atlantic  Pact  I  withhold  any  condemnations  of  our  friends  to  the  our  government  has  appealed  to 
take  vacations.  It  is  a  recipro­
East  For  recreational  purposes  on  the  way  over  the  crew  conduct­ our  patriotism  to  man  the  ships,  To  the  Editor: 
cal  proposition.  There  are  other 
ed the  famous  tobacco  test  with  slop  chest cigarettes. The  outcome,  to  sail  them  across  the  ocean  in  1  want  to  thank  all  the  Union  companies  and  other  ships. 
seven  out  of  10  preferred  Camels—the  other  three  preferred  convoys,  to sally  forth  from  port  Brother^  who  called  upon  me  Admittedly,  compulsory  vaca­
women. 
and  brave  the  sub­infested  sea,  while  1  was  in  the  Staten  Is­ tions  will  not  create  jobs,  but 
The  trip  progressed  with  only  a  few  minor  injuries.  One  AB  ­making  sortie  after  sortie. 
land  Marine  Hospital. 
it  will  bring about  a better  turn­ ' 
lost,  the  tip  of  his  tongue.  He  was  licking  the  bowl  in  the  Mix­ And  twice,  too,  after  the  two  1  imderwent  two  operations  over in the  jobs we  already havet. 
master  and  forgot  to  shut  the  motor  off.  However,  at  present  we  World  Wars,  our  government  and  was  discharged  on  March  1  feel  sure  that  if  we  are  not 
are confronted  with a. serious situation.  Half  the  crew  has diarrhea,  has  betrayed  us  in a  manner  in­ 28.  1  lost  a^few  pounds,  but  1  trying  to  live  beyond  our  means; 
the  other  half  has  constipation—gad!  If  we  could  only  strike  a  compatible  with  honor  and  dig­ feel  okay  now. 
or  are, not  trying  to  get  ritai 
happy  medium. 
nity  of  the  United  States.  Gone  I'll  be  home  for  the  next  45  quick  and  are  not  too  selfi^ 
Red  Campbell  foreign,  given  away  on  the  sly.  days,  so I'd  like  my  friends  and  about  letting  our  Brother  mem­
former  shipmates  to  visit  me  at  bers  take  their  turn  on  thosp 
my  home  at  17  Moore  St.,  "certain  jobs,"  we  will  all  get ^ 
Hospital  Patients 
along  imder  the  12­month  vaca­ •  
Brooklyn,  New  York. 
When  entering the hospital 
Brother  Palmer  has  also  been  tion  ruling. 
notify  the  delegates  by  post­
discharged  from  the  hospital  and  Let's  vote  for  it! 
card.  giving  your  name  and •   Tony  Viera  was  operated  on. 
Fred  T.  Miller 
the  number  of  your  ward. 
SS 
Kenyon  Victory 
Pedro  J.  Erazo 
To  the  Editor: 

Uncle  Sam  Asleep At  Post 
In World Shipbuilding Race 
y

Staten  Island  Hospital 

JUleo, Now h lie Mmme IhspNa/s 
These are  the Union  Brothers currently  in the marine  hospitals. 
as  reported  by  the  Port  Agents. These  Brothers find  time  hanging 
heavily  on  iheir  hands,  JDo  whitf  you  can  to  cheer  them  up  by 
writing  them. 
BALTIMORE  MARINE  HOSP. 
J.  R.  CNAGEY 
M.  J.  LUCAS 
R.  FREY 
H.  DUFFY 
J.  TAURIN 
C.  HANSON 
E.  MATHEWS 
S,  SHACK 
J.  MACK 
W.  D.  WARMACK 
L.  T.­  CAMPBELL 
M.  D.  WATT  ' 
J.  YUKNAS 

C.  P.  SLIM  THOMPSON 
C.  W.  GOODWYN 
HENRY  BECKMAN 
T.  MAYNES 
FRANK  KUBEK 
THOMAS  FRAZONE 
F.  M.  OTT 
S.  INTEGRA 
JOHN  WYMOND 
E.  Y.  BULIKA 
A.  VEIERA 
H.  J.  OUT 
O.  P.  OAKLEY 
MICHAEL  PARACHIV 
T.  F.  R02UM 

BTATEN  IIL^^D^HOSPITAL 
C.  ESOLAN 
NEPONtlT^H^PITAL 
HENRY  WATSON 
WILLIAM  PADGETT 
FREDERICK  PEACE 
MATTHEW  BRUNO 
J.  F.  GAMBLICH 
MALVIN  COLLINS 
J.  BLOMGREN  , 
JAMES  RUSSELL. 
J.  B.  PURVIS 
R.  A.  BLAKE 
J.  H.  O'DANIELS  JR. 
1  EStlBAN  LOPEZ 

/ou can  contact  your  Hos­
pital  delegate  at  the  Staten 
Island Hospital  at  the follow­
ing  times: 
Tuesday  —  1:30  to  3:30  p.m. 
(on  5th  and  6th .floors.) 
Thursday —  1:30 to  3:30 pun. 
(on  3rd  and  4th floors.) 
Saturday  —  1:30  to 3:30  p.m. 
(on  1st  and  2nd floors.) 

JOHN  PADZIK 
J.. DRISCOLL  •  
JOHN  T.  EDWARDS 
FRED  ZI5IGER 
V.  FERRER 
R.  A.  LILLAK 
R.  BLATTINO 
JIMINEY 
TULL 
ELI  DUTCHEN 

ft ft 
NEW  ORLEANS  HOSP. 
J.  LYONS 
w;  HANSTUCH 
R.  CRUZ 
E.  NAVARRE 
F.  LANDRY 
H.  F.  LAGAN 
L.  WILLIS 
L.LANG 
J.  H.  FORT 
T.  A.  CARROLL 

ABOARD  A WATERMAN  SHIP 

C.  EJfeLL 
A.  O.  ROY 
G.  NEWMAN 
O.  NORM 
L.  GOLEMDIEWSKI 
A.  J.  LAPEROUSE 
A.  F.  KOTHE 
R.  N.  FRENCy 
L.  TICKLE 
M.  FIELDS 
J.  HULL 
E.  W.  WALDEN 
W.  CARROLL 

ft ft ft 

SAVANNAH  HOSPITAL 
J.  MAXEY 
J.  (CHUBBY)  DAVIS  " 
CARL  SMITH 

ft ft ft 

BOSTON  HOSPIT^ 
FRANK  ALASAVICH 
PETER  KOGOY 

These  SIU  crewmembers  of  the  SS  Beauregard  took  ad­
vantage  of  clear  skies  to  get  together  for  a  "shot"  on  deck. 
Photo  was  taken  for  the  LOG  by  Joseph  L.  Duke,  Junior 
X  Third  Assistant  on  the  vessel. 

�.mm"'" 

Pa#B Ten 

Mm' 
r,.­

LOG

The  Seafarers  In 
By  JOHN  BUNKER 

'

War 

torpedo  till  it  was  all  but  on  top  of  them,  and 
That  was  the last  he saw  of  the  trio, for  they 
then 
there 
was 
only 
time 
for 
a 
startled 
cry 
or 
went  down' with  the ship. 
xM;­
Caribbean Camiyal 
two. 
On  watch  below,  when  the  torpedo  hit,  was 
(Part  Two) 
The  steel  tube  bulleted  through  the  lifeboat,  the  4^ to  8;  Second  Assistant  Franc&amp;  Amberger, 
Although  U­boats  liked  best  to  bag  a  baiixite  and  hit  the steel  hull  of  the  tanker  in  an  ex­ Fireman  Robert  Baylis  and  Oiler  Joe  Lewnuk. 
Joe  escaped  —  miraculously,  it  seemed  —  by 
ship  or  a  tanker,  because  these  cargoes  were  so  plosion  that  stifiled  all  cries  or  shouts for  help, 
vital  to  the  war  effort,  they  weren't  at  all  blowing  boat and  men into a  myriad  torn  pieces  climbing  up  the  emergency  cable  ladder  to  the 
engineroom  skylight  before  the  engineroom 
choosey  about  their  targets—and  molasses  tank­ of  human  bodies  and flying  steel. 
It 
was 
one 
of 
the few 
known 
cases 
in 
which 
flooded and  the  Millinocket  settled  by  the stern. 
ers got  sunk  as well  as more "vital"  prey  during 
German 
submarines 
deliberately 
attacked 
life­
Seamen could  i^er tell when  their ship  might 
the war  in  the  Caribbean  and  the  Gulf  in  1942. 
boat 
occupants 
from 
American 
ships. 
get  hit  during  these  hectic  days, for  subs  gave 
The SS  Catahoula  of  the Cuba  Distilling  Com­
no  warning. 
SIX  SOS  CALLS 
pany,  a favorite  among  SIU  men  who  liked  the 
Captain  Homer  Lanford  was  pulling  the ­
senorita  rvm,  was  hit  on  April  5,  to  be  followed 
Before  the  Carrabulle  sank,  Sparks  managed 
whistle 
cord  of  the  SS  Del  Mxmdo,  to  turn  a 
by  its sister  ship  the  SS  Carrabulle  on  May  26.  to  get  out  six  SOS  calls,  then  ran  out  of  the 
There  was a  full load  of  molasses in  the tanks­ radio  shack  onto  the flooded  deck  and  jumped  convoy  into  the  old  Bahama  passage  off  Cuba, 
when  this Mississippi  Shipping Cor^pany  freight­
of  the  Catahoula,  as  she  stood  north  from  San  overboard  just  as she  went  under. 
er 
got  a  torpedo  in  the  engineroom,  killing  all 
Pedro  de  Macoris,  Dominican  Republic,  toward 
Brave  were  the  men  who  volunteered  to  sail 
Wilmington, Del., in  the late afternoon of  a warm  their  old,  unarmed  ships  through  "U­boat  Lake"  hands  below. 
An  old  "Hog,"  the  Del  Mundo  was  "commo­
in  early  1942. 
clear  day  over  a  lazy,  beautiful  sea. 
dore" 
of  a  38­^ip fleet,  and  was  carrying  30 
On  the  20th  of  May,  the  George  Calvert,  a 
Two  men  were  on  lookout,  but  they  couldn't 
jsee  the  sub  waiting  for  them  against  the  glare  Bull  Line  Liberty,  Was  sunk  • ith a  loSs  of,  Polish  women  war  refugees  as  passengers.  A 
,  of  the setting  sun.  The first  torpedo  hit  on  the  three  men  while  bouiid  for  Bandar  Shapur  with  number  of  other  ships  were  sunk  in  the  same 
attack,  covering  the  sea  with  a  maze  of floating 
port side in a  terrific blast  that  blew up the deck  9,116  tons of  war supplies  for the Russians. 
Another  Bull  Line  ship,  the  Major  Wheeler,  debris. 
plates,  loosened  the  engine  room  bulkheads  and 
Captain  William  B.  Sillars,  of  the  Waterman 
disappeared  m  the  Caribb^m  to  become  an  un­
,  carried  away  the  catwalk. 
freighter  Afoundria,  sensed  pending  disaster  to^ J 
solved  mystery  of  the  sea. 
PITCHED  BATTLE 
And  there was the City  of  Alma of  the Water­ his  slilp  on  May  5,  1942,  when  the  vessel  was 
Being  one  of  the first  ships  equipped  in  some 
man  Company,  en  route  from  Port  of  Spain,  hit  by  a.sub  in  mid­afternoon  off  the  northwest 
fashion to fight  back against  the subs, the general 
' 
&gt; 
Trinidad,  to  Baltimore on June  2,  when  she  was  coast  of  Haiti. 
alarm  was  sounded;  and  a  complement  of  Navy 
hit  by  just  one torpedo from  an  unseen  submar­
SENSED  DANGER 
gunners manned  their  machine guns  so well  that 
ine. 
He  bad come  on  to the  bridge  just  a few  min­
the inquisitive Sub  had its periscopa shot away— 
Ripping a 40­foot  hole in the hull, the "tinfish"  utes before,  saying  to Second  Mate  James  Chat­
or so it  seemed from  the  deck  of  the tanker. 
almost  sliced  the freighter  m two, and  she  sank  field,  *T feel  t^t right  now  we  are  at  the  most 
Not  a  bit  daunted  by  the  prospect  of fighting 
so  speedily  that  ten  men  were  saved  only  be­ dangerous  stage  of  our  trip.  Keep  a  very  good 
a  raider  with  .30  caliber  pellets,  the  guncrew 
cause  they  had  jumped  clear  when  she  plimged,  lookout!" 
fired  away  till  they  consumed  200  rounds. 
later  climbing  aboard  a  ­Tferaft  which  had 
But  four  minutes  after  the first  torpedo,  the 
The Afoundria  had a  load of  bombs up forward 
broken 
loose 
and floated 
free. 
; 
sub let  them have another,  which found­ its mark 
Sparks  was  caught  in  his  shack,  sending  out  and  a  cargo  of  beans  aft.  Fortimately,  the  tor­
W: W-: forward of  the bridge  to starboard—showing  that  calls  for  help.  The  Skipper,  Second  Mate,  Chief  pedo  hit among  the beans.  All hands were saved.. 
the wary U­boat had made a  quick circuit  around 
By  the  end  of  July, submarine  sinkings in  the ­
Engineer,  First,  Second  and  Third  Assistant  En­
the ship for its second  try. 
Caritibean  and  the  Gulf  of  Mexico  had, been 
After  this  hit,  the  Catahoula  lost  no  time  go­ gineers  and  22  other  crewmen  were  lost  on  the  drastically  cut,  but  ships  continued  to  go  down 
ing  down,  and  was  under  water  fore  and  aft  in  City of  Alma. 
The  little  Millinocket,  Bull  Line,  was  warned  in  these  waters  right  up  to  the  end  of  the  war, 
little  more  than  60  seconds. 
and  among  them  were  freighters  manned  by, 
Two  of  the  crew  had  been, killed  in  the first  of  the  proximity  of  a  marauding  sub,  but  too  SIU  crews. 
Ifiast,  and five  more  were  crushed  when  the  late  to  save  herseK. 
It  is,  unfortunately,  impossible  in  this  account 
It  was five  minutes past five  in  the  afternoon 
' 
:stack  fell  athwart  the  starboard  lifeboat. 
r/r 
even 
to  mention  all  of  the  Union's  contracted 
One  lifeboat  and  one  raft  on  the  port  side  got  when Steward Ernest  Oxley stopped  by the wire­ ships that  went  down in  these tropic waters,  but 
%!'. 
' •  •  v 
away  safely  and,  thanks  to Sparks  having  stuck  less  room^and  read  a  message  which  had  just  not  to  be  forgotten  are some  of  the "oldtimers," 
V­.'­il 
by  his  post  to  get  off  four  calls for  help,  38  sur­ come  in  from  San Juan. The  radiogram  warned  including  the  Barbara,  sunk  with  considerable 
111  vivors  were  rescued  the  next  day  by ,  the  USS  that a  submarii^ was  in their  vicinity. 
And  correct  it  was, for  Steward  Oxley  had  no  loss  of­life  among  passengers  and  crews;  the 
Sturtevant. 
Alcoa  Carrier,  Alcoa  Partner,  Edith,  Lebore, 
Heroism  of  the  Radio  Operator  and  the  tragic  more  than  read  the warning of  danger  when  the  Alaskan  and  Antinous. 
»•  
death  of  the  Skipper  and  23  men  marked  the  ship  shuddered  from  a  torpedo  explosion  in  the 
^"sinking  of  the  Carrabulle,  which  tried  bravely  starboard  side aimd^ps. 
Another  episode  of  the  role  of  SIU  crews  in 
Oxley  ran  out  on dedc to see  the Skipper,  the 
to escape  from  a  U­boat  on  the  night  of  May  26, 
while  en  route  from  Good  Hope,  La.,  to  San  Chief  and  the  First  Mate  running  toward  the  World  War  XI  will  appear  in  the  nei^t  issue  of 
.V: 
­.Juan,  Puerto  Rico,  with  a  cargo  of  emulsified  life  rafts,  with  the Captain  shouting "Let  go  ^e  the  SEAFARERS  LOG. 
rafts.  It's  our  only  chance. Let  go  the  rafts." 
liquid  asphalt. 
The first  they knew  of  a U­boat's  presence was 
the  moan  of  a  siren  and  the  crack  of  a  shot 
tr  %  % 
across  the  bow. 
The  SS  Santore  got  hers  just 
CLOSE  RANGE 
outside 
of  an  Atlantic  port  and 
U­K: 
In a  moment  or  two, they  saw  the raider little  capsiaed  in  3  thinutetf,  trapping 
more than a ship's  length off  the beam,  where it  the  biaek  gang  below  deck.  For­
opened fire  on  them  with  a  light  gun,  throwing  tunate help  was  dose  by,  and 
it 
4. 
shell after shell into  the defenseless  tanker while  the  majority  of  the  crew  was 
saved. 
Chi 
the 
righf 
is 
a 
Coast 
the  general  alarm  summoned  all  hands  to  the  Guard  fmat  picking  SIU  men 
boats  and  the order  was  given  to  abandon  ship.  out  of  the  water.  For  some  of 
Th^ lowered away  as the nearby  U­boat  mov­ die  cr^, this  was  their  second 
ed around  to the  port  side and  opened fire  again,  sinking. 
the  shells  hitting  in  rapid  succession  against 
U­boat  Lake  was  a  happy 
deck  house  and  bridge. 
huntidg  ground  for  nasi  subs, 
As  the first  boat  pulled  away  from  the  ship's  and  the ocean floor was  merally 
side,  the  U­boat  commander  hailed  them  from  covered  with  American  si^M— 
and  American  seamen. But  how­
the conning  tower. 
ever short  were the ,odds against 
"Are  you  all  right?" he  asked.  . 
" 
them—and  they  were  ior  many, 
They  shouted  "no"—that  another  boat  was  many  months  unarm^  and  un­
still  preparing  to  cast  off.  They  heard  several  escorted—there  was  no  lade  df 
plnen, laughing on  the  raider's de&lt;d£,  even  while a  seanim  to  carry  suppBes~ and 
of  the werld­
second  torpedo  streaked  past  them  and  hea'cled  arms to all corners 
wide  battlefront. 
for  the^ lifeboat  that  was  jiist  now  shipping  its 
;pars  beside  the  sinking  Carrabulle. 
The  men  in  the  boat  probably  never  saw  the 

1 

?  I! 

frf.­r­j' 

%  %•  

�_ 
f;r. &gt;  ­rriday. AprU:^.'WSO'  ^ 

g  g.  g ^ A PAR EM  S  LOG 

Page Elerei^ 

NEW  ORLEANS  —  Chairman. 
with.  Progress  was  also  reported 
Leroy  Clarke,  23062;  Jlecording 
on  "the  welfare  fund  talks  and ; 
SecreiaxT,  George  Allen,  114; 
the  details  of  the  plan  should' 
Reading  Clerk,  Buck  Stephens, 
be  ready  for  presentation  to  the 
76. 
membership 
within  a  short  time. 
PORT­ 
REG. 
REG. 
REG, 
TOTAL 
SHIPPED  SHIPPED  SHIPPED  TOTAL 
Minutes  of  all  Brandi  meet­
The 
possibility 
of  a  strike  on 
DECK 
ENG. 
STWDS. 
REG. 
DECK 
EN&amp; 
StWDS.  SHIPPED 
ings  read  and  approved.  Secre­
the  waterfront  as  a  result  of 
20 
16 
15  '  51 
7 
7 
11 . 
25  the  East  and  Gulf  Coast ,opera­
tary­Treasurer's financial  report  Boston 
New York.,. 
104 
. 
94 
91 
289 
82 
104 
84 
270 
read  and  accepted.  Agent  re­
tors  refusal  to  give  MM&amp;P  the 
15 •   20 
22 
57 
13 
13 
9 
35  contract  in  effect  on  the  West 
ported  that  shipping  had  picked  Philadelphia....: 
92 
106 
98 . ^  296 
89 
83 
55 
227  Coast  was  discussed  in  the  re­
up  since  last  meeting  but  had  Baltimore 
26 
34 
.24 
84 
2 
— 
1 
3  port.  It  was  reported  that  the' 
not  reached  heights  enjoyed  in  Norfolk.......„ 
6 
8 
2 
.  16 
5 
5 
1 
11  AFL  Maritime  Trades  Depart­
previous  months.  There  were  Savannah:...... 
' 
(No  Figures  Received) 
(No  Figures  Received) 
seven  payoffs,  six  sign­ons  and  Tampa 
ment  had  pledged  all  out  sup­
32 
33 
29 
94 
17 
18 
14 
49  port  of  any  strike  that  might  be 
more  than  20  ships  hitting  here  Mobile..  .: 
44 
41 
81 
166 
74 
69 
99 
242  called  in  view  of  the  fact  that 
in­transit.  The  latter  helped  New Orleans....,, 
Galveston. 
43 
30 
32 
105 
^ 
27 
19 
21 
67  the  operators  stall  is  based!  on 
shipping,  as  about  15  of  the  in­
West 
Coast 
21 
27 
19 
67 
•
 ' 
' 19 
24 
17 
60 
transits  took  replacements.  The 
a  desire  to  smash  the  union.  The 
Del  Mundo  came out  of  the ship­ TOTAL 
strike 
deadline  has  been  set  for 
403 
409 
413 
1,225 
335 
342 
312 
989 
yard and  took  almost a  full crew. 
midnight,  Saturday,  April  22, 
The  outlook  for  the  coming  two 
Motion  carried  to  conciu­  in 
weeks  is not  too  good,  with  only  compulsory  vacations  to  be  sub­ can­ied  to  concur  in  committee's  ance  Committee.  The  report  said  Headquarters  report.  Motion  (by 
eight  scheduled  payoffs;  Two  of  mitted  to  Hea(iqu^ters  for  use  findings  on  member  accused  of  also  that  negotiations  with  Cit­ Oppenheimer)  carried  instructing 
'  these  ships" are  heading  for  the  in setting  up ballot. Elected  were  conduct  unbecoming  a  Union  ies  Service  on  working  rules  negotiating  committee  to  work 
boneyard.  The  Seatrain  Havana  R.  Gibbs,  H.~L.  M«Grath,  Deck;  man.  Sent  to  a  vessel  as  a  re­ were  in  progress,  with  only five  toward  a  vacation  clause  where­
is  still  in  Havana  locked  in  by  J.  Davis,  R.  L.  McKenzie,  En­ lief  Fireman,  this  man  accepted  points  remaining  to  be  settled.  by  payments  will  be  computed 
trouble  between  the  company  gine;  E.  Cjordon,  F.  Orjales,  the  pay,  then  disappeared  with­ In  order  to  give  CS  crewmen  on  the  basis  of  a  minimum  of 
and  the  railroads there. SIU  del­ Steward.  Motion  carried  to  per­ out  performing  any  work.  Com­ protection  on  the  working  rules  90  days  service,  instead  of  the 
egates  attended  the  Louisiana  mit  SUP  Branch  lo  move  into  mittee  ­suspended  him  for  90  as  soon  as  possible,  it  was  rec­ six­month  clause  now  in  effect. 
State  Federation  of  Labor  meet­ Baltimore  SIU  Hall.  Meeting  ad­ days  and  ruled  that  he  not  be  ommended  that  pact  be  signed,  Under  Good  and  Welfare,  there 
exclusive  of  the  points  in  dis­ was  discussion  on  a  variety  of 
ing.  Delegates  from  the  Lake  jburned  at  8:15  PM,  with  340  sent  on  any  relief  jobs  for 
period  of  two  years. 
agreement,  rather  than  hold  it  subjects  of  Union  interest.  Meet­
Charles  area  praised  the  SIU  in  membeiis  present. 
up  imtil each  one  had  been  dealt  ing  adjourned  at  8:30  PM. 
a&gt; 
i 
^ 
that  place  during  the  Cities  Ser­
NORFOLK  —  Chairman.  J. S. 
vice  beef,  and  the  Agent  said  MOBILE — Chairman,  J.  Car­
they  deserve  a  vote  of  thanks  roll,  14;  Recording  Secretary,  H.  White.  56;  Recording  Secretary, 
• ' US  assets  to  the  Union.  He  said  J.  Fischer,  59;  Reading  Clerk,  Ben  Rees,  95;  Reading  Clerk, 
Glen  Lawson,  39560. 
that  Bisso  tugmen  are  stUl  on  J.  Ward.  . 
Minutes 
of 
other 
Branch 
meet­
Minutes  of  all  previous Branch 
strike,  which  is  90  percent  effec­
ings 
read 
and 
accepted. 
Port 
meetings 
read  and  accepted.  Mo­
tive'  with  longshoremen,  the 
companies  and  the  NMJJ  coope­ Agent  reported  on shipping  pros­ tion  carried  to  concur  in  Head­
rating  with  the  M^W.  Volimteer  pects  for  the  coming  two  weeks,  quarters  report  to  the  member­
pickets  are  still  needed,  he  said.  listing  the  vessels  slated  to  hit  ship.  Secreta'Ty­Treasurer's fin­
AVIT  ARDOIN 
ROBERT  EDWARD  MORAWITZ 
Brother  Warren  urged  all  hands  the  port.  He  reported  on  the  ancial  report  read  and  approved. 
eligible  to  register  for  local  el­ three­day  State  Federation  of  Port  Agent  discussed  in  detail  Write  at  once  to  Miss  IsabeUe  Get  in  touch  with  your  Local 
ections  so  that  support  can  be  Labor  Convention  which  he  and  the  set  up  for  servicing  Cities  Vidrine,  Route  3,  Box  33,  Ville  Board,  No.  3,  400  E.  Lombard 
Street,  Baltimore2,  Maryland  ma­" 
given  to  friends  of  organized  la­ other  SIU  delegates  attended  in  Service  ships  entering  this  port.  Platte,  Louisiana. 
'bor.  Motion  carried  to  allow  Ste­ Montgomery.  He  also  informed  He  pointed  out  that  since  there 
*  *  * 
\  mediately,  inasmuch  as  they .jj 
have  you  listed  as  "delinquent." 
are only 
two 
CS company 
agents 
HENRY 
MEYERS 
'  phen  Miskow, who  was behind  in  meeting  that  he  and  other  SIU 
officials 
would 
attend 
a 
confer­
on 
the 
Atlantic 
Coast—^Norfolk 
*  *  * 
assessment,  to  register.  Motion 
C.  Sheridan  asks  that  you  call 
MILTON  KURKEMILIS 
­  earried  to  accept  committed^ rec­, ence  aimed  at  getting  some  of  and  Boston—with  proper  care  him  at  Still well  4­4930  in  New 
EDDY  BURNETT 
•   onunendatiohs  to  permit  four  the  ECA  cargoes  down  into  Gulf  this  would  mean  a  lot  of  jobs  York  City.  ' 
Please  contact  Benjamin  B.  j] 
­  members  to  reactivate  their  ports  for  shipment  abroad.  Mo­ for  this  post  and  the  Union.  Mo­
Sterling  or  Marvin  Schwartz  at 
'books.  Five  members  took  the  tion  carried  to  accept  Headquar­ tion  carried  to  concur  in  Head­
GERALD  J.  ARTIACO 
42  Broadway,  New  Yoric,  im­
Union  Oath  of  Obligation.  Under  ters  report  ^nd  Secretary­Trea­ quarters'  Reinstatement  Commit­
"Please  write  and  send  your 
Good and Welfare,  there was  dis­ surer's financial  report.  Meeting  tee's  report.  Excuses  were  re­ address  again;  it  has  been  mis­ mediately. 
*  *  * 
. cussion  on need  for registering  to  adjourned  at  7:40  PM,  with  282  ferr^  to  the  Dispatcher.  Motion  placed:  Mary." 
MIKE  ZEGLEN 
carried  to elect  two SIU Brothers 
vote,  the Cities  Service  beef,  the  members  in  attendance. 
"Write  to  me  c/o  the  New 
to  attend  Virginia  State  Federa­
MM&amp;P  beef.  Meeting  adjourned 
i.  ^  ^ 
HENRY  BECKMAN 
Orleans Hall. 
Your mother  wants 
SAVANNAH—Chairman, 
Jeff 
tion 
of 
Labor 
convention in 
Roa­
.  at  8:20  PM,  with  390  members 
This  Brother  is  now  in  Ward 
Gilleile,  37060;  Recording  Secre­ noke. Elected  were J. A.  Bullock  5B,  Staten  Island  Marine  Hos­ to  hear  from  you,  *oo:  Eddie 
present. 
tary,  J.  B.  Sellers,  38401;  ­Read­ and  J.  S.  White.  Under  Godd  pital  and  asks  that  his  former  Pendzimaz." 
4  4  4­
*  *  * 
BOSTON —Chairman,  A.  For­ ing, Clerk,  E.  M.  Bryant,  25606.  and  Welfare  there  was discussion  shipmates  visit  him  when  in 
AMILIO  SIERRA 
que,  48462;  Recording  Secretary,  Minutes  of  previous  meetings  on  servicing  Cities Service  ships.  New  York. 
Contact  Department  of  Wei­
Ben  Lawson,  694;  Reading  Clerk,  in  all  Branches  read  and  accept­ A  number  of  good  ideas  were 
*  *  * 
fare, 157  E.  67  Street,  New  York 
B.  Murphy, 39427. 
ed. Motion  carried  to  concur  in.  advanced.  Meeting  adjourned  at 
ROBERT  (Bob)  DAVIS 
Minutes  of  other  Branch  meet­ Secretary­Treasurer's  financial  7T50  PM,  with  84  members'  Get  in  touch  with  Pvt.  Frank  21,  New York. 
4*4 
•  
ings  read  and  approved.  Head­ report.  Agent  said  that  shipping  present. 
J. Schutz,  RA  18354141,  Hq.,  Hq. 
LESTER  MCHUGH 
quarters  report  to  the  member­ is  stiU  slow  in  this  port.  Sched­
ife  Sev.  Co.,  67th  Med.  Tank  Bn 
Sidney  J.  Swearingen,  412 
ship  read  and  concurred  in.  Ag­ uled  to  arrive­­ in  the  coming  G AL VES TO N — Chairman,  Camp  Hood,  Texas. 
Harwood, 
Orlando,  Florida,  has 
Keith 
Alsop. 
7311; 
Recording 
ent  discussed  shipping  in  the  two­week,  period  are  the  Topa 
*  *  * 
some 
of 
your 
belongings  and 
Secretary, 
C. 
M. 
TannehiU, 
Port  of  Boston,  which  has  been  Topa,  Alawai,  Inez,  Southstar 
JAMES  H.  SISIARER 
would 
like 
to 
send 
them  to  you. 
25922; 
Reading 
Clerk, 
R. 
WU­
fair.  Motion  carried  to  accept  and  the  SUP­contracted  Hawai­
A.  J.  Merz,  Claims  Agent  for 
bum. 
37739. 
4 
4 
4 
Secretary  ­  Treasurer's' financial  ian  Retailer.  Motion  carried  to 
Triton  Shipping  Company,  asks 
JUSTO  R.  VELAZQUEZ/ 
report.  Meeting  adjourned  at  concur  in  Headquarters  Report.  Motions  carried  to  concur  in  that  you  get  in  touch  with  him. 
Rose  Velazquez,  311 
Contact 
Headquarters 
report 
and 
Secre­
7:35  PM,  with 120  members pres­ Two  men  were  excused  from 
*  *  * 
W. 
29 
Street, 
New  York­  City, 
tary­Treasurer's financial 
report. 
the 
meeting. 
Under 
Good 
and 
ent.  , 
ARMANDO  DE  FERMO 
regarding your 
mother. 
Welfare,  it  was  stressed  that  Agent  discussed  shipping  in  this  "Mother  is  very  ill.  Please 
4  4  4 
BALTIMORE —Chairman,  A1  time  is  growing  short  for  those  port.  Motion  carried  to  buy  new  write,  home  at  once:  Sister  Yo­
NORBERT  PRUSZKA 
Btansbury,  4663;  Recording  Sec­ who  have  not  yet  registered  to  watercooler  for  the  Branch  Hall.  landa." 
Your  parents are worried  about 
retary,  G.  A.  Masthrson,  20297;  vote  in  the  coming  local  elec­ Meeting  adjourned  at  7:20  PM. 
*  *  * 
you. 
Reading  Clerk,  J.  Beresford,  tions.  A  large  • ,turnout  of  the 
*  *  * 
SAMUEL  F.  BRUNSON 
labor  vote  is  important  in  order  NEW  YORK—Chairman,  Lloyd  ­Write  your  mother  at  Fair ax, 
3860. 
Motion  carried  to suspend  reg­ to  elect  candidates  friendly  to  Gardner,  3697;  Recording  Secre­ S.  C. 
tary,  Freddie  Stewart,  4935; 
ular  prder  of  business and  go in­ organized  labor. 
• * 
  *  * 
Reading  Clerk,  Eddie  Mooney, 
a." 4;  4. 
RUSSELL  E.  INSCOE 
to  obligations  and  charges.  Wil­
Get  in  touch  with  Frank  R. 
liam  T.  EUwood  took  the  Union  PHILADELPHIA  —  Chairman.  46671. 
Oath  of  Obligation.  Charges  A.  S.  Cardtdlo,  24599;  Recording  Minutes  of  other  Branch  meet­ Klein,  5  Court  Square,  Long  Is­
were  read  and  trial  committees  Secretary,  Don  Rood,  41130;  ings  read  and  approved,  Secre­ land  City  1,  N.  Y.,  as  soon  as 
findings  were,  concurred  in.  Reading  Clerk,  D.  Hall,  43272.  tary­Treasurer's financial  report  possible. 
SS TINI 
Branch  minutes  read  and  ap­ Minutes  of  other  Branch  meet­ read  and  concurred  in.  Port  Ag­
(OcL.  1949  ­  Jan..  1950)­  ' 
*  *  * 
•   ALLEN  MYREX 
proved.  Several  men  excused  ings  were  read  and  accepted.  ent  discussed  shipping  in  the 
The  following  crewmembers 
from  meeting.  Motion  carried  to  Motions  carried  to  accept  Secre­ port,  which  he  described  as  fair.  Contact  your  home in  Garden­ have  money  due  them:  G. 
concur  in  Headquarters  report.  tary­Treasurer's  financial  report  Charges  read  and  referred  to  a  dale,  Alabama.  There  is  serious  Champlin,  DM;  J.  McGuffer, 
Port  Agent­discussed  .shipping.  and  Headquarters  report  to  the  trial committee.  Headquarters  re­ illness in .the family.' 
Oiler;  A.  Ramos,  FWT;  W.­Sing­
He said thait  SUP wished  to move  memberslup.  Agent  reported  that  port  recommended  that  commit­^ 
leton,  Wiper;  J. Bertiard,  Wiper* 
*  *  * 
WILLIAM  STYDINGER 
into  the  ^alfimore  Hall  because  shipping  has  slowed  down  a  bit  tee  be  elected  to  handle  vacatiop 
H. Conneil,  MM,  and  O. Richard, 
of  the adverse conditions in  ship­ these  past  two  weeks,  but  that  clause  beef.  Committee  to  be  Important  you . contact  Ade­ MM  Get  in  touch with  Mr.  Paul 
.  ping.  Motion  carried  to  elect  the 'affairs  of  the  port  were  in  elected  within*  one  week  and  laide  Becker,  713  S.  Clinton  Castelli,  Paymaster,  Carf^  Ltd., 
­  port  committee  frorp floor  of  good  shape  otherwise.,  Charges  that  it  also  be  authorized  to  Street,  Baltimore  24,  Maryland.  24  State  Street,  New  York  4^ 
meeting  to  draft,  resolution  on  were  read  and approved.  Motion  function  as  the  Quarterly  Fin­ Youi' mother  is ill. 
New  York. 

A&amp;G Shipping From March 29 To April 12 

lipieyM

�&amp; • ' 

TEE  SEAFARERS  LOG 

Page  Twelve 

MTD Pledges 
Full  Support 
To  Officers 

i 

¥.:i 

ir 

m-¥'

II/­' 

{Continued  from  Page  1) 
by  the  West  Coast  operators  in 
•  contract  negotiations  , with  the 
;  MM&amp;P  last  October,  and  have 
;  been  in  effect  ever  since  with­
out  causing  any  hardship  to  the 
shipowners  there. 
Spokesman  for  the  East  Coast 
operators—some  of  whom  have 
interests  on  the  West  Coast  and 
signed  contracts  there — answer 
,  this  fact  by  simply  stating  that 
they  cannot  be  expected  to  ac­
cept  agreements  "negotiated 
elsewhere." 
The  shipowners'  bad  faith  has 
been  demonstrated  by  a  series 
of  cables  and  telegrams  they 
have  been  sending  to  skippers 
at  sea,  telling  them  the  union  is 
in no  position  to  conduct  a strike 
and  that  their  ranks  are  divided. 
MTD  STATEMENT 
The  position  of  the  AFL  wa­
terfront  unions  was  set  forth  in 
a  statement  released  by  John 
Owens,  executive  secretary  of 
the  MTD./The  statement  said 
that  the  member  unions  of^ the 
MTD,  "after  due  deliberaiion, 
agreed  that  the  committee  for 
the  companies  and  agents  is  de­
termined  to  smash  the  AFL  li­
censed  officers'  union." 
The  demands  of  the  MM&amp;P 
are  "reasonable  and  fully  within 
the  ability  of  the  shipowners  to 
meet,"  the  statement  continued. 
"The  MM&amp;P  is  not  asking  for 
anything  that  has  not  been 
granted  on  the  West  Coast,  and 
which  have  caused  no  hardship 
to  the  operators  there." 
"In  view  of  the  shipowners' 
union­busting  stand,  the  MTD— 
whose  position  is  endorsed  by 
AFL  President.  William  Green— 
is  immediately  calling  upon  all 
of  its  affiliates  ir:  all  US  ports 
to  set  machinery  in  motion  for 
complete,  all­out  support  when 
the  MM&amp;P  issues  its strike call," 
the  MTD  official  said. 

i&gt;idir&gt; Ai^ lie 1950 

J4otei ^ 
^^dlaUrant lA^orheri  ^ 
nion 

J!ocJ flo. 16 
Hofaf  and  Katfauranf  Employees  and  Barftndert  infsrnoftowol  Union 
•  / 

Affiliated  wilh the  Amsrieon  FsdsroWon of  labor 

752 Eighth Avenue, New York 19, N. Y.  ' . 
^ 
v 

' 

: V 

(of  46lh  St.) 

. 

Tslsphone: Circle  6­9585 
»ii« 

Manjh  31s  1950 

DAVID  SIEGAL 
President 
JOSEPH  RODRIGUEZ 
See'y­Treas. 
JOHN GREEN 
General  Orgeniwr 
LEW GUCK 
Labor Chief 

Dining Room  Dept. 
JOE  LINDER 
Vice­President 
FRANK  BOTTACCINI 
Business Agent 
MAX FREED 
' Business Agent 
BASIL  KALFIDES 
Business Agent 
MORRIS ZWIRN 
Business Agent 
JACK  WOLFSON 
Business Agent 
(Banquet  Dept.) 

•   "y 

Ur.  Foul  Balls  eeoreta^treasurer 
Seafarers hxteroatlonal Union
51  Beaver  Street 
Hew  York  City 
­ 

^ .  .  lU  . 
^\
&gt; 
' 

" 

Dear  Sir and  Brotheri 
On  behalf  of  the  offioers  and  meE^ers  of  Looal  16 allow ae 
to express  our dee^ appreoiation for  the  splendid  cooperation 
you  axtd  your, aeobers  gave  us  in  helping  to win the  Howard 
^ 
Johnson  strike* 
This  strike  was  in many ways  a  orUolal  one  for  our  union* 
These  employers  were  tpying to  reestablish an  open  shops  hourly 
wage  type  of  operation  which was  eliaiuated aany  years  ago  on 
Broadway*  Had  they succeeded *  they would  have  iape riled  the 
wage  standards  and  conditions  of  thousands  of  union  workers* 
That  this  did  not  happen  is a  tribute  to­the  staunch support 
we  reeeived  from  Brother  A1  Bernstein and  all  the  other nerabers 
• of the  SIU irtio  were  in  there  pitching With  us  for the  duration 
of  the  strike*  Their action  was  in  the  best  traditions  of 
trade  unionism* 
Once  again with many*  many thanks  for your  outstanding 
support*  I  remain* 
/ 

Bartenders Dept. 
JACK  KENNEDY 
Vice­President 
JOHN H. GARDNER 
Organizer 
DICK  MARTIN 
Bus. Agent­Organizer 

DS/ha 

egal ^
President 

FRANK  McGUIRE 
Bus. Agent­Organizer 

Time  and  again  the  SIU  membership's  policy  of  aiding  fellow­trade  unionists  in  legitimate 
beefs  has  proved  a  vital  factor  in  smashing  employers'  attempts  to  destroy  hardwon  wages  and 
conditions.  The  above  letter,  from  the  president  of  a  union  that  has  accomplished  much  in  the 
drive  to  wipe, out  substandard  conditions  in  its  industry,  should fill  Seafarers  with pride.  As  the 
letter  states,  "their  action  was  in  the  best  tradition  of  trade  unionism." 
The  policy  of  inter­union  cooperation,  so  religiously  followed .by  the  SIU,  is imperativs  in 
protecting  the  interests  of  all  organized  workers.  A  defeat  for  any  trade  union  is  a  defeat 
ultimately  felt  by  all  trade  union  members. 

free  Trade  Union  Body  Launches 
Battle  for  World­Wide  Democracy 

WASHINGTON­r­The  strongest  to  work  with  the  United  Nations,  "We  are  not  imposing  any­
:  effort  in  world  history  to  unite  International  Labor  Organiza­ thing,"  he  said.  "We  will  assist 
free  labor  of  all  nations  is  im­ tion,  United  Nations  Educational,  them  so  that  they  rnay  teeich 
derway.  ^ 
Scientific  and  Cultural  Organiza­ themselves  and  get  necessary  in­
w^- -.
­  This  was  revealed  by  J.  H.  tion  and  other  world  bodies. 
fluence  in  public  life. 
Oldenbroek,  secretary­general  of 
Mr.  Oldenbroek  said  the  new 
ARMS  AID 
the  3­months­old  International 
Confederation  is  prepared  to 
Confederatioh  of  Free  Trade  4.  Assure  delivery  of  Ameri­ work  with  governments. 
­p­'­'V'. 
Unions,  on  his first  official  visit  can  arms  to  .western  European  "But  we  are  also  prepared  to 
democracies  with  the  aid  of 
to  the  United  States. 
criticize  governments,"  he  said. 
—  The  campaign  is  planned  for  working  agreements  with  Inter­ "That  distinguishes  us  from  the 
at  least  3  years  and  will  reach  national  Transport  Workers  Fed­ World  Federation  of  Trade 
te­ into 
Asia,  Africa,  the  Near  and  eration  and  other  trade  secre­ Unions  which  is  prepared  to  cri­
m  Middle 
East,  South  America  and  tariats. 
ticize  (Mily  those  governments 
countries  behi^  the  Iron  Cur­ 5.  Carry  the  message  of  free  which'  don't  take  orders  from 
tain.  These  are  some  of  the  democratic  labor  behind  the  Iron  Moscow. 
steps  already  authorized: 
Curtain  to  the  non^communist  "We  commend  the' American 
1.  Dispatch  of  ­a  mission  to  the  peoples  of  Czechoslovakia,  Po­ government  for  the  European 
Par  East  and  Southeast  Asia  for  land,  Roumania,  Esthonia,  Lat­ Recovery  Program  and  Atlantic 
a  2­month  investigation  of  social  via,  Lithuania.  "They  are  not  Pact.  We  criticize  the  American 
communist,  they  are  just  under  government  when  it  tries  to 
and  trade  union  conditions. 
_  2.  Establishment  :n  that  part  an  iron  heel,"  Mr.  Oldenbroek  establish  relations  with  Franco 
of  the  world  a  training  college  said. 
Spain." 
for  trade  unionists,  to  operate  Mr.  Oldenbroek  emphasized  The  new  Confederation  speaks 
that  all  of  these  things  will  be  for  more  than  50,000,000  workers 
for  3 years  at  least. 
­3.  Opening  of  well­staffed  of­ carried  out  without,  imposing  in  53  nStions,  including  the  AFL 
fices  in  New  York  and  Geneva  anything  on  peoples  or  nations.  and  CIO  in  the  United  States. 

The  West  Coast  CIO  long* 
shoremen  has.  been  practically 
shorn  of­its  top  communist  of­
ficials  as  a  result ­  of  Harry 
Bridges'  conviction  on "a  perjury 
charge  bj^  a  Federal  Court ­jury 
in  San  Francisco  two  weeks  ago. 
The  Frisco  jury  found  Bridgea^sj 
guilty  of  lying  that  he  was  not 
a  communist  when  he  obtained 
American  citizenship.  Convicted 
with  Bridges  were  two  other  top 
leaders  of  the  International 
Longshoremen's  and  Warehouse^ 
men's  Union,  CIO,  who  h!ad 
helped  him  to  gel  his  naturali­
zation  fraudulently.  They  are 
James  R.  Robertson,  first  vice­
president  and  Henry  Schmidt, 
international  representative. 
Although  Bridges  had  evaded 
the  US  government  for  the  past 
ten  years,  he  found  the  going 
hard  in  his  attempts  to  win  con­
trol  of  the  entire  US  waterfront 
for  the  communists. 
BLOCKED  BRIDGES 
Acting" with  other  AFL  mari­
time  organizations,  the  Seafarers 
International  Union  repeatedly 
smashed  the  power­seeking 
moves  of  the  commies  and  theic 
number  one  waterfront  tactician^ 
Back  in  1946,  when  Bridges 
made  his  strongest  bid  for  con­­
trol  of  the  US  maritime  industry 
by  forming  the  Committee  for 
Maritime  Unitjt,  composed  of  the 
CIO  maritime  unions,  the  SIU 
led  the  fight  that  ended  in  the 
CMC's  collapse. 
Legal maneuvers  will  undoubt­
edly  delay  Bridges'  deportation. 
If  and  when  he  is finally  ousted 
from  the  US,  he  will  probably 
continue  his  waterfront  activities 
in  behalf  of  the  communists 
from  another  sector.  Bridges  is 
president  of  the  World  Federa­
tion  of  Maritime  Unions,  set  up 
and  controlled  by  the  commu­
nist­dominated  unions in  Europe. 
Formidable  opposition  awaits 
Bridges  in  that  capacity,  too,  for 
the powerful  International  Trans­
portworkers  Federation,  w i t hi 
which  the  SIU  is  affiliated,  is 
prepared  to  lock  horns  with  the 
commies  whenever  they  attempt 
to  ^ash  any  of  the  free  and 
democratic  waterfront  unions  or 
disrupt  the  flow  of  goods  be­
tween  the  world's  democracies. 

irS  A  SMALL  WORLD 

Just  a  few  days  before  this  scene,  Frenchy  Michelet  (left) 
and  Eddie  Mooney  were  thousands  of  nules  apart.  But  their 
ships  hit  New  York  at  the  same  time  and  here  they  iire  as 
chairman  and  reading  clerk  at  the  Mar,  29  mating. 

�</text>
                  </elementText>
                </elementTextContainer>
              </element>
            </elementContainer>
          </elementSet>
        </elementSetContainer>
      </file>
    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="7">
      <elementSetContainer>
        <elementSet elementSetId="1">
          <name>Dublin Core</name>
          <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="42905">
                  <text>Seafarers Log Issues 1950-1959</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44875">
                  <text>Volumes XII-XXI of the Seafarers Log</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="48">
              <name>Source</name>
              <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44876">
                  <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="45">
              <name>Publisher</name>
              <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="44877">
                  <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
          </elementContainer>
        </elementSet>
      </elementSetContainer>
    </collection>
    <itemType itemTypeId="1">
      <name>Document</name>
      <description>A resource containing textual data.  Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre text.</description>
    </itemType>
    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
        <name>Dublin Core</name>
        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
        <elementContainer>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10201">
                <text>April 21, 1950</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10245">
                <text>Seafarers Log</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10297">
                <text>Newsprint</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10349">
                <text>Vol. XII, No. 8</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="48">
            <name>Source</name>
            <description>A related resource from which the described resource is derived</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10375">
                <text>Paul Hall Maritime Library Microfilm 1939-1993</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10401">
                <text>Text</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10434">
                <text>Headlines:&#13;
AFL MARITIME DEP'T PLEDGES FULL SUPPORT TO MM&amp;P STRIKE&#13;
ITF PANAMANIAN BOYCOTT NEAR&#13;
NEW HIRING HALL BILL&#13;
PRIVATELY-OWNED FLEET SHOWS SLIGHT DECLINE&#13;
SHIPOWNERS ATTACK&#13;
THE UNION HIRING HALL - A WAY OF LIFE&#13;
ALL THREE DEPARTMENTS SHARE IN NEW YORK'S FAIR SHIPPING&#13;
STILL SLOW, SAYS PORT SAVANNAH&#13;
TANKERS GIVE HYPO TO BOSTON SHIPPING&#13;
MOBILE JUST KEEPS ROLLING ALONG&#13;
DEL NORTE NEWS SHEET MAKES SHIPBOARD DEBUT&#13;
WERNICK ANXIOUS FOR CHANCE TO WRESTLE IN N.Y.&#13;
LOAD OF LARD SETS PATTERN ON SOUTHLAND'S SMOOTH TRIP&#13;
THE SEAFARERS IN WORLD WAR II&#13;
BRIDGES' CONVICTION BIG BLOW TO COMMIES&#13;
FREE TRADE UNION BODY LAUNCHES BATTLE FOR WORLD-WIDE DEMOCRACY</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="10435">
                <text>4/21/50</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="13080">
                <text>Seafarers International Union of North America</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
        </elementContainer>
      </elementSet>
    </elementSetContainer>
    <tagContainer>
      <tag tagId="64">
        <name>1950</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="3">
        <name>Periodicals</name>
      </tag>
      <tag tagId="2">
        <name>Seafarers Log</name>
      </tag>
    </tagContainer>
  </item>
</itemContainer>
